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Part of The Circle: Vol. 53 No. 10 - February 3, 2000

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F¢qp!e,Wi6
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the
floor?Is
it
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9µt ·what happened
onpg;S··
·
M?Pst.f6hV~d;Tomasz.\
Cielebak is
out of
action .
uidefiniteiy~r l~vilig
. schoolto careJorhis . . . .
·· · cancer.:.stricken
mother~·.
pg.i6 . ;
..
~
the··stllde~f Ilewspaper
of
!l8rist College
VOLUME #53 ISSUE #10 .
FEBRUARY 3, 2000
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C.ircle photo/Mike Haigh
illli11t(i!lis1fltii:i:~:s
;";,
,
1}~11:IIMlJ!t~~~~le~'.
!1;::::irit~:ili:
./W,he.11 Je.r~i:t1Y
.

,
!}'litlfte.iwr1~0:
•:i
;fl:.}\'~~
,
th~.
only
Oil(?
up'here,
.
. Junfor, Vinny J\ufier{);who ·.
t9
)1i~:
?ff:•cllmpuf
ljouse\i!ftei . · .. so IJosteverythingt Smith said. . . also live<! in. tlle hQiise;descri~
.'stiying·a~1~
:
ftje9µ•~
:
'tl\e Breyi-.
.
"J3very<>iJ~ else left ~yerything '
.
the wre'clcage after the. fire was .
.9~s;;zjiglit,,theJasfJh1ngh(ex_; uphere~xcepttheircl,othes.'
.
'., ,. cm#irieµ. ··:··· .. ·, ......
..
/
.. • .··
pei::ied
w,as
to
'
fin.1:1
h,i~.
1}0111~
'
jn
.
.
:
S.cott Ffacller recalled his first
''The· :structure is still stand-
ashes::·,:
O<J:
.
.
s~\/L;
;f. ))
look at the off~campus house
ing, ·but everythii:3g ·else is
.in
·
:
::
~i:n.tIDi~~'.i-9.oµm1at(! ,Sc,ott
aftc:r
the
fire had destroyed
it. ..
ashes .. The. fi~e,\Vent,str~ight
F{sc.h~t:~il;c_C>yf!"f4tljeiE$l:Iigh
'_'We-got
a
phone•call and the .· through •
.
the. roof and.the win-
Sfhouse burned.fiomthe ins1de landlord told us
it
was burned
dows were blown out." . ·
_6uta.t)l:~6ct:w,Jariuaryf6;'tiie down,''. he said'."The fire hap- .
Police are, still iiivestigating .
day,aftei:)liefirel>laze(ithro~gh pened the
day
before
I
came .. the.caus~ofthefire. Smith, who
~e. stiuc:tjiie
from tpe.
lJottom
back; s~
I
wentto take a look to
hacJ stayed at idriend's house
:
'up,:Ieayiiig :'only sing(!.4;
pitn-
se(! if there was anything
I
could . that night because . the . heating
nan.ts
of i}early a1r their-belcmg-
salvage,"
. . ·.
.
system: in lhe, house was not
: ings/ The·
t.llgli
·.·St., r~siderice .
Unfortunately the fire left next
working, said he o.bserved land-
was home t(} six Marist students to nothing within the house in-
lord Bob Wern using
a
blow-
. in all.
. ..
. .
tact. Among the items lost in
·
I
FIRE·
3
.
. .
.
... p
ease see .
,
pg.
Smith, who remained in the fire were televisions, com-
xG-reek
life
kicks off
with
rush
NSID
bo··yoli
tfilii~that••i
:
McDonalds should
be open
2{
hours a
day?
.
NO
6
SURVEY TAKEN LAST WEEK
This
is
an zm.ramlific
sunHY
/aJ:nl
from
100
Maristsn.dtnts.
"
·
byCHRISfYBARR
·
·
· Staff Writer.
· As ~other semester.begins,
. so
does
another season of Greek
rush.-
: The four sororities, Alpha
Sigma Tau, K~ppa .· Kappa
Gamma,
Kappa
Lam~
Psi,
and
Sigma Sigma Sigma. and the two
fraternities, Alpha Phi Delta and
· Phi Kappa Sigma, began re-
cruiting potential
n~w
members
at rush on Sunday, J:m.
30
~d
will continue until. Wedresday,
Feb.'9.·
..
.
. The Greek organizations are
hoping for a large turnout this
semester as it is the first time
thisyear that freshmen
wiH
be
allowed to rush.
0
lt
fs Mari.st
school policy that freshmen can
not rush their first semester
here.
"We'r:e about t<> begin our
fonnal rush period where any
student can rush if they meet
•· tlle
minimum academic require-
ments
.(a
GPA of at least
2.0),"
said Steve Sansola, assistant
dean
for Student Affairs. "The
sororities
will
have three nights
of rush and the fraternities will
have one night.
At
rush
. ... please see
RUSH, pg. 4
.;;;Y:
Community .................... 2
eatures ........................ 5
Opinion .... : .................... 8
&E .......................... 11
Sports ........ : ................. 16
.
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I ,
. / TIIE/tiRehE
·
FEBRUARY 3,· 2000
>
0~
Wednesday, Jan. 19, atap-
proXllllately
8
p.m., an
RA.
from
Midrise confiscated enough
booze from one male Marist stu-
dent to open his own on-cam-
pus pub.The alcohol recovered
included 2 bottles-of Vodka· 2
bottles of Amaretto;
2
bottles' of
Black Hause Schnapps;
1 bottle
of Whiskey;·.
L
bottle of cream
brandy;
l
b.ottle of Canadian
Club;
1/2
bottle ofWild Tuikey;
1/2
gallon of scotch;
1/2
gallon ·
of Bailey's Irish Creme; I pintof
Captain Morgan Rum,; 1 pint of
Tangueray
Gin; 1
pint Peach
Tree Schnapps; 12 oz. of Kaluha;.
and
2
quarts of Captain Mor-
gan.
Do you>think the bookstore
should be sellingHigh
Times
Yearbook Needs You!
Calling all sophomores and
juniors! The yearbook is cur-
rently in need of your assis-
~nce with all facets of produc-
tion. Also, send any pictures
you would like to contribute.
Call the
Renyard at x2
l 49.
·
qi~gazin~?
Help
with
Resumes
Get it on paper! - resume and
cover letter writing workshop.
The workshop is geared for be-
ginners covering basic resumes
including format and content ..
The workshop will be held on
Wednesday Feb: 9, from
11-12
p.m. Call Career Services at
x3547 to reserve your seat.
An abundance of Bud Ice
· c_ans were ~en
away
by
Secu- ·
Celebrate Black History
nty f~om .Benoit.. early Sunday
Month
·
mornmg; on
Jan:25, between
the
. The Black Student Union and· · hOU!"5 ?f12:30 a.m. nd
l
a.n(.
"They se}l High Times
in there?! lguessit
doesn't
'inake
any:
sen~e,"
Frank
Tkazyki .
Student Programming Council
'
·; · · ·
· presents speaker
,
Qlenis
. f{M:~sfsii,~w:plow,i;:~~ed
-
Redmond. The
lecturewiihake
:11!to.
~
stude11t'.s bl~cKH1ndain
< .. ··• ·· ·
place:Wednesday,Feb.9,at7:36
theMc:qm.iipai-~g°l6tonT~es~ ... :
·
{r••C
O
/·,
p.m.inthePAR.Refreshinents
day'. Jan:25?at-i_:20p.tn:{:·· .
/.···!
will be s~rved.
Now it's your
turn
Calling
all
Marist students!
If
you have a band,
an
event, a
club, or any other campus news
that you want to see in this col-
umri,contact the
Circle atx2429
orHZAL.
·
. 'f\.n lllli11vi.ted.· g~est pi~gy ..
backed into.Leo-Hall around 2
p.m. onTu~sd~:y!January 25to
surprise an ex-"girlfriend .. Toe
girlfriend
was
so flabbergaste<i
that she had the rion-Marist stu-
. dent esco.rted offc:_lllllpllS by Se~
curity. Secriri_ty warned him that
if he comes back he will be
ar-
rested.
.
..
The riewJames A. Canavino
Library has already been chris-
tened by vandalism. The. graf-
fiti artist left
"SAM
HILL"
scratched into a t()ilet paper dis~
pen_ser.
It
was discovered on
Wednesday, Jan. 26. Perhaps the
intention of the artist is to en-
courage students to go out and
explore some distinct tunes.
Marist Security would like
to inform students to "BE .
AWARE, Fire drills are in effect
and if you "snooze you loose."
In other words, expect to pay a
fine.
Weekend Weather-
hi: 46
· lo: 28
hi:47
lo: 27
hi:45
lo:22
Source: http://www.weather.com
(The
Weather Channel)
•' ' •
f
1



..
,
....
"Are. you serious! I had
no idea but it seems a
little ludicrous to
me. " ,
Carolyn Salter
sophomore
"I
don't have a
problem. with them:
selling High. Tzmes •· but ·
it~ funny consideting
they won't sell other
. . . ,I'/' ,,
.stuJJ•
K.C. Skolnik
sophomore
Printed:
1111811999 11:os
AM .
Document
Name:
Jw85()87a01.QX
Rald;3
· Une
.Scf9en:
as·
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FEBRUARY 3, 2000
THE-CIRCLE
···•·•·.News
PAGE3
SCtQ11
Ha'.llfire triggers safety awareness
by
KATIIERINESLAUfA
·Staff.Writer
·
!twas
a .tragic story that .·
alarmed a nation.
·Three· innocent college stu-
dents were killed in a Seton Hall_
dorm fiie and _many others suf-
fered from smoke inhalation and
shock_. The fire is not only a
tragedy of. young. lives cut
short, it is an event that opened
the eyes of campuses around
the nation. With fire tragedies
more prevalent in the news, it
raises. an• in:ipo$fit; qllestio_n -
how fire p_roqfisl',1:arist College?
have," said McLain.
The Seton Hall fire has not
only put the fire alarm system
under review, but Marist is initi~
ating more fire safety training for
resident staff members.
Marist College also helps to
prepare students in case of
emergencies with fire drills,
which are he_ld on a regular ba-
sis. Such precautions do secure
the uncertainties of campus stu-
dents.
"The school is relatively_safe
with constant fire drills and
· smoke detectors in every room,"
said Bri"an McAlpin, a freshman
and Parliamentarian of the stu-
dent government here at Marist.
. "Ninety-nine percent of fire
alarms occur at dinner," stated
Tom McLain .. He said most
alarms are due to students who
are careless with cooking. He
cited examples, such as stu-
dents placing both a pizza and
its cardboard box in the oven.
However, with the tragedy of
Seton Hall still fresh in the
minds of many, students seem
to be taking fire precautions
more seriously. Curtis Kelly,
a
Resident Assistant of Gartland
Commons, believes this helped
in the recent fire drills held last
week.
"We_ area relatively safe cam-
pus in comparison to other col..:
leges of the same size," said Tom .
McLain, Assistant Director. of
Safety and Security .. '.'We have.
su,rpassed most. building

.. , .
.
.
'
Photo counesy CNN
The recent Seton Hall fire drew attention to campus fire safety.
Though fire <l:rills are a great
way to help promote a fire-safe
"Seton Hall has made every-
thing more of a reality to those
at Gartland," said Kelly.
codes."_
.
· According to. the Office of
Safety andSecurity, the campus
seems very safe. Marist College
has a campus-wide fire alarm
system, which connects not
only to the security office by a
radio transmitter, but to Duch-
. ess _County _Fire Control Head-
quartersas welt Security dis-
patchers have a one-digit dial
system. to the police depart-
ment, fire department and am..:
bulance service.
F-IRE: Students
-
left without a home
... continuedfrompg. 1
"It appeared in the firsrfloor
Even with the adequate fire
system, Marist College is look-
ing to improve the campus' fire
safety. Currently, the campus is
under review from the president
and others.
"Marist is reviewing all pro-
cedures to· improve what we
. campus, the issue raises another
important question: How effec-
tive are they? With fire alarms
constantly going off in housing
areas such as Gartland Com-
mons, these drills seem to have
desensitized many students
who have become annoyed
with the constant alarms.
Fire safety has become a real-
ity to everyone on campus and
with Safety and Security pre-
pared for emergency, students
and staff can feel secure once
again.
torch torectifJ·thehe~ting situ-
living area, spread
up
the stairs
ation, _ .. ·. ... . ...
. _
_
to the second floor, then up in\o
.
·
f3:-~He~s'ih'g?a!Sq~~t~¢1t'::-~J~-li~~~rri~i1f;~r~P1~~:~.
,,.,&'i'1!h~'«tii~,-,.."'·"~?Sn"'W's'ara~;,Becker:sma1k..,..,.~~4.~ .... ,~-.~,.,,...."
7 ··,
·
r~•ffi{jifft~~i
1
W<>f
hg~i~t1~~~~cTlie]il~ftjiq{mi§tti~1\ti~S~·
,f~!:'.ffie · last:fouple
·
of
days·;.
·
aria•·Jsi~'.Matistjuniors
.
in ·a dif~cult
. the pipes'.were froz~n;'' .
<
.
·.
situaf;ion;-without a place to stay
·
\ Smith° is scheduled to rneet . for
.
the firsf week of school.
:with
the
police
0
to ~ssist · in ·the :A.ufiero :and: Snµth said
the.
col-
. investigation this·week:
lege off~red
to
help;· but was
. Junior.Pat Kempf, who _also
slo_winrespi:>nding.
lived in the High
St.
house, said
"Heally didn't
think
they" made
landlord Wern mad~
the
situa-
anattemptto help µs, and after
tion worse by being uncoopera-
two phone calls and being up
tive:
here for a·week they offered to
"He said he \"'.Ould do the:best put us in_ Talmadge, but we
·.· he could
t?

help us,'' Kempf would have_ been split up._ The
said._ '1Ie· also said' he would first-week of classes was rough
. give
us_
a refund, t>µt heJ1~d no __ - we hag to find a new place, .
insurance:'\-.c
/,;<:_;:.:
;_;,i\;f'- _
newfomiture, and we're still
.• "-i~empf
ai{l-!et~Il})';·s01iJh\
waitinifor
a
phone line.in our
pointed•ou(tli~t:Weinch~ged .

