The Circle, April 13, 2000.xml
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 53 No. 17 - April 13, 2000
content
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Vohnne 53
:Jssue·
17 .
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·
-FEATURES-
. Ch~outthenew
In~
ternational ·outlook
section; p;
5.
·
;.SPORTS~.·:~.;
' Tennis favo~;~ ;in
MA.AC Tournament'
· Jind
out
more on
p;
-16 •.
·· on-the web at www.ac_ademic.marist.edu/circle,
April 13~ 2000 ·
,TymillSki's choiGe·fO:fViCcil>resideittt1uestio11ed
New SGA administ!atiop.: begins
a
li~tle shaky
by
KATEI\iOYLAN
~taffWr[ter
. after· Hu~t~/exp~~;ed iCJack of c~n-
Dunn ·to:gef tci the heart of the issue.
. · fidence·in Dunn's abilities to success-
Amanda Kelly, <lirector o( public re~
. · fully-execute'.· her responsibilities. ··
lations for
SC.A,
:v.:_ils'
alsopres¥nt, .
-
. _'Iyminiski responded_ to the.imony-
'Dunn was. appointed.
as
Parlfamen~
.
-The
admiriis;ration of Student Body . molls leter: He also expressed an opin:
tariail ·h'aifway throiigli Colleen
. Presidellt. Seth. Tyminski -.is stuck .in
ion to the. anonymous' autho~ of the
McCullough's administi-atio~ dudng
the .mud .before even getting on the . letter.,. who said he or·sne would,not
the 1997~98 acad.emic year. Hunter
road.
·> ... ··. . ·.· ·.
·
. .
.
~eve~l)i~,q~.~t;r id~µtlty out
off,~ar,
~
i?Jer ~ppointed heriParUa~entarian
.. : . The.Circle
recei~ed_llll anonymous·
of·retaliation'.>
< . • .·. ··
. :
•..
for the J998,99,year.:
.y.: '. ..· . ,
letter hist. week,' purportedly. from: a · ·;" • '~F think' they shouicI 'i:ea?retaHa~
.
'
.}fontet
said tliat
at
tile
tim
7
Dun,(s
member of Tyminski's administra-
tion a·lotmore now·thatlknow about · appointntent :was made, he felt she.
tion, raising concern over. the ap-
the Jetter,'.':he said. ;,Aiiffnsigned
was the best' c·anclidate for the job. ·
pointment of }9-istine Dunn as
Ex-
·
letteds a very· childish aucf'unproc
However, conmcts later arose be-
"Ryan and I had a personal dispute
and I felticould no Ionger·work for
· him," Dunn said.
. _
. Dunn also stated that the ·conflict
between herself and Hunter dealt with
·issues outside of SGA., Hunter ech-
. oed. these . sentiments .
"The conflict was a c·ombination .
of differences· that accumula.ied over
tinie regarding how SGA should
be. :
run," Hunter said.
, . . . · :· ..
Accompanying the aiionymo)ls'.:i'.'
· Jetter was the letter written by Ryan
°
Hunter sent to Dunn informing her
of her removal from the office of
Parliamentarian.
ecutive Vice. President.
fessfonal way to do business:"
c· · ·
tween Dunri and Hunter that resulted
Dunn was fired
as
Parliamentarian
. Sunday night Vaness·a Santos of · in Dunn's removal from her posi- ··
.. ;please seeTYMINSKI, pg. 3
by former president R_Yan Hunter,
MCTV sat down with Tyminskiand
tion,
Seth
Tyminski.
. .
First anniversary
of
.carionization
marked
/ -
. . .
.
. . . .
ies lecture seri6s, which
~ill
be
by;rnFF)?AHNCKE
an annual eyenL . '
• . . ·
... · .
.
. . News Editor • :
... ·. .·
The
,t?y~~~,:~elcl
ifih~/~rnall
·. · _'. __
:·
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.
, / :, .. :,:.;.;,,__;_;.:;,;,;;:· :;~:: .. :~iil:iijg,rp~Ai;:\V~~ :~~te11decl by
,;: J,?utfto,'an,illnes(tliafforc¢d- ,'appfO!(!Illately,
.
I00members of
·. ·gu~~fspe~e,r:~(ogi.Ef Cefon'~!:!·
·
.
fa
9
41ty,jtafffu!dJoc~
91~tgr: ·
.
,Voegtlejnto' the'.;h9spital :last
-,:
· ·
.
Brother.Frarit(Kelly;directot\
0
:>:11i11rs~ay, t11i!11~ugdtaI
qa_ili~::
·
·.•~of Canip~s}{inistry, · saidit.waso:- .
l
/lie Studie(le¢ttire;
~n
the :NeUi . away to coniroemorate tlie
can- .
. Galetti h~d to,be'clinceied:·
-F·. .
onizatjon'of Champagnat ..
:theiecture wasscliedulecfto ..
.
:
"In
light
<>filie
factdiat it was
· mark
the
first anniversary of the· one· year ago tlli's'weekend, we
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Photo courtesy Mcghan O'Gea,y
c.an.--.. o.niz. a.t1.·.o.n.of
...
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ar
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ce.n.i.n-. jus. tth.ou. ght.w.e .. w. ou.ld·c.elebrate
Rutt(fiOretto
qt
Dining
Se,:v_ices·$mefap~ a
pie.in
the_fcic~
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otSteve
.$ai1~01.a:'
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Champagnat, the founder of the. tlie first anniversary," he said:
o.-..
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~:~=~:;~~I}:()ftheJ~dure·
1a1/:~:~~~~~~:~~:;r}~~
.
. .
.
.l. ·
didn<>t prevent~ celebratiop of -Marist. Singers sang- the same
• t~ . · ·
• '
·
· t -
f
:iheanniversarytrom·occ\iring,
musicthey,sang at the·c;uioni~
- --n1e ,
·11rown1nfl- con es
however,• ..
· .. ·..
zationJnRomelastyear.- ..
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Thep]aqi.IejnJhelobbyof
Accoi:dingfoKeny:therewill
·byJ\.M.\'.$P~ERG .. ':
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,
3
!1A~,'.ktWN,..~d.?-U.E?:.~~~nt;, otber.,Qreekf' ···· .. '
·
.· ·.•·· ' / '
ChampagriatHaU ,was blessed. be
a
CathoHc _Studies .lecture
•
·•
·•
· ,. ''{~taff)Yffi,e'rt'.':\'!~f
_,
c:;w~~~
9PJ.1
11
?U_aI.s~fR:2ns9r~d ~; · ...
·
: Alpha S!gma ,Ta
11
•
ca.ptur.ed. · Thursday afternoon.- The
·
dedi- _
..
each year, focusing on adtffer'." .
: :· . >
·
,:
:. ·.
·>·· •
'c"··
,fundr~ts.er,:for.
_
H,a,1?
1
~at,forJit1:- .
.
first place
'tn
the, Greek·,Week · · catioilwas foJlowed tiy a dinner
ent aspect-of Catholicism each~
. ~~!J
1
1::Y<>
11
:geJ ~he~ y9u . j_glJl~~ty;'.~!iere._e~9~lem1;1,deA
0 "
sorority sajidings~: folloy,ecl
J?y
to
inahgur:ate the_Catholic Stud-'
time; .
C?l11l>J_n~P.I~fllHI% bel!y·flOP7 ·. nations;to
!hfo,~
·crearcf pies ·a~
<
Sigma
SigJila·
Sigma; ·K.~~pa
. pmg
lill,d
s~1~q~? : : '·~--. .
.
__ faculty·_ a,nd. stu,clent partiti:, .. Kappa Gamma{~nd_ Kappa.
No, 1t) 119t~yo,_ur h1stspm1g _ • P.ants: ... ·.. . _
:<""
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Lanida, Psi. For the fraterriitiesi
break
in
Cancun. :It's .caUed
·Steve Sansola, Assistant
Dean
. ' .
.
.
.
Greek.Weei ·,
-••:
:> ;\
<
i ·
·
.. ··
of
Activities,~ 'said. that-.Greek .•.
.:.please
see
GREEKS,pg.
4
•
.
·oreek We'ekis'anann~al.event.
·•weekis
iltime.for.the'sororlties.
at MarisFColiege\Jt consists - arid fraternities
'
io W<>rk tog~tlier
ofa series,ofevents":'and con-·
·
_and have -fun. ,
.
.
-.-,_~
.
·
testsirrwhichthesor<>ritie};and.
·
.:•:,''It's'be,eri
a
great ~eek;'\he
fraternities ofr campus partici-
·
said/ '' Affthe Greeks have been:
pate.
·
·. , • · - .. · · . . . ururiec1
'anf
supportive
of
·each
It
was held.onApijl
4i8,
and> other'duriiig'the evenk ·_Ks'
included .. e_vents ·
.
such.
a:s
jce abot1t Greeks-working alongside
carving, a
pie
e~i\ng ~oniest; . each otp.er and havfog
fun
with
:.
.
· Photo
.cou~y Meghan O"Geary. · ·
.
,
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· ·,
·
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· .. : Photo courtesy Marist College
Sansolasmiled throughout
it
all. · Pope John Paul II during last year's canonization ceremony. ..
WEEKLY .POLL-
-■:■:
::-·Wotld:WideWebconcems·oo~
byLAlNEYNADEAU.
Are you, g~ing
~p
__ _ ..
~taf!Write~ ..
.
vote for~
Hillary-or-~ ·
--,~~w.nynJ~ffing
fu,e ',Ve6cir
writ-
Rudy•
;-for
'fhe
New.
•in!f~!l·~rp.ail,do;youever feel
·
·
someone
1s
looking over your
York Senate seat?
shoulder?
Hillary
53
.
Rudy
47
ee
related story
of page 4.
· is
an
unsciemijic swwy taken
00 Marist
strulenJs
wlw
are from
N.
ork State.
"I always thought people from
Marist tracked the sites I vis-
ited,"
freshman Keara Troy said.
"I
guess
it
could be an invasion
of my privacy, but I don't have
anything to hide, so it doesn't
bother me."
Troy said she.believes ¥arist regular basis. She §aid IT does
can pinpoint the sites she visits
not track
tlie
use of the Internet
on the Inteme_t: Many other
by individual students.
_
students share this belief, or are
"We
are not .in the business
uncertain of what the Infqnna- -. -of watchitig what kids
.ar.e
do-
tion Technology Center at ing and policing what thef do,"
Marist is capable of and actu-
she said. "I have three people
ally do.
· who run the entire network of
Manager of Systems Net-
almost 10,000 machines, so they .
works and Operations Martha
have a· lot better things to do
McConahay said there are many than watch what one kid
is
do-
misconceptions of what Infor-
ing o.n a daily basis."
·mation Technology (11) is ca-
pable of and what they do on a
...
please see
WEB,
pg. 3
INSIDE
ommunity .....................
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TH£·
CIRCLE
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=PA~
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E
2
Tune into Sports Radio
.
WMCR- Marist College Ra-
·
dio - Fdday- Tuesday, 7:00 p.m.
-
9:00
p.m.Tune into 88. l for the
.
latest sports talk, sports up-
dates, and coverage of your
fa-
vorite Marist teams.
If
you have
any questions, call the Sports
Director, Mike Koller at x4724.
Online Job Fair
New York State Colleg~ and
Universities
Vuti.Ial
Job
Faii-2000
is being held from April
l "."
May
30.
To
register go
to
www.collegeceritral;com/jobs
and dick on student
registra-
tion. Follow the
-
easy instruc-
tions and then you are on your
way to exploring listings of jobs
both
.
fuii,
part time
and
intern.:.
ships across the state.
A pellet gun was fired at a male
student jogging behind Leo Hall
on Wednesday April 5 at 1:15
a.m ....
An assumed non-art student
crafted a phony River-view park-
-
ing sticker that was discovered
by security, costing him $45
more than the piece of art was
worth. This was reported on
-
Wednesday April
5,
at
7
p;m
.
..
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The members of Marian Hall
seem to have mastered the art
of vandalism. Toilet paper di!>~
.pensers
and soap dispensers
have been reported to have been
tom off the wall on the first floor
of Marion Hall on Thursday and
.
April 6, Saturday, April
s:
Two
reports were filed on Monday,
April 10th
;
One report involved
-
the Marist Money machine
yanked from the walL
'
Earth
Day Lobby Day 2000
What do you want to
be
when
you grow
Up? W!Iy?
"I
want to be a btim on the
beach because
I
can have fun
in the sun all day long and
..
there
is
no ~ork."
.
Siisan
.
·
Decotis
.
-
.
"Successful' because that
would be nice."
ChrisWeber
''.We want to get the band back
together."
Jonl\futray&
-
.
.
..
'
Jobri Ragozzine
.
,
freshman
·
f_r~shmai1
:
.
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..
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With the world celebrating the
<· '· ·
,
.·
.
~em ors,
'·
'
·
30th
anniversary of Earth Day,_a
A toaster oven in desperate
· ··- ··
-- ~- ·
·
·
. :,
,
,
,>
~
-
-
"··
,
,
·•·:
coalitipn ()flo
_
cal;
,
state, and na-
; -
~~ed ~f
-
~li#!~g_;-"caught
firl
, /
_;•
,
;':'~
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s::; }~
-- ~
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.
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.
c,,
tional
-
e
_
iivfronfuenfar
gr~ip's
..
~hile a Jl!ale student attempted •
,
~at_approx1mately
2
p.m,
.
.
,
,c
•••
;
Fifi
fighferS\vili
'.
nevePbe
-
·
:
alaori
iri
~1e
.
u
.
tilocK
al7:50
p
i
fu.
;
-
toheatpizzain.Gartlari_dcom
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__
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·
,
-_-
_
-
.
_-_·-
b
_
or
_
e
_
d
_
wh
_
_
HeMaris_
-
__ t_Coll
_
ege_stu
_
-
April9th
t
.
_.
-
.
· have coine tog~ther and you ate
.
-
·
·
·
,.
-
-
·
'
-
-
invited to join them. Thecoali-
mans
02
apartments on Apnl
6
'
,:Sfu4
•
~;1i
C
ii~h;~;;e:f;&Ka'.t{
}
t i i :
.:
~t{f{4~
.
:rif~~
-
Tiitt1r~
/
:,i
-i
1~d
:
eh~ri~
:
k
(
iC\VaS
,
c~#ged
tio11
will
head toAlbany to lobby
_
be sni
,
iished leading to the 3rd,
-
.
:CJartla
'
nd
:
,
Comllli:>n
'
s
:
o
'.;}jlock
,
t~r
a
_'
Leo IfaH studentwho
W~S
outside of the Legislative Office
Security caught a
,
student
.
.
4tp,
an~.
5th
fl<>or~ inthdvlid-:·
.
aroJnti6:3C>p
,
;
rrif~.n.Apefi
9.an?
'
,_•
,no!•
r~sp9ns}bl~
;
.{or
..
the _calls
Building on April 10, 2000 from
feigning a limp when he noticed
-
·Rise
res1_denthall on the
_
mom-
.
-_
the
·
smoke from
a
inale
:
student
<,.
1Dl.lcl~.
-.
A,n;
:
mvest1gat1on
_
by a
9 am to 4 p.m.
,
Bus transporta-
thatthe officer observed that he
ih
'
g'6fApriI9:
.
cooking set off
'
aiibtherfire
.
p~rs~n~~i from
.
the_C~mmu~i-
tion will be made available to
had parked
·
in a handicapped
Marist students.
If
you are in~
spot without a s
_
ticker
Of}
April
terested contact student repre-
-
7.
Security
·
wopld like to ~emind
-
sentative Veronica at896-8086
_
people that they h
_
aveno
t
mer~y
~r vlren;o@aol.cofu. For more
~;
for,
peoplewho park inihandi-
.·
information, che~k.
-
o~twww
.
capped spots.
enadvocat~s.org.
·
.
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...
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YearbookN~dsYour llelp
·
Eight students "'.ere r,e_ported
_
to hav~
'
coq~µnied
-
°39
:
pans of
-
-
.
The
Yearl)o~k Sta.ff is looki11g
·
-
,
be~r after security
·
crashed the
-_
for peqp}e' t9 help out infinis.h-
.
,
party_
imd confiscat~d nitie re~
_
iI1g
Jhisyear'
s
_
c
bo
9
Ic.
Al!;o;
-
'.
mainirig
·
cans/oottles
th~t
were
peoplewh<>. would be inte,rested
ftiU
·
on April 7
_
arou~d
'
I l p.m .
.in h~Jpirig Out ~ext year,
Cori-
·
tact the Renyard office
:
.
Now it's your
turn
-
Calling all Manst students!
If
you have
.
a band, and e
.
vent, a
club; or any.
·
other event you
would like to see featured in
campus· corner, contact the
Circle,
ai: x
2429
or
HZAL
A stubborn student
::.
walked
·-
back into
'
the
_
Benoit House
whileFireFighters were check-
ing
out
the student residence
after.a fir~ alarm went off on
April
8
aro~n~_l:45 a.m.
A student volunteer fire fighter
_
battled an oven fire while cook-
in in his Town House I on A ril
Weekend
-
Weather
·
Saturday
-
-=S=~
hi: 63
lo:
45
hi: 67
Io: 46
Source: www.weather.com
hi: 64
Io: 43·
.
.
CORRECTION
e
i~formation provided
t:9
_
us:
about the BSU baby shower
:
pi~tured i~ last
~eek'§
ci;X,e,
'
wa
ncorrect. The shower was for unwed mothers not an AIDS baby shower. We apologize for
·
an
orifosion this may have caused.'
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APRIL 13, 2000
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PAGE3
1?YMJNSKI:
Letter casts doubt
on
Thrun'
s abilities
'
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continuedfr.om pg .
.I
!
; ,
1eiter was';~he iette~ ~ritten by Ryan
Hµnter sent to Dunn
·
informing hor
of her
:
removal from the office
·
of
Parliamentarian .
.
Both Tyminski and Dunn have
stressed that this letter was not a
matter of public knowledge and both
questioned how
·
this teller could
·
have
faHen into someone else
'
s hands
other than those
.
it was sent to.
·
Hunter said there were a number of
. ways that the_ leiter could have been
obtained, but
said
he did not have an
idea
-
where it came from.
"How exactly it got out or through
whose hands is beyond me," he said.
The
_
leuer cited Hunter's unhappi-
riess with Dunn.
"Your tantrums
·
and blatant disre-
spect
of
my positionhave
·
made it
impossible for
_
me to utilize you as
Parliamentarian," Hunter said in the
letter
.
"Your insubordination and
_
mocking of Student Government
positions and daily functioning has
negatively· affected other represen~
tatives and I feel that this is not what
·
.
is iri
ilie
bestin
'
tei-esrofthe organi-
zation
-
arid the stuclent body
~
"
.
'fyminski.
who
i-ecenity appointed
·
.· Dµrin as his Executive Vice President,
said that he felt the letter forcing
Dunn
'
s
'
removal from her position
was not an issue to be concerned
.
about in
.
considering her appointment
to his own administration .
.
"The rei'ationship between Ryan
and Kristine is none of my business"
'fyminski said. "It was Ryan's ad-
ministration and he cduld have done
whatever he wanted to ~ith it~•
.
'fyininski ri1entioried that the ad-
ministrations
are
different and should
be treated so.
•
.
"That in no way affected my deci-
.
.
.
• _
Circle file photo
Tyminski is facing controversy in his first week in office.
.
sion to appoint Ms
.
Dunn. Her work
·
ethit and character are both phe~
nomenal."
.
.
.
.
.
Both Dunn
·
and 'fyminski said that
·
they have a long history working
together on a number of projects.
They coni.in_ued
fo
stress that they
have nothing but the utmost confi-
dence in each other.
Hunter also wished Tyminski and
_
Dunn
·
the best of luck arid encour~
ageil them
_
to continue to focus on
student issues.
Tyminski commented that in mak-
ing his appointments he focnsed on
the ability of the candidatc
·
to work
hard
_
and get
_
the job do
_
ne
.
He went
on to say that very little consider-
ation is given to whether or not the
board members have respect for each
other.
"It's more a matter of who can get
the job done," Tyminski said
.
. Tyminski said he had no idea why
anyone on his administration would
.question Dunn's appointment.
"When we sat down and went over
· the rules l asked that if there were
·ariy concerns, that they would be
brought directly to me, and each one
of the members looked at me and
nodded their heads," Tyminski said.
Hunter acknowledged that the de-
cision he made is not reflective of
Dunn's overall ability to fulfill her
responsibilities. He repeated the fact
that
,
due to conflicts. the two of
t}lem had difficulties working to-
gether.
"My telling go of Kristine does not
. mean that she is not going to be a
good Vice President for Seth," Hunter
said.
Dunn suggested that p
e
rhaps the
·
reasoning behind the anonymous let~
ter. could be attributed to knowledge
that was attained second hand. A situ-
ation such as this, she said. would be
understandable.
"If
this is the case I would just hope
that they would come to me and
speak to me one on one,
"
Dunn
s
aid
.
Sunday afternoon the appoint-
ments were made official and the Stu-
dent Senate voted unanimously in
favor of Dunn.
In an effort to reassure the student
body, Dunn said that she
felt
she was
ab
s
olutely capable of performing her
duties as Executive Vice President of
the Tyminski administration.
"Your insubordina-
tion and mocking
of
_
Student Government
positions and daily
functioning
has
nega-
tively affected other
repre~entatives."
.Ryan Hunter
in· a letter to
Kristine Du,in
Tyminski had nothing but praise for
·
Dunn, attributing hi
s
success in his
campaign to her organization and
hard work. Tyminski said that their
own relationship, as well as his suc-
cess, should be a testament to the
fact that Dunn is fully capable of ful-
filling her responsibilities.
Tyminski wants to make sure that
SGA does not get a bad rap based on
one anonymou
s
l
e
ller
.
"If
anyone has any questions, they
should just come to SGA," Tyminski
said
.
•
c
.
·
~ ;
'
ffif.Ol'tnfittqnTeclifiology
.·
.
·
'
·
exp1afus
onlineStiidentprivacy
Throughout the interview,
.
..
.•. continuedfrompfL
_
,
the
campus.
:
The fast
.
check
_
_ _
-
.
'
lookedatChampagnatHaIL
Even though
.
they are not
'
McConahay said problems are
looking at whatindividuals are
not always because a student
doing, Mcconahay said IT does
.
is intentionally manipulating
have
a
responsibility
-
to nioni-
the systelil.
_
IT ta~es stude
_
nts
tor the network.
·
IT looks for
off temporarily i
_
ftheircomput-
what is happening ~n the net
::
·
ers are causing errors in the sys-
work to determine how well the
tern.
.
.
.
fq6ipII1ent is hahdling the load
.
.
''Either the person is doing
and
watchingforpossible prob-
,
something or perhaps there is
leihs
>>
.,
.
.
..
·.
\
/
:
sowetl:iing
:
wrofig with the
.
PC
,
/
'.We
:
·
are
hot
looking
a_t
wha°t'.
'.
iliat
is generating
a:
lot of errors
students 8.re
'.
cJojij
'
g,
we are
.
~nd then we have to. deal with
·
c:hecking . for. problems
i1_1 the
that," she said.
·
·
system,'';McConahay said.
.
Sophomore Jared Creaser has
/
-
kprobleri1 may be that one
been kicke~ off the network
snioenfcornputer is
_
taking tip
three times since he has been at
.
most of.the bandwidth
.
of the
·· ·
Marist.
As
an information sys-
compuiei-. system:
.
Bandwidth
terns major, he said he recog":
c9riesponds to how much vol-
..
nizes that it is often the result of
mrie a particularline
_
cari carry.
·
his computer being shut down
When one computer is using up
improperly and causing erro!S
too much ofthe
·
systems band--.
-
·
.
.
on the network. Before he was
width it
talces
away
tfom
others
.
called he ·said he was unaware
use of the system.
.
IT could see what was happen-
McConahay sai~ that when
ing on his computer.
one machine is u~ing too much
"Now I know they keep logs
bandwidth it is knocked off the
and if they see errors Q)at are
system until they identify what
slowing down the network they
the machine is doing.
will call you and let you know;'-'
'That is inconvenient for the
Creaser said.
.
.
person whose machine that is,"
Creaser said that being tern-
said Mcconahay, "but one per-
porarily kicked off
_
did nQt
·
soil
,
can't
,
be allowed
-
to take
·,
botherhim,
-
He said itis a good
aw
.
ay
.
the abiliti
_
(,S ofothers to
system and he is glad it is:in
use their machines. It is not that
place.
.
.
·
we want to knock people off the
"It is better tha
_
t they check in
network but we want to protect
on the system and make sure
everyon~'s usage of it."
that everything is running
IT can detennine if one com-
okay," said Creaser.
..
puter is using too much of the
They can tell what machine
bandwidth when periodical
may
be
causing errors but
IT
checks are done of the network.
cannot detect exactly what ma-
Checks are done less than once
terial the person at that machine
a month on different sections of is viewing.
"We only track the sites that
werun,,,McConahay said
.
"We
know how many people visited
the Marist webpages but I can't
tell you who on campus ac-
cessed Yahoo yesterday. There
is no way for me to know that."
To protect themselv(?s, IT is
given some privileges over the
system. For example, in extreme
cases they can check person~)
·
email through student's
MaristB account. Some stu-
.
dents are unaware of this capa-
bility and some disagree with it.
"I don't think people are get-
ting into my email," said Sopho-
mo_re Cliristina Pagano.
'1
don't
really think about it, I just fig-
.
·
ure no one really cares."
Junior Matt Yorke said he
does think about it and expects
that when he writes someone an
email it will not be looked at by
anyone else.
"I have an expectation of pri-
vacy between the person I am
sending an email," he said. "I
feel it is a breach of privacy if
this information can be ac-
cessed."
·
_
Mcconahay said that al-
though she has systems privi-
leges to look in email, she is
_
·
only warranted to do so when
she suspects there is a problem.
"As an educational institution
we have to protect out image
butwe also have to protect our
students and faculty to say
what th!!Y need to say,"
Mcconahay said.
·
From what Mcconahay has
said Marist is in no way "stalk-
ing" its students.
1-898GPLAN2
WWW.jobs.kaplan.com
_
£-0£1,!/f
.fl
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~---------·-------------------------------------------~--:---
/
i
,
' , .
,'
I
1
'
,
;
APRIL 13, 2000
. CollegelookingintoposmbleHillafy-R_itdydeb8te
·
-
-
by
KATIIERINESLAUTA
Staff Writer
It seems everywhere you tum
recently there is some talk of
elections.
.
-
Marist Institute forPubli.c Opin~
.
:.
7
ihn
(MIPO); saict'"drganizing de~
bates is quite a production.
.·
''Campaigns go"inhdebates
over whether there
,
will be de-
"Marist
has
the
pres-
.
tige of polling and an
image
:·
of
.
being a
_
n
academic leader."
Whether it is for President of
the United States or Senator, the
media is constantly talking
about politics.
.
.
.
Besides the presidential cam-
paign, the race between Hillary
Rodham Clinton and Mayor
Rudy Giuliani for New York State
Senate will become even more
of a hot topic as election day
draws near.
,
Photo courtesy CNN
A senate debate between Clinton and ~iuliani could in the works.
Marist hopes to become a part
of this attention. Recently, there
have been discussions of a pos-
sible debate between the
present New York G.i
.
ty mayor
and our First Lady. . , ..
However, according to Chief
College Relations Officer Tim
Massie, nothing is definite.
"We're in the very, very, very,
very early ~tages of this,"
Massie said.
Marist has begun to discuss
the formation of a debate be-
tween the~o campaigns
-:
With
.
the great
•
reputation o(M:#~t
and an often-neglected Hudson
River
.
Valley population, this
.
would be an excellent way. to
bring an important campaign
·
into the community.
.
.
·
"Marist has the prestige of
Dmiler recognizes
club
achievements
by
SARAH BERGERON
rector of student activities. "All
Staff Writer
of the dubs on campus received
certificates, which is
.
really
Dinner, awards, applause and
great."
.
.
.
. ..
tears marked the end of old ad-
In particular, some clubs re-
ministrations andthe beginning
-eeived
sp~cial
.
recognition for
of new ones
at
the Student Gov-
outstanding achievements over
emment Transition dinner on
the last year. These clubs, che>-
Friday, April
7
at Christos.
'
.
sen by the Vice Presiclent
.
for
I
polling and an image of being
an academic leader," Massie
said.
·
While this idea seems like an
excellent one, ther~ is
.
no gu<!f-
antee.it
will
occur.
··
There has
been no discussion on the can~
dictates' level of any debates
.
taking place, let
_
alone a debate
near
.
Marist.
Lee Miringnoff, Director of the
·
bates," he said.
·
Since this proposed debate is
·
not in the works yet, there is no
set date forwhen this will take
place or venue for where itwili
be located. However; if one is
scheduled, it will
..
not be until
after a possible
.
September pri.-
·
mary.
.
.
·
.
'fiml\'lassie
Cl.lief
College
·
Relations
Officer
·
The students' response from
·
this proposed debate is ex-
Marist arid the Hudson River
tremely positive. Whiie some
Valley can
'
cmly hope such an
.
.
laughed at the idea of major po-
important political debate will
litical figures coming to the
come this way.
Marist area, the majority felt is
In the most recent MIPO poll
would be an excellent idea.
·
·
about the Giuliani-Clinton race;
"I thirik it isreally good," said
the
•
two candidates
.are
closely
Laur~n O'Gara; a Special Edu.:
matched for the firsftime since
ccttion/Psychology major. "I
·
last October
;
:
, .
hardly watch the news here~ so
·
. ·
GiliHani has thesupportof46
it wouldbe
·
a good way to in-
percentofNewYorkState'sreg-
fonn me
:
"
·
·
.
.
·
·
istered voters, whileCiiriton bas
·
'
With such an indefinite idea,
43 percent of the support.
nothing is certain .
.
·
However,
•
Eleven percent is undecided.
