The Circle, April 24, 2008.xml
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Part of The Circle: Vol. 61 No. 24 - April 24, 2008
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VOLUME 61, ISSUE 24
FOUNDED IN 1965
THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 2008
Red Foxes hire former Memphis
assistant coach Chuck Martin
By GREG HRINYA
Sports Co-Editor
The name Chuck Martin might
not be recognizable to most peo-
ple, but the names of Memphis
Tigers' stars Derrick Rose, Chris
Douglas-Roberts,
and
Joey
Dorsey surely are.
Martin coached all three while
working as an assistant coach at
Memphis.
The Marist Red Foxes men's
basketball team named Chuck
Martin their head coach on
Thursday, Apr.
17,
in a
2
p.m.
press conference. After guiding
some of the most talented players
in the country, Martin will now
bring his experience to the
Hudson Valley.
Martin spent two seasons at
Memphis and amassed a stagger-
ing
71-6
record alongside
Naismith coach of the year John
Calipari. This past season,
Memphis traveled to the NCAA
championship game only to fall
short in overtime against eventu-
al champion Kansas.
Martin agreed to a six-year deal
that runs through the
2013-2014
season, and he will become the
sixth Division I Yiead coacn in
Red Foxes' basketball history.
For the Marist community,
Martin's arrival represents a
homecoming for the Bronx
native. He played
for
St.
Raymond's High School and
operated as an assistant coach for
both Manhattan and St. John's.
Most recent1y, he assisted
John
Calipari in Memphis' consecutive
runs
to
the NCAA tournament.
Martin noted the
Kaylen Gregory, a senior
campus atmosphere
entering his
fifth
year of
and the opportunity to
...,"_._.,-iiJ.w
eligibility, will look
to
coach at one of the
capitalize on his opportu-
premier schools in the
nity to finally crack the
Metro
Atlantic
lineup after waiting for
Athletic Conference
four seasons.
(MAAC) as
several
"I hoP,e it's my call and
of the reasons he
_ _
it should
be
a good oppor-
chose this school.
tunity because
we're
"When I got here
depleted in guys but not in
the first thing I told
talent," Gregory said.
Tim [Murray) and
Dr.
Gregory is ~xcited about
Murray was there was
the opportunity to play for
a spirit on campus,"
Coach Martin in a system
Martin said.
"There
geared towards his game.
was a life and a pulse
"That
style of play fits
here, and that really
my caliber very well,"
excited me.
If
there's
Gregory
said.
"The
a
life
and there's a
upbeat, fast, running and
pulse on campus, then
jumping type play.
If
he
that will trickle down
can recruit the right guys
to the other programs
for this program
,.
it'll be
here at Marist."
even more exciting to
Before Martin's
watch
than
what we've
arrival at Marist, he
been doing here the past
discussed his plans
four years and should top
with Coach Calipari
it."
and the new Marist
Nothing
new
for
head coach believed
Schneider
this job represented
With Matt Brady's
his best opportunity.
departure, Ryan Schneider
"I think the campus
may be
looking
at
the
is the best campus m
record books. Schneider
the league," Martin
will have played for four
said. "I think it's the
different Division I coach-
bestjob. I don't know
es in his four seasons of
if people agree with._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
__.~~.....;
.-r.-._ __
_..c_ _ _
...;.. _ _
_;=. ___
...J
eligibility. Schneider lias
me or not, and I really
FROM POUGHKEEPSIEJOURNALCOM
played for three different
don't care, but I think
New men's basketball coach Chuck Martin meets the
returning
Red Foxes after
his
coaches since his freshman
it's the best job, the
Introductory
press co~fere~ce held In Cebar~t ~n Thursday April
17.
.
year at Vermont.
campus, the facilities, [and) the
Martm beheves that
Devezm
ts Rose), you can defimtely apply
..
Obviously, I think coming into
atmosphere."
the perfect building block for the here at Marist. I think I've talked my freshman year .of college I
Coach Martin has his work cut type of offense he. wants ~o
to enough people where I think he didn't expect that I would be in
out for
him,
however. Marist will employ here at Manst. Martm can play that way."
the position that I am
today,
but
reportedly lose freshman and co-
hopes
_to
run
an up-t~mp~,
Martin made a point to you can look at it a couple of
MAAC rookie of the year Jay Me~ph1s-s~le off~nse, which ts acknowledge the other talent that ways," Schneider said. "You can
Gavin to a transfer to Virginia a dribble-drive motion.
remains on Marist's roster.
be frustrated and mad about it and
Commonwealth University. In
"I think the way that we played
Despite losing Gavin and six
be
stubborn and it could be an
addition, Marist lost six seniors at at Memphis excites me with seniors, the Red Foxes will lo'ok absolute disaster, or you could
the conclusion of last season.
[Devezin]," Martin said. "I think to their bench for leadership.
accept it and
try
and be successful
and make the most of it."
Despite the inconsistencies,
Schneider is excited about
the
character and experience that
Chuck Martin brings to Marist.
"He has a great resume. He's
worked and coached with some
of the best names in the busi-
ness," Schneider said.
"Hopefully
as a player entering my senior
year he can bring that continued
success here to Marist."
Farmer's view
Although senior and former Red
Foxes' captain Ben Farmer
has
played his last game with Marist,
he was impressed by the hire Tim
Murray and company
·
made in
replacing Brady.
"I
think it's great for the school,
the program, and the communi-
ty," Farmer said. "After hearing
him speak he sounds lik~ a really
good guy, and he's_ got really
good intentions for the program."
Without Farmer, the Red Foxes
miss a great deal of leadership.
Marist will also
lose
key contrib-
utors Ryan
Stilphen, Shae
McNamara, Spongy Benjamin,
and Louie
Mccroskey.
The senior believes
that
the tal-
ent is there
to
be successful next
season in Martin's system, but the
team might
struggle
in its first
season with a new coach.
"The returning players are
good,
they're
good players,"
Farmer said. "I think the system
he's going to want to play, I think
guys like Kaylen and a few other
guys will have a chance to flour-
ish.
"With a new coach it's
always
tough, and
the
first year there's
always some bumps in the road,
but I think eventually he will get
this place right up at the top of
the
league."
''Tim
Murray and his staff made
a slam dunk with the hiring of
Chuck," Calipari said. "Marist
has a proud basketball tradition,
and I'm confident that Chuck will
do his best to continue - and
build on - the level of success the
Marist program has enjoyed."
Point guard David Devezin is the
our
principles and our style of
team's only returning starter.
play [at Memphis with Derrick
Marist students expose
_
green thumbs for Earth
Day
Meet Martin's new
coaching staff:
Tyrone Weeks
Tvron1.:
Weeks was
hired
as
one
oi the men
<.
t'tball team new as
1 -
·
tant
coaches. Weeks was
the
Coordinator
ot
Basketball
OperatfoM for
Memphis
University.
..,._ _ _.
Weeks has six years of
FffOM
ao
REDFOXES.COM
·
experience as a
Division 1
c\1ad1
serving
as
an.assistant
at
Rhode
Island and
'it
Bonaventure.
Philadelphia
11
th
l
and
UMass.graduate,
Weeks
led tti.e Minutemen
to four-straight
C , .
Tournaments and a
Final J'our appearance
n
1996.
Paul Lee
PaulLee
was
hired
as
one
of the
men's
basketball
team ,s new
assistant
coaches.
Lee bas
18
years
of
experience as
an
assis-
.
tant
at Northwestern
and
Columbia. He
spent six
.seasons asColm.nbia's top
FROM NUSPORJS.COM
assistant and recru.iting
coordinator, Jnd wa ·
a Lions•
player
from
1982-1986 and a team captain
during
his
t:nior car
Basketball
Times
ranks
Lee as
one
of't'ne
best assistant
coaches
in the
nation~
THE CIRCLE
845-575-3000
ext.
2429
writetheclrcle@gmail.com
A & E: EXPECTED SUCCESS IN SPRING CONCERT
WITH 400 TICKETS SOLD
3399 North Road
Poughkeepsie, NY
12601
The addition of
Belikos, Marist's Battle of the Bands win-
ner has increased optimism
for
Saturday's
show
PAGE
7
AMY WHEELER/
THE
CIRCLE
Members
of
SEED
participate in the
annual Earth
.
Day.tree planting event In front
of
Leo and Sheahan Hall.
FEATURES: MAINTAINING VALUES - A PROFILE
ON STUDENT-ATHLETE, KASEY NAGLE
Marist
sophomore, Kasey Nagel, focuses
on
what he
finds important in life: family and football
PAGE5
•
THE CIRCLE
..
THURSDAY
,
APRIL
24,
2008
www.maristcircle.com
'
Security Briefs
~enoit attempts Extreme Home Makeover, fails
!:3Y
ffiER THURSON
john
Gildard
in Training
'
;4/17 - Lower West Cedar
•
jn either a strikingly lame
prank or simply the worst
t;ase
of memory
loss
recorded on campus, a stu-
tlent reported their car
~tolen, only to find it in
another location later in the
'
fiay. Unless there are mere-
!Y
more Grana Theft Auto
~mateurs-in-training
on
campus than initially sus-
pected, this can all proba-
bly be attributed to a surely
knee-slapping prank. And
'
to
all
you
wannabe,
gonnabe, two other words
I can't say in this newspa-
per, pranksters, remember,
!'Dude, Where's My Car"
tame out
8
years ago, and it
wasn't that funny then.
Although, I'm sure all it
µeeded was more than a
half a decade for society to
batch up on the prank. Way
io strike while the iron is
hot.
4/18 - Benoit
pisplaying a clever new
way to round up priority
points, the Benoit house
was found
·
to boast a bath-
room complete with ripped-
liown ceiling tiles, toilet-
paper
·
holders hanging off
the wall, and a used fire
extinguisher, with appar-
ently no reason for its use.
To me, this is only fitting -
the place you dispel of
waste should be filled with
waste also. See, sometimes
you just need to look hard
to find the poetry in life.
Sometimes, really hard. It's
a gift, really.
4/18 - Tennis Courts
Making the usual rounds of
the tennis courts
,
security
reported the black fencing
encasing the courts them-
selves was bent. Seriously
-
bent fencing? That's all I
get to work with? An
unknowing passerby tram-
pled on the fencing, or a
displaced deviant really
wanted to mess with the
college.
If
the latter was
true, you really cut deep,
you rebel without a cause.
If
there's anything a college
prides itself on, it's the
black fencing surrounding
any athletic field. Way to
make a statement. Next
time, try ripping out the
flowers in front of the
library in a fit of rage.
Really hit them where it
hurts, why don't you?
4/18 - Campus Green
What, were the monkey
bars and sandboxes too
heavy to assemble? With
the increase in beautiful
summer
temperatures
comes one thing, well,
besides the noticeable lack
of students in classrooms,
Close to
Campus!
Monlh-lo-Month Renla s
• Vorletv
of
510l'Q(Je
Room
Packi
upplies
Avaffable
HYDEPA
4'351600
POUGHKEEPS E
454.001
at least: the Marist College
slip-and-slide.
Allowing
time for at least a few good
flips onto the slide, security
finally
confiscated
the
oversized tarp and hose
after a few minutes. Now,
there could be two reasons
for this crackdown on
childhood activities. Either
security takes the grass
quality of Marist extremely
seriously, or there is just
something about tanned,
toned females in skin-tight
bikinis frolicking under a
cold, dripping hose and
sliding head first down a
giant piece of plastic that
seems to get the general
campus population all hot
and bothered. I'm going
with the grass theory - it
really is the pride and joy.
4/19 - Upper West Cedar
Wasting a perfectly good
breakfast, another group of
merry pranksters took it
upon themselves to snve
eggs to campus, throwing
them at windows in Upper
West Cedar. Well, that's
one way to pass the time.
Most people have a hobby,
a job or something, you
choose to toil your days
away contemplating how
many eggs to throw at win-
dows. Oh, and your high
school guidance counselor
told you you were never
going to amount to any-
thing
.
Look at you, proving
them wrong and every-
thing. You hang in there, Caljfomia, and when you
kitty on a
branch.
speak, no ones probably
watching or listening. I
4/19 -
Lower Townhouses know, I know, you contest -
·
the rest is still unwritten.
What do these three things Actually, also wrong. It's
have
in
common?
A written down, in security,
hairdryer,
an
alarm, and the in
black-and-white.
I can
Fairview fire department? show you if you like.
Answer: all cliches of
Marist College.
Bigger
question: how hot do you
really need your hairdryer
to be before it starts setting
off alarms?
Speaking
of
setting off alarms, where
are your friends,
because
the day you have hair appli-
ances almost burning build
-
ings dowi'•, your brain cell
activity should be setting
off some alarms of its own.
Ouch, that was a bum. Kind
of like a hairdryer one.
Turns out, we do have
something
in
.
common.
Who would've thought?
4/19 - Leo
Hall
Oh
my
god, like, let•s let
the crazy times totally
begin guys. Or not, whatev-
er happens. Security confis-
cated the following alcohol
from one unlucky Leo
room:
Coors,
various
amounts of rum, Bacardi,
and Smirnoff. Like, oh my
god, you guys are totally
the girls from "The Hills
.
"
Except, you aren't on a
reality show, your finale
includes what dorm to go
back to, not a choice
between
Paris
and
4/21
- Townhouses
In the shock of the season,
another fire alarm was set
off, with the culprit this
time
being
a kettle left on
the stove. Yes, because
after a long day, all I want
to do is curl up on the
couch with a good book, a
warm blanket, and a nice,
piping hot mug of tea.
Second thought: throw the
blanket off in a fit of panic,
use the book to fan the
flames away from your
face, and use the teabags to
erase any sign from your
eyelids that you stayed up
all nisht, reliving the fact
that your kettle almost
burnt down an entire block
of
apartments.
Yeah,
because that screams relax-
ing afternoon time. You
might want to turn on
Lifetime, I'm sure there is a
movie on about your har-
rowing ordeal by now.
Disclaimer: The Security Briefs
are intended as satire and fully
protected gs free speech under
the First Amendment of the
Constitution.
Onsite
Screen Printing
&
Embroidery
creatLve
Destg~
sevvices
24 Hr.
Tees
&
Banners
--=i
,
~
!
l'ISA
~
-
h1
r¢
MU
i!
rd
t.~
illcttf'~
--
-
"GUARDIAN
Serving Area
College Students
for
over
25
years
SELF STORAGE
800.698.NYNY
PAGE2
T~IE
CIRCL
Margeaux Lippman
Editor in Chief
Usa Brass
Managing Editor
Andrew Overton
News
Co-Editor
Matt Spillane
News C~Editor
Tricia Carr
A&E
Editor
KaitSmlth
Opinion Editor
Brittany Florenza
Health Editor
Isabel CaJulls
Features Co
Editor
Deanna GIiien
Features
Co-Ed
i
tor
Greg Hrinya
Sports
Co-Editor
RichArleo
Sports Co-Editor
James
Reilly
Photography Editor
Advertising Editor:
Christina Usher
Art Editor:
Colin Rand
Copy
Desk:
Amanda Mu
l
vihill,
Marina Cella,
Emily
Ftore
Ellzabe h Hogan,
Sarah Holmes,
Alana Linsenblgler
Rachel Macch1arora.
Rache
l
Ma
l
eady
Gerry
McNutty
Faculty Advisor
The Circle is
the weekl
student newspaper o
Marist College. Letters
t
the editors, announc
ments, and
story
ideas
ar
always welcome, but w
cannot publlsh
uns,gne
letters. Opinions
expf1ess.ea1
m
articles
are
necessarily those
editorial board.
The
Circle
staff can
be reached at (845) 57
3000 x2429
or
letters
t
the
editor can be sent
t
writethecircle@gmall.com.
The Circle
can also b
viewed on
its
web
site,
www.maristcircle.com.
www.marlstclrcle.com
THE CIRCLE •
THURSDAY, APRIL
24, 2008 •
PAGE 3
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l 7
T~IE CIRCLE
-
THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 2008
D1agnos1s: en1or1t1s
Symptoms: Laziness,
humor, self-loathing
y
TRAVIS
MIU.ER
taff Writer
Senioritis: fan,
l
thought that
·ord
,u1
only
legcul
acy
in
high
cbool. Once
.,ou'r a
nil.1r
in
ollcge. you're uppo
ed
t
ha\C
·0ur
Ut.:t
together!
enioritis: Peopl
hep
a km~
1e
what
I
,Im
domg
VI
hen I
gr.id-
atc. "Your !,'lle s is as good ,
min ," I
tell
them. I am h
I
mg
cnough
trouble
fo ·u.
111 •
on
p· -
mg my da ·~ . I c,mnot
worr
bout finding a Job
or
mnkmg
life
plan .
r
tried multitasking for
·1 VI ·ck ·1rlicr in
thl'
ut that turned mto ,, hu c
m ~-.
cnioritis.
111e
WJ)'
the
c on-
my
I
lot)krn,
right
110,-..
b
uld
l
c cu bother
to
try
to
look for a
ob' Maybe I ,
111
Jw,t
t, rt
t
Hin,
people
I
m
mm
mg to
Hav.
aii. Yeah,
I \\ 111
rcla
and
njoy m cit
for
,1
ltttle wh1l •
,.
ctore I let
the
,
al world
gd
me
lo~ n.
.'cnioritis H '). at h;'.ast " ·
idn't
graduate last year. \\
ould h -.e
ean11.:d
a eptable
ntl)-lc\
·I
10b ,
but then \ ·
1,·
uld
lla\
·
be n th~
fi
l
to
gel
. enioritis:
TI1ere should
be
an
cntry
in a
rt
dical
eucy lopc.:dia
for
this.
