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Part of The Circle: Vol. 53 No. 18 - May 4, 2000

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PresidentDennis Murray
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designing
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"A lot of the parents came to
longed to Sara Martire.
WEEKLY
POLL
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.
.
re
you
upset
abou
arist's
decision
t
ban
the use of
.Napster?
YES
NO
- -
-
.
-
32
18
related
story
of page
3.
·
is
an
U1l5Cimtijic
$WWY
takDi
Marist
·
stut/mls.
· taurants that
·
are
very
·
success-
fall and the models need to be
see
their
kids'
_
work. There were
ful.
.
.
. •.
·
.
·
trained,"
DeSanna
said.
also some alums who
are
de-
.
For over 16
.
y~. Kerrey has
Freshman Kate Kickery, a
signers in New York. and some
served
as
both
a U.S. Senator modelfor the
·
·
show
;
found the
of the people from the commu:.C
.
and Gove~or. His focus has experience to be
a
good
one.
nity came as well,'
,
' she said.
been
.
on improving
·
.
education,
"I'm
a fashion design major so "Paulene Tr:igere. a famous de-
·
.
health
care
and tax reform. His
it was fun to
see
what went into

signer, was
also
on hand at the
devotion to national issues and
it
because I know I will have to
evening show to present two of
his
willingness
to present new
do the
.
same
in
,the years to
the
.
awards. We bad about 500
and. bold
.
sohitions has im-
come,"shesaid.
"I
had
so
much
people on hand for the after-
pressed many.
fun modeling iii it though."
noon showing, and there were
Murray said that the school is
DeSanna had a lot of help. as
600
in attendance for the
honored that Kerrey has offered about 120 students were in-
evening
perfonnance."
to speak at the ceremony. His
volved
in
the
production. There
At
.
the conclusion of the fash-
exemplary
military
and political
·
were eight seniors and
IO
jun
-
ion show portion of the pro-
.•. please
see
KERREY,
pg.
4
iors contributing designs, for a
gram,
the Silver Needle Awards
total of 58 pieces.
were presented. The most out-·
INSIDE
■ TODAY:
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~~:::.16

































· _ . THE?CIRGL£t~r . .
~.omlti(lri
i~y
Tune_ into Sports Radio
WMCR - Marist College Ra-
dio - Friday - Tuesday,
7:00 p.m.
- 9:00 p.m; Tune into 88.1 for the
latest sports talk, spor:ts up-
dates, and coverage_ of yourfa-
vorite Marist teams.
If
you have
any questions, call the Sports
Director ,MikeKolleratx4724.
Library Dedication
The Board of Trustees, the
Alumni Association, and the
campus community are the
hosts of the official James A
Cannavino Library ded~cation.
The dedication will take place
this Saturday, May 6, at I 0:30
a.mat the library ..
Mr.
Marist Competition
Ski.;.masked delinquents
jumped and shot a Marist senior
and one_nonstudeht in an at-
tempt to steal money arid gold
chains. This incident occurred
·
in the Confetti's parking lot"at
. approximately 4 a.m. on April 16.
Security would like the Marist
community to know that the vic-
tin!s are recovering. Can you be-
lieve that we actually used to go
to this place?
_
A bike seat was discovered
missing · from· a Sheehan
resident's bicycle on April 18.
No evidence has surfaced yet
· Four Citibank employees-were
escorted off campus by Marist
Security. for soliciting credit
cards on April 18. Darn those
Citibank people wanting stu-
dents to achieve even more debt
than they already have.
One country's flag was found
missing from the Rotunda on
Communication Arts Society . April 22 at 6:30 p.m .. War has
is sponsoring the first annual
been deciared on Marist Col-
Mr. Marist competition this
lege.
Thursday, May 4. The compe-
Multiple CD's and Sony
tition will take place in the Nelly
PlayStations were. stolen from
Goletti Theater and admission
Benoit. over Spring Break. The
is
$1
.
.
. situation
i~
presently _under,
in- .

,
\ ·
vestigation··by the city of
Now it's your tum
. Calling all
-
Mari.st students!
If
you have a band; and event,
a
• club, or any other event you
would Iik~
id ·
s~e. featured . in
campus corner, contact the
Circle,
at x 2429
orHZAL.
Poughkeepsie. Police:•:' Victims
will be forced to go out on Sat-
urday night.
· . .
· Five CD's were (discovered
missing from. a female• student .
while working out at the McCann
fitness ce,nter on April
2
around
5p.m.
"What are you wearing?" A
14-year-old student was found
gunty of making harassit1g
phone calls to a Marist student
teacher.
· ·
Weekend Weather
Friday
Saturday ·
Sunday
lti:
81
lo: 56
hi: 83
lo: 57
Source: www.weather.com
hi: 79
lo: 51
What ~re you .. doing this·
summer?
"Camp Bisco!"
Eric Hellriegel
sophomore
"Touring with N'Sync.;,
RichBroski
sophomore
"Waiting for the first Rotary
• Day of of the Millenium."
Brian
Perry
sophomore.
1
I
I
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.
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TH£:CIRCL£;-
:
r
-
:
-News ..
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-
--
MAY 4, 2000
PAGE3
.
.
NewregulationmakesNapsteruseillegaloncampus
by
ED WILLIAM.Sm
·
·
Staff Writer
.
One of the favorite activities
of many Marist students has
come to an
·
end, as the entire
campus received the bad news
·
on April
19.
E--mail from A. Hany Williams,
director of technology
_
and sys-
tems, was sent out to the entire
campus explaining that use of a
program called Napster
on
the
Marist network would be
banned starting May
1.
Napster was the program used
by many to download their fa-
vorite music onto their own
.
.
.
-.
.
computers;
·
According to its website,
Napsteris an integrated browser
and coillmunic::ations system
provided
:
by
.
Napster,
Inc:
to
enable musicians and music
fans to locate bands and music
available in the
MP3
music for-
mat. It also goes on to say that
users are responsible for com-
plying with all applicable federal
and state laws applicable to
such content, including copy-
right laws.
Martha Mcconaghy, man-
ager, systems/network and op-
erations, explained why Napster
was being lJanned.
The primary reason was net-
work
.
bandwid
_
tht she s_aid
.
"Napst~r was taking up a sig-:-
nificant amount of bandwidth.
We had received a lot of com-
plaints fr(?m
·
students about
slowed internet connections.
"We have various ways of
looking at the traffic. We can
see what programs people are
using.
If
they're taking up too
much bandwidth, they'll be
taken off the network. We've
seen as much as two or three
gigabytes of activity per per-
son, per day. All of that activity
takes away from everyone else's
use of the network.
·
The e-mail
has gone out to faculty as well
as the students, so this is a cam-
pus~wide ban."
Marist is not the only college
to deal with the Napster prob-
.
lem. Earlier this month, the rock
band Metallica filed a lawsuit
. against Napster
·
itself .
.
·
.
They
also filed suit in U.S. District
Court against the University of
Southern California, Yale Uni-
versity and Indiana University
as defendants.
The suit charged Napster and
the schools in question with
copyright infringement, unlaw-
ful use of digital audio interface
device and violations of the
Racketeering Influenced and
Corrupt Organizations Act.
Since the Metallica lawsuits, all
three colleges have banned the
use ofNapsteras well.
McConaghy said the legal ac-
tivity did not influence the ban.
"We knew about the lawsuit,
but it wasn't really the reason
for banning Napster," she said.
"We had decided to ban it even
before the lawsuit. Also, the ban
is not just Napster, it's on all
similar software as well. Any-
thing that performs that same
kind of function is banned.
"The students also have to be
very aware of the situation.
Some of these lawsuits aren't
going after schools, but instead
they're going after individuals.
They could be tracked down and
sued themselves."
Two students from Siena
found out the ha,rd way as they
were arrested for violation of
copyright laws.
This ban has received mixed
reviews across campus.
''I'm happy that they banned
it because it now speeds up the
rest of my Internet activity, but
I'm
upset at the same time be-
cause
I
don't have the access
to music I once had, and now I
have to buy CD's," said fresh-
man Paul Lukason.
"
Come on. Let's get real. Do
these students really need the
faster speeds to download their
debauchery? That's right, de-
bauchery," said freshman Eric
Wehrberger. ''I'd rather listen
to some music than hear geeks
Studehts h
·
ave
,
,
voice<;f theilopinions about
'
more tti
:
an just the food .
.
,:;
,



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.
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soDEXllO:


Lmkedto
for.cprofitprisons
... conti11:uedfrom
pg.
J
Sodexho
off
campus if
(Sodexho) is not willing to di-
vest from
.
for profit-prisons,
they will beforced to do so on
their own or suffer serious
fi-
nancial loss."
.
Not With Our Money! litera-
ture reads: '"The dirty secret of
the private prison industry, is
that while the profits end up in
the hands of a few corporations,
all of the rest of us pay the
·
so-
cial costs
.
Eventually, nearly all
ofCCNs inma~ will return to
public life; will the time they
spent in dangerous and inhu-
. mane prisons make us safer?"
Sodexho, which provides ser-
vices at all of Marist's dining
facilities, owns 17 percent of
Corrections Corporation of
America (CCA), the largest U.S.
private prison operator, and nine
percent of Prison Realty Trust,
CCNs
real-estate development
sister company. Doctor Crants,
·
CCNs
Chairman and Chief Ex-
ecutive Officer, is a member of
·
Sodexho's Board of Directors.
Nashville-based CCA has a
history of questionable behav-
ior, including the alleged
.
mis-
treatment of detainees at a fed-
eral immigrant detention
·
center
in Elizabeth, NJ, wl1kh lead to
.
.
anFBlprobeinApril
1999.
The
company also faces ~nanc~al
woes, having announced the
loss of a combined $265 million
inl999.·
Joseph Heavy, general man-
ager for all on~campus dining
facilities, said he has heard of
.
th~
protests but d ~ not know
enough about the details of the
to take a personal stance.
"I'd have to say I don't know
enough about the situation to
form an intelligent opinion,"
Heavy said. "Of course I don't
personally endorse sweatshop
like conditions or labor."
Little ciamor has been made
on the Marist campus in re-
sponse, but some students are
aware of the controversy.
"It
wouldn't surprise me if
I
found out that an organization
associated with Marist (like
Sodexho) was doing something
·
sketchy outside ofMarist," said
Senior Kevin Graff.
Prison Moratorium Project and
Raptivism Records recently an-
nounced the release of the "No
More Prisons" Hip Hop Compi-
lation
CD,
accompanied by the
current "No More Prisons" hip-
hop tour. The 40-city tour hits
many college campuses, and is
being used along with the CD
as a tool to educate students
and music fans and raise money
for activists.
Sodexho Marriott, targeted by
the tour, shut down a No More
Prisons event February
15
at
American University. The event
was to be held at a Sodexho
Marriott owned facility.
Photo courtesy AP
Metallica is taking Napster to court.
whine about their bandwidth
speed. It's true!"
There are also some students
that think this whole ban will
blow over once these lawsuits
are settled and Napster will be
back in full effect next year.
However, Mcconaghy does
not foresee the same thing.
"I don
'
t anticipate it ever be-
ing un-banned," she said.
"Its
use spreads very quickly. The
way Napster works, you also
become a server
,
and people c
a
n
take stuff from your computer
.
It becomes a security issue too
because people don't realize
this."
Marist takes third in
advertising competition
by
JAIMETOMEO
Editor-in
~
Chief
A team of five Marist students
came in third against twenty-
three schools competing Satur-
day, April 15 in the American
Advertising Federation
2000
National Student Advertising
Competition. The presentation
part of the two-day competition
was held in New York City. The
AAF
District
2,
encompassing
colleges and universities in New
York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania,
Delaware, Maryland and Wash-
ington, D.C.
The two-part competition re-
quires each school to submit a
40-page plan book detailing an
integrated marketing communi-
cation program, answering the
problern posed by the client,
The New York Times
.
Two
weeks later, the schools present
a twenty-minute promotion, di-
rect marketing and public rela-
tions programs. Sara Bergeron,
Matthew Marino, Rachel
Palmes, Carie Pluff and Natalie
Zeinoun represented the Marist
team, Fifty Miles off Madison.
Other members of the team are
Kristin Collarini
,
Tammi Dzeiema,
Doria Goodrich, Patrick Lacroix,
Sarah Perz and Heidi Tracy.
Their faculty advisor is Marcia
Christ
St. John's took second place
and Georgetown will compete
nationally with the I I other AAF
districts. Other schools that
competed were Penn State Uni-
versity, George Washington
University and Ithaca College.
Marist will look to compete in
the event again next year
.




























