At the dinnei:, entitled ''.Unify-
Club Affairs Lou Totino and his
ing Students Through Action:
staff,arethosethathavemetthe
Enhancing the Quality," Marist
·
·expectations
for
achievement
club presidents joined the
·
stu.: and co~unity c:optributio~s.
.
The
tug-of-war was oneQf the highlights
of
Saturday's Field Events.
dent government leaders for the
.
According to Lynch, the deci-
fo~a~ tran~ition of the student
sion was
'
tightthis year; so
.
tight,
· "
..
.
·
.·
'nv
..
·
·
.
.
·v
·
·
·
·
·.
·
K S
·.·
··
.·_
·
·
..
·
· .
·
·_
•
•
.
·
.
F
.
·.un
..
·
·
'.
·.
+
.
11. ~ .
·
.
.
·
e·
·
.
.
h
.
~.
·
·
.a
·
.. ·
·
.
·
b
.·
.·
y
.
. ·
.. ··
.
·
.
.
···
.
·
··
a 1 1
:
.
.
.
...
•· ·.·
.·
admm1strat1ons.
-
tl:tatties were dec:lared.:
.
;
}
\.J'1'..E.J.lli
·
Ll.l
J.J!
u,J
Themaineventoftheevening
"They hadivecy tough ded--
•
was th
.
e inauguration
_
of Seth
· .
sfon this
.
year,
.
and ffeel that
•
.
·
·
Tyminski as Student Booy Presi-
.
they ll)ade
tlie
best decision by
-
..
;
continued from
pg:1_
dent
for
the
2000~01
adrriimstra
~
·
aUow1ng for aJiet he sai~.
.. '
· ·.
tion .. With
.
faculty members,
·.·
'JJletie
,
occ~rre(in th(award
Alpha
·
PiiiDelta finished
'
ahead
ildlllinistratorn,
President
,
for. the club demonstr~tii,g out:
offlyKappa Sigma.
.
·
··
.
.
.·.·
.·
:
Murray and
•
.
members
:
of:t
,
he
standing°
\
~om
111
unfry
..-
~ei~fce
>
·
0
rniizabethJacobson;president
Board of :Trustees looking
·
on,
.
Th"e award
was
shared
between
of
Gre~k.
Council
and member of
StuderitChief Justice
;
Caroline
MCCTA
:
;
whic~
)
p
~~
rfotm.e
.
d
Kappa Kappa Ganim~, saidtliat
Davis administered· the oath
:
of
children) theaterfor c;orilq:llimty
the last day of Greek Week was
office to Tyrni~ski. . .
. · ... ·
·
·
schools, raising over
.
$~,00Qfor
the
field
events, which hicludep
Once the o;ltff was t:iken,
the
·
.
battered ,vo
·
menwitllJhe ,Vagina
tlietug"of war, the big wheel re~·
riewest student admiriistratiori
Mori6Iog'ues peiformanc~; and
lay and the tire throw.
.
·
.
.
·
..
was
offici;il. According
·
to
the Marist'Band, \VhO travefoct
·
-'.
'!
A
lot of people participate in
Tymi~ski, the
.
ceremony went
with all of the athletic teains for
th
'
e
;
field events,»
she
.
saia.
well.
.
·
.
.
.
.
.
·
.
aH compeiitions,"performed for
"Pepple weren't separated an_d
"''It
w~s
a
very well ruri cer:,
several Presidents' receptiqns
there ~as
a
lot <>_funity."
.
.
emony,"Tymihskisaid. "Every-
and performed at the Run
for
·
Jacobson said
C
thatGreek
thing went smoothly and it was
H
·
·
·
·
Wi
.
.
.
eekis
.
iil.
.
s
.
o
.
,.
a
..
.
. w
.
.
ay
·
t~
.-
~
.
h
.
\>
,
v/
_
oth
...
·
~
.
.
·..
.
unger.
.· .
. . .
. .
. .
.
..,
._...;;..;.a
just'a nice evening.''
.
~
,
.
.
The
'
Class
of the
Year award
ers
'
how the sororities and fra:.
.
.
According
•
to
·
co_.organiier
was given to the Class of 2001,
ternides
are in~olved Ori. cam:,
Chris Uryriowicz, the dinner at-
marking its second outstanding
pus.
.
.
.
.
tempted to stay to the point,
recognition in its three years
·••rt
was open house tha(week-
while keeping the importance of
here.
end," ~he said: "The incoming
the ceremony.
· .
.
·
•
The Black Student UniQn.was
freshman see the involverrienf
"It was good to come together
awarded Club of the.Year, rec-
of Greeks on caJ!ljJlis."
and recognize what clubs and
ogn~zing their efforts in holding
Gina J.,ozito, co-chair of Greek
SGA did this
year,"
Urynowicz
over
18
different activities over Week ahd member of Sigma
said. "It was nice because usu-
the year, includ~ng a baby Sigi.na Sig!}1a, said that
th¢
ma~J:.l
;,tJly thes~ ihtngs
;
drag
.
on
/
QUt
shower for
.
unwed mothers.
. •
go!ll
fqr
all ~~orgiµji~9-
,
oris was
.
this year
ii
was
~ijo~
so people.
.
.
A~
~w~d
\Vas also
presented
to
i:t~ve fon,
'
arid
'
H
,vas not
got
~
chance
to
.
be able to talk
to the
·
Greek Council recogniz~
about witi'ning or losing.
with each other."
.
ing them as Council of the Year.
"My favorite event was the
In
addition to the formal inau-
Overall, the dinner provided
fundraiser because it was not
guration of the new
·
student
an opportunity for the efforts of worth any points
as
far as
who
body president, the dinner was
·
student leaders to
be
recognized
won," she said. "For an entire
also an opportunity to recognize
by
fellow students, faculty and
day the Greeks worked toge~er
all of the clubs on campus.
administration. President Den-
as
.
a whole to raise money for a
"Everyone is recognized at
nis Murray and Dean Gerard
good cause."
this event," said Bob Lynch, di-
Cox spoke at the dinner.
Lozito said another of her fa-
Meghan O'GeafY competes in S
_
aturdciy's tricycle races.
v:orite e.vents
was
the belly flop
come tog~ther for a common
contest;
·
'
·
.
··
.
.
"h
.
·
·d
·
'
.
.
.
,
cause,
,
e sat .
,
.
.
.
·
.
'
tI
likedthe belly flop because
.
The talent show also occurred
it's hysterlcal watching every-
·
.
duringGreek'Week. Thesorori~
·
one,".she said .
.
"The whole idea
ties. coordinated
·
dances and
o.f it is insane."
.
skits that th¢y p~rformed at the
.
,
;
H~yin_
9
_fu~
s
_
~}l!~~j~
~~
,
!h~
.
.
.
:.
~~Jli
Jfoletti Theater
.
.
Frid
,
ay
:
~ottva~I~!1 behm~
.
1t a~!! ~tbe
.
r
·_
~v~ning.
/
'.'
·.
, , ,
,
;
·_:·:
/
tpan commg out on top of the
.
.
.
.
Wilile
·
Kapp~i'Lamda
·
Psi
standings
:
.
.
.
.
walked
.
away with first place,
Joel Gardener, co~chair of Lozito said it was a fun way for
·
GreekWeekandmemberofPhi
everyone to display their tal-
Kappa Sigma, ~aid that Greek
.
·
ents.
Week is about unity and coop-
·
MaureenSachetti,amemberof
eration among the organiza-
Alpha Sigma Tau, agreed.
tions.
.
"It's like fourth grade again,"
"It is such a beautiful thing Sachetti said.
when all Greeks of all letters can
i
THE CIRCLE
A:PRIL
13,
2000
Fea
·
tu
i
res
Marist Student
·
Thomas Wilson's remarkable life
He has lived through war, crime, and other unimaginable tragedies, but he still comes to school each day with a desire to learn, and the
motivation to
·some
day, go back and repay all those who have helped him.
·
BYLISABURKE
Features Editor
Look around you in your next
class. Most likely you'll see
people who have had nearly the
same experiences as you; a simi-
lar upbringing, family life, and
roughly the same high school
and college experiences. This
would be true unless Thomas
Wilson is in your class.
·
We can
oniy imagine what he has been
through.
·
Wilson, a Liberian native, has
not only been
a
successful stu-
dent, but a volunteer teacher in
the harshest of circumstances,
an emergent leader in
.
a time
when fear and submission is the
natural tendency, and a fearless
pioneer in humanitarian organi"
zations during his homeland's
civil war.
.
His life did not start out this
·
way, but as that of a "normal"
young man. He lived with his
family in Cape Palmos, a nice
.c:ity:
outside the
.
capital. They
-
:
-were
fairly well off, hisipother
,
:;
was the chairwomaii'of the N
aJ
tfonalDemocratic
Party, and
his
father, the head of telecommu-
nications for a big company.
They had a house, a car,
and
land, just like the rest of us
.
. ·
Photo courtesy
11tomas lVilron
Volunteer teachers during thier first graduation
ceremony.Proud they have molded minds disturbed by war
and crime. Wilson is second from left.
the remaining children unedu-
cated and without direction. To
encourage the children (the
ages of seventh to twelfth grade
students) not to take up arms,
Wilson and friends organized a
volunteer teacher association.
In order to remain in Liberia with
the students, it was necessary
for Wilson and others to cross
the border irito the
Ivory Coast
at least once
a
·
day to create a
supply line of food for every-
one; The arduous walk
tra-
versed bushes; a beach, and a
river, and took nearly five hours
the refugee camp. The refugee
camp wasn't a camp in the tra-
ditional sense,
a
group of shel
-
ters all in a common
area,
but
·
the refugees stayed in houses
with volunteers who allowed
them to stay while paying rent
after the first month. They had
little cash, and depended
on
state
aid
and
money
from
other
family members. Wilson's par-
ents were finally
able
to get to-
gether enough money to build
their own house.
After three months in the Ivory
Coast after that incident, he felt
restless.
It
was useless, sitting
in another country and not do-
ing anything
.
Wilson felt impo-
tent, and had to make a change.
His parents urged him not to go
back, for the impending danger,
but he couldn't stay.
He saici of the
.
refugee camp,
"It
was terrible. We were re-
duced to nothing. We were
nothing
.
"
·
Wilson in Menza, South Sudan in May 1999 during his time
volunteering for Doctors Without Borders.
His parents also encouraged
his friends to stay in the camps,
but one friend wouldn't allow
that. Wilson named James
Biney as someone who encour-
aged him to go back to Liberia
and make this school they had
started work.
This was August of 1990 when
he returned to Liberia to con-
tinue teaching. His school had
grown from
40
students in the
first semester to approximately
500. As a registered refugee,
and with help along the border,
he was able to get the food and
supplies and leave to go back
home. Because of the nature of
the border,
the
government was
unable to seal it off, as much as
they tried, to prevent people
from leaving
Liberia.
Wilson graduated high school
in 1988 and attended a techni-
cal college with the intentions
of becoming an electronics en-
gineer.
·
Sounds pretty normal,
but this is where we differ.
By
his third semester, his life as he
knew it would end:
Civil war had
-
broke out in
Liberia, forcing natives to flee
their hometowns to find refug~
in camps in the neighboring
Ivory Coast. Many,. including
his family and friends, had left,
as supply lines to food and wa-
ter had been cut, so staying
meant starving. Young people
left as an alternative to being
drafted, otherwise the army
would come in and forcefully
recruit soldiers.
The staff and faculty of the lo-
cal school
fled
as well, leaving
to complete, but it was worth
not having to leave home.
There were soldiers at the bor-
der, so it was difficult getting
across and back safely.
"You can't tell who people
are," he said.
·
"You can't trust
anybody."
But the idea of staying became
less
appealing after the
first
trag-
edy struck. Rebels set off a
multi-fire and the sound reso-
.
nated throughout the land,
heard by all who remained in
Liberia. Wilson lost two friends.
For the first time, the tragedy hit
home.
"I
can't stay here," he said.
This provided enough impetus
for him to leave home for the
first time.
He finally joined his parents
and other fonner neighbors in
Wilson had since become a
volunteer for the
Red
Cross, and
this allowed him to cross the
border more freely. He had his
share of
the
rations, and people
knew who he was and what he
was doing, so he was able to
get
all the
food he needed back
\
Please see WILSON
pg.
6
APRIL 13~ 2000
..
WILSON
Cont'dfrompg. 5
be good."
By 1998
;
the war was officially
to the school.
over when Taylor won reelec-
Wilson was now waitingfor
·
tion. Wilson says this is be-
his opportunity to come to the
cause if he didn't win, the war
United States
.
His ties to Marist
would never end
.
Liberia is in
originated when Brother Paul
contjnual process of rebuilding.
Ambrose was the
-
keynote· His parents and many of his
speakerat Wilson's High School
friends still live in the Ivory
gr
_
aduation
,
and he had kept in
Coast.
'!O
~
MONTSEII
contact with him since
.
In
1990,
While working with the Red
he wrote to Brother Paul, letting
·
Cross
~
he found
·
another hu-
him know of his situation and if manitarian cause that he wanted
there was any way he could
to become a part of. Do
.
ctors
help. He told Wilson about a
Without Borders is an organi-
scholarship program that he had
zation
·
.
that was present in
for international students, al-
Liberia helping the
war
victims.
lowing them to complete their
(See panel, previous page)
_
He
degree at Marist free of charge.
saw these people, who took an
He offered this to Wilson, but
oath
·
of neutrality and
·
just
hewasn'tabletocomehereuntil
wanted to help people. He
the previous recipient finished
found this
·
afuazing
;
and
found
his degree; he would have to
himself asking
_
thei;n,
_
"Why
wafr4orfiveyears
.
Hedecided
would you do
tlus?!'
He soon
i
r•=
1
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r
;
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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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~7:~7:~
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-
that this was a
gre~i
\5pportu
>
;
fourid out that
he,
;
tbo
c
b
hld
::
English is Wilsori
:
s native Ian,-
;
.
,
nization
\
iS the
:
Oest Way
•
he can
-
.,
Ed.
'
f
t
?tf,
p~
~r
i
}f!~'l!~P?W!l
,
.
,
,
.
,
nity if he could just w~it ifout.
-
answer that question.
:·
-
":,
r
:
•
-
guage, but he picked up French
_,
;
do that.
~
Aftednat
,i·
he
c
will
·
fr
.'.
,
.
()utlo_o.~ -l{~g<?f
~
a_<:qg~~.pt_c
_
~e
~
.
_
•
Brother Paul sent him money
·
He was iritrigtied; and knew
:
phoneticallyby living
-
in Africa
.
nally be able
-
and free to think
•
of
:
.
_
_
;
ated
by
Professor '{;faire. Keith
.
_
and luck to keep him safe in the
that this was the next step he
and working with this French-
himself
,
and
-
"startmy life
all
over
·
and myself._ She ~as he! ped me
meantime.
wanted to take with his life.
speaking organization.
again."
set up
_
the mtervl<!W _
wtth]1o-
While waiting to come to
When Wilson leaves Marist, -_ He wil
_
l have a degree in com-
His
·
home
.in
Liberia was de-
mas
:
Wi~son and provided t~
m
-
America, he continued working
·
with a degree in computer sci-
puters, but he knows more about
stroyed, but
_
he
_
can call '\vher
-
-
formation on Doctor~ wltl!out
with the Red Cross. He was
ence infonnation systems, he
society and humanity than any
ever in the world he
_
goes his B_orders. We would
_
lik<; ~hzs to
enrolled in the training program
plans to return to Liberia and
textbook could teach. He will
home.
·
·
·
become a r:__egular f~Clture
m
The
in Monrovia,Liberia's capitol.
workwith Doctors WithoutBor-
take his
life lessons and use
"I don't have
:
a real home to
Circle
_
qppearing at
.
least once
During his training, Liberian
ders.
them to do good and help oth-
goto," he said, '"but I have ev-
_-p_
ei- f
~~<!
ster.Offr ~im is to_sup
-
President Charles Taylor or-
He
_
first worked with them in
ers.
.
ery home
to
go
to;»
:·:
por
r
and_promote mtematwnal
dered an attack of Monrovia.
1999 when he volunteered for a
"I -want to pay them back for
On the future; he said
,
"l al
"'
·
life
gnd
interesth
'
ire at_Afarist.
Wilson and the Red Cross were
mission in South Sudan, Africa.
all
they have
,
done for
;
me," he
:
•
. ways have hope that things will
.
--
Any,inpu(yoi(can provide to-
kept there, in the buffer zone, to
After exams last May
,
he flew
saidofDoctors without Borders.
_
_
be well/'
:>
-'
,
. ,
.
·
,:
wards
.
ih1s
wouifib~
gC,.ei.uz
§
ap
~
·
, _
take care of the injured
,
J\n at-;,
_
to Paris for a
,
de\,rieijng.of._his._, '1:-Ie feels workingfortheirorga::-
,
.
.
;
,
_
, ·
1
,,.,
.
,
. , . : -.
·-
-
-
1 ,
prei:ib.tJd;
··
Emditds'at'HZAL.
:.
tempt_toes~ap~
\\'.a§
tjs~ng!h.~if. . 9li§Sion,
.
llJ!dJ9
,
ugq
,
o_µ~
,
h~ )}as!,;.
-
-
-
~.;/
',-,))
{,
I
~
,
.
:
: ;,
:
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,::J~o(,·
.
'J\
d
fhan
f
Yoii
?
]
>•'.
·
:?\/
1
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/
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.
r:
·s•.
,
_
.
Jives.
_
.
the worst assignment possible;
Of President Taylor
;
Wilson
·
he
was to go to Menza
,
a town
said he can see why people like
·•
in horrible condition
'
. He was
him; but he feels that he is no
there for one month, and
.
al
-
good
.
'
·
though it was one of the hard:-
"He's got a lot of charisma,"
est things he had done, he en'"
he said. "People believed
-
he joyed it because he was
_
doing
was a god, but I could
_
see he
what he loved; he was helping
was a tyrant I knew he couldn't
people.
•·
·
·
Blast From
The P
-
ast)
A Letter to the Editor, dated November 2, 1989
'
-
0
:
.
.
:
.•
-
.
·.-
·
.
~
Editor:
I'd really like to know whom
the administration is trying to
kid with
-
this Alcohol
·
Aware-
ness Week slogan of "Party
Smart."
·
-
Marist is a largely dry campus,
with the possession of alcohol
resulting ina written reprimand
and a fine. The college has been
working with the local police in
busting off-campus parties. It
seems to me that college offi-
cials don't want us to party
smart; they would rather we not
party at all.
Instead of fighting about the
whole issue with Marist Secu'-
rity running aroun
_
d trying to
bust people- honestly, they get
their kicks off of it-and with stu-
dents trying to hide their alco-
hol, succeeding most of the
time, I'd like to offer an altema-
~~
-
i.
•.
Since drinking is going-to oc-
·
cur anyway
,
why
not
control it
instead of banning it? Campus-'
sanctioned parties
_
could con-
trol the amount of al~hol con-
sumed, eliminate the possibility
of students driving back to cam-
pus from
.
a party drunk, and also
eliminate the complaints many
residents
·
give to the college
over noisy off-campus parties.
All this is
·
not to say that I
don't believe in partying smart
.
I just think it is hypocritical to
say it and not let us party at
all.
-People come to college to party
as wellas10 study. The admin-
istration can't stop students
from drinking, no matter what it
does .
.
The forbidden fruit
.
is,
after all, the sweetest.
James
Hurler
APRIL
.
13, 2000
THE
c1Rct£
··
Features
ARIES
You'd like to buy new toys, but
-
you can't quite afford them. Not
a problem. Instead of worrying,
look around for ways to increase
your income. You should be a
wealthy person. It would look
so g,ood on you!
TAURUS
lID
How about a romantic excur-
sion this evening? Most of the
hassles should be out of the way
early, leaving plenty of fun and
games. Being a weeknight could
complicate matters, but on the
other hand, why not? Take your
·
good times when you can get
them, right?
SAGITIARIUS
You have a winning hand! You
might do well in love this
evening. Your work could get
in
the way of romance and travel
this morning, but don't despair.
You're more than rewarded for
your patience later on. Be in the
right place, with the right per-
son.
There's a lot of activity; that's
CAPRICORN
·
vmGO
(or sure. People may drop by at
.
Changes are still going on at
tenjbly inconvepit!nt times. This
.
Travel will be much easier later
your place. Something you
try
couldbekids;byllieway: You're
in the week, maybe as soon as
maynotgoasplanned; butdon
_
't
_
trying to be
.,
~ good sport, but
tomorrow. Befo!e you ~o, take
despair. Just keep putting in the
don'tletthemprishyou
_
around.. care
0 ~
somethmg thats
-
been
corrections and trying again;
Ifyouwantpec1ceandq~iet.kick
,
_bothenng
you.You ma~ not
_
·
That's your secret formula for
them all out.
-
.
want t~
-
talk much about It yet,
-
success, anyway. You just never
but if you can get it tidied up,
give up!
you
1
fffeel much better.
GEMINI
You're going to be in a talkative,
playful mood. You're teaching
LIBRA
others, and they're teaching
This could be a playful day for
you. You may have to learn
you. Get together with a favor-
about more rules and regula-
ite partner and good friends.
tions;
·
h
_
owever.
_
No problem,
Don
:t
spend too much;
_
that
right? MaJ_ce
th~in
into a game,
w~~ t be ~e~essary
.
Your com-
and they inightalniost b~ frin ... ·
._
.' panionsh1p IS extremely valu-
.
·
-·
'
•
· .,,.
able. Savor that and take care
_
_
.
.
_
.
.
...
not to overdraw an account.
CANCER
AQUARIUS
You know somebody who sees
things quite differently than you
·
do. This is good, actually. To-
·
day this opposite could get you
going. He. or she won'
_
t agree
with you but stimulates you to
take cr:eath(e action. Don't
worry; the overall outcome's
good.
Waiting until this evening to ask
for the money might be
_
a good
SCORPIO
PISCES
idea. Timing is a delicate sci-
A bonus you'd c~mnted on may
You're creative and powerful
ence.Yoti need
·
to use'youdn-
-
not come yet Don't spend the
no:w. You're probably getting to
telligence, of course. Youriritu-
·
,
-
money until
i
you're
·
~ure the
where you're making a pretty
ition might be even more iis~~ c-cht~_cclc
~~f
cliare.9:
;
Y
_
?ui- bank
~
;
g9og Income, too. Today's not
ful, however.
If
in doubt;
\vaif
''Yourluclcgets,better aspie day-.. quite easy, but don't let that slow
goes,,on,
.
butjt's~~qtty ron~:
_,
you down. Your hard work could
~eteJS
/
~e~t
.
~o~
;
t~
~~~
·
a
;
?I-~-
f
biieflfif! eve1i'more money, and
.
.:_
nsk_
~~'Y-
Suc~Wljh the
_
pum~ar.
_
--
that's just
·
as it should be .
.
·
··
--•
-
-
.
.
-_.·::
.'.'"\:
..
.
_
...
~
·
.:
-.:-
·
..
·
.
,
.
..
.
~-
....
~..
.
.
·
,
:--
PAGE 7
,
•
I
I '
•
•
< '
• '
•
·
'
I
I
I
{
0
·
•
_.
APRIL
·
13, 2000
.
·
Student
.
not enterfiliqedJJY
The
·
·-
eircle's
·
,
A.&E
section
I neve;
·
b~fore havet seen a settionfo ~ny paper as.poo~is the A&Esection of
·
TheCircle: With the exception of the -"On
TV" column, I rar¢lyfind anything worth
reading in this humorless, intellectually boring farce 9f.an:entertainme
_
nt section:
Last week's review ofthe
Third
EyeBiind concirt
·
wl!S ori~9.f.thepqor~st revie,'!Vs
.
I have
·
seen in
-
~i
long time,
.
Firstly, the articie
_
does not review.
tile
'
show',
·
merely
giv~s
:
th~
opit1i~~
_
of~~
i_jp~e,r_
Cr4•~~Js
_
~~at
tli~
_
Op
'
_
~d
)
~~H~n
~1/or~ .
.
:.
~~c~ii~J_r,,
iJ
th~
:'
W.IJ~envas "ein,b¥1f1~s~4 t?
,
be there» as
·
slie eJoqu~~tly
_
pt1t,
_
why
_
d1d
'
_
sheg<?,?
{
Ht~r
·
article:
points" outseveral aspectsi>_f
~i
cq11cert
tliiit
are
cpinmon
'
i~
almost
any
_
oth
'
er ·
ven
_
ue.Yes; it was hot in the McCann ¢enter.-as it \YOUld be
in any other crowded-
concert. Maybe
-
~
e
.
write
r
_'should gc>°oui more
'
ofteri
and
realize
that large-scaJt
social events a
·
s
·
_
such
·
are bound to be
·
crowded and overheate
·
d.
But
the
probleµi goe.s far beyond
_
on~or two poqrly written artides,
:
it
goes
up
to
.
the section itself, I have read afewofthe
.
'.
'Kmidtsen's Komer''.articles in the past
.
month to only find°myself aggravated further. ':poes
.
thi
_
s writer•s
·
~ogance
knqw
~o
.
ends?
-
~~ i~
-
r~~lY1
_
if~Vef,funn
_
y andN~ occasional att~nipts to souncl educated
faH
miserably:
·
1t is no wonder that the section is in such shambles with
an
incompetent . .
--■
.
-----~~~~~lll!l!!l--~~~~111!_1111
... _______
ia
and
ignorant
writer
·_
.
such
:
as
him
as
.
the
.
·
.
editor
,
THE CIDl'lliE
Th~
-
A&EsectjoriofTheCircle~asamazingpotentialtliatis<;~mple(elyuntap~
:
.
•
-
h-
.
,
:
d
_
.
~
/
.
.
·
-
'~f
-
_·
·
_
:
,
.
-.
1
:
1
..
_.
•
~
-
--·
It could be used
as
·
a·
fonn for·
ideas, suggestions, and topics of·entertaininent
i
t
e stu
ent n
·
ewspaper-
·
o
n-ranst
,
co
ege
·
Instead of this we have shoddy writing; poor columns,
and
boredom .
.
I hope
tliat
•
'
''
Jaime Tollleo &
Chris
Grogan
something happens to improve the section in the
future
because it could
be
·
a very
.
Editors-in-Chief
.
interesting and important part of
.
the paper, as well as part of Marist College:
ShawnLockt
Jill
G~ocoildo &
·
•
·.
<
',
Doug
Guarino
.
Managing E4itors
.
. Mik~
-
Bagnato
_
·
·
Opir1;ion Editor
.
·
.
'Jetl'Dahncke
i
News Editor
-·
·
Chris Knudtsen
A'&EEditor
.
.
.
::
Mik~Haigl(
" ;
~
-
,
,
·
..
:·,
M~Grodio&
·
·
PlwtciEditor
..
,;
.
.
•'
ColleenBarrett
·
Business"Editors
.
Patrick Whittle; Staff Czar
.
LisaBurke
.
.
Features Editor
Mike
Ferraro
Sports
Editor
.
Greg
S~omone
.
Webmaster
G.ModeleClarke, Faculty Advisor
.
The Circle
is the student newspaper of MaristCollege, Poughkeepsie,
NY.
Issue
are publi~hed 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
HZAL.
You
can
visit us on the web at
htt
:llwww.
academic.marist. edulcircle. -
,
;
:
:
.
'
APRIL
13,
2000
PAGE9
The views expressed on these pages are not necessarily those of
The Circle
Clloose
_your
own
fate:
'
'
(it'
S
:
.
e!!!d~~~!:ytell~!!~a!ndst= ~u~eY.,l
cafeteria lunch.
•
The shackles
Boss that you like to play
commenting on how good your
of locker combinations and
·
racquet-ball and fancy yourself significant other looks at a com-
paperbag-covered books were
a decent golfer, inviting him to
pany picnic, and after a few gin
tossed away in favorofuncom-
·
hit the links with you some time;
and tonics he/she begins to
fortable Abercrombie & Fitch
or B) Describe your root beer
openly lament being married to
gear and social smoking .
.
Soon,
bottle collection at length, in-
a fat cow/fat oaf. Do you A)
these new vices will be dropped
forming The Boss of color,
Take The Boss aside and have a
in
favor of business lunches
··
depth, funny label pictures, and
heart to heart, explaining the vir-
and the nicotine patch. Ah,
lingering olfactory emanations
tue of his/her ability to sustain a
adulthood,
.
.
··
.
resulting from your failure
·
,to
· ·
meaningful marriage with his/her
It
was fqur years ago when we
clean the bottles.
-~
·
overweight husband/wife, elimi-
·
. .
.
. .
·
. . . .·.
.
.
..
.
Were faced with c'rudal deci:-
,
Scenario
T.\\'.9:
The Boss re-
nating the need to ogle at your
',
.,
,,:::
·
,>
:.:;:\
t·:{.;f'"
'
-
'.
··
.·
..
sions fot perhaps the first time
quests that
-
you perform the ar-
more attractive
·mate;
or B) Take
b y P A ~ ~ ~ /
:,,/
Jnourliye~. Decision.slike;''Do
duoustaskofphotocopyinghis
The Boss aside and give him
.
.
.
.
' ,
;:.
:
;
: <
.C::.
'
:':.'·
·\
-
/~~:
•
'
ljotn a fraternity or theCornm
most recent manifesto. Do yo,u
"The Rock Bottom" through the
The clock is Jicking
.
on·
-
Jhe
·
Aris society?" Decisions like,
A) Jump at the chance to per-
tray of bologna sandwiches?
Class of 2000. The:final
.
sa:nds
_:
"Do I stay home and write that
form pointless busywork, si11ce
Scenario Five: You've had it
are
_
slipping through the
_
hour-
·
College Writing paper
-
or do I
-
you're making a big 20K a year
with The Boss. Now, he/she is
glass
_
th~t is our collegiate _ex-
.
ride·the Bertie's bus and.risk the
plus dental and you don't waii't
bringing the age
.
old tactic of
perience. The final leavefofthis
.
driver mocking nie after a total
to screw it up; or B) Say in a
sexual harassment to the table,
four-year tree of knowledge and
- ·
stranger ralphs on my shoe?"