'a1t
1t
probably foils
under
. ttention
-
Deficit
Hy1
eta
ti
ity
Di~ordet.
Seniorili :
I'm more con-
cerned
a·bout
getting ticket for
senior
week
than
J
am
about
fin-
ishing
ny
apping project.
en
orirls:
Vitamm
C
pruhahl)
i~n
t
the
best d10icc of a smger
to rcpre ·nt
u:-;
ith
a
graduation
song. Of cour. c, it 'Would
JU
t
follow
uit
with th· washc<l up.
-h
·t
talent
from the l 990s
already rep1esentin our. chool.
enioritis:
That
\ a
a
L1fchouse joke
for those of you
who
d1dn
't
get that.
. eniorlti : 1y
parents
would
be cc
tut1 •
to
kn
\\
rm
u ing my
(.'oil ge ·ducat
ion
to tra.
h-talk
Litehou
e.
enioriti
:
I
'.Shouldn't
hflve
started
kipping
cl~
this semes-
ter.
Vhen
it rains, it pour
. cnioritis.
In pre,·iou . l!mcs-
1
rs.
my
1
0,tl ,
-..
to mak
the
Dean's
Li
t.
ow I'm alculat~
i
ng
my
1
PA
just
to ee hoi,,,
lov.
r
can go \\
hilc
~
till
cum
lnudc.
cmoritis:
Ha wan
i
d
1fll
ynu
1uy ' 1'11 tell
IR'Opl •
I'm
mo -
1
lawau
mg to I
cmb urg
l'
DJib
1uti
r
i
thing C11
h:
ys
11 cd th n m · · of ho c
•
• ~' \ 1<.:C
i1 \
itc
ru .. ,,
8
·II
to
ountri~ .
' very
c,
r("er
confrrcncc.
Scnioriti~:
1:
Fai.eb ok
Senioriti~:
I
hope Vitamin
Ii
nl:c
r~cebook-<lumpcd me
rite an
Hhc1
ong thal rnn be
bccau
too
many
people
th ·
nthcm or our grnd1w11on
thought
we er really en aged.
rnioriti :
Ten he keep .tsk-
re\ e rcall) getting
that
old'?
ing
"ho
the
sl.'niors
at in
da ;;,
SenioritL:
Sp
"tking
or
being
11.:n
th~)
a k us
if\\1.:
.ire
xcit-
old
when
I ome back
to
visit
•ti
to graduate. I h
J
1rnght as n xt ) car.
r'
11 e 23.
not
in
ol-
vel
I
ju
t
Icy
us out of
class
right
kgc, )
·t
1ill tr,>
ing
to !iv the
h •n. h1;cau c I guara
Ice
m)
hfe
·tyle.
1'11
oflk1all_
qu:ihfy
as
~
• ind
i
wandering for the rest of
'tha\
guy··
~
be
tm1c.
•
enioriti :
ro
mill
r
wh ·re
I
"
·
cnioritis.
Som one ju
1
wld
:11d up, I'm dcstmc
t
wear the
I
me th re , alrcad) a s
niontls
"towme" badge wllen
rm
out at
: rirtick
\\rittcn a
t
week.
t}
tl11; bar.
l
much
for
origmality.
enlotitis: \
hat
about 1iley
!
cnihrJfi :
This
i,
p,mnmg out
yrus writing u a graduation
I
mm:
hkc
a poem than
n
v\'S
son
'!
She'. p
pular.
Wait,
she
l .
to~
l
meant to !.?et
s1,urces,
but
has11 ·1
even
,raduatcd
high
I
"J
~
l
r
was tuo l
2)
Plus, all
1}
c school yet.
: u ks \.\-Ould
be from
scnion.,
Srnioritis:
Man.
I
wanted to
: nd
th
'Y
are
probahlv
all
JU
t
a
come up wttll
creatl
•e
way
lo
I
~
• la;,y
nd 1pa1hetic as Jam.
nd
th1 ,
but I'm JUst tou
laz)
I
:=========================.
I
I
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PAGE4
As global food prices soar, Third
World nations continue to starve
By MIKE NAPOLITANO
Staff Writer
If you haven't noticed, there
is
a food
shortage
in the world.
Other than a
slight
rise in prices
in some foods at the
supermar-
ket, Americans do not have any-
thing to worry about because the
United States is at the top
of
the
neo-liberal economic food chain.
I can find nothing more infuri-
ating than deliberately
withhold-
ing food from impoverished
peo-
ple to meet your own greed-ori-
ented goals. People are
starving!
Does that prospect phase
the
cap-
italist big-wigs at the World
Bank? Absolutely not.
Here is the reality: the
global
agro-business is
run
by intem~-
tional trade and monetary organ-
izations
such as the World Bank.
They decide the fixed rates of
food based on their petception of
the economic market. In the last•
year and a half, food prices have
risen about 45 percent,
affecting
the world's poorest people the
most - people who are
essential-
ly at the mercy of the richest peo-
ple in the world.
When you make
less
than
a
dol-
lar a day, your first priority is
feeding yourself and your family.
to alleviate their hunger prob-
This becomes impossible when a lems. Peru, for example, is using
food
"shortage"
dictates that potatoes to create potato meal
grain-which is readily
available which is being used by the
-
cannot be shipped to your Peruvian military to make bread
impoverished
nation because for the hungry. Although this is a
there
is
a fear of
"scarcity."
Are great way of helping the poor, it
they serious?
still
does
not
solve
the fact that
While this
"scarcity"
is occur-
many are still malnourished and
ring, rice farmers in
Thailand are
need protein in the form of
guarding
their
rice
fields from
beans-a staple in most develop-
"thieves"
who
cannot
access
ing
nations.
food
because the
country
is
Perhaps
the
most saddening
going to export
the rice to the part of the
situation is
that most
global agro-market instead
of of the countries that are currently
feeding
their own people.
suffering
were, at one point, self-
Meanwhile
there
is
rioting over
.
sufficient agricultural nations.
the
deliberate holding of crops in People were able· to farm food
18
countries,
including those as
for themselves and their family,
close
as Mexico and as far as
which allowed them to
survive
in
Uzbekistan.
their own rite.
There
are
real
factors that are
Unfortunately, due to interna-
driving
up the costs of food such tional
"free-trade"
agreements,
as
rising
petroleum
prices,
envi-
these nations were forced to open
ronmental
instability,
transporta-
their borders to international
tion
costs,
and demand. This,
agro-business. These corporate
however, does not excuse the farming companies, a majority of
mass neglect
of
some world lead-
which are
Ame~can,
would
ers.
They
could
easily implement
flood the markets of these rural
subsidized
stocks of food that nations with
subsidized
crops
would be
easily ~ccessible
for forcing most
farmers
out
of
busi-
poorer nations to purchase.
ness and into
factories.
From
In
response to the hardships,
there,
every
person had
to
pur•
some
nations
are
in
fact turning chase
goods
to
survive, goods
towards
their
own
agro-
business
that were provided by the corpo-
ration that had just forced them
off their land.
Essentially,' the problem was
created by the developed nations
of the world and is now being
perpetuated by them. Sadly
enough, almost every industry is
at the mercy of the
,developed
nations. Industries like agricul-
ture, that are so important for
survival should not be
run
by
corporations because it allows
for the possibility that business
interests will be put ahead of the
needs
of
the
people.
Unfortunately this affects the
most vulnerable people in the
world-the poor.
Professor Robert Watson,
the
Chief Scientific Advisor for
the
Department for Environment,
Food, and Rural Affairs put it
best in a recent interview with
Al-Jazeera:
"Business
as usual
will mean that we will not be
able to feed the world. Business
as usual means we will continue
to degrade the environment.
Business as usual means that we
will not ever solve the problems
of poverty and hunger."
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CIRCLE
THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 2008
www.marlstclrcle.com
PAGE5
Maintaining Values: Student-Athlete of exemplary character defines his
experiences by what he considers to be most important in life
By
ASHLEY POSIMATO
Staff Writer
·
explained his ultimate happiness on the team as having nothing to do has been since I can remember but our relationship is so much more
with being an athlete. "I've made really great friends on the team and than that it's tough for me to explain it," said Kiley Nagle.
know that these are
.
bonds I will always hold onto," he said.
After a momentary loss for words, Nagle further described exactly
Remember the third question on the midterm of your eight a.m. phi-
Nagle continues to consider his values when assessing his
how much he values his relation-
losophy class sophomore year? Come on, how can you forget the one decision to attend Marist. He has found that that test grades,
ship with his brother:
about Thoreau's perspective on the relationship between science and scoreboards, and class rank are not the essential ingredients
"I can't imagine being here
religion?
that define the time spent at college. For him, the true mean-
without him, and I couldn't
Ok-well then you can definitely recount the exact amount of time ing of his experience thus far has been based on what he con-
imagine not having h'im around
left on the clock when the other team kicked the field goal, that siders most important in life.
to
share the relationsliip that we
should have been easily blocked, and _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ "I
think
about everything I've done here so far,"
have. The best way I can put it is
caused your football team to be elimi-
Nagle said. "I'm not going to remember how
that he's going to be the best man
nated one round too early from your
many touchdowns I scored or what my college
at my wedding, he'll be godfa-
senior
year
playoff
run.
grade point average was, it's going to be the rela-
ther of my first child, and I'm
There's no way you could have forgot-
tionships and bonds I've made."
going to name my first son after
ten that too?
Nagle is not only a huge contributor to the foot-
him because that's just shows
That is unless you're Kasey Nagle.
ball team but he is also an active member of
who he is and how much he
Currently a student-athlete at Marist
Housing
and
Residential
Life.
means to me."
College, Nagle describes his relation-
As a resident assistant he is held to high expec-
1
Kasey
Nagle is a prime exam-
ship with the school as a "good fit."
tations which he has
.not
only met, but exceeded;
pie of a well-rounded young man
Being a senior in high school was
and he is grateful for the position despite the dif-
with a bright future.
He has
really stressful and confusing, he said.
ficulties attached to it.
proven that we each choose the
Visiting a variety of l.llliversities and
"Keeping a positive attitude gets tough some-
L - - - - - - - - - - - - . L . . - - - 1
tool by which we measure the
being heavily recruited by a number of
times, like on the weekends when we're on duty
worth of our experiences. Nagle
football coaches was tiring. He did
until 3 a.m., but it's worthwhile because of the people has chosen his values and his life tips the scales!
however find comfort and confidence in
I've met;" he said. ''The job allows me to influence and
"Everything I have is a gift from God," he said. "Like having my
what ended up being his deciding fac-
help people. It's such a fulfilling experience."
family, all my abilities, and my personality is all God given, so
I'm
tor.
Nagle measures the worth of all the roles he takes on blessed for that-life is good."
"My brother goes to school here," he
by how they foster , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - ~
said. "His name is Kilex and he's a jun-
interaction
with
A Prize within a Prize
ior now; we're on the football team
other people, some-
together and he's my best friend."
thing he has kept
But although the inevitable first year
consistent
with
transition was eased by the presence of
goredfoxes.com
what he considers
his older brother, Nagle was forced to
to be the foundation
adjust to the differences he would face on the college level athletic of all his values.
fic1a
.
"Nothing is more important to
"I was used to playiPg all the ti~, be.cause in high school I really me than my family," he said. "I
didn't come off the
field,"
he said. "Playing here has been a hum-
would never change anything
bling experience. Everyone's equally good and you really have to about them
-
I love them to
perform at top level. It's kind of like you have to pay your dues death."
before you get on the field."
.
And according to brother, team-
After understanding the challenges and accepting them, Nagle has mate, and best friend
Kiley
found complete satisfaction in his experience with Division I foot-
Nagle, the feelings are mutual,
ball.
and the emotions are returned.
Nagle described football as a life-long love of his, but also
"~e is niy best friend and he
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Want some cash? ,Got a great shot of some
students
or Marist life in general? Send 'em to cir-
cleshots@gmail.com. The Admissions department of Marist and The Circle have teamed up this semes-
ter to bring you the first ever Marist Photo Contest. The contest is aimed at finding the most artistic pho-
tos that represent what Marist is all about. Submissions for the contest will be reviewed by the e-board
members of The Circle where the best four will be picked, published in the paper, and best of all, award-
ed cash prizes. First place will win $100, second gets $75, third
is
awarded $50, and fourth wins $25.
This isn't the end for these pictures though
.
Admissions will
filrther review
the submitted photos, where
those that are selected by the department
will
b'e oi'tere
'
d yet
anotKer,
cash prize. A $50 all-rights award
will be offered to any picture selected
By
the Admissions
Di:parttti'ent.
These selected photos may
be
fea-
tured by Marist Admissions, the Yearbook, and/or other Marist Offices. The Marist Admissions market-
ing department circulates to nearly 50,000 people
.
Credit for each photo will be given wherever credits
are required. So if your passionate about photography, get the camera out and send us what you got. Only
small .jpeg format pictures will be accepted for submission (a larger file will be required if selected as
a winner of the competition or selected by the Admissions Department)
.
All photos should be titled with
name of the photographer in this format; LAST NAME_FIRST NAME. Please specify in your e-mail's
"subject" line that the e-mail is a submission for the
"Marist
Photo
Contest".
Three submissions will be
allowed per person and minor adjustments to photographs ( such as cropping and other minor changes)
are acceptable. Under no circumstances will photoshop projects or
creations
be accepted
in
this contest.
Regardless of the fact that these pictures may be used by Marist
College
in the future, the artistic qual-
ities of submitted photographs matter greatly. So grab your camera, have fun, and you could get paid for
just being a part of Marist.
-----
-
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cartoon corner
By VINNIE PAGANO
:
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I
www.marlstclrcle.com
Features
Hookups and Breakups:
Don't be a creeper
with
lime
Jell-O
By
MORGAN NEDERHOOD
Staff Writer
By the fourth passing time; Ian finally stopped at
his locker, and Mimi was at the end of the hallway,
stalking and waiting.
Mimi had been totally in love with Ian for years-
Ian opened his locker and stared at the plastic
since grade school, actually.
container in confusion.
Now a high school freshman, she decided it was
He definitely hadn't left the Tupperware treat
time to be mature and make a move.
placed neatly on top of his science book, but Ian
For any normal person, this would entail some had no idea how it had arrived at the bottom of his
sort of confrontation, phone call, or anything basic locker.
and easy.
Ian
picked
up the container and held it in his hand
Shit even a note with
as he looked
around
him for
"Do 'you like me"
Apparently, the wisdom,
11
Go big or
the mystery Jell-O lover.
scrawled in gel pen
go home
II
isn't always applicable.
Mimi darted away, proud
would have been okay
'
,
of her accomplished mission
(you know, those notes
Sometimes, you II be slapped with
but also completely oblivi-
with the "Circle one:
the reality of, "Go big, and you'll
ous to the fact that Ian hated
ves
No" at the bot-
lime Jell-O.
1
'
probably go home. Alone.
11
tom, and some hearts
Ian never spoke of his
drawn liberally around
.
sketchy encounter with the
the crumbled lined paper.) That seriously would mysterious maid of lime Jell-O, and he and Mimi
have been more normal than what Mimi did.
never went"Out, to state the obvious.
Alas, this freckled oddity thrived on being awk-
Last year, while home from college, Ian finally
ward as hell. While hovering near Ian and his broke his silence and revealed that he had known it
friends one day, Mimi overheard him make an off-
was Mimi the entire time. Sure, he was flattered,
hand comment about his love for Jell-O. She but also incredibly creeped out by Mimi's stealth
decided there was only one way to win Ian's love.
Mimi put Jell-O in his locker.
Normally, the school wouldn't give out the lock-
er combinations of its students. Well, this didn't
stop Mimi.
She simply went to the Student Affairs Center,
told them that she was Ian's
"guardian
angel" for
the crew club, and they handed her Ian's combina-
tion.
I guess they expected her to surprise him with
brownies or something normal.
Nope. Instead, Mimi filled a plastic container
with lime Jell-O, placed it in Ian's locker, and wait-
ed for him
to
discover his love token.
After each class, Mimi would sprint through the
high school to Ian's locker and wait for him at the
end of the hallway. She would stand there for the
entirety of the six minutes allotted in between each
class period, and then she'd sprint to class when
Ian didn't go to his locker.
m1ss1on.
Maybe Mimi would've had more of a chance if
she had used any flavor but the crap known as lime
Jell-O.
Personally, I think the flaw in her plan was the
actual stalker factor.
Everyone loves grand, romantic gestures (admit
it, you
damn
cynic,) and we love it when a person
does something wild and crazy for a crush.
However, I
think
that we love those gestures - so
long as they don't involve and sort of
security
breach and/or stalking ... a lesson Mimi learned the
hard way.
Apparently, the wisdom, "Go big or go home,"
isn't always applicable.
Sometimes, you'll be slapped with the reality of,
"Go big, and you'll probably go home. Alone."
THE CIRCLE •
THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 2008 •
PAGE
6
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IN DECIDING WHICH LAW
SCHOOL
TO ATTE D,
Quinnipiac Univer ity School of aw ranks among the top
100
law schools
in
such
categories as full-time student LSAT
scores
(median
-
158)· admi sion acceptance rates;
student/faculty
ratio
(13:1);
and employment rates
after graduation. Not
to
mention, we
offer merit scholarships ranging from
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to full tuition. Before you decide which
school to attend, make sure you review the facts.
To
learn more, visit
law.quinnipiac.edu,
email
ladm@quinnipiac.edu
or call
1-800-462-1944.
I
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H
TtIE CIRCLE
THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 2008
www.maristcircle.com
Expected success in spring concert with 400 tickets sold
By
TRICIA CARR
A&E Editor
This Saturday, the oft-dis-
cussed spring concert is coming
to the Marist River Front. As of
Tuesday, 400 tickets had been
sold. With the addition of
Belikos, the winner of Marist's
Battle of the Bands, to the line-
up, students are becoming more
optimistic about the show.