MAY 4, 2000
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:
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PAGE4
Black week celebrates heritage ofstudents.,faculfy
by
BRENDANMcGURK
Staff Writer
This past week, Marist College
held its annual tradition ofBiack
Week, celebrating the heritage
of students and faculty of Afri-
can~American ancestry.
Marist's Black Student Union
sponsored the weeklong event,
which ran from April 24 through
.
April 29. The week, filled with
activities
celebrating black heri-
tage, was open to the entire
campus.
The first event to kick off the
annual Black Week was Tues-
day evening's Nyabingi.
Nyabingi, a Swahili word trans-
lated as
"celebration",
was the
talent show event. The show
featured
.
several acts ending
with farewell songs from several
seniors, including Edward
Antoine, the former president of
the Black Student Union. The
event culminated in the corona-
tion of this year's Black King and
Queen.
Wednesday night's festivities
were highlighted by
a
lecture by
black poet an~ speaker Kurt
·
Nugent Nugent's slam poem
...
was geared to addressing issues
of the day such as interracial
relationships and racism.
Nugent was performing excerpts
from his book of poetry, Poetic
Justice.
Dr. Gregory Moses, the faculty
advisor for the Black Student
Union, said that Nugent
brought tremendous energy
and talent to the performance.
"[Nugent] performed to a
small, enthusiastic audience,"
Moses.said.
"He
brought a lot
of energy to the show. We look
forward to a lot more perfor-
mances with him. I was very
happy to have witnessed such
a rising star on his way up."
Thursday evening's events
.
included the Def Jam Explosion,-
•·
which hosted three black come~
··
di ans
.
performing in the Caba-'.
ret. The three humorists, Rob

.

Stapleton, John Lanster and
Kareem, performed to a mixed
crowd of Marist students.
Valerie Page, president of the
Black Student Union, said that
.
.
there was a good turnout of stu-
dents for the event.
·
"There
·
was a crowd of about
·
150 in the Cabaret that night. It
was a pretty good turnout for
the event," Page said.
Friday's activities were high-
lighted by the Black Student
Union-sponsored Fashion
Show, held in the Cabaret.
The week's
·activities
and
events culminated in Saturday
evening's main event, the Cul-
tural Dinner Dance. The semi-
formal event was a dinner and
awards ceremony to honor out-
standing members of the Mari st
faculty, as well as students in-
volved in the Black Student
Union.
Awards were presented to stu-
dents from every year, freshman
through senior, for outstanding
contributions to the
.
organiza-
tion. Awards were also pre-
sented to faculty members in
fields such as most informative
faculty member, most support-
ive faculty member, most sup-
portive
college
department and
the like.
Photo
courtesy Red, II ack
.
& Green Promotion
:
Poet Kirk Nugent-spoke at Marist Wednesday
.
night.·
·
August
F.
Mustardo; a
'
soptio-
more marketing major, said that
the past Black Week was an op-
portunity for all students to ap-
preciate different cultures.
"The
events of the past week
really
'
allowed in
'
any :Students to
appreciate different cultures,"
Mustardo said. "There are
many diverse cultures on
·
the
Marist campus. Many people
just don't realize that."
·
Kerrey:
Ex-Navy
Seal to
speak at C01Jllllencement
.
:.:contiizuedfrom
pg.
1
that wo
.
uld
.
otherwise be
service are two reasons why he
unaffordable.

.
·
.
th9ught iLwas;such a
.
great
.
J
I<~rr:ey,,suppqrts
:the:Jjead
;,
ch_oice.
.
.
·,q
,
,
;,;r
:
.
: ,-:
.
,,
,
.
. ,
.
.
Star:Land
,
childhoo,:l:educati
.
on
,
.c
"We wantsomeone who can
·
prograITls
;
and has fought to
in-
·
.
be
a
role model for the stu-
creasefunds for math and sci-
. dents," Murray said .
.
'.'He
is a
.
ence programs;
:
.
'
good public speaker as well."
In.the Senate, he is a member
Murray said
.
that much like
of many committees; such as the
Marist.CoBege, K
_
errey
·
is a
,
Senate Finance Committee
.
and
leader in the use of technology
·
the Senate Agrici.dtural Commit~
andtheinternet.
.
tee. He also is a leader in
.
He began a program,called farmer's rights andagricultural
CLASS. (Communications
,
issues.
·
Learning and Assessnienlin
Murray said
.
that Kertey is
and Student Centered System)
.
.
committt!d to pu~li<?
,
s~ryice.
:
Project
,
Jni~ pr6gr~Il) al~o~s
;:·
.
'':I:I~
:
is
:
a)~~did11
,
ipjny na-
~choois to' offer fully,acciediteo
.
..
tiorialissile~ dealing with

fam~
interactive high school classes
.
ily," he said:
:
·
... '·
.
..
· ·
·
·
o'n theJntefnet.
'
This

ailows
•·
Kimey.wilfreceive an honor-
.
high schools to offer classes
.
ary
:
ci~gree
:'ci(
t6~
ciiimcmy,
:-
.
·
Praxisfotum~
·wolliofstudents,faculty
by
JAIME TOMEO
the streets and
·
back on their
Editor-iri~Chief
feet," Kelly said.
.
·
·
Professor Mar Peter-Raoul,
Lend a helping hand.
Praxis advis
.
or, introduced
'
the
That's what the students who
Student Global
"'
and' Rural
participated in Praxis projects
p ·
A
f
d
this semester did. 'Awards were
·
fOJects.
team
·
O
.
Slu ents
·
headed to Mirabel, MexicoJor
presented·· to students and
Spring Break to Volunteertheir
teachers who have volunteered
services. She is simply follow-
at numerous local civic organi-
ing Dr. King's example.
zations at The Fourth Annual
"We are remindful
·
of Dr.
Praxis Project Forum on April
King's quote about being a
19. Praxis Advisor and Profes-
Good Samaritan," Peter-Raoul
sor Dr. Bruce Luske opened the
saiq.
·
Forum by explaining the recipe
Senior Hanqeh Kalyouse(f
for the Praxis Project
has selflessly donated her time
"Itis a combination ofloving
·
·
for ihefour
years
she has
i,een
·
.
hearts and willing hands to do
a member of the Praxis Group.
·
something," Luske said.
"I encourage anyone who en-
Junior Amanda Kelly volun-
joyshelpingotherstojoin Praxis
teered at the Good Counsel
Group," Kalyouseff said
.
.
Children's Project, a homeless
The Praxis Group has affected
shelter for women and children.
Kalyouseff in a remarkable way.
It
was one of four Student Praxis
"To me it is a part of my life,"
Youth Projects this semest~r.
K 1
ff 'd E
th"
I
"Itgiveswomenandtheirchil-
a youse sai ·" very mg
do seems Praxis related".
dren the opportunity to get off















































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.
CIRCLE.
MAY
·
4,·2000
Features
Career Planning 101
What are you going to do after graduation?
BY MARY WITKOWSKI
Staff Writer
can take up to eight to ten
months.
According to Koulik about 60
to
70
percent of the current se-
Marist College seniors
are
pre-
ni()r class is registered with Ca-
paring to take the next steps in
reer Services.
their future as they enter the
"It's helpful if students regis-
working world.
.
ter with us so that we can know
According to Chet Koulik, as-
who they are and whatthey are
sistant
director of the Career
looking for;'' he said.
Center Development and Place-
Koulik said students looking
ment, 90 percent of the 1998
to go into fields such as com-
graduating class was working
munications need to do a lot
within a year of graduation.
In
more networking ..yith employ-
addition t? entering
.
the work
:
ers since these types of jobs
force, 29 per~erit
_
.
of ¥,arist
_.
don'trecruitpeople
,
.
.
graduates cboo's'e to
attend
..
·
"PR firms and major networks
graduate school.
are receiving resumes every day
·
However, the day after gradu-
so it's a lot more competitive,"
ation may not be the best tii:ne
he said. "Those kinds of jobs
to think about a career path.
require a lot more networking."
According to Koulik, the pro-
Senior Jennifer Matarazzo, a
cess of thinking about a career
communications major with a
should start at least by the
concentration in journalism,
student's junior year.
was offered a job
as
assistant
.
Koulik said he encourages
editor at Doubleday Direct,
students to think about what
where she interned over the
kind of career they want to have
summer.
instead of choosing a major
"I
can't stress enough how im~
without knowing what they can
portant it is to take advantage
do with it.
of the hands on approach to the-
.
"The first thing students need
real world," she said .•
to do is to establish a goal of
Students should also keep an
what job or what career they
open mind about their majors
want to do," he said. "Some stu-
·
and the opportunities that are
dents choose a major and then
available in theworking world.
neglect to get advice about what
Koulik said people are often
to with that major."
too quick to just assume that if
Students who want to be em-
you major iri computer science
ployed the summer or fall after
your only choice is to work at
their graduation should start
IBM. The field of technology is
the actual job search in the early
in highest need right now of em-
fall of their senior year. Koulik
ployees and basically any type
said this is because the job of organization, such as non-
search and application process
profit and retail organizations,
are looking for people with
strong technology skills.
Senior Kevin Graff, an infor-
mation technology major, will be
working
in
New Jersey at
Franklin Mutual Advisors, a
stock-trading firm, for their In-
formation systems and Informa-
tion Technology department.
Graff
has interned at the firm for
the past two summers, which he
said helped him gain valuable
hands on experience.
"My education at Marist has
prepared me a lot, but there is

-
nothing like learning on the job,"
he said.
"It's
always good to
get hands on experience."
Koulik said internships are a
great way to get great experi-

ence as well as academic credit.

Students can apply for intern-

ships as early as the summer
·
after their sophomore year and
are encouraged to do as many
as they can.
Senior Bob Bammann, a busi-
ness administration major with
a concentration in marketing,
was offered his job doing out-
side sales for a chemical com~
pany in Connecticut through his
paid internship with the com-
pany over the
_
sum19er:
;
-

-.
Bammaimsaid
his working
ex-
perience as well as Marist's pro-
gram hasprepared him well for
his career.
"For the most part, Mari st has
prepared me for the real world,"
he said. "By doing a lot of
group projects, I've learned how
to work with others, which is a
skill required in my field."
Blast From the
.
Past
Computer Theft Baffles
_
Security_
t

BY CHRIS LANDRY
Two new IBM computers
worth more than
·
$6,000 were
stol~n- with no signs of forced
entry-:froril Donnelly Hall over
the mid-tenn break, according to
Joseph Leary, director of safety
arid security.
Both computers, including
keyboards and printers, were
taken from room 105 of the psy-
.
chology department between 1
a.m. on Saturday, Oct. 21 and
noon on Sunday Oct. 22, Leary
said.
Because there
·
was
.
no damage
to the lc:>eks,
Leary
said it is likely
the comp~ters were taken by
somemi'~ with access to keys.
"Whoever took them (comput-
ers) sure knew what they were
doing," Leary said.
And the thief or thieves knew
exactly what they wanted,
Leary
said.
Only the two new
conputers were taken, nothing
was damaged and an old com~
puter was left behind, Leary
said.
Dr. Royce White, assistant
professor of psychology, dis-

covered the computers, one in
:
his office and one in
_
the psy-
·
chology studentf lounge, miss-
ing on the following Monday.
Security and Town of
Poughkeepsie Police have no
.
suspects yet but are continuing

an investigation, Leary said.
.
White said there is no doubt
his and the department's door
was locked when he left that
Friday.
-
Housekeeping was the

last to see the computers when
workers were cleaning at I a.m.
on Saturday, Leary said.
The theft prompted Security,
under the request of White and
other faculty members, to install
new locks last Friday. Before
the lockchange, any student or
faculty member who had reason
to use the room could get keys
or access to them, Leary said.
"In a case like this you try to
figure out who has access,"
Leary
said. "But there were just
too many keys out there to boil
itdown to a few people."
November
2,
1989
r
PAGES