Jamaican accent,
"Listen
up,
presenting you with the ultima-
aspiration are finally fluttering
And yes, even decisions Hke,
The Boss, I'm a badass mutha
.
tum that you may only keep
to the earth. The final slices are
.
''.Do lsimply stand by arid laugh. and I don't take no crap ... froriJ
your job
if
he/she is allowed
to
being de'(oured raveifously
or do I actively participate
in
nobody!"?
·
·
refer
to
yo1i'with pet names like
fromthepizzaofmirsenioryeru;.
·
naked slip-and-slides in the
Scenario Three: The Boss
"Pookie" and "Smootchie-
-
..
<
·.
Melodramaaside,
-
it is
-
pretty
..
·
basement of Leo?"
·
•
gives you the keys to the com-
pants."
·
Do you A) Gleefully
--
-·
damn scary
<
·
·
·
·
•
..
-
.
·
~
:
\ ·
-
·· ·
.
So; n9:w that we have collec-
·
pany car, which just so happens
·
oblige (you' re up to 22K and
-
Fouryearj:ag_9;
·
.
o/~:.~~~e
:
an.x
~;,
·
·::
c
tivefrcom~ to
.:
this.,new,cross-
to be the Delorean from the
stock options now, baby), and
.
.
jously wajjing Ul!'oµg~cl~ssjif:'
'
hQaos;
w!fet~
dp
.,,
~e
go
frolll
originaj.£~afk Tq The Eu{~re.
;
I?o
~
ev~I_l
.
m~1¢l comp@_y shjrts ~at
'·
-
,
for
:;
cJa~t.h§
}
.~~
f
:
~
~~F
-~N
l!~h
'
Jner~z
(
JJre
~
Iioi§ei~e ours;
' ·_
you
A)
Say~'~e>a[f?~
Y
t!iis,
:
is
ff_
sa{
:J
fI\#i
t~
w;ith
;
~~o
:
ptchie'~
.
·
\
School: T~o'1~
_
sues ago;J ~as · proceed at your own nsk!
heavy;'
1
and dnve 1t around
pants ; or B) Work up the nerve
writinganequallysappJ'.
-
'Ican't
.
..
.
···
Scenario One
.
: You a!Jd The
town; honking atevery girl you
to tell the boss that you'll main-
:
believ~ it'.s seaj~rcyear ~Jr~ady''
}
·
Bos
_
s
_
are haying a getting
7
tg-
·
s~e; orB) Grab a sports almanac
tain a professional relationship
i
column; ahd you cmfp~obably
.
i
·
know
:.
each-other
-
lunch' at Sal
:
and go back (to th,efuture, as it
.
expec(anothe~ in the ~nal isslle
/
Anthony's
_in
Union Square.
were)
SO
years, bettirg on evecy
.
but tha~ is besides the p~int:
_
It
.
.
The
·-
Bo.ss comments that he
major sports event and becom-
-
was a mereOfou_ryears agotfiat
.
.
likes\iour ~ork, anct"inquires
ing agazillionaire?
we traded bad HighSchool
~af-:-
._
.
about your
-
interests off the job.
Scenario Four: The Boss
fi-
0pfuioh
,
~tor deprive, self
·
of sleep,
.
·
writes
headli~~
·-
in third person
:,
..
: ·-
··•«•"
""'''
·"·'~
;.
.
,·
.
·
•
•
·
It
.
sounqs like a self~explana-
.
sions come to fruition, we have
".
,
i,
tory term
':
to
:
me, but
for
those
·
·
gotto put in a c~mcerted effort
,
..
·
-·
readers'u~familiar to_ it, the
to work on the project before it
:
.
.
alinighter is the act of Viorking
·
slips away. I happen tci get the
'
·
·
·
throughthe night without sleep
:
most work done in the middle of
Do it!!
,
_
.
the night
-
..
. But
it
is oh,
so-
much more
The reason I tell you this is
·
than
.
that!
;
The allnighter is a
-
because
·
I want to ~ffer the
heroic psychological event; it· allnighter as an effective means
is a conquest of the mind over
of getting your own work done.
the
desini to quit. A,nd it's also
And, I can offer advice.on how
.
_
.
what I do at least once a week
to do it right.
.
·
,
byMICIIAELBAGNATO
-
·
inthecomputerlabinDonhelly.
·
:
1-
Setting:
Opinion Editor
·
.
-
,
·
.
·
;
WHY?
'
.
·
":
Find an environmentthathas
As.I
·
write
.
!hi5;rnank~fy6ll'.
·
,
~
:
Tb"tfaris
_
wef to this question
- .
as Iittled,~stracti
,
o
:
ns
~
p~ssibJ
.
~:
.
are
the wUiing inhabitants ofa
:
is
:
not very complicated;
·
Sun-
·
This is
f!iUCh
easi¢r to achieve
·
land of make-believe and fairy.:
•
-
.
ply,
iri
·
our disorganized,hectic
·
•
intheiniddleofthenight
ldon!t
.
tales, playing silly pinatagames
·
lives. wecommissiori"ourselves
fi~dmyselfwondering
.
whatev-
for candydrops and lollipops.
toamultitudeofprojects. These
eryoneelseisdoing,asthelogi-
Sexual harassment is not funny
If
you answered
"A"
to any
of the above, you should be
ashamed of yourself
.
If
you
answered "B" to any of the
above, you have a slightly more
developed sense of humor, but
shame on you anyway
.
Truly, a
win/win situation is hard to
come by.
Patrick Whittle came one goal
short of
a "hat
trick"
on
the ice
last Sunday against the St.
Louis Blues. Oops! wrong
Patrick. Oh, man.
.
Why? Because you were asleep
projects
_initially
intrigue us
cal assumption remains that
·
.
,-,
when I wrote this at 3:30 in the
,
based on their ability to exer-
they
~
all asleep. Ahhh...
uncomfortable.
downers, like marijuana, alcohol,
morning! Ha! You people make
cise our need to create;
'
A mes-
I haye a computer in my room,
2-
Nourishment:
shroorns, etc.
melaµgh.
merizing spark churns'in our
_
but ~so have two roommates;
You're going to need energy
Think stimulants; amphet-
Haha
minds until we envision a fin-
·
hence, the
lights ha
_
ve got to be
to bum while sitting like a
lump
amines are wonderful, but pricy
•
0
ha:..
·
ished product, resulting from
off, ~d noise ought to be kept
in front of a computer all night
and illegal ... bad. Keep it simple
.
,
'-
~-"
.
.
'~:i
:
-
,
·;
·.
c;ountJess hours of effo~.
,
,Xet,_ ~o a ri!inimum.
_,
Working}pthe
_
long. A large helping of pasta,
~
J!itpcaffeine
.
' ...
cu'eeerie
voice.
.
..
tragically, this focused th
-
ought
..
dark is impossibl
_
e, and f9r ~ome
' -
rice, or grain.based dishes
will
.-
.':
:
Caffeine
'
is
'
C(?inmonly avail-
"Enter a place where
time
is
.
quickly expires, fading
out
to
reaso~, my body riaturil,lypro-
,
fill iifyour need foi carbohy2
able in such products as coffee,
flipped,(notreally)wheremagi-
the back burner of our con-
duces the sourid of several
dratesoverthelonghaul.
MountainDew,Jolt,andVivarin
cal things can and will happen,
sciousness. Like building an
chirping crickets during mating
3-
Drugs:
to name a few. The efficacy of
(son-of) and where complete
elaborate sandcastle only to
season. No, I'm just kidding.
A common misconception is
these products is fairly consis-
mumbo-jumbo emanates from
find it swept away when you
It «;Joesn't do that.
that these are necessary for an
tent. Be careful not to consume
my brain much quicker because
weren't looking...
Anyway, leave the dorm room
allnighter. Relying on them can
too much caffeine at once; the
I honestly
could
not care
less. ·
That was much more cqmpli-
if you're stuck
in
one, and get cause disastrous side effects, so
brain fries and .hallucinations
Enter the world
·
of the
cated than anything I originally
to the
_
24-hourcomputer labs in
watch out!
begin. Whoa!
"allnighter. .. "
set
out
to
explain, but the point
Donnelly. They're bright and
Of course, distance yourself
Huh?
is that in order to see these vi-
cold,
·
and the chairs are very
from the heavily mind-altering
pleaseseeAU.NIGHTER,pg./0_
_,,
........
•
•
>
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,
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\
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\ ' '•
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\ , \
1
\ \ I I · , ,
•
THE.
Cif(.CLt .'.··
APRIL 13, 2000
.
oe~E:cti
PAGE 10
The views expressed on these pages are not necessarily those of
The Circle
Why did elected s·tudent Body Presid:e·nt
Seth Tyminski appoint a recently-fired SGA.
mem-
ber
·to
be
his
right-hand
woman?·
October 27
1
\
1999
.
Dear Ms. Kristine Dunn,
.
.
.
.
·
In
March 1999, you applied to become Parliamen~an under the 1999-2000 Hunter
administration. lexplained in great detail .what the roles and responsibilities would be as a Student
Government member to you as
well
as all potential candidates. ·
In
particular, lspoke with you regarding
yqur role as a Parliamentarian. Your: responsibilities were clearly presented to you
in
the Student
Goveniment·constitution(Article
II;
§
1 and 11) and
By-Laws( Article
III.
§
1
and 5J)._Also in that meeting,
I discussed with you your role.as
an
Executive Board member ..
As
explained to me by former student body
presidents, the executive board is an extension of the student body president. They
are
advisors who are
expected to be loyal, 4onest, hard working, exemplify strong leadership capabilities, and are committed to
the goals of Student Government . These qualities are essential since the advisors to the president are
handpicked by himor her.
I believe lmeritioried respect was critical at the interview. You appeared to
accept what
I was
asking
of you
with
your acceptance of the position of Parliamentarian; Your recent
actions,
and
discussions with various Student Government representatives have led me
to
believe that you
no longer are willing to accept the dutiesiresponsibilities of Parliamentarian. and. Executive Board
member.·
YotJ! blatant refusal to meet with Executive Vice-President Chris Urynowicz.
Robert
Lynch.and• ..
myself, have caused me to take drastic actions that pain me to
take.
I, regretfully, can no longer work with
you.·· Your tantnims(Per October 26,1999 at 5:50pm) ·and blatant disrespect of my position have made it
impossible forme
to
utilize you as a Parliamentarian. Effective, 8am October 29, 1999, I relieve you of
your duties/responsibilities as Parliamentarian
of
the 1999-2000 Marist College Student Government
Hunter Administration~ Your obvious contempt towards me has strained our working relationship causing
me
·10
lose faith, trust and confidence in you
as
a student advisor.
If
you were allowed to continue,
this
. would
be
very detrimental
to
~e functioning of Student Government of which
I'm responsible for. lhave
tried
to
workwith you
as
Parliamentarian (during our meeting on October
5, 1999
at
I lam)~.
Your actions
since. the meeting have been condescending, unprofessional, biased
and
confrontational:
I
thought there
was a resolution at that meeting. Your continued actions, however, have made co--operationwith you
extremely difficult
Your
insubordination
and
mocking of Student Government positions and daily .
functioning
has
negatively affected other representatives
and I
feel.thatthis is not what
is
in the.best
. -interest of the organization.
and
the student body,
This·
decision·
is
based solely
on
what
is·
in• the best
interest
for
the Student Go\iernment and
the
student body.
~
i.
~
·,
:,:-
\:1 '.,' ; :
. . . . . .· lean
no)on~er
~ilo\il
t01ir opinions
aitd
f:ieh.ivibts
t<f
hipder the
progres1i' ofme
as
the
Student ' ,
Body
President, the student.body ofMarist College,
and
the goals that Student Government
as an , ,
organization
has
agreed to. Student Government wishes you future success in•any endeavor tbatyou
will
tak¢
on. '.ReHeving
yoti
of your duties i_s one of the hardest
things
that
I
had
to
do as
Student-Bopy
President,
but
I feel
that tny actio~
are
in the best interest of the Student Government
As
always, ifyou
have any questions~.comments or ·cencems, you can gi.ve
me a
call at
x2300
or Vice-President Urynowicz
at
x2863.
·
·
·
. Cc:
Dean
Cox
' Dean
DiCaprio
BohLynch·
.
Dean Sansola
:Dr.Kent
· Dr.Davis
Chris
Urynowicz
Sincerely,
Ryan
P.
Hunter
Student Body rresident
THE.CIRCLE
AprU
13, 2000
Arts.
·
&Entertainment
.
.
.
Studenfisproud ofSPC's role
in'bringmg entertainment
to
Marist College
byDOUGLASM.DEISSJR.
·thoughtnever came up. If it
lights,sound;andsetpiecesfor ·
StajJWriier
.
were a matter of not having
Third Eye Blind
and Tonic.
ThirdEyeBlindcomeatall,ora
Along with at least 15 profes-
Sunday nigl_lt, I think that most
sional technicians, the students
Since bringing the entertain-' people would choose the Sun-
did anything from helping as-
ment is just as important as com-
day night.
semble parts of the set to actu-
menting on its.content and en-
Many things had to be done,
ally setting up the lights and
joyment, I thought it would be starting Friday night of that
sound. Everyone worked until
fitting to explain just what goes _
weekend. Comprising of SPC
about 4:00pm and we were then
into something like a concert of · members and College Activities
given an hour to go shower and.
this magnitude at Marist.
employees,· some 42 people
eat some dinner. We came back
It is easy to look at
an
event showed upat 7 :00 Friday night
and had to work the entire show
• from a student's poin~ c>fv,iew; to help put up the staging. From
making sure that people weren't
and say all the bad ~11gs .• @i.t: 7:Q0to 11:00 everyone helped
doing too many things that
may hav~ h~ppenedqup~~':~~?,llnlpad the! staging off of the,, would hurt them.
event.
It
ts apo,ther to
lsn.?:\Y,i~X .. ;,
;Jrucks, push it into the .. Field
.
The main concern for SPC and
actly what kind of w,orKg<>~~'in:c;,house, pu(up the staging, and
College Activities wa~ for the
to something like .hpnging Dr ... ' set tip some 500 chairs. Each
students to have the ni.ost fun.
Drew or Third Eye Blind to person was there for one rea-
with the least harm to their bod-
. Marist College. . _
_ _
_ . _ son, to help make this show the
ies. Although it was very hot,··
For me, I have had the privi-
biggest Marist has ever seen.
everyone did the best they
lege to assist in bringing three
Only after making sure that there
could to get people outside if
big performances to Marist Col-
was nothing else that could be
they experience heat e~austion.
lege. The first is being Cherry done, did _everyone finally go
No matter what, the concern
Poppin Daddies,.
the second home for the evening.
was for the students. That
Rockapella
and theinostrecent
Saturday began at 1:00pm with
never left the thoughts of ev-
being Third Eye Blind artdDr. the.setting up of McCann for
eryone who was helping to put·
Drew. It wasn'(untilI actually . Dr.,Drew's arrival. A hospital-
this show together.· Immediately
worked on orin:ging t1l~·se )tyroomwas setup for
I?!•
Drew.
.
after the show, everyone had to
shows to
life
th~tltin~erstood There was a break for dinner and
do the opposite of what had
th~
work that lig!\1 S,gf2;P.Q<if9l-:·'":the1Y:·~veryone had to be back . taken them the whole day to do.
leg_e Activitiet~!~1w~Jl~tt:J}j~b'f-~:39_; Dr. Drew c~e out, - ' ~e•h_ad to,break do~n. t!1e en~ .
First, SPC go,es:t%QUgli a,J_ong • · spoke, answered quest10ns and
tire Field House .. Every piece of.
proc~ss of band ~e~~hing look~
then it was time to get back to
sound, lights, and staging was
.ing for a band thafcanfitcCJm-::/work. Every single chair that
taken down and shipped out to
ing to Marist in their schedulet:>had been brought out the night
the trucks. Everyone got out
Once a band has'been decided,•.·._ before was then put away in · around about 3:00am. The only
the fun really begiil.F Tak~ two boxes.Then everyone who was
thing that made it worth it was
weekends ago, as
al!_
example. _ their to help had to wheel all of the idea that hopefully most of
°-r., Drew was as..9-h~duled _to · the lights and sound equipment
the students had a great time.
speak on Saturdafand Third toatnickbeforetheycouldleave
When all_ is said and done,
Eye Blind
onSunday night. It for the night. · ~yentually, at
there is a lot of work that goes
"'.as mentioned that it seemed
10:45-11:00allstudentswerere-
into such an event asa major
ridiculous to · have]hird Eye leased to enjoy what they could
concert. Without the work of
Blind
on Sunday nigh_L Did of their evening before having
SPC there would have been no
anyone consider that it may to show back up the following
concert, no Third Eye Blind and
have been the only time that the
morning at 8:30am.
·. no Tonic, this is fact.
band could be scheduled at
From here, everyone had to
Marist College.
No, this unload three truckloads of
Ticl(.etmaster's charges are
anythihg
but
convenient
: byADAMKOWALSKI
Staff Writer
appalled to
ieam
that
it
waso_ver
. ; ... $8 .. ,• . .
.. . .
.
· . .
The tickets for the show itself
.. , were about what they are every.
Tickets for the Vans .Warped year, $27, a great deal for an all
Tour
in New York went on sale day concert featuring almost 30
last weekend. The day long af-
bands, but the service charge
fair
·
will be taking place on - had doubled since last
year.
So
Randatrs Island this July with
for tickets to the Vans Warped
headliners -NoFx, tlte Mighty
Tour,
Ticketmaster expects me
Mighty
Bo~stones, LqngBeach" . .
to pay
<!11
extra $8,fortheC\:>llVe:-
Dub All Stars
(ex-members of · nience
of
not hayingto go
into
Sublime,)
arid
Green
Day. ·
So I
New York to get tickets. · Going
went on down tQ Ticketmaster into New York is an easy task
to find out how much tickets
for myself, so I will find myself
were going to be, to tell my. hoping on the PATIi trains from
friends. Well ... I had to pick my
Hoboken to 33rd Street to get
jaw up off the floor when she my tickets this weekend, with-
told me tllat they would be $35.
out the service charge, from the
After I managed to stammer out
lovely Marihattan Center box
the question of how much the
office on 34th street. But what
service charge was I was utterly
about the rest of you poor slobs
who woul_d,have to spend moi:e
than $2 to avoid this "conve-
nience charge?" ,,, .
It's not just events like the
Warped Tour
either. The charge
on Nine Inch Nails tickets for
the· show at Madison Square
Garden was $10, tickets for the
Dave Matthews Band
at Giants
Stadium is about the same.
Sports_ wi~f also find the price of
"convenience ~barges" going
up as well. Baseball is effected
as well, and its not like baseball
in New York doesn't cost a lot
anyway. Shea Stadium is num-
ber three on the list of the most
expensive ballparks, third only
to the new field in Seattle, and
please see
Ticketmaster,
pg.
13
PAGE 11
1
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·.
ApriF13, 2000
'
TH£ CIRCLE
.
Arts
.
&
.·
Entertainment·
·
.
.
.
.
.
'
.
.
.
.
.
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PAGE-12
<
On
\
TV
Buffy
·
•
·
.
.
+
Ang
.
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el
-
·
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-
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wz
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.
Mikerhmtpson
good TV
by
MIKE THOMPSON
Staff Writer
friends at her new high school,
including Willow Rosenberg
.
(Alyson
Hannigan)
and
Alexander "Xander" Harris
Ah, spinoffs. For those of you
(Nicholas Brendon),
who don't know, a spinoff is a
At her new school, Buffy als
·
o
way to cash in on the success
met Rupert Giles (Anthony
of a current hit show without
Head), the school librarian, who
having to go to
.
the
.
trouble of knew she was a slayer and con-
(gasp!) creating a whole
.
new
vinced her to pick up the stake
show. Simply take _a character or
aga_i~. Buffy
.
began
,
figtit1ng
,
two from the established hit,
valilpfres and ~emoµs again,
and then "spin off"
.
the
andcontinu
'
eddoingthatforthe
character(s) into a new setting,
rest of her
_
high school career.
with new characters. Some
·
Along the way,'she meta vam-
spinoffs are successes
(The
·
pire named Angel (David
Jeffersons; Laverne and
~
.
oreanaz), and he quickly be-
Shirley)
and some are duds
camealoveinterestltwasaclas-
(Joanie Loves Chachi; Flo).
sic love-hate relationship (as
Over at the WB, you'll find a
most relationships with vam-
spinoff that is a modest success:
pires are), but it was a very in-
Angel.
As is the case with most
tense one. By the time Buffy
spinoffs, Angel directly follows
graduated high school in 1999,
the show it was spun off from,
Angel had become good.
·
He
Buffy the Vampire Slayer,
on
and Buffy said goodbye and he
Tuesday nights. '(he result is
moved away, ,vhile Buffy, ac-
two hours of quality entertain-
companied by Willow
.
and
ment.
.
.
.
.
·
Xander, moved
qff,
t9 college'..
.
Buffy the
Vanipife
Slayer(corri-
I'm pleased
to
report that this
monly called
Buffy)debuted
in
season has found
Buffy
in as
1997. It was derived from the
good a shape as its ever been
1992 movie of the same name
in.The series is still full of ac-
and
·
it picked
·
up where th;
tion (Gellar
is
very athletic, and
movie left off. Sixteen year-old
the producers of Buffy takead-
.
Buffy Summers (SarahMichelle
vanµige of this), and there is still
Gellar)and her mother moved to
a good balance between com-
Sunnydale, California; froin Los
edy and drama. In fact, some of
Angeles, where Buffy discov-
the lines of
Buffy
are very funny
.
ered she was a vampire slayer
indeed, such as this one from
and encountered some horrible
Willow: "It's like this dream!
vampires. In Sunnydale, Buffy
had about Xander, except that it
hoped to start a new slayer-free
wasn't about Xander, it was
life, anµ quickly made some
about someone else; and it
wasn't even me,
it
was a friend
of mine and she doesn't remem-
ber it." Also, the character of
Willow is quickly becoming a
·
very interesting one, and a re-
curring character from the past,
the vampire Spike (James
Marsters), has become a regu-
lar. character
.
this season, and
that has met with some wonder-
ful
.
_and
.
hilarious
.
scenes. The
show is mo:ving aiong ffoe,
·
and
the Angel
.
character· isn't
missed at all.
.
.
_·
·_
This
'is
good because Ang~l
has his own show now. Called
Angel
(well, duh), it debuted in
1999. In the show, Angel has
moved to Los Angeles, where
Photo courtesy
'
of WB
Buffy is still betterthan Angel.
sets up shop as a private detec-
tive. Accompanying Angel from
comedy
·
~~ drama isn~t as good
made show, and a lot of fun to
Sunnydale (and Buffy) is
asitisonBuffy.Asaresult,there
watch.1~Jlinall,BuffyandAn-
CordeHa Chase (Charisma Car-
have been some awkward mo-
gel
make for
a
nice Tuesday
penter), who becomes Angel's
n:1ents here and there on Angel.
nigh
_
t doubleheader. And you
s~cretclry. Police detective Kate
Also, the show is rather dark.
don't even
:
have to bother
Lockley (Elizabeth Rohm) also
The producers
·
of
Angel
in-
changing ~hannels. Both
assists Angel at the detective
tended on making the show
shows air on WPIX, Ch,
11,
agency.
'.
Al_e)(.is Penisofjoined.
.
more "adult,, than Buffy
j
bui
the . which is
.
conveniently located
the cast in e,arly
·
2000
as
·
wesiey
)JlOOd is
foo
often
.
too
dark
for
;
atChanneUl hth°re
·
on
the
Mari.st
Wyndham-Price; Angel's s
'
icie-
its own goocf-It's nbt nearly
'
as
.
Co11egetelevision dial. Tell your
kick. Together, Ange(and
_
his
dark
as
;
_
say, Star Trek: Deep
friends;
-
let there
.
be campus-
motley crew fight evil denions.
Space Nirie,
but the toneof the
wide Buffy and
Angel
nights!
.
.
While not as good as Buffy,
show could definttelyJ~
·
eJight-:
Angel
1s
by
no means
.
a bad
enedalittfo; wh1lestillmaintain.:.
·
show. There are
:
many good
..
ing its ''adult'
'.
'
appeaL
.
.
.
.
moments in the show and the
.
}hes~ s~ther smaU qm~bles
writi~g can
.
be
pretty. clever
asicle, An,ge_[!s s_tiH
~I)
enj(?ya~le
(sample quo~e. from Cordelia:
· .
s~ow .
.
It
s
.
P,ot yet as g9.o~ as
"See?You can save the damsel
Buffy,
but
it
.
s
,
better than most
and
make great money
;
Is this a
spi,noffs; ~fy9u
.
haven't se~n _it
great country or what?"). The
·
~lrea?y; g1ve1t a_try; yo1.1 might
acting has also been pretty
hke it_. And
_
,
a~
.
•
~Iw:iys,
.
~e<?p
good. Still, the balance between
watchmg Buffy. Its a very well
.
.
If
y_d~
h(Jye
an/
s~ggesiions
of
.
TV shows Joi Mike Thompson
.
to
r~view,
emailhim
•
ai K4ZK:
Check
·
out his radio
slidw.
ev-
.
eryWe4nesday
11ightfrom1J
pm
to]
am on 88.1 FM, Marist Col-
lege
Radio.
·
.
.
Everyo~ llkiSenterfain111ent,so
wiry
notwriJe afaoutit? Dfop
off.stones forthe4&Esection, Save40lldisk, at211B
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Tll£CIRCL£
Arts
&
Enterlainment
PAGE 13
Korn continues to
play
on
by
MARKDICCIANNI
Staff Writer
Once again, I had to agree,
that I had just seen the best live
band ever on Saturday night at
the
Continental Airlines Arena
in East Rutherford,
NJ. That
band is the one that brought
hard rock and metal back to life,
Korn. Without them; we would
still be swimming in a marsh of
Dave Matthews and dance mu-
sic every time we turned on the
radio. Those are the types of
music that push the bile to the
tip of my throat.
When
Korn
released their self-titled debut
album in 1994, heavy music was
once again recognized. Three
more albums later,
Korn is still
going strong. They never
changed their sound by trying
to be something that th,ey are
not and have always given their
fans what they want.
The tour is called
The Sick
and Twisted Tour with Spike
and Mikes Sick and Twisted
Animation Festival, Staind,
and of
·
course
Korn. Sraind
came on first. They were an-
other excellent live band. They
played
.
every song off of their
only album "Dysfunction" with
outstanding sound quality, in-
cluding my favorite song off the
aibhrri;
''Crawl."
However, you
.
have to be in
a
laid back mood
to watch them, which I was at
·
the time. They are notvery en-
ergetic on stage
-
buiperhaps
that could be because their qual-
ity of sound might falter if they
. jumped
around
too much. How-
ever, they are definitely worth
checking out if you can.
Ticketntaster:
~ontinuedfrom pg.
·
11
to Yankee Stadium.
In
addition
at a reasonable price? They
to
the
~ost
_
of the game, fans
.
have no real competition. They
have
·
to pay anextra$5 for
.
the
have exclusive agreements with
$30 seats
·
at Yank'ee Stadium.
·
·
many
yenues in
order to pre,vent
Considering what-you are pay- ·
·
other ticket companies from
.
ing for your average concert,
·
I
·
moving in on their market.
With-
guess thi
_
s
_
isn'
_
t that bad, but
ou.t competi~ion these "conve-
bow long
.
before the charge
nience charges'' will continue to
guess this isn't that
.
bad, but
-
go up.·· Eventually this policyi
bow long before the charge
to quote Wayland Smithers,
_
doubles
iri
baseball staahiilis as
- ,
"wilfcreate
'
a healthy rriix of.the
·
.·
well?
.
rich and the ignorant/' So I wiU
-
-
Let me
·
jusi say that
•
•
:,
findniyselfgoihgtobuy"tickets
-
Ticketmaster is not exactly the
for shows at venues themselves
most customer friendly service
from now on. I don't know ex-
_
either. Have any of you
,ever
actly how policies like this help·
tried to found out information
ticketmaster, but when you're
about a show before
.
the tickets.
-
.
the only game in t~wn; there is
go on sale?
If a radio station
,
rea1ly not much anybody can do
isn't announcing the infonna-
about it.
tion, than getting it through
. ,
ticketmasteds worse than pull-
.
•
Adam Kowalskiis
-
~ju;ii~'iwith
,
ing your own teeth alone
i°.
a.
-
a
·
majorinradioltelevision/film
.
dark closet with a pair of sets-
He has received
an
honorary
sors. They never know any-
Bachelors Degree from Arom
s
-
thing; I've even been accused
Punk
Rock
Academy.
of making an event up because
itwasn'tintheircomputers. So,
can someone tell me how the
hell this is convenient?
But why would Ticketmaster
need to provide decent service
Spike and Mikes Animation
Festival was just shown on a
-•
~9(
Hairads
·
,
iis.oo
Photo
courtesy
or Korn
Korn still gives their fans what they want.
screen suspended above the
stage. You really couldn't hear
it very well; it was pretty idiotic
and not worth getting into.
However, they did show the
original South Park pilot episode
which was funny: It was strange
too because Cartman's name
was Kenny and he was killed
first.
Korn took the stage
after
that
stupid animation show . Their
entire set was incredible. They
had a lot of energy plus their
sound was excellent. As
I
said
before,
Korn gives their fans
what they want, they did so by
allowing their fans to vote on
the Internet at the
Korn web site
for what songs they should play
on this tour. Five songs were
picked from each album and
Korn played the~ aH.
·
Their stage was very intricate
with large screens in the back-
ground and fire effects on the
ground and suspended above.