Are,"
was
released on June
19. Their latest
s i n g l e ,
"Broken,"
reached number
70
on
Billboard's Hot
Digital
Songs
list
in
2008.
Other
singles
Lifehouse fans
can look forward
to hearing on
Saturday
are
"First
Time,"
''Whatever
It
Takes,"
"You
and Me" and
When the spring concert featur-
ing
Lifehouse
and
Matt
Nathanson was announced in
February, its Facebook event
wall confirmed mixed feelings
among students.
Comments
ranged from "can't wait" to
"I
didn't know people actually paid
money to see Lifehouse."
"Hanging By A
WWW.MYSPACE.COM/BELIKOS
Moment."
Winner
of
Battle of the Bands, Bellkos, Is opening for this weekend's spring concert.
According to their Web site,
Lifehouse has sold out shows in
cities across the U.S. including
their New York City show at the
Roseland Ballroom on April l.
Following their concert at
Marist, Lifehouse will be per-
forming later that day at SUNY
Binghamton.
Their latest album, "Who We
Matt
Nathanson, known for his cover
of "Laid," is accompanying
Lifehouse on their national tour.
Playing the 12-string guitar, he
has potential to be a great open-
ing act with an array of songs
from his six studio albums.
Belikos, who won the chance
to open for
a
national band at the
Chance Theater after Battle of
the Bands, joined the spring con-
cert in March. Coming from
Ann
Arbor, Mich., the band has a
sowid similar to the Gym Class
Heroes. Their MySpace page
says "when the Belikos family
takes the stage they can make
clergy give the devil a chance
and good kids dance like dosed
up sex addicts."
With the variety of music pro-
vided by these three unique
artists, this year's spring concert
should be enjoyable for students.
The show is expected to start at
noon. Student tickets can be pur-
chased at College Activities for
$5 and guest tickets for $15 up to
the day of the show.
Give Mom and Dad a break and try out our
HASSLE-FREE SUMMER STORAGE!
Limited Number
Available!
Call Now to
.
Reserve you rs!
but
if
not. ...
Try
Our Units:
Storage units inside
our climate
controlled building.
Includes pick up
and delivery.
Share ·with your
roommates!!
Semester and year
storage also available.
4'wide
, Includes 2 oversized pieces AND
FREE pickup
&
delivery!!
ADDSPACE
INDOOR
SELF-STORAGE
i
11111111111
I
Call
845-297 -1500
or visit us at
www.
addspace.com
(Submit your unit request by clicking on the VASSAR link)
Try something new
next
semester.
The Circle
is looking for new e-board members
for the fall.
Interested? E-mail WriteTheCircle@gmail.com
PAG~7
"
.
,
.JI
Karan creates trendy
DK.NY spring collection
By
COURTNEY
SAVOIA
Staff Writer
Donna Karan is one
of the most passionate
and
inspirational
designers that the
fashion world has
been exposed to
sinccllll•-
she came onto
the
scene in 1984.
Driven
by her own creative
spirit, Donna has
cre-
ated pieces for the
everyday
ma~,
woman and child
who
crave
i:omfortab
l
e
and stylish fashion.
"Everything
I
do
i
s.__ _
_.
a matter of heart, body
and soul," says Donna Karan,
chief designer of the internation-
al company that bears her name
.
"For me, designing is an expres-
sion of who
I am as a woman,
with all the complications, feel-
ings and emotions."
Karan considers the lifestyle
that her customer has before
designing her collections. She
became famous for her easy
seven pieces, which every
woman needs to get though each
d
ay o
f
the
week These
ba
s
ic
pieces have made her one of the
most renown and popular
designers among celebrities,
who tum to her for everything
from casual dress to evening
wear.
"I created this company for
women like me and my friends,"
says Karan. "We're passionate
and creative, striving to make a
difference in whatever way we
can. For us, communication is
the ultimate essential of all."
Donna Karan New York was
established in 1989 and features
more reasonable prices than
Karan's couture collections.
DKNY is what Karan calls "the
pizza to Collection's caviar".
The target customer is someone
who is young and is willing to
take a risk. The prices range
from $29.50 to over $300 and
features clothes that can be worn
any day of the
week.
"Simply stated, DKNY is the
energy and spirit of New York:
International, eclectic, fun, fast
and
real,"
according
to
DKNY.com. "DKNY addresses
the real-life needs of people
everywhere, from work to week-
end, jeans to evening
.
Both fash-
ionable and friendly, DKNY
consistently delivers its unique
mix of style around the world."
The DKNY brand is inspired
by the feel and excitement of
New York City. Growing up in
Long Island and later working in
New York City, Karan became
influenced by the atmosphere
and attitude of city-life and
incorporated this into her collec-
tion.
The DK.NY collection offers
basic t-shirts, a wide assortment
of denim, blouses, skirts, dresses
and jackets. More recently,
accessories have been added and
include handbags, shoes, acces-
sories, eyewear and even
fra-
grances. Karan has expanded
her
collection to the fullest and cov-
ers every aspect of what her cus-
tomer needs for everyday life
and anything else they so desire.
Karan's current spring collec-
•
"
,J
.,
WWW.DKNY.COM
tion follows many of the trends
that have been so popular this
season including bright colors,
bold patterns and geometric
"'
designs
.
Flowy skirts and mini-
dresses are available in shades of
bright yellow, pink 'and white ,
•
and feature unique patterns, such
as floral designs. Even the shoes
and accessories in her collection
.
feature some type of color pat-
•
tern or design and are perfect for
the customer who wishes to
try
a
trend on a smaller scale. instead
of in an entire garment.
The versatility of Karan's
designs is one of the qualities
that make her such a respectable
designer among people who
have different budgets. She
seems to understand that her
designs appeal to different types
•
of customers and has been very
accommodating by creating
bridge and better collections, in
addition to her couture
line.
:
One of the reasons she designs
'
for different categories and at
different price points goes back
to when she first created the
DK.NY collected in 1989. Karan
was looking for ways to create
stylish and trendy clothing that
her daughter and husband could
wear every day, whether it was
going to school or work or to
social events. She realized that
although she was designing for
high-class people, you can't be
dressed-up all the time, and it is
important to have those go-to
casual pieces for a typical day.
"For Karan, it's never been just
about clothes," according to
DKNY.com.
"It's about a
lifestyle. She sees the entire pic-
ture from head-to-toe, from
function to aesthetic."
This quote illustrates another
one of the reasons I admire
Donna Karan so much. She is
always thinking and considering
what is in the best interest of her
customer. She not only thinks
about the fabric and quality of
her designs, but also considers
what her customer is going to be
doing while wearing her clothes
and if it fits into their lifestyle.
I think that DKNY is a great
example of a lifestyle brand,
especially for customers who are
in college, because it represents
the fun and excitement of being
young. For me, clothing has
always been an expression of
who I am and where I am during
a certain point of my life.
Knowing that Karan
is
on the
same page as her customer is an
added bonus and will continue to
bring her success for years to
come.
THE CIRCLE
THURSDAY,
APRIL 24, 2008
www.maristcircle.com
PAGES
A reflection on Relay
for
Life at
Marist
By CHRISTINE SAVOIA
Staff Writer
On Friday, Apr.
18, Marist
College hosted Relay for Life
with the help of the American
Cancer Society on the campus
green. For those who are unfa-
miliar with the event, the
American Cancer Society hosts
over 4,800 relays nationwide
each year in order to raise
money for cancer
research,
honor those who are currently
battling cancer and remember
those who have died as cancer
victims.
These
relays
are gener-
ally overnight events where
teams set up tents and take
shifts
walking
for the cause.
Last weekend, students from
all sorts of organizations, clubs
and Greek affiliations poured
onto the campus green to par-
ticipate
in
the walk that lasted
from 6 p.m.
Friday
night to 6
a.m.
Saturday morning.
The
event was
kicked off by a series
of riveting
speeches
from
American Cancer
Society rep-
resentatives and Marist faculty
and
students who
helped make
Relay for Life possible here on
campus, as well as an honorary
first lap
for
all cancer survivors
present.
At 10 p.m. that night, the
luminaria Ceremony of Hope
was held, during which candles
were lit to form the word
"HOPE" in remembrance of
those who had lost their lives.
For those who did not attend
this year, I would definitely
recommend it as something to
get involved in next year, even
for graduating seniors who
might be looking for a reason to
Society is an easy way to
ensure that they are able to keep
doing what they do best: trying
to find cures and providing sup-
port for those still fighting.
Relay was personally a
very
important thing for me to
attend. Just two weeks before
my high school graduation, I
walked into a hospital room and
was shocked to see that my
grandmother, who had always
been one of the central figures
"Even
if you're not able to attend the event itself, donat-
ing onllne to the American Cancer Society
Is
an easy way
to ensure that they are able to keep doing what they do
best: trying to find cures and providing support for those
still fighting."
visit campus. Although I per-
sonally didn't tough out the
entire night, it really was a
great experience for me as
someone who has lost several
relatives to cancer. It was obvi-
ous that they try to make the
event not only a time ofremem-
brance and hope, but also an
opportunity to have fun by pro-
viding food and a DJ.
Even if you're not able to
attend the event itself, donating
online to the American Cancer
in my life, was so worn down
by the
.
effects of chemotherapy
and a spreading ovarian cancer
that she didn't even recognize
me; she died the next day.
I
can
perfectly picture the day· of her
wake and how much evidence
there was of what a horrific bat-
tle she had gone through. Her
cheeks wer~ completely
sunken
in, all of her hair had fallen out,
and her arms were little more
than brittle twigs. It's probably
the worst memory I have
in
all
Local
psych evaluation
Student participants
needed for
this study
By KARLIE JOSEPH
Staff Writer
Over
the past eight
months and continuing
through
Juiy,
Marist
College students
are being
offered the opportunity
to participate in a
smokers' study
conducted by George Schinkel.
The study will
take place at Dutch~ss County
Department
of
M~ntal Hygiene, and those who
choose to participate will receive $20 in
exchange for
their
service.
"The
whole process
is
fairly simple," said
Schinkel;
"We
start with a phone screening in
order
to see if the
person is a good candidate
for
the study, then further olarify their credibil-
ity
with a brief psychological evaluation."
After
the
volunteer is
cleared, he or she must
complete
an hour long interview at Dutchess
County
Department
of
Mental Hygiene. The
interview
consists of
specific
questions regard-
ing past memories and experiences.
"There
are
absolutely
no risks involved,"
said Schinkel, "and
the most appealing part for
students is it is an easy 20
bucks."
While
in the
process of changing career
paths,
Schinkel, former CEO
of NBGI
Securities Inc, bolds
an internship at Dutchess
County Department
of Mental Hygiene and is
currently working at
both
Lexington
Center for
Recovery and
Downstate
Correctional facility
in
Beacon.
Schinkel said
that the research is
being done
as a part of
his dissertation as he is
working
for
a
PhD in psychology at The New
School
University
in Manhattan.
The research is based on a model developed
in the late 1970s by psychologist Dr. Carlo
C:
Diclamente at the Universi~y of Rhode Island.
The concept, known as the
"Stages
of Change
Model" examines the differing steps a person
takes before a major change bas occurred in
their life.
"I am basically looking for two constructs in
this particular study," said Schinkel,
"the
pre•
contemplative stage which includes those who
are happy with their particular status as a
smoker,
and the contemplative
stage, those
who are looking to change." Schinkel's
goal is
to identify bow smoking contributes to how
people portray themselves to the world.
"The
specifics of the questions are directed
to
answer my
_
fundamental question in the
research: how addiction impacts personality,"
said Schinkel.
Schinkel said that while the research is not
limited to college students, the majority of his
participants are between the ages of 19 and
22.
"I have currently completed 15
subjects
including students from
The
New School,"
said
Schinkel, "So far I have
gotten only
two
responses from Marist students but none that
actually took part in the study."
Schinkel said that his main focus has been
college campuses for two reasons:
availability
and the number of people who begin
smoking
in
this age group. Schinkel looks
to
have more
participants as the study
continues.
"I hope the Marist community will be willing
to contribute to this research,"
said Schinkel.
EARTH
WEEK
www
.
thedailygreen.com
my lifetime. It's a feeling you
can't really.
comprehend
until
you
experience
it for
yourself.
Likewise,
taking
the proper
steps to protect
yourself
from
cancer
is equally
important.
Being young doesn't mean it's
okay to not be health-con-
scious. Older adults don't get
the types of avoidable cancer
from
whatever they
are doing at
that point at
their lives- they
get
it
from
doing things they
shouldn't have done at our age.
For our
generation,
this would
largely include
smoking
and
tanning.
I'm sure
everyone's
had the
anti-cigarette lecture hammered
into them
since grade school.
·
Tobacco
usage
is the
number
one cause of
preventable
deaths
and does all sort of
horrible
things
to
your
body.
According to quit-smoking-
stop.com,
it causes
heart
attacks,
stroke, several
kinds of
cancers, heart disease, and
emphysema. It also
claims
that
3 out of
every 4
deaths of
young
people is
due to
smok-
ing,
half of
lifetime smokers
will
die
from the
habit,
and
half
of those
deaths occur in
middle
age.
Furthermore, according
to
th~ Skin Cancer Foundation's
website, a 1994 Swedish
study
concluded that women between
18 and 30 years of age
who vis-
ited a tanning salon ten times or
more had a seven times higher
chance
of
developing
melanoma. Youth and carefree
attitudes will not last forever,
so it is important to have a per-
spective that prevents health
issues in the future.
This
is
why events like
Relay,
for Life are
so
important. No
one
should have to see
someone
they love
so dehumanized by a
disease. Also, take
care of
yout
body- it's the only
one you're
going
to
get. Meanwhile,
maka
the effort to participate in
events like
Relay for
Life. They
really
do
make a
difference.
www.relayforlife.com
The Green Scene:
tips & terms
Compiled By BRITTANY FIORENZA
Health Editor
Tips:
1.
While driving,
maintaining
a constant speed
will
save gas.
2.
Five minute showers
use half the amount of water
a typical shower is capable of using, accord
ing
to
the
U.S. Environmental
Protection
Agency.
3.
Pay your bills online. Save paper
and
fossil fuel!
4.
Air-dry your
clothes rather than use
a drying machine.
5.
Print on both sides
of
your paper
(Each
year
America uses
4
million tons of paper -
that's
2'7
pounds per person!)
6.
Walk, don't drive.
7.
Lower
your home heating and
add
an
extra layer
of
shirts (a heavy sweater adds 4 degrees!)
8.
Reuse
plastic
bags.
(They
make good
garb~ge
bags.)
9.
Don't
keep your tap
running when you're not using the
water. (Example: while brushing youc
teeth, washing dishes etc.)
10.
Keep
the fridge
full. Not too
full,
not too
empty
to
utilize the maximum efficiency of energy.
Source,
www
.
thedailygreen.com
Terms:
Biodegradable
A material or substance which, when
left
exposed
to
nature, will decompos~ without harmful effects to
the
environment.
Brownfield
The U
.
S. Environmental
Protection
Agency's (EPA) designation for existing facilities or sites that have
been
abandoned or underused
because of
real
or perceived
environmental contamination. The EPA spon
sors
an initiative to
help
mitigate
these health
risks and return the facility or land to renewed
use.
Cradle-to-Grave -
With no
consideration for sustainability,
these
types
of
products are used for a period of time and then
discarded,
often
long before their useful life
is actually complete.
Daylighting
Natural daylight introduced into interior spaces and controlled specifically to reduce levels of electril::
lighting,
minimize glare and optimize lighting quality.
Fossil Fuels
Fuels such as coal, oil and natural gas extracted from
beneath
the Earth's surface, often with significa.qt
environmental and political cost. These fuels are a finite resource and are non
-
renewable
.
Hazardous Waste -
Byproducts of society with physical, chemical
or
infectious characteristics that pose hazards to the envi-
ronment and human
health
when improperly handled.
Sick Building Syndrome (SBS)
Health complaints such as
nasal
congestion,
headache, irritated
eyes, lethargy and tiredness, which are
difficult
to
medically diagnose but
are present
in
individuals when they are within a building and di~-
appear or diminish once they
leave
the building.
The
cause of
SBS
is suspected to
be
poor air quality
anti
conditions within the building.
Wastewater
Water
that
has been used and contaminated. Wastewater must be purified before being used again or
before
being returned to the environment.
Source, American Society of Interior Decorators (ASID), 2005
www
.
marlstclrcle.com
THE
CIRCLE •
THURSDAY
,
APRIL
24
,
2008 •
P
AG
E
9
- - - - - - - - - - - - - . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , . - - - - - - - r - - - - - ~ - -
RE
in Poughkeepsie and Fishkill
would like to offer any Marist College student a
15%
student discount
anytime, for any product or meal!
***
Simply show us your student ID
We
serve brea!ifast items, lunch and dinner
***
Free
Wi-Fi,
a cozy
fireplace,
and jazz
...
The perfect study environment!
Bring your laptops!
Limit
$20
per visit before discount.
See you soon!
www.marlstclrcle.com
THE CIRCLE •
THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 2008 •
PAGE 10
Green and Rigas honored as Marist goes 5-1
By
JUSTINE DECOTIS
Staff Writer
The Marist women's softball
team had a superb week, going
5-1 with two games each over St.
John's and Metro Atlantic
Athletic Conference (MAAC)
foes Rider and Iona.
Last
Wednesday,
Marist traveled
down to Queens fQr a double
header with Big East team St.