_new place.· It was -stressful,"
them
for
rentfor thefirsthalfof
i
Aufiero said.
,J~nuary,;'then::m:tde)1itjls~I°(_::" .. "They told us tneywould
· scarce.;
·
.
·:<{r
~>~
·:
·,-,.>- :
>
check and see if th~re was fur-
. ,;m;
:
~oh~itai1rto.~s;\1iid
fii•'
niture we could have or a place
left the theckf inlourje-curify '~-to. stay on campus, but by that
. deposit
\Vith
soniecmtf els·e," · .tim~, one week after classes be-
' Smithsaid. ''Wehavehishome gan, we had
_
already found an
phone ~~m,~er and his
cell and apartment,'' Smith said .
. we've beenlea~ing:messages, . Resident Director Kelly Ann
but he hasn't returned any of Sherman, who fielded the calls
our.tallst , .\
,
.. _. _·• .
.
.
, . regarding the fire and on cam-
Wem;"who owns atleast three pus vacancies, said the Office
other houses. in Poughkeepsie, of Housing and Development
was unavailable for.comment.
did their best to accomodate the
,
Firefi°ghters at . the sixjuniors .
. Poughkeepsie Fi_re Departme11f_ : · . "The hou~ing office offered
· were equally tight-Iip~4 about . _
them spac~ m Talm~dge Co_urt
the situation, but'adrnittedtllere · · and any as~1stance with findmg
was some pqssibi°lity:o( foul· :-.ofL camp;us apartments,"
play.
·: /
.
.. ·--
-
~
-
: ,_. ·
.
She~ansaid. .
__
,_
:
"Itwas~~spic\oris,'')aicl,
Cap-
Whde the· fire _caused_ unex-
t;l.in Decker,'wht?
was
one of the
pectedJteartache and a difficult
firefighters. on.die scene: "Right
beginning ~o the_ new semester,
now its being investigated by
Jeremy Silllth said the faculty at
Fire Inspector Madsaac."
Marist have been very under-
Decker; w])o arrived at 9 High
standing.
St.at2:55.a.m:onthedayofthe . "Most of my tea~hers h~v~
fire, described the path of the
been pr~tty, good about
1t, .
flames as they consumned the
Smith said. 'They understand
house.·
we're going to be a little unor-
. ganized for a while."
1h1 Circ/1 wants YUIii
If you are
a
journalism
rilajor or just interested
in writing for
The
Circle,
please call
x2429.
the student newspaper of marist college
.,
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r
' '
.
' , '
FEBRUARY 3, 2000
RUSH:
·
A whole new
ClaSs
of students
readyiOpleOge
·
make iUhe
.
biggest yet,;,
.
she
said.
·
·
.
.::continuedfrompg: 1
students have the opportunity
The fraternities are hoping that
to see each different organiza-
many men will
turn
outfor rush
tion."
as well. Mike Walsh, a member
Elizabeth Jacobson; president
of Alpha Phi Delta, said that be-
of Greek Council, said that rush

ing in a fraternity has many ben-
is a great opportunity for both
efits.
·
.
·
men and women to get involved
"Fraternities take
.
part in cam-
on campus.
pus life and community service
"Greek life gives students the
and
being in a fraternity pro:
opportunity to get involved
·
vides lifelong bonds ofbrother-
with community service and
hood," he said.
·
campus life along with helping
In addition to new members,
to develop social and leadership
Marist College Greek life may be
skills," she said. "Rush enables
getting two new organizations.
both men
.
and women to meet
The Sigma Gamma Rho sorority
new people with different inter-
is beginning the process of be-
es ts."
.
comingrecognizedbytheschool
.
According to Debbie Moran,
and there is student interest in
vice president of sorority recruit-
beginning a new fraternity.
·
·
ment, the sororities promoted
"Sigma Gamma Rho has met
rush all over campus
in
hopes
the minimum requirements of
10
of bringing in big numbers this
founding members and are close
semester.
to getting approval by the Stu-
"We're hoping this will be a
dent Government Association to
very successful rush for sorori-
become
a
club," said Sansola.
ties because the number of se-
"They have developed their by-
niors in each sorority is high.
.
. laws and once they are ap-
Every sorority is working to~

proved to be a club the found-
gether topr~~~te
.
this ruslt,~nd
>
ing class can
.
move (9rwardfor
-
.
..
the spring and they
\Vill
be able
to rush new members in the fall."
The group
of
·
15 students in-
terestedfo beginning a new fra-
ternity will be meeting with col.:.:
lege officials to try arid begin
the first
_
steps. According
·
to
Dan Caracciolo, one of.the in-
terested students; the reason
the group is seeking to
forma
new fraternity is so there will be
more diversity on campus.
"We're a diverse group
of
guys in activities from radio to
theatre. We'reinterested in in- ·
dividuality and also community
service. Already we've worked
with the Make
a
Wish founda-
tion and
_
have plaris to host a
·
·
dance -a-thon
·
with the Muscu-·
tar
Dystrophy Association/' he
·
said.
Sansola said that more meet-
ings are necessary

before it can
be determined
ifa
new.fraternity
will
be allowed to
form on cam-
pus.
"We' re. pursing that idea with
the students and whether or not
it will happen,,. he said.
.
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THECIRCL£
FEBRUARY 3;2000
.
Feat
,
u res
PAGE 5
1,)>.U
'
~reJfetting
i
sle¢py, yery, very
·
·
sleepy ••.
·
byALExisSCARPINATO
.
:

.
.
·
Patients traveled from various
place, or memory.
places
to
touch these trees, but
Many people'_s
-
lives are
ended up touching all the trees;
changed forever by'ttie use of
notjust
·
the magnetized
.
ones:
hypnosis: A branch of hypno-
..
Staff
Writer'
·
; -
Y(?tt'~~ independe.nt.
:
You
This led scientists to theconclu-
sis, called hypnotherapy, helps
don't obey anyone. Under no
sion that Mesner was a fraud.
many people improve theirlives,
drcumstances can anyone
.
tell
This discovery prnved, in real-
from quitting smoking to losing
·
.
·
you what to do.
-,
Although this
ity, it was ~e patient who heals
weight. According to hypno
-
"
may be the case
,'
many people

himself throµgh his own power
therapistJay Block, hypnosis
.
b¢come a slave to
:
the mind
.
and i111agination.
can be used to improve your
'
whfl~ under1he power ofhyp
~
general
functioning
to make you
nosis.
·
.
·
_
feel better mentally and physi-
.
.
With no CQnsistency in the
Often people_ e
_
nter
_
a
-
cally.
.
·
definftion
·
of hypnos_is, there
·
Saturday night, Marist College
:
are manfco
_
~tra
.
sti&g'th<!ories.
beginning
.
state of
hosted a performance by hyp-
'
f;:venthoµgh
,
~yP,iltjsis}s'often
hyp~osis and do not'
notist
"The
Astonishing Neal".
_
·
viewedas
·
confacfwiththeun-
'
·

·
·.
·
The sold out show proved to
.
con
..
scious
·
,
a~other theory
even rea zze
zt. ··~
-
be a success when a group of
.
states that
it
is
simply
a
form
of
Many people's lives
Marist.students were hypno-
relaxation .
.
Othersbelievehyp-
ar.e c'hangl!dforever
:
tized.and directed to do various
riosis
to be
·
a trance or an al
~
b ... h'
.
.
.

·
.
s
·
·
.
:
b
'
acts, Subj¢ctsclaimtohavefelt
.
tered state of
.
awareness.
.
·
·
.
Y .

:ypnoszs.. • • •
·
·

·
·
U
.
-
:
as if in a
.
daydream
_
w'11le under

.
.
The'origill~f
:
hyp11osis
;
.
b6-
·
jectscfa,zin'to have felt
_
hypnosis
;
yetstill
'
aware.
·
.
gins in 1773whenari.Austnan
asif'
in a
:
daydrea,i,f
.
NaomiBrown
;
oneoftheh_yp~
astronomer, Franz Mesmer,
·
be-
·
··
·
·
·
notized said that while she was
lieved that he was able to treat
while under hypno-
inthetranceshewasstill in com-
-
cases of hysteria with magnets.
sis, yet
·
still aware.
plete control.
His theory, called
'.'.animal
mag-
"If
I wanted
.
to come out I
netism'', supported the idea
could have," said Brown,
•~It
that four magnetic fluids in the
Often people enier
a
beginning was
.
just
a
lot of fun."
·
body were in need of magnetic
state of hypnosis and do not
·
According to Graham
alteration.
even reaiiz;e it. Being completely
Wagstaff of the University of
In order to keep the fluids in
enthralled in a novel or movie is
Liverpool, "Studies of hypno-
.
harmony
/
Mesner


suggested
a common experience that is con-
sis have
.
drawn our attention to
that patients soak
in
baths of
sjdereg similar
to the state of a number
bf
mundane yet fasci-
.
hot
water,
magnets, andfronJiJ...
mind
·
nece
_
ssary for hypnosis.
·
nating phenomena
·
that do beg
ings. HeJia:d such faitli in his
Another instance where this oc-
for explanations even though
a
,
theory
'tliafii'led
him to
rub
curs·is.
.
hearirig a. song 9r
smell-
th~9ry
.
of hypnosi~
·
.
_
per se
·
t
mlt
"
'
'eM'6ri
'
trJbs
'
?i~~~t"~a·
·
·
t~:l'
:
ing•ii:fragrarice thatcausesa
·
re/ cfoesn~t
.
.
neeci
·to
·
pr6vide
·
's1.1ch
i
tria~?~ffif~',
\
'!
;
"?
fl
,,.
~
:
cf
,
,_"
\
mefubranc
·
e
,
tif
a
'
differenMfme;
'.
explanati~ns;'
'.
.
.
.

:
!
:
.
.

Marist
.
gets CathOiiC studies millor
.
by
LISA BURKE
.Features
Editor.
is i~tegrated int9 the curriculum,
as mariy ofMarist's students are
catholic
.
.
Lewis said thatthe pro-
gram will help these students to
'
better
-understand
their own
.f"oUo'wing
a
trend of Col-
-
background.
leges like Fairfield, Loyola arid
.
"l
thtnk
:
a pnnc
_
i pie n:ason for
Manhattan
;-:
Marist
-
has
'
.
re
.;
.
thiswogram is we have a
large
·
cently adopted a program for
.
.
huinberofstudents
who are from
a
mino(in
·
Catholic studies.
>
"
ihe ca.tholic background.hut do
TheManst Brothers would tje
.
riot have
a.Jull
understanding of
proud.
.

.
-
r
. .
" ·
-'
.
.
'
f
~
~hatifmeans,''
~aid
1..e\ViS,
'
.
The
The
prog~ani,
;
appr9_vecI
.
by
-
.
·
·.
col_lege owes this
fO
those stu-
college faculty ]ast sp1:ing,
will
.
dents:"
·
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
allow sttident.s
:
to
i
fulfiU their
·
The proposal for this
:
:
new
core/Libera
L
stt1d1es)eqtiir~~
course of study stated five main.
inents whhi1&}U:inng
a
nµnor
poiots as
the
rationale behind
in this
o.ew

foterdisciplfoary

·
the program. The first is that it
·
area.
"'
:
.
·

·
;
.
-
.
:-
--,
..
~
:/
·
-
·
.
.
offers a way for students to in'.'

Accordinf tti Robert
~wi~,
·
tegrate
_their-Core/Liberal
arts ·
,
Associate
'
professqr, English
·
.,
electives more fully, and to bet-
and coordin
'
atpr of die pr9.,.
..
ter understand their place in his-
gram,
this qualify
makes it suit:
tory and culture.
able for
,
any
,
s~dent,
. ,
:
.
·
.
·
Sec;ond,iU1dds to the college's
:
"It wo'llld
:
be
"
i:fuin.'or
·
that
·
·
· ·
stated mission to cultivate in its
people
;souicf
complete irre-
·
·
students a sensitivity to ethical
spective of their major," said
.
and spiritual values.
Lewis
.
.
·
.
.
·
Third, being in nature an intc!r-
.
To achieve the minor
:
oµe
. ·
disciplinary study, it can accom-
~ust complete IUrie creq1~
·
of
.
:
:
'
modate studepts of all ~duca-
catholic studies courses
·
and tional fields.
·
·
.
•;
.
nine credits of
related electives
..
.
J:'ourtll
/
the
:
program
.
will en-
in the fields
.
of the arts and
phi-
courage the goals of tolerance
losophy. Catholic tradition
·
.
.
an
·
c1
_
respect
for
diversity that
has contributed to a number Maristcurriculumpromotes.
of different culrures
in their
art,
And finally, Catholics fonn the
music, literature, etc, and these single largest religious group in
required courses provide for~
Dutchess County, and so !he
ther insight to Catholicism's
·
program in the adult education
wide influence.
-
department would provide for
Although Marist is not offi-
the community, as well, an op-
cially affiliated with theCatho-
P?rtunity to. enrich their reli-
lic Church, many of the g1ous edu~atton
religion's tradition and spirit
The relative novelty of the pro-:
gram has limited
its
publicity to
the campus. Stu~ents who take
Lewis's classes are
aware,
and
"
a few have expressed their in-
terest to him. However, at this
point, only one student is offi-
cially enrolled
.
Benjamin ~renkert, a
sopho-
mor~ history and American
studie
-
smajor,
has signed up for
·the
minor to expand upon his
religious education.
·
"I
wanted a deeper under-
-
standing of Catholicism's his-
.
torical background
and
tointen-
sify my
O\VIJ
knowledge of.the
church
and itsimpact
on the
world," he said
:
·
The program blends nicely
with hismajor
·
as he hopes to
use \Vhat he learns in his career,
which may be teaching at the
college}evel or writing for a his-
torical journal
.
A catholic, Brenkert received
religious education during his
youth but attended public grade
.
and high schools. He said he
wanted to come to Marist to see
the difference between the two.
"l
wanted to see what the real
difference
.
was between public
and private school," he said.
As to which he prefers,
"I
can't
make the decision yet."
Program coordinator Lewis
said he hopes that the program
will increase in popularity as
pe9ple learn more about it.
"Marist is privileged to have
'
this program," he said.
.
.
., ,
.
.
.
Circl~ photo/Mike
Haigh
,
St
.
udents at Saturday night's hypnotism show were
told by the Astonishing Neal that they were as
weightless as helium balloons.
Man not returning your
phone
calls?
Coftisea by
the sJgnals she's sen<f-
ing? ~ave a rash you can't
Identify? Then Email
your problems to Lusty
Lisa
@
k8gi
for
the
infor-
mation that you need.
.
,





FEBRUARY 3, 2000
:PAGE
6
What's Happ~ning this Weekend arOulldlO~n .... ·
THEATRE
County Players Falls
Theatre, Wappingers Falls,
298-1491
Presents
. KenLudwig's
hilarious comedy
Moon Over Buffalo
Pawling Theatre
Company
855-1965
Presents
Once upon a Dream
A Disney and
Broadway revue
KAROKE
.. ·Ro6ghcutTavern,
. West Road, ·
Pleasant Valley,
566-'3665
· . Fridays 10pm .
ART.