_-
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:
·c1RCi.£
-
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Features
.
.
.
..
.
, •
••
-
~
-
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.
_
_
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~-

·
.
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PAGE6
































I
i
.I
.i
I
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'l
,
\
I
I
,
,
I
l
I
'
i
MAY
4, 2000
TH£ClRCL£
Features
ARIES
By now you should know how
to be thrifty. Don't take risks.
Tell people who
:
want your.
money that you' re still thinking
about it Read the fine print and
do the homework
.
Don) be
ashamed to make a deal that
works for you. It's OK to do
that.
TAURUS
.
Move quickly; That's not easy
·
for you, but it?s time.Take
:
·
·
action on
:
something you've
thought aboutf or a long time.
You have
·
an incredible advan-
tage now, but conditions
·
are
changing. Grab this chan~e and
make a difference.
/
llOC)
A lid has been kept on
·
your
enthusiasm. You've been play-
ing to a critical audience. That's
about tq change.
·
By tomorrow
you'll be the star of the show.
And, you'.ll be better for the les-
son you've recently learned.
VIRGO
You've had some lucky breaks
over the past few days. Don't
get overconfident, though. Ex-
:
pect a quiz tomorrow. You may
be asked to prove you know
·
what you're talking about. Go
over your notes one more time.
LIBRA
.
You may have recently discov-
ered that you enjoy budgeting!
Putting those numbers into
GEMINI

.
rows is kind of fun
.
A task that
You'll come out of hiding by
was once drudgery could be-
tomorrow. You're almost fin-
comeafongame.Ifthisishap-
ished with whatever
:
you've pening, you're learning how to
SAGfITARIUS
If
you can't help
.
everyone who
.
wants what you have,
Y<?U
.
.
could hire somebody to help.
Think about ittonight and call a
few people tomorrow. An argu-
mentative person could be per-
fect. So, don't take the first
'no'
for an answer. Concede a point
or two and get the agreement so
you can o sh
ing.
CAPRICORN
You're still
lucky,
but don't pro-
crastinate; Make the decision
you've contemplated for the
pastfewdays. You'llhavetoget
back to work tomorrow so you
can't afford to wait any longer.
Don't spend too much, either.
AQUARIUS
.
A lot of activity is going on
at
home. If you recently moved,
you almost should be settled by
·
now. You'll have more time for
been working dn. Yoii're°about
·.
win! Keep atit.
to have a breakthrough, and.·
then you'll
want
to take action.-
Don't rush things; trust your
romance and games tomorrow
·· andthenextday. MeanwhiJ~._do
-
·
: 'l
'whiitdvei
'rieeds
'
to bi{done to
instincts.
CANCER
,
Groups and organizations are
imeortant in
.
..
rour
•·
life now.
You're coming out of your shy,,
ness and sometimes that's dif-
ficul~. You mafpave to deal with
some things you've been avoid-
ing! Don't wofu'; you'restrong
·
enough now. Gettough!
.
SCORPIO
You and your partner need
_
to
get together to talk about
money. How much d~ you have
and how are you going
to spend
it? This could be adelicate sub-
. ject, but dontt put itoff. Money
is~ always an
.
inportarit topic.
Discuss ways on how you can
spend less
'
and save
·
more.
·
get things right.
PJSC£5
,
Focus on the subject you're
learning. This is the way to make
your dreams c()me true. Yo~r
frierids may warit you to com~
·
out
·
and play, but turn them
do\Yn. Right
now the most im:
,
poitant thing for you to do is
practice, practice, practice!
PAGE7







































MAY4, 2000
.PAGE:8
. CONGRESS SHALL MAKE NO LAW ••• ABRIDGING FREEDOM OF SPEECH OR OF THE PRESS
Features article raises
international educatio
awareness on campus
Dear
Editors:
Thank you for Lisa Burke's
superb article on Thomas
Wilson
Ill's
remarkable life
(CIRCLE, 13
Apri12000).
Such an article once
a
semes-
ter would help remedy what
is an unfortunate aspect of
Marist College: a serious
deficiency in international edu-
cation. This deficiency
wilJ
be greatly
aggravated
next
year with the losses of Dr.
Norkeliunas in Russian Studies
and of Dr. Sue Grunewold in
Asian History, neither of whom
is being replaced by comparable
specialists.
The CORE Committee is still .
struggling to decide what -
requirement to legislate in glo-
bal education. The decision is
not
"if'
but
"what". USA hege-
mony will end in your lifetime,
probably within the next genera-
tion, given
the43%
illiteracy
rate
among our fourth-graders
today. You must.learn to love
and live with other cultures as
equals.
Bro. Joseph Belanger
Student embarrassed
by.
C311lpus:i,ewspaper_
'

. . . . . .
·
'
.
.
Dear
Editor:
· No matter how many edit<>rs
you change, no matter how·
many. reporters come and go,
The Circle coQtinues to be a
joke.
, Besides the myriad spelling
and grammatical errors, the big-
gest- problem
I
have with the
current issue is the assertion in
- the lead: article "Students · not
too. high
()0
bookstore'' that
Marist College
h~
one of ~e
highest· STD' rates 'among
col.:
leges. Could you please back
this up with some
data?
Yeah,
we've all heard the rumors, but
article and claim that'they are
fact If you want
to
use a statis-
tic as.· serious
~
'that one, you
had better get it.from a reliable ·
scientific source and print that
source.
On
top of that, the unprofes-
. sional writing in· that· article "'
"Ah,
~e wonderful Marist C:of-
- lege bookstore .• ;":and "Matjst
College,:perhaps better known:
~
Mattress 9?9ege; Ho!}ie
of ..
the Bed Fox~•~ is aneinbarrass-
ment and a poor excuse for jour-
nalism.
Thank you,
Tffie=Cf.-1cli:'
Academic
Paper
or Offsbootof
the
N8Ji()Di1lEngUirer?' ·
... ·
.
· .
·
...
.
.. · ·.
·
Eclitor~
'
•, , _ \ · _,,
:
· _ ofM~st'sttiderits/'
1
Do yoii"'''{.,'4isdairi froii?Ma'rist-fi6ulty.fr:•;::J
'/''l
()ver the pasty~
I
have
·
think
your going·
fo
'
get.
A$$ · ·.
•Wfiy should President Murray
·
submitted articles to the
over Spring Break?''
I
raise the ·continue to support this
Circle, whichJwould hope
question, . is the Circle sup-
newpaper when it reduces the
hav~ impacted the Marist
posed_ to
be
an Academic Pa-· tradition
of
Saint· Marcellin
community. However, last
per,
which yoices the· concerns
Champagnatt;
·
_ . . . .
weeks issue read like a fifteen
ofMarist. students,•· or
a
scan-
One has no rational for the re-
. page spread of the National
dalouspublication whichadvo-
cerit trend of anti-Catholic ar-
Enquirer.
.. ... _
.
. cates the dumbing down of ·
tides that haveinade their way
.·.

Who gave y()~ guys. _ _
higher ~ucation. -Th~·spirit of to the Circle. -Then again, if the
germissiontg print theJetter
Ray BradbllI}''s Fahre°'1eit451 · Cu:cle staff promotes questions
fyom Il)tanHunter
to
Kristine:
resonates <within· the lowered
about
a$$•
and the degredation.
Dunn? The publication of that
· standards . the Circle has pr<>-'
of· their peers/like Kristine
. l1r~r embarrasses I(,ristine,.
-

..
moted by publishing such -
Dunn, -then ·it is_ obvious why
'the Circle staff and the factdty
questions and articles; _ _
they would also attack the
'
val-
advisor, ~o~orilydidyou· _
.
Iri
tlie_end, th~question the
uesoftheCatholicChurch.The
_
di~edit afollo\V
peers
ability
Circle faculty must address is · circie is not the National
to serve her conuminity, but
whether they \Vant the-Cirlce'to
Enquirer, but an academic
you, on~ again lO\vered the
read1ike ·.
:
the New_
Yofk
Ttfues
paper.
It's ,time
it
started to :.-
stan~d of
this
off's,hoot
of
or
th~
Nation1fijq
11
irer. _
.. : • •
read like an academic paper. · ·. ·
the National
Enquirer.
·
.. _,•, . ..
RightnO\v)'(say that reader-
_
I also wo~der who h,as de-
shipjs quite low, and I attribute
Respectfully,
_
cided to permit the recent line · this to two thiitgs>-Thefack of -
·of questioning that has found .
·
crerubilitybroughtownbypoor ·BenjaminBrenkert
its way to the w_eekly question • judement
and
the lack
of
Sophomore
.. THE CIRCLE. .
-
the
student newspaper_ of m~rist
college
Jahn~
Tomeo&
Ciiris
Grogan
·
.
Editors-in-Chief
Jill Giocondo
&
Jefl'Dahncke
LisaBurke
Doug
Guarino
News Editor
Features Editor
Managing Editors
Mike
Bagnato
Chris
Knudtsen
Mike Ferraro
Opinion Editor
A&EEditor
Sports Editor
MikeHaigh
Mary Grodio
&
Greg Salomone
Plwto Editor
Colleen Barrett
Webmaster
Business Editors
Patrick
Whittle,
Staff CllU
G.Modele Clarke,
Faculty Advisor
The Circle
is the student newspaper of Marist College, Poughkeepsie,
NY.
Issues
are published every Thursday. We welcome letters to the editor, club announce-
ments and story ideas. We cannot publish unsigned letters to the editor.
The
Circle
staff can
be
reached at
575-3000 x2429
or by email at
HZAL.
You can
visit us on the web at
:/lwww.
academic.marist. edulcircle.










































































THE.
:
c1tca:
·
:
.
-

Op~Ed
The views expressed on these pages are
n:oi
necessarily those of
The
Circle
MAY4,2000
PAGE 9·.
Whittle's last stand
.
.
. byPATRICKWHITILE
thejoy of communal bathrooms
to make the ordinary become
for the first time. In retrospect.
extraordinary, to romanticize the
the freshman residence halls are
dull, and to
.
refuse to let any-
a perfect breeding ground for
thing take the smile from your
good socialists. The need to
face. Youth i~ idealism, ques-
c09perate to slUVive would give
tioning what you
think
is wrong,
Karl Marx something to
be
proud
and chasing your dreams no
of: This "sharing" yirtue is also
matter how far fetched. And in
visible in the cohabitation prac-
my case, consuming plenty of
tices of residents of the afore-
root beer.
mentioned halls, but
I
am not
Something
I
wish
I
had learned
sure what Marx would have to
at a younger age is that positiv-
say about that
ity is hopelessly underrated
.
The finality of senior year is
"College age" is a time when
cause for as much celebration~
positivity and idealism can be
As
I sit down to write this fi-
it is speculation. While many of
easily mistaken for naivete and
naI
chapter in my collegiate ex-
us are as clueless about our fu-
ignorance.
In
all fairness, which
perience, I
realize
why we spend
ture now as we were
freshman
could be more ignorant to cyni-
$80,000 and four years of our
year, certainly we
are
all happy
cally look for the darkest cloud
lives pursuing
a
piece of paper to be
_
casting aside the chains of
in the bluest sky orto"naively"
and a lovely cap and gown en-
our daily routines, meeting new
.
hope for the silver lining in a
.
semble. Unfortunately, this
.
fac~s. and
,
e?(periencing new
cloudiest sky?
A
positive per-
knowledge is coming
too
nie far
things. Eventually some of us
son questions,
seeks
truth, and
after it would have been
of
use
will be d¥ing en~ugh to expand
finds answers. The negative,
to me. College is
.
not about
8
our culinary tastes beyond pizza
·
cynical
and judgmental
are
more
o'clock classes, cramming for
and bagels, as those are surely
apt to accept a bad situation.
tests, stealing text books from
the only luxuries afforded to col-
Whether you
are
·
1
s
or 118, that
an overpriced bookstore, or cul-
lege students. Soon new rou-
should be an easy choice to
minating each week at the same
tines will set in, the new faces
make. As college students, we
bars. And although sometimes
will become old faces, and the
live in an environment that fos-
it feels like it, college is not even
new things will become com-
ters expanding our knowledge
·
about playing Frisbee.
monpiace. Ifl may be so bold,
I
of our world and ourselves.
College is a personal evolution.
would like to offer two of the
Taking advantage of this is the
.
.
.
Identities are lost and found,
more important revelations that
most positive thing we can
Th
.
·
Am
·
··
·
·
sqmetirnes several times in some
have come to me over my own
do.
e
ugli•
~
.
.
e
·
n•can
individuals. Inhibitions and in-
four-year evolution at Marist.
Four years at Marist were four
·
·
.
·
· . . .
.
~L:
· •
· .
,.
~
. .• _·
·• ·.
.
.
·

nocence f~l prey to this new
Most importantly, youth does . years well spent.
I
must take
.
.-,.
experience for many~ for better .
.
not cease at the end of high
the opportunity to thank every-
.
by
DF;RRJ~A.Jq~n
.
·,
.