They performed the expected
songs of theirs such as "Freak
on a Leash,"
"ADIDAS,"
"Blind," and "Falling Away from
Me," but also played
such
un-
expected songs as "Kill You,"
"Ball Tongue," and my favorite
Korn song,
"Good
God." Luck-
ily,
I
had not seen the results of
the poll for the songs being
played on-line before
1
went to
the concert so
fr
was all a sur-
prise.
Korn performed for about an
hour and twenty minutes. The
whole set was non-stop energy
from beginning to end. They
are definitely a band worth your
money to go see.
I have to ad-
mit,
Kam is the best live band
that
I
have ever seen and with
all of the concerts that I attend,
that is saying a lot. We can only
hope that
Korn will give up the
arena tours for awhile and do a
couple tours stopping at smaller
venues. However, that isn't
very likely.
The fast thing that I feel worth
commenting on is the crowd at
the show. Everyone was cooJ
with each other. There were no
morons at the show to ruin it for
everyone else. In fact, that is
my experience with attending
shows of bands that are part of
the new metal sound. People
are just there to have fun, not to
start fights. There is unity
among the fans, which hardcore
music boasts that it has, but
rarely does.
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TH£
:
CIRCLE
APRIL 13, 2000
·
·•
•
S
·
"
Orts
Softbajl struggling]n
MA.AC
.
.
.
.
.
·
·,
;
· .
'
.
·-
by
JORDAN EIBLE
Staff Writer
The Marist softball team, now
sporting an overall 13-9 record,
struggled over the weekend,
losing two games apiece to Iona·
(1-0, 3-0) and Fairfield (5-3, 3-2).
The four lo
·
sses came after a
doubleheader sweep against
St
Francis (NY) Th
·
ursday (3-1, 5-
4).
Pitcher Melanie Kasack was
key in Marist's victory in game
one against St. Francis on
Thursday. Kasack, who serves
as the Red Foxes' captain, struck
out six batters while walking
none. She allowed just one un-
earned ru
.
n in the 3-1 victory.
"You can't ask for more from
any one player," center fielder
Amanda Koldjeski noted.
"Melanie
gives 110 percent all
the time, and acts as a true cap-
tain on and off the field."
Koldjeski along with short-
fifth home fun· ofthe· ·season .
.
..
stop Michele
·
Gosh and first
·
However, the Red Foxes had
baseman Melissa Tucci also
just three hits in a 5~3 loss.
.
contributed greatly; scoring
In game two, runs from Gosh
Matist's three runs for the game.
.
and Amy Angus and RB I's from
·
Left fielder Jessica Craver
Koldjeski and Arigus put
boosted the offensive attack
Marist in the right direction.
with t_wo runs batted in.
However,
it
was not enough to
Saturday against-Iona proved
·
push the Foxes past the Stags,
to be more
of a struggle for the
.
who scored
.
three runs in the
Red Foxes, who were unable to
second inning.
score in both
.
games. Despite
With half of the season re-
strong hits from the bats of
·
maining, the Foxes, whoare0-4
Craver, Bobbi Jo Gonnello and
in the conference, will depend
•
Jessica Shorey, Iona shut out
on
··
power hitters Tucci,
Marist 1-0
iri
game one and 3-0
Koldjeski, Craver, and Gonnella
in game two.
to keep them competitive in the
Kasack's perfonnance on the
Metro Atlantic·Athletic Confer-
mound in game one was solid;
.
ence (MAAC).
.
with four strikeouts and one
"We're a young team with no
walk.
.
.
seniors," Koldjeski said,
.
"but
Sunday's games against
:we've
really come together so
Fairfield were improvements for
·
far and so many underclassmen
Marist, although the Red Foxes
·
·.
are
·
coristan
'
tly
·
litepping up.
.
I
still fell twice
w
the Stags.
.
In
•
think tournament play is
in
our
game one, Koldjeski's hit her
future."
.
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-photocourttsyofnthletics
Coach jorinah O'Do
.
nnell's
team
is
13~9
but
0-4 iri
the
MAAG.
;
:
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· .
. ·
APRIL
13,
2000
·.
:THE
"
CIRCLE
S•
•
·
·
Orts
/
by
MIKE
FERRARO
:
w:m
p'rovide
the
'opportunity
.
to
The
NFL
wm focus its
-
~yes
0~
fill these needs.
If
they keep their
New York this. weekend, as the
picks, they could get Virginia's
draffwill be held:
·
As ofright Jones and Jackson State wide
now, the Cleveland Browns hold . receiver Sylvester Morris.
It
is
the first overall selection. The
possible they could swing a deal
\Vashington Reds
.
kins follow
for Corey Dillon or Keyshawn
with the nexttwo picks.
Johnson.
:-· .
·
.
Initially, the Browns appeared
Buffalo (2(?)-Last year, their
tobe targeting Florida State
first round pick was Ohio State
·
wide receiver Peter Warrick with
cornerback Antoine Winfield.
-
-
their
pick.
However, jnsiders
.
This year, they could grab an-
now say they will'are looking at
other Ohio State comer, Ahmed
a
.Penn
State
.
defender. The
Plummer.
·
But if Tennessee
choice is between defensive end
safety Deon Grant falls this far,
Courtney Brown and linebacker
he will be
a
Bill.
-
LaVar Arrington.
Carolina (23)-The Carolina
Ideally, the Redskins would
coaching staff was impressed
crave both Penn State players.
by Oklahoma offensive tackle
.
·
However, they will likely have
Stockar McDougle at the Senior
to
settie
for one .
. ·
With the sec-
.
Bowl.
.
The 36 I-pounder would
ond of their back~to
-
back picks,
fill
a void at left tackle. The Pan-
look for them t.o grab Alabama
~hers also need help at the sec-
offensive ~ackle Chris Samuels. · ondary and linebacker. Grant
Here's'a.lookaroundtheNFL
and Michigan State linebacker
to see who or what should be
Julian Peterson
are
also possi-
on every team's wish Hst.
·
Each
bilities.
··
team's number of its first round
Chicago (9)-IfUrlacheris avail-
pick is in parenth~ses
.
able, he will go no farther, be-
Arizona (7)-Their running
cause
.
the
Be
_
ars
need
game is weak, and Virginia run-
playrriakers on defense. Michi-
ning'back Thomas Jone~ fits in
gan St~te wide receiver Plaxico
nicely. IfJonesisofftheboard,
Burress would also fit nicely
they could look at Tennessee's
starting alongside Marcus
Jamal Lewis ... They also could
Robinson.
select a playmaker on defense.
Cincinnati ( 4 )-This is a situa-
New Mexico's Brian Urlacher, an - -tion wortp iponitoring. Hprida
extremely ;ers~tile athiete who . Sta~ '-Yideiece~ver P~t~rWarrick
.
projects as a
:
weakside line~
.
-
·
will
'likely
.
f~l
.
Hhis far.
:
.
;Th~
backer, would
-
be an intriguing Bengals
·
have two
_
disgruntled
·
.:
pit;k.
;:
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:
:
:
i
.
: ;
.
.
.
-
.
·
-
:
players
·on
:
offense
'
in Carl
Atlanta (none)
.:.
They traded
.
:Pickens
_
and Corey Dillon;'and
this year's first roilnd,er in last
they may be making multiple
yea(s draft for backup tight end
deals on draft day. They also
Reggie-Kelly. That was
·
sh~er
have so many holes that trad-
brilliance.
The
Falcons need to
ing down to acquire more picks
:
improve
'their
depth just al)Otit
would make sense.
everywhere.
Will
they take Gear-
Cleveland { l)-Asicie from the
gia Tech's Joe Hamilton on the
._
likely. selection of Brown or
_
·
:
draft's ~9co,n~l;_d~y7,
:\\
·
:
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·
.
.
.
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A_rp9~t9r(I'l~
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.
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Balt1mC>re
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.(~; 1$)-.They
_
re-:
•
•
,i
they
..
·
n~ed
..
help
:.
e\'.erywhere.
-:
ceived
Aii~rita
'sJirsdciunder
· ..
Lc,ql{fot the Br_owns
fo
get a
.•
'
ihis
·
yea(Asaresult.ijleRavens
wiqe
::
recefvei- or tightend in
are
ateamto
watch-dn draft day;
round two.
·_
:
..
-
:
'.
:
:
:-, .
·
They11eed
:
•
~
runnin1f back)md
·
• .•
.
Dallas
:
:(non~e)/fhey
tr_aded
wide receiver,
:
and
·
thesi picks
,
.
their-fir_st-rnllnder forJoey Gal-
~·
•
·
.
..
'
.
'
.
.
·
.
'
.
.
..
.
Warrick
may
slip to #4.
i'
photo
courtesy of tspn.com
Urlacher: the draft's most
versatile player
loway. In round two, they will
be looking to address needs at
comerback (preferably one with
~ize) or middle linebacker. They
may go for a sleeper comer such
as Oklahoma State's Jacoby
Shepherd.
.
.
Denver ( 10)
-
The Broncos may
move up in
an
attempt to acquire
Waqick. If they stay at ten, they
will
look at Miami tight end
Bubba Franks, Florida wide re-
ceiver Travis Taylor, and
Marshall quarterback Chad
Penningto.n. Franks looks like
the pickright now, but it's far
from a certainty.
Detroit (20)-The Lions
·
have
just five picks in this draft. They
·
might be looking to upgrade at
guard, possibly converting
Wisconsin tackle Chris McIn-
tosh to left guard. Tennessee's
C9sey Coleman, a natural guard,
is also a possibility.
Green Bay (14)-The Packers
need to upgrade their front
seven. Tennessee defensive
·
end Shaun Ellis will fill a need
and put pressure on the quar-
terback
.
Indianapolis (28)-The Colts
showed against Tennessee in
last year's playoffs that their run
defense can be vulnerable.
That's why BYU linebacker Rob
Morris or
·
Boston College de-
fensive tackle Chris Hovan
would fit in nicely .
.,
._·, _ .
__
Jacksonville (29FnieJaguars
need a left guard, arid they have
been looking for a third receiver
seemingly since their inception.
Georgia Tech wideout Dez
White is a Jacksonville native,
but he might not fall this far.
If
not, USC's Travis Claridge
f
ould help the offensiv~ line.
Kansas City (21)-Coach .
Gunther Cunningham loves
power football. Cunningham
and Wisconsin running back
Ron Dayne
seem
to be a perfect
match. The Chiefs also will be
looking
·
for a game-breaker in
the return game later on.
Samuels will go to the 'Skins.
Pennington: the only QB that
will
be taken in
round one
PAGE 15
Miami (none)-They have no
really bad secret. They also
first-~ound pick as a result of the
have a need for a receiver, which
Patrick Surtain deal
·
with Caro-
·
may be addressed in round two
lina two years ago. They also
by West Virginia's Jerry Porter.
only have 5 picks. They may
Pittsburgh (8)-They need help
look for someone to eventually
at wide receiver, so Burress
replace Richmond Webb at left
could be the answer here. They
tackle, or a wide receiver such
could grab Pennington, which
as Florida State's Laveranues
would make the Kordell Stewart
Coles.
saga all the more entertaining.
Minnesota (25)-The Vikings
St. Louis (31 )-What do they
could use a pass-rushing defen-
need? The Rams are just draft-
si ve end.
Howard, John
ing for depth at this point, but
Engleberger of Virginia Tech,
they could take Florida State
and Darren Howard of Kansas
kicker Sebastian Janikowski
State are the most likely possi-
with the last pick in round one.
bilities.
San Diego (none)-They always
New England (none)-They es-
trade theirfirst:round pick a year
sentially traded their first-round
in advance tQ move up and get
pickforCoachBillBelichick. In
someone only Bobby Beathard
round two, they may try to an-
has heard of. The Chargers like
swer their age-old question at their small-school prospects,
running back. Travis Prentice· and they will probably get an-
from Miami of Ohio could land
other
.
here.
San Francisco (12, 24)-Rav-
New Orleans (none)-The Ricky
aged by salary cap and old age,
Williams deal cost them their
the 49ers need everything.
first-rounder this year as well.
Pennington would
fill
a need
They would like a playmaker at
here,
and
comerback needs to
wide receiver later on, possibly
be addressed as well. Plummer
USC's R. Jay Soward. Even
or California's Deltha O'Neal
though they signed Jeff Blake,
would
fill
that need.
Coach Jim Haslett is said to like
Seattle (19, 22)-A wide receiver
Louisville quarterback Chris
and a linebacker would prob-
Redman.
ably fill their two biggest needs.
N.Y. Giants (11)-The pick will
White and Morris, respectively,
probably be a running back.
could be their picks. Tennessee
Dayne is a possibility here, but
linebacker Raynoch Thompson
Alabama's Curtis Alexander
is a good athlete who might fit.
seems the more likely pick. The
If McDougle is available, the
Giants may add some depth at
Seahawks could grab him to be
comerback in the later rounds.
their right tackle.
N.Y. Jets (16, 18)-TheJets still
TarrtpaBay (13, 27)-They need
might
_
tra
.
c:le
.
Keyshawri Johnson
_
_
tall
receivers
and a tight end.
and mc:i,ve
up,
btitthat scenario
.
Throw them into the White/
seems less likely. 1)Iey would
Morris/fayior mix, and Franks
be thrilled if Franks fell this far.
might work. They may look for
They also could use a pass
offensive line depth with their
rusher
(Ellis,
Howard,
second first-rounder.
Engleberger) and third receiver
Tennessee (30)-The areas
(White, Taylor, Morris).
where they n·eed to add depth
Oakland (17)-Sandwiched be-
(tight end, safety) are not the
tween the Jets picks are the Raid-
deepest in this draft. If Grant
ers, who need help at wide re-
somehow falls this far, the Ti-
ceiver and
safety.
Grant would
tans would be ecstatic. They
fill
the safety need, while White,
may get the best player avail-
Taylor, and Morris would help
able.
_
out at receiver.
Washington (2, 3)-They only
Philadelphia (6)-The Eagles
have two other picks after round
getting Florida State defensive
one. But after they add two blue-
tackle Corey Simon has been a
chip prospects, will it matter?
TENNIS:
MAAC
tourney favorites
... continued from pg.16
teams' chances as well, but
ex-
pressed some concern in St.
Peter's, wh~ is the probable sec-.
ond seed in the tournament, and
who Marist only beat4-3 earlier
this year. He describes them as
"very tough," but credits most
of the close match to the home
court advantage of the Pea-
cocks "dimly lit bubble."
Racanelli was a little more
blunt.
"We can beat them 7-0," he
said.
The Red Foxes will travel to
Kiamisha Friday in a brand new
role as the favorites. Brimming
with confidence, not cockiness,
they will take the courts as the
hunted. They
will
try to build
onto their solid, but incomplete
"La.st year, we were the
new kids on the block, but
then we shocked
every-
Olle.
This year we are the
champs.
We are the
hunted instead of the
hu,zter."
Mike Racanelli
Men'•s tennis
.
fouridation, and build the roof,
and finish on top.
:,
·
"
,
,
.
i
·::THE:
CIR.CLE
'exttwoweeks_
Softball pitcher Melanie
· b ak
"
Joh
~=;it:~:;• .'· . s, .
a.,,, .. ··· ..
•
{.;ba~!::E16
B
-_ ---.-~ -
--.ball ... ·. . ..
fi• .. : ~
•4;:i4S1;;;,::<,:•~~~~-.~it:£t1~1
. ~~3w
·RB1~~~~m~Im!t~L:~~LLt0~'~T:if~~,t~
· Staff Writer
4
victory.i
, .'
·- .·.
,
·
Ambro~iriLand Cueto kiiocked'F· (. '.-.
'· Riding
a
three gamtnvinning
. .
l~
~?S
for
M;~~ti_n '. i~s hal(of
-~'Good
>
teams: wilfgo
After suffering a minor:set-
.
streak,thefoxesretumedhome
. the s1~th.-. The team.added an-
.. ·
, .. ·· .. · .. -
.
-. _ .
back by 16sing fout: out of five -fohostthe,Canisius Golden Grif-
C>ther. t\YO in Jh¢ b9ttom' of the
game . by ~ame a,id
games, theMaristbaseball team . fins. Afterscotjnganunearned
.. '.(!ig~thfrom_ah~I"d,QUh,lefrom
even inning by-, in-
seems to·have'gotten back on
runinth'efourthinning;Marist
-:Gueto':,md an;RBI from Jeff
• · · . _ .-
lv◄
·
have __
·
a
the right track; Two· wins
broke the gairie ope11 in ~e bot--
:,tliit{o;,
but:jf'was not enough
:-..!Jln~. :>-'
>s:(! .. _ ... ·_
-
;t
.-J:;.;
against Hartford arid Anriy and
tom of the eighth; scoring seven· .
:,~~'fii'nj~~us·closed ouf the gime · .
:young gfoup. ,of
,g'fi,ys
another two over Canisius has
runs
off
of pitchers''Mark West .
lly
ci
score of 7-4.
. .
_ ..
th~i are · begfnning: to
kept the team from falling be-
and Scott Beebe;· Ambrosini
''We:-wantedto wm the three
· · · _ -.. ,
<'
·· ··-·: · -_
hind in the standings;:and·has
l.ined,a double that t>iu:ely
grun_es,'_'
_
saifSzefc of theloss.
learn
:
how to staY_ Jo-
given it a boost of confidence
squeezed intofairtei-ritory.that
?It
is)lie:type _of game tharwe-
cused:and are adJust-
entering a key part of the sea..- - drove intwo. Anthony Cervini
w.~lMoo}.:.~~ck on at the end of
ing
:well."
.
son.
also added two RBrs in-the in-
John $zefc
thes!!ason asagame we should
· · - -
-•
QnApri15,theRedFoxestrav-
ning,
have.-\Y<>Q.''.,:o :_~,_
_
__ ·
_ ., . _.
. ___
.
eled to Hartford; where the team
Bechtel(S~O) pitched six, in-
. one third innings, allowing one · .: M,aris(now, 19.;-_~-2, 8-3 in the
. : ·: -
·'John
Szef
C
won a commanding
J
1-5 deci-
nings, giving up one run and :, ear11ed run and striking out ·
:¥.~tt<>
~tlan~~Jtlll~-~~c Confer- ·
baseball~liead ·coach
sion; Designated hitter Chuck
striking out six Canisitis battei;s,
lliree
Griffins, Ool recorded his _e11ce ;(MA,Aq),~- faces_~-- t<>ugh ___ · __ -_ ·_•.- . -._· _
:,.'.:-
,:,'<:.;-:.~ •.
:
. __
.
!:~h!~
1
~~~~:kt~o!;~
~~s~- '~~~:r~~-~~~~s~;i:~~~~~~
7
ing ~~d
t::~~!:~i~
stfu-~~n~;J:!~~
~i,ak¼~i£~]{}~1~;~:~a~~~!~;~~~~~~~~~½t~l'',.':,;:,:;~.,-~
which was more than enough
·
"It
·is· scary to see your num-
the team's last four games. , .. '
0
:l:i!h_igb,:.Qtj_iy.?rs~ty;\be,for~. tp1v:-/¥ciae~w.~~r.:f'tjie'seas'on_
IS
g01rg
for Vin Roma to pick up the
vie-
ber one pitcher get-hurt on the
.
-The wiri gave Marist a five
eliiig, foJa~tf~Mo:rh~dtteain' for-.Maris~."::Jiina is_10-1 in tile
.
tory. Ken Catino started.the mound," said head coach
John ·
gam~.wjnningsti-eak,afterdrop-
tigh(·b~hiiia:M~rist,:jii .the?:MAACillldstandsinfirstplace.
game, pitching four innings and
Szefc. :•!Itappeared to be a mus~
ping foul"out of five games just MAAC·standings.. : .-.-:; ,_,· · _ · ''. -)~.s
·
the sea~on goes ·on, ·it is
giving up two earned, mns.
cularstrain;butheisday~to-day
a week ago.
?
''Le.tv.f_oy_~~is
a
g~p~·team.~~ .;tough:for a team.to ~oncen,tr~te
· Roma pitched two scoreless in-
now.''
·
·
''It-is just what we needed,"
said-Szefc.: "They lost'
a
lot of on one game;when a big match
nings to record the
win,
while
Ool'(l-2) crune into the game . Szefcsaidofthewinningstreak.
players fast year, but (coach)
upJs right around the comer.
Kevin Ool recorded the save.
in relief and pitched ri.vo score--
?It sh_ows that (the players)will · Stevl Owens is· well respecte<:f · -- "G6odteams will go game by
Thefollowiiig day, tii~·tearn: less-innings to earn:his first vie-
battle through eac;h g::une.".
'C.
and will have his team ready."
game, and even inning by. in-
traveled_ to face. Army. Ryan
·
tory
of the season, as, Mari st
The
.
team also received better
Marist will play
a
three game
ning," said Szefc in reference to
Kondratowicz (2-1) pitched five - won the game, 9-1. _
pitching in the games, accord-
series against LeMoyne in a se- - keeping a. te.am focused on the
innings and gave. up just two
In. the second·. game of_ the
~i_ig to _Szefc'° The pitchin~ staff · ries .that could play a,key mle in
task at hand. -"We have a young
earned runs. Ool pitched one
April 8 .doubleheader, Marist
ga_ve _up
J?
~ns in::fiv". games,
dictatjrig w,here the season: will
group · of guys_ that are begin-
and one third innings·ofscore-
scored fourruns intwo innings · a_s'.9PP'?~e~}~}4'!ri,the p~evi-
end;11pfo~th;_F'o.x.~. a~cordi11g
ning to learn how to stay fo-
less ball to earn his second save
off of Canisius.starling pitcher ?u,s f°.utJ~sser,
~-i .. .
r<;:,, . , •.
t2_~~~fti,
>:
p;;
;iq,j•;
·
i; •
·
_
cused and are adjusting well."
in two days. ·, Anthony Tyler Hosick.
'
Cerviriidoubled
·
f11 ·}h7
~R~~~:~~}9t?rf~~
·
. ·
.'.Tu~n~~H:-Y!'.l»'~~Sf~~a.¥-~
- Bocchino led the Foxes with,a- in'.thebottom of the third;'scbr-
.three:'game series, Camsms
or6reakus," he added~
r:,,:-:-,; :,:- _ .•
triple and two RBI's,while An- · ingJimmyWtllis;DerekRandeiI, .. -_ ~oly~~Jts'.ilitti!)g w9es by sc;:o~--
:. Miµi'siis•als_o_ l_9o_king forward
thony Ambrosini,. Ben· ~ueto,. and Becht~l: : __ -·' .
-·· ·' '_._
i~g
fiv¢ _runs-fa.
t~e :top of-the
to facing,,fona in two .w.eeks,
_
arid Chuck Bechtel added one
. Catino··.(3.:3) pitched si~ ~d si~th jn~irig, ,highlighte4 °by~ a
which Szefc_ alsoJeels -will·
d~~
:' "!. '.
.
~
.
.
c.
·Tennisteam~i9g8SMAACtoumamentnears
byCLAYNORRIS
-
StaffW.nier
season;theMarist playen;haye.
•
-matches in ·a rbw at 'one '.pbi~t;
faced levels ofcoinpetitiofrthat
-
h1cluciing big winsover Boston
,
other MAAC teaI11sJ1ave not.
C<>llegeand ~QDy. . _
_ .
-
: 'Confid~nce: rtot cotkiness, is -
"Hope.fully;the§e experie11ces
i
In
addition, the
·
middle ofthe. : -
the tlieme of the Marist men's
have 'giver(us'enoitgh,fou~da-· lineup,isyoung,b.u,t imp_r_essiv~ .
.
tennis team thi_s spring. Posting tion to putthe mofo~ourhouse -·' . S~phomore fas~il'c_(}elli!r
-
and.
a perfect 8~0conferehce t¢cord
at- the. MAAC tourney,''., said. freshriiari; Eric.:,Scheldr have
should ma.Re the Red Foxes the
Sinith:
.
_. ____ . -_
.
.. _ . ' ·· ·_- _. _ beell wfoning consisteniiy
all
favorites~· and.assures thdmtlie: ---_ _ Smith look~ at orie
.
partictilai · _
spq11g hj:singlet
anci;.
~ccord-
·
top see4 in
·
the MAAC:tdtima'- -· momerif
as· llie
tu~rig point in }ni
t1
.
~01tth/~iinpfoving daily" :
m_etjt(which··sta~s Friday in_ the season;:~ne•in,which:his
intheir,doubl<?~:matc:l)_e(./_
.
_-
.
Kiamisha,N.Y.
. .
·
teamhasn'tlqoked;back.
..
:.?,Thtfdept~f~¢yep.-*etcp.es
. - ACCQ[din.gtq I-Iea.cl.¢oacJ1
Tim
i
On March:24, pJaying against
i
clpi,yri
t9' Juiµi
Qelgado'
iri the _
·- Smitli,:Maristhas_eained the title , - Btisforrcoilege
iri)pe
deciding .· six.tlJ'.spot9ftheHneup,who 'is,.:
offavorites'in the
'
MAAC.'
'
giine; Matist!f'bes(sfngles . ''.withoufguestion/tlie-besi: .
.
. "We have prepared harder,
player, Ralphy~ei:Plasse, had ·_ -si,:-tlr p!c1.y~r,i11. !h(~<>nfel'ef!C.f:
traine.d ltarder,juid_phtyed in
lost the firsCsei 6-2 arid was ._:andsh?ulddomina:teinthetour.a·,
riiore matclies
·
and.tournameilts
doWri
s~
i'
iii thesecond.
:
s·erv~ ~a'ment;•( accio~ding' tq.)iis •
than· any other: team (in the ing30-40, VanDerPl_a.sse broke
cOa~ll.: .,/ ,~'~
-
: ·:
:-
: :
:t/:£);~/ , :
MA.AC),"Siriithsaid: _
-. ____
·
· .
a
_
siring:cin·his•~irdra~ket:
}Ie _
)(Setiigt£~pt~ip_·cpd;:I_e.atl~i,
-
--.
·
'.·Marisf·has:pfayed'iti'such wasforcedtc>'ilseateainmate's' _-MikeRacanelli,sptindedmuch
competitiye · t<Jilrn~eiits · this - ·_ racket
but
ended u°p
w1nhlng
the - ·: like
his
:c(!ach when'asked about -
-
yellras, the.University
of
Con- .. set 11:-9
in.a
tiebreaker. : . ,
his:team's·chances in·ihe con-·_
necticut Totirnament;: the .-
Smith~aidthe'BosfonCollege
ference tournament _ ._,- _ .·
Q)meUinvitational;theHatvard . player~as :•mentaliy andphysi~
~
_F ..
Y{e ·h~ve' a strong.-team;
Invitational, and theECAC_Elite
cally exhausted" after the sec- . we'.ve proven_ we cru.i.bea,t
(a.H
16Toumainent
ond ·set.· . '
-
-
·_
-_
-· othei:-MAACieams),there's"iio
TheECACEiite 16isaninvi- . . Varu)erPlasse, with momen-
reasonweshouldn\"Racanem
tation--0nly tournament in whicli , : ~m'nowdn
~!s
sii:le, w~nton to -_ said. / .::: ...
:
: . ·
..
> .. :
---th~top 16diyisionf~~•ffotn· _:, ~Jq_~etarne.;}s~k~_QI!_la.t~Q,/t~:· I<1s gef~n~ing!--f~C ~ham~,,
Maine to Virginia, c6inpetes.
·
. 3Jor the Red Foxes.
ptons, the Red Foxes hav~ had
<co'ach-Smith said-die entire
•·:smith described it as one of ·to dealwith being the favorites
team:
w~fi
"elated'' to be in-
his inost exciting matches in his _ this y~. - -~
_,
:
eluded in the tournament be-
coaching career. .
. "Last yea{we were the new
cause the Red Foxes. were se-
The Marist lineup does not kids on the block, bu~ then we
lected ahead of schools such
seem to have any hol_~s or weajc
shocked ev.ery_one;" said
as, Rutgers, Georgetown, Bos-
points.
Along . _. with
Racanelli, "Thisyearwearethe
ton CoJlege, and Providence.
,VanDerPlasse, senior Roberto
champs. We are the hunted in-
By playing in competitive Mayer continues to have an
stead of the hunter.''
tournaments throughout the
outstanding spring, winning 12
Both Smith and Racanelli
agree that theirteani is very con-
fi
denr but not over_Iy so.
Racanelli describes the team as
very level headed and, as a
group, they are taking the s~-
son one step as a time.
Racanelli said that everyone
seems
tQ
be
peaking at the right
time and that
if
they perfonn at
their level, they will end up
MAACchamps.
Smith is confident of his
... please see
TENNIS,
p. 15
53.17.1
53.17.2
53.17.3
53.17.4
53.17.5
53.17.6
53.17.7
53.17.8
53.17.9
53.17.10
53.17.11
53.17.12
53.17.13
53.17.14
53.17.15
53.17.16
<"
r--
;,,~,
..
,
..
.
..
-·
Vohnne 53
:Jssue·
17 .
.
·
-FEATURES-
. Ch~outthenew
In~
ternational ·outlook
section; p;
5.
·
;.SPORTS~.·:~.;
' Tennis favo~;~ ;in
MA.AC Tournament'
· Jind
out
more on
p;
-16 •.
·· on-the web at www.ac_ademic.marist.edu/circle,
April 13~ 2000 ·
,TymillSki's choiGe·fO:fViCcil>resideittt1uestio11ed
New SGA administ!atiop.: begins
a
li~tle shaky
by
KATEI\iOYLAN
~taffWr[ter
. after· Hu~t~/exp~~;ed iCJack of c~n-
Dunn ·to:gef tci the heart of the issue.
. · fidence·in Dunn's abilities to success-
Amanda Kelly, <lirector o( public re~
. · fully-execute'.· her responsibilities. ··
lations for
SC.A,
:v.:_ils'
alsopres¥nt, .
-
. _'Iyminiski responded_ to the.imony-
'Dunn was. appointed.
as
Parlfamen~
.