Vassar College
.
College Center Gallery,
437-5370
Chris Meyer's
.· mixed-media artwork,
through February
16
MUSIC·@,
THE CHANCE
Poughkeepsie, 471-1966
Friday, February
4
Thelvtachine
(A Pink Floyd show) :
with
·
Charmless Man
Johnny Society
The Farewell Tour, $10
Saturda~, February 5
. Indecision
· with
Kill your Idols·
Reach the Sky .
Fight for Life.
$8
MISCELLANEOUS
Open ice
@
the
Mid Hudson Civic Center,
Poughkeepsie,
454-5800
Monday,
1
lam-lpm · ,
Friday,
IJam-
lpm;J:30pm-9pm
Saturday and Suriday, 2:30- 4:30







































































































































¥
l
i
· THt::'t11RcLE
;
FEBRUARY
3, 2000
Fe&tJJ
res
.
·
.
·
-
~
-
- .
·
.
·..
.
LEO
.
.
You've
,
~ee1_1
_
under a great
.
Things aren
'
t going as
·
·
deal of pres
.
~ufefor
the
past
few
smoothly today as they have·
.
days. And
/
gue
i
~
'
what?°You
been. Make sure you're being
·
;
s~ll ari!
Lu~@y
;
y~u worfweli
.
.
properly represented
:
Delega-
in this
'
sort9fsifoation
.
No need
~ion is good, but if you're
to get angry
ff
the heat's turned responsible for the results,
.
up. you
;
<;an
:
always
.
pull up y'ou'd beuer stay tuned in to the
.
stakes and o somewhere else.
·
·
.
proceedings - in detail.
i'Aimtis
-
·
·
·
SAGITTARIUS
.
Whatever you' re doing now is
more difficult than you'd like
it_
to be. It's also taking up too
much of your time
.
You may
even have to postpone a date
·
you were eagerly anticipating.
Romance will be much easier
over the weekend anyway. Re-
.
sche
.
dule.
·
You're most likely in
a
n en-
·
·
,
,
~
trepreneunalmood.Youcould
.
.
. ,
,
VIRGP
.
.

.
.
·
.
CAPRICORN
.
.

coine up withanide,
fr
butdori't
.
You could encounter
:
a:
·
diffi:
.
You couid find
~\
vay
to mike
.
be dis~ayed:'ififdoesri'.t wod6
cult
.
situ
_
ation
.
'
Oh
;
~
sure, you're
.
more money
.-
This could
'
be ei-
right away. You don't knowev-
·
stilllucky an
_
d popular, but you
·
ther by taking
cm
anothe
r
job6r
·
erything you need
·
10
know, yet,
··
may be a
little bit
strapped for
by getting a better deal on
.
but you're learning!
·
ca~h. · You want something you
·
s
·
omething you always buy'.
can't afford. No big deal.
.
·
Loo~ f()r bargains
a
nd othe1;
'
GEMINI
You may have to curtail your
activities fofa while, due to lack
·
opportunities.
Don't'let
-
a minor breakdown
stop you
.
_
of funds
.
Well, you
.
do have the
.
LIBRA
money, bu(if.you spdnd
it
on
·
.•
One)~st issue may need to he
AQUARIUS
.
on
;
~ tlii
_
~g
,)

_w
o,~'tbe able to
i
.
dealt with)f yop
_
' re charming;
·

.
You' re intelligent.of
.
course .
.
;
SP,.t:P?,
,
}t;:.
<>~
}
~
~
J
St
te
t (
}f
y~u.

:
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.
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r,
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.
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.
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Y?u
.
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>.
~net
..
th~
\)
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•.
.
;
tllit;1k
.;,
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thi~
~
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;
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.
·
·
·
.,
ar~
nqt
gomg your way. You're citymay actually be more impor-
more apqo win if you don't fear
.
tarit
tha.n creativity
.
now
.
.
,losing
;
What you
~
ve gofjs
·
bet-
.
-
.
.
:
ter iliari what ymiJack; Yori can
dowithoii ·
·
·
•·
.
·
.
.
..
_
:
/ \ .7:
t~CE,R
:
:'i.
/ _: __
._
.
·,
,
You're
s61f~C::
effective work-
:
Thirtgs aren't
;
going
·

as
-
·
SCORPIO
·
i!Jg
w
_
itha te?,ID.Yoii don
'.
t
quite'
irii9
9
thly
:ct
i
_
cia
y
:'
a~
.\
hf
y
h
;
ve
·
·
Yo
KJ
~
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~
higll~ene~gy
.
pers6n.
.
have
O\
vhaLYou warit yet;
-
bu
(
.
been
~:
:
-Malce
(
sure
-
you
'.
re be~ng
·.
If
a11yho~y
-_
could be in
_
tWO
·.
that'sOK.
_
Getyounicttogether
.
p
f
operly
j
~pr~sentef
.
D
e,
Iega
:'
•·.
placeg'afihesam
e
tiine
J
t wpuld
.
now, S<>you can take on an even
ti~g
~
is
g\>o~
;_
.
b9
_
t)f
·
,
y§u
!
re re-
l:>e you, Joda:y, that wo
_
ulcfoome
bigge
{
challe11ge tomorrow. The

~p9ri.sipl
f
f<#
-
!Jie
,
results;
;
you' d
h
f
handy; Maybe you
_
can
dO
it
•.
·
problem gets more complex, buf
be~~~
;s
tarJM11~<;l
-
iil toJ.~e pro
~

~
by !ettirtg yourfinger~
90
some
y()U 're getting smarter.
·
Don't
_
ce,
~
clin~
fr
i~
}
e
,
~~1
/
/:
.
:
:
.
·
.
i
)
::
."
:O-
~
of
th
~
w
f:
,
lkin
f
. Phon~
_
ajlead
:
·
·
give up.
.
.
·•.-·
.-
·
·
.
.
_·,
.:..
...
,
-
._
\
.
:,
-
-
~
:
·
.
.
-.
·
·
..
http://www.hndb.com
decent prices
.
Th~ site lists
.
.
.
:
~
Thelnternet Movie
.
the' top
5
movies at the box
.
Qatabiise is the ~um~r one
',
office as well as movie
'
news
moviewebsite
iii
the world.
It
.
. about filins up to
a
year away
·
:
has everything ~n
any{~wre
from release. There is a movie
film ever
:
mad1~
t
y~
;
they
~ven
.
. ,
qu°ote and trivia questi6n <>f
cover Chitty
Cllitfy 13ang
·
·
.
the day, everyday. In
,
adclition
Bang:
At IMDB
:
ycnif.µ1 get-
-
te>
all Qfthis
'
there is even
a
movie reviews[iriformation
··
section of games and puzz!es
·
·
about the
cas~
·
content,
'
~d
where you can win cash prizes
crewofwhicheverfilinyou're
-
based on your knowledge of
looking for. If you sign up at
the trivialities of film. So if
the site, you give
'
a review
you' re into m<>vies, or just
yourself, or post'a message on · can't
think
of who played
the message
board
for the
Paco
in
Herbie Goes Bananas
movie you're looking
up
(It was
Joaquin
Garay ID in
( every movie has their own
case
:
you
really
were wonder-
message board)
..
You
can
ing); check out http://
.
even order DVD's and Videos
www.imbd.com, it's the
best
directly from the site, and at
thing out there for movie
.
infonnation.
.
·
:pq

.you like to
gooutonthe
·
·
weekends? Do
yo'I]
li~e
to
_·.
writ~? Are you
over 21?
If
you
answered yes to all
these questions, then
we have a job for
you.
·
All
you have to
..
·
.
dois go out to one of
your favorite night
spots,
·
have a good
time,
·
and write
.
about it for
The
Circle. Sound like a
good idea? Then
· email Lisa at k8gj
and let the good
times roll!




































































































































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i
.
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Graduate
Offe~~~t~\11&
.
Editor,
I like
the
websfre BUT)'ou are llOt
,
puttiri.g youibest
.
footfonvard
wliert
yotir"site
'
has numerous typos.I
aaj
sure
,
yo~ dori'
-f
wanfyisitors
to
ilunkthat
'
this
is
the
type
-
of educa_!ionyou reciev~
at
Marist.Two words: Spell Check.
Jim
O'Toole
Class of 1993
, ·
:
..
.
':
*
'
*All

.
lettets
·
..
···
to
·
..
thi?
··.
eJitor
-
friusi
.~.-
/Je
·,
.
:.

'
submitted by
the/1!'iidaY
.
·
.
bej6r~
.
p~blication
date.
·
Drop a letter
in
LT 211 or email
us-Ut.HZAL.
~*
THE
.
CIRCLE
.
Jaime Tomeo/Chris Grogaµ
.
Editors-in-chief
Jill
Giocondo
Managing Editor
Nik Bonopartis
News.Editor
Lisa Burke
Features Editor
JetJDahncke
Sports Editor
·
Michael
·
Bagnato
·
Opinion Editor
Chris
Knudsten
-
Mike
Haigh
Colleen
Barrett &
A
& E Editor
Photo Editor
Mary Grodio
Business Managers
G.Modele Clarke,
Fac~lty
Advisor
The Circle is the student newspaper of Marist CoUege, Poughkeepsie,
NY.
Issu
published every Thursday. We welcome letters to the editor, club announce-
ments
and story ideas. We cannot publish-unsigned letters
to
the editor.
The
Circle staff can
be
reached at
575-3000 x2429 or by email at
Hl.AL.
You can
visit us on the web at http://www. academic.marist. edulcirr:le.
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.
-
'.•
.
. .
FEBRUARY
3,
·
2000
.
.
.
THE
'
CIRCLE
·
-
.
o
·
-
_:_>
_
p--e
·-

·
·
ct
·
·
:
·-
.
.-
.
·
:
'.
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:
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_:
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-
~·,-
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_
The
views
expressed
cm
these pages are not necessarily those of The Circle
PAGE9
Tlie
Cli-Cfe
is
in
good
hands
·
without
lepers
by
PATrY~CWill1JLE
:
·
Some G191
·
-
.
(LCA),"
:
claiming that my
off-
on the blackmarket (that's why
this point does not include lep-
colorremarks that they were a
there were so mariy spelling er-
ers (yet). Long live diversity-
bun
_
ch of'~nos
·
eless,
Mr:
Bums-
rors last semester), but
I
had no
just nq
_
lepers, please.
emulating freaks of
·
nature"
ch(?ice but to step down as edi-
_
The real reason for my depar~
weteJtbelous. Although Mr.
tor, Now; ·my own position
..
ture from my post as Editor-in-
Buriis, the despotic ownerofthe
within
The Circle will be as
a
·
ChiefofThe
Circle is because I
nuclear
·
·
plant
·
on "The
columni
_
st, and
I
have promised
have been accepted as an intern
Sirnpsons;" is portrayed
as
hav-
to devote
.
at least
.
one column
at
The Nation magazine in New
ing leprosy and is Springfield's
this semester to extolling
the
York City.
I
do not plan to bore
richest man, apparently many
achievements of America's lep~
you with stories of my trials and
members ofLCAfind him
rrii-
ers(or; as tQey like to be called,
tribulations at America's oldest
.
serly and offensive
.
They con-
·
''.thefaciallycl!allenged.")
weekly magazine (until next
fronted
-
me with their highest
·
'
Just let me stop and ask one
week), but I will say one thing.
·
.
pajdJawye~ (whohad
'
a·nose
question. ·Are you actually
My internship at the magazine
and al(ten-f!r.gemails;
·
by the
·.·
buying any o(thisJ
·
that has served as the voice for
.
·
way); and I spent the next few
No, indeed: the reason Chris
unconventional :wisdom since
months in court
·
.
·
Grogan andJaime Tcimeo have
1865 is the one and only thing
The inevitable has happened.
As luck·would have it, the
taken over control
0
of this
-
fine
·
that could have forced
me
to
As a'result ofari unforturihie
,
judge had a hi~tory of leprosy
publication is much more mun-
make such a difficult decision as
law-suit;
I
have beeri forced to
in his family
and
he foun<ime
.
dane than the ~ought of a sub-
to step down
as
a
Circle editor.
resign as Editor,;,in
':.
Chief of
The
guilty
oflibel, demanding that
I
culture oflepers demand
_
ing re-
However, since this is my
·
final
Circle. Last semester, one of pay damages for character defa-'
·
venge
oyet
my iikening of them
semester,
ii
would be foolish to
my columns took a
:
~eliberate
matiori and resign as Editor-in-
to America's most hated car-
tum
down
such
an
and irresponsible, ~hoiat people
Chfef.
·
I
.
scrounged up the
toori
: ·
villairi.
.
In
fact,
.
I never
·
opportunit.y, .. p]us, now its tech-

with leprosy. lre<::eived
a
phone
·
m<>ney by removing
all
of the
wrote such a column. I usually
nicaily not my fault anymore
call later that
'
week from
.
"spell~check
"
features in the
choo~e only
fo
insult Marist's
.
wh~n
The Circle
.
spells every-
"Leprosiµc Citizens of America
·
computer lab and selling them
subcultures, which at least at
thing wrong.
Elian
:
Qr
.
·
.
Joseph:
A
..
iieitrllto
..
:
3bsin:dibt
,
s
.:,.
·
.
•.
·
·
·
t
·
·-
~
·