John's. Megan Rigos continued
her great season by
pitching
superbly for the Foxes, throwing
the complete game in a 4-1 victo-
ry for the Foxes. She allowed
one unearned run on only two
hits and recorded ten strikeouts
and did not allow a walk. Marist
had a very balanced offensive
attack as six players recorded
hits, all six getting one each.
The Red Foxes began the scor-
ing early as they jumped on St.
John's starter Linzee Sumerall
for three runs in the first and
one
in the second.
Rigos may have pitched well in
Game 1, but her performance
was overshadowed as St. John's
pitcher Kat Lawrence hurled a
perfect game against Marist in a
shortened
Game
2.
The game ended in the fifth
because of the ten-run rule.
Lawrence's first inning foreshad-
owed what would be a superb
game as she struck out the side.
Strikeouts accounted for
~
. .
~ ~ ~ ~ • • • • • • • • • • • • • • than the score indi-
twelve of the fifteen outs in ...
_ _ _
ll••••llll!I
cates as both teams
the
game.
scored three runs
The St. John's offense was
in the first. Marist
led by Alyson Funn, who
went ahead 4-3 in
went 2-for-3 with four
the sixth before
RBIs
and two runs scored.
adding three insur-
The Red Foxes showed
ance runs in the
resilience through the rest
seventh.
Malloy
of the week by not allow-
again had a good
ing the 10-0 perfect game
game driving in
loss to bring them down.
two runs on two
Marist
traveled
to
hits.
Lawerenceville, N.J. for a
The good for-
doubleheader with Rider
(;.;~~ti~
tunes continued for
looking for their first con-
Marist
on
Sunday
ference win, and they were
when it faced Iona
able to come away with
in a doubleheader.
two wins. Rigos again got.._,~.
The Foxes explod-
the start for Marist and
ed in Game 1, win-
pitched a complete game.
ning by a score of
She allowed two runs, one
E:;;:;:::.;..==~
7
.
.:...::,...;:~;::;::::;,:::;:::~=
17-0.
earned, on three hits with
iiiiiiti■iiliii~
The Foxes got the
seven strikeouts. However,
~
....
~..:;.:.iblil.l~:CC:=~!::::::i:.i
~~\I
scoring
started
Rigos needed help from her
....,._liooiiil ..
early by scoring
teammates
at the end of the
.
JAMES REIUY/
THE:
CIRCLE
nine runs right out
.
Senior ace
Megan
Rigos
went
3-0
for the Foxes
this
past
.
~ame when It ap~eared that
week ..
In
MAAC
play she struck out
13
and allowed
Just of the gate m the
It would end up m the loss
one
ea
med
run
in
12 innings
pitched. Two
of
her wins
top of the firSt
column for the Foxes.
were
complete games.
In Wednesday's game against
St.
The offensive
Marist was trailing 2-1 in
John's she struck out
10
and did not allow an earned
run. onslaught
was
the top of seventh with two
pitched a complete game in a 7-3
extremely as five
outs when Kate Malloy came up victory for the Foxes. Melissa players had RBIs and ten collect-
with the clutch two-run single Giordiano was the catalyst for
ed at least one hit. In a day of.
that gave the Foxes the lead.
the Red Fox offense, as she has
offensive leaders, Jessica Green
Rigos retired the Broncs in order been so often the season.
led the way with four hits, four
in the bottom of the inning to Giordiano went 4-for-4 with two
RBIs, and one run scored in five
clinch the 3-2 win.
runs scored and one RBI from
at-bats. Rigas pitched all five
Caitlin Carpentier was the
the leadoff spot
in
the order.
innings, shutting out the Gaels
starter for Marist in Game 2 and
The game was a closer contest and allowing only one hit.
Carpentier started Game 2 for
Marist and almost bested Rigas
as she also shut out Iona, allow-
ing two hits. The
offense
contin-
ued to shine for Marist as it bat-
tered the Iona pitcher for eight
runs
on
eight hits. Pamela de la
Llave led the scoring with two
hits, two
RBIs
and a run scored.
Marist's 8-0 win gave them a
four game winning streak and
improved its MAAC record to
4J
3.
Green
and Rigas were honored
by MAAC in what was a great
week for the entire Marist team.
Green was named MAAC Player
of the Week and Rigas took
MAAC
Pitcher
of the Week hon-
ors for the third time this season.
Green finished the week
9-for-19
with eight RBIs, four runs
scored, and three walks, good for
over
a .500 on-base percentage.
Rigas
had
a superb week fmish-
ing with a 3-0 record and a 0.37
ERA in
nineteen
innings.
The
Red
Foxes will look to
contin1,1e their hot play with the
mid-week double header against
non-conference foe Fordham.
The Foxes will then return home
for two
tough
conference match-
ups against second place
Niagara
and first place Canisius. Marist
is currently third in the MAAC
with a 4-3 record, 17-22 overall
on
the
season.
Le Moyne takes down Marist in three straight
By
RICH ARLEO
runs over the next five innings.
Sports Co-Editor
After going down 6-2 early, it
was tough for Marist to
try
to
The Marist baseball team was come back, and Le Mayne's
on a three-game winning streak
heading into a road trip to Le
Moyne. The only problem is,
Le
Moyne was on a five-game win-
ning streak themselves, and after
the weekend series, Marist's
streak is over and Le Mayne's is
now at eight games.
·
The Red Foxes dropped all
three games to Le Moyne out in
Syracuse and kept Le Mayne's
offense under double digits in
only one of the three games.
In the first game, Marist's
starter Stephen Peterson wasn't
able to get out of the second
inning. He gave up six runs in
1.1 innings pitched before being
relieved by Kyle Putnam,, who
was solid in giving up just four
offense tacked on a few more to
stave off any effort of a Red Fox
comeback.
The second game of the double
header
was a
bit
c1oscr.
however.
Marist got out to a 2-0 lead, but
Le Moyne answered back in the
bottom of the second with four
runs of their own off Marist's
st~rting pitcher Josh Rickards.
He only lasted 3
.2
innings and
suffered from some control
issues. He only gave up three
hits, but had five walks which
led to giving up six runs. He was
relieved by junior Jacob Wiley,
who shut down Le Mayne for the
rest of the game and gave Marist
a chance to regain the lead.
Wiley was the most impressive
pitcher over the weekend, as he
~nly allowed one hit in 2.1
innings pitched against the pow-
erful Le Mayne offense.
Marist pounded out 13 hits in
the game but was only able to
squeak out five nms, which was-
n't enough to overtake Le
Moync.
The Foxes offense had five hit-
ters with multi-hit games, and
senior catcher Keith Glasser led
the team with two RBIs when he
cut the deficit to 6-4 in the sixth
inning with a two-run home
run.
Designated hitter Andrew
Stanton hit a solo shot in the first
inning to ~riginally
.
put Marist
ahead, and the top three hitters in
the lineup combined to go 6-12,
but only scored two runs.
After a rough double header,
Marist looked to
try
to
rebound
on Sunday, but Le Mayne's
offense would have none of it,
aod Marist was down 8- l by the
end of the third inning, which
proved
to
be too <Jeep a hole to
dig out of.
Marist decided to go with
freshman pitcher Sean Mckeown
to start, but he was ineffective.
\ft
r he
gave up
six earned
runs
in just two innings, sophomore
Richard
Cary
came in and was
able to at least slow down Le
Mayne's offense just a bit, but
wasn't able to shut them down
completely. Cary gave up four
earned runs over the next 4.1
innings pitched.
Wiley came in again and fin-
ished out the game on the mound
for Marist, giving up one
run
in
1.2 innings pitched.
The Red Foxes offense wasn't
too bad,. but once again they just
didn't do enough to overcome
the large deficits they were in
each game.
Freshman second baseman
Ricky Pacione led Marist's
offense with two solo home
runs.
First baseman Kenny Anderson
also added two RBIs. The seven
runs scored weren't enough, and
Marist
loi.t
the final
game
of the
series by a score of
11-
7.
Marist
is cunrently
tied
fol'
sev-
enth place in the Metro Atlantic
Athletic Conference
(MAAC)
with a 5-7 record. They are 14-19
overall.
The schedule from here on out
is mostly conference games, so
the Red Foxes are going to have
to start winning quickly and con-
sistently
if they want to have any
chance in the MAAC.
The team will face Saint Peters
at home for an important three-
game series
starting
on April 26.
Water Polo gears for MAACs
Marist combine
By
RON JOHNSON
Staff Writer
Water polo continues
to
live
up
to the athletic tradition others
sports have established here at
Marist College.
Over the past few years, Marist
has demonstrated exceptional
athletic ability in some major
sports such
as basketball
and
baseball~ but few know of the
success Marist College has
demonstrated in its
women's
water polo program.
This year the team has accumu-
lated a 25-7 record, which is pro-
gram
record
for
wins.
The Foxes went undefeated in
conference play this year, going
10-0 for the second straight sea-
son.
Marist proved itself earlier this
season by hanging tight with the
No. 14 team in the nation,
Hartwick College. Marist lost by
thtee, but the competition set the
team up for its Metro Atlantic
Athletic Conference (MAAC)
games.
"The out-of-conference play
helped us prepare for
our
confer-
ence opponents this year," head
coach Ashleigh Jacobs said.
The water polo team is current-
ly ranked 12th in the nation in
defense and sixth in offense. In
addition, they received votes in
I
the AP Poll to be one of the Top
20 teams in the nation.
No team would ever get off the
ground without the players, how-
ever. Captains Libby Davis, the
senior goalie,
and Katelin
Mccahill, the junior 2M, have
led this team on offense and
defense.
They are supported by a solid
core, of players in Maggie
Hatcher,
Kristen
Barnett
,
Samantha
Swartz, and Angie
Rampton, who according to
coach
Jacobs
are key players and
major
scorers on this team.
Marist has a solid group of
returning
players next year, 6
upcoming
MAAC
Championships. Marist will face
Siena in the semi-finals this
Saturday at 3 p.m. at home, and
if they defeat Siena, will go on to
the finals at home on Sunday at 2
p.m. against the winner of Iona
vs. Wagner.
"We have a good group of moti-
vated girls," said Jacobs, "and
it's really nice to see all their
hard work and hours with Greg
White
(the
Strength
and
Conditioning Coach) in the gym,
pay-off."
returning freshman, nine sopho-
Good Luck to the Marist Water
mores, and three juniors, all of
Polo Team as they host the
whom have the experience to
MAAC Womens Water· Polo
keep this team on top for years to
Championships at the McCann
come.
Center Natatorium on April 26
Coach Jacobs stated that "no
and April 27!
team can be overlooked; any-
body can beat anybody at any
point."
The
Red
Foxes
defeated
their
biggest rival, Wagner, in compet-
itive matches twice this season.
St. Francis proved to be a tough
competitor for the Red Foxes
this year with both match-ups
proving to be exciting, both ulti-
mately ending in Marist wins.
In
addition, Marist beat conference
rival Iona twice on the way to
receiving the No. 1 seed in the
'
By
DEANNA
GILLEN
Features Co-Editor
Dr. Keith Strudler's Public
Relations Class to hold Marist
Combine,
an
event which aims
to show how Marist Students
stack up against NFL's Draft
prospects,
which
combines
~peed and agility tests (40-yard
dash, 20-yard shuttle, three-cone
drill) as well as the vertical leap
and standing long jump.
It
will
take place at Marist's state-of-
the-art Tenney Stadium at
Leonidoff Field
0,11
April 27 at
I
p.m.
-4p.m.
"You have heard plenty from
Mel Kiper and other NFL Draft
Analysts, and a lot of the analy-
sis has
to
do with prospective
players' performances in the
NFL Combine,"
said Eric
Zedalis, a senior in Strudler's
P.R. class. "Now's your chance
to
see how you would do in these
drills."
All proceeds from the event
will be donated to Matt's
Promise Foundation
"This past winter, my friend
from back home died of cancer.
He had had it since he was a jun-
ior in high school," said Kristen
Casamento, a junior at Marist
College, and a member of
Strudler's P.~. class. " I knew
I
really wanted to do something in
his memory, so when I wasn't
able to attend the walk they had
in Old Tappan, New
Jersey
for
him, I decided our group could
donate our proceeds in his name
to
Matt's Promise Foundation."
"This is a really cool event,
because we'll really get to see
how athletic the non-athletes at
Marist College are. Maybe some
were really
.
talented in high
school, but didn't get recruited
here.
"If you love to compete, this
event is for you," said Travis
Miller of Strudler's class. "You'll
see just how fast and
versatile
you really are.
Students can sign up in the
McCann Center on Apr. 19 from
9 a.m. -3 p.m., and Apr. 23 from
12
p.m.
3
p.m.
The cost is $1 per event or $3 to
participate in all five events.
Free pizza courtesy of Rocco's
Pizzeria and door prizes for all
particiP.ants
courtesy
of
Dutchess
Distributors.
Individual event winners and
overall male and female winners
will be awarded prizes. See the
event page
on
Facebook (Marist
Combine presented by Dr.
Strudler's
Sports
Public
Relations class) or e-mail marist-
combine@gmail.com for more
information.
Roarin'
Red Foxes
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www.maristcircle.com
THE CIRCLE •
THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 2008 •
PAGE 11
~
Women's lacrosse drops final home match to Le Moyne
:By
MATT SPILLANE
:News
Co-Editor
In
its last regular season game
:of 2008, the Marist women's
.lacrosse team put forth one of its
:best overall performances of the
;year. With balanced offense,
:aggressive
defense, and consis-
:tent
goaltending, the Red Foxes
:had all facets of their game in
:synch.
To
Marist's dismay,
though,
the
:;same could
be
said for Le
;Moyne. The Dolphins went toe
:to toe with the Red Foxes
~oughout the course of an
:evenly
matched contest,
but
it
:was Le Moyne that ended up
f
with the final tally.
The Dolphins clung to a
one
goal lead for the
final
10:23 of
over Marist on Sunday, April 20,
putting a damper on the Red
Foxes' senior day. Being the la~t
home game of the season, Marist
honored seniors Lindsey Diener,
Liz
Burkhard
,
Ali Carnabuci,
Caitlin Bergin, Jessica O'Brien,
and Kelsey Haggett beforehand.
The senior class led Marist to
was really nice to each other out
there. You could tell there's a lit-
tle rivalry in there."
In
a physical bout, each team
had a controlling half, with Le
Moyne's coming in the second.
Sophomore midfielder Liz
Falco split two Le Moyne
defenders and scored with nine
an 8-8 record this season and the seconds left in the first half to put
second seed in this weekend's'
Metro
Atlantic
Athletic
Conference
(MAAC)
Championship at Iona. The Red
Foxes lost last year's MAAC
title game to
Le
Moyne in a 14-
13 overtime nail biter.
The bitter taste from last year's
loss to the Dolphins carried over
to the teams' matchup last week-
end.
"You could definitely feel the
her team llp 6-5 at the break.
Falco also had the game's first
score earlier in the half, and the
teams proceeded to trade goals
throughout the rest of the period.
Marist would go up one with Le
Moyne quickly tying it.
Marist broke the trend, tallying
the first two goals after halftime.
However, Le Moyne amped up
its transition defense and trig-
gered a four goal
run that
(
:the game for an 11-1
O
victory tension," Diener said. "No one allowtd the Dolphins to take a 9-
8 lead midway through the sec-
ond half.
"We couldn't get the ball safe-
ly into our attacking end," Marist
head coach Tanya Kotowicz said,
"and when we did we rushed
things."
The teams traded a pair of goals
before junior attacker Kate
Noftsker found junior midfielder
Carolyn Sumcizk, who knotted
the score at 10-10 with 12:44 left
in the contest. Le Moyne did not
take long to recapture the lead,
however.
Junior attacker Michelle
Lissner dodged from behind the
cage, drew a double team, and hit
freshman defender Mia Valletta
on the crease for an easy goal.
With 10:23 left, Marist had plen-
ty of time to retake the lead.
The Red Foxes could not get
anything going on offense,
though. Marist's best scoring
opportunity came with 0:10 left
as Le Moyne lost possession and
Falco snagged the loose ball. As
the seconds ticked off the clock,
Falco raced downfield, quickly
faked a defender, and got off a
shot that went just wide of the
net.
Falco finished the contest with
four goals and five groundballs,
while Carnabuci scored twice.
Diener had a goal and an assist
and Burkhard stopped 14 shots
and grabbed two groundballs.
Although the team lost its reg-
ular season finale, Marist still
heads into the MAAC tourna-
ment on a strong note, coming
off a passionate performance
against Le Moyne.
The
Red
Foxes will play third-seeded
Canisius on Friday, April 25, at
noon at Iona.
Marist earned a 15-14 victory
over the Griffs on April 11, and
knows what challenges Canisius
presents. However, the Red
Foxes cannot help looking for-
ward to a potential rematch with
top seed Fairfield. The Stags
defeated Marist 11-10 in over-
time earlier in the year for the
Red Foxes only MAAC lo
.
ss, and
Marist would love a second shot
at them.
"Our head is there
[Canisius],"
Diener said, "but we still have
Fairfield in the back of our
minds."
[
M
en's and women's rowing teams win conference titleS
I
:By
SARAH SHOEMAKER
:
staff
Writer
:
The Marist men's and women's
:rowing
teams had an excellent
:showin.g
this Sunday, capturing
:Yet another Metro Atlantic
:Athletic Conference
(MAAC)
:championship
title.
I
The men managed to capture
tfirst place in all but one of the
!day's
eight events while the
!women
completely swept the
~ompetition,
placing first in
:every
entered
event.
!
This is the 11th MAAC title for
:the men and the eighth for the
I
:women's team.