-The
admiriis;ration of Student Body . molls leter: He also expressed an opin:
tariail ·h'aifway throiigli Colleen
. Presidellt. Seth. Tyminski -.is stuck .in
ion to the. anonymous' autho~ of the
McCullough's administi-atio~ dudng
the .mud .before even getting on the . letter.,. who said he or·sne would,not
the 1997~98 acad.emic year. Hunter
road.
·> ... ··. . ·.· ·.
·
. .
.
~eve~l)i~,q~.~t;r id~µtlty out
off,~ar,
~
i?Jer ~ppointed heriParUa~entarian
.. : . The.Circle
recei~ed_llll anonymous·
of·retaliation'.>
< . • .·. ··
. :
•..
for the J998,99,year.:
.y.: '. ..· . ,
letter hist. week,' purportedly. from: a · ·;" • '~F think' they shouicI 'i:ea?retaHa~
.
'
.}fontet
said tliat
at
tile
tim
7
Dun,(s
member of Tyminski's administra-
tion a·lotmore now·thatlknow about · appointntent :was made, he felt she.
tion, raising concern over. the ap-
the Jetter,'.':he said. ;,Aiiffnsigned
was the best' c·anclidate for the job. ·
pointment of }9-istine Dunn as
Ex-
·
letteds a very· childish aucf'unproc
However, conmcts later arose be-
"Ryan and I had a personal dispute
and I felticould no Ionger·work for
· him," Dunn said.
. _
. Dunn also stated that the ·conflict
between herself and Hunter dealt with
·issues outside of SGA., Hunter ech-
. oed. these . sentiments .
"The conflict was a c·ombination .
of differences· that accumula.ied over
tinie regarding how SGA should
be. :
run," Hunter said.
, . . . · :· ..
Accompanying the aiionymo)ls'.:i'.'
· Jetter was the letter written by Ryan
°
Hunter sent to Dunn informing her
of her removal from the office of
Parliamentarian.
ecutive Vice. President.
fessfonal way to do business:"
c· · ·
tween Dunri and Hunter that resulted
Dunn was fired
as
Parliamentarian
. Sunday night Vaness·a Santos of · in Dunn's removal from her posi- ··
.. ;please seeTYMINSKI, pg. 3
by former president R_Yan Hunter,
MCTV sat down with Tyminskiand
tion,
Seth
Tyminski.
. .
First anniversary
of
.carionization
marked
/ -
. . .
.
. . . .
ies lecture seri6s, which
~ill
be
by;rnFF)?AHNCKE
an annual eyenL . '
• . . ·
... · .
.
. . News Editor • :
... ·. .·
The
,t?y~~~,:~elcl
ifih~/~rnall
·. · _'. __
:·
.
.
, / :, .. :,:.;.;,,__;_;.:;,;,;;:· :;~:: .. :~iil:iijg,rp~Ai;:\V~~ :~~te11decl by
,;: J,?utfto,'an,illnes(tliafforc¢d- ,'appfO!(!Illately,
.
I00members of
·. ·gu~~fspe~e,r:~(ogi.Ef Cefon'~!:!·
·
.
fa
9
41ty,jtafffu!dJoc~
91~tgr: ·
.
,Voegtlejnto' the'.;h9spital :last
-,:
· ·
.
Brother.Frarit(Kelly;directot\
0
:>:11i11rs~ay, t11i!11~ugdtaI
qa_ili~::
·
·.•~of Canip~s}{inistry, · saidit.waso:- .
l
/lie Studie(le¢ttire;
~n
the :NeUi . away to coniroemorate tlie
can- .
. Galetti h~d to,be'clinceied:·
-F·. .
onizatjon'of Champagnat ..
:theiecture wasscliedulecfto ..
.
:
"In
light
<>filie
factdiat it was
· mark
the
first anniversary of the· one· year ago tlli's'weekend, we
:::
·
•--'"~/',':.,:- :'.: · ,
.
.. ·
.
>
·
<
,
.:,. ·. ' •. ::
•.
·· .. ,- ·..
.
. · ·:··
·
·, .';· ·, · · •
..
t
.. -·-.
Photo courtesy Mcghan O'Gea,y
c.an.--.. o.niz. a.t1.·.o.n.of
...
s.t.
M
..
ar
..
ce.n.i.n-. jus. tth.ou. ght.w.e .. w. ou.ld·c.elebrate
Rutt(fiOretto
qt
Dining
Se,:v_ices·$mefap~ a
pie.in
the_fcic~
'
otSteve
.$ai1~01.a:'
-
· .
.
. · ···.· .
.
.
.
.
Champagnat, the founder of the. tlie first anniversary," he said:
o.-..
-re.ie_ ...
k .. .. -
.w-
..
e.
~e.•
.
.. ,
...
k_.·
:<_11.>i.•-g··•·
·
>•b
...
·········•.
·
·
·
·.·,·.·.···l···
.i,g··_i;·.:1
... · ...
1._·
...
t
.. ·
e.
:a
..
·.
'11.·· ..
v.
··,.··
~:~=~:;~~I}:()ftheJ~dure·
1a1/:~:~~~~~~:~~:;r}~~
.
. .
.
.l. ·
didn<>t prevent~ celebratiop of -Marist. Singers sang- the same
• t~ . · ·
• '
·
· t -
f
:iheanniversarytrom·occ\iring,
musicthey,sang at the·c;uioni~
- --n1e ,
·11rown1nfl- con es
however,• ..
· .. ·..
zationJnRomelastyear.- ..
.. H~ ;.· ·:.:·•.·:-·.
,
_
.
··-
.
.
. _-,_~_-_ .
:
. . _.:~.--:---,...
.
-
,. -
Thep]aqi.IejnJhelobbyof
Accoi:dingfoKeny:therewill
·byJ\.M.\'.$P~ERG .. ':
....
,
3
!1A~,'.ktWN,..~d.?-U.E?:.~~~nt;, otber.,Qreekf' ···· .. '
·
.· ·.•·· ' / '
ChampagriatHaU ,was blessed. be
a
CathoHc _Studies .lecture
•
·•
·•
· ,. ''{~taff)Yffi,e'rt'.':\'!~f
_,
c:;w~~~
9PJ.1
11
?U_aI.s~fR:2ns9r~d ~; · ...
·
: Alpha S!gma ,Ta
11
•
ca.ptur.ed. · Thursday afternoon.- The
·
dedi- _
..
each year, focusing on adtffer'." .
: :· . >
·
,:
:. ·.
·>·· •
'c"··
,fundr~ts.er,:for.
_
H,a,1?
1
~at,forJit1:- .
.
first place
'tn
the, Greek·,Week · · catioilwas foJlowed tiy a dinner
ent aspect-of Catholicism each~
. ~~!J
1
1::Y<>
11
:geJ ~he~ y9u . j_glJl~~ty;'.~!iere._e~9~lem1;1,deA
0 "
sorority sajidings~: folloy,ecl
J?y
to
inahgur:ate the_Catholic Stud-'
time; .
C?l11l>J_n~P.I~fllHI% bel!y·flOP7 ·. nations;to
!hfo,~
·crearcf pies ·a~
<
Sigma
SigJila·
Sigma; ·K.~~pa
. pmg
lill,d
s~1~q~? : : '·~--. .
.
__ faculty·_ a,nd. stu,clent partiti:, .. Kappa Gamma{~nd_ Kappa.
No, 1t) 119t~yo,_ur h1stspm1g _ • P.ants: ... ·.. . _
:<""
.. . . .
..
·. .
Lanida, Psi. For the fraterriitiesi
break
in
Cancun. :It's .caUed
·Steve Sansola, Assistant
Dean
. ' .
.
.
.
Greek.Weei ·,
-••:
:> ;\
<
i ·
·
.. ··
of
Activities,~ 'said. that-.Greek .•.
.:.please
see
GREEKS,pg.
4
•
.
·oreek We'ekis'anann~al.event.
·•weekis
iltime.for.the'sororlties.
at MarisFColiege\Jt consists - arid fraternities
'
io W<>rk tog~tlier
ofa series,ofevents":'and con-·
·
_and have -fun. ,
.
.
-.-,_~
.
·
testsirrwhichthesor<>ritie};and.
·
.:•:,''It's'be,eri
a
great ~eek;'\he
fraternities ofr campus partici-
·
said/ '' Affthe Greeks have been:
pate.
·
·. , • · - .. · · . . . ururiec1
'anf
supportive
of
·each
It
was held.onApijl
4i8,
and> other'duriiig'the evenk ·_Ks'
included .. e_vents ·
.
such.
a:s
jce abot1t Greeks-working alongside
carving, a
pie
e~i\ng ~oniest; . each otp.er and havfog
fun
with
:.
.
· Photo
.cou~y Meghan O"Geary. · ·
.
,
·
· - ..
·- ,
..
.
· ·,
·
-_
· .. : Photo courtesy Marist College
Sansolasmiled throughout
it
all. · Pope John Paul II during last year's canonization ceremony. ..
WEEKLY .POLL-
-■:■:
::-·Wotld:WideWebconcems·oo~
byLAlNEYNADEAU.
Are you, g~ing
~p
__ _ ..
~taf!Write~ ..
.
vote for~
Hillary-or-~ ·
--,~~w.nynJ~ffing
fu,e ',Ve6cir
writ-
Rudy•
;-for
'fhe
New.
•in!f~!l·~rp.ail,do;youever feel
·
·
someone
1s
looking over your
York Senate seat?
shoulder?
Hillary
53
.
Rudy
47
ee
related story
of page 4.
· is
an
unsciemijic swwy taken
00 Marist
strulenJs
wlw
are from
N.
ork State.
"I always thought people from
Marist tracked the sites I vis-
ited,"
freshman Keara Troy said.
"I
guess
it
could be an invasion
of my privacy, but I don't have
anything to hide, so it doesn't
bother me."
Troy said she.believes ¥arist regular basis. She §aid IT does
can pinpoint the sites she visits
not track
tlie
use of the Internet
on the Inteme_t: Many other
by individual students.
_
students share this belief, or are
"We
are not .in the business
uncertain of what the Infqnna- -. -of watchitig what kids
.ar.e
do-
tion Technology Center at ing and policing what thef do,"
Marist is capable of and actu-
she said. "I have three people
ally do.
· who run the entire network of
Manager of Systems Net-
almost 10,000 machines, so they .
works and Operations Martha
have a· lot better things to do
McConahay said there are many than watch what one kid
is
do-
misconceptions of what Infor-
ing o.n a daily basis."
·mation Technology (11) is ca-
pable of and what they do on a
...
please see
WEB,
pg. 3
INSIDE
ommunity .....................
2
eatures .........................
5
•
•
.
C'
p1ruon ........
~
.................
o
&E ..... :: ................... 11
ports ................... ;_ .......
16
I
I
'.I
TH£·
CIRCLE
,
. .
Apti(l3,20~oo~
---
- - ~ - -
.
~'_:_o_
·
.
·
_1_1_·
.
~_n_11~~...;..u..;;;..i .......
n
.........
-_
.
~i
t~y~
··
·
=
_
·
_
======::::=:::=·
.
<
=PA~
:
d ____
E
2
Tune into Sports Radio
.
WMCR- Marist College Ra-
·
dio - Fdday- Tuesday, 7:00 p.m.
-
9:00
p.m.Tune into 88. l for the
.
latest sports talk, sports up-
dates, and coverage of your
fa-
vorite Marist teams.
If
you have
any questions, call the Sports
Director, Mike Koller at x4724.
Online Job Fair
New York State Colleg~ and
Universities
Vuti.Ial
Job
Faii-2000
is being held from April
l "."
May
30.
To
register go
to
www.collegeceritral;com/jobs
and dick on student
registra-
tion. Follow the
-
easy instruc-
tions and then you are on your
way to exploring listings of jobs
both
.
fuii,
part time
and
intern.:.
ships across the state.
A pellet gun was fired at a male
student jogging behind Leo Hall
on Wednesday April 5 at 1:15
a.m ....
An assumed non-art student
crafted a phony River-view park-
-
ing sticker that was discovered
by security, costing him $45
more than the piece of art was
worth. This was reported on
-
Wednesday April
5,
at
7
p;m
.
..
-
The members of Marian Hall
seem to have mastered the art
of vandalism. Toilet paper di!>~
.pensers
and soap dispensers
have been reported to have been
tom off the wall on the first floor
of Marion Hall on Thursday and
.
April 6, Saturday, April
s:
Two
reports were filed on Monday,
April 10th
;
One report involved
-
the Marist Money machine
yanked from the walL
'
Earth
Day Lobby Day 2000
What do you want to
be
when
you grow
Up? W!Iy?
"I
want to be a btim on the
beach because
I
can have fun
in the sun all day long and
..
there
is
no ~ork."
.
Siisan
.
·
Decotis
.
-
.
"Successful' because that
would be nice."
ChrisWeber
''.We want to get the band back
together."
Jonl\futray&
-
.
.
..
'
Jobri Ragozzine
.
,
freshman
·
f_r~shmai1
:
.
-
-_
~
-
.
..
,,
With the world celebrating the
<· '· ·
,
.·
.
~em ors,
'·
'
·
30th
anniversary of Earth Day,_a
A toaster oven in desperate
· ··- ··
-- ~- ·
·
·
. :,
,
,
,>
~
-
-
"··
,
,
·•·:
coalitipn ()flo
_
cal;
,
state, and na-
; -
~~ed ~f
-
~li#!~g_;-"caught
firl
, /
_;•
,
;':'~
::,
s::; }~
-- ~
;
'"J
.
>
~
0
---i
f
<: '.,
1
.
:
~
;;,
~'..'
i"
~
-
'.:'.
'z
!.
•-
~
-
~
-
~
·
:.
i·
.
,
•
::;;[
-:;--;._
..
~
·;:t
\
}
.~
\~
..
:
.
c,,
tional
-
e
_
iivfronfuenfar
gr~ip's
..
~hile a Jl!ale student attempted •
,
~at_approx1mately
2
p.m,
.
.
,
,c
•••
;
Fifi
fighferS\vili
'.
nevePbe
-
·
:
alaori
iri
~1e
.
u
.
tilocK
al7:50
p
i
fu.
;
-
toheatpizzain.Gartlari_dcom
_
-
''--'
·
·:··- _
__
-
.-
_
_
·
,
-_-
_
-
.
_-_·-
b
_
or
_
e
_
d
_
wh
_
_
HeMaris_
-
__ t_Coll
_
ege_stu
_
-
April9th
t
.
_.
-
.
· have coine tog~ther and you ate
.
-
·
·
·
,.
-
-
·
'
-
-
invited to join them. Thecoali-
mans
02
apartments on Apnl
6
'
,:Sfu4
•
~;1i
C
ii~h;~;;e:f;&Ka'.t{
}
t i i :
.:
~t{f{4~
.
:rif~~
-
Tiitt1r~
/
:,i
-i
1~d
:
eh~ri~
:
k
(
iC\VaS
,
c~#ged
tio11
will
head toAlbany to lobby
_
be sni
,
iished leading to the 3rd,
-
.
:CJartla
'
nd
:
,
Comllli:>n
'
s
:
o
'.;}jlock
,
t~r
a
_'
Leo IfaH studentwho
W~S
outside of the Legislative Office
Security caught a
,
student
.
.
4tp,
an~.
5th
fl<>or~ inthdvlid-:·
.
aroJnti6:3C>p
,
;
rrif~.n.Apefi
9.an?
'
,_•
,no!•
r~sp9ns}bl~
;
.{or
..
the _calls
Building on April 10, 2000 from
feigning a limp when he noticed
-
·Rise
res1_denthall on the
_
mom-
.
-_
the
·
smoke from
a
inale
:
student
<,.
1Dl.lcl~.
-.
A,n;
:
mvest1gat1on
_
by a
9 am to 4 p.m.
,
Bus transporta-
thatthe officer observed that he
ih
'
g'6fApriI9:
.
cooking set off
'
aiibtherfire
.
p~rs~n~~i from
.
the_C~mmu~i-
tion will be made available to
had parked
·
in a handicapped
Marist students.
If
you are in~
spot without a s
_
ticker
Of}
April
terested contact student repre-
-
7.
Security
·
wopld like to ~emind
-
sentative Veronica at896-8086
_
people that they h
_
aveno
t
mer~y
~r vlren;o@aol.cofu. For more
~;
for,
peoplewho park inihandi-
.·
information, che~k.
-
o~twww
.
capped spots.
enadvocat~s.org.
·
.
..
.
.
...
.
.
-
_.·
;
:
..
;
;
YearbookN~dsYour llelp
·
Eight students "'.ere r,e_ported
_
to hav~
'
coq~µnied
-
°39
:
pans of
-
-
.
The
Yearl)o~k Sta.ff is looki11g
·
-
,
be~r after security
·
crashed the
-_
for peqp}e' t9 help out infinis.h-
.
,
party_
imd confiscat~d nitie re~
_
iI1g
Jhisyear'
s
_
c
bo
9
Ic.
Al!;o;
-
'.
mainirig
·
cans/oottles
th~t
were
peoplewh<>. would be inte,rested
ftiU
·
on April 7
_
arou~d
'
I l p.m .
.in h~Jpirig Out ~ext year,
Cori-
·
tact the Renyard office
:
.
Now it's your
turn
-
Calling all Manst students!
If
you have
.
a band, and e
.
vent, a
club; or any.
·
other event you
would like to see featured in
campus· corner, contact the
Circle,
ai: x
2429
or
HZAL
A stubborn student
::.
walked
·-
back into
'
the
_
Benoit House
whileFireFighters were check-
ing
out
the student residence
after.a fir~ alarm went off on
April
8
aro~n~_l:45 a.m.
A student volunteer fire fighter
_
battled an oven fire while cook-
in in his Town House I on A ril
Weekend
-
Weather
·
Saturday
-
-=S=~
hi: 63
lo:
45
hi: 67
Io: 46
Source: www.weather.com
hi: 64
Io: 43·
.
.
CORRECTION
e
i~formation provided
t:9
_
us:
about the BSU baby shower
:
pi~tured i~ last
~eek'§
ci;X,e,
'
wa
ncorrect. The shower was for unwed mothers not an AIDS baby shower. We apologize for
·
an
orifosion this may have caused.'
'
.
~
·
·--
,,
.
-
.
.
.
:
.
...
·•
•
'
APRIL 13, 2000
...
--~-------_,
______
_
_
.·
•·
.
. . .
-
·
·--
.
-
TH£
·
CIRCLE
.
·
.
News
....
..
. .
_
.,_.,I
•
.
...
....
..
~
.
PAGE3
1?YMJNSKI:
Letter casts doubt
on
Thrun'
s abilities
'
.. ;
~
continuedfr.om pg .
.I
!
; ,
1eiter was';~he iette~ ~ritten by Ryan
Hµnter sent to Dunn
·
informing hor
of her
:
removal from the office
·
of
Parliamentarian .
.
Both Tyminski and Dunn have
stressed that this letter was not a
matter of public knowledge and both
questioned how
·
this teller could
·
have
faHen into someone else
'
s hands
other than those
.
it was sent to.
·
Hunter said there were a number of
. ways that the_ leiter could have been
obtained, but
said
he did not have an
idea
-
where it came from.
"How exactly it got out or through
whose hands is beyond me," he said.
The
_
leuer cited Hunter's unhappi-
riess with Dunn.
"Your tantrums
·
and blatant disre-
spect
of
my positionhave
·
made it
impossible for
_
me to utilize you as
Parliamentarian," Hunter said in the
letter
.
"Your insubordination and
_
mocking of Student Government
positions and daily functioning has
negatively· affected other represen~
tatives and I feel that this is not what
·
.
is iri
ilie
bestin
'
tei-esrofthe organi-
zation
-
arid the stuclent body
~
"
.
'fyminski.
who
i-ecenity appointed
·
.· Dµrin as his Executive Vice President,
said that he felt the letter forcing
Dunn
'
s
'
removal from her position
was not an issue to be concerned
.
about in
.
considering her appointment
to his own administration .
.
"The rei'ationship between Ryan
and Kristine is none of my business"
'fyminski said. "It was Ryan's ad-
ministration and he cduld have done
whatever he wanted to ~ith it~•
.
'fyininski ri1entioried that the ad-
ministrations
are
different and should
be treated so.
•
.
"That in no way affected my deci-
.
.
.
• _
Circle file photo
Tyminski is facing controversy in his first week in office.
.
sion to appoint Ms
.
Dunn. Her work
·
ethit and character are both phe~
nomenal."
.
.
.
.
.
Both Dunn
·
and 'fyminski said that
·
they have a long history working
together on a number of projects.
They coni.in_ued
fo
stress that they
have nothing but the utmost confi-
dence in each other.
Hunter also wished Tyminski and
_
Dunn
·
the best of luck arid encour~
ageil them
_
to continue to focus on
student issues.
Tyminski commented that in mak-
ing his appointments he focnsed on
the ability of the candidatc
·
to work
hard
_
and get
_
the job do
_
ne
.
He went
on to say that very little consider-
ation is given to whether or not the
board members have respect for each
other.
"It's more a matter of who can get
the job done," Tyminski said
.
. Tyminski said he had no idea why
anyone on his administration would
.question Dunn's appointment.
"When we sat down and went over
· the rules l asked that if there were
·ariy concerns, that they would be
brought directly to me, and each one
of the members looked at me and
nodded their heads," Tyminski said.
Hunter acknowledged that the de-
cision he made is not reflective of
Dunn's overall ability to fulfill her
responsibilities. He repeated the fact
that
,
due to conflicts. the two of
t}lem had difficulties working to-
gether.
"My telling go of Kristine does not
. mean that she is not going to be a
good Vice President for Seth," Hunter
said.
Dunn suggested that p
e
rhaps the
·
reasoning behind the anonymous let~
ter. could be attributed to knowledge
that was attained second hand. A situ-
ation such as this, she said. would be
understandable.
"If
this is the case I would just hope
that they would come to me and
speak to me one on one,
"
Dunn
s
aid
.
Sunday afternoon the appoint-
ments were made official and the Stu-
dent Senate voted unanimously in
favor of Dunn.
In an effort to reassure the student
body, Dunn said that she
felt
she was
ab
s
olutely capable of performing her
duties as Executive Vice President of
the Tyminski administration.
"Your insubordina-
tion and mocking
of
_
Student Government
positions and daily
functioning
has
nega-
tively affected other
repre~entatives."
.Ryan Hunter
in· a letter to
Kristine Du,in
Tyminski had nothing but praise for
·
Dunn, attributing hi
s
success in his
campaign to her organization and
hard work. Tyminski said that their
own relationship, as well as his suc-
cess, should be a testament to the
fact that Dunn is fully capable of ful-
filling her responsibilities.
Tyminski wants to make sure that
SGA does not get a bad rap based on
one anonymou
s
l
e
ller
.
"If
anyone has any questions, they
should just come to SGA," Tyminski
said
.
•
c
.
·
~ ;
'
ffif.Ol'tnfittqnTeclifiology
.·
.
·
'
·
exp1afus
onlineStiidentprivacy
Throughout the interview,
.
..
.•. continuedfrompfL
_
,
the
campus.
:
The fast
.
check
_
_ _
-
.
'
lookedatChampagnatHaIL
Even though
.
they are not
'
McConahay said problems are
looking at whatindividuals are
not always because a student
doing, Mcconahay said IT does
.
is intentionally manipulating
have
a
responsibility
-
to nioni-
the systelil.
_
IT ta~es stude
_
nts
tor the network.
·
IT looks for
off temporarily i
_
ftheircomput-
what is happening ~n the net
::
·
ers are causing errors in the sys-
work to determine how well the
tern.
.
.
.
fq6ipII1ent is hahdling the load
.
.
''Either the person is doing
and
watchingforpossible prob-
,
something or perhaps there is
leihs
>>
.,
.
.
..
·.
\
/
:
sowetl:iing
:
wrofig with the
.
PC
,
/
'.We
:
·
are
hot
looking
a_t
wha°t'.
'.
iliat
is generating
a:
lot of errors
students 8.re
'.
cJojij
'
g,
we are
.
~nd then we have to. deal with
·
c:hecking . for. problems
i1_1 the
that," she said.
·
·
system,'';McConahay said.
.
Sophomore Jared Creaser has
/
-
kprobleri1 may be that one
been kicke~ off the network
snioenfcornputer is
_
taking tip
three times since he has been at
.
most of.the bandwidth
.
of the
·· ·
Marist.
As
an information sys-
compuiei-. system:
.
Bandwidth
terns major, he said he recog":
c9riesponds to how much vol-
..
nizes that it is often the result of
mrie a particularline
_
cari carry.
·
his computer being shut down
When one computer is using up
improperly and causing erro!S
too much ofthe
·
systems band--.
-
·
.
.
on the network. Before he was
width it
talces
away
tfom
others
.
called he ·said he was unaware
use of the system.
.
IT could see what was happen-
McConahay sai~ that when
ing on his computer.
one machine is u~ing too much
"Now I know they keep logs
bandwidth it is knocked off the
and if they see errors Q)at are
system until they identify what
slowing down the network they
the machine is doing.
will call you and let you know;'-'
'That is inconvenient for the
Creaser said.
.
.
person whose machine that is,"
Creaser said that being tern-
said Mcconahay, "but one per-
porarily kicked off
_
did nQt
·
soil
,
can't
,
be allowed
-
to take
·,
botherhim,
-
He said itis a good
aw
.
ay
.
the abiliti
_
(,S ofothers to
system and he is glad it is:in
use their machines. It is not that
place.
.
.
·
we want to knock people off the
"It is better tha
_
t they check in
network but we want to protect
on the system and make sure
everyon~'s usage of it."
that everything is running
IT can detennine if one com-
okay," said Creaser.
..
puter is using too much of the
They can tell what machine
bandwidth when periodical
may
be
causing errors but
IT
checks are done of the network.
cannot detect exactly what ma-
Checks are done less than once
terial the person at that machine
a month on different sections of is viewing.
"We only track the sites that
werun,,,McConahay said
.
"We
know how many people visited
the Marist webpages but I can't
tell you who on campus ac-
cessed Yahoo yesterday. There
is no way for me to know that."
To protect themselv(?s, IT is
given some privileges over the
system. For example, in extreme
cases they can check person~)
·
email through student's
MaristB account. Some stu-
.
dents are unaware of this capa-
bility and some disagree with it.
"I don't think people are get-
ting into my email," said Sopho-
mo_re Cliristina Pagano.
'1
don't
really think about it, I just fig-
.
·
ure no one really cares."
Junior Matt Yorke said he
does think about it and expects
that when he writes someone an
email it will not be looked at by
anyone else.
"I have an expectation of pri-
vacy between the person I am
sending an email," he said. "I
feel it is a breach of privacy if
this information can be ac-
cessed."
·
_
Mcconahay said that al-
though she has systems privi-
leges to look in email, she is
_
·
only warranted to do so when
she suspects there is a problem.
"As an educational institution
we have to protect out image
butwe also have to protect our
students and faculty to say
what th!!Y need to say,"
Mcconahay said.
·
From what Mcconahay has
said Marist is in no way "stalk-
ing" its students.
1-898GPLAN2
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_
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~---------·-------------------------------------------~--:---
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i
,
' , .
,'
I
1
'
,
;
APRIL 13, 2000
. CollegelookingintoposmbleHillafy-R_itdydeb8te
·
-
-
by
KATIIERINESLAUTA
Staff Writer
It seems everywhere you tum
recently there is some talk of
elections.
.
-
Marist Institute forPubli.c Opin~
.
:.
7
ihn
(MIPO); saict'"drganizing de~
bates is quite a production.
.·
''Campaigns go"inhdebates
over whether there
,
will be de-
"Marist
has
the
pres-
.
tige of polling and an
image
:·
of
.
being a
_
n
academic leader."
Whether it is for President of
the United States or Senator, the
media is constantly talking
about politics.
.
.
.
Besides the presidential cam-
paign, the race between Hillary
Rodham Clinton and Mayor
Rudy Giuliani for New York State
Senate will become even more
of a hot topic as election day
draws near.
,
Photo courtesy CNN
A senate debate between Clinton and ~iuliani could in the works.
Marist hopes to become a part
of this attention. Recently, there
have been discussions of a pos-
sible debate between the
present New York G.i
.
ty mayor
and our First Lady. . , ..
However, according to Chief
College Relations Officer Tim
Massie, nothing is definite.
"We're in the very, very, very,
very early ~tages of this,"
Massie said.
Marist has begun to discuss
the formation of a debate be-
tween the~o campaigns
-:
With
.
the great
•
reputation o(M:#~t
and an often-neglected Hudson
River
.
Valley population, this
.
would be an excellent way. to
bring an important campaign
·
into the community.
.
.
·
"Marist has the prestige of
Dmiler recognizes
club
achievements
by
SARAH BERGERON
rector of student activities. "All
Staff Writer
of the dubs on campus received
certificates, which is
.
really
Dinner, awards, applause and
great."
.
.
.
. ..
tears marked the end of old ad-
In particular, some clubs re-
ministrations andthe beginning
-eeived
sp~cial
.
recognition for
of new ones
at
the Student Gov-
outstanding achievements over
emment Transition dinner on
the last year. These clubs, che>-
Friday, April
7
at Christos.
'
.
sen by the Vice Presiclent
.
for
I
polling and an image of being
an academic leader," Massie
said.
·
While this idea seems like an
excellent one, ther~ is
.
no gu<!f-
antee.it
will
occur.
··
There has
been no discussion on the can~
dictates' level of any debates
.
taking place, let
_
alone a debate
near
.
Marist.
Lee Miringnoff, Director of the
·
bates," he said.
·
Since this proposed debate is
·
not in the works yet, there is no
set date forwhen this will take
place or venue for where itwili
be located. However; if one is
scheduled, it will
..
not be until
after a possible
.
September pri.-
·
mary.
.
.
·
.
'fiml\'lassie
Cl.lief
College
·
Relations
Officer
·
The students' response from
·
this proposed debate is ex-
Marist arid the Hudson River
tremely positive. Whiie some
Valley can
'
cmly hope such an
.