.-
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~:
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~
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~~~~{;g~~;r:r?-:'"4.~~~
~{~
~~ff;~r~:
s
;:~
,
by
BENJAMINBRENKERT
-
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<fi
:
n'afuralizatioii
'.
of.':
'
'6iiri
'
'
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;
Elian,
C'.'.'
:~
·;:
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·
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.
-
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'"2''.
?t
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:'?':':·
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'Far
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fioiii
"
iiavingJnrf
6
1>s
ia
J
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:
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·
·
2
·
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for the past few
,
.
moµths
_
Re-
tial evidence
.
of
at6m.ic
:
espio~
.
. .
.
.
publi"a
-
~s luivfspearnea~ed
,
iiiigi;
-
a
l
irf
tlie

.
has(
(
o
f
Klaus
thecausetpk~p
_
J!li!:lllJ:ioiµalez
Fuciis
; )
llis
:
··
de~ate
.
does
here inAmerica
'.
j
,EI1ari
/
«,ho'is' 'addressC:ongress in thel950's.
six years old
;
barely knows
.
the
The
-
case before us mirrors the
defiriidon,of
.
pemoc
.
nicy, Jet
..
anti~Comm).iriist
i
enti111~rits 9f
alone the speWng. Havi
_
ng
~n
.
the McCarthy
·
e:~
'.:-
Feed~ng nos~
.
.
Keep your eyes on
The Circle
this semester, we are in capable
hands under Chris and Jaime
.
Perhaps it takes two people to
replace a leader of my caliber ... or
perhaps they figured they could
blame everything that goes
wrong on each other. Either
way, it's sure to
.
be a good last
semester for
.
the graduating se-
niors (we do graduate eventu-
ally, right?)
,
and for everyone
else, I have but one word of ad-
vice: avoid the lepers.
Patrick Whittle lost his title as
Editor-in-Chief ofThe Circle af-
ter a viol!;!nt coup led by Chris
Grogan and Jaime Tomeo gave
him no choice but to flee for his
life. While on the run, he was
offered an internship at The
Nation
.
He now spends his days
sitting on park benches talk-
ing to pigeons and other
marginalized wildlife
.
rescued
.
···
·
···
··
'
·
·
·
· ·
.
·
·
. · ·
ta}g
iC
·
from
.
a
i
cla
i
ms of
.
tragic jour-
1
the
.
terrors
ney,which
°Castro's
·
left
·
his
go
.
vern-
Moth
.
er
ment
'.
im-
dead
·
.
·
off
p
I
o r
e
s ;
:
;:~
;
i~
~~~
'
~:i~
'i
t
i!J?:l.
ll¥
the shoi:es
politiciaiis
·
~~~
~
.
~
El
fan
'
'
<
is
foediah
~
~e
.
.
f~rced
i
to
d e n
i
'f
.
ct
·
Arn
_
erica
hete
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ou
ri
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.ins~i;;,
:
coi
·:
die
·
,
lrt.ith.
,
America according to the
willo
L
"
.WliileCoinmunisni and Castro's
his
,
tela.ti~~s
/
While
hi
{
Gdfua
:
;,
,
\
:
go
'
vemmentrtiay
be
the
iintith-
mothers
,
tr.tv
,
~rs¢
~
A.nleri
_
ca
in
a
.
. :
esisJo America's way, the right
·
.
.
politic~Jycllargedeshipadede
~
·
fo
~
Eliari
rests

in
.
his
.
·
Father's
· mandirig
~
the
.:.
boys
,
return,
,
his
:
wishes.
.
.
.
.
Fatherwai~
:
patiently
in
Cuba,
· .
.
·•
other proposa1s
iiichide
the
Many
§.E_e<:Ul~~
~~ou~!1i~
:
P~Y:::
:
:
:
Jo~cf:J:W8fcition ofElian's fam-
chological a.ffeci$
_
Elfat1 maybe
./
ily
frotµ Cuba to the Miami area
·
.
enduring;
~
'
-
In
'
fac
f'
some
h
a
ve
-
'
where
'
the boy currently
resi<i~~
postulated
_,
tha
_
t~
.
return to his
·
Th
_
ough a tragic case, compr:o-
riative land
;
Ci.Iba, would1eave

··
mises such
·
as
that one are un-
·
him, for Jack ·of'.:{better
:
term
-.
realistic.
In
·
short, who would
"shell
f
shB¢ked
:·~
.Th~
'
de~~te
.
·.
pay for Elian'.s
family to
s~t:tle
- over
ltjs)-e
_
tµ~J~
C1:1ba h?.Si
.
9.,
.
iJ!l~Jh~j~ new llqrne?\Vhile
iµe
·
spired
/
a
'
J\.v¢nty
:
J::irst
.
,
Cen,lllry
·
.
Cuban population in Miami
·
ce1:;
attack onCommunism
/
·
· : ,,
'
.>>
-

ebrates ih¢i
{
victory in Family ·

·
·
.
WhileCoininu.rusm
:
has pra~.,
Goui~payerdoUarsare~J!t
.
. ticallY.,
.
beeriJi~ited'io
~
geo;.
0
on appeals m11de by the INS
to
graphical isolation (te; Cuba dismisS the lo~er courts deci-
and Chiria);Ainerica
·
has
:
de
.:
:
·
sion
>
Moreover, who wouldp.'t
mocratized the entire world
:
The
want their taxpayer
.
money
to
be
panic amongst
certain
pµblic
·
of
:
·.
spent
on
a
meeting between At-
ficials causes one to note the tomey
.
General Janet Reno
.
and
absurdity of recent anti-C~tro Elian's Grandmothers? The ab-
rallies.
The
Presidential debates
surdity of this
.
case is increas-
are
filled with
questions pertain
-
·
ingly glorified
as
Cuban defec-
ing to Cuba and the deportation
tors, who have a personal anti-
the same
·
dumbfounded
·
issue
Joseph McCarthy brought to or
...
please se~
ELIAN,
pg
.
JO .
..
.
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FEBRUARY 3,
·
2000
PAGEl0
.
The views expressed 011 these
pages
are not necessarily those of
The Circle
The Spindoctor battles theeleiµeq~
by
DOUGLASP. GUARINO
Assistant Managing Editor
Ah,
winter
at Marist.
·
Isn't it
just beautiful? The entire cam-
pus coated by a blanket of
white, pine trees decorated with
Mother Nature's sparkling tin-
.
sel, Old Townhouse residents
sliding down a hill on mattress
at breakneck speeds, Gartland
residents tumbling down the
·
same hill on a garbage can lid.
No matter how you look at it,
there really just isn
'
t anything
more breathtaking than the maj-
esty of the Hudson Valley after
asriowfall.
.
until the const~uction of the
impos
.
sible ~~c~~si
.
:app
_
roxi-
new Fontaine building is
.
com-
mately
,
f9ur
.
tons
.
of tigl:!tly
plete. ½egen
"
cfhas
'.
it
.
thafflyers
·
!
packed ~nowbas beenplo~ed
'
warriing students of impendi
.
ng
into your re
.
ar blilllper,
,
a.II but
·
fines, were placed on au cars in
burying the
.
:
trunk of
•.
your
:
~ar.
the lot some time ago
.
Myst~ri-
(What
tll~
puq,ose:0,fpl~
.
\1/ing
oiisly, nobody bas actually ~~er
th~ parkiµg,l9tsis if
.
tll~
,.
cars in
seen one
'of
these)lyerf
.
Per~
them are unable
.
to leave
,
their
'
haps they were all
,
smitched
,
up

spots is
,
qllit~
:
beyond
.
m~
\
But
arid eaten by the
.
abominable
·
then
.
agaiil
;
rm
just
c!
wdterJ
:
snow tponst~r
in
the ITlid~~e.pf
,Yourj~µmey
,
co!l:clude~~h.eil
th~ 9~ght?
l'.11
leaye
.
tllat f?Yo~r
.
you finally return, !qyour
;
dorrn
,
O\Yili
.
magiriati<Jn
.
.
_
.
'.
.
..
·,
i'.~
Herey,:n1:finp
_
apHeofsaKI_a,rge
·
the charge on
:
t~i\
.
~~
.
c~nd
·
e,no
,
~gllJc( di~
.
s9ly~
.
~
;
sigajficaµt
·
ticket reads, "failµi:e
;
t6
par~
iI1
a ·
portioI1 <>f
tlle
polai;i~e
,
cap,,<>!)
marked space." This
might
seim
y()ur
,
stoop
'
where
·
a
:
~Q~t~I1g
'.
of
rather
'
strange considering tllat
ankle
.
deep snow used
'.
to be
.
the lines desigriati11g the park-
·
You quickly learn that this pile
.
ing spaces are not even visible
of salt is much more
.
slick than
since they are
.
buried under
any
sheet ofice could
.
ever be
,
.
nearly
,
a f()ot
·
of snow. Appar-
as you tumble
.
down th\! steps
And then you go to your car ..
.
Now everybody residing in the
North has to deal with the an-
noying task of removing snow
and ice from one's prospective
vehicle the morning after a
snowstonn. Whether your cho-
sen method of per
s
onal trans-
portation be a car, truck, SUV
(yuck), golf cart, or bicycle, it's
just something you have to do.
No big deal, ifs just a simple fact
oflife. Right?
:
ently, th.e security guard that is-
backward and
,
Iand on
the
solid
sued this ticket used
·
his infra'-
.
.
concrete that. was once
.
cush-
red, snow penetrating goggles
ioned by that beautiful white
to see
the
lines that your naked
blanket
I
mentioned earlier, This
·
eye could not,
.
and thus de-
salt
will
become a constant re-
dared you
.
a threat to c~pus
minder of your shortcomings, as
safety
.
·
(And you thought all
it
will
coat your living room car-
that extra
,
tuition money went
pet for weeks to come. Pretzels
'
photo court
es
y Modclc Clarke
toward the technology in the
anyone?
new library.)
....
·
where you should be open to
ti
,
ckets frozen to your wind-
Orice youare done shouting
Doug Guarino, a
,
k.ti
.
The
new and .greater chaHenges.
shield.
obscenities over the two hefty
Spindoctor, is
The Circle's
As-
.
Remind yourself of this, when
The first of these tickets is
for
·
fines
.
you no,v have to pay, you
sistant Managing
·
Editor. A
after ~dging furough the snow


(drum roll please) "parking in a
realize that the
:
ftin
has yet to
Junior fromEasi Islip
,
NY,
he is
to
'
get to your
car (
which for the
,
·
restricted.
area.'}
<
This
'
despite
.
·
·
begiri;Iorhow
;
y<>iiintist
fig~re
.
'a
Cimzmzinication/Journalism
.
R,righL
.
That is, of course, except if
you are at Marist, where it seems
even
the
simplest of tasks can.:
not be simple
>
But after
all this
·
is college and college is a plate
~ii~d
:
i~
:
;;{~~tri~m~Wf:~
.
~;:?Z~
·
.
·

mi~ifit,1i1
~
~;i{J}i
{,
f;¥,
)
f,~
i
i~~t9~\~
t~
&~
'•.·
·
;:1::c;i!~
-
~
.
;~~
0
{
~
t
-.fr
1
.
~~/cal
find
'
not one,
'
but two
'
parking
gally
"·'
paik
.'
h1
'.
:
the
'
Comrribn
s-
fo
t
.
;

uis
lc
li
a
s
'
6een
'
rend
ere
d
virtu
J
iiiy
'
Marist Brothers_oj

the
.··
St1foBlS
The Marist
·
St
Marcel
·
'
,
Peters
S
members.
We weti
make
·
Go
number a
.
7 4
.
countries.
.
.

.
:
.
In this
country
·
the
,
,
New
Jersey, Mas$achusetts,
West Virginia, Louisiana,
New
For more
_
information
please
conti
Bro.
John
cherry
F.M.S.
·
21-28
35 Street
Astoria,
NY,
1
_
1105
(718) 204-0506
.
.