:
Even though the conditions
:were tough with a strong head-
:wind blowing against all of the
'
;
boats
,
Marist was able to handle
'the situation at hand.
"Both squads
did
Marist proud
in bringing home both the men's
and the women's MAAC cham-
pionships," remarked senior cap-
tain Brad Gagnon.
"I'm proud of the positive race
results in the face of good com-
petition from our conference
rivals and challenging weather
conditions."
Junior coxswain Lindsay
Wright, who coxed three events
including the winning Women's
Varsity 8 boat, was ecstatic about
her second MAAC champi-
onship title.
"I'm really proud of everyone
on
the team. We all wanted the
win and we all stepped up and
got it. .. victory is a great feeling
in general, but getting there with
amazing people makes it that
much more fabulous."
The men's final-points trophy
scores were 186 points ahead of
second place Fairfield with 157
points, 138 against hird place
Loyola, Iona, 125 points, and
Manhattan
48
points.
The women's team finished with
165 points, followed by Fairfield
University with 135 points, Iona
College, 118 points, Sacred
Heart University, 111 points,
Loyola College, 101 points, and
Manhattan College, 20 points.
We would like to specially rec-
ognize the "Love Boat" Men's
Lightweight 4+, Matt Moreau,
Logan Johnson, Graham Bullis,
and Brenden O'Bryan with their
record-breaking time of 9:30.05,
for proving that coxswains can
row.
Courtesy of Janet Mathes
The Marlst men's and women~ crew teams swept the MMC
champi-
onships
this past
weekend
at Mercer Lake. The
men
have won eight
consecutive titles
while the women won seven of
their
eight events.
"omen's result
1.
Ma1i
t
!.
◄
1rficld
3.
Iona
4. S crcd
Heart
5.lo)ola
6.
1 ah,ttt m
Men's Re u1ts
1.
Man
t
2.
h1rfield
3.
Lo)ol1
4.
Iona
5.
f\1anhatl'ln
THE CIRCLE
THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 2008
www.maristcircle.com
Upcoming Schedule:
Baseball: Saturday, April 26 - vs. Saint Peter's, Noon.
Women's Lacrosse: Friday, April 25 - at Iona, MAAC
Championships.
PAGE
12
Marist defense sets pace vs. Providence, Mount St. Mary's
ByCODYLAHL
Staff Writer
A defense that had allowed
upwards of
10
goals a game
~lamped down this week to
secure Marist mens lacrosse's
first victory and first winning
streak of the season. At the other
end of the field, the Red Foxes'
offense was propelled by sopho-
tnore attack Ryan Sharkey's two
goals and one assist in their
7-6
win over Providence. Freshman
attack Corey Zindel's three goals
(luring their 6-5 double-overtime
win over Mount Saint Mary's
sparked the team.
On Wednesday, April
16,
the
Red Foxes used a five goal sec-
ond quarter and 12 save perform-
ance by junior goalie Ryan
Penner to outlast Providence
7-6.
During the second quarter, the
Red Foxes would make use of a
~
minute equipment penalty on
the Friars' Thomas Wenskus to
net three consecutive man-up
goals. Sharkey assisted senior
attack Pat VanHall with the first
at the
14: 17
mark to even the
~coi;e at 1-1. Zindel would assist
sophomore Matt Francis with the
go-ahead
goal
with
13:48
temaining. Seventeen seconds
later, VanHall assisted sopho-
more attack Matt Teichmann in
extending Marist's lead to 3-1.
Providence would cut Marist's
lead to 3-2 on a goal by Devin
McBride at th~
6: 17
mark; how--
ever, senior Pete O'Hara and
Sharkey would answer with
goals of their own at the 3:49 and
2:02 marks, respectively, to
extend Marist's lead to
5-2
enter-
ing the third quarter.
After a third quarter that saw
each team record a goal, the
Friars would make a desperate
fourth
quarter comeback attempt
in which they would outscore
Marist 3-1, out-shoot Marist 12-
7
and go a perfect
6-6
on clears.
However, Zindel would assist
Sharkey in netting Marist's even-
tual
game-winning goal at the
5:53 mark and the Red Foxes
would hold on to earn their first
victory of the year.
Marist head coach James
Simpson expressed satisfaction
with his team's performance
against Providence.
"It
felt fantastic to put together
a solid
60
minute performance,"
Simpson said, "This is great for
the guys and their confidence."
In
the second game of the
week,
the Red Foxes outlasted
Mount Saint Mary's to earn a
6-5
double-overtime
victory
on
Saturday, April 19. Again, the
Red Foxes defense put forth a
solid effort by spreading five
Mount Saint Mary's goals over
the course of regulation play
while holding the Mountaineers
without a shot in either overtime.
Mount Saint Mary's would
record the game's first points
during a man-up opportunity
when Joe Derwent assisted Dan
Mohr in giving the Mountaineers
a
1-0
lead at the
10:11
mark.
Marist would answer
4:11
later
when junior defensive midfielder
Matt Schunk assisted Zindel in
evening the score at 1-1. Marist
took its first lead of the contest,
2-1, 5:48 later when Teichmann
netted
an
unassisted goal.
Mount Saint Mary's tied the
game at
2-2
when Dan Mohr was
assisted by Jon Rodrick in find-
ing the back of the net 3: 14 into
the second quarter. Seven min-
utes later, Zindel would notch his
second goal of the contest to give
the Red Foxes the lead, 3-2.
However, Mohr would record his
second goal of the contest at the
2:05
mark to tie the score at
3-3
going into the second half.
Over the course of the first half,
Marist was able to outshoot the
Mountaineers 20-17 and record
16
ground balls to Mount Saint
Mary's eight while senior defen-
sive midfielder Dan Needle went
a perfect 8-8 on face-off
attempts.
Marist would record the only
goal of the third quarter as Zindel
would tally his third and final
goal of the match on a cross-net
feed from junior Paul Santavicca
at the
6:01
mark. Freshman
attack Ryan McNiemey would
extend Marist's lead to 5-3 at the
9:19 mark of the fourth quarter.
However, Mount Saint Mary
'
s
constructed a last minute come-
back where Joe Derwert assisted
Geery Grant in cutting the Red
Foxes' lead to one with
00:41
seconds left before notching an
unassisted goal of his own with
00:06
remaining to tie the game,
5-5,
and force overtime.
After an evenly played first
overtime, Santavicca was assist-
ed by Teichmann in making the
most of a Mountaineers
30
sec-
ond holding penalty committed
at the end of the first overtime to
record the game-ending goal
14
seconds into the second over-
time. Santavicca's goal gave
Marist its second victory of the
year and secured the Red Foxes'
first winning streak of the sea-
son.
Marist Head Coach James
Simpson attributes the Red
Foxes' recent defensive perform-
ances to multiple aspects of their
game.
"We preach team offense and
team defense," Simpson said.
"We made a few personnel
changes, guys stepped up, we
have great leadership from our
seniors and we received great
stops from our keeper."
Marist will look forward to
playing at home against Wagner
on Saturday, April 26 at 1 p.m.
GoReclFoxes.com
Freshman
attack
Corey
Zindel led the Red Foxes
In
their
first
two
wins
of
the season.
He notched
a hat trick In the team's double over-
time win
against
Mount
St. Mary's and earned
his
third MAAC rookie
of the week award.
Zlndel
leads
Marlst with
1.
7
goals
and
24 assists.
Upcoming Schedule
Vagn1.:r
~
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FOUNDED IN 1965
THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 2008
Red Foxes hire former Memphis
assistant coach Chuck Martin
By GREG HRINYA
Sports Co-Editor
The name Chuck Martin might
not be recognizable to most peo-
ple, but the names of Memphis
Tigers' stars Derrick Rose, Chris
Douglas-Roberts,
and
Joey
Dorsey surely are.
Martin coached all three while
working as an assistant coach at
Memphis.
The Marist Red Foxes men's
basketball team named Chuck
Martin their head coach on
Thursday, Apr.
17,
in a
2
p.m.
press conference. After guiding
some of the most talented players
in the country, Martin will now
bring his experience to the
Hudson Valley.
Martin spent two seasons at
Memphis and amassed a stagger-
ing
71-6
record alongside
Naismith coach of the year John
Calipari. This past season,
Memphis traveled to the NCAA
championship game only to fall
short in overtime against eventu-
al champion Kansas.
Martin agreed to a six-year deal
that runs through the
2013-2014
season, and he will become the
sixth Division I Yiead coacn in
Red Foxes' basketball history.
For the Marist community,
Martin's arrival represents a
homecoming for the Bronx
native. He played
for
St.
Raymond's High School and
operated as an assistant coach for
both Manhattan and St. John's.
Most recent1y, he assisted
John
Calipari in Memphis' consecutive
runs
to
the NCAA tournament.
Martin noted the
Kaylen Gregory, a senior
campus atmosphere
entering his
fifth
year of
and the opportunity to
...,"_._.,-iiJ.w
eligibility, will look
to
coach at one of the
capitalize on his opportu-
premier schools in the
nity to finally crack the
Metro
Atlantic
lineup after waiting for
Athletic Conference
four seasons.
(MAAC) as
several
"I hoP,e it's my call and
of the reasons he
_ _
it should
be
a good oppor-
chose this school.
tunity because
we're
"When I got here
depleted in guys but not in
the first thing I told
talent," Gregory said.
Tim [Murray) and
Dr.
Gregory is ~xcited about
Murray was there was
the opportunity to play for
a spirit on campus,"
Coach Martin in a system
Martin said.
"There
geared towards his game.
was a life and a pulse
"That
style of play fits
here, and that really
my caliber very well,"
excited me.
If
there's
Gregory
said.
"The
a
life
and there's a
upbeat, fast, running and
pulse on campus, then
jumping type play.
If
he
that will trickle down
can recruit the right guys
to the other programs
for this program
,.
it'll be
here at Marist."
even more exciting to
Before Martin's
watch
than
what we've
arrival at Marist, he
been doing here the past
discussed his plans
four years and should top
with Coach Calipari
it."
and the new Marist
Nothing
new
for
head coach believed
Schneider
this job represented
With Matt Brady's
his best opportunity.
departure, Ryan Schneider
"I think the campus
may be
looking
at
the
is the best campus m
record books. Schneider
the league," Martin
will have played for four
said. "I think it's the
different Division I coach-
bestjob. I don't know
es in his four seasons of
if people agree with._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
__.~~.....;
.-r.-._ __
_..c_ _ _
...;.. _ _
_;=. ___
...J
eligibility. Schneider lias
me or not, and I really
FROM POUGHKEEPSIEJOURNALCOM
played for three different
don't care, but I think
New men's basketball coach Chuck Martin meets the
returning
Red Foxes after
his
coaches since his freshman
it's the best job, the
Introductory
press co~fere~ce held In Cebar~t ~n Thursday April
17.
.
year at Vermont.
campus, the facilities, [and) the
Martm beheves that
Devezm
ts Rose), you can defimtely apply
..
Obviously, I think coming into
atmosphere."
the perfect building block for the here at Marist. I think I've talked my freshman year .of college I
Coach Martin has his work cut type of offense he. wants ~o
to enough people where I think he didn't expect that I would be in
out for
him,
however. Marist will employ here at Manst. Martm can play that way."
the position that I am
today,
but
reportedly lose freshman and co-
hopes
_to
run
an up-t~mp~,
Martin made a point to you can look at it a couple of
MAAC rookie of the year Jay Me~ph1s-s~le off~nse, which ts acknowledge the other talent that ways," Schneider said. "You can
Gavin to a transfer to Virginia a dribble-drive motion.
remains on Marist's roster.
be frustrated and mad about it and
Commonwealth University. In
"I think the way that we played
Despite losing Gavin and six
be
stubborn and it could be an
addition, Marist lost six seniors at at Memphis excites me with seniors, the Red Foxes will lo'ok absolute disaster, or you could
the conclusion of last season.
[Devezin]," Martin said. "I think to their bench for leadership.
accept it and
try
and be successful
and make the most of it."
Despite the inconsistencies,
Schneider is excited about
the
character and experience that
Chuck Martin brings to Marist.
"He has a great resume. He's
worked and coached with some
of the best names in the busi-
ness," Schneider said.
"Hopefully
as a player entering my senior
year he can bring that continued
success here to Marist."
Farmer's view
Although senior and former Red
Foxes' captain Ben Farmer
has
played his last game with Marist,
he was impressed by the hire Tim
Murray and company
·
made in
replacing Brady.
"I
think it's great for the school,
the program, and the communi-
ty," Farmer said. "After hearing
him speak he sounds lik~ a really
good guy, and he's_ got really
good intentions for the program."
Without Farmer, the Red Foxes
miss a great deal of leadership.
Marist will also
lose
key contrib-
utors Ryan
Stilphen, Shae
McNamara, Spongy Benjamin,
and Louie
Mccroskey.
The senior believes
that
the tal-
ent is there
to
be successful next
season in Martin's system, but the
team might
struggle
in its first
season with a new coach.
"The returning players are
good,
they're
good players,"
Farmer said. "I think the system
he's going to want to play, I think
guys like Kaylen and a few other
guys will have a chance to flour-
ish.
"With a new coach it's
always
tough, and
the
first year there's
always some bumps in the road,
but I think eventually he will get
this place right up at the top of
the
league."
''Tim
Murray and his staff made
a slam dunk with the hiring of
Chuck," Calipari said. "Marist
has a proud basketball tradition,
and I'm confident that Chuck will
do his best to continue - and
build on - the level of success the
Marist program has enjoyed."
Point guard David Devezin is the
our
principles and our style of
team's only returning starter.
play [at Memphis with Derrick
Marist students expose
_
green thumbs for Earth
Day
Meet Martin's new
coaching staff:
Tyrone Weeks
Tvron1.:
Weeks was
hired
as
one
oi the men
<.
t'tball team new as
1 -
·
tant
coaches. Weeks was
the
Coordinator
ot
Basketball
OperatfoM for
Memphis
University.
..,._ _ _.
Weeks has six years of
FffOM
ao
REDFOXES.COM
·
experience as a
Division 1
c\1ad1
serving
as
an.assistant
at
Rhode
Island and
'it
Bonaventure.
Philadelphia
11
th
l
and
UMass.graduate,
Weeks
led tti.e Minutemen
to four-straight
C , .
Tournaments and a
Final J'our appearance
n
1996.
Paul Lee
PaulLee
was
hired
as
one
of the
men's
basketball
team ,s new
assistant
coaches.
Lee bas
18
years
of
experience as
an
assis-
.
tant
at Northwestern
and
Columbia. He
spent six
.seasons asColm.nbia's top
FROM NUSPORJS.COM
assistant and recru.iting
coordinator, Jnd wa ·
a Lions•
player
from
1982-1986 and a team captain
during
his
t:nior car
Basketball
Times
ranks
Lee as
one
of't'ne
best assistant
coaches
in the
nation~
THE CIRCLE
845-575-3000
ext.
2429
writetheclrcle@gmail.com
A & E: EXPECTED SUCCESS IN SPRING CONCERT
WITH 400 TICKETS SOLD
3399 North Road
Poughkeepsie, NY
12601
The addition of
Belikos, Marist's Battle of the Bands win-
ner has increased optimism
for
Saturday's
show
PAGE
7
AMY WHEELER/
THE
CIRCLE
Members
of
SEED
participate in the
annual Earth
.
Day.tree planting event In front
of
Leo and Sheahan Hall.
FEATURES: MAINTAINING VALUES - A PROFILE
ON STUDENT-ATHLETE, KASEY NAGLE
Marist
sophomore, Kasey Nagel, focuses
on
what he
finds important in life: family and football
PAGE5
•
THE CIRCLE
..
THURSDAY
,
APRIL
24,
2008
www.maristcircle.com
'
Security Briefs
~enoit attempts Extreme Home Makeover, fails
!:3Y
ffiER THURSON
john
Gildard
in Training
'
;4/17 - Lower West Cedar
•
jn either a strikingly lame
prank or simply the worst
t;ase
of memory
loss
recorded on campus, a stu-
tlent reported their car
~tolen, only to find it in
another location later in the
'
fiay. Unless there are mere-
!Y
more Grana Theft Auto
~mateurs-in-training
on
campus than initially sus-
pected, this can all proba-
bly be attributed to a surely
knee-slapping prank. And
'
to
all
you
wannabe,
gonnabe, two other words
I can't say in this newspa-
per, pranksters, remember,
!'Dude, Where's My Car"
tame out
8
years ago, and it
wasn't that funny then.
Although, I'm sure all it
µeeded was more than a
half a decade for society to
batch up on the prank. Way
io strike while the iron is
hot.
4/18 - Benoit
pisplaying a clever new
way to round up priority
points, the Benoit house
was found
·
to boast a bath-
room complete with ripped-
liown ceiling tiles, toilet-
paper
·
holders hanging off
the wall, and a used fire
extinguisher, with appar-
ently no reason for its use.
To me, this is only fitting -
the place you dispel of
waste should be filled with
waste also. See, sometimes
you just need to look hard
to find the poetry in life.
Sometimes, really hard. It's
a gift, really.
4/18 - Tennis Courts
Making the usual rounds of
the tennis courts
,
security
reported the black fencing
encasing the courts them-
selves was bent. Seriously
-
bent fencing? That's all I
get to work with? An
unknowing passerby tram-
pled on the fencing, or a
displaced deviant really
wanted to mess with the
college.
If
the latter was
true, you really cut deep,
you rebel without a cause.
If
there's anything a college
prides itself on, it's the
black fencing surrounding
any athletic field. Way to
make a statement. Next
time, try ripping out the
flowers in front of the
library in a fit of rage.
Really hit them where it
hurts, why don't you?