.
laughed at the idea of major po-
important political debate will
litical figures coming to the
come this way.
Marist area, the majority felt is
In the most recent MIPO poll
would be an excellent idea.
·
·
about the Giuliani-Clinton race;
"I thirik it isreally good," said
the
•
two candidates
.are
closely
Laur~n O'Gara; a Special Edu.:
matched for the firsftime since
ccttion/Psychology major. "I
·
last October
;
:
, .
hardly watch the news here~ so
·
. ·
GiliHani has thesupportof46
it wouldbe
·
a good way to in-
percentofNewYorkState'sreg-
fonn me
:
"
·
·
.
.
·
·
istered voters, whileCiiriton bas
·
'
With such an indefinite idea,
43 percent of the support.
nothing is certain .
.
·
However,
•
Eleven percent is undecided.
At the dinnei:, entitled ''.Unify-
Club Affairs Lou Totino and his
ing Students Through Action:
staff,arethosethathavemetthe
Enhancing the Quality," Marist
·
·expectations
for
achievement
club presidents joined the
·
stu.: and co~unity c:optributio~s.
.
The
tug-of-war was oneQf the highlights
of
Saturday's Field Events.
dent government leaders for the
.
According to Lynch, the deci-
fo~a~ tran~ition of the student
sion was
'
tightthis year; so
.
tight,
· "
..
.
·
.·
'nv
..
·
·
.
.
·v
·
·
·
·
·.
·
K S
·.·
··
.·_
·
·
..
·
· .
·
·_
•
•
.
·
.
F
.
·.un
..
·
·
'.
·.
+
.
11. ~ .
·
.
.
·
e·
·
.
.
h
.
~.
·
·
.a
·
.. ·
·
.
·
b
.·
.·
y
.
. ·
.. ··
.
·
.
.
···
.
·
··
a 1 1
:
.
.
.
...
•· ·.·
.·
admm1strat1ons.
-
tl:tatties were dec:lared.:
.
;
}
\.J'1'..E.J.lli
·
Ll.l
J.J!
u,J
Themaineventoftheevening
"They hadivecy tough ded--
•
was th
.
e inauguration
_
of Seth
· .
sfon this
.
year,
.
and ffeel that
•
.
·
·
Tyminski as Student Booy Presi-
.
they ll)ade
tlie
best decision by
-
..
;
continued from
pg:1_
dent
for
the
2000~01
adrriimstra
~
·
aUow1ng for aJiet he sai~.
.. '
· ·.
tion .. With
.
faculty members,
·.·
'JJletie
,
occ~rre(in th(award
Alpha
·
PiiiDelta finished
'
ahead
ildlllinistratorn,
President
,
for. the club demonstr~tii,g out:
offlyKappa Sigma.
.
·
··
.
.
.·.·
.·
:
Murray and
•
.
members
:
of:t
,
he
standing°
\
~om
111
unfry
..-
~ei~fce
>
·
0
rniizabethJacobson;president
Board of :Trustees looking
·
on,
.
Th"e award
was
shared
between
of
Gre~k.
Council
and member of
StuderitChief Justice
;
Caroline
MCCTA
:
;
whic~
)
p
~~
rfotm.e
.
d
Kappa Kappa Ganim~, saidtliat
Davis administered· the oath
:
of
children) theaterfor c;orilq:llimty
the last day of Greek Week was
office to Tyrni~ski. . .
. · ... ·
·
·
schools, raising over
.
$~,00Qfor
the
field
events, which hicludep
Once the o;ltff was t:iken,
the
·
.
battered ,vo
·
menwitllJhe ,Vagina
tlietug"of war, the big wheel re~·
riewest student admiriistratiori
Mori6Iog'ues peiformanc~; and
lay and the tire throw.
.
·
.
.
·
..
was
offici;il. According
·
to
the Marist'Band, \VhO travefoct
·
-'.
'!
A
lot of people participate in
Tymi~ski, the
.
ceremony went
with all of the athletic teains for
th
'
e
;
field events,»
she
.
saia.
well.
.
·
.
.
.
.
.
·
.
aH compeiitions,"performed for
"Pepple weren't separated an_d
"''It
w~s
a
very well ruri cer:,
several Presidents' receptiqns
there ~as
a
lot <>_funity."
.
.
emony,"Tymihskisaid. "Every-
and performed at the Run
for
·
Jacobson said
C
thatGreek
thing went smoothly and it was
H
·
·
·
·
Wi
.
.
.
eekis
.
iil.
.
s
.
o
.
,.
a
..
.
. w
.
.
ay
·
t~
.-
~
.
h
.
\>
,
v/
_
oth
...
·
~
.
.
·..
.
unger.
.· .
. . .
. .
. .
.
..,
._...;;..;.a
just'a nice evening.''
.
~
,
.
.
The
'
Class
of the
Year award
ers
'
how the sororities and fra:.
.
.
According
•
to
·
co_.organiier
was given to the Class of 2001,
ternides
are in~olved Ori. cam:,
Chris Uryriowicz, the dinner at-
marking its second outstanding
pus.
.
.
.
.
tempted to stay to the point,
recognition in its three years
·••rt
was open house tha(week-
while keeping the importance of
here.
end," ~he said: "The incoming
the ceremony.
· .
.
·
•
The Black Student UniQn.was
freshman see the involverrienf
"It was good to come together
awarded Club of the.Year, rec-
of Greeks on caJ!ljJlis."
and recognize what clubs and
ogn~zing their efforts in holding
Gina J.,ozito, co-chair of Greek
SGA did this
year,"
Urynowicz
over
18
different activities over Week ahd member of Sigma
said. "It was nice because usu-
the year, includ~ng a baby Sigi.na Sig!}1a, said that
th¢
ma~J:.l
;,tJly thes~ ihtngs
;
drag
.
on
/
QUt
shower for
.
unwed mothers.
. •
go!ll
fqr
all ~~orgiµji~9-
,
oris was
.
this year
ii
was
~ijo~
so people.
.
.
A~
~w~d
\Vas also
presented
to
i:t~ve fon,
'
arid
'
H
,vas not
got
~
chance
to
.
be able to talk
to the
·
Greek Council recogniz~
about witi'ning or losing.
with each other."
.
ing them as Council of the Year.
"My favorite event was the
In
addition to the formal inau-
Overall, the dinner provided
fundraiser because it was not
guration of the new
·
student
an opportunity for the efforts of worth any points
as
far as
who
body president, the dinner was
·
student leaders to
be
recognized
won," she said. "For an entire
also an opportunity to recognize
by
fellow students, faculty and
day the Greeks worked toge~er
all of the clubs on campus.
administration. President Den-
as
.
a whole to raise money for a
"Everyone is recognized at
nis Murray and Dean Gerard
good cause."
this event," said Bob Lynch, di-
Cox spoke at the dinner.
Lozito said another of her fa-
Meghan O'GeafY competes in S
_
aturdciy's tricycle races.
v:orite e.vents
was
the belly flop
come tog~ther for a common
contest;
·
'
·
.
··
.
.
"h
.
·
·d
·
'
.
.
.
,
cause,
,
e sat .
,
.
.
.
·
.
'
tI
likedthe belly flop because
.
The talent show also occurred
it's hysterlcal watching every-
·
.
duringGreek'Week. Thesorori~
·
one,".she said .
.
"The whole idea
ties. coordinated
·
dances and
o.f it is insane."
.
skits that th¢y p~rformed at the
.
,
;
H~yin_
9
_fu~
s
_
~}l!~~j~
~~
,
!h~
.
.
.
:.
~~Jli
Jfoletti Theater
.
.
Frid
,
ay
:
~ottva~I~!1 behm~
.
1t a~!! ~tbe
.
r
·_
~v~ning.
/
'.'
·.
, , ,
,
;
·_:·:
/
tpan commg out on top of the
.
.
.
.
Wilile
·
Kapp~i'Lamda
·
Psi
standings
:
.
.
.
.
walked
.
away with first place,
Joel Gardener, co~chair of Lozito said it was a fun way for
·
GreekWeekandmemberofPhi
everyone to display their tal-
Kappa Sigma, ~aid that Greek
.
·
ents.
Week is about unity and coop-
·
MaureenSachetti,amemberof
eration among the organiza-
Alpha Sigma Tau, agreed.
tions.
.
"It's like fourth grade again,"
"It is such a beautiful thing Sachetti said.
when all Greeks of all letters can
i
THE CIRCLE
A:PRIL
13,
2000
Fea
·
tu
i
res
Marist Student
·
Thomas Wilson's remarkable life
He has lived through war, crime, and other unimaginable tragedies, but he still comes to school each day with a desire to learn, and the
motivation to
·some
day, go back and repay all those who have helped him.
·
BYLISABURKE
Features Editor
Look around you in your next
class. Most likely you'll see
people who have had nearly the
same experiences as you; a simi-
lar upbringing, family life, and
roughly the same high school
and college experiences. This
would be true unless Thomas
Wilson is in your class.
·
We can
oniy imagine what he has been
through.
·
Wilson, a Liberian native, has
not only been
a
successful stu-
dent, but a volunteer teacher in
the harshest of circumstances,
an emergent leader in
.
a time
when fear and submission is the
natural tendency, and a fearless
pioneer in humanitarian organi"
zations during his homeland's
civil war.
.
His life did not start out this
·
way, but as that of a "normal"
young man. He lived with his
family in Cape Palmos, a nice
.c:ity:
outside the
.
capital. They
-
:
-were
fairly well off, hisipother
,
:;
was the chairwomaii'of the N
aJ
tfonalDemocratic
Party, and
his
father, the head of telecommu-
nications for a big company.
They had a house, a car,
and
land, just like the rest of us
.
. ·
Photo courtesy
11tomas lVilron
Volunteer teachers during thier first graduation
ceremony.Proud they have molded minds disturbed by war
and crime. Wilson is second from left.
the remaining children unedu-
cated and without direction. To
encourage the children (the
ages of seventh to twelfth grade
students) not to take up arms,
Wilson and friends organized a
volunteer teacher association.
In order to remain in Liberia with
the students, it was necessary
for Wilson and others to cross
the border irito the
Ivory Coast
at least once
a
·
day to create a
supply line of food for every-
one; The arduous walk
tra-
versed bushes; a beach, and a
river, and took nearly five hours
the refugee camp. The refugee
camp wasn't a camp in the tra-
ditional sense,
a
group of shel
-
ters all in a common
area,
but
·
the refugees stayed in houses
with volunteers who allowed
them to stay while paying rent
after the first month. They had
little cash, and depended
on
state
aid
and
money
from
other
family members. Wilson's par-
ents were finally
able
to get to-
gether enough money to build
their own house.
After three months in the Ivory
Coast after that incident, he felt
restless.
It
was useless, sitting
in another country and not do-
ing anything
.
Wilson felt impo-
tent, and had to make a change.
His parents urged him not to go
back, for the impending danger,
but he couldn't stay.
He saici of the
.
refugee camp,
"It
was terrible. We were re-
duced to nothing. We were
nothing
.
"
·
Wilson in Menza, South Sudan in May 1999 during his time
volunteering for Doctors Without Borders.
His parents also encouraged
his friends to stay in the camps,
but one friend wouldn't allow
that. Wilson named James
Biney as someone who encour-
aged him to go back to Liberia
and make this school they had
started work.
This was August of 1990 when
he returned to Liberia to con-
tinue teaching. His school had
grown from
40
students in the
first semester to approximately
500. As a registered refugee,
and with help along the border,
he was able to get the food and
supplies and leave to go back
home. Because of the nature of
the border,
the
government was
unable to seal it off, as much as
they tried, to prevent people
from leaving
Liberia.
Wilson graduated high school
in 1988 and attended a techni-
cal college with the intentions
of becoming an electronics en-
gineer.
·
Sounds pretty normal,
but this is where we differ.
By
his third semester, his life as he
knew it would end:
Civil war had
-
broke out in
Liberia, forcing natives to flee
their hometowns to find refug~
in camps in the neighboring
Ivory Coast. Many,. including
his family and friends, had left,
as supply lines to food and wa-
ter had been cut, so staying
meant starving. Young people
left as an alternative to being
drafted, otherwise the army
would come in and forcefully
recruit soldiers.
The staff and faculty of the lo-
cal school
fled
as well, leaving
to complete, but it was worth
not having to leave home.
There were soldiers at the bor-
der, so it was difficult getting
across and back safely.
"You can't tell who people
are," he said.
·
"You can't trust
anybody."
But the idea of staying became
less
appealing after the
first
trag-
edy struck. Rebels set off a
multi-fire and the sound reso-
.
nated throughout the land,
heard by all who remained in
Liberia. Wilson lost two friends.
For the first time, the tragedy hit
home.
"I
can't stay here," he said.
This provided enough impetus
for him to leave home for the
first time.
He finally joined his parents
and other fonner neighbors in
Wilson had since become a
volunteer for the
Red
Cross, and
this allowed him to cross the
border more freely. He had his
share of
the
rations, and people
knew who he was and what he
was doing, so he was able to
get
all the
food he needed back
\
Please see WILSON
pg.
6
APRIL 13~ 2000
..
WILSON
Cont'dfrompg. 5
be good."
By 1998
;
the war was officially
to the school.
over when Taylor won reelec-
Wilson was now waitingfor
·
tion. Wilson says this is be-
his opportunity to come to the
cause if he didn't win, the war
United States
.
His ties to Marist
would never end
.
Liberia is in
originated when Brother Paul
contjnual process of rebuilding.
Ambrose was the
-
keynote· His parents and many of his
speakerat Wilson's High School
friends still live in the Ivory
gr
_
aduation
,
and he had kept in
Coast.
'!O
~
MONTSEII
contact with him since
.
In
1990,
While working with the Red
he wrote to Brother Paul, letting
·
Cross
~
he found
·
another hu-
him know of his situation and if manitarian cause that he wanted
there was any way he could
to become a part of. Do
.
ctors
help. He told Wilson about a
Without Borders is an organi-
scholarship program that he had
zation
·
.
that was present in
for international students, al-
Liberia helping the
war
victims.
lowing them to complete their
(See panel, previous page)
_
He
degree at Marist free of charge.
saw these people, who took an
He offered this to Wilson, but
oath
·
of neutrality and
·
just
hewasn'tabletocomehereuntil
wanted to help people. He
the previous recipient finished
found this
·
afuazing
;
and
found
his degree; he would have to
himself asking
_
thei;n,
_
"Why
wafr4orfiveyears
.
Hedecided
would you do
tlus?!'
He soon
i
r•=
1
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r
;
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_
;,
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;
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,
_
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.-
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-
that this was a
gre~i
\5pportu
>
;
fourid out that
he,
;
tbo
c
b
hld
::
English is Wilsori
:
s native Ian,-
;
.
,
nization
\
iS the
:
Oest Way
•
he can
-
.,
Ed.
'
f
t
?tf,
p~
~r
i
}f!~'l!~P?W!l
,
.
,
,
.
,
nity if he could just w~it ifout.
-
answer that question.
:·
-
":,
r
:
•
-
guage, but he picked up French
_,
;
do that.
~
Aftednat
,i·
he
c
will
·
fr
.'.
,
.
()utlo_o.~ -l{~g<?f
~
a_<:qg~~.pt_c
_
~e
~
.
_
•
Brother Paul sent him money
·
He was iritrigtied; and knew
:
phoneticallyby living
-
in Africa
.
nally be able
-
and free to think
•
of
:
.
_
_
;
ated
by
Professor '{;faire. Keith
.
_
and luck to keep him safe in the
that this was the next step he
and working with this French-
himself
,
and
-
"startmy life
all
over
·
and myself._ She ~as he! ped me
meantime.
wanted to take with his life.
speaking organization.
again."
set up
_
the mtervl<!W _
wtth]1o-
While waiting to come to
When Wilson leaves Marist, -_ He wil
_
l have a degree in com-
His
·
home
.in
Liberia was de-
mas
:
Wi~son and provided t~
m
-
America, he continued working
·
with a degree in computer sci-
puters, but he knows more about
stroyed, but
_
he
_
can call '\vher
-
-
formation on Doctor~ wltl!out
with the Red Cross. He was
ence infonnation systems, he
society and humanity than any
ever in the world he
_
goes his B_orders. We would
_
lik<; ~hzs to
enrolled in the training program
plans to return to Liberia and
textbook could teach. He will
home.
·
·
·
become a r:__egular f~Clture
m
The
in Monrovia,Liberia's capitol.
workwith Doctors WithoutBor-
take his
life lessons and use
"I don't have
:
a real home to
Circle
_
qppearing at
.
least once
During his training, Liberian
ders.
them to do good and help oth-
goto," he said, '"but I have ev-
_-p_
ei- f
~~<!
ster.Offr ~im is to_sup
-
President Charles Taylor or-
He
_
first worked with them in
ers.
.
ery home
to
go
to;»
:·:
por
r
and_promote mtematwnal
dered an attack of Monrovia.
1999 when he volunteered for a
"I -want to pay them back for
On the future; he said
,
"l al
"'
·
life
gnd
interesth
'
ire at_Afarist.
Wilson and the Red Cross were
mission in South Sudan, Africa.
all
they have
,
done for
;
me," he
:
•
. ways have hope that things will
.
--
Any,inpu(yoi(can provide to-
kept there, in the buffer zone, to
After exams last May
,
he flew
saidofDoctors without Borders.
_
_
be well/'
:>
-'
,
. ,
.
·
,:
wards
.
ih1s
wouifib~
gC,.ei.uz
§
ap
~
·
, _
take care of the injured
,
J\n at-;,
_
to Paris for a
,
de\,rieijng.of._his._, '1:-Ie feels workingfortheirorga::-
,
.
.
;
,
_
, ·
1
,,.,
.
,
. , . : -.
·-
-
-
1 ,
prei:ib.tJd;
··
Emditds'at'HZAL.
:.
tempt_toes~ap~
\\'.a§
tjs~ng!h.~if. . 9li§Sion,
.
llJ!dJ9
,
ugq
,
o_µ~
,
h~ )}as!,;.
-
-
-
~.;/
',-,))
{,
I
~
,
.
:
: ;,
:
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,::J~o(,·
.
'J\
d
fhan
f
Yoii
?
]
>•'.
·
:?\/
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.
r:
·s•.
,
_
.
Jives.
_
.
the worst assignment possible;
Of President Taylor
;
Wilson
·
he
was to go to Menza
,
a town
said he can see why people like
·•
in horrible condition
'
. He was
him; but he feels that he is no
there for one month, and
.
al
-
good
.
'
·
though it was one of the hard:-
"He's got a lot of charisma,"
est things he had done, he en'"
he said. "People believed
-
he joyed it because he was
_
doing
was a god, but I could
_
see he
what he loved; he was helping
was a tyrant I knew he couldn't
people.
•·
·
·
Blast From
The P
-
ast)
A Letter to the Editor, dated November 2, 1989
'
-
0
:
.
.
:
.•
-
.
·.-
·
.
~
Editor:
I'd really like to know whom
the administration is trying to
kid with
-
this Alcohol
·
Aware-
ness Week slogan of "Party
Smart."
·
-
Marist is a largely dry campus,
with the possession of alcohol
resulting ina written reprimand
and a fine. The college has been
working with the local police in
busting off-campus parties. It
seems to me that college offi-
cials don't want us to party
smart; they would rather we not
party at all.
Instead of fighting about the
whole issue with Marist Secu'-
rity running aroun
_
d trying to
bust people- honestly, they get
their kicks off of it-and with stu-
dents trying to hide their alco-
hol, succeeding most of the
time, I'd like to offer an altema-
~~
-
i.
•.
Since drinking is going-to oc-
·
cur anyway
,
why
not
control it
instead of banning it? Campus-'
sanctioned parties
_
could con-
trol the amount of al~hol con-
sumed, eliminate the possibility
of students driving back to cam-
pus from
.
a party drunk, and also
eliminate the complaints many
residents
·
give to the college
over noisy off-campus parties.
All this is
·
not to say that I
don't believe in partying smart
.
I just think it is hypocritical to
say it and not let us party at
all.
-People come to college to party
as wellas10 study. The admin-
istration can't stop students
from drinking, no matter what it
does .
.
The forbidden fruit
.
is,
after all, the sweetest.
James
Hurler
APRIL
.
13, 2000
THE
c1Rct£
··
Features
ARIES
You'd like to buy new toys, but
-
you can't quite afford them. Not
a problem. Instead of worrying,
look around for ways to increase
your income. You should be a
wealthy person. It would look
so g,ood on you!
TAURUS
lID
How about a romantic excur-
sion this evening? Most of the
hassles should be out of the way
early, leaving plenty of fun and
games. Being a weeknight could
complicate matters, but on the
other hand, why not? Take your
·
good times when you can get
them, right?
SAGITIARIUS
You have a winning hand! You
might do well in love this
evening. Your work could get
in
the way of romance and travel
this morning, but don't despair.
You're more than rewarded for
your patience later on. Be in the
right place, with the right per-
son.
There's a lot of activity; that's
CAPRICORN
·
vmGO
(or sure. People may drop by at
.
Changes are still going on at
tenjbly inconvepit!nt times. This
.
Travel will be much easier later
your place. Something you
try
couldbekids;byllieway: You're
in the week, maybe as soon as
maynotgoasplanned; butdon
_
't
_
trying to be
.,
~ good sport, but
tomorrow. Befo!e you ~o, take
despair. Just keep putting in the
don'tletthemprishyou
_
around.. care
0 ~
somethmg thats
-
been
corrections and trying again;
Ifyouwantpec1ceandq~iet.kick
,
_bothenng
you.You ma~ not
_
·
That's your secret formula for
them all out.
-
.
want t~
-
talk much about It yet,
-
success, anyway. You just never
but if you can get it tidied up,
give up!
you
1
fffeel much better.
GEMINI
You're going to be in a talkative,
playful mood. You're teaching
LIBRA
others, and they're teaching
This could be a playful day for
you. You may have to learn
you. Get together with a favor-
about more rules and regula-
ite partner and good friends.
tions;
·
h
_
owever.
_
No problem,
Don
:t
spend too much;
_
that
right? MaJ_ce
th~in
into a game,
w~~ t be ~e~essary
.
Your com-
and they inightalniost b~ frin ... ·
._
.' panionsh1p IS extremely valu-
.
·
-·
'
•
· .,,.
able. Savor that and take care
_
_
.
.
_
.
.
...
not to overdraw an account.
CANCER
AQUARIUS
You know somebody who sees
things quite differently than you
·
do. This is good, actually. To-
·
day this opposite could get you
going. He. or she won'
_
t agree
with you but stimulates you to
take cr:eath(e action. Don't
worry; the overall outcome's
good.
Waiting until this evening to ask
for the money might be
_
a good
SCORPIO
PISCES
idea. Timing is a delicate sci-
A bonus you'd c~mnted on may
You're creative and powerful
ence.Yoti need
·
to use'youdn-
-
not come yet Don't spend the
no:w. You're probably getting to
telligence, of course. Youriritu-
·
,
-
money until
i
you're
·
~ure the
where you're making a pretty
ition might be even more iis~~ c-cht~_cclc
~~f
cliare.9:
;
Y
_
?ui- bank
~
;
g9og Income, too. Today's not
ful, however.
If
in doubt;
\vaif
''Yourluclcgets,better aspie day-.. quite easy, but don't let that slow
goes,,on,
.
butjt's~~qtty ron~:
_,
you down. Your hard work could
~eteJS
/
~e~t
.
~o~
;
t~
~~~
·
a
;
?I-~-
f
biieflfif! eve1i'more money, and
.
.:_
nsk_
~~'Y-
Suc~Wljh the
_
pum~ar.
_
--
that's just
·
as it should be .
.
·
··
--•
-
-
.
.
-_.·::
.'.'"\:
..
.
_
...
~
·
.:
-.:-
·
..
·
.
,
.
..
.
~-
....
~..
.
.
·
,
:--
PAGE 7
,
•
I
I '
•
•
< '
• '
•
·
'
I
I
I
{
0
·
•
_.
APRIL
·
13, 2000
.
·
Student
.
not enterfiliqedJJY
The
·
·-
eircle's
·
,
A.&E
section
I neve;
·
b~fore havet seen a settionfo ~ny paper as.poo~is the A&Esection of
·
TheCircle: With the exception of the -"On
TV" column, I rar¢lyfind anything worth
reading in this humorless, intellectually boring farce 9f.an:entertainme
_
nt section:
Last week's review ofthe
Third
EyeBiind concirt
·
wl!S ori~9.f.thepqor~st revie,'!Vs
.
I have
·
seen in
-
~i
long time,
.
Firstly, the articie
_
does not review.
tile
'
show',
·
merely
giv~s
:
th~
opit1i~~
_
of~~
i_jp~e,r_
Cr4•~~Js
_
~~at
tli~
_
Op
'
_
~d
)
~~H~n
~1/or~ .
.
:.
~~c~ii~J_r,,
iJ
th~
:'
W.IJ~envas "ein,b¥1f1~s~4 t?
,
be there» as
·
slie eJoqu~~tly
_
pt1t,
_
why
_
d1d
'
_
sheg<?,?
{
Ht~r
·
article:
points" outseveral aspectsi>_f
~i
cq11cert
tliiit
are
cpinmon
'
i~
almost
any
_
oth
'
er ·
ven
_
ue.Yes; it was hot in the McCann ¢enter.-as it \YOUld be
in any other crowded-
concert. Maybe
-
~
e
.
write
r
_'should gc>°oui more
'
ofteri
and
realize
that large-scaJt
social events a
·
s
·
_
such
·
are bound to be
·
crowded and overheate
·
d.
But
the
probleµi goe.s far beyond
_
on~or two poqrly written artides,
:
it
goes
up
to
.
the section itself, I have read afewofthe
.
'.
'Kmidtsen's Komer''.articles in the past
.
month to only find°myself aggravated further. ':poes
.
thi
_
s writer•s
·
~ogance
knqw
~o
.
ends?
-
~~ i~
-
r~~lY1
_
if~Vef,funn
_
y andN~ occasional att~nipts to souncl educated
faH
miserably:
·
1t is no wonder that the section is in such shambles with
an
incompetent . .
--■
.
-----~~~~~lll!l!!l--~~~~111!_1111
... _______
ia
and
ignorant
writer
·_
.
such
:
as
him
as
.
the
.
·
.
editor
,
THE CIDl'lliE
Th~
-
A&EsectjoriofTheCircle~asamazingpotentialtliatis<;~mple(elyuntap~
:
.
•
-
h-
.
,
:
d
_
.
~
/
.
.
·
-
'~f
-
_·
·
_
:
,
.
-.
1
:
1
..
_.
•
~
-
--·
It could be used
as
·
a·
fonn for·
ideas, suggestions, and topics of·entertaininent
i
t
e stu
ent n
·
ewspaper-
·
o
n-ranst
,
co
ege
·
Instead of this we have shoddy writing; poor columns,
and
boredom .
.
I hope
tliat
•
'
''
Jaime Tollleo &
Chris
Grogan
something happens to improve the section in the
future
because it could
be
·
a very
.
Editors-in-Chief
.
interesting and important part of
.
the paper, as well as part of Marist College:
ShawnLockt
Jill
G~ocoildo &
·
•
·.
<
',
Doug
Guarino
.
Managing E4itors
.
. Mik~
-
Bagnato
_
·
·
Opir1;ion Editor
.
·
.
'Jetl'Dahncke
i
News Editor
-·
·
Chris Knudtsen
A'&EEditor
.
.
.
::
Mik~Haigl(
" ;
~
-
,
,
·
..
:·,
M~Grodio&
·
·
PlwtciEditor
..
,;
.
.
•'
ColleenBarrett
·
Business"Editors
.
Patrick Whittle; Staff Czar
.
LisaBurke
.
.
Features Editor
Mike
Ferraro
Sports
Editor
.
Greg
S~omone
.
Webmaster
G.ModeleClarke, Faculty Advisor
.
The Circle
is the student newspaper of MaristCollege, Poughkeepsie,
NY.
Issue
are publi~hed 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
HZAL.
You
can
visit us on the web at
htt
:llwww.
academic.marist. edulcircle. -
,
;
:
:
.
'
APRIL
13,
2000
PAGE9
The views expressed on these pages are not necessarily those of
The Circle
Clloose
_your
own
fate:
'
'
(it'
S
:
.
e!!!d~~~!:ytell~!!~a!ndst= ~u~eY.,l
cafeteria lunch.
•
The shackles
Boss that you like to play
commenting on how good your
of locker combinations and
·
racquet-ball and fancy yourself significant other looks at a com-
paperbag-covered books were
a decent golfer, inviting him to
pany picnic, and after a few gin
tossed away in favorofuncom-
·
hit the links with you some time;
and tonics he/she begins to
fortable Abercrombie & Fitch
or B) Describe your root beer
openly lament being married to
gear and social smoking .
.
Soon,
bottle collection at length, in-
a fat cow/fat oaf. Do you A)
these new vices will be dropped
forming The Boss of color,
Take The Boss aside and have a
in
favor of business lunches
··
depth, funny label pictures, and
heart to heart, explaining the vir-
and the nicotine patch. Ah,
lingering olfactory emanations
tue of his/her ability to sustain a
adulthood,
.
.
··
.
resulting from your failure
·
,to
· ·
meaningful marriage with his/her
It
was fqur years ago when we
clean the bottles.
-~
·
overweight husband/wife, elimi-
·
. .
.
. .
·
. . . .·.
.
.
..
.
Were faced with c'rudal deci:-
,
Scenario
T.\\'.9:
The Boss re-
nating the need to ogle at your
',
.,
,,:::
·
,>
:.:;:\
t·:{.;f'"
'
-
'.
··
.·
..
sions fot perhaps the first time
quests that
-
you perform the ar-
more attractive
·mate;
or B) Take
b y P A ~ ~ ~ /
:,,/
Jnourliye~. Decision.slike;''Do
duoustaskofphotocopyinghis
The Boss aside and give him
.