~
Education
o
·
We art
-
oun
.
ded

.
.
·
by
·
.
..
int in
;
~
st
ted
apostoli
ions
.
in
,
.
.
.
k
in
·
New
i
Yor
:1
.
I
·~
. .
eorgia,
Texas,
nd
.
California.
.
"A
heart
that
knows no
bouncls."
-----------------------
Fill
tis •
·
.
re!
.
·
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~
·
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·
··
i
Nll
.
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·
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· ·•.
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...
.
.
.
Th~
.
Cir¢{e
i
i§Qffe.png
:
Maii$t
:
¼ollege
.
·
.
students
:
.
a
:
ttm,qu~f
qru.tn
,
tp
,
.
ijpeW
.
;
any
·
·
ideas
••
(hroughouf
·
c~n;ipus.
-:
·

.
.
c1a
:
~sJµed
·
·
a9
:
·
'.
sp
_
a~¢
·.•
wi11
be
·.
provided
:
.
.
for
..
·
.
anyohe
crazy
eµoughJg
'
writ¢.
2S
.:.
wor,g~.or
less
:
and sencLthem
'
to
·
MSc
·
10130
c/o
:
''Classified,'
.
'
.
or ifyou
're
_
irito
c
_
on-
vepiehce,
·
em~il
,
them
to
:
.
HZA
'
L.
Write
"Classified"
for t~e subject of
the
email~
·
·
.
.
ELIAN:
";
.. cont'dfrompg. 9-
·
Castro agenda, capture the
American Press
.
Elian's short-
stay in America
·
hasembittered
Fidel Castro and
·
intensified
anti-American sentiments felt
throughout Cuba.
.
. This
.
Modem
day
attack on
·
communism parallels the feeble-
mindedness of the 1950's cam-
paign against Communism. If
,
you don't think so watch the
presidential debates or anti-
Communist
raUies and
agendas
!31cing America by storm. The
·
only person who should be
tak-
.
ing his
son to school every
morning is his Father.
In
refus-
ing his Father the right to cus-
tody
,
Elian
's Father
is denied
the
right to parenthood.
.
'
i'
I
I










































by
ADAM KOWALSKI
Rockers." Within the first few
about almost anything. The
Staff Writer
.
tracks it is very easy ro see that
songs seemto be about the last
In
the
-
fate 80's, in San Fran-

Jesse's musical tastes have not
10
.
years of sitting back in his
.
ciSCO;
a ·group of friends built
changed in the least over the last
self imposed exile. Many of the
from the-grourid up
··
om(of the
_
ter. years~ In_ fact this album
·
songs
are
about loneliness, but
-mostinfluential punk/ska bands
sounds so much like
an
Op Ivy
the main theme of the album is
of all time. J'hey quickly
rose
to
album that most people would
clearly love. There
are
very per-
.
the top of the
Ba.y
Area scene
·
think it was the same band.
sonal songs of love with lines
and stai;tecito spread
~<::E<?SS
tpe
Jesse now plays guitar
as
well
.
like "souls like ours must touch
nation. Putting together
:
a
few
as doing vocal~ and he ltas
to
be free" from "Deep Spring"
7''
record~
·
Op~ration
'
Ivy
re.:
-
-
-
teamed
-
upw
_
ith Mass
-
Giorgini
·
and "you're like
a:
dream come
· corded an album
.
with
Lookout
·
_
·
on Bass and Dan Lumley on
true to me girl
,
trouble gonna
Rec6r4s
>
Th~
-
night that
the
al-
.
Drums to create a CD that is not
be alright''
from
a "Place Where
bum
:
was released they
.
played

-
a
great departurefroni
Op/vy but
we can Stay."
.
to a sold but crowd -at
Gilman
$tiU
comes across as incredibly
This is the album that
Op Ivy
Street; in Berkley, California:
new andfresh.
_
_
·
fans have been
·
waiting for and
ThefoUowing day theywere no
The album opens with
a
quick
it is clearly worth the wait. Even
longer a band. ~ad singer Jesse
ska track called
~
•ctassics of if you were not a fan of
Opera-
Michaels quifdue to personal
Love"which pours through a list
·
tion Ivy, this album is extremely
problems he

had
.
dealing with
of influences
from
Bila
catchy and is one of the best
the barids meteoric rise.
Fitzgerald to TheClash'. The
albums that I have heard in a
:
·
.
.-
While his follo\V
Op Ivy
.
album takes off from there mix-
.
long time. Hopefully
Common
bap:driiates
.-
_
Tim -
-
''Lint"
ing strong rock tracks like "Cast-
Rider
will
be around for a lot
Armstrong and Matt Freeman
aways"
-
with powerful rock
longer than
Operation Ivy was
weni'on to
form
oni
of
the best
·
tracks like "Heatseekers
"
and
and hopefully Jesse Michaels
punk
bands
of
the 90's
inkan-
great
.
punk songs like
.
'
-
'On
will
have the chance to experi-
cid, Jesse pulleda d
_
isappearing
·
Broadway."
Com
_
mon Rider ence touring in the scene that
act, variishing off the face of the
combines punk and ska in a way
he helped to create with his
Earth

until now
.
,
·
.
thafhas not been heard for a
work ten years ago. Hopefully
Late.Jastyear heform~d
a
new
long time, yet still sounds lnven-
the chorus in "Heatseekers" is
band called
Common Rider and
.
tive~
true, "We're gonna last for-
putoufa COon
l'anic
Button
-
.
Jesse shows that he still has
ever
.
"
Records called "Last Wave
the ability to right great lyrics
Brand-Ultraspankin'
.
New
~
\:i

:
:. ,
" ,
·
~
\
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.
.
-''\.
.
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~
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-
,
·
,
-
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-
~
~-
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_
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~
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,
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_
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-;.:
_
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;
-
'
.
-
by
MARKDiCCIANNh
Staff
Writer
·
PAGE 11
_
Rocker's Not the First
ments? Undoubtedly. Should
byCHRISKNUDTSEN
she have been penalized for
A&E Editor
them? No. So why should one
By now we've all heard case be harped on repeatedly
·
eriough about John Rocker's and the other ignored? The an-
infamous comments that bashed swer is because we live in a so-
on New York. Well, there's
al-
ciety full of double standards
.
ways room for one more voice. and
a
growing wave of PC righ-
With comments clearly showing teousness that is threatening
·
to
a racist mindset, Rocker man-
strangle us.
aged to infuriate thousands,
.
· Celebrities are people too and
leaving nobody at his side. He incidents such as these reflect
was quoted from Sports Illus-
similar feelings held by thou-
trated, saying, "Imagine having sands of others. Some whites
to take the number
7
train to the hate blacks, some blacks hate
ballpark like you' re riding whites, etc. Neither of the two
through Beirut next to some kid celebrities were very intelligent
with purple hair, next to some with what they said. Nor were
queer with AIDS, right next to they the only ones who believed
some dude who just got out of in those ideas. Rather than the
jail for the fourth time, right next blowing up the incident, we
to some
20 year old morn with 4 should be more concerned with
kids." Not even his own team what it means in everyday life
.
supported him after he referred There are hate crimes, hate
to one of his teammates as a "fat groups, hate, hate, and more
monkey."
·
Even Twisted Sister hate. That poses a more seri-
attempted to cut all ties with the ous threat to our society than a
Braves, asking that their song few bigoted words from celebri-
"I Wanna Rock" never again be ties.
used for Rocker's entrance.
I'm not saying that the com-
Following the initial uproar he merits uttered by these two
was forced to get a psychiatric should be ignored or callously
examination. Obviously some-
blown off. They were brought
one missed the point. There's out
in the open which showed
no need for an examination in a the Ameri
_
can people ~at every-
cas6
like
this
'.
There
·
;s
·
no ~ys
·
-
one,
,
including celebrities
,
-
are
tery as to
·
why he said the things rarely as kind and good wiUed
he did, they were a product of as we would like to believe. The
his own racist beliefs. Were simple fact is that people are
they ignorant? Of course
.
Were imperfect and frequently igno-
th~y ridiculous? Yes. Should rant. No measure of politically
he be forced out of baseball for correct hysteria will ever erase
them? No.
the traces of racism and hatred
Little was said or done when in people
.
If anyone thinks that
Lauryn Hill madehercohtrover-
a psychiatric examination and
sial remarks
,
''I'd rather my chil-
counseling is
·
going to change
.
dren starve than have white
·
Rocker; they are sorely mis-


rre~eritly
had¢¢ pleasure
·
of
interviewing"
the
voc
-
alist and
programmer
of
the riew indus-
trial/metal band,
Ultraspank via
·
e-mail.
i
.
got: a chance
_
to firid
out what was going oh with the
band lately
,
.
.
,
.
The
California based band,
Ultrifspank,fele~sed their first
-self~titled album in 1998
,
There
first hit single was
"5",
a song
about how quic!cly
'
life
~
c
·
~n
change
in five minutes
·.
9r five
--
secmi<Js.
,.
You
Illay
remember
.
• people buy my music
.
" Similar taken. Maybe it is time to look
_
t<> the Rocker incident, an apol-
at
·
ourselves instead of others
·_
ogy
_
was i~sued shortly after in order to stop some of the
with Hill sayirig that
.
the com~ problems that are eating away
-
xnents were Out of context. But at our country .
.
In the words of
is
'
this commentJUSt ~s ignorant Optimus Prime, "
.
.. till all are
and abimrd
.
as Rocker
'
s state-
one." 'Nuffsaid.
Ulfraspank standi~g
pretty.
Ultraspankfroni Ozifest
~
98
;
iri
-
sound has developed.
,
Iio~ever,
which thyy playeq on
~e
_
sec-
_
he alsg told m€! that they :are still
ond
stage
and were
abJe
to
-
the same
V!traspank.
Plus, they
makea:name for them selves·at
--
·
also got'a n~w drummer named
this festival.
,
.
·
_
-
- -- ·
-
-
James who added
'
a jazz
.
feel
to
>
At.
thiftime;
.
uiiraspdnk is
..
the heavy souhds
·
of
the
band.
n
'
ow
_
recording a new alb~m.
He also felt that they
are
allbet-
The
'
albmfr has
·
ho mime
·
at this
ter
'
players and songwriters over-
time bufsorne track names are
alt
·
·
_
·
·
_
''Push'', "Feed'';
.
"Click", "Jack-
-
When I asked Pete about new
ass'
?;
-
"Thanks'\ and others.
bands that he is interested
·
in
~
he
The albuin is
.
scheduled 'ror"re-
told me that he really likes
Slip-
lease in lateApril.
knot, the custom n:iask wearing
·
Pete, the vocalist, told me that
metal band with
_
nine members,
the band has learned a lot since
since he was able to learn a lot
the first album and that their
from them. He also .liked how
they are keeping the hard rock
scene new, not being part of the
"recycled crap'' out there.
(Hinmm, I worider ifhe was re-
.
ferring
to
famous
i
plagi
_
arists
and
sell-outs
Limp
Bizkit?)
·
_
Hopef'.ully,
Ultraspankwill be
playing in Poughkeepsie dur-
ing thei
_
r up-corning tour, pos-
sibly at
The Chance. Ifyoµ get
tosee them, buy Pete an ice
cold beer, but no hard stuff s
i
nce
that gets him in trouble.
If
you
are interested in checking out
Ultraspank on
:..
line then go to
WWW.ULTRASPANK
.
COM.
In
my cd player: Anti~Heros "That's Right"
·
The Bruisers "Cruisin for a Bruisin
"

