4/18 - Campus Green
What, were the monkey
bars and sandboxes too
heavy to assemble? With
the increase in beautiful
summer
temperatures
comes one thing, well,
besides the noticeable lack
of students in classrooms,
Close to
Campus!
Monlh-lo-Month Renla s
• Vorletv
of
510l'Q(Je
Room
Packi
upplies
Avaffable
HYDEPA
4'351600
POUGHKEEPS E
454.001
at least: the Marist College
slip-and-slide.
Allowing
time for at least a few good
flips onto the slide, security
finally
confiscated
the
oversized tarp and hose
after a few minutes. Now,
there could be two reasons
for this crackdown on
childhood activities. Either
security takes the grass
quality of Marist extremely
seriously, or there is just
something about tanned,
toned females in skin-tight
bikinis frolicking under a
cold, dripping hose and
sliding head first down a
giant piece of plastic that
seems to get the general
campus population all hot
and bothered. I'm going
with the grass theory - it
really is the pride and joy.
4/19 - Upper West Cedar
Wasting a perfectly good
breakfast, another group of
merry pranksters took it
upon themselves to snve
eggs to campus, throwing
them at windows in Upper
West Cedar. Well, that's
one way to pass the time.
Most people have a hobby,
a job or something, you
choose to toil your days
away contemplating how
many eggs to throw at win-
dows. Oh, and your high
school guidance counselor
told you you were never
going to amount to any-
thing
.
Look at you, proving
them wrong and every-
thing. You hang in there, Caljfomia, and when you
kitty on a
branch.
speak, no ones probably
watching or listening. I
4/19 -
Lower Townhouses know, I know, you contest -
·
the rest is still unwritten.
What do these three things Actually, also wrong. It's
have
in
common?
A written down, in security,
hairdryer,
an
alarm, and the in
black-and-white.
I can
Fairview fire department? show you if you like.
Answer: all cliches of
Marist College.
Bigger
question: how hot do you
really need your hairdryer
to be before it starts setting
off alarms?
Speaking
of
setting off alarms, where
are your friends,
because
the day you have hair appli-
ances almost burning build
-
ings dowi'•, your brain cell
activity should be setting
off some alarms of its own.
Ouch, that was a bum. Kind
of like a hairdryer one.
Turns out, we do have
something
in
.
common.
Who would've thought?
4/19 - Leo
Hall
Oh
my
god, like, let•s let
the crazy times totally
begin guys. Or not, whatev-
er happens. Security confis-
cated the following alcohol
from one unlucky Leo
room:
Coors,
various
amounts of rum, Bacardi,
and Smirnoff. Like, oh my
god, you guys are totally
the girls from "The Hills
.
"
Except, you aren't on a
reality show, your finale
includes what dorm to go
back to, not a choice
between
Paris
and
4/21
- Townhouses
In the shock of the season,
another fire alarm was set
off, with the culprit this
time
being
a kettle left on
the stove. Yes, because
after a long day, all I want
to do is curl up on the
couch with a good book, a
warm blanket, and a nice,
piping hot mug of tea.
Second thought: throw the
blanket off in a fit of panic,
use the book to fan the
flames away from your
face, and use the teabags to
erase any sign from your
eyelids that you stayed up
all nisht, reliving the fact
that your kettle almost
burnt down an entire block
of
apartments.
Yeah,
because that screams relax-
ing afternoon time. You
might want to turn on
Lifetime, I'm sure there is a
movie on about your har-
rowing ordeal by now.
Disclaimer: The Security Briefs
are intended as satire and fully
protected gs free speech under
the First Amendment of the
Constitution.
Onsite
Screen Printing
&
Embroidery
creatLve
Destg~
sevvices
24 Hr.
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&
Banners
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,
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r¢
MU
i!
rd
t.~
illcttf'~
--
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Serving Area
College Students
for
over
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years
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PAGE2
T~IE
CIRCL
Margeaux Lippman
Editor in Chief
Usa Brass
Managing Editor
Andrew Overton
News
Co-Editor
Matt Spillane
News C~Editor
Tricia Carr
A&E
Editor
KaitSmlth
Opinion Editor
Brittany Florenza
Health Editor
Isabel CaJulls
Features Co
Editor
Deanna GIiien
Features
Co-Ed
i
tor
Greg Hrinya
Sports
Co-Editor
RichArleo
Sports Co-Editor
James
Reilly
Photography Editor
Advertising Editor:
Christina Usher
Art Editor:
Colin Rand
Copy
Desk:
Amanda Mu
l
vihill,
Marina Cella,
Emily
Ftore
Ellzabe h Hogan,
Sarah Holmes,
Alana Linsenblgler
Rachel Macch1arora.
Rache
l
Ma
l
eady
Gerry
McNutty
Faculty Advisor
The Circle is
the weekl
student newspaper o
Marist College. Letters
t
the editors, announc
ments, and
story
ideas
ar
always welcome, but w
cannot publlsh
uns,gne
letters. Opinions
expf1ess.ea1
m
articles
are
necessarily those
editorial board.
The
Circle
staff can
be reached at (845) 57
3000 x2429
or
letters
t
the
editor can be sent
t
writethecircle@gmall.com.
The Circle
can also b
viewed on
its
web
site,
www.maristcircle.com.
www.marlstclrcle.com
THE CIRCLE •
THURSDAY, APRIL
24, 2008 •
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l 7
T~IE CIRCLE
-
THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 2008
D1agnos1s: en1or1t1s
Symptoms: Laziness,
humor, self-loathing
y
TRAVIS
MIU.ER
taff Writer
Senioritis: fan,
l
thought that
·ord
,u1
only
legcul
acy
in
high
cbool. Once
.,ou'r a
nil.1r
in
ollcge. you're uppo
ed
t
ha\C
·0ur
Ut.:t
together!
enioritis: Peopl
hep
a km~
1e
what
I
,Im
domg
VI
hen I
gr.id-
atc. "Your !,'lle s is as good ,
min ," I
tell
them. I am h
I
mg
cnough
trouble
fo ·u.
111 •
on
p· -
mg my da ·~ . I c,mnot
worr
bout finding a Job
or
mnkmg
life
plan .
r
tried multitasking for
·1 VI ·ck ·1rlicr in
thl'
ut that turned mto ,, hu c
m ~-.
cnioritis.
111e
WJ)'
the
c on-
my
I
lot)krn,
right
110,-..
b
uld
l
c cu bother
to
try
to
look for a
ob' Maybe I ,
111
Jw,t
t, rt
t
Hin,
people
I
m
mm
mg to
Hav.
aii. Yeah,
I \\ 111
rcla
and
njoy m cit
for
,1
ltttle wh1l •
,.
ctore I let
the
,
al world
gd
me
lo~ n.
.'cnioritis H '). at h;'.ast " ·
idn't
graduate last year. \\
ould h -.e
ean11.:d
a eptable
ntl)-lc\
·I
10b ,
but then \ ·
1,·
uld
lla\
·
be n th~
fi
l
to
gel
. enioritis:
TI1ere should
be
an
cntry
in a
rt
dical
eucy lopc.:dia
for
this.
'a1t
1t
probably foils
under
. ttention
-
Deficit
Hy1
eta
ti
ity
Di~ordet.
Seniorili :
I'm more con-
cerned
a·bout
getting ticket for
senior
week
than
J
am
about
fin-
ishing
ny
apping project.
en
orirls:
Vitamm
C
pruhahl)
i~n
t
the
best d10icc of a smger
to rcpre ·nt
u:-;
ith
a
graduation
song. Of cour. c, it 'Would
JU
t
follow
uit
with th· washc<l up.
-h
·t
talent
from the l 990s
already rep1esentin our. chool.
enioritis:
That
\ a
a
L1fchouse joke
for those of you
who
d1dn
't
get that.
. eniorlti : 1y
parents
would
be cc
tut1 •
to
kn
\\
rm
u ing my
(.'oil ge ·ducat
ion
to tra.
h-talk
Litehou
e.
enioriti
:
I
'.Shouldn't
hflve
started
kipping
cl~
this semes-
ter.
Vhen
it rains, it pour
. cnioritis.
In pre,·iou . l!mcs-
1
rs.
my
1
0,tl ,
-..
to mak
the
Dean's
Li
t.
ow I'm alculat~
i
ng
my
1
PA
just
to ee hoi,,,
lov.
r
can go \\
hilc
~
till
cum
lnudc.
cmoritis:
Ha wan
i
d
1fll
ynu
1uy ' 1'11 tell
IR'Opl •
I'm
mo -
1
lawau
mg to I
cmb urg
l'
DJib
1uti
r
i
thing C11
h:
ys
11 cd th n m · · of ho c
•
• ~' \ 1<.:C
i1 \
itc
ru .. ,,
8
·II
to
ountri~ .
' very
c,
r("er
confrrcncc.
Scnioriti~:
1:
Fai.eb ok
Senioriti~:
I
hope Vitamin
Ii
nl:c
r~cebook-<lumpcd me
rite an
Hhc1
ong thal rnn be
bccau
too
many
people
th ·
nthcm or our grnd1w11on
thought
we er really en aged.
rnioriti :
Ten he keep .tsk-
re\ e rcall) getting
that
old'?
ing
"ho
the
sl.'niors
at in
da ;;,
SenioritL:
Sp
"tking
or
being
11.:n
th~)
a k us
if\\1.:
.ire
xcit-
old
when
I ome back
to
visit
•ti
to graduate. I h
J
1rnght as n xt ) car.
r'
11 e 23.
not
in
ol-
vel
I
ju
t
Icy
us out of
class
right
kgc, )
·t
1ill tr,>
ing
to !iv the
h •n. h1;cau c I guara
Ice
m)
hfe
·tyle.
1'11
oflk1all_
qu:ihfy
as
~
• ind
i
wandering for the rest of
'tha\
guy··
~
be
tm1c.
•
enioriti :
ro
mill
r
wh ·re
I
"
·
cnioritis.
Som one ju
1
wld
:11d up, I'm dcstmc
t
wear the
I
me th re , alrcad) a s
niontls
"towme" badge wllen
rm
out at
: rirtick
\\rittcn a
t
week.
t}
tl11; bar.
l
much
for
origmality.
enlotitis: \
hat
about 1iley
!
cnihrJfi :
This
i,
p,mnmg out
yrus writing u a graduation
I
mm:
hkc
a poem than
n
v\'S
son
'!
She'. p
pular.
Wait,
she
l .
to~
l
meant to !.?et
s1,urces,
but
has11 ·1
even
,raduatcd
high
I
"J
~
l
r
was tuo l
2)
Plus, all
1}
c school yet.
: u ks \.\-Ould
be from
scnion.,
Srnioritis:
Man.
I
wanted to
: nd
th
'Y
are
probahlv
all
JU
t
a
come up wttll
creatl
•e
way
lo
I
~
• la;,y
nd 1pa1hetic as Jam.
nd
th1 ,
but I'm JUst tou
laz)
I
:=========================.
I
I
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PAGE4
As global food prices soar, Third
World nations continue to starve
By MIKE NAPOLITANO
Staff Writer
If you haven't noticed, there
is
a food
shortage
in the world.
Other than a
slight
rise in prices
in some foods at the
supermar-
ket, Americans do not have any-
thing to worry about because the
United States is at the top
of
the
neo-liberal economic food chain.
I can find nothing more infuri-
ating than deliberately
withhold-
ing food from impoverished
peo-
ple to meet your own greed-ori-
ented goals. People are
starving!
Does that prospect phase
the
cap-
italist big-wigs at the World
Bank? Absolutely not.
Here is the reality: the
global
agro-business is
run
by intem~-
tional trade and monetary organ-
izations
such as the World Bank.
They decide the fixed rates of
food based on their petception of
the economic market. In the last•
year and a half, food prices have
risen about 45 percent,
affecting
the world's poorest people the
most - people who are
essential-
ly at the mercy of the richest peo-
ple in the world.
When you make
less
than
a
dol-
lar a day, your first priority is
feeding yourself and your family.
to alleviate their hunger prob-
This becomes impossible when a lems. Peru, for example, is using
food
"shortage"
dictates that potatoes to create potato meal
grain-which is readily
available which is being used by the
-
cannot be shipped to your Peruvian military to make bread
impoverished
nation because for the hungry. Although this is a
there
is
a fear of
"scarcity."
Are great way of helping the poor, it
they serious?
still
does
not
solve
the fact that
While this
"scarcity"
is occur-
many are still malnourished and
ring, rice farmers in
Thailand are
need protein in the form of
guarding
their
rice
fields from
beans-a staple in most develop-
"thieves"
who
cannot
access
ing
nations.
food
because the
country
is
Perhaps
the
most saddening
going to export
the rice to the part of the
situation is
that most
global agro-market instead
of of the countries that are currently
feeding
their own people.
suffering
were, at one point, self-
Meanwhile
there
is
rioting over
.
sufficient agricultural nations.
the
deliberate holding of crops in People were able· to farm food
18
countries,
including those as
for themselves and their family,
close
as Mexico and as far as
which allowed them to
survive
in
Uzbekistan.
their own rite.
There
are
real
factors that are
Unfortunately, due to interna-
driving
up the costs of food such tional
"free-trade"
agreements,
as
rising
petroleum
prices,
envi-
these nations were forced to open
ronmental
instability,
transporta-
their borders to international
tion
costs,
and demand. This,
agro-business. These corporate
however, does not excuse the farming companies, a majority of
mass neglect
of
some world lead-
which are
Ame~can,
would
ers.
They
could
easily implement
flood the markets of these rural
subsidized
stocks of food that nations with
subsidized
crops
would be
easily ~ccessible
for forcing most
farmers
out
of
busi-
poorer nations to purchase.
ness and into
factories.
From
In
response to the hardships,
there,
every
person had
to
pur•
some
nations
are
in
fact turning chase
goods
to
survive, goods
towards
their
own
agro-
business
that were provided by the corpo-
ration that had just forced them
off their land.
Essentially,' the problem was
created by the developed nations
of the world and is now being
perpetuated by them. Sadly
enough, almost every industry is
at the mercy of the
,developed
nations. Industries like agricul-
ture, that are so important for
survival should not be
run
by
corporations because it allows
for the possibility that business
interests will be put ahead of the
needs
of
the
people.
Unfortunately this affects the
most vulnerable people in the
world-the poor.
Professor Robert Watson,
the
Chief Scientific Advisor for
the
Department for Environment,
Food, and Rural Affairs put it
best in a recent interview with
Al-Jazeera:
"Business
as usual
will mean that we will not be
able to feed the world. Business
as usual means we will continue
to degrade the environment.
Business as usual means that we
will not ever solve the problems
of poverty and hunger."
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CIRCLE
THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 2008
www.marlstclrcle.com
PAGE5
Maintaining Values: Student-Athlete of exemplary character defines his
experiences by what he considers to be most important in life
By
ASHLEY POSIMATO
Staff Writer
·
explained his ultimate happiness on the team as having nothing to do has been since I can remember but our relationship is so much more
with being an athlete. "I've made really great friends on the team and than that it's tough for me to explain it," said Kiley Nagle.
know that these are
.
bonds I will always hold onto," he said.
After a momentary loss for words, Nagle further described exactly
Remember the third question on the midterm of your eight a.m. phi-
Nagle continues to consider his values when assessing his
how much he values his relation-
losophy class sophomore year? Come on, how can you forget the one decision to attend Marist. He has found that that test grades,
ship with his brother:
about Thoreau's perspective on the relationship between science and scoreboards, and class rank are not the essential ingredients
"I can't imagine being here
religion?
that define the time spent at college. For him, the true mean-
without him, and I couldn't
Ok-well then you can definitely recount the exact amount of time ing of his experience thus far has been based on what he con-
imagine not having h'im around
left on the clock when the other team kicked the field goal, that siders most important in life.
to
share the relationsliip that we
should have been easily blocked, and _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ "I
think
about everything I've done here so far,"
have. The best way I can put it is
caused your football team to be elimi-
Nagle said. "I'm not going to remember how
that he's going to be the best man
nated one round too early from your
many touchdowns I scored or what my college
at my wedding, he'll be godfa-
senior
year
playoff
run.
grade point average was, it's going to be the rela-
ther of my first child, and I'm
There's no way you could have forgot-
tionships and bonds I've made."
going to name my first son after
ten that too?
Nagle is not only a huge contributor to the foot-
him because that's just shows
That is unless you're Kasey Nagle.
ball team but he is also an active member of
who he is and how much he
Currently a student-athlete at Marist
Housing
and
Residential
Life.
means to me."
College, Nagle describes his relation-
As a resident assistant he is held to high expec-
1
Kasey
Nagle is a prime exam-
ship with the school as a "good fit."
tations which he has
.not
only met, but exceeded;
pie of a well-rounded young man
Being a senior in high school was
and he is grateful for the position despite the dif-
with a bright future.
He has
really stressful and confusing, he said.
ficulties attached to it.
proven that we each choose the
Visiting a variety of l.llliversities and
"Keeping a positive attitude gets tough some-
L - - - - - - - - - - - - . L . . - - - 1
tool by which we measure the
being heavily recruited by a number of
times, like on the weekends when we're on duty
worth of our experiences. Nagle
football coaches was tiring. He did
until 3 a.m., but it's worthwhile because of the people has chosen his values and his life tips the scales!
however find comfort and confidence in
I've met;" he said. ''The job allows me to influence and
"Everything I have is a gift from God," he said. "Like having my
what ended up being his deciding fac-
help people. It's such a fulfilling experience."
family, all my abilities, and my personality is all God given, so
I'm
tor.
Nagle measures the worth of all the roles he takes on blessed for that-life is good."