.
.
.
' ,
;:.
:
;
: <
.C::.
'
:':.'·
·\
-
/~~:
•
'
ljotn a fraternity or theCornm
most recent manifesto. Do yo,u
"The Rock Bottom" through the
The clock is Jicking
.
on·
-
Jhe
·
Aris society?" Decisions like,
A) Jump at the chance to per-
tray of bologna sandwiches?
Class of 2000. The:final
.
sa:nds
_:
"Do I stay home and write that
form pointless busywork, si11ce
Scenario Five: You've had it
are
_
slipping through the
_
hour-
·
College Writing paper
-
or do I
-
you're making a big 20K a year
with The Boss. Now, he/she is
glass
_
th~t is our collegiate _ex-
.
ride·the Bertie's bus and.risk the
plus dental and you don't waii't
bringing the age
.
old tactic of
perience. The final leavefofthis
.
driver mocking nie after a total
to screw it up; or B) Say in a
sexual harassment to the table,
four-year tree of knowledge and
- ·
stranger ralphs on my shoe?"
Jamaican accent,
"Listen
up,
presenting you with the ultima-
aspiration are finally fluttering
And yes, even decisions Hke,
The Boss, I'm a badass mutha
.
tum that you may only keep
to the earth. The final slices are
.
''.Do lsimply stand by arid laugh. and I don't take no crap ... froriJ
your job
if
he/she is allowed
to
being de'(oured raveifously
or do I actively participate
in
nobody!"?
·
·
refer
to
yo1i'with pet names like
fromthepizzaofmirsenioryeru;.
·
naked slip-and-slides in the
Scenario Three: The Boss
"Pookie" and "Smootchie-
-
..
<
·.
Melodramaaside,
-
it is
-
pretty
..
·
basement of Leo?"
·
•
gives you the keys to the com-
pants."
·
Do you A) Gleefully
--
-·
damn scary
<
·
·
·
·
•
..
-
.
·
~
:
\ ·
-
·· ·
.
So; n9:w that we have collec-
·
pany car, which just so happens
·
oblige (you' re up to 22K and
-
Fouryearj:ag_9;
·
.
o/~:.~~~e
:
an.x
~;,
·
·::
c
tivefrcom~ to
.:
this.,new,cross-
to be the Delorean from the
stock options now, baby), and
.
.
jously wajjing Ul!'oµg~cl~ssjif:'
'
hQaos;
w!fet~
dp
.,,
~e
go
frolll
originaj.£~afk Tq The Eu{~re.
;
I?o
~
ev~I_l
.
m~1¢l comp@_y shjrts ~at
'·
-
,
for
:;
cJa~t.h§
}
.~~
f
:
~
~~F
-~N
l!~h
'
Jner~z
(
JJre
~
Iioi§ei~e ours;
' ·_
you
A)
Say~'~e>a[f?~
Y
t!iis,
:
is
ff_
sa{
:J
fI\#i
t~
w;ith
;
~~o
:
ptchie'~
.
·
\
School: T~o'1~
_
sues ago;J ~as · proceed at your own nsk!
heavy;'
1
and dnve 1t around
pants ; or B) Work up the nerve
writinganequallysappJ'.
-
'Ican't
.
..
.
···
Scenario One
.
: You a!Jd The
town; honking atevery girl you
to tell the boss that you'll main-
:
believ~ it'.s seaj~rcyear ~Jr~ady''
}
·
Bos
_
s
_
are haying a getting
7
tg-
·
s~e; orB) Grab a sports almanac
tain a professional relationship
i
column; ahd you cmfp~obably
.
i
·
know
:.
each-other
-
lunch' at Sal
:
and go back (to th,efuture, as it
.
expec(anothe~ in the ~nal isslle
/
Anthony's
_in
Union Square.
were)
SO
years, bettirg on evecy
.
but tha~ is besides the p~int:
_
It
.
.
The
·-
Bo.ss comments that he
major sports event and becom-
-
was a mereOfou_ryears agotfiat
.
.
likes\iour ~ork, anct"inquires
ing agazillionaire?
we traded bad HighSchool
~af-:-
._
.
about your
-
interests off the job.
Scenario Four: The Boss
fi-
0pfuioh
,
~tor deprive, self
·
of sleep,
.
·
writes
headli~~
·-
in third person
:,
..
: ·-
··•«•"
""'''
·"·'~
;.
.
,·
.
·
•
•
·
It
.
sounqs like a self~explana-
.
sions come to fruition, we have
".
,
i,
tory term
':
to
:
me, but
for
those
·
·
gotto put in a c~mcerted effort
,
..
·
-·
readers'u~familiar to_ it, the
to work on the project before it
:
.
.
alinighter is the act of Viorking
·
slips away. I happen tci get the
'
·
·
·
throughthe night without sleep
:
most work done in the middle of
Do it!!
,
_
.
the night
-
..
. But
it
is oh,
so-
much more
The reason I tell you this is
·
than
.
that!
;
The allnighter is a
-
because
·
I want to ~ffer the
heroic psychological event; it· allnighter as an effective means
is a conquest of the mind over
of getting your own work done.
the
desini to quit. A,nd it's also
And, I can offer advice.on how
.
_
.
what I do at least once a week
to do it right.
.
·
,
byMICIIAELBAGNATO
-
·
inthecomputerlabinDonhelly.
·
:
1-
Setting:
Opinion Editor
·
.
-
,
·
.
·
;
WHY?
'
.
·
":
Find an environmentthathas
As.I
·
write
.
!hi5;rnank~fy6ll'.
·
,
~
:
Tb"tfaris
_
wef to this question
- .
as Iittled,~stracti
,
o
:
ns
~
p~ssibJ
.
~:
.
are
the wUiing inhabitants ofa
:
is
:
not very complicated;
·
Sun-
·
This is
f!iUCh
easi¢r to achieve
·
land of make-believe and fairy.:
•
-
.
ply,
iri
·
our disorganized,hectic
·
•
intheiniddleofthenight
ldon!t
.
tales, playing silly pinatagames
·
lives. wecommissiori"ourselves
fi~dmyselfwondering
.
whatev-
for candydrops and lollipops.
toamultitudeofprojects. These
eryoneelseisdoing,asthelogi-
Sexual harassment is not funny
If
you answered
"A"
to any
of the above, you should be
ashamed of yourself
.
If
you
answered "B" to any of the
above, you have a slightly more
developed sense of humor, but
shame on you anyway
.
Truly, a
win/win situation is hard to
come by.
Patrick Whittle came one goal
short of
a "hat
trick"
on
the ice
last Sunday against the St.
Louis Blues. Oops! wrong
Patrick. Oh, man.
.
Why? Because you were asleep
projects
_initially
intrigue us
cal assumption remains that
·
.
,-,
when I wrote this at 3:30 in the
,
based on their ability to exer-
they
~
all asleep. Ahhh...
uncomfortable.
downers, like marijuana, alcohol,
morning! Ha! You people make
cise our need to create;
'
A mes-
I haye a computer in my room,
2-
Nourishment:
shroorns, etc.
melaµgh.
merizing spark churns'in our
_
but ~so have two roommates;
You're going to need energy
Think stimulants; amphet-
Haha
minds until we envision a fin-
·
hence, the
lights ha
_
ve got to be
to bum while sitting like a
lump
amines are wonderful, but pricy
•
0
ha:..
·
ished product, resulting from
off, ~d noise ought to be kept
in front of a computer all night
and illegal ... bad. Keep it simple
.
,
'-
~-"
.
.
'~:i
:
-
,
·;
·.
c;ountJess hours of effo~.
,
,Xet,_ ~o a ri!inimum.
_,
Working}pthe
_
long. A large helping of pasta,
~
J!itpcaffeine
.
' ...
cu'eeerie
voice.
.
..
tragically, this focused th
-
ought
..
dark is impossibl
_
e, and f9r ~ome
' -
rice, or grain.based dishes
will
.-
.':
:
Caffeine
'
is
'
C(?inmonly avail-
"Enter a place where
time
is
.
quickly expires, fading
out
to
reaso~, my body riaturil,lypro-
,
fill iifyour need foi carbohy2
able in such products as coffee,
flipped,(notreally)wheremagi-
the back burner of our con-
duces the sourid of several
dratesoverthelonghaul.
MountainDew,Jolt,andVivarin
cal things can and will happen,
sciousness. Like building an
chirping crickets during mating
3-
Drugs:
to name a few. The efficacy of
(son-of) and where complete
elaborate sandcastle only to
season. No, I'm just kidding.
A common misconception is
these products is fairly consis-
mumbo-jumbo emanates from
find it swept away when you
It «;Joesn't do that.
that these are necessary for an
tent. Be careful not to consume
my brain much quicker because
weren't looking...
Anyway, leave the dorm room
allnighter. Relying on them can
too much caffeine at once; the
I honestly
could
not care
less. ·
That was much more cqmpli-
if you're stuck
in
one, and get cause disastrous side effects, so
brain fries and .hallucinations
Enter the world
·
of the
cated than anything I originally
to the
_
24-hourcomputer labs in
watch out!
begin. Whoa!
"allnighter. .. "
set
out
to
explain, but the point
Donnelly. They're bright and
Of course, distance yourself
Huh?
is that in order to see these vi-
cold,
·
and the chairs are very
from the heavily mind-altering
pleaseseeAU.NIGHTER,pg./0_
_,,
........
•
•
>
'
'
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'
\
~ ~
\
\
\
'
\
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,
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\
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\ ) \
\ , \
1
\ \ I I · , ,
•
THE.
Cif(.CLt .'.··
APRIL 13, 2000
.
oe~E:cti
PAGE 10
The views expressed on these pages are not necessarily those of
The Circle
Why did elected s·tudent Body Presid:e·nt
Seth Tyminski appoint a recently-fired SGA.
mem-
ber
·to
be
his
right-hand
woman?·
October 27
1
\
1999
.
Dear Ms. Kristine Dunn,
.
.
.
.
·
In
March 1999, you applied to become Parliamen~an under the 1999-2000 Hunter
administration. lexplained in great detail .what the roles and responsibilities would be as a Student
Government member to you as
well
as all potential candidates. ·
In
particular, lspoke with you regarding
yqur role as a Parliamentarian. Your: responsibilities were clearly presented to you
in
the Student
Goveniment·constitution(Article
II;
§
1 and 11) and
By-Laws( Article
III.
§
1
and 5J)._Also in that meeting,
I discussed with you your role.as
an
Executive Board member ..
As
explained to me by former student body
presidents, the executive board is an extension of the student body president. They
are
advisors who are
expected to be loyal, 4onest, hard working, exemplify strong leadership capabilities, and are committed to
the goals of Student Government . These qualities are essential since the advisors to the president are
handpicked by himor her.
I believe lmeritioried respect was critical at the interview. You appeared to
accept what
I was
asking
of you
with
your acceptance of the position of Parliamentarian; Your recent
actions,
and
discussions with various Student Government representatives have led me
to
believe that you
no longer are willing to accept the dutiesiresponsibilities of Parliamentarian. and. Executive Board
member.·
YotJ! blatant refusal to meet with Executive Vice-President Chris Urynowicz.
Robert
Lynch.and• ..
myself, have caused me to take drastic actions that pain me to
take.
I, regretfully, can no longer work with
you.·· Your tantnims(Per October 26,1999 at 5:50pm) ·and blatant disrespect of my position have made it
impossible forme
to
utilize you as a Parliamentarian. Effective, 8am October 29, 1999, I relieve you of
your duties/responsibilities as Parliamentarian
of
the 1999-2000 Marist College Student Government
Hunter Administration~ Your obvious contempt towards me has strained our working relationship causing
me
·10
lose faith, trust and confidence in you
as
a student advisor.
If
you were allowed to continue,
this
. would
be
very detrimental
to
~e functioning of Student Government of which
I'm responsible for. lhave
tried
to
workwith you
as
Parliamentarian (during our meeting on October
5, 1999
at
I lam)~.
Your actions
since. the meeting have been condescending, unprofessional, biased
and
confrontational:
I
thought there
was a resolution at that meeting. Your continued actions, however, have made co--operationwith you
extremely difficult
Your
insubordination
and
mocking of Student Government positions and daily .
functioning
has
negatively affected other representatives
and I
feel.thatthis is not what
is
in the.best
. -interest of the organization.
and
the student body,
This·
decision·
is
based solely
on
what
is·
in• the best
interest
for
the Student Go\iernment and
the
student body.
~
i.
~
·,
:,:-
\:1 '.,' ; :
. . . . . .· lean
no)on~er
~ilo\il
t01ir opinions
aitd
f:ieh.ivibts
t<f
hipder the
progres1i' ofme
as
the
Student ' ,
Body
President, the student.body ofMarist College,
and
the goals that Student Government
as an , ,
organization
has
agreed to. Student Government wishes you future success in•any endeavor tbatyou
will
tak¢
on. '.ReHeving
yoti
of your duties i_s one of the hardest
things
that
I
had
to
do as
Student-Bopy
President,
but
I feel
that tny actio~
are
in the best interest of the Student Government
As
always, ifyou
have any questions~.comments or ·cencems, you can gi.ve
me a
call at
x2300
or Vice-President Urynowicz
at
x2863.
·
·
·
. Cc:
Dean
Cox
' Dean
DiCaprio
BohLynch·
.
Dean Sansola
:Dr.Kent
· Dr.Davis
Chris
Urynowicz
Sincerely,
Ryan
P.
Hunter
Student Body rresident
THE.CIRCLE
AprU
13, 2000
Arts.
·
&Entertainment
.
.
.
Studenfisproud ofSPC's role
in'bringmg entertainment
to
Marist College
byDOUGLASM.DEISSJR.
·thoughtnever came up. If it
lights,sound;andsetpiecesfor ·
StajJWriier
.
were a matter of not having
Third Eye Blind
and Tonic.
ThirdEyeBlindcomeatall,ora
Along with at least 15 profes-
Sunday nigl_lt, I think that most
sional technicians, the students
Since bringing the entertain-' people would choose the Sun-
did anything from helping as-
ment is just as important as com-
day night.
semble parts of the set to actu-
menting on its.content and en-
Many things had to be done,
ally setting up the lights and
joyment, I thought it would be starting Friday night of that
sound. Everyone worked until
fitting to explain just what goes _
weekend. Comprising of SPC
about 4:00pm and we were then
into something like a concert of · members and College Activities
given an hour to go shower and.
this magnitude at Marist.
employees,· some 42 people
eat some dinner. We came back
It is easy to look at
an
event showed upat 7 :00 Friday night
and had to work the entire show
• from a student's poin~ c>fv,iew; to help put up the staging. From
making sure that people weren't
and say all the bad ~11gs .• @i.t: 7:Q0to 11:00 everyone helped
doing too many things that
may hav~ h~ppenedqup~~':~~?,llnlpad the! staging off of the,, would hurt them.
event.
It
ts apo,ther to
lsn.?:\Y,i~X .. ;,
;Jrucks, push it into the .. Field
.
The main concern for SPC and
actly what kind of w,orKg<>~~'in:c;,house, pu(up the staging, and
College Activities wa~ for the
to something like .hpnging Dr ... ' set tip some 500 chairs. Each
students to have the ni.ost fun.
Drew or Third Eye Blind to person was there for one rea-
with the least harm to their bod-
. Marist College. . _
_ _
_ . _ son, to help make this show the
ies. Although it was very hot,··
For me, I have had the privi-
biggest Marist has ever seen.
everyone did the best they
lege to assist in bringing three
Only after making sure that there
could to get people outside if
big performances to Marist Col-
was nothing else that could be
they experience heat e~austion.
lege. The first is being Cherry done, did _everyone finally go
No matter what, the concern
Poppin Daddies,.
the second home for the evening.
was for the students. That
Rockapella
and theinostrecent
Saturday began at 1:00pm with
never left the thoughts of ev-
being Third Eye Blind artdDr. the.setting up of McCann for
eryone who was helping to put·
Drew. It wasn'(untilI actually . Dr.,Drew's arrival. A hospital-
this show together.· Immediately
worked on orin:ging t1l~·se )tyroomwas setup for
I?!•
Drew.
.
after the show, everyone had to
shows to
life
th~tltin~erstood There was a break for dinner and
do the opposite of what had
th~
work that lig!\1 S,gf2;P.Q<if9l-:·'":the1Y:·~veryone had to be back . taken them the whole day to do.
leg_e Activitiet~!~1w~Jl~tt:J}j~b'f-~:39_; Dr. Drew c~e out, - ' ~e•h_ad to,break do~n. t!1e en~ .
First, SPC go,es:t%QUgli a,J_ong • · spoke, answered quest10ns and
tire Field House .. Every piece of.
proc~ss of band ~e~~hing look~
then it was time to get back to
sound, lights, and staging was
.ing for a band thafcanfitcCJm-::/work. Every single chair that
taken down and shipped out to
ing to Marist in their schedulet:>had been brought out the night
the trucks. Everyone got out
Once a band has'been decided,•.·._ before was then put away in · around about 3:00am. The only
the fun really begiil.F Tak~ two boxes.Then everyone who was
thing that made it worth it was
weekends ago, as
al!_
example. _ their to help had to wheel all of the idea that hopefully most of
°-r., Drew was as..9-h~duled _to · the lights and sound equipment
the students had a great time.
speak on Saturdafand Third toatnickbeforetheycouldleave
When all_ is said and done,
Eye Blind
onSunday night. It for the night. · ~yentually, at
there is a lot of work that goes
"'.as mentioned that it seemed
10:45-11:00allstudentswerere-
into such an event asa major
ridiculous to · have]hird Eye leased to enjoy what they could
concert. Without the work of
Blind
on Sunday nigh_L Did of their evening before having
SPC there would have been no
anyone consider that it may to show back up the following
concert, no Third Eye Blind and
have been the only time that the
morning at 8:30am.
·. no Tonic, this is fact.
band could be scheduled at
From here, everyone had to
Marist College.
No, this unload three truckloads of
Ticl(.etmaster's charges are
anythihg
but
convenient
: byADAMKOWALSKI
Staff Writer
appalled to
ieam
that
it
waso_ver
. ; ... $8 .. ,• . .
.. . .
.
· . .
The tickets for the show itself
.. , were about what they are every.
Tickets for the Vans .Warped year, $27, a great deal for an all
Tour
in New York went on sale day concert featuring almost 30
last weekend. The day long af-
bands, but the service charge
fair
·
will be taking place on - had doubled since last
year.
So
Randatrs Island this July with
for tickets to the Vans Warped
headliners -NoFx, tlte Mighty
Tour,
Ticketmaster expects me
Mighty
Bo~stones, LqngBeach" . .
to pay
<!11
extra $8,fortheC\:>llVe:-
Dub All Stars
(ex-members of · nience
of
not hayingto go
into
Sublime,)
arid
Green
Day. ·
So I
New York to get tickets. · Going
went on down tQ Ticketmaster into New York is an easy task
to find out how much tickets
for myself, so I will find myself
were going to be, to tell my. hoping on the PATIi trains from
friends. Well ... I had to pick my
Hoboken to 33rd Street to get
jaw up off the floor when she my tickets this weekend, with-
told me tllat they would be $35.
out the service charge, from the
After I managed to stammer out
lovely Marihattan Center box
the question of how much the
office on 34th street. But what
service charge was I was utterly
about the rest of you poor slobs
who woul_d,have to spend moi:e
than $2 to avoid this "conve-
nience charge?" ,,, .
It's not just events like the
Warped Tour
either. The charge
on Nine Inch Nails tickets for
the· show at Madison Square
Garden was $10, tickets for the
Dave Matthews Band
at Giants
Stadium is about the same.
Sports_ wi~f also find the price of
"convenience ~barges" going
up as well. Baseball is effected
as well, and its not like baseball
in New York doesn't cost a lot
anyway. Shea Stadium is num-
ber three on the list of the most
expensive ballparks, third only
to the new field in Seattle, and
please see
Ticketmaster,
pg.
13
PAGE 11
1
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·.
ApriF13, 2000
'
TH£ CIRCLE
.
Arts
.
&
.·
Entertainment·
·
.
.
.
.
.
'
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
'
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·
.
·
PAGE-12
<
On
\
TV
Buffy
·
•
·
.
.
+
Ang
.
.
el
-
·
'th
-
.
-·
·
·
.
-
_
_.
_
:
_
--
-
_- .
..
·
·
-
·
-
-
wz
.
.
.
,
.
.
Mikerhmtpson
good TV
by
MIKE THOMPSON
Staff Writer
friends at her new high school,
including Willow Rosenberg
.
(Alyson
Hannigan)
and
Alexander "Xander" Harris
Ah, spinoffs. For those of you
(Nicholas Brendon),
who don't know, a spinoff is a
At her new school, Buffy als
·
o
way to cash in on the success
met Rupert Giles (Anthony
of a current hit show without
Head), the school librarian, who
having to go to
.
the
.
trouble of knew she was a slayer and con-
(gasp!) creating a whole
.
new
vinced her to pick up the stake
show. Simply take _a character or
aga_i~. Buffy
.
began
,
figtit1ng
,
two from the established hit,
valilpfres and ~emoµs again,
and then "spin off"
.
the
andcontinu
'
eddoingthatforthe
character(s) into a new setting,
rest of her
_
high school career.
with new characters. Some
·
Along the way,'she meta vam-
spinoffs are successes
(The
·
pire named Angel (David
Jeffersons; Laverne and
~
.
oreanaz), and he quickly be-
Shirley)
and some are duds
camealoveinterestltwasaclas-
(Joanie Loves Chachi; Flo).
sic love-hate relationship (as
Over at the WB, you'll find a
most relationships with vam-
spinoff that is a modest success:
pires are), but it was a very in-
Angel.
As is the case with most
tense one. By the time Buffy
spinoffs, Angel directly follows
graduated high school in 1999,
the show it was spun off from,
Angel had become good.
·
He
Buffy the Vampire Slayer,
on
and Buffy said goodbye and he
Tuesday nights. '(he result is
moved away, ,vhile Buffy, ac-
two hours of quality entertain-
companied by Willow
.
and
ment.
.
.
.
.
·
Xander, moved
qff,
t9 college'..
.
Buffy the
Vanipife
Slayer(corri-
I'm pleased
to
report that this
monly called
Buffy)debuted
in
season has found
Buffy
in as
1997. It was derived from the
good a shape as its ever been
1992 movie of the same name
in.The series is still full of ac-
and
·
it picked
·
up where th;
tion (Gellar
is
very athletic, and
movie left off. Sixteen year-old
the producers of Buffy takead-
.
Buffy Summers (SarahMichelle
vanµige of this), and there is still
Gellar)and her mother moved to
a good balance between com-
Sunnydale, California; froin Los
edy and drama. In fact, some of
Angeles, where Buffy discov-
the lines of
Buffy
are very funny
.
ered she was a vampire slayer
indeed, such as this one from
and encountered some horrible
Willow: "It's like this dream!
vampires. In Sunnydale, Buffy
had about Xander, except that it
hoped to start a new slayer-free
wasn't about Xander, it was
life, anµ quickly made some
about someone else; and it
wasn't even me,
it
was a friend
of mine and she doesn't remem-
ber it." Also, the character of
Willow is quickly becoming a
·
very interesting one, and a re-
curring character from the past,
the vampire Spike (James
Marsters), has become a regu-
lar. character
.
this season, and
that has met with some wonder-
ful
.
_and
.
hilarious
.
scenes. The
show is mo:ving aiong ffoe,
·
and
the Angel
.
character· isn't
missed at all.
.
.
_·
·_
This
'is
good because Ang~l
has his own show now. Called
Angel
(well, duh), it debuted in
1999. In the show, Angel has
moved to Los Angeles, where
Photo courtesy
'
of WB
Buffy is still betterthan Angel.
sets up shop as a private detec-
tive. Accompanying Angel from
comedy
·
~~ drama isn~t as good
made show, and a lot of fun to
Sunnydale (and Buffy) is
asitisonBuffy.Asaresult,there
watch.1~Jlinall,BuffyandAn-
CordeHa Chase (Charisma Car-
have been some awkward mo-
gel
make for
a
nice Tuesday
penter), who becomes Angel's
n:1ents here and there on Angel.
nigh
_
t doubleheader. And you
s~cretclry. Police detective Kate
Also, the show is rather dark.
don't even
:
have to bother
Lockley (Elizabeth Rohm) also
The producers
·
of
Angel
in-
changing ~hannels. Both
assists Angel at the detective
tended on making the show
shows air on WPIX, Ch,
11,
agency.
'.
Al_e)(.is Penisofjoined.
.
more "adult,, than Buffy
j
bui
the . which is
.
conveniently located
the cast in e,arly
·
2000
as
·
wesiey
)JlOOd is
foo
often
.
too
dark
for
;
atChanneUl hth°re
·
on
the
Mari.st
Wyndham-Price; Angel's s
'
icie-
its own goocf-It's nbt nearly
'
as
.
Co11egetelevision dial. Tell your
kick. Together, Ange(and
_
his
dark
as
;
_
say, Star Trek: Deep
friends;
-
let there
.
be campus-
motley crew fight evil denions.
Space Nirie,
but the toneof the
wide Buffy and
Angel
nights!
.
.
While not as good as Buffy,
show could definttelyJ~
·
eJight-:
Angel
1s
by
no means
.
a bad
enedalittfo; wh1lestillmaintain.:.
·
show. There are
:
many good
..
ing its ''adult'
'.
'
appeaL
.
.
.
.
moments in the show and the
.
}hes~ s~ther smaU qm~bles
writi~g can
.
be
pretty. clever
asicle, An,ge_[!s s_tiH
~I)
enj(?ya~le
(sample quo~e. from Cordelia:
· .
s~ow .
.
It
s
.
P,ot yet as g9.o~ as
"See?You can save the damsel
Buffy,
but
it
.
s
,
better than most
and
make great money
;
Is this a
spi,noffs; ~fy9u
.
haven't se~n _it
great country or what?"). The
·
~lrea?y; g1ve1t a_try; yo1.1 might
acting has also been pretty
hke it_. And
_
,
a~
.
•
~Iw:iys,
.
~e<?p
good. Still, the balance between
watchmg Buffy. Its a very well
.
.
If
y_d~
h(Jye
an/
s~ggesiions
of
.
TV shows Joi Mike Thompson
.
to
r~view,
emailhim
•
ai K4ZK:
Check
·
out his radio
slidw.
ev-
.
eryWe4nesday
11ightfrom1J
pm
to]
am on 88.1 FM, Marist Col-
lege
Radio.
·
.
.
Everyo~ llkiSenterfain111ent,so
wiry
notwriJe afaoutit? Dfop
off.stones forthe4&Esection, Save40lldisk, at211B
.
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.
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Tll£CIRCL£
Arts
&
Enterlainment
PAGE 13
Korn continues to
play
on
by
MARKDICCIANNI
Staff Writer
Once again, I had to agree,
that I had just seen the best live
band ever on Saturday night at
the
Continental Airlines Arena
in East Rutherford,
NJ. That
band is the one that brought
hard rock and metal back to life,
Korn. Without them; we would
still be swimming in a marsh of
Dave Matthews and dance mu-
sic every time we turned on the
radio. Those are the types of
music that push the bile to the
tip of my throat.
When
Korn
released their self-titled debut
album in 1994, heavy music was
once again recognized. Three
more albums later,
Korn is still
going strong. They never
changed their sound by trying
to be something that th,ey are
not and have always given their
fans what they want.
The tour is called
The Sick
and Twisted Tour with Spike
and Mikes Sick and Twisted
Animation Festival, Staind,
and of
·
course
Korn. Sraind
came on first. They were an-
other excellent live band. They
played
.
every song off of their
only album "Dysfunction" with
outstanding sound quality, in-
cluding my favorite song off the
aibhrri;
''Crawl."
However, you
.
have to be in
a
laid back mood
to watch them, which I was at
·
the time. They are notvery en-
ergetic on stage
-
buiperhaps
that could be because their qual-
ity of sound might falter if they
. jumped
around
too much. How-
ever, they are definitely worth
checking out if you can.
Ticketntaster:
~ontinuedfrom pg.
·
11
to Yankee Stadium.
In
addition
at a reasonable price? They
to
the
~ost
_
of the game, fans
.
have no real competition. They
have
·
to pay anextra$5 for
.
the
have exclusive agreements with
$30 seats
·
at Yank'ee Stadium.
·
·
many
yenues in
order to pre,vent
Considering what-you are pay- ·
·
other ticket companies from
.
ing for your average concert,
·
I
·
moving in on their market.
With-
guess thi
_
s
_
isn'
_
t that bad, but
ou.t competi~ion these "conve-
bow long
.
before the charge
nience charges'' will continue to
guess this isn't that
.
bad, but
-
go up.·· Eventually this policyi
bow long before the charge
to quote Wayland Smithers,
_
doubles
iri
baseball staahiilis as
- ,
"wilfcreate
'
a healthy rriix of.the
·
.·
well?
.
rich and the ignorant/' So I wiU
-
-
Let me
·
jusi say that
•
•
:,
findniyselfgoihgtobuy"tickets
-
Ticketmaster is not exactly the
for shows at venues themselves
most customer friendly service
from now on. I don't know ex-
_
either. Have any of you
,ever
actly how policies like this help·
tried to found out information
ticketmaster, but when you're
about a show before
.
the tickets.
-
.
the only game in t~wn; there is
go on sale?
If a radio station
,
rea1ly not much anybody can do
isn't announcing the infonna-
about it.
tion, than getting it through
. ,
ticketmasteds worse than pull-
.
•
Adam Kowalskiis
-
~ju;ii~'iwith
,
ing your own teeth alone
i°.
a.
-
a
·
majorinradioltelevision/film
.
dark closet with a pair of sets-
He has received
an
honorary
sors. They never know any-
Bachelors Degree from Arom
s
-
thing; I've even been accused
Punk
Rock
Academy.
of making an event up because
itwasn'tintheircomputers. So,
can someone tell me how the
hell this is convenient?