,
broken down by C(\mb?,l:-atl1'e4
..
or worse. For some, dreams and
scn.~ol, at
fu.~
eriq
_
pf college, at
one who
"
took
.
10
minutes of
.
Political Columnist:
,
: '.
.
troops with automatic w~ons,
.
aspirations are found, chased,
die first sign of hair-loss, or even
.
their
'
day to·~e~d-ii:ifco'iumrt:S:
. '"
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
whofater, according'to the fam-
and attained. For
.
others,
thty
.
when you start to show a legiti-
whether it was a week in which
I
The violent and unnecessary,
.
.
il y, trashed the house and are lost or traded in for a rimg in
mate concern in thl!tgs like401
K
wrote about the price of rice in
·
_
seizure
·
and removal
.
of.
Elian
smashed
,
religious icons in the the corporate ladder
,
All
of us
plans and financing your wed-
.
China or my affinity for
.
The
Go~ez from
his
.
Miami
home
.
middle of the night.
.
Are
we arrived at Marist with some sort
.
ding
.
.
Youth ends
.
when you
Simpsons
.
Most importantly,
c a ~ Iandmanyot;her Ametj-
.
.
going to have a situation
iri
this
·
of goal in mind, whether that
.
want itto end, and you are ready
thank you to G. Modele Clarke
cans to be shocked and horri-
country where the ends justify goal was to
grab
the
·
world by
to be considered an adult.
for four years of guidance and
fied atthe actions of our goy-
the means, when we do11'thave
the ears and make it listen, to
That's the good part The bad
friendship
.
emment It wasAttorney Oen-
our top law enforcement people strive to become a more fulfilled
part is thatyouth ends when you
.
Finally, thank you to anyone
eral,JanetRenothatdecidedto

abidingbythelawsoftheland? person,.or just to have a good
decidethattheweeklypaycheck
has.chosen or wilLchoose·to
raid the home.of pdv~~ Ameri-
Has the precedent been set that time. All are valid, if imperma-
and the daily drudge are more
channel outrage into creativity
.
can citizens to settle
~
custody
.
anybody~s
.
home can have their nent. stations in life.
·
.
important to you than the color
and compassion. The future is
battle.
~ere
.
are
no C>therwords
doors
.
broken down and can be
Fall
of
1996
is a distant memory
in life. When you have to make
ours; as individuals we can
to describe her actions but as
:
a
trashecLbecause the govern-
for some, but it was
.
when most
time to have fun, your youth has
strive for a better tomorrow or
.
~stia.me .
.
The quesffon <'>f
.
ment:thinksomething's wrong?
.
of the graduating senior
.
class
officially ended. Youth
·
does
not
simply try not to screw it up too
-
this controvetsyJs; was
.
the
.
ThisisnotcominunistChina,',we moved away from home.took
necessarily entail a lack of re-
badly. I know my choice.
Attorney General Justified
jn
-
arein America and Americans
.
coU~ge
classes; an~
experienced
sponsibility, btit rather a desire
ordering the raid ofJlie
,
home
.
:
·
e,verywhe~
;
s~<>uJ.cl
~
o~~ged
.
A
..
b
.
.
.
.
.
d
d
~:~;:-~~i!dtt
~:t~;t~"fil';:!~ti
n
·
roa
·
stu en t urges
which
.
protects American Citi-
in
_
no way should tlie separation
zens
from imreasonable search froin his
Miami
felativeshave
o·t·h
.
·
er
·
s
·
to
I
.
E.
andseizures?"Theans~er
.
is
,
beeridoneinthatfashion. For
.
·
.
.
exp
.
ore urope
HELL
NO!!!
·
Janet Reno must this Janet
R~nb:
you are
in
·
ev-
have tllought that it was David
ery way, the ugliest American.
Karish and not the lawyer
re~
,
resenting Elian's
Miami
rela-

The~Days
.
lives she was negQtiating
with.
-
She
thought itwas Waco all
over again and it was time to
sendinaq:nedcomniandos. No,
Ms. Reno, it was
.not
Waco, it
was a six year old boy involved
in
a:
custody battle.
·
hi
no way
should the government have
intervened in
a
custody dispute
that should take place in family
court
·
The ends did not justify the
means in this
case.
There were
other options that were avail-
able in removing Elian from the
home. Ever heard of Jetting the
judicial process
.
run its course
and the
courts
deciding where
he should go.
·
No
matter
what
the case was, it should have
been peaceful. Instead a law-
abiding family's doors were
It seems that
in
his life after
the presidency,
Bill
Clinton
wants to be a comedian. Clinton
has
made
a
movie spoofing
him-
self in his last days in office.
This tomfoolery is not only asi-
nine, it is a disgusting use of the
White House. How can those
affiliated with the Democratic
Party
condone such nonsense?
(On second thougl!t why
·
ask
·
that to
a
party who has Al Gore
as its presidential nominee.)
The
Last Days? Don't let the door
hit you in the ass on your way
out.
I would just like to thank
Patrick Whittle for all the help
throughout
.
the past two years
byTRACEYCARANGELO
:
This article is being written
with. the intent to convince as
many people as possible to
study abroad .
.
I
am here in
Madrid, Spain, the second se-
mester of my junior year, hav-
ing the time of my life. Although
this undescribeable experience
will
soon come to end,
I
have
been wishing I had stayed here
for two semesters.
I
have ac-
.
complished a lot so far but there
is always more.
So you may be wondering
why I
am
telling you this but it
isn't something that I could just
let go or forget My goal now is
to persuade others that they too
can
make it one semester or two,
away from Marist College. Not
that
I
don't loye the red foxes or
anything, but if you can go
away and experience something
new and adapt to a
_
new culture,
I guarantee you won't regret it
and undoubtedly learn from the
experience.
I mean, why not? What have
you got to lose?
If
you are afraid
that you are going to miss
peopl~-if they
are
true friends,
they will still
be
there when you
get back and supporting you
the whole time anyway. Not to
mention, if you feel you could
never make
.
it out of the country
for so long, don't worry! You
create your days and you de-
cide what you do and there are
always are Americans wherever
· you go so you
can
actually go
away but not feel that you
are
away-get it? But, of course this
is not avisable and/or the
rea-
son one should go away.
Again, not to go on but i want
to express th~t you make the
most of what you do. So if you
want a challenge, something
new, something interesting in-
stead of the same old Marist life,
th
_
en do it Go away and prove it
to yourself. The benefits out-
weigh the problems, if any. The
hardest feat that I have con-
quered has been actually sitting
down trying to do work because
there is so much to do and so
much to
see.
There is always a lot of op-
portunity to travel too so the
more you
see
the better,
_right?
Research countries and pro-
grams, then do it Try it for a
year and if you can't,
a
semes-
ter.
If
one thing
I
have learned
here, is that time
flies.
You have
to be prepared but flexible and
make the most of your days.
If
anyone has any questions about
·
anything or needs further en-
couragement that it is okay to
go abroad, email me ... k3s3






























































































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mt:
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c1acm
"MAY 4, 2000
/Qi!)~Ed
'
·
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'
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'

'
'
'
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·
·
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The views
expressed on these
pages
are
not
necessarily
those
Of
The Circle
··- '' · .
.
FrauSigrid
-
Bnµtdis
.
gay~
.
TJ[).Q~
-
Jliaij6¢tqm,fifu
',
Sffi
_
~Dts
byKARENE.SHULTL
a
diploma; I have been given
nections lever made happened
and let you forget abou(your
teUycniso much
-
~bout
·
From
·
connections'that will carry me
when I walked into
my
Gennan
busy schedule f (?r seventy-five
the people she
'
intrc,duced
·
me
It is hard to believe.I'm a se-
throughout my life.
.
class fres~an yea,r andmet my
.
minutes
_;
Frau made it fun;
to, to the country s,he helped me
nior and that in a few short
.
For thirty-twQ
,
years Frau
professor, FrimBrandis. ·unlike
·
Last year when I ~as in Ger-
to se
'
e close up;
-
Frau
~
set me
.
·
weeks
I
will receive my diploma
Sigrid Brandis taught German to
the three Gennan teacheri.
I
had
many
I
would write to Frau and
upon a greater path oflife
:
More
and officially mark the end of the students of Marist College,
had
in
high school, she forever
give her.the update on my Ger-
important than<what l
:
.
saw,
my undergraduate study at· linking us to a language and a
adapte~ to her students always
many
·
experiences both in and · wrote, and the grades Irece~ved,
Marist. Four years of co1lege
culture she knew
_
firsthand. I
seeking out new ways to keep
out of classes .
.
She said she was
are the connections Frau gave
seem to have soared by. As a
was both shocked and sad-
class'interesting and
-
keep us
"very interested" to see what
I
me to a languag~l the connec
.::
freshman
I
was still reflecting
dened to learn of Frau's death
talking in
;
German.
:
She e~-
would say aboufmy Germany
tions
i
have to Frau. With her
back on high school, with little
on March 2§, 2000. For all the
braced my
dream
of studying in
experience after I would return
.
playfulteaching
scyi~
ru1.d loye
'ihought of my senior year of students who enjoyed sharing
Germany and dideverythingin
I'm glad that I was able
to
show
.
of
life she cultivated corinec-
·
college c
'
rossing my mind. It
their lives and her spirit,she will
her power to help me get there.
.
her and tell her all about what
I
tions within her students so we
was so far off. Now three years
be
.
deeply missed. My relation-
From connecting m~ with other had done
,
because she was such
.
.
could become the people we al-
at Marist, one year o
f
studying
ship with Frau has taken on a
study abroad students to writ-
a large part of me gettil)g
ways
'
wanted to be.
_
Lorig after
in Gennany, and two internships
level I
ing recommendations, Frau was
there.
.
·
Marisi is just another thing ( did
later, it is finally sinking in. If never thought it would.
I
just
a cheering· se
·
ction anyone
.
Frau was a lover of life !llld
a
.
·
with my life;
hyill
still have the
anything my college goals back
naively assumed that Frau
would envy. Hooked forward
champion of adventure. She
connections from and to Frau
.
then were to study abroad for a
would always be at Marist
·
to Friday Gennan classes with
genuinelycaredandkeptincon-
.
The connection to life, to
:
Ger-
year, do well at Mari st and
teaching her students to sing
Frau, as did many ofher stu-
tact with her students long after
man, and to the spirit of a per
:
graduate in four years with
and speak in German.
,
.
dents. From fi
_
eld trips to par".'
they left the classroom. She was
sori
:
we all
will
·
hold within us
something to show for it. But in
They say that being a success
ties, quizzes, presentations,
real,
·
.
.
forever.
.
.
.
_
.
.
_
.
my four years of college I have
in the real world is all about con-
games, and readings; Geiman
_
My years with Frau were all
.
Thank you Frau
:
Brandis
,
for
achieved more than grades and
nections. One of the best con-
class was sure to Uftyour mood
.
about

those
·
connections
·
they
everything
.
.
.
.
Saba
still rushinG the
HELL
away
froJ;)]. sororities
by
SABA CHOUDRY
ment on me
,
indiyid~ . y. An?,
~me to talk ~o me when
l
walk
f?r mor~_and more subdivisiops
·
w~ote
·
articles were original
I
would just like to start out
yes,
I
am an md1v1dual.
mt9 McCoys and have a guy
fdled wi
_
th yet another May
-
enough to make up there own
by saying "I'm sorry." No, wait;
Hmm ..
.!'
m pretty, sure
.
that
~ake fun of m~ .. .1' Maybe. it's
flo~er Co~pact of rules. Soci-
insults •so they
.
kept reusirig
that's what! wouldcallconfonn-
·
?1eans th
_
at you ar?n t and ~ave
tune to startputtingado~npay-
·
ety mgeneral has its <,>wn prob-
yours).
·
ing for everyone's benefit. But Just proved my p~mt-entirely:
ment on those ther~py b11Js.
.
.
lems ..
'.
. .
.