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THE.CIRCLE
FEBRUARY 3, 2000
.•Art,
,
&:Eot1P1ail11HIDI
'
PAGE12
en ..
fV.
~i'rh
At\ik~ 11'heAl\p~en .
by
l\UKETHOMPSON
Staff Writer
For my first column of the new
semester, new year, and .new
millenium, I thought that
it
mi~t
be nice to give a sort of mid-
season recap ofthe six broad-
cast networks, and where they
stand so far in the 1999-2000
season. Some networks have
had great years (ABC, UPN)
while others have had not-so-
great years (NBC, FOX). So,
without further adieu, here is my
quick midseason analysis. The
analysis also includes a grade, ·
which is based on the network's
overall success (or failure) so far
this season:
ABC
sorry :s.tate of affairs the pa~t
few years, this would be quite
the coup for them. GRADE: A~
CBS
It's easy to fincl fault with Cl:3S
(it's easy, 'mkay).-After all, it's
the broadcast network with the.
oldest core audience, a'dubious
honor ihat has earned the net-
workthe nickname of GBS
(the
Geriatric Broadcasting$ystem)
in some industry circles. ~01t1e
of its dramas, such as
Diagnd-
s is Murder, Walker, Te.xas
Ranger·
and
Martial
Law
are
routinely made fun of within the
entertainment industry. How-
ever, the simple fact is that the
network has made some impres-
sive strides so far this season.
Its audience, while still th-e old-
Six words define ABC's sue-
est by far, has actually gotten a
cess this year:
Who Wants to be
little younger. The network's
a Millionaire.
This little game
Monday night comedy block,
show has proven to be big news
anchored by the Top 20 hit
Ev~
indeed. The show was a big hit
erybody Lov.e~ Raymond,
cori-:-
last August and its run this past
tinues to improve in the ratings,
November was spectacular. The
A
surprise. hlt for the network
ratings have gotten even better
has been
Judging Amy;Which
since ABC made the show a
is set in Hartford, CT. (Fellow
regular series in January. It is
Nutmeggers, s·alute!) The show
difficult to exaggerate how huge
routinely places in the Top 30,
Millionaire
has b~en to· ABC.
despite increased competition
The network had really not been .in its timeslot from
NYPD Blue
doing well in the ratings for the
over on ABC. The hever-say:-
past few years. Its veteran
dieJAGisstillaTop30hit,and
shows were just getting older
the new drama
Family
Law
is
and its new shows were not . also doing well. Of course, CBS
catching on.
It was in danger of still has its problems, aside fro,m
losing its third-place standing in
those I mentioned earlier. lis
the ratings to FOX, which had
Who.Wants tobe a Millionaire
never happened b~for~. Along
rip-off,.
Winning Lines,
is,\vi11c-
came_Millionaire
and suddenly . ning few fans, and
its
new
en.ti-
the- situation changed: The
caBy--.i.ccl~imed drama;
/{ow
show is a virtual guarantee to ·
and Again,
is starting to flolln:-
come in first in the ratings in just . der: in the Tatings. Also;\Y9!1
abo,ut any timeslot it airs
in.
haveto\vonderiftherecenfac:.
However, the
.
network still has
quisitio11 of_CBS by Yiacom will
ABC,- and 'ev{!n. FOX: .Even
NBC's. "Must-~ee!'· Thursday
sitcom block has been dropping
in the ratings. To top it all off,
NBC, which prides itself on the
youth of its audience, has seen
its core audience actually gera
_ few years older this season. So,
after all this, what does the Pea-
cock network have to crow
about.? Well,
if
you get pasuhe
· network's sorry state of sitcom -
affairs, things aren't all that bad. .
ER-is
still the highest.:.rated
drama or sitcom on television,
and
lLiw &
Otder
is still pulling
in good· ratings. Also, NB Cs ·
rookie dramas, such as
Law
&
Order: Special Victims Unit
and
The West Wing,
have been sue.,.
_cessful in the ratings. In my
opinion, this season has been a
wake-up call for .the execs at
NBC. For the past few years,
they've been churning out me-
diocre sitcoms, assuming we'll
watch. Well, we've shown theni
we won't. Maybe this will con-
vince ~BC 'to!iIDprove their.
sitcom
1
proqu~t? :_0_ne _c_aji:only
hope.-GRADE:
C-- .·.
ABC's biggest hit of the season.
Photo counesy www.ultraspank.com
of UPN) recently bought CBS.
acted, melodramatic teen angst
Since FCC standardsstate ~at
(Dawso,n 's_,, ,Creek). _
Yet,
FOX
· a conip~ny·. c~°'f
t
~,i.f
~7'YA;
i,
~~~gf!X•
·!111
the~e shows hav~
broadcast;networks,•Yiacom .
,
pmven. to.be ratmgs ,successes
had conteipplated
shutting .
this season,with
:
Buffi, and
An-
down UPN," since it has consis--
gel
leading the pack. Of course, ·
.. _tently struggled in the ratings
these shows'will most likely
. FOX::has"not h;d ·a grea(sea-. anyway. Now · th·ar:.
WWF' ..
burn out eventually, but for n<>w
son: Most of the network's.new
·
Smackdown/"
has proven·so
they;re}tits, and they've helped· ·
Sh()WS
have alre.ady :t,eerlcan- ' successful,JJPN.has,beengiyen
malceWB a success. As long as
celled
(Ryan Caulfield,.llar_sh
an. ext~nded Jife. But"cion'f go
they take the attention off of the
ReallJl~Action)
or will be gone
runningto W-al~Ivfarttci btiy that
WB
sitcoms, I can't complain
in
a few weeks_(Tzme
of
your Life,. ·
UPN' T:'shirt quite so fast
WJYF
-too . much. From• yeterans • like
<Jet Real).
Itslong,-runninghit,
.S.ma..ckdo._"?~1
~nd
s,~r.r~e,t The Steye. He;rvey Show
to
dramas, ..
Beverly/fills, -90~ 10 .. '.: fo1qg~ran~
st1Il,.t!te C>nlY:. s1.1.c,
ne\\'~r. shows }!k,e the. woeftllly
and
Party of Fivf
ha,ve· floun- • _ cessfu,L~hows, on. the_ n~nvo!k,
u~fu~ny
.
Zoe, it s. the sam.~ old
dered jn the·ratings
_
and have
so the
_
. .opti()n f~lllains .. that fh1?g
foi;
WB
sitcoms. The less
' announced they'ffbe calling it Yi,aCOJAil1ay _mov
_
e one, <>r.both,
wntten about them, the better.
qufts. at the end ~f the season.
Sh()\\is.t<>,
C:BS; and
si111ply
do
GRADE: C+ · ·
And there yoµ bf1Ve it,
InY.
fel-
· issues with some of its regular_ lead. to the type of
shakeups
series. Aside from
Millionaire,
that
·
have· been going 011' at ·-
the only ABC show thatregu~ .ABC, whichimeritionedearlier.
lady ranks iri the Top 20 shows
What does the_futureJ1old/or
of the week is
NYPD Blue.
CBS?There'sonlyonethi~gto
Sports Night,
a favorite of crit-
say: stay tuned. GRADE: C+
Justabout~eonlycomfortFOX _ a\VlJ.~_withQI>~: qf~our.se,jf
has is .that
-The Sinipsons.
and
that
.
were to happen, would any-
Ally McBeal
continue- to do
body really care? GRADE:
B
greaUn · the ratings, and that
That '70s Show
is bec:oming a
WB
modest hit. Oh, that and a little
show called
Malcolm
fn
the
Middle.This
clever show,
which.debuted in January, .has
done smashing business.in the
ratings, and may be FOX's big-
gest ,live-action comedy. hit
It'stoq bad
ABC
is'alreadyus:.
ing those· letters, because
WB
could sure put them tQ us·e: the
Angst Broadcasting Company:.
Yes, teen angst is all around· on
WB
this seasQn, from ali~q teen
angst.
(Roswell)
to supernatu-
ral. teen angst
(Charmed)
to
v~pire teeri angst -
(Buffy. the
Vampire Slayer, Angel)
to over-
. h>
_
Vl
Marist boys and girls. My
thoughts on where the networks
stand .so
far
this season. Now,
my grades
are
not
final,
The Feb-
· ruaiy
sweeps, where the.net,.
'Yorks ttof out their big-:-rati~gs
guns, .are upo11;u.(1'he net-
- works still hav~ plenty
of
time
to improve; This'has
been
a very
ics (including me) still isn't do-
ing well in
~e
rating~;
And
the
future~ of the· successful
Spin
City
is still very much up'in the
air. Michael J. Fox, who h~s
Parkinson's disease, has an-
nounced he'll be leaving the
show at the end of the year.
While it's true that
Spin City
is
an ensemble show, it's almost as
difficult to imagine a Fox-less
Spin City
as it is -to imagine a
Ted Danson-less
Cheers.
Still,
the alphabet network has a lot
to cheer about. ABC had the
-Super Bowl this year, which is
· always ratings gold, and they
have the Oscars in March, which
is also sure to do great. Based
on
Who Wants to be a Million-
aire,
the Super Bowl, and the
Oscars, ihe buzz is that ABC
might actually win the
1999-2000
ratings race. Considering their
NBC
.
.
NBC has seen their fortunes re-
ally drop this season. The net-
work started the season in a bit
of controversy, having uncer-c
emoniously cancelled critical
darlings
NewsRadio
and
Homi-
cide: life on the Street
late last
spring. It didn't help
matters
any
when
The Mike O 'Malley Show
and
Cold Feet,
the two shows
which replaced
NewsRadio
and
Homicide,
respectively, on the
schedule, promptly tanked in
the ratings and became two of
the first casualties of the 1999-
2000
season.
From
there things
kept on getting worse for NBC.
Its once-strong Tuesday night
sitcom 1ineup has performed
consistently worse in the rat-
ings, regularly losing to CBS,
_ since
Jn Living Colo~.
If
Malcolm in the.Middle
proves
to be a long-standing hit, FOX's
misfortunes during the 1999-
2000. season, while still pretty
bad, may not be as bad as ex-
pected.
GRADE:
C
UPN
Like
ABC,
UPN's phenomenal
success this season can be at-
tributed to a single show:
WWF
Smackdown!
The show is by
far the biggest hit UPN has ever
had in all of its five years of ex-
istence, especially·. with the
young adult audience. It
wouldn't be a big stretch to say
that
WWF Smackdown!
has
saved UPN. As mentioned
ear-
lier, Viacom (the
parent
company
_ interesting TV se~on;.
~o
pick
up that remote control, grab a ·
box of Junior Mints, and catch
soine of what the tietworkshave
tooffer. .
.
..
-
.
.
,















































































·
TH£
.
CIRCLE
.
·
-
:
Arts~fntentainment
PAGE 13
·
~ru;rey
_
~
Kaufman on Man on the Moon
·.:
.··
byEDw,n,LIAMSID
Carrey provides an almost
--
._
SiajfWriter
frightening depiction of
Last year Jim Carrey decided Kaufman in this movie, so much
to expand his horizons a bit as so that its hard to believe that
hetook a dive into the dramatic it's not Kaufman up on the
waters of Hollywood in The screen. Like most Carrey flicks,
Truman Show. The movie won thereisanampleamountofcom-
over many critics and did well at edy, but that is mainly due to
the box office, though not quite Kaufman's nature and how
as
well as his comedy blockbust- much of his life dealt with the
erslike Ace Ventura Pet Detec- comedy industry. The film gets
tive. Carrey won a Golden Globe off to an impressive start as it
Award for "Best Actor in a
.
boasts one of the most unique
Dranta'' for The Truman Show, opening sequences in recent
but the Academy didn't deem memory. Carrey, portraying
him worthy of an Oscar.
·
Carrey Latka from Taxi, appears on the
wasn't shy about voicing his dis- screen and explains to the audi-
pleasure with the Academy's ence how the movie did not
decision, but he shook
·
off
the come out nearly
_
as
_
good as he
disappointment and went back had hoped so the entire film
·
to the grindstone to work on his was scrapped. Following this
newest film, Man on the Moon, opening mon·ologue, we ar
_
e
a biographical movie on the life treated to an early viewing of
of Andy Kaufman, and the end the closing credits. Once the
_
·
result was another masterpiece. credits conclude, Kaufman ad-
During his lifetime, Andy mit~ it was a trick to weed out
Kaufman was regarded by fans the casual viewers form the au-
.
as a comic genius and by detrac- dience, and then the real
film
tors as an out-of-control lunatic. begins.
MostoftheAmericanpublicsim-
The
film takes us through
ply didn't understand him, and many periods of his life, includ-
the numerous outrageous antics ing a short scene as·a child, his
of his later life alienated many of breakthrough into the business
those who had initially enjoyed at a small comedy club, his stint
him in the role ofLatka Gravas in on Taxi, his tenure at Saturday
the TV series Taxi. In 1982, Night Live (including his dis-
Kaufman was ousted from Sat- missal from the show), his run
urdayNight Live when a phone-
in
professional wrestling, and
in poll gave him less than a
30%
perhaps the most entertaining
fav~rable

r.ating
i -
Opinions

of aspect of his
'
life, his
alter-egci,
·
Kau
.
fman were
'
deeplydiv.idecfat T_ony
·
Clifton/
'
Through'
'
all of
the time of
his
'i
98'4
,-
deaih
:,
frtnn thesf
'
diffei-enf character~ he
lung
.
cancer
;"
·
In
·
subsequent
·
plays ahd allofthe
'
bizatre situ
~
;
-
years, as often happens
with
atforis he puts himself info, ids
performers who
.
suffer an un- amazing
how
Kaufman bhirrec;I
timely demise, his reputation has the lines between craziness and
been rehabilitated, and it's diffi- genius.
cultto.find anyone who doesn't
Another strong acting perfor-
remember him fondly.
m~nce comes from Danriy
DeVito; who plays Kaufman's
agent, George Shapiro. Shapiro
spots Kaufman at one of the lo-
cal Clubs and decides right
away that he needs to sign the
unorthodox comedian. Through
his work with Kaufman the two
become great friends and form
~
strong relationship. The in-
teresting thing here is that
De Vito received this role even
though he was a member of the
Taxi cast. Thus he was the only
member not played by himself
in the film. Courtney Love also
puts forth a respectable perfor-
mance
as
Kaufman's girlfriend,
proving to us that she may be a
better actor than musician.
Maybe she actually should quit
her day job.
The film is so strong on so
many levels.
It
is an accurate
biography, but it is done in such
a fashion that the audience is
never bored. Even though they
may know a lot about Kaufman,
they're still on the edge of their
seats. The acting is great on al1
parties, causing the audience to
be p1:1Ued in multiple directions
whenever the characters are.
But the selling point of this
movie has got to be the depic-
tion of. Kaufman
·
by Carrey,
w~ich was right on the money
as he totally lost himself in
Kaufman's character. In a re-
cent interview on VH 1, De Vito
said,
"I
thank Jim Carey very
much because
for
the time that
wefilmedthatmovie•it was as if
Andy
'
was still with us.'
c
The Academy may have
snubbed Carrey Jast year, but it
would be awfully hard for them
to do it for a second straight year
after this impressive perfor-
mance, convincing us that he's
more than just a comedian.
.
The
Gang~~AJIII~re:
Qropkick Murphys
Throw
Down at The Chance
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
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.
..
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-.
.
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:
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.
·
·
-
·
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any signs of Pat.
I
kept my eye
byMICHAELBAGNATO
>
outfor sweatet vests aiid great
.
.
. ·
op~Ed
Editpr
.
.
. .

hruE Meanwhile,
·Toinmyandthe
.
·
:
<'.
_
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. ·

t~rr{J[S
/
()Ut
Of
~0ston; wer{just
.
An
,
6fthe tiinJ,
·1
w
·
alk
'.
fu-biiricl .
·
.
pegihhipg their se
_
t
.
They
_
·
w_ere
thiril4ngJ,i1r1i_Go4's
giftJq
the
d~cent; but
the
only
thing
fre-
·
w,<?,r}d:
.PW
-
~otft~~?~{~k~_w\<:t
inembei: about theni was the
·
m~~meki
_
ngof.opmionechtors
covers
.
they did of "Pretty Va-
o(i
,
9hopl n~\Yspapers ofsom.e-
cant" Ein_d some
Misfitssoni
J
thing?
'
Betause it
sure
:
seems
f~und Pai;Chris and company,
like
that to me
"
sonietiiri~s; I
am
and
'