But why would Ticketmaster
need to provide decent service
Spike and Mikes Animation
Festival was just shown on a
-•
~9(
Hairads
·
,
iis.oo
Photo
courtesy
or Korn
Korn still gives their fans what they want.
screen suspended above the
stage. You really couldn't hear
it very well; it was pretty idiotic
and not worth getting into.
However, they did show the
original South Park pilot episode
which was funny: It was strange
too because Cartman's name
was Kenny and he was killed
first.
Korn took the stage
after
that
stupid animation show . Their
entire set was incredible. They
had a lot of energy plus their
sound was excellent. As
I
said
before,
Korn gives their fans
what they want, they did so by
allowing their fans to vote on
the Internet at the
Korn web site
for what songs they should play
on this tour. Five songs were
picked from each album and
Korn played the~ aH.
·
Their stage was very intricate
with large screens in the back-
ground and fire effects on the
ground and suspended above.
They performed the expected
songs of theirs such as "Freak
on a Leash,"
"ADIDAS,"
"Blind," and "Falling Away from
Me," but also played
such
un-
expected songs as "Kill You,"
"Ball Tongue," and my favorite
Korn song,
"Good
God." Luck-
ily,
I
had not seen the results of
the poll for the songs being
played on-line before
1
went to
the concert so
fr
was all a sur-
prise.
Korn performed for about an
hour and twenty minutes. The
whole set was non-stop energy
from beginning to end. They
are definitely a band worth your
money to go see.
I have to ad-
mit,
Kam is the best live band
that
I
have ever seen and with
all of the concerts that I attend,
that is saying a lot. We can only
hope that
Korn will give up the
arena tours for awhile and do a
couple tours stopping at smaller
venues. However, that isn't
very likely.
The fast thing that I feel worth
commenting on is the crowd at
the show. Everyone was cooJ
with each other. There were no
morons at the show to ruin it for
everyone else. In fact, that is
my experience with attending
shows of bands that are part of
the new metal sound. People
are just there to have fun, not to
start fights. There is unity
among the fans, which hardcore
music boasts that it has, but
rarely does.
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TH£
:
CIRCLE
APRIL 13, 2000
·
·•
•
S
·
"
Orts
Softbajl struggling]n
MA.AC
.
.
.
.
.
·
·,
;
· .
'
.
·-
by
JORDAN EIBLE
Staff Writer
The Marist softball team, now
sporting an overall 13-9 record,
struggled over the weekend,
losing two games apiece to Iona·
(1-0, 3-0) and Fairfield (5-3, 3-2).
The four lo
·
sses came after a
doubleheader sweep against
St
Francis (NY) Th
·
ursday (3-1, 5-
4).
Pitcher Melanie Kasack was
key in Marist's victory in game
one against St. Francis on
Thursday. Kasack, who serves
as the Red Foxes' captain, struck
out six batters while walking
none. She allowed just one un-
earned ru
.
n in the 3-1 victory.
"You can't ask for more from
any one player," center fielder
Amanda Koldjeski noted.
"Melanie
gives 110 percent all
the time, and acts as a true cap-
tain on and off the field."
Koldjeski along with short-
fifth home fun· ofthe· ·season .
.
..
stop Michele
·
Gosh and first
·
However, the Red Foxes had
baseman Melissa Tucci also
just three hits in a 5~3 loss.
.
contributed greatly; scoring
In game two, runs from Gosh
Matist's three runs for the game.
.
and Amy Angus and RB I's from
·
Left fielder Jessica Craver
Koldjeski and Arigus put
boosted the offensive attack
Marist in the right direction.
with t_wo runs batted in.
However,
it
was not enough to
Saturday against-Iona proved
·
push the Foxes past the Stags,
to be more
of a struggle for the
.
who scored
.
three runs in the
Red Foxes, who were unable to
second inning.
score in both
.
games. Despite
With half of the season re-
strong hits from the bats of
·
maining, the Foxes, whoare0-4
Craver, Bobbi Jo Gonnello and
in the conference, will depend
•
Jessica Shorey, Iona shut out
on
··
power hitters Tucci,
Marist 1-0
iri
game one and 3-0
Koldjeski, Craver, and Gonnella
in game two.
to keep them competitive in the
Kasack's perfonnance on the
Metro Atlantic·Athletic Confer-
mound in game one was solid;
.
ence (MAAC).
.
with four strikeouts and one
"We're a young team with no
walk.
.
.
seniors," Koldjeski said,
.
"but
Sunday's games against
:we've
really come together so
Fairfield were improvements for
·
far and so many underclassmen
Marist, although the Red Foxes
·
·.
are
·
coristan
'
tly
·
litepping up.
.
I
still fell twice
w
the Stags.
.
In
•
think tournament play is
in
our
game one, Koldjeski's hit her
future."
.
.
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-photocourttsyofnthletics
Coach jorinah O'Do
.
nnell's
team
is
13~9
but
0-4 iri
the
MAAG.
;
:
··
·
--·-
-·
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· .
. ·
APRIL
13,
2000
·.
:THE
"
CIRCLE
S•
•
·
·
Orts
/
by
MIKE
FERRARO
:
w:m
p'rovide
the
'opportunity
.
to
The
NFL
wm focus its
-
~yes
0~
fill these needs.
If
they keep their
New York this. weekend, as the
picks, they could get Virginia's
draffwill be held:
·
As ofright Jones and Jackson State wide
now, the Cleveland Browns hold . receiver Sylvester Morris.
It
is
the first overall selection. The
possible they could swing a deal
\Vashington Reds
.
kins follow
for Corey Dillon or Keyshawn
with the nexttwo picks.
Johnson.
:-· .
·
.
Initially, the Browns appeared
Buffalo (2(?)-Last year, their
tobe targeting Florida State
first round pick was Ohio State
·
wide receiver Peter Warrick with
cornerback Antoine Winfield.
-
-
their
pick.
However, jnsiders
.
This year, they could grab an-
now say they will'are looking at
other Ohio State comer, Ahmed
a
.Penn
State
.
defender. The
Plummer.
·
But if Tennessee
choice is between defensive end
safety Deon Grant falls this far,
Courtney Brown and linebacker
he will be
a
Bill.
-
LaVar Arrington.
Carolina (23)-The Carolina
Ideally, the Redskins would
coaching staff was impressed
crave both Penn State players.
by Oklahoma offensive tackle
.
·
However, they will likely have
Stockar McDougle at the Senior
to
settie
for one .
. ·
With the sec-
.
Bowl.
.
The 36 I-pounder would
ond of their back~to
-
back picks,
fill
a void at left tackle. The Pan-
look for them t.o grab Alabama
~hers also need help at the sec-
offensive ~ackle Chris Samuels. · ondary and linebacker. Grant
Here's'a.lookaroundtheNFL
and Michigan State linebacker
to see who or what should be
Julian Peterson
are
also possi-
on every team's wish Hst.
·
Each
bilities.
··
team's number of its first round
Chicago (9)-IfUrlacheris avail-
pick is in parenth~ses
.
able, he will go no farther, be-
Arizona (7)-Their running
cause
.
the
Be
_
ars
need
game is weak, and Virginia run-
playrriakers on defense. Michi-
ning'back Thomas Jone~ fits in
gan St~te wide receiver Plaxico
nicely. IfJonesisofftheboard,
Burress would also fit nicely
they could look at Tennessee's
starting alongside Marcus
Jamal Lewis ... They also could
Robinson.
select a playmaker on defense.
Cincinnati ( 4 )-This is a situa-
New Mexico's Brian Urlacher, an - -tion wortp iponitoring. Hprida
extremely ;ers~tile athiete who . Sta~ '-Yideiece~ver P~t~rWarrick
.
projects as a
:
weakside line~
.
-
·
will
'likely
.
f~l
.
Hhis far.
:
.
;Th~
backer, would
-
be an intriguing Bengals
·
have two
_
disgruntled
·
.:
pit;k.
;:
?'.:: ·
:
:
:
i
.
: ;
.
.
.
-
.
·
-
:
players
·on
:
offense
'
in Carl
Atlanta (none)
.:.
They traded
.
:Pickens
_
and Corey Dillon;'and
this year's first roilnd,er in last
they may be making multiple
yea(s draft for backup tight end
deals on draft day. They also
Reggie-Kelly. That was
·
sh~er
have so many holes that trad-
brilliance.
The
Falcons need to
ing down to acquire more picks
:
improve
'their
depth just al)Otit
would make sense.
everywhere.
Will
they take Gear-
Cleveland { l)-Asicie from the
gia Tech's Joe Hamilton on the
._
likely. selection of Brown or
_
·
:
draft's ~9co,n~l;_d~y7,
:\\
·
:
<<-
·
.
.
.
_
A_rp9~t9r(I'l~
_
sa
_
y ~rririgton),
.
:.-,
.
-
Balt1mC>re
_
.(~; 1$)-.They
_
re-:
•
•
,i
they
..
·
n~ed
..
help
:.
e\'.erywhere.
-:
ceived
Aii~rita
'sJirsdciunder
· ..
Lc,ql{fot the Br_owns
fo
get a
.•
'
ihis
·
yea(Asaresult.ijleRavens
wiqe
::
recefvei- or tightend in
are
ateamto
watch-dn draft day;
round two.
·_
:
..
-
:
'.
:
:
:-, .
·
They11eed
:
•
~
runnin1f back)md
·
• .•
.
Dallas
:
:(non~e)/fhey
tr_aded
wide receiver,
:
and
·
thesi picks
,
.
their-fir_st-rnllnder forJoey Gal-
~·
•
·
.
..
'
.
'
.
.
·
.
'
.
.
..
.
Warrick
may
slip to #4.
i'
photo
courtesy of tspn.com
Urlacher: the draft's most
versatile player
loway. In round two, they will
be looking to address needs at
comerback (preferably one with
~ize) or middle linebacker. They
may go for a sleeper comer such
as Oklahoma State's Jacoby
Shepherd.
.
.
Denver ( 10)
-
The Broncos may
move up in
an
attempt to acquire
Waqick. If they stay at ten, they
will
look at Miami tight end
Bubba Franks, Florida wide re-
ceiver Travis Taylor, and
Marshall quarterback Chad
Penningto.n. Franks looks like
the pickright now, but it's far
from a certainty.
Detroit (20)-The Lions
·
have
just five picks in this draft. They
·
might be looking to upgrade at
guard, possibly converting
Wisconsin tackle Chris McIn-
tosh to left guard. Tennessee's
C9sey Coleman, a natural guard,
is also a possibility.
Green Bay (14)-The Packers
need to upgrade their front
seven. Tennessee defensive
·
end Shaun Ellis will fill a need
and put pressure on the quar-
terback
.
Indianapolis (28)-The Colts
showed against Tennessee in
last year's playoffs that their run
defense can be vulnerable.
That's why BYU linebacker Rob
Morris or
·
Boston College de-
fensive tackle Chris Hovan
would fit in nicely .
.,
._·, _ .
__
Jacksonville (29FnieJaguars
need a left guard, arid they have
been looking for a third receiver
seemingly since their inception.
Georgia Tech wideout Dez
White is a Jacksonville native,
but he might not fall this far.
If
not, USC's Travis Claridge
f
ould help the offensiv~ line.
Kansas City (21)-Coach .
Gunther Cunningham loves
power football. Cunningham
and Wisconsin running back
Ron Dayne
seem
to be a perfect
match. The Chiefs also will be
looking
·
for a game-breaker in
the return game later on.
Samuels will go to the 'Skins.
Pennington: the only QB that
will
be taken in
round one
PAGE 15
Miami (none)-They have no
really bad secret. They also
first-~ound pick as a result of the
have a need for a receiver, which
Patrick Surtain deal
·
with Caro-
·
may be addressed in round two
lina two years ago. They also
by West Virginia's Jerry Porter.
only have 5 picks. They may
Pittsburgh (8)-They need help
look for someone to eventually
at wide receiver, so Burress
replace Richmond Webb at left
could be the answer here. They
tackle, or a wide receiver such
could grab Pennington, which
as Florida State's Laveranues
would make the Kordell Stewart
Coles.
saga all the more entertaining.
Minnesota (25)-The Vikings
St. Louis (31 )-What do they
could use a pass-rushing defen-
need? The Rams are just draft-
si ve end.
Howard, John
ing for depth at this point, but
Engleberger of Virginia Tech,
they could take Florida State
and Darren Howard of Kansas
kicker Sebastian Janikowski
State are the most likely possi-
with the last pick in round one.
bilities.
San Diego (none)-They always
New England (none)-They es-
trade theirfirst:round pick a year
sentially traded their first-round
in advance tQ move up and get
pickforCoachBillBelichick. In
someone only Bobby Beathard
round two, they may try to an-
has heard of. The Chargers like
swer their age-old question at their small-school prospects,
running back. Travis Prentice· and they will probably get an-
from Miami of Ohio could land
other
.
here.
San Francisco (12, 24)-Rav-
New Orleans (none)-The Ricky
aged by salary cap and old age,
Williams deal cost them their
the 49ers need everything.
first-rounder this year as well.
Pennington would
fill
a need
They would like a playmaker at
here,
and
comerback needs to
wide receiver later on, possibly
be addressed as well. Plummer
USC's R. Jay Soward. Even
or California's Deltha O'Neal
though they signed Jeff Blake,
would
fill
that need.
Coach Jim Haslett is said to like
Seattle (19, 22)-A wide receiver
Louisville quarterback Chris
and a linebacker would prob-
Redman.
ably fill their two biggest needs.
N.Y. Giants (11)-The pick will
White and Morris, respectively,
probably be a running back.
could be their picks. Tennessee
Dayne is a possibility here, but
linebacker Raynoch Thompson
Alabama's Curtis Alexander
is a good athlete who might fit.
seems the more likely pick. The
If McDougle is available, the
Giants may add some depth at
Seahawks could grab him to be
comerback in the later rounds.
their right tackle.
N.Y. Jets (16, 18)-TheJets still
TarrtpaBay (13, 27)-They need
might
_
tra
.
c:le
.
Keyshawri Johnson
_
_
tall
receivers
and a tight end.
and mc:i,ve
up,
btitthat scenario
.
Throw them into the White/
seems less likely. 1)Iey would
Morris/fayior mix, and Franks
be thrilled if Franks fell this far.
might work. They may look for
They also could use a pass
offensive line depth with their
rusher
(Ellis,
Howard,
second first-rounder.
Engleberger) and third receiver
Tennessee (30)-The areas
(White, Taylor, Morris).
where they n·eed to add depth
Oakland (17)-Sandwiched be-
(tight end, safety) are not the
tween the Jets picks are the Raid-
deepest in this draft. If Grant
ers, who need help at wide re-
somehow falls this far, the Ti-
ceiver and
safety.
Grant would
tans would be ecstatic. They
fill
the safety need, while White,
may get the best player avail-
Taylor, and Morris would help
able.
_
out at receiver.
Washington (2, 3)-They only
Philadelphia (6)-The Eagles
have two other picks after round
getting Florida State defensive
one. But after they add two blue-
tackle Corey Simon has been a
chip prospects, will it matter?
TENNIS:
MAAC
tourney favorites
... continued from pg.16
teams' chances as well, but
ex-
pressed some concern in St.
Peter's, wh~ is the probable sec-.
ond seed in the tournament, and
who Marist only beat4-3 earlier
this year. He describes them as
"very tough," but credits most
of the close match to the home
court advantage of the Pea-
cocks "dimly lit bubble."
Racanelli was a little more
blunt.
"We can beat them 7-0," he
said.
The Red Foxes will travel to
Kiamisha Friday in a brand new
role as the favorites. Brimming
with confidence, not cockiness,
they will take the courts as the
hunted. They
will
try to build
onto their solid, but incomplete
"La.st year, we were the
new kids on the block, but
then we shocked
every-
Olle.
This year we are the
champs.
We are the
hunted instead of the
hu,zter."
Mike Racanelli
Men'•s tennis
.
fouridation, and build the roof,
and finish on top.
:,
·
"
,
,
.
i
·::THE:
CIR.CLE
'exttwoweeks_
Softball pitcher Melanie
· b ak
"
Joh
~=;it:~:;• .'· . s, .
a.,,, .. ··· ..
•
{.;ba~!::E16
B
-_ ---.-~ -
--.ball ... ·. . ..
fi• .. : ~
•4;:i4S1;;;,::<,:•~~~~-.~it:£t1~1
. ~~3w
·RB1~~~~m~Im!t~L:~~LLt0~'~T:if~~,t~
· Staff Writer
4
victory.i
, .'
·- .·.
,
·
Ambro~iriLand Cueto kiiocked'F· (. '.-.
'· Riding
a
three gamtnvinning
. .
l~
~?S
for
M;~~ti_n '. i~s hal(of
-~'Good
>
teams: wilfgo
After suffering a minor:set-
.
streak,thefoxesretumedhome
. the s1~th.-. The team.added an-
.. ·
, .. ·· .. · .. -
.
-. _ .
back by 16sing fout: out of five -fohostthe,Canisius Golden Grif-
C>ther. t\YO in Jh¢ b9ttom' of the
game . by ~ame a,id
games, theMaristbaseball team . fins. Afterscotjnganunearned
.. '.(!ig~thfrom_ah~I"d,QUh,lefrom
even inning by-, in-
seems to·have'gotten back on
runinth'efourthinning;Marist
-:Gueto':,md an;RBI from Jeff
• · · . _ .-
lv◄
·
have __
·
a
the right track; Two· wins
broke the gairie ope11 in ~e bot--
:,tliit{o;,
but:jf'was not enough
:-..!Jln~. :>-'
>s:(! .. _ ... ·_
-
;t
.-J:;.;
against Hartford arid Anriy and
tom of the eighth; scoring seven· .
:,~~'fii'nj~~us·closed ouf the gime · .
:young gfoup. ,of
,g'fi,ys
another two over Canisius has
runs
off
of pitchers''Mark West .
lly
ci
score of 7-4.
. .
_ ..
th~i are · begfnning: to
kept the team from falling be-
and Scott Beebe;· Ambrosini
''We:-wantedto wm the three
· · · _ -.. ,
<'
·· ··-·: · -_
hind in the standings;:and·has
l.ined,a double that t>iu:ely
grun_es,'_'
_
saifSzefc of theloss.
learn
:
how to staY_ Jo-
given it a boost of confidence
squeezed intofairtei-ritory.that
?It
is)lie:type _of game tharwe-
cused:and are adJust-
entering a key part of the sea..- - drove intwo. Anthony Cervini
w.~lMoo}.:.~~ck on at the end of
ing
:well."
.
son.
also added two RBrs in-the in-
John $zefc
thes!!ason asagame we should
· · - -
-•
QnApri15,theRedFoxestrav-
ning,
have.-\Y<>Q.''.,:o :_~,_
_
__ ·
_ ., . _.
. ___
.
eled to Hartford; where the team
Bechtel(S~O) pitched six, in-
. one third innings, allowing one · .: M,aris(now, 19.;-_~-2, 8-3 in the
. : ·: -
·'John
Szef
C
won a commanding
J
1-5 deci-
nings, giving up one run and :, ear11ed run and striking out ·
:¥.~tt<>
~tlan~~Jtlll~-~~c Confer- ·
baseball~liead ·coach
sion; Designated hitter Chuck
striking out six Canisitis battei;s,
lliree
Griffins, Ool recorded his _e11ce ;(MA,Aq),~- faces_~-- t<>ugh ___ · __ -_ ·_•.- . -._· _
:,.'.:-
,:,'<:.;-:.~ •.
:
. __
.
!:~h!~
1
~~~~:kt~o!;~
~~s~- '~~~:r~~-~~~~s~;i:~~~~~~
7
ing ~~d
t::~~!:~i~
stfu-~~n~;J:!~~
~i,ak¼~i£~]{}~1~;~:~a~~~!~;~~~~~~~~~½t~l'',.':,;:,:;~.,-~
which was more than enough
·
"It
·is· scary to see your num-
the team's last four games. , .. '
0
:l:i!h_igb,:.Qtj_iy.?rs~ty;\be,for~. tp1v:-/¥ciae~w.~~r.:f'tjie'seas'on_
IS
g01rg
for Vin Roma to pick up the
vie-
ber one pitcher get-hurt on the
.
-The wiri gave Marist a five
eliiig, foJa~tf~Mo:rh~dtteain' for-.Maris~."::Jiina is_10-1 in tile
.
tory. Ken Catino started.the mound," said head coach
John ·
gam~.wjnningsti-eak,afterdrop-
tigh(·b~hiiia:M~rist,:jii .the?:MAACillldstandsinfirstplace.
game, pitching four innings and
Szefc. :•!Itappeared to be a mus~
ping foul"out of five games just MAAC·standings.. : .-.-:; ,_,· · _ · ''. -)~.s
·
the sea~on goes ·on, ·it is
giving up two earned, mns.
cularstrain;butheisday~to-day
a week ago.
?
''Le.tv.f_oy_~~is
a
g~p~·team.~~ .;tough:for a team.to ~oncen,tr~te
· Roma pitched two scoreless in-
now.''
·
·
''It-is just what we needed,"
said-Szefc.: "They lost'
a
lot of on one game;when a big match
nings to record the
win,
while
Ool'(l-2) crune into the game . Szefcsaidofthewinningstreak.
players fast year, but (coach)
upJs right around the comer.
Kevin Ool recorded the save.
in relief and pitched ri.vo score--
?It sh_ows that (the players)will · Stevl Owens is· well respecte<:f · -- "G6odteams will go game by
Thefollowiiig day, tii~·tearn: less-innings to earn:his first vie-
battle through eac;h g::une.".
'C.
and will have his team ready."
game, and even inning by. in-
traveled_ to face. Army. Ryan
·
tory
of the season, as, Mari st
The
.
team also received better
Marist will play
a
three game
ning," said Szefc in reference to
Kondratowicz (2-1) pitched five - won the game, 9-1. _
pitching in the games, accord-
series against LeMoyne in a se- - keeping a. te.am focused on the
innings and gave. up just two
In. the second·. game of_ the
~i_ig to _Szefc'° The pitchin~ staff · ries .that could play a,key mle in
task at hand. -"We have a young
earned runs. Ool pitched one
April 8 .doubleheader, Marist
ga_ve _up
J?
~ns in::fiv". games,
dictatjrig w,here the season: will
group · of guys_ that are begin-
and one third innings·ofscore-
scored fourruns intwo innings · a_s'.9PP'?~e~}~}4'!ri,the p~evi-
end;11pfo~th;_F'o.x.~. a~cordi11g
ning to learn how to stay fo-
less ball to earn his second save
off of Canisius.starling pitcher ?u,s f°.utJ~sser,
~-i .. .
r<;:,, . , •.
t2_~~~fti,
>:
p;;
;iq,j•;
·
i; •
·
_
cused and are adjusting well."
in two days. ·, Anthony Tyler Hosick.
'
Cerviriidoubled
·
f11 ·}h7
~R~~~:~~}9t?rf~~
·
. ·
.'.Tu~n~~H:-Y!'.l»'~~Sf~~a.¥-~
- Bocchino led the Foxes with,a- in'.thebottom of the third;'scbr-
.three:'game series, Camsms
or6reakus," he added~
r:,,:-:-,; :,:- _ .•
triple and two RBI's,while An- · ingJimmyWtllis;DerekRandeiI, .. -_ ~oly~~Jts'.ilitti!)g w9es by sc;:o~--
:. Miµi'siis•als_o_ l_9o_king forward
thony Ambrosini,. Ben· ~ueto,. and Becht~l: : __ -·' .
-·· ·' '_._
i~g
fiv¢ _runs-fa.
t~e :top of-the
to facing,,fona in two .w.eeks,
_
arid Chuck Bechtel added one
. Catino··.(3.:3) pitched si~ ~d si~th jn~irig, ,highlighte4 °by~ a
which Szefc_ alsoJeels -will·
d~~
:' "!. '.
.
~
.
.
c.
·Tennisteam~i9g8SMAACtoumamentnears
byCLAYNORRIS
-
StaffW.nier
season;theMarist playen;haye.
•
-matches in ·a rbw at 'one '.pbi~t;
faced levels ofcoinpetitiofrthat
-
h1cluciing big winsover Boston
,
other MAAC teaI11sJ1ave not.
C<>llegeand ~QDy. . _
_ .
-
: 'Confid~nce: rtot cotkiness, is -
"Hope.fully;the§e experie11ces
i
In
addition, the
·
middle ofthe. : -
the tlieme of the Marist men's
have 'giver(us'enoitgh,fou~da-· lineup,isyoung,b.u,t imp_r_essiv~ .
.
tennis team thi_s spring. Posting tion to putthe mofo~ourhouse -·' . S~phomore fas~il'c_(}elli!r
-
and.
a perfect 8~0conferehce t¢cord
at- the. MAAC tourney,''., said. freshriiari; Eric.:,Scheldr have
should ma.Re the Red Foxes the
Sinith:
.
_. ____ . -_
.
.. _ . ' ·· ·_- _. _ beell wfoning consisteniiy
all
favorites~· and.assures thdmtlie: ---_ _ Smith look~ at orie
.
partictilai · _
spq11g hj:singlet
anci;.
~ccord-
·
top see4 in
·
the MAAC:tdtima'- -· momerif
as· llie
tu~rig point in }ni
t1
.
~01tth/~iinpfoving daily" :
m_etjt(which··sta~s Friday in_ the season;:~ne•in,which:his
intheir,doubl<?~:matc:l)_e(./_
.
_-
.
Kiamisha,N.Y.
. .
·
teamhasn'tlqoked;back.
..
:.?,Thtfdept~f~¢yep.-*etcp.es
. - ACCQ[din.gtq I-Iea.cl.¢oacJ1
Tim
i
On March:24, pJaying against
i
clpi,yri
t9' Juiµi
Qelgado'
iri the _
·- Smitli,:Maristhas_eained the title , - Btisforrcoilege
iri)pe
deciding .· six.tlJ'.spot9ftheHneup,who 'is,.:
offavorites'in the
'
MAAC.'
'
giine; Matist!f'bes(sfngles . ''.withoufguestion/tlie-besi: .
.
. "We have prepared harder,
player, Ralphy~ei:Plasse, had ·_ -si,:-tlr p!c1.y~r,i11. !h(~<>nfel'ef!C.f:
traine.d ltarder,juid_phtyed in
lost the firsCsei 6-2 arid was ._:andsh?ulddomina:teinthetour.a·,
riiore matclies
·
and.tournameilts
doWri
s~
i'
iii thesecond.
:
s·erv~ ~a'ment;•( accio~ding' tq.)iis •
than· any other: team (in the ing30-40, VanDerPl_a.sse broke
cOa~ll.: .,/ ,~'~
-
: ·:
:-
: :
:t/:£);~/ , :
MA.AC),"Siriithsaid: _
-. ____
·
· .
a
_
siring:cin·his•~irdra~ket:
}Ie _
)(Setiigt£~pt~ip_·cpd;:I_e.atl~i,
-
--.
·
'.·Marisf·has:pfayed'iti'such wasforcedtc>'ilseateainmate's' _-MikeRacanelli,sptindedmuch
competitiye · t<Jilrn~eiits · this - ·_ racket
but
ended u°p
w1nhlng
the - ·: like
his
:c(!ach when'asked about -
-
yellras, the.University
of
Con- .. set 11:-9
in.a
tiebreaker. : . ,
his:team's·chances in·ihe con-·_
necticut Totirnament;: the .-
Smith~aidthe'BosfonCollege
ference tournament _ ._,- _ .·
Q)meUinvitational;theHatvard . player~as :•mentaliy andphysi~
~
_F ..
Y{e ·h~ve' a strong.-team;
Invitational, and theECAC_Elite
cally exhausted" after the sec- . we'.ve proven_ we cru.i.bea,t
(a.H
16Toumainent
ond ·set.· . '
-
-
·_
-_
-· othei:-MAACieams),there's"iio
TheECACEiite 16isaninvi- . . Varu)erPlasse, with momen-
reasonweshouldn\"Racanem
tation--0nly tournament in whicli , : ~m'nowdn
~!s
sii:le, w~nton to -_ said. / .::: ...
:
: . ·
..
> .. :
---th~top 16diyisionf~~•ffotn· _:, ~Jq_~etarne.;}s~k~_QI!_la.t~Q,/t~:· I<1s gef~n~ing!--f~C ~ham~,,
Maine to Virginia, c6inpetes.
·
. 3Jor the Red Foxes.
ptons, the Red Foxes hav~ had
<co'ach-Smith said-die entire
•·:smith described it as one of ·to dealwith being the favorites
team:
w~fi
"elated'' to be in-
his inost exciting matches in his _ this y~. - -~
_,
:
eluded in the tournament be-
coaching career. .
. "Last yea{we were the new
cause the Red Foxes. were se-
The Marist lineup does not kids on the block, bu~ then we
lected ahead of schools such
seem to have any hol_~s or weajc
shocked ev.ery_one;" said
as, Rutgers, Georgetown, Bos-
points.
Along . _. with
Racanelli, "Thisyearwearethe
ton CoJlege, and Providence.
,VanDerPlasse, senior Roberto
champs. We are the hunted in-
By playing in competitive Mayer continues to have an
stead of the hunter.''
tournaments throughout the
outstanding spring, winning 12
Both Smith and Racanelli
agree that theirteani is very con-
fi
denr but not over_Iy so.
Racanelli describes the team as
very level headed and, as a
group, they are taking the s~-
son one step as a time.
Racanelli said that everyone
seems
tQ
be
peaking at the right
time and that
if
they perfonn at
their level, they will end up
MAACchamps.
Smith is confident of his
... please see
TENNIS,
p. 15
53.17.1
53.17.2
53.17.3
53.17.4
53.17.5
53.17.6
53.17.7
53.17.8
53.17.9
53.17.10
53.17.11
53.17.12
53.17.13
53.17.14
53.17.15
53.17.16