_
_
.
.
!didn't realize how much an
hey, even I h_ave to admit that
You have e!11bodied your group.
. There was all this ~omplam-
... .I ~as also con:ectthat soro~:..
affect this would have on ev-
~ose letters were ~yond
an:iaz-
You, aren t Anna a~y~ore.
mg of you know nothmg ofour 1ty girls make ~ose. th~t don t
.
eryone. Wi'th the response.rm
mg. Congratulations! You are
Yo~ re A:nna the soronty siste!'.
secret cul! an? ~e not ~lowed
pledge
t?
b~ anti-soc!al1tes
.
)'et
getting,
you'd think I ran out-
now individuals. (Refer back to
A ~irect
_
msultto your group 1s
to form anopm10n.
I
guess you
yo~ all hve m these httleGreek
··
side and
.
started screaming
.
third word in title-add ans-then
a direct msult to you. As soon
guys -~ere right.
I
for~ot that
.
worlds_ thinking that no one ~an
Guess
.
that's what
.
happens
.
add the word no !
_
).Anrw~y, as
as I figure out how th,at makes
sqro~ties were second
m
com-
real~y hv~ ~on.nally ~d fu11ct10~
'Nhen you
form
an opiiµol1., .
.
lexpectedlgotthe'.'G1rlfnend, • youyourownpersonl llbesure
plex1tyto
.
<>penheartsurgery.As socially outside of them. You
·
.. .In
·
conclusion all those
:you mu~t
~e
_dropp~:n
~
acid, . to .. contact:yo~
.
:
.
·
. . -
.
soon
·
!),s lpass the MKA'!''sJ'~I
·
..
_
don't Jqio~ ~ow wrong ~ou are.
_ :
Jhings yqu'.v~"claitriedJ<?
.
~o:
· .
~ause you
l:nppm
?
"
re,sponse.
l
/
lstandbeh1n,d my;?rgamza-
.
be Stire tC>
,
clore~earch )~
:
this
,,
J.
~av~
,-
fnends;
_'
X?u·,m1ght
be·
-
'
'
findin.ffneri<is',"
volunteering,
JU~t want all
·
0~ us to clear our
tlon ,no
,
ma~er
:
What._
.
Another
field. Not to men~on, everyone
t~mk!?g,
-
"~ow
I~
;
th~t
pos-
·

:-
doing good
foi
the coimminity
mmds _and thmk. ~o harsh
helpmg ofblmd o,~ence
_
here.
felt the !1eed to bnng up random s1ble? Well, its qm!e su~p~~--I
can be
.
done with
.
out a sorority
.
words, Just pure physical beat"-
Sweetheart, don. t JU~t blmdly
du?s hke the
.
Chess Club for
~ay for them. There
.
~ an mitia-
·
So
;
m
f
question remains: why
ings.
.
. .
.
.
.
obey .• ;cause,I IIDghtJu,st h~ve
.
-
Amm~l
.
Lovers
:
,
and the
·
tionJ~~
-
and ~en
_
we buy
;-
~ach
make this int<i
'
a group everit?
:
My imtlal pomt was that so-
to meet you at Heavens Gate.
Crackwhore Self-Esteem Group
other
.
httle
gifts
·
at

random
.
to
You have attracted those that
rorities
~~
a_way _from the es-
Save _me a seat.th~ks,
~~t lo and h<,>W If~ed to m~1_1tion their show
ho\V
m_uch we}ove e~ch
·
just waritt6fitin; the followers
.
sence of md1V1dual1sm
.
Alll
got
mention
.
the passion this girl
usefulness m my article.
~ther.Ials~hked the followmg

Break the
·
group and everyone
back was that
'.
you guys don:t
hadabou~howmuchsheloved
pieq I thought, they hav~,a
.
lme':
..
lhave
.
~lofthesewomen
·
istheiro\Vllleader.Sincegroups
~ear fleec~ vests and the repeti-
her soronty
.
~ell
I
~a_s pr~ud
p~mt. .. n?t a good one ... but it s
·
to depend
.
on mthe fyture Sa~a,
hl'lve
restrictions, rules, etc
:
, one
tive
'
questlon of '.
'
Haven't )'.OU
to see that passion.I dJUSt bke
sun_ a pomt .
.
• .
.
,
.
•.
.
h~w a~out y_o~?" Afterreadmg
·

needs'to do
as
much as pos
'
sible
ever wanted to be ma group like
to send that message outto Ms.
First of all, the article wasn'
.
t
that-I 1~ediately wet myself
td
allow
for
the
~se
of all our
this beforeT No one really came
Name Withheld
. .

.
. :
named
·
'
'Random
·
Groups And
fyOJ!l
pure fear ofnot
.
havi!)g
~y-
_
fi-tfdorif
and
ex ression. You
'11
-
close to refuting the argument.
And the last hne
,.
i\1:en ..
:
it
;'
TlleirAffec~ On Sa~a'Un gen
~
:
on~ t<,> ever

love me
;
I guess
-
·
e
t
more out of
O
le
fr
the

The clo~est anyone ~ot was "I
?roke ~y heart
'.
When dJSC~~s-
.
_,
eral I thi~k groups ru:~bad. It is
she's right
:
I'm. the ci~ewithllle
.
tiiy
'
i
x
,Rres's
'
the~eiv6s.
Oka?.
alsobehevethatany~udgement
mg~eimpo~ceofbemgma a necessity to foryn
S?IDt": type
_
self
~
est~m
.
of agemus
_
be!l~~
L
•uitff ufod that sonieorie
pa~s~d ~nmy
·
SOro?ty; ?r so-
..
sor~nty,,<me girl wro~e thefo!-
of ~oup
_
tO
.
f\!p.
.5-
~ont!) il~~~
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'
que~n
.

~pote
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to
<
S
,
a.ba:
.
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.
1
~
IS
-
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rde.aeJ
·
tEsa
someihiii
''
/
:
.
ront1es
m
general,
IS
'
a Judge-
lowmg.
·
.
They sacnfice
-
their society but there is ~sQno
_
11eed
_:
,
-
known
~
none ofthe
.
gids
.
who
/
;
.
t
,
<i
.'
r
'-,
";'
y
• .:
:c,_
-
,
}
_
.:.:;
.
Former dormerdeIVes
int{>
/
the
<}~f!l~i(le
Of
,
cJOrming


-
> .
,
by
NIKBONOPARTIS
have reached
.
a such a pinnacle
'
m
_
ove soine stuff around, and
'
''Y'<>~rbathroolll is
,
disgust-
'
appalling;in a hideous, matted
of
'
uncleanness that it extends
'
you realize
'
there's eggs; cheese,
·
.
·
_
ing;".
S~rry
said. "Li~e,ldon't conglomer~ticm that si
_
ts in
~
This article will serve
as
an ex-
to all facets of the living arrange-
.
and other stuff from last semes-
.
think you
'
ve ever thrown out an
'
-
puddle among the dampness of
ample of sorts
·
to those who
ment I
_
thought about this one _ter
:
And in the back, I mean all
empty
.
roll oftoiletpaper."
.,
..
·
.
·
thebaihroom floor.
have always wondered what it's
_
day as an absolutely gorgeous the way
in
the back, that's where
Sperry contimied on to com-
:
"You
·
get
.
in there
;
and you
like to Ii ve
in
.
a Marist
.
sophomore visitor to my abode
it
iealJy starts to get nasty
.
-
ment on the state of the kitchen
have to
_
do that five.;.minutepre-
townhouse;
-
to allfreshmari,
-
a
pointed out
;
of .all things, the You
_
've got a package of sausage
,
in her house.
.
.
-
.
wash before you can jump
in,"
few sophonior~s. even
_
Marist one part of
my
house I ihought all the way in the back of the
'
"J>eople say that '\Ve_stCedar
z
~aid of the sho~~r .
..
"And you
faculty and
.
staff, and all those
a memberof the female popula-
freez:er, with maybe one link left,
s~de~ts are lucky
.
to)av~ dish-
.
don't want to 'fouch
~
anything
·
who
walk
by the flagship hous-
ti
on would never notice. ·
and you look at the ·date and'it's
washers, when iri facqhey're
.
with your hands, so you end up
- ingarrangementsofMaristand·
. "Youtstairs are filthy!" she .fromthefirstweekofschool."
thecauseofsomanyprobleins,"
trying to splash the
.
water :So
say' to themselves "Well, the
said, and !immediately resigned
So maybe that's why it always
Sperry said
;_
"I don't understand
everything washes into the
outside looks really nice." Hah.
to this fact with the full know I-
smells like the Sheahan funk ev-
why people put
pirty
dishes in
drain, and that's where you get
You have to wonder sometimes
edge that they were indeedatro-
ery
·
time we open the fridge. I
the sink when the dishwasheiis
your overflow."
what comes out of sticking eight cious. But, l reflected, at least wonder~d whether
.
the female
empty.
·
But your bathroom
.
.. "
Z's comments
·
were met with
to ten people in a house where
she didn't see the bathroom.
populationherewouldhavesimi-
And
_
she rolled her eyes.
an upro;rr
·
ofhilarioi.Js approval
'
space is restricted
.
and person-
One ofmy roommates,noted
Jar
problems, so I journeyed to
So what about the bathroom?
from
.
the observing crowd.
alities clash almost as much as
philosopher Mike Z.,
·
summed the other side of West Cedar to
.
W~at aura of
.
mystique
·
sur-
Maybe
·
he should do stand:-up
living styles. So, without fur-
up the problem exactly.
interview ~e on.e house of girls
rounds this cavern that serves
comedy. In all, it was never fully
therinterruptions or sugar coat-
.
''Well; the kitchen, that's re-
·J
knew were messier than us.
as a trib11fe to ~e Gods of por-
.
.
de<;:
_
ided who had the filthier
ing,l'dliketodelveintothedark allywhereyoucaritellwhatkind
"I've never seen our house
celain iri our house'?
.
,
house, u
·
s or.the girls a
·
fow
side of donning.
of people you're dealing with," cleaner than on parent's week-
Again, the talents of Mike Z.
doors down. But we all agreed
Upperclass housing is Z noted. uYou open the fridge, end," junior Melanie Rago said.
were needed to asses the prob-
that no matter what kind of ef-
,
unique. You
_
have an obscene
and the odor of milk that's like 2 "Just because there's no sched:.
Iem. Apparently a sasquatch
fon is put into keeping the place
amount of people living under weeks outdated just hits you, ule doesn't mean it shouldn't be
regularly bathes himself in our cleari,
it
just doesn't work out.
one roof, a situation that
recre-
and it's disgusting."
cleaned, but it never gets done.
lavatory, because ~ere's hair -
So, freshmen, that's what you
ates MTV's Real World to a tee.
But Z would not halt his
But Jenn Sperry, a housemate
everywhere.
On
the shower ba-
.
have to look forward to.
And out of all the people living
ponderings there.
of Rago 's, was pointed out that
sin floor, clinging to the shower
there, there are always the two,
"And maybe it looks ok at my house was on par with theirs
curtain in
_
the most disgusting
maybe
·
even three or four that first," he said. "But then you in tenns of mess factor.
·
arrangements, and perhaps most
.









































































































