watched as Pat was eag~rly
so
'.
~9n_~in~ed the whole
_
»7orl
_
~
_
_
taken
,
advantage of by
a:
i
7
~
wa_sjtistc~y' about me and niy
?
year
.:old
girl.
-
.
stupid-Iittle~coiumn in The-stu-
Next up was
Toe to Toe,
a
pid~little-Circle.
.
.
group out of Sidney, Australia.
H,i
-. _
:
·..
-
.
.,
__
_
.
. _
_
.
Truetohisillustriousnickname,
J
sure l~amed my lesson at
.
the
Senior Seim Dougherty, a.k.a.
The
'
Chance theater
for
the
''Spopky," mysteriously ap-
D.ropkick Murphys show on
the
peared during the Aussie act's
22ncl,
_
I announced my presence
set, making the total number of
to the lady at the ticket window,
Marist students I spotted at the
who will remain anonymous.
:
.
. -
showa·modest seven. Spooky
·
.
.. I'.m Mike Bagnato, Opinion
also came armed with a slew of
Editor for The Circle: th~
_
student
·
critici
,
s~s a
_
bout the band.
,
.-
-
newspaperofMaristCollege. I
"They were good, but a little
believe you willJin_d my name
too much metal for my taste,"
on your list of guests." She
said Dougherty. "I did kind of
didn'.t: According to her, two
-
dig the whole Australian-accent
people were accounted
_
for on
thing, though."
The Circle guest list: A&E Edi-
Toe
to
Toe
had
·
a distinctly
t~:>r Chris Knudsten and some
speed metal/hardcore blend go-
guy named Patrick Whittle.
_
ing on. The gui
_
tarwork was fast
.
After enduring the onslaught
and original; and the start/stop
·
to my self~image back at the
style of drumming provided
ticket window, I made an attempt
enough time changes to keep it
to look around the theater for
interesting. Halfway through
the
-
set, the singer
asked
the
audience, "Anybody know
anything about bed
·
karate?'!,
Silence.
.
.
-
"OK,
I'll
-
tell y'all
about that later." He
_
never did:
Bugger!
.
Dropkick Murphys
·
finally
made their appearance follow-
in
'
g a slightly harrowing bag-
pipe performance of ''Cadence
to Arms." This was easily for-
gotten as they energetically
jumped into
·
''Do or Die," the
title track off their
first
album.
The last t1me I saw
Dropkicks
was St. Patty's l)ay last year,
and
if
anything has changed at
all about them, they've defi-
nitely gotten a much bigger au-
dience. It probably has a lot to
do with the fact that
The
Chance
has about as much
standing area as mydonn room,
but people were standing on
top of each other as everyone
and their mother crowded into
the pit. A fat kid squealed,
"Hey, who pinched my ass?!"
The set list mainly featured
songs from the most recent al-
bum, "The Gang's All Here."
The riewer album features the
addition of a ne~ singer, Al Barr,
after Mike McColgan left the
band. Barr's scratchy throating
provides "Gang's
...
" with a
Al Barr raises a call to arms.
harder edge than McColgan's
more soulful, blue-collar croon-
ing off earlier releases.
In
this
respect, the newer release
.
has
received criticism as too much of
a detachment from the band's
earlier sound from the likes of
Junior "Bad-Boy" Matt Daigle.
However, Barr's voice definitely
came through on such older cuts
as, "Memories Remain," "Far
Away Coast," and "Finnegan's
Wake.'
1
Dropkick Murplzys'
music can~
not easily be categorized into any
strictly established style, but
their blend seems to come mainly
from Irish folk, punk, and rock
music influences. The sound is
Photo councsy Skully
@
www.unitedandstrong.com
a driving effort to get as many
chord progressions into one
song. The lyrics are unabash-
edly emotional, often centering
on the band's dedication to a
sense of urgency and engage-
ment with life.
The band encored with "Road
to the Righteous" and invited
the entire crowd onstage for
"Skinhead on the MBTA" com-
plete with an interlude of
AC/
DC's
"TNT." The early show
ended at ten o'clock in order to
allow
The Chance
to transform
into raverland. I walked outside
past ticket window lady; my
sweat-soaked body froze in a
matter of seconds. Cool, ouch.
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·~i
.:
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i
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t
f
i.'
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·
,
THE
,
CIRCLE
FEBRUARY 3, 2000
SRortS
Two
.
key players·outOf actionfc,r111enJs)iOt)ftS
-
.
.
.
. .
.
·..
.
,

.
.
·
.
.
-
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'
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'
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_.
__
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·
by
CLAYTQN NORRIS
·
.
StiljfWriter
.
.
Bad news has
.
become com-
monplace for the Marist men's
basketball team laiely, and there
are no signs of that changing.
In addition to losing forward
Tomasz Cielebak, who went
home to Poland to care for his
cancer.,.stricken mother, the Red
Foxes are now without the ser-
vices of jui:tio
·
r forward Donald
Vale and senior swingman Joe
Mccurdy.
Vale has left the team for what
appears to be the remainder of
the season to concentrate on his
academics. The decision to re-
move Vale from the team canie
after consultation with head
coach Pave Magarity, athletic
director TimMuqay and NCAA
faculty representative Dr. John
Ritschdorff.
According to Murray, it was
important that Vale get back on
track academically.
'
'
.
A
ciear
distinction had to be
made that Vale was not academi-
callyineligible according to col-
_Iege standards. He was simply
not meeting standards the ath-
letic department sets for their
athletes.
.
"It was purely a decision made
by the coaches and the athletic
department," Murray said.
"This had nothing to do with
the office of academics which
would deal with suspensions."
The absence of Vale could
prove to be a crushing loss, He
gave Marist a crucial spark off
· the bench. In 13games, he was
averaging six points, three re-
bounds in
14
minutes of action.
Magarity stressed the magni-
tude oflosing Vale.
·
"It's a very big ioss for us. He
was one of ounop six or seven
guys," Magarity said. "He was
the first guy to come off in the
front line rotation. Vale was play-
ing pretty well and had some big
games. He's a terrific rebounder,
and· he plays with a ton of en-
ergy. He's one of the toughest
players I've ever coached."
·
The injury bug is what bit
Mccurdy.
practice when McCurdy was
.
participating in a
.
two-on-
.
two
·
defensive recovery drill
.
when
he suffered-a spill, landingon
his
1eft wrist.
·
He
_
continued to practice, but
within
a
half-hour he com-
plained of much pain. Soon af-
ter his wrist began to swell.
Once the
·
swe1ling subsided,
X-rays confirmed a bone chip
·
in the wrist and the possibility
of
·
stretched
ligaments.
Mccurdy visited with Dr. Will-
iam Thompson, and. then with
Dr. Gregory Zale, a hand spe.:.
·
cialist. McCurdy's wrist was;
placed in a splint,. an~ a hard
cast will he applied this week.
lfhe heals in four weeks,
McCurdy might be available for
the
·
final homestand
:
with
.
Niagara, Manhattan and Stena .
.
The Metro Atlantic Athletic
Conference Tourn~ment begins
March 3.
·
McCurdy was playing well as
of late andwas
·
averaging eight
points
.
and
.
more than three re-
·
bounds per contest.
..
"It was a decision made by the
athletic department and the
coaching staff," Murray said.
"When recruiting players, the
coaching
.
staff gl!arantees that
the
,
stud~
_
n_t, wilLgraduate on
time. It is critical for them to
concentrate
.
on getting a de-
gree."
He injured his left wrist in prac-
tice early last
:
Tuesday, and will
likely miss the next four weeks.
This latest epidemic brings the
total of scholarship players un-
available to a tally of five
..
The~e are the deepest person-
nel losses
.
in coach Dave
Magarity's
·
14 ;easons at the
·
.
..·
_.
, .
.
Plwto
.
Counesy Carlisle Stockion
'
Mccurdy wlii mi
,
ss at least four weeks
~ith
an\njur~d
wrist.
The injury occurred early in
hehri.
.
FOXES,; ..
Mari~tfi.};~ll
Str'Uggtillg
through season
with
·s~I
:
2
'
•'.
rec
.
ord
···
...
continued
from
pg.
16
the season\i midpoint. "These
Hustle
arid
clµ
_
tch shooting

games ~e becoming a search for
.
helped the Red
_
Foxes secure a
·•
.. ·
four-game losing streaJc that answers. We're struggling right
.
pow~n'ul so.:60 vict9ry over
·
.
featured loses
.
to Richmond,
now."
.
.
Loyola, and
-,
broughfconfi-
.
Fairfield and Canisius, as well
'
Just when things look~cl the
dencebacktotheMaristberich.
as· a three-point heartbreak er to
bleakest for Mari st howev~r,'_the
'
'
<CI felt!
go{
the rrionkey off
Manhattan at the storied Madi-
true ~eart of the
.
team beg~_to
.
.
my back," Smith said in the
son Square Garden in New York
come out.
,
In
r)Ieir game against Poughkeepsie
Jdurrial .
.
''I j11st
City.
_
.
.
....
StPetersonJanua:ry23,
the
team
.
want~d
to
corrie out and play
Aside from the Western
Michi-
showed
a
imified effort
tin
both
well.'
.
'
.
.
·
. .
ganloss however, the team was
ends ofthefl~or
.
wlule
<
alsodis~
'
'
'
'
Whitten
.
berg
)oid
the
playing good basketball but just
..
playing
'a
'
confidence do:WO "the
.
.f oughke_epsie
Jouma[~a(it
·
didn't seem to have that extra
.
stretch
that
left
:
the
'
P:ackid
:
vias
a,
sign Maris(coifld d~at
gea{when they needed ~t.
.
,
'
McCann~entedncheei:sas
.
tlie
.
· witlithelossofsoin~or'itikey
A five-point victory against
·final)~ore
read
79/64
-
g9od
players
,
'
·
.
.'
·-
- ..
.
.
Canisius showed an indication
.
guys
{
<
:
.
.
'
.

.
.
·
.
-
''We knew it was time to step
that Marist could indeed pull
,.-TqmKenney,w~oled•'th~V{ay
. up,''J1e said.
;'We
vtei:e short,
everything together and play 40
_
with:I6 points;said it
.
\Vas a
players and
.
we had to do
iL
miriu,t~s of solid basketball, but
.
must:-win gam~Jor the
_
FQxes;
.
(Rick and
I)
ihlci
we had to come
Jh!:ee days later Rider seized a
.
''Heltlobviouslfllacfii> s.tep
out
and
do
'
our
.
hes{"
..
.
.
65~60 victory, which sent $e
.
it up," he told the Poughke~piie
·
.
J.1tls Tuesday
_
the Red Fox~~
_
pJayefS back to classes a littJe
Journal.
''We're
.
down
'
to nine,
Jost atiother MAAC contest"to
steamed.

,
·. .
-
10 games aric(this.isit. We've
Iona,
_
77~6-4;
_
·

··
·
.
. _
·
.
.
.
·
.
.
·
Aqding injury toirisult at this
got to do
,
it now, anct'get thejob
The win illlprov¢lona to7-4
point, was the loss of three of done.''
'. .
;
'
in the
'
conference, and 11-9
Marist's top guns in Joe
McCurdychipped inll ~ints, overall.
'
Mccurdy, TomaszCielebakand and Drew Samuels and
·
Sean
The Foxes are now
8-12
'
0ri
Donald Vale. Mccurdy hurt his
Kennedy contributed 10 points
the' season
'
;
:4-
Tin theconfer-
wrist in practice before the each.
ence.
Loyola game, and looks to
be
Following this big win how-
.
Further information was not
out for at least a month.
ever, was the mentioned loss of available at press time ..
.
Cielebak had to ~nfortunately McCurdy,
which
.
forced
Even with Marist in
'
seventh
return to Poland where he is at-
Magarity to go to a three guard
pla~e in
·
the (MAAG), it
tending to personal matters, starting lineup.
In
his first start
wouldn't be a stretch of the
while Vale has taken a leave of for Marist, freshman Sherman
imagination to see them climb
absence to concentrate on his Whittenburg had 17 points,
up the ranks.
grades.
while Tom Kenney put up 13
OnlyMAACteamsremainon
These three injuries have only against Loyola.
·
.
the schedule, with Rider com-
added to the Marist injured list
Therealstoryofthisgamewas ing to town tonight at 7:30.
If
as Blake Sonne is still out work-
hometown product Rick Smith,
Marist can continue to play
ing on his strained right knee,
who traveled back to his home
high-octane basketball on both
while Mark Prosser was red-
state of Maryland and scored a
ends of the floor, and shy away
. shirted this season after having career high 21 points. Making it
from letting teams get back into
an ACL surgery in June.
even sweeter for Smith was the
the game in the waning min-
"lt feels terrible,'' Cielebak said
fact his parents, brother and sis-
utes, they can keep the season
in the Poughkeepsie Journal at ter were all at the game.
·
from becoming a lost cause.
...






























































































·.•
.-;.
,
·


·
,I";

':
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..:

•.· • • .
'
Rbcin~yi-Iam;on;
·,
Ii~
'
wo~ld.
~e
Faulk;s fmt season in St
~
Louis
lostfofthe year. Speakinfi:>f
·
was
·
no less important to the
:
wh{ch; the).~.~sappeareq w_ell
Rams' success.
-
He set
an
NFL
.
cm
th~ifway to another lost year
record with 2,429 yards from
.
W1thou{hii.n:
·
.:: ·
· .
·
.
.
scrimmage, and he became only
·
:
·EntirKurtiWarner.
·
·
the second player in league his
_
-
..
After(}reen)injury,Wanier
tory to have 1,000 yards
·
rush-
.
. :
·
·.
·
••
-
.
.
w~s
,
thrust into th~ spotlight.
ing and receiving in the same
· -
·
.
·.
·
· .. ,
·
.
-
·

·
:
_
./
_--::
Hispreyious
:
_
st(?psin football
season. Roger Craig first ac-
:
:

\i<
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>
·
:~::'·
~,
~~t~~~t!itot:;~,Li!:u~!
-
~:fc!~~~eJ9!r: i~a1t9~~-the San
.
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_
ne·yar~
>
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i;
.
;
_
;
:
.
-
·.
World
·
League's Amsterdam
It was also a remarkable
run
:>
.
·Whei(al.L\\ias·said
arid
done;
.
Admirals,
.
He had been left un-
for theTennessee Titans. In the
\
th~
J
~:9})'-
;
~tt
:
~easbn was de~
~
-
protected by the Rams in the
·
ex-
previous
few
seasons, this team
cid.e.d
by"orie
yard.-1t was a sea-

.
-
.
pansion draft earlier iii"the'year.
had struggled to find an iden-
;
~ori:¢~il:ipl~te with ~ps
_
tJl,rt teanis
._

.
And this was the guy who was
tity, and more importantly, a
.'
'A~f
}
J
.
\µn_11_ing;,: :iri~ividual
· :/
~upposed
.
to
.save
•theJhms'
home. In 1999, the Titans
.
'
a~hit!_v
_
ement,s.
·
i:_;:
.:
_ \
· .
.
:

.

season, and probably.
·
Coach
posted 13 regular season wins,
·
_
:
\;
}Y~~n
_
/vlike}o11es
:
_
t~ck.led
.
·
·
.
_
PickVermeil'sjob?
.
_
.
·
·
,.
.
bursting above three seasons of
PAGE 15
Kevm Qys9h
:
at the
:
one:.cyard
.
.
All Warner did was have ar-
8-8 mediocrity.
·
<
·
linf$iI!lda:y)ughtJfi
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guablythe greatest season by
Steve McNair, Eddie George,
,
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Hft~f
;
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-
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Jevon Kearse (aka "The Freak")
.
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.
c~a'Jl-P,~Qt1s
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fC>r the f_irst
.
·
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arid company g°airied the na-
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tional recognition they rightly
'-,'.
'.Ql~
-
~upirBowl proveQ to
_
be
.
yards,
:
41 TDs, and he com-
deserve. Jeff Fisher is also
rec-
'
a
·
fitting
climax for
ail
improbable
pleted over" 65 % of
hi~
.
passes.
ognized now as one of the
NFL'
s
Seidel has been a bright spot for this seci.son for the Foxes .
season.
:
·
-
. -
..
·
This equates to an astounding
best coaches .
Foxes drop to ninthinMAAC
.
Jn fast year's off-season,
tiie
·
109.2
QB rating.
Are there any teams in posi-
.
R.ams made
·
several
.
moves
:
to
.