"My brother goes to school here," he
by how they foster , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - ~
said. "His name is Kilex and he's a jun-
interaction
with
A Prize within a Prize
ior now; we're on the football team
other people, some-
together and he's my best friend."
thing he has kept
But although the inevitable first year
consistent
with
transition was eased by the presence of
goredfoxes.com
what he considers
his older brother, Nagle was forced to
to be the foundation
adjust to the differences he would face on the college level athletic of all his values.
fic1a
.
"Nothing is more important to
"I was used to playiPg all the ti~, be.cause in high school I really me than my family," he said. "I
didn't come off the
field,"
he said. "Playing here has been a hum-
would never change anything
bling experience. Everyone's equally good and you really have to about them
-
I love them to
perform at top level. It's kind of like you have to pay your dues death."
before you get on the field."
.
And according to brother, team-
After understanding the challenges and accepting them, Nagle has mate, and best friend
Kiley
found complete satisfaction in his experience with Division I foot-
Nagle, the feelings are mutual,
ball.
and the emotions are returned.
Nagle described football as a life-long love of his, but also
"~e is niy best friend and he
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Want some cash? ,Got a great shot of some
students
or Marist life in general? Send 'em to cir-
cleshots@gmail.com. The Admissions department of Marist and The Circle have teamed up this semes-
ter to bring you the first ever Marist Photo Contest. The contest is aimed at finding the most artistic pho-
tos that represent what Marist is all about. Submissions for the contest will be reviewed by the e-board
members of The Circle where the best four will be picked, published in the paper, and best of all, award-
ed cash prizes. First place will win $100, second gets $75, third
is
awarded $50, and fourth wins $25.
This isn't the end for these pictures though
.
Admissions will
filrther review
the submitted photos, where
those that are selected by the department
will
b'e oi'tere
'
d yet
anotKer,
cash prize. A $50 all-rights award
will be offered to any picture selected
By
the Admissions
Di:parttti'ent.
These selected photos may
be
fea-
tured by Marist Admissions, the Yearbook, and/or other Marist Offices. The Marist Admissions market-
ing department circulates to nearly 50,000 people
.
Credit for each photo will be given wherever credits
are required. So if your passionate about photography, get the camera out and send us what you got. Only
small .jpeg format pictures will be accepted for submission (a larger file will be required if selected as
a winner of the competition or selected by the Admissions Department)
.
All photos should be titled with
name of the photographer in this format; LAST NAME_FIRST NAME. Please specify in your e-mail's
"subject" line that the e-mail is a submission for the
"Marist
Photo
Contest".
Three submissions will be
allowed per person and minor adjustments to photographs ( such as cropping and other minor changes)
are acceptable. Under no circumstances will photoshop projects or
creations
be accepted
in
this contest.
Regardless of the fact that these pictures may be used by Marist
College
in the future, the artistic qual-
ities of submitted photographs matter greatly. So grab your camera, have fun, and you could get paid for
just being a part of Marist.
-----
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cartoon corner
By VINNIE PAGANO
:
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I
www.marlstclrcle.com
Features
Hookups and Breakups:
Don't be a creeper
with
lime
Jell-O
By
MORGAN NEDERHOOD
Staff Writer
By the fourth passing time; Ian finally stopped at
his locker, and Mimi was at the end of the hallway,
stalking and waiting.
Mimi had been totally in love with Ian for years-
Ian opened his locker and stared at the plastic
since grade school, actually.
container in confusion.
Now a high school freshman, she decided it was
He definitely hadn't left the Tupperware treat
time to be mature and make a move.
placed neatly on top of his science book, but Ian
For any normal person, this would entail some had no idea how it had arrived at the bottom of his
sort of confrontation, phone call, or anything basic locker.
and easy.
Ian
picked
up the container and held it in his hand
Shit even a note with
as he looked
around
him for
"Do 'you like me"
Apparently, the wisdom,
11
Go big or
the mystery Jell-O lover.
scrawled in gel pen
go home
II
isn't always applicable.
Mimi darted away, proud
would have been okay
'
,
of her accomplished mission
(you know, those notes
Sometimes, you II be slapped with
but also completely oblivi-
with the "Circle one:
the reality of, "Go big, and you'll
ous to the fact that Ian hated
ves
No" at the bot-
lime Jell-O.
1
'
probably go home. Alone.
11
tom, and some hearts
Ian never spoke of his
drawn liberally around
.
sketchy encounter with the
the crumbled lined paper.) That seriously would mysterious maid of lime Jell-O, and he and Mimi
have been more normal than what Mimi did.
never went"Out, to state the obvious.
Alas, this freckled oddity thrived on being awk-
Last year, while home from college, Ian finally
ward as hell. While hovering near Ian and his broke his silence and revealed that he had known it
friends one day, Mimi overheard him make an off-
was Mimi the entire time. Sure, he was flattered,
hand comment about his love for Jell-O. She but also incredibly creeped out by Mimi's stealth
decided there was only one way to win Ian's love.
Mimi put Jell-O in his locker.
Normally, the school wouldn't give out the lock-
er combinations of its students. Well, this didn't
stop Mimi.
She simply went to the Student Affairs Center,
told them that she was Ian's
"guardian
angel" for
the crew club, and they handed her Ian's combina-
tion.
I guess they expected her to surprise him with
brownies or something normal.
Nope. Instead, Mimi filled a plastic container
with lime Jell-O, placed it in Ian's locker, and wait-
ed for him
to
discover his love token.
After each class, Mimi would sprint through the
high school to Ian's locker and wait for him at the
end of the hallway. She would stand there for the
entirety of the six minutes allotted in between each
class period, and then she'd sprint to class when
Ian didn't go to his locker.
m1ss1on.
Maybe Mimi would've had more of a chance if
she had used any flavor but the crap known as lime
Jell-O.
Personally, I think the flaw in her plan was the
actual stalker factor.
Everyone loves grand, romantic gestures (admit
it, you
damn
cynic,) and we love it when a person
does something wild and crazy for a crush.
However, I
think
that we love those gestures - so
long as they don't involve and sort of
security
breach and/or stalking ... a lesson Mimi learned the
hard way.
Apparently, the wisdom, "Go big or go home,"
isn't always applicable.
Sometimes, you'll be slapped with the reality of,
"Go big, and you'll probably go home. Alone."
THE CIRCLE •
THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 2008 •
PAGE
6
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NORTH
RD., POUGHKEEPSIE 454-9239
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paat AllaSport • Oppoaile St. Fralfcla Hoapital • Near K&:D D,ll • Free P11rklng
IN DECIDING WHICH LAW
SCHOOL
TO ATTE D,
Quinnipiac Univer ity School of aw ranks among the top
100
law schools
in
such
categories as full-time student LSAT
scores
(median
-
158)· admi sion acceptance rates;
student/faculty
ratio
(13:1);
and employment rates
after graduation. Not
to
mention, we
offer merit scholarships ranging from
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to full tuition. Before you decide which
school to attend, make sure you review the facts.
To
learn more, visit
law.quinnipiac.edu,
ladm@quinnipiac.edu
or call
1-800-462-1944.
I
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H
TtIE CIRCLE
THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 2008
www.maristcircle.com
Expected success in spring concert with 400 tickets sold
By
TRICIA CARR
A&E Editor
This Saturday, the oft-dis-
cussed spring concert is coming
to the Marist River Front. As of
Tuesday, 400 tickets had been
sold. With the addition of
Belikos, the winner of Marist's
Battle of the Bands, to the line-
up, students are becoming more
optimistic about the show.
Are,"
was
released on June
19. Their latest
s i n g l e ,
"Broken,"
reached number
70
on
Billboard's Hot
Digital
Songs
list
in
2008.
Other
singles
Lifehouse fans
can look forward
to hearing on
Saturday
are
"First
Time,"
''Whatever
It
Takes,"
"You
and Me" and
When the spring concert featur-
ing
Lifehouse
and
Matt
Nathanson was announced in
February, its Facebook event
wall confirmed mixed feelings
among students.
Comments
ranged from "can't wait" to
"I
didn't know people actually paid
money to see Lifehouse."
"Hanging By A
WWW.MYSPACE.COM/BELIKOS
Moment."
Winner
of
Battle of the Bands, Bellkos, Is opening for this weekend's spring concert.
According to their Web site,
Lifehouse has sold out shows in
cities across the U.S. including
their New York City show at the
Roseland Ballroom on April l.
Following their concert at
Marist, Lifehouse will be per-
forming later that day at SUNY
Binghamton.
Their latest album, "Who We
Matt
Nathanson, known for his cover
of "Laid," is accompanying
Lifehouse on their national tour.
Playing the 12-string guitar, he
has potential to be a great open-
ing act with an array of songs
from his six studio albums.
Belikos, who won the chance
to open for
a
national band at the
Chance Theater after Battle of
the Bands, joined the spring con-
cert in March. Coming from
Ann
Arbor, Mich., the band has a
sowid similar to the Gym Class
Heroes. Their MySpace page
says "when the Belikos family
takes the stage they can make
clergy give the devil a chance
and good kids dance like dosed
up sex addicts."
With the variety of music pro-
vided by these three unique
artists, this year's spring concert
should be enjoyable for students.
The show is expected to start at
noon. Student tickets can be pur-
chased at College Activities for
$5 and guest tickets for $15 up to
the day of the show.
Give Mom and Dad a break and try out our
HASSLE-FREE SUMMER STORAGE!
Limited Number
Available!
Call Now to
.
Reserve you rs!
but
if
not. ...
Try
Our Units:
Storage units inside
our climate
controlled building.
Includes pick up
and delivery.
Share ·with your
roommates!!
Semester and year
storage also available.
4'wide
, Includes 2 oversized pieces AND
FREE pickup
&
delivery!!
ADDSPACE
INDOOR
SELF-STORAGE
i
11111111111
I
Call
845-297 -1500
or visit us at
www.
addspace.com
(Submit your unit request by clicking on the VASSAR link)
Try something new
next
semester.
The Circle
is looking for new e-board members
for the fall.
Interested? E-mail WriteTheCircle@gmail.com
PAG~7
"
.
,
.JI
Karan creates trendy
DK.NY spring collection
By
COURTNEY
SAVOIA
Staff Writer
Donna Karan is one
of the most passionate
and
inspirational
designers that the
fashion world has
been exposed to
sinccllll•-
she came onto
the
scene in 1984.
Driven
by her own creative
spirit, Donna has
cre-
ated pieces for the
everyday
ma~,
woman and child
who
crave
i:omfortab
l
e
and stylish fashion.
"Everything
I
do
i
s.__ _
_.
a matter of heart, body
and soul," says Donna Karan,
chief designer of the internation-
al company that bears her name
.
"For me, designing is an expres-
sion of who
I am as a woman,
with all the complications, feel-
ings and emotions."
Karan considers the lifestyle
that her customer has before
designing her collections. She
became famous for her easy
seven pieces, which every
woman needs to get though each
d
ay o
f
the
week These
ba
s
ic
pieces have made her one of the
most renown and popular
designers among celebrities,
who tum to her for everything
from casual dress to evening
wear.
"I created this company for
women like me and my friends,"
says Karan. "We're passionate
and creative, striving to make a
difference in whatever way we
can. For us, communication is
the ultimate essential of all."
Donna Karan New York was
established in 1989 and features
more reasonable prices than
Karan's couture collections.
DKNY is what Karan calls "the
pizza to Collection's caviar".
The target customer is someone
who is young and is willing to
take a risk. The prices range
from $29.50 to over $300 and
features clothes that can be worn
any day of the
week.
"Simply stated, DKNY is the
energy and spirit of New York:
International, eclectic, fun, fast
and
real,"
according
to
DKNY.com. "DKNY addresses
the real-life needs of people
everywhere, from work to week-
end, jeans to evening
.
Both fash-
ionable and friendly, DKNY
consistently delivers its unique
mix of style around the world."
The DKNY brand is inspired
by the feel and excitement of
New York City. Growing up in
Long Island and later working in
New York City, Karan became
influenced by the atmosphere
and attitude of city-life and
incorporated this into her collec-
tion.
The DK.NY collection offers
basic t-shirts, a wide assortment
of denim, blouses, skirts, dresses
and jackets. More recently,
accessories have been added and
include handbags, shoes, acces-
sories, eyewear and even
fra-
grances. Karan has expanded
her
collection to the fullest and cov-
ers every aspect of what her cus-
tomer needs for everyday life
and anything else they so desire.
Karan's current spring collec-
•
"
,J
.,
WWW.DKNY.COM
tion follows many of the trends
that have been so popular this
season including bright colors,
bold patterns and geometric
"'
designs
.
Flowy skirts and mini-
dresses are available in shades of
bright yellow, pink 'and white ,
•
and feature unique patterns, such
as floral designs. Even the shoes
and accessories in her collection
.
feature some type of color pat-
•
tern or design and are perfect for
the customer who wishes to
try
a
trend on a smaller scale. instead
of in an entire garment.
The versatility of Karan's
designs is one of the qualities
that make her such a respectable
designer among people who
have different budgets. She
seems to understand that her
designs appeal to different types
•
of customers and has been very
accommodating by creating
bridge and better collections, in
addition to her couture
line.
:
One of the reasons she designs
'
for different categories and at
different price points goes back
to when she first created the
DK.NY collected in 1989. Karan
was looking for ways to create
stylish and trendy clothing that
her daughter and husband could
wear every day, whether it was
going to school or work or to
social events. She realized that
although she was designing for
high-class people, you can't be
dressed-up all the time, and it is
important to have those go-to
casual pieces for a typical day.
"For Karan, it's never been just
about clothes," according to
DKNY.com.
"It's about a
lifestyle. She sees the entire pic-
ture from head-to-toe, from
function to aesthetic."
This quote illustrates another
one of the reasons I admire
Donna Karan so much. She is
always thinking and considering
what is in the best interest of her
customer. She not only thinks
about the fabric and quality of
her designs, but also considers
what her customer is going to be
doing while wearing her clothes
and if it fits into their lifestyle.
I think that DKNY is a great
example of a lifestyle brand,
especially for customers who are
in college, because it represents
the fun and excitement of being
young. For me, clothing has
always been an expression of
who I am and where I am during
a certain point of my life.
Knowing that Karan
is
on the
same page as her customer is an
added bonus and will continue to
bring her success for years to
come.
THE CIRCLE
THURSDAY,
APRIL 24, 2008
www.maristcircle.com
PAGES
A reflection on Relay
for
Life at
Marist
By CHRISTINE SAVOIA
Staff Writer
On Friday, Apr.
18, Marist
College hosted Relay for Life
with the help of the American
Cancer Society on the campus
green. For those who are unfa-
miliar with the event, the
American Cancer Society hosts
over 4,800 relays nationwide
each year in order to raise
money for cancer
research,
honor those who are currently
battling cancer and remember
those who have died as cancer
victims.
These
relays
are gener-
ally overnight events where
teams set up tents and take
shifts
walking
for the cause.
Last weekend, students from
all sorts of organizations, clubs
and Greek affiliations poured
onto the campus green to par-
ticipate
in
the walk that lasted
from 6 p.m.
Friday
night to 6
a.m.
Saturday morning.
The
event was
kicked off by a series
of riveting
speeches
from
American Cancer
Society rep-
resentatives and Marist faculty
and
students who
helped make
Relay for Life possible here on
campus, as well as an honorary
first lap
for
all cancer survivors
present.
At 10 p.m. that night, the
luminaria Ceremony of Hope
was held, during which candles
were lit to form the word
"HOPE" in remembrance of
those who had lost their lives.
For those who did not attend
this year, I would definitely
recommend it as something to
get involved in next year, even
for graduating seniors who
might be looking for a reason to
Society is an easy way to
ensure that they are able to keep
doing what they do best: trying
to find cures and providing sup-
port for those still fighting.
Relay was personally a
very
important thing for me to
attend. Just two weeks before
my high school graduation, I
walked into a hospital room and
was shocked to see that my
grandmother, who had always
been one of the central figures
"Even
if you're not able to attend the event itself, donat-
ing onllne to the American Cancer Society
Is
an easy way
to ensure that they are able to keep doing what they do
best: trying to find cures and providing support for those
still fighting."
visit campus. Although I per-
sonally didn't tough out the
entire night, it really was a
great experience for me as
someone who has lost several
relatives to cancer. It was obvi-
ous that they try to make the
event not only a time ofremem-
brance and hope, but also an
opportunity to have fun by pro-
viding food and a DJ.
Even if you're not able to
attend the event itself, donating
online to the American Cancer
in my life, was so worn down
by the
.
effects of chemotherapy
and a spreading ovarian cancer
that she didn't even recognize
me; she died the next day.
I
can
perfectly picture the day· of her
wake and how much evidence
there was of what a horrific bat-
tle she had gone through. Her
cheeks wer~ completely
sunken
in, all of her hair had fallen out,
and her arms were little more
than brittle twigs. It's probably
the worst memory I have
in
all
Local
psych evaluation
Student participants
needed for
this study
By KARLIE JOSEPH
Staff Writer
Over
the past eight
months and continuing
through
Juiy,
Marist
College students
are being
offered the opportunity
to participate in a
smokers' study
conducted by George Schinkel.
The study will
take place at Dutch~ss County
Department
of
M~ntal Hygiene, and those who
choose to participate will receive $20 in
exchange for
their
service.
"The
whole process
is
fairly simple," said
Schinkel;
"We
start with a phone screening in
order
to see if the
person is a good candidate
for
the study, then further olarify their credibil-
ity
with a brief psychological evaluation."
After
the
volunteer is
cleared, he or she must
complete
an hour long interview at Dutchess
County
Department
of
Mental Hygiene. The
interview
consists of
specific
questions regard-
ing past memories and experiences.