-
:
M~y
:
4,
2000
by
ADAM KOWALSKI
.
Staff Writer
Top Five Most Annoying
Things in movies.
5)
Changing
the facts of the actual story to
make a better movie, i.e.
The
H~rricane
and
Erin
Broi:kovick
4)
Milking a movie
completely devoid
·
of any cre-
ative value but use WB teen
stars to try and bring in the
twelve-year-olds, i.e. "Gossip."
3) Blockbuster summer movies,
high on special effects and loud
.
·
.
.
,
.
.
.,,
.
.
.
_
,.
.
Photo courtesy ofTouchstooc Pictures
A confused John Cusack in High Fidelity.
noises that eliminate the need
she is leaving him forlan, a Bud-
to help Rob, in fact they drive
for decent acting. 2) Corey dhistplayed by Tim Robbins.
him nuts, but they are his
Feldman. l) Using a repetitive
As soon as Rob fiQds out about
·
friends so he won't fire them
.
annoying gimmick to progress
· ·
Ian, from a mutual friend; played
Jack Black is by far this mov-
the story and
take
up space, like
by Joan Cusack, he is deter-
ies standout performance, pro-
.
~hese stupid top five lists which
mined to find out why. Rob re-
vidfog ~qmic relief and at times
..
make iip almost all
ofHiglz Fi-
sorts
to
stalking Laura while
the movies
.
only bearable char-
deliti
_
tracking do"wn
his
otherex
~
girJ-
·
acter.
·
sfack has appeared in
._
~f
you take the top five lists
friends and learning the reason_s
many other movies such as
E,i~
·
·
outofthemovieitisaverywell
why they left. The ex-es are
emyoj the State; Dead Man
done film. Unfortunately right
played by Lily Taylor, Joelle
Walking,
and
Mars Attacks!
from the start these lists come
Carter and Catherine
_
Zeta-
.
This is· easily his best perfor-
up constantly·aboutstlipid and Jones. The other women who
mance. You can also catch him
·
little thing.
·
The movie·centers
walk in and out of Rob's
life
touring the world with his
around Rob Gordon, played by
throughout the movie an~ Lisa
"band"
Tenacious D
;
they are
John Cusack, who

owns a
Bonet, as musician Marie de
wellworthitforthecomicvalue.
record store (actual records, not Salle, and Natasha Gregson
.
Although this movie is a little
CD'.s) and has a problematic
.
Wagner, as newspaper colum-
on the long side, and the top
love life. The top five list that
nist Caroline. Rob finds himself five lists
·
get a little tedious, it is
the
·
movie
·
revolves around is
.
trying to navigate
·
through all
worth seeing. The look that Rob
Rob's top five most memorable
_
these women trying to figure out
takes at his relationships even-
break-ul)s, \Vhi~h h
_
is current
.
wha,t happens jn
·
his relation-
·
tually leads him to take a long
girlfriend has just altered by leav-
..
ships. .
.
.

'.
;,
,
,.
. - .
;

.
, ·
· ·
.
look at his·life and by the end of

..
fog
'
him:

·
Rob
goes
on:
on'e o{;
,
;
,;"'.
:As~isting,
,
9.t
,
ltindering,
;
de-
.. ,
;
the fi.lm'

he
·
s
·
tarts
•-
'
to

make
,
:
::
·
\
·
--•
:
.
.
;
:
:(;
J,
·
.
,
:,
,
_._,
~_~,.:
..
·r;
1.
-!_:·!
'':.
.'_
r q !
.
.
.
-
.

.:
.
.
.

,

.
·
_
·
th~~~
,
soul
i
'S~~
-
r5f1!J~
.
1t
.
~11~s to
.
p~n~zng. on Y,qur pe_rspecttve,
,
changes. John Cusack puts
in
·
try
_
and find outwhy
;
,
none of . Rqpmh1squestareh1semploy-
agoodperfonnancethatisout-
.
his relationships ev~~work out.
:
ees at Champion~hip Vinyl,
shined by an exceptional cast

ni.~
w
_
oineil in
_
his
_
life
are
. ·
Barry and Dick, played by Jack
·
at times , especially Jack Black
;
playe4
by
_
a
":'ide
_
vatjety of ac-
.
Black and Todd
_
Louiso
.
Dick is
.
and Tim Robbins.

This is one
·
.
tresses
.
His
·
ctirr¢lit
·
girlfriend
.
a
shy
;
quiet person who tried to
·
·
of the best movies that
I
have
La~ridsplay_e~
hy
'
tJ>en.HJ~jle,
.,
avoid confrontatio~; the
,
very
seen in a while, but I can't fig-
.
who is starring in her first major

aggressive Barry makes this ex-
ure out if it is because this is
Amiricao
·
film:
.
tauraJ~aves tre~ely difficult. These two
actually that good, or every-
·
·
R,~
-
~•
~tit neglects to tell hi!D
.
tha
_
t
:
characters basically do nothing
thing else
is
just really bad
.
.
-
'.
'
.
.
'
'.
.
-
.
.

.
~
,
. ~·
.
WM.CJ
is
:
communicating
.
.
·
fine>with]\farisf.f?ollegtr
,,.:.
:
·
·
.,
TJ
t~·}
~:~~
t
r
--
Jf}
f"'(; ~}
.{
\
s
,
~h}
'
/'.
·
'::.
·
:
~~.:--
W
\
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'-
ff
'
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L
\
i".

·
-
·
.
'
bySTEVEVITi'ORIA
.
he
"
litetally threw The Circle af have
.
turned heads
as
a campus
Staff Writer
me and I quicklr r.ead the article.
.
.
organization \illd have achieved
·
'
·.
·
I
.
spent three mote hours ~ith
:. ·
the funds necessary to update
In regards th
the
article printed
.
·
the family that day showing
0!(r technology accordingly. As
1n
'
the April 6, 2000 issue of The
them arourid and attempting to
the station grows, hopefully our
Circle entitled "Marist Cominu-
.
explain wliy that' article ap-
budget will allow us to continue
nicatlons are Jacking with the
peared, and how
·
we are better
·
the maintenance and promotion,
radio,'' I would like to voice my
·
than the article gave us credit
and gain a large listening popu-
.
own
opinion
:
ram the promo-
for.
_
.
.
.
lation in the process. Only the
ti'dns director with WMCR and
Wh~t
~
do not und,e~~~d is
·
·.
backing of the college faculty,
·-
I have
'
heen
·
tunning
·
arotind
·
·
how
·
just one week prior to the
.
staff, and students will allow us
.
doing all I can within legal
printing of the aforemerition
·
ed
.
to proiiferate
·
to
'
our full poten-
school limits to spread the word
·
article; ari article was printed
tfaJ as a college radio station.
about our station.
about how Ian Philbrick turned
We must, however, not lose
During the open house activi-
-
the radio
·
station "upside sight of the fact that FCC regu-
.
ties fair, however, I had a female
down." What I
wanna
stress,
Jations prevent us from turning
senior in high school approach
is how that particular quote is
up our signal. We need to pur-
the WMCR table with her fam-
absolutely true .
.I
have been on
chase an educational license
ily. She asked
if
I could show
staff with WMCR
·
for 2 years
before that can happen, and we
her the studio and I gladly
now and _there is 9ot
.
a
:_
single
s
_
till need to make a few more
obliged. After a tour of th~ sti.t~
·
.
!hlng that relllains th
_
e
same
from
iinP,r<>vements until we reach
dio
and seeing alJ the "t1ew
Just 3 semt:5ters a~o'.
·
W~ ~ave
,.
th;it s~ge. Hopefully, the relo-
.
equipment we have, her father
all new eqmpment, the abthty to
· ·
cation of our antenna will allow
turned to me and said, "I put callers on the ~ir, the ability
us to reach the campus loud and
haven'tseenanythingherethat
to do live
.
broadcasts from
clear. TheentireWMCRstaffis
wouldmakemeunderstandwhy
events both on and off
_
the
work
_
ing harder than ever to
the paper would write an article
.
Marist campus, as well a
~
a staff bring you music, sports, news,
Jiketheydid." to this comment,
of enthusiastic DJ's and direc-
andotherqualityprogramming.
1
questioned him, "what ar-
_;
.
tors ~hat wan~ nothing more
.
.
Ourst_ati~n is better now than it
tide?" Up until that point, I
-
than
to
be
'
li~!ened to;
.
.
.
.
·
.
:
~as
·
,
~y~~
-
~~
!
an~
it ~ill con-
.
hadn't had a chance to read the
·
·
As f¥ as
li!~
s~}:l~! s
_
support
t1riue to
_
m;iprove
,
wJ_th your
S).lp-
paper that week. That is when
for'the
'
statfon "fii1ancially
;
we
port.
·
·
·'
··
·
·
·
PAGE 11

























