Warner's numbers could have
tion to make similar leaps next
indicate a
-
potential explosive~
beeg even high~r had the Rams
season? One possibility is the
Iiess on offense. They imported
·
not blown outteams all year. Of Washington Redskins. They
.
two men from Washington; with
·
their 13 regular season wins, 12
.
already have an explosive of-
Mike Martz named offensive
·
were by 16
.
points or more. In
fense,
.
and three first-round
·
coordinator;
·
an.d Trent: Green
most of their games, Warner picks in this year's draft should
signed to play
QB.
·
·
racked up his numbers in no
.
bolster their defense.
The
_
Rams also acquired
more
_
than three quarters of ac-
While n·ew owner Daniel
(stole?)
JIB
Marshall Faulk from
.
_
tiori:
_
..
,
.
.
Snyder is already disliked in
..
_
IndianapoHs,
·
and·drafte~
-
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·?}
/
ln
·
,
the
_
Super Bowl,.Warner
league circles, it is _also appar-
k
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As surprisinf~s this season
:
knee
injury
in
.
the preseason, as
TD
:
passes, which earned
.
hiin
·
yias;
_
next year
may
be
even more
o'.
'
a iesiiltofa
l;lit
.
byJhe
,
Cfoirgei:s
\
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the
MVP
~ophy.
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difficultto figure.
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.
by
PEfERPALMIERI
·
·
Staff Writer
After going 8-3 through the
first 11 games of the season,
good enough for one of the best
starts in team history, the Marist
women's basketball team hit a
bump in the road and now owns
a 9-9 record.
In an 11-game span starting on
Dec. 11, the women posted,
_
a
\
recofd.of4-,7, in~luding a five-
game
losing
streak.
-
.
·
·
The Red Foxes are now 2-7 in
.
the-Metro Atlantic Athletic
Conference (MAAC), which
puts the team in ninth place.
.
On Dec
:
U,
the women trav-
ded to Colgate
to
take on the
Red Raiders, Despite 17 points
p~ople io
'
witness_thefirstover-
Bulls: Instead he was wearing a
from Marie Fusci and another
. ,
timegainein~uperBowlhistory.
suit and assuming the basket-
14byDiesaSeidel, Colgate man-
..
it is refreshing to think about
ball operations for the woeful
aged to pull awayin the second
wliatcould
'
havebeen,but the
Washington Wizards.
_
·
halfanddefeatMarist, 64-51.
.
fact still remains that on Sun~
"Jordan and the Wizards" just
·
However, Marist managed to
.·.
day
._
the Rams w~re the better
does not have the sam~ ring that
put together a three-game win-
_·_
team
and they earned their first
"Jordan and the Bulls" does·.
·
ning streak capped by a 66-55
.
Super Bowl ever.
.
.
.
.
Unfortunately, Jordan will not
.
victory over Navy. Seidel
.-
Jbis
NFI..
seasonwas omfthat
enjoy the same success with the
notched a double-double
·
with

.
we have never seen before. A
Wizards that he did with the
14
'
points and 13 rebounds to
,
.
· f
·
great player, Barry Sanclers; re-
Bulls. Here's why.
go along with a personal best
··
"'
tiiedin.themiddleofhisprime
Jordan has.a lot of salary
.
cap
seven blocks.
.
;
,>
,
A
,
new riliUennhim
,-
ha.s
: .
. The49ers, Packers, Broncos,
issues to deal with. First he
Seidel was named MAAC
dawned, and with it the National
Steelers, Falcons and J~ts
/
all
-
must deal either Rod Strickland
Player of the Week for the week
;
F:ci
:
Q~tiaULeague has continued
·
_
perennial powerhouse
_
teams
or
Ju
wan Howard,
·two
very
of December 26. She averaged
·
.
toamaze us.
.
_
the last couple of years, failed
.
good players, but both are
19 points and 13 rebounds, in-
. :
?
\Yho would have predicted
-
to make the playoffs .
.
Thus,
·
·
grossly overpaid.
.
eluding a career-high 24 points
·
·
thatSteveMcNair, Mark Brunell,
there seems to be a shifting of
Richard Hamilton is the player
against Army.
Kui-{:Warner and Shaun
_
King
the guard in the NFL.
'
.
thatJordanwill have to build this
Despite the team's success,

would be the starting quarter.:
.
Next year should be interest-
team around. He was a very
·
the following week started the
backs in the conference cham-
ing and here are a couple of
.
good college player, but has yet
beginning of a season-high five
p~oriship games?
thoughts to ponder for the off-
to display anything of notori-
game losing streak. On Jan. 4,
With that said, was anybody
season.
ety in the NBA like fellow first
Marist hosted Niagara.
After
thinking
_
·
about a Super Bowl
Will the concussion~prone
round draft picks Steve Francis
·
·
Niagara went on a 20-0 run in
~t\Veen the St. Louis Rams and
·
Steve Young return, and
·
if he
and Elton Brand.
the first half, the Purple Eagles
the Tennessee Titans?
does wiH it be with the 49ers?
The only way that Jordan
put the Red Foxes
away
in the
Although
_
the Super Bowl
was
Does Dan Marino retire '"'.ithout
could help this team is if he put
final minutes of the game and
.
.
n~t infiltrated with
·
the normal
a ring, and does Sanders come
on a jersey
.
and actually played
won 59-53.
.
pow~rhouses, it was a very ex-
back to the game in search of
_
again. But we all know that is
The women next faced
c}ting
.
game, especially the
.
his own ring?"
~
·
unlikely to happen.
Fairfield University on Jan. 11
fourth quarter.
Will Kurt W~er re~athis
The Jordan mystique is in se-
at the McCann Center. Marist's
·
Only one other time has th~
.
·
.
sensational season? WiU the
riousjeopardy. When he left the
shooting woes continued as
.
Super Bowl come <iow11 to ~e

Giants or th~)ets make the play-
game, the lasting image that he
last play (Super Bowl
XXV,
offs? Who
will
be convict
_
ed or
left us with was the game win-
where Scott Norwood's missed
acquitted of murder first,
·
Ray
ning shot and a sixth champi-
field goal gave the New York
Lewis or Rae Carruth?
onship.
Giants their second champion-
Just as the NFL was filled with
He is putting that at risk, for
if
slup}, and never has one team
surprises,sowastheNBAwhen
he fails the lasting image that
been
so close yet so far away -
its greatest player came back to
will
be in our minds is that of a
one yard.
the game.
Unfortunately,
loser, something that we have
Three feet was all that it would
Michael Jordan was not don-
never associated Jordan with.
have taken for about
45
million
ning number 23 for the Chicago
they shot 26.2 percent from the
field. Gail Strumpf of Fairfield
led all scorers with 23 poil!ts as
the Stags defeated Marist 67-
46.
On
Jari.
14 the women traveled
to New Jersey to take on Ri
_
der
College. Despite having a
three-
point lead at the break, the
women could not overcome a
13-2 run by the
_
Broncs in the
final 5:50 of the game.
Maritza Rodriguez scored
22
points to lead Rider
to
a
75-64
victory.
Tift
led Marist with 15
points.
The women then traveled to
Albany to face Siena. The Red
Foxes seemed to have con-
quered their shooting problems
·
by getting four players to score
in double digits, but the Saints
proved to be· too strong for
Marist,
Bronwyn Tobin's 15 points
_
were enough as Siena won the
66-59.
. On fan. 23, there
seemed
to
be a light at the end of the tun-
nel in sight.
·
Marist faced
Can1sius, at that time last in the
MAAC.
However, tenacious defense
held Marist to just
.
17 points at
the half.
Marist never led in the game
andlost82-45.
·
The Foxes did snap their los-
ing steak on Jan. 26 against
Iona. Led by Seidel with 16
points Marist defeated the Lady
Gaels59-45. -
The Red Foxes finfshed the
I I-game span with a home game
against conference foe Loyola.
30 Marist turnovers were the
formula for disaster, as the Grey-
hounds won the game 53-39 .
The women will travel to
Mariahattan tomorrow where
they will take on the Jaspers at
6:00p.m.




















































































































































































































































































































































'
!
··
·
Stat
of
the Week
Freshman guard Sherm
.
an
·
Whittenbe,rg
..
was
.
hamed
MAACRookieofthe
·
_.
·
.
.
W~koii"Jan
:
24after
.·.
ii-taking his
first
career start.'

,
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'
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Week
"It looks just aspromisiiig
cir us
·
this season."-
Larry
V.anWagner, !"e_n
's
Sli!,(§ing
'
oach
/
·
on: the· tipc<Jinitig
'A.AC
championships.
:.
_.,
.
·
PAGE16
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indefinitely'.

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therapy
:
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.
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·
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ca1led
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·
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foother's
·
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.
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,
foflhe
'.
se-
·.
-Dave
Magarity
Meir's
.
basketball
.
ening condition
;
:
.
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.
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.
nior to
:
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,:
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f.'
Magarity.
him and
his
niother
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,
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.
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.
.
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so
.
devii.stated.
.
.
Cielebak also
~
missedJ
l games
.
·
AtlanHc
•·.
A.thlak Coliferenc~
·
lie'tned his
'
best,but
'
1(war
db-
_
hist Season
·
wheil the
·
NCAA
selectioii\'vas
:
averaging
:
~nlis:-
.
-
vfous tha't
·
h
·
e
_:
\~~s tith~usa~d
-
·
fourid him in violation ·of play~
.
·mafsix points a
i
gafue;
and
even
m1.Jes a\\'.~Y mentilly,"
-
Magarity
fog
for a professional team in
lost his startilig
>
spot
.
in
.
the
said. "Something1ikethis takes
·
.
Poland, even though he riever
.
lineup for t~e
·
firsttime in his· a higher
:
prece.dent'than basket-
signed a c9ntract.
.
. collegiate career
:
.
·"·
·
·
,
.
.
.
ball. After
.
we
·
got
back from
.
The Red Foxes' woes don't
:
Head coachOave Magarity
Buffalo, he decided to go home
stop there
\
thoµgh; as
'
they !l,ive
'
!
·
.
said Cielebak's mothets il1ness
to
beWitli his
.
rtioilier.'
-'.
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.
.
·
.
also
_
J~st jtmioi-DoiialdVale in
:-
·
·
ha
c
la Serious impilct on his
per-
·, .
!.
thdo$S ofCielebak ca~~ at a
definitel:f"so thaChe
'
can
con
-
.
fo@ance.
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very
.
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for
'.
thi Foxes
.
centr
~
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.
'
·•
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'Ilis i.iricle had told
rile
C>fthe
_
They
:
clropped
·
seven c
:
onsecu-
·
are
-
also without
·
senior
-:
~ituatiori' back in
'
mid:io-late
tivf! games at one
.
point
;
and cur-
.
swingmrui'Joe McCurdy, who is
'
.
.
December,"Magaritysaici. "His
rerit1y
·
sftats~venthplacejnthe riursinganinjliredleffwrist.
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mother had fjeen cioing well; ~d
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·
..

·
:
In
·
the absen'ce of these key
.
M~rist
will
be with(?Ut Cielebak while he
'
cares for his rnother.
she
.
was
·
r~cei
_
ving chein
_
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/
Magarity,'has had
'
to
.
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ki.
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th
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game:
·
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·
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nts
;
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·
she
.
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foflOOQ-yard free style with a
plivilegetocoach,''Honigsaid.
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mentcompetition,thel<oxe,swill
Drew Samuels makes a move in the paint against St. Peter's.
time of9:39.16. His ste1lar time
.
''We're
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.
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this
.
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beat the past record b}'7.5 sec-
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chan'tpioils~ips
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hop~fullyrecl!P!~rt
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first
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;
mi~i!l'g
;
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·
.
Following
·
in the
.
record-set-
·
place
~
but also i~prove her own
--
.
Maris_fwill oppose
Lehigh
/
die
··
h
.
·
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__
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1
··--
··
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··
·:



h
--
-
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t
·
·
ft
·
tingissophomoreJeremyYrrgil.
score."
.
.
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...
··
.
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tiO«!-holders of the
.'
Patriot
,
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av
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·
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,
en
Virgil
won the inen's200-yard
!uniorErinMcGrathis
·
_
cll}<>ther
.
4ague:,'Yhi~hisaliigherlevel
butterfly with a time of2:00.08,
·
·
swimmer to wa!ch this
:
tourna-
..
than'
·
the Foxes have competed
by
.
PEl'ERMOYLAN
Staff Writer
.
'
'
·-·
-
.

·
· -As the ~pring se~ester
be-
.
gins, most of the conversations
.
q~d around campus have
re:-
.
volved arourid the fun students
had over the winter recess. For
the
·
Mari st basketball. team,
however, the same could not
be
which is currently the best in the
ment, according to Honig
~
jil
the past
.
.
..
said.
.
.
·
Me fro
·
.Atlantic ·Athletic McGrath dominates the 100 and
·
"It's the first time in our his-
When
·
most students went Confer
I 111
llence(MAAC).
2~yardbiitterflyin the confer-
tory that this has beeri done"
·
home to partake in holiday ceJ-
Another key athlete on the
ence, and looks to set two new
VanWagnersaid .
.
''We've ~n •
ebrations, the Red Foxes were in
team;juniorKeithNichols, also
records for the MAAC,
.
_
building up to this level all sea-
Michigan recei
_
ving one of their earned recognition this past
A_s
for_ th_e women's boards,
son,
and
we purposely placed
.
worst loses to date.
·
mQnth in the
MAAC
wheribeat-
Shella N1en can
be
considered
this meet last.
·
It is exciting for
Following that game was~
.
iiig Fordh~ University in the
one of Marist's best divers ever.
us and should
be beneficial be-
1
Fo
vv'-'
free
style. His personal best was
~he broke the three meter div-
·
··
fore the
·
MAAC champion-
... p
ease see
...u:..;,,
pg. 14
.
ds
th
·
atuneof9:47.17.
mg recor
at were set in the
ships."

·



53.10.1
53.10.2
53.10.3
53.10.4
53.10.5
53.10.6
53.10.7
53.10.8
53.10.9
53.10.10
53.10.11
53.10.12
53.10.13
53.10.14
53.10.15
53.10.16