i
r
,
_
.
..
·
-
.
.
'
\
\
' \
\ '
..
'
• • ' I
" I \ \
'
\
' \ •
.
'
'
'
'
\
'
.
.
\
'
.
.
.
' ' \
\
I
'
I
\ '
\ • '
'
byM1KE1HOMPSON
Staff Writer
Well, this is it. My last "On
TV" column of the 1999-2000
school year. Over the last eight
months, I hope I've kept you
entertained.
I know I've kept
myself entertained. I'd like to
say that knowing that I've
amused myself is all that mat-
ters, but I'd be lying. After all,
this column is for you, the
would-be couch potatoes that
help to make up the Marist com-
munity. So, I thought that in this
column for you, I'd do a tribute
to a show that
1 know many of
you have watched since the
time you got your very first zit.
I'm
talking about
Beverly Hills,
90210,
which is leaving the air
-
waves after ten years.
I
doubt there is a student on
campus who isn't at least some-
what familiar
withBeverly Hills,
90210
(which is commonly
known as
90210).
The show de-
buted in 1990, when most of us
were just finishing
up
grammar
school or just starting junior
high. Though
I had seen
bits
and pieces ofit before, my per-
sonal introduction to
90210
came in 1991, when I watched a
dubbed~in-Spanish version of it
in my Spanish class. That was
during the show's early years,
when twins Brandon (Jason
Priestly) and Brenda (Shannen
Doherty) Walsh were the main
characters on the show. The two
had moved to Beverly Hills
(quick; guess the zip code) from
Minnesota with their parents
Cindy. At their new high school,
Brandon and Brenda quickly
·
THE
'
CIRCCLE
Arts
·
&
Entertainment
PAGE12
On
TV
90210
ends after
with
d
d
-
MikeThony,son
a eca e
make friends, and the dramatic
misadventures begin.
The
90210
gang graduated
high school in 1993 and went
on to college. In the type of
wonderful coincidence that
only happens in television land,
they all wind up at the same col-
lege together ( except, of course,
for Dylan, the James Dean-ish
loner, played by Luke Perry).
Things don't stay that way for
long, though. Who doesn't re-
member at least some of
Shannen Doherty's alleged
troubles on the set? Well, at the
close of the fourth (1993-94)
Photo counesy of Fo~
Say goodbye to the cast of 90210.
season, Brenda got shipped off However, I recently viewed an
to London, and Doherty left the
early episode of the series and
show. Taking her place was
found myselfenjoying it in spite
Valerie Malone (Tiffani-Amber
of myself (and also laughing at
Thiessen), the wild girl with a
the dorky 1990 fashions and
taste for pot and men. Several
music, before
I
realized that that
original characters, including
was the way it really was). Then
Dylan and the parents Walsh,
it hit me:
90210
is the ultimate
left the series at the end of the
guilty pleasure.
fifth season. The gang gradu-
Come on, whodoesn'tremem-
ated college in
1997, and Bran-
ber when Dylan's dad blew up
_
don and Valerie both left (which, it was recently di-
Beverly Hills
in 1998, at the
vulged), or when his new bride
start of
902JO's
ninth season.
was gunned down the day after
Dylan returned to the series
their wedding? Who didn't
around this time.
shake their head in disapproval
I have to admit that, through-
when Kelly got hooked on co-
out the 1990s, I was never a big
caine?
:
But do people admit to
fanof90210. Though lama self-
knowing all this? Many don't.
confessed soap opera fan (All
Mosn,f those in denial are
My Children; it's my vice),
guys, who don't wantit known
90210
could be sometimes too
_
that they watch a prime-time
melodramatic for my tastes. And -soap that can sometimes be re-
let's face it: the show wasn't lentlessly cheesy, But at the
going to win any acting Emmys
same time it's captivating
,
partly
(although I was surprised to
because of the fact it's been on
find that it was nominated for
for ten years. It's become a part
two Golden Globes for acting;
of every 18-25 year-old's teen-
Jason Priestl~y,
_
arguably the age memories. Whether you
best actor on the show, was the
wantto admit it or not, you've
one nominated both times).
probably watched the show.
90210
has been a very impor-
tant show
in
the history of tele-
vision. There had been many
prime-time soap hits in the past,
but there was never a hit prime-
time soap opera that centered
around high school students.
Its popularity inspired several
other prime-time teen soap op-
eras. Ironically, it was a teen
soap opera that helped seal
90210's
fate. This season, it was
scheduled up against WB's hit
teen angst drama
Dawson's
.
·
Creek,
and its ratings took a dip.
Also, original cast
_
members
Bnan Austin Green and Tori
Spelling were _
set to exit the
show at the end of the season.
It seemed like
a
good time for
the cast and crew of
90210
to
·
call it a decade.
FOX
is heavily hyping the se-
ries finale of
90210.
Mum's the
word as to what will happen, al-
though Tiffani ·Thiessen (~ho
recently has dropped "Amber''
fr01nherm1me) and original cast
.
member Gabrielle Carteris (who
played Andrea Zuckerman for
the show's first five years) will
return. Rumor has it that David
(Green) and Donna (Spelling)
will tie the knot There's only
one way"to know for sure what
will happen, and that's to tune
in. The finale airs May 17th, and
by that time finals will be over,
so you'll have no legitimate ex-
cusefor missing the show. Yeah,
yeah, it's right in the middle of
Senior Week.
Cry
me a river, se- ·
niors.
,
That's no excuse for miss-
ing the finale. Come on, it's
90210.
Let's bid it, and the other
members of the Graduating
Class of 2000, a fond farewell.
And
now it's time for me to
say farewe11 for a few months.
But don't worry. I'm only a jun-
ior, so you'U have another year
of"On TV" columns to look for-
ward to. Like I said in the open-
-
ing paragraph, I hope you've
enjoyed my columns this year.
Maybe now
.
you're a choosier
TV viewer. Or maybe you think
I need to get a
Jife.
Whatever
the case, it's ~en a
.
fun year.
Peace out.
The
Arts and Entertainment section is seeking
new
writiirsfor
next year, please lookfor
The
Circle's table atn~xtfall's Activi-
ties fair
-:'~,
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THE CIRCLE
May 4, 2000
Arts
&
·
Entettainment
PAGE 13
The people still have a lot
·
to stay:
IMF protests
in
D.C.
by
CIDUSKNUDTSEN
A&E Editor
American workforce as compa-
nies leave the country for for-
eig11 markets where labor wages
Global interdependence and
are lower.
angry, frustrated, working citi-
This most recent weekend of
zens
are
not a promising couple
,
demonstrations was seen as the
no matter how much politicians
less violent sequel to the Seattle
around the world wish they
protests last'year
:
The motiva-
could be. The streets of Wash~
tion of protesters ranged from
ington D.C. were home to over
those concerned with the human
2,000 protesters on the weekend
rights of workers in nations
of April 16. College students,
such as China, .to those who
environmentalists, union work-
were worried about the environ-
ers, and other concerned citizens
.
..
mental practices of corpora-
organized to protest against the
tions, to those who were critical
International Monetary Fund
of how globalization will affect
(IMF) and the World Bank
.
the American workforce.
I
was
The World Trade Organization
therefor
the latter.
.
(WTO)cameunderpublicscru-
We arrived at a
:
camp site
tiny as a result of the riots in
where students from several
Seattle at the end 1999. The
colleges in the Hudson area
WTO, in conjunction with the
were staying around midnight
IMF and World Bank, are inter-
on Saturday, April 15. We were
national organizations that are
immediately informed that sev-
joining countries in an expand-
eral Vassar students had been
ing global economy. While this
arrested, along with over 600
may seern ideal, many citizens
other protesters, earlier in the
in the United States have be-
day while attending a legal dem-
come skeptical of their efforts
onstration
.
Tensions and anxi-
because they believe that a more
ety ran high as many began to
interdependent,
global
worry about how the police
economy will damage the
would meet protesters on the
following day.
After a brief, three hour nap in
a ·soggy and dilapidated tent,
our caravan of approximately 25
people left the site and towards
D.C.
·
We came in around 10 in
the morning and were immedi-
ately greeted on the street by a
convoy of police cars and mo-
torcycles with sirens and horns
·
blaring. The bike-cops repeat-
edly backfired as they passed,
hoping to intimidate the onlook-
ers. Along with the previously
mentioned P.Olice were police on
·
horseback, and the foot soldiers
in
full
riot gear
.
These
"robocops
"
were protected by
·
knee-high boots, heavy kevlar
vests, sleeved gloves, a helmet
with a visor, several canisters of
pepper spray, a tear gas gun,
and night stick.
There were scattered groups
marching across the city, some
merely marching with chants
,
some with rather creative signs
or other creations. A group of
five protesters had a giant card-
board mock~up Trojan horse
with a gift tag that read
"
from
the IMF." One eccentric dem-
Eye Contact
Universe
by
SEAN MACOMBER
I li
.
e with
_
mr kechingey~
-
- .
sure I'm free c'mon home with me
got
An
itdito
-
have
'.
some
:
sex
not with my wife
_
got her for life
new flavor on my tongue
fresh, virgin, young
why the need
.
. for time at a different speed?
Hey, go away
whythethoughtlcaught
in the contact with a place set
for a second where my first person
should be, with me
byMELINDA
O'CALLAGHAN
.
.
time spent on you
is the same
,
as time lost on me
what would
I
do
to get you
closer to me
-anythlng-
if I only knew what.
standing near you
is skirting the edges
of a plack hole
the closer I get ·
the more I'm sucked in
the more my power fails
the closer I get

the further you seem
.
there :is no you
<
to stop my descent
·
into the black void
because that void is you
onstrator marched around in full
drag, repeatedly telling onlook-
ers, "you don't have to pimp
yo'selves out to the World Bank
no more."
But the protesters who re-
ceived most of the attention
(from both the media and police)
were the ones participating in
civil disobedience by swarming
barricades with their bodies.
Several times during the day
they would surround the incom-
ing cars containing the IMF del-
egates in an attempt to block
them out of their meeting. They
succeeded in delaying the meet-
ing, but only delaying. At cer-
tain points in the day, the pro-
test seemed more like a city-
wide carnival with protesters
lying on the grass getting a sun
tan.
It is at this point that I started
to have mixed feelings about the
protest. The intensity dropped
around 2:30 in the afternoon as
many wandered towards the
green to hear Ralph Nader,
among others, speak. At first I
was disturbed but then I real-
ized two things. Firstly, the
Untitled
people showed up for the right
reasons, and they did their best
to make themselves heard,
whether it be from chaining
themselves down and risking
pepper spray, or simply from
marching with the crowd
.
Sec-
ondly, a major success was
reached besides stalling the del-
egates meeting
.
We were seen.
The protest received a
plethora of media attention (not
all of it entirely informative, but
coverage
nonetheless)
throughout the weekend. Many
people sitting at home saw the
protests on the news that night
without even knowing about th~
controversy over the IMF and
World Bank
.
In this scenario,
we achieved our goal of inform-
ing people that there is a seri-
ous problem and hopefully
there will be even more con-
cerned and informed people on
the street next time around. We
may have not changed much
but we did our best
, a
nd to some
extent we can
s
ay that th
e
coun-
try heard us.
by
LESLIE MARCUSE
_
I
am one, but not just one
I've got three parts all the same
.
mind and body guided through spirituality
a
god without a name
your religion contains such love
but lost a part of my whole
I
find sacrifice in this act
still obtaining a completeness in my soul
close your ears, through my words may be true
close you eye
because as long as you have faith in god, what's
the worst thing you can do.
These holy doctrines that you follow
are the writings of a man
a string of beads entangled in your fingers
and a cross in the other hand
to question such contradiction would pull you
from his protective fist
and the oppression of my people
is the result of your destiny
and divine right
Because damnation just makes it so easy
and my exhilaration is pure taboo
but I say as long as you have faith in
god what's the worst thing you can do?



















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MAY 4, 2000
, •••

I
Tllfi
·c1RC11£F ; -
sports••· .
.
.
.
'
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PAGE 14






































.....
:.
-
~'
.
.
..
..
"
..
The team's ERA is 6.39; Only
homers in the first game played
The 2000 Major League Base-
two pitchers (Billy Wagner; 3.38
at San Francisco's Pac Bell park,
-
.
ban season is
.
now a month old,
.
and Shane Rey
·
nolds,3;48 with
acc9unting for half of his total.
and some of the ind1vidual and
a 4-0 record)
..
have an ERA be-
Sheffield leads the Dodgers
team statistics have been star-
fow 5.00. It appears as if Enron
with seven.
tling. Some ofthem were quite
Field might be the second com-
... how dominating Randy
_
surprising to say the least.
_
For
ing bf Coors Field, only without
.
Johnson is this year? He's 6-0
example,didyouknow...
the· altitude. However, the
with an ERA of0.91. Further-
.;.the
Chicago White Sox
Astros'
.246avera:geis
the third
more, he has pitched two shut-
ow~~d the American
.
League?s
_
_
_
wors~
i
in
;
~~
,
~.ttional: µ:ague,
<;>uts and given up 26 hits in 49 .1
_
bes
.
t r~cord,
,
17-8 thr:ou,gh
-
..
ahead
of01¥Y
tll;e
putrid
Bre'_V.;
innings. He has walked 10 and
_
Su?day
s
playr
.
• -
__ ·
·
,
.
-
ers (.243) and Phillies
(.229).
:
-
struck out
64.
.
·
:':
~eWhiteSox,~ateam;~e
.
_
_
:,:
.:.'.tl}e I<:.ansas

City Royals
.
·
L
P~di-o Martiri~z is not far
hittmg .313
_
? Their)owest hit-
have the A.L's
·
best home
behind(again)intermsofdomi~-
tingregµlarisMagglioOrdone!z
record (10-2) a~d wcir.stroad
nation? Martinezis5-0withan
·
aL~84~ ~ho)us~so happens to
record(2:11)?
~
-
·
-
.
-
__
- -
-.
ERA
of 1.27. He has given up
be one ofl>aseball's
_
rising stars.
_ ·
_
... Mfke Hampton has 30 ~alks
22 hits and 8 .walks while strik-
-
·
_.:;that<?rdon~:z•s:484fig~rei
_
s
-
~da6A8
·
ERAi~33.linnings
ing out 50 in 35.1 innings.
e1ghtpomtsfogher tllan that of pitched iri a Met µniforin?:
·
.
Maybi:; this year.Martinez wins
. th
_
e Cle".elaridindians' average
,
.
... Mark McGwire has Thome
·
. th~ MVP award he was robbed
·
as ateam?
:
.
.
.
__
runs in his first 42 at~bats in
of last year .
.
'.:
only fourte;ams in the A.L.
·
2000?
'"
-

Originally, lwas planning on a
ha.ve I.ower
·
batting ayerages
.• :Jennairie pye is the first
·
writinganartideabouttheNBA
than
·
the Indians, a11d two of player to reach double digits in
playoffs. Instead, I'lljust sum-
.
them are the divisi~n leading
home runs in either league? Dye
·
marize them in a few words: no '
Yankees ( .262)
and
Mariners
currently has
.
H,
or
6
less than
one
will
beat the Lakers. Period.
(.271)?
the Colorado Rocldes asa team,
The only
_
question at this
Ph
o
to Courtesy
Carlisle
StockJon
_
.. .Juan Encarnacion
(.368)
and
And yes, Coors Field is still at a
point is who will come out of
G_regg-Jeffe
_
ries (yes, that Gregg
mile high.

·
_
_ _
the East to be the proverbial
Jefferies, .309) are the only two
... the
N.L.
's co-leaders in home
sacrificial lamb; People might
Detroit Tigers hitting higher
rims are Andres Galarraga and
call me crazy (and they just
than .258? Welcome to Comerica
Steve Finley (nine apiece)?
_might be right), but think about
Park, where pitchers reign and
... the Toronto Blue Jays have
this: does anyone play tougher
hitters hit
_
with disdain.
_
_
three players
with·
eight home
defense and have an explosive
... Mike Bordick has as many
runs (Carlos Delgado, Tony
scorer quite Hke the Philadelphia
hom
.
ers as Alex Rodriguez
Batista, .tnd Jose Cruz, Jr.)?.
76ers?
A hot Allen Iverson
(seven), which is
.
more than
... on a team with Gary
couldleadthisteamalongway.
Nomar Garciaparra (two) and
Sheffield Shawn Green Todd
Thanks to everyone who has
Derek-Jeter (three) combined? ,. Hundley,' and Eric Karr~s. the
read this column this year and
Catcher Anthony Ambrosini hit his team-leading fifth home
run of the season Sunday. He is one of four Red Foxes to
start every game this season
.
... exactly how much:of
ari
ef-
_
Los Angeles Dod__gers'
'
second-
not
_
used it for toilet paper.
-
fect
-
Emon
-
F1elcfifo.s' had
~n
the
_
··
leading home
ru~
hiii°ff
is Keviif -
.Goodluckoii
finals,
·
and
see you
Houston. Astros'
'
pitching staff?
Eister, with six'? Elstei- hit three
in the
fall.
'
.
b
MARK
SMITH
y
.
A
Decade ~f Dynasty ...
If
ever been a World Series year for the
managed a title themselves.
a
_
phrase was used to describe
_
Expos and a run at Roger Maris'
_
There still are powers in Michi-
sports
in
the nineties, that's the
home run record by Ken Griffey
gan, South Bend, and Nebraska,
one
;
As we leave the nim:ties
Jr. and Matt Williams. We saw
but the Sunshine State is at the
and embark upon a new decade
Wayne Huzienga buy a World
head of the class.
and'
a
new century, we need to
:.
Series for the Florida Marlins.
·
·
In college basketball the roost
look back at the teams, the
.
We saw Mark McGwire and
is ruled along Tobacco Road
people: and the moments that
Sam.my Sosa smash
'.
_
Maris
_
'
between Raleigh-Durham and
have defined it.
-
.
tecord
and we
.
watched the 1998
-
Chapel
Hill; those cities being
Heroes came and went. We
Yankees
win
a record 125 games.
the homes of f?uke University
saw our
·
1ast of Magic; Larry,
·
Footbalfsaw adynasty pass
,
and the. University of North
11ichael, Montana, Elway,
·
on, and_another dynasty of
.
Car~lina. Between the
.
two
Marino,
.
Sanders, Gretzky
/
and
sorts was born. The San Fran.:: - schools they managed three
Lemieux.
·
.
Maybe
_
as snicierits
·
cisc:o49ers won their last Super
_
·
national
-
-
championships and
wehaven'tfully appreciated the
Bowl in the 90s, and began their
more Final Fours than you can
moments we
.
have seen pass us
slow descent into mediocrity.
- ,
·
shake a
·
stick at.
.
There are no
·
by_ during the
·
past ten years,
-
The NFC East became THE
&-
rebuilding years at these
but V>'.i'! certainly won't forget
vision in the
NFL. Just ask the
schools, thereisonlyre-anning.
them.
_
When we are old and gray
Buffalo Bills, who went on to
·
In general, the nineties had
wewillputourgrandchildrenon
lose four consecutive Super more than its share of memo-
our
knees
·
and tell them about
Bowls to NFC !fast opponents,
-
rable mom~nts .. , Whq can for:-
the
_
time we saw Big Mac blast assumjng the mantle of Super get th~ greatest collegeJ>asket-
number 70, or the time we saw
Bowl
.
whipping boys
_
from the
ball game
ever
played ... ? Ken-
TENNIS: Headed
-
to
·
the
NCAAs
... continuedfrompg. 16
Chris Webber cailtime-out dur-
·
·
DenverBroncos.
_
..
_
tuckyversusDukeinovertime,
Smith is realistic about his
ing the NCAA championship
-
Basketball had its own transi-
with Christian Laettner's buzrer
team's chances.
withnoneleft.
·
iionfromShowtimetoMl The
·
beatergiviilg
.
Dukethevictory ...
, ·-
"We're not the Gonzagas or
A Decade of Dynasty ... Dy-
decade began
with
_
the Lakers
Elway being held aloft after fi-
the Valparaisos of the basketball
nasties were
_
born, dynasties
losing to the Bulls, and the Bulls
nally winning
a Super Bowl...
world," Smith said.
"We'
re not
passed on, and dyn;¼Sties were
never looked back
{as
long as ,MJ, urnm
...
I'll nee4
a
bigger
a Cinderlla.team. Atlhis state of
resurrected in the nineties.
.
they had Michael). Everi Texas •. · list .. MichaelJohnson comp let-
our development, there is no
Baseball saw the resurrection of had
-
i~ own
·
l~tHe dynasty)n
_
.
ing
_
'1,i~ 20Q/4()0 llleter combo
·
.
slipper th;it would fit us.~•
_
two of.its oldest winners in the
bask;et
.
b~~. \V~a~
with Houstqn
_.
w#h,. an
.
e~r\h_
,
shattering
.
,
Rac.iiriellisaid that the tet1m
i~
Braves and the Yankees. Both
and Srut'Antonio winning the. time::.Jo'e
·
Carter's walk off,
.
more ready for"the tournament
teams
'
returned to the greatness
MJ-Jess titles in the decade. ·
World Series winning Home
than last year.
·
Even though he
that is reserved for
.
baseball's
·
College football w~ ruled by
-_
~un ... the list
goes
on and on.
sees~"! playing a tough team,
hallowed teams.
_
the teams from Florida. The ·special moments were shared
they have acquired experience
In 1991 we gotto
see
the l\vins
University of Miami Hurricaries
by audiences the world round
this year against top competi-
and Braves
go
from
last to
first
won two
titles in the
90s, the
and
we were there ... or at least
tion.
in one season. We saw the
Florida State Seminoles also
that's what
we'll
tell the
Healsospokemoreoptimisti-
strike cut s~ort what could have
w~n two, and the Florida Gators
grandkids.
cally about the team's chances
in tl}e tournament.
"Once you've won the
MAAC once, with the
stakes being an NCAA
bid,
it
becomes more dif-
ficult to. continue win-
ning because, realisti-
_
cally, all teams want to
b¢at the team on top."
Tim Smith
Men's tennis coach
"The
Red Foxes are
looking
forward to hunting down their
prey in nationals," Racanelli
said.























































































































































































































































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_
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·row in tile Metro Atlantic Aili-:
-
Brady; Anthony Ambrosini; and
:1etic
,
S<J.rif~r~tj~{M,AAC),~e.
TIIIl~
_
ittri~
(:-
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Maris't basebfill
'
tearii seemedto
·
Vin Roma
.
pitched 2-213
:
in-·
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1Jei11i
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!~~p'
at
the
worst
time
hhigs~
g(v,i~g
up
~
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ruii
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ea.m
of
the
·
season
::
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ut


.Maristheid
·
an 8,-4,
'
conferen~
:seven-Jaspers
·
t?eambis iliird
·
·
·
. record
·and
:
stbpd in
s~c:onci·
,
w#{"clf
/
t~~
'
}ea;qn(
.
.•
,pfm1ip
.
place. Howev~i', the Red
Fox~
··
Joscllllo.pij)vided theoffin~ive·
:
·
wire
,
swept
by
·
ilie
·
I>olphins
/
·.
supix.>itbydrivingitj
ihif¥'ijih~-
w,hich
·
put iliem
·
at 8-:7 in
·
tile
·
<
:
After
·
ajxxfrly
.
pitched
:
game
MAAC.
·
-
ffi>m
ooth
:
te{lms
.
in
.
the ~ly in-
.
·••
TheRedFoxesiheilfacecifirst
·
·.
nings in'theseasonfinale,bolli
.
~
i'
.
.
place Ioria in a cmcial series.
,
teams
eleit~
'
i6wdrkfron'1ihe
·
:
·
Despite Iosing~~~tgame()f
:
b~
.
uin
>
;
M~k
:
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~§~011~itsh~
.
:
·
. the seri~sii
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·
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·
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.
sco,r~Iess
.
iqnings for
.

l
• Foxes ba
.
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.
to~k
·

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fpi~~edofftiie.
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tiled
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tie
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Jef'fTafi#o

tfillied
three'@I's
'.'
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pnfortu~a(ei)':',
fc
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Mai:ist/Iora
.
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1t
l!f
il
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tile team; aCCQrdi11g to Head
to
.
fifthplace
.
'in
'
ili~MAAC,
al-
.
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j,ho1oc",,;,rtuyofCarluleStockton
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iliougli
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ibref
games.sepa-
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Fr~~
:
~rt'.la)1
l<eyin..QQl.pi,c.1ieq a,
:
s
.
foi"~lei;$)'.i_inth. in,ga~e one ~1turday to rec,ord a saye,
.
and
·
Despite the
:J~
sing streak,
.
.
fl;l
,
t.e
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ttj<si~o~4
:
aJid,j~yenih
·.
h~
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pjtqh~~
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sy0rel
_
ess inhing~J>frSund~yto recordfhe win;
,
·ool
is4-4
011
the y~ar with 4
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on
Apri}'29.
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Marlstwill
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host.Sieiiij<>IJ.May
·•
·

·
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h Id
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·
21
McCannB
·
;
.
J>roved
to
·
be
a
dassic slugf~L
'.
6; the Saints cwie11tly'holci the
.
Nfagaia
Jbel'tuple
F.ag)es
cur.:

pla}<hj)st
'
fo
'.'
tlie
:
2000
.
MAAC
. .
e on ay
at
.
...
ase-
When
all
was
said and
doiie~
tile
seve_nthpla
_
cespot Tlle'roilow'."
'
·
rentlystaiidin~ixthpiace
:
.. _·
-
.
~hajnpionships, starting on
ballFiel~
.
.
·
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tll
,
lis,
.
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fi
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sC~Son Witli:
NCAA biif
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SFERRAR
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ei:slo
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play-a major college 0~
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Pl~~ng a~~inst~om~
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s:
Smiili considered winnirig tile
Atfailtic
'
A:thle~c'. ~onfer~rice
"'
·.
·
Lastyear"·in' tne
·
'toiimairient;
••
,
'·.
~ C
·fo,1,e·•.-an
·
accofuplish-
(MAAC)
and wmn~g the co~-
the ~ed Foxes traveled
·
.
.
to
ment, considering his
team
was
fere~ce toum~ent, tile men s
Austm, Texas to talce on tile
now playing the role of the
tenms t ~ 1s headed to the Texas Longhorns. The Long-
hunted, not the hunter.
'NCAA toum~ent for tile sec-
horns, ranked s~venth in the
"Once you've wop the
ond c~nsecutlve year.
.
cou~try at the time, defeated
·
MAAC once, with the stakes
!danst enters the t_oumament
Man~~
.
.
_
being an NCAA bid, it becomes
~tit
a record ~f~3.
'.Ire.~
This year, Racanelli said he
.
more difficultto continue win-
rrught
be
play1~g 1ts besttenms
would_ welcome another long
ning becaµse, realistically, all
of tile season nght now .
.
In
the
.
road tnp.
teams want to beat the
team
on
MAAC tournament, theteam
"We ~on't want to travel any-
top," Smitll said.
won 25 out of 27 matches.
.
;
where
.
m th:, van. We_ w~t to
.
Smith and Racanelli agree that
_The NCAA tournament ~lee-
go by plan:, Ra~elh said. ..
tile
team
will probably receive a
tlon show ~es place this
af-
_ ·
.
·
Racanelli also said ili_at a tnp
similar seeding to last year .
.
That
te~oo? .
.
Seruor ~d t ~
cap-
out ~est c?uld result m good
would mean a matchup with one
tam
Mike
Racanelli
said iliat
the
publ!c relations for the team and
of the nation's top teams.
De-
tournament represents a step up
Manst
~s
a whole.
·
.
.
spite ilieir 20-3
·
record, Marist
in competition.
Head ~ach Tim ~rruth said he
will not receive a high seed due
"Certainly
.
winning the would !ike to
5et:
his~ take a
to its strengili of schedule in tile
MAAC is a nice honor. But it's
road ~p for a different reason.
MAAc:
quite another thing to be rec-
He said that he wants his play-
...
pleaseseeTE1'r'NIS,p.15
·


53.18.1
53.18.2
53.18.3
53.18.4
53.18.5
53.18.6
53.18.7
53.18.8
53.18.9
53.18.10
53.18.11
53.18.12
53.18.13
53.18.14
53.18.15
53.18.16