"There
are
absolutely
no risks involved,"
said Schinkel, "and
the most appealing part for
students is it is an easy 20
bucks."
While
in the
process of changing career
paths,
Schinkel, former CEO
of NBGI
Securities Inc, bolds
an internship at Dutchess
County Department
of Mental Hygiene and is
currently working at
both
Lexington
Center for
Recovery and
Downstate
Correctional facility
in
Beacon.
Schinkel said
that the research is
being done
as a part of
his dissertation as he is
working
for
a
PhD in psychology at The New
School
University
in Manhattan.
The research is based on a model developed
in the late 1970s by psychologist Dr. Carlo
C:
Diclamente at the Universi~y of Rhode Island.
The concept, known as the
"Stages
of Change
Model" examines the differing steps a person
takes before a major change bas occurred in
their life.
"I am basically looking for two constructs in
this particular study," said Schinkel,
"the
pre•
contemplative stage which includes those who
are happy with their particular status as a
smoker,
and the contemplative
stage, those
who are looking to change." Schinkel's
goal is
to identify bow smoking contributes to how
people portray themselves to the world.
"The
specifics of the questions are directed
to
answer my
_
fundamental question in the
research: how addiction impacts personality,"
said Schinkel.
Schinkel said that while the research is not
limited to college students, the majority of his
participants are between the ages of 19 and
22.
"I have currently completed 15
subjects
including students from
The
New School,"
said
Schinkel, "So far I have
gotten only
two
responses from Marist students but none that
actually took part in the study."
Schinkel said that his main focus has been
college campuses for two reasons:
availability
and the number of people who begin
smoking
in
this age group. Schinkel looks
to
have more
participants as the study
continues.
"I hope the Marist community will be willing
to contribute to this research,"
said Schinkel.
EARTH
WEEK
www
.
thedailygreen.com
my lifetime. It's a feeling you
can't really.
comprehend
until
you
experience
it for
yourself.
Likewise,
taking
the proper
steps to protect
yourself
from
cancer
is equally
important.
Being young doesn't mean it's
okay to not be health-con-
scious. Older adults don't get
the types of avoidable cancer
from
whatever they
are doing at
that point at
their lives- they
get
it
from
doing things they
shouldn't have done at our age.
For our
generation,
this would
largely include
smoking
and
tanning.
I'm sure
everyone's
had the
anti-cigarette lecture hammered
into them
since grade school.
·
Tobacco
usage
is the
number
one cause of
preventable
deaths
and does all sort of
horrible
things
to
your
body.
According to quit-smoking-
stop.com,
it causes
heart
attacks,
stroke, several
kinds of
cancers, heart disease, and
emphysema. It also
claims
that
3 out of
every 4
deaths of
young
people is
due to
smok-
ing,
half of
lifetime smokers
will
die
from the
habit,
and
half
of those
deaths occur in
middle
age.
Furthermore, according
to
th~ Skin Cancer Foundation's
website, a 1994 Swedish
study
concluded that women between
18 and 30 years of age
who vis-
ited a tanning salon ten times or
more had a seven times higher
chance
of
developing
melanoma. Youth and carefree
attitudes will not last forever,
so it is important to have a per-
spective that prevents health
issues in the future.
This
is
why events like
Relay,
for Life are
so
important. No
one
should have to see
someone
they love
so dehumanized by a
disease. Also, take
care of
yout
body- it's the only
one you're
going
to
get. Meanwhile,
maka
the effort to participate in
events like
Relay for
Life. They
really
do
make a
difference.
www.relayforlife.com
The Green Scene:
tips & terms
Compiled By BRITTANY FIORENZA
Health Editor
Tips:
1.
While driving,
maintaining
a constant speed
will
save gas.
2.
Five minute showers
use half the amount of water
a typical shower is capable of using, accord
ing
to
the
U.S. Environmental
Protection
Agency.
3.
Pay your bills online. Save paper
and
fossil fuel!
4.
Air-dry your
clothes rather than use
a drying machine.
5.
Print on both sides
of
your paper
(Each
year
America uses
4
million tons of paper -
that's
2'7
pounds per person!)
6.
Walk, don't drive.
7.
Lower
your home heating and
add
an
extra layer
of
shirts (a heavy sweater adds 4 degrees!)
8.
Reuse
plastic
bags.
(They
make good
garb~ge
bags.)
9.
Don't
keep your tap
running when you're not using the
water. (Example: while brushing youc
teeth, washing dishes etc.)
10.
Keep
the fridge
full. Not too
full,
not too
empty
to
utilize the maximum efficiency of energy.
Source,
www
.
thedailygreen.com
Terms:
Biodegradable
A material or substance which, when
left
exposed
to
nature, will decompos~ without harmful effects to
the
environment.
Brownfield
The U
.
S. Environmental
Protection
Agency's (EPA) designation for existing facilities or sites that have
been
abandoned or underused
because of
real
or perceived
environmental contamination. The EPA spon
sors
an initiative to
help
mitigate
these health
risks and return the facility or land to renewed
use.
Cradle-to-Grave -
With no
consideration for sustainability,
these
types
of
products are used for a period of time and then
discarded,
often
long before their useful life
is actually complete.
Daylighting
Natural daylight introduced into interior spaces and controlled specifically to reduce levels of electril::
lighting,
minimize glare and optimize lighting quality.
Fossil Fuels
Fuels such as coal, oil and natural gas extracted from
beneath
the Earth's surface, often with significa.qt
environmental and political cost. These fuels are a finite resource and are non
-
renewable
.
Hazardous Waste -
Byproducts of society with physical, chemical
or
infectious characteristics that pose hazards to the envi-
ronment and human
health
when improperly handled.
Sick Building Syndrome (SBS)
Health complaints such as
nasal
congestion,
headache, irritated
eyes, lethargy and tiredness, which are
difficult
to
medically diagnose but
are present
in
individuals when they are within a building and di~-
appear or diminish once they
leave
the building.
The
cause of
SBS
is suspected to
be
poor air quality
anti
conditions within the building.
Wastewater
Water
that
has been used and contaminated. Wastewater must be purified before being used again or
before
being returned to the environment.
Source, American Society of Interior Decorators (ASID), 2005
www
.
marlstclrcle.com
THE
CIRCLE •
THURSDAY
,
APRIL
24
,
2008 •
P
AG
E
9
- - - - - - - - - - - - - . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , . - - - - - - - r - - - - - ~ - -
RE
in Poughkeepsie and Fishkill
would like to offer any Marist College student a
15%
student discount
anytime, for any product or meal!
***
Simply show us your student ID
We
serve brea!ifast items, lunch and dinner
***
Free
Wi-Fi,
a cozy
fireplace,
and jazz
...
The perfect study environment!
Bring your laptops!
Limit
$20
per visit before discount.
See you soon!
www.marlstclrcle.com
THE CIRCLE •
THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 2008 •
PAGE 10
Green and Rigas honored as Marist goes 5-1
By
JUSTINE DECOTIS
Staff Writer
The Marist women's softball
team had a superb week, going
5-1 with two games each over St.
John's and Metro Atlantic
Athletic Conference (MAAC)
foes Rider and Iona.
Last
Wednesday,
Marist traveled
down to Queens fQr a double
header with Big East team St.
John's. Megan Rigos continued
her great season by
pitching
superbly for the Foxes, throwing
the complete game in a 4-1 victo-
ry for the Foxes. She allowed
one unearned run on only two
hits and recorded ten strikeouts
and did not allow a walk. Marist
had a very balanced offensive
attack as six players recorded
hits, all six getting one each.
The Red Foxes began the scor-
ing early as they jumped on St.
John's starter Linzee Sumerall
for three runs in the first and
one
in the second.
Rigos may have pitched well in
Game 1, but her performance
was overshadowed as St. John's
pitcher Kat Lawrence hurled a
perfect game against Marist in a
shortened
Game
2.
The game ended in the fifth
because of the ten-run rule.
Lawrence's first inning foreshad-
owed what would be a superb
game as she struck out the side.
Strikeouts accounted for
~
. .
~ ~ ~ ~ • • • • • • • • • • • • • • than the score indi-
twelve of the fifteen outs in ...
_ _ _
ll••••llll!I
cates as both teams
the
game.
scored three runs
The St. John's offense was
in the first. Marist
led by Alyson Funn, who
went ahead 4-3 in
went 2-for-3 with four
the sixth before
RBIs
and two runs scored.
adding three insur-
The Red Foxes showed
ance runs in the
resilience through the rest
seventh.
Malloy
of the week by not allow-
again had a good
ing the 10-0 perfect game
game driving in
loss to bring them down.
two runs on two
Marist
traveled
to
hits.
Lawerenceville, N.J. for a
The good for-
doubleheader with Rider
(;.;~~ti~
tunes continued for
looking for their first con-
Marist
on
Sunday
ference win, and they were
when it faced Iona
able to come away with
in a doubleheader.
two wins. Rigos again got.._,~.
The Foxes explod-
the start for Marist and
ed in Game 1, win-
pitched a complete game.
ning by a score of
She allowed two runs, one
E:;;:;:::.;..==~
7
.
.:...::,...;:~;::;::::;,:::;:::~=
17-0.
earned, on three hits with
iiiiiiti■iiliii~
The Foxes got the
seven strikeouts. However,
~
....
~..:;.:.iblil.l~:CC:=~!::::::i:.i
~~\I
scoring
started
Rigos needed help from her
....,._liooiiil ..
early by scoring
teammates
at the end of the
.
JAMES REIUY/
THE:
CIRCLE
nine runs right out
.
Senior ace
Megan
Rigos
went
3-0
for the Foxes
this
past
.
~ame when It ap~eared that
week ..
In
MAAC
play she struck out
13
and allowed
Just of the gate m the
It would end up m the loss
one
ea
med
run
in
12 innings
pitched. Two
of
her wins
top of the firSt
column for the Foxes.
were
complete games.
In Wednesday's game against
St.
The offensive
Marist was trailing 2-1 in
John's she struck out
10
and did not allow an earned
run. onslaught
was
the top of seventh with two
pitched a complete game in a 7-3
extremely as five
outs when Kate Malloy came up victory for the Foxes. Melissa players had RBIs and ten collect-
with the clutch two-run single Giordiano was the catalyst for
ed at least one hit. In a day of.
that gave the Foxes the lead.
the Red Fox offense, as she has
offensive leaders, Jessica Green
Rigos retired the Broncs in order been so often the season.
led the way with four hits, four
in the bottom of the inning to Giordiano went 4-for-4 with two
RBIs, and one run scored in five
clinch the 3-2 win.
runs scored and one RBI from
at-bats. Rigas pitched all five
Caitlin Carpentier was the
the leadoff spot
in
the order.
innings, shutting out the Gaels
starter for Marist in Game 2 and
The game was a closer contest and allowing only one hit.
Carpentier started Game 2 for
Marist and almost bested Rigas
as she also shut out Iona, allow-
ing two hits. The
offense
contin-
ued to shine for Marist as it bat-
tered the Iona pitcher for eight
runs
on
eight hits. Pamela de la
Llave led the scoring with two
hits, two
RBIs
and a run scored.
Marist's 8-0 win gave them a
four game winning streak and
improved its MAAC record to
4J
3.
Green
and Rigas were honored
by MAAC in what was a great
week for the entire Marist team.
Green was named MAAC Player
of the Week and Rigas took
MAAC
Pitcher
of the Week hon-
ors for the third time this season.
Green finished the week
9-for-19
with eight RBIs, four runs
scored, and three walks, good for
over
a .500 on-base percentage.
Rigas
had
a superb week fmish-
ing with a 3-0 record and a 0.37
ERA in
nineteen
innings.
The
Red
Foxes will look to
contin1,1e their hot play with the
mid-week double header against
non-conference foe Fordham.
The Foxes will then return home
for two
tough
conference match-
ups against second place
Niagara
and first place Canisius. Marist
is currently third in the MAAC
with a 4-3 record, 17-22 overall
on
the
season.
Le Moyne takes down Marist in three straight
By
RICH ARLEO
runs over the next five innings.
Sports Co-Editor
After going down 6-2 early, it
was tough for Marist to
try
to
The Marist baseball team was come back, and Le Mayne's
on a three-game winning streak
heading into a road trip to Le
Moyne. The only problem is,
Le
Moyne was on a five-game win-
ning streak themselves, and after
the weekend series, Marist's
streak is over and Le Mayne's is
now at eight games.
·
The Red Foxes dropped all
three games to Le Moyne out in
Syracuse and kept Le Mayne's
offense under double digits in
only one of the three games.
In the first game, Marist's
starter Stephen Peterson wasn't
able to get out of the second
inning. He gave up six runs in
1.1 innings pitched before being
relieved by Kyle Putnam,, who
was solid in giving up just four
offense tacked on a few more to
stave off any effort of a Red Fox
comeback.
The second game of the double
header
was a
bit
c1oscr.
however.
Marist got out to a 2-0 lead, but
Le Moyne answered back in the
bottom of the second with four
runs of their own off Marist's
st~rting pitcher Josh Rickards.
He only lasted 3
.2
innings and
suffered from some control
issues. He only gave up three
hits, but had five walks which
led to giving up six runs. He was
relieved by junior Jacob Wiley,
who shut down Le Mayne for the
rest of the game and gave Marist
a chance to regain the lead.
Wiley was the most impressive
pitcher over the weekend, as he
~nly allowed one hit in 2.1
innings pitched against the pow-
erful Le Mayne offense.
Marist pounded out 13 hits in
the game but was only able to
squeak out five nms, which was-
n't enough to overtake Le
Moync.
The Foxes offense had five hit-
ters with multi-hit games, and
senior catcher Keith Glasser led
the team with two RBIs when he
cut the deficit to 6-4 in the sixth
inning with a two-run home
run.
Designated hitter Andrew
Stanton hit a solo shot in the first
inning to ~riginally
.
put Marist
ahead, and the top three hitters in
the lineup combined to go 6-12,
but only scored two runs.
After a rough double header,
Marist looked to
try
to
rebound
on Sunday, but Le Mayne's
offense would have none of it,
aod Marist was down 8- l by the
end of the third inning, which
proved
to
be too <Jeep a hole to
dig out of.
Marist decided to go with
freshman pitcher Sean Mckeown
to start, but he was ineffective.
\ft
r he
gave up
six earned
runs
in just two innings, sophomore
Richard
Cary
came in and was
able to at least slow down Le
Mayne's offense just a bit, but
wasn't able to shut them down
completely. Cary gave up four
earned runs over the next 4.1
innings pitched.
Wiley came in again and fin-
ished out the game on the mound
for Marist, giving up one
run
in
1.2 innings pitched.
The Red Foxes offense wasn't
too bad,. but once again they just
didn't do enough to overcome
the large deficits they were in
each game.
Freshman second baseman
Ricky Pacione led Marist's
offense with two solo home
runs.
First baseman Kenny Anderson
also added two RBIs. The seven
runs scored weren't enough, and
Marist
loi.t
the final
game
of the
series by a score of
11-
7.
Marist
is cunrently
tied
fol'
sev-
enth place in the Metro Atlantic
Athletic Conference
(MAAC)
with a 5-7 record. They are 14-19
overall.
The schedule from here on out
is mostly conference games, so
the Red Foxes are going to have
to start winning quickly and con-
sistently
if they want to have any
chance in the MAAC.
The team will face Saint Peters
at home for an important three-
game series
starting
on April 26.
Water Polo gears for MAACs
Marist combine
By
RON JOHNSON
Staff Writer
Water polo continues
to
live
up
to the athletic tradition others
sports have established here at
Marist College.
Over the past few years, Marist
has demonstrated exceptional
athletic ability in some major
sports such
as basketball
and
baseball~ but few know of the
success Marist College has
demonstrated in its
women's
water polo program.
This year the team has accumu-
lated a 25-7 record, which is pro-
gram
record
for
wins.
The Foxes went undefeated in
conference play this year, going
10-0 for the second straight sea-
son.
Marist proved itself earlier this
season by hanging tight with the
No. 14 team in the nation,
Hartwick College. Marist lost by
thtee, but the competition set the
team up for its Metro Atlantic
Athletic Conference (MAAC)
games.
"The out-of-conference play
helped us prepare for
our
confer-
ence opponents this year," head
coach Ashleigh Jacobs said.
The water polo team is current-
ly ranked 12th in the nation in
defense and sixth in offense. In
addition, they received votes in
I
the AP Poll to be one of the Top
20 teams in the nation.
No team would ever get off the
ground without the players, how-
ever. Captains Libby Davis, the
senior goalie,
and Katelin
Mccahill, the junior 2M, have
led this team on offense and
defense.
They are supported by a solid
core, of players in Maggie
Hatcher,
Kristen
Barnett
,
Samantha
Swartz, and Angie
Rampton, who according to
coach
Jacobs
are key players and
major
scorers on this team.
Marist has a solid group of
returning
players next year, 6
upcoming
MAAC
Championships. Marist will face
Siena in the semi-finals this
Saturday at 3 p.m. at home, and
if they defeat Siena, will go on to
the finals at home on Sunday at 2
p.m. against the winner of Iona
vs. Wagner.
"We have a good group of moti-
vated girls," said Jacobs, "and
it's really nice to see all their
hard work and hours with Greg
White
(the
Strength
and
Conditioning Coach) in the gym,
pay-off."
returning freshman, nine sopho-
Good Luck to the Marist Water
mores, and three juniors, all of
Polo Team as they host the
whom have the experience to
MAAC Womens Water· Polo
keep this team on top for years to
Championships at the McCann
come.
Center Natatorium on April 26
Coach Jacobs stated that "no
and April 27!
team can be overlooked; any-
body can beat anybody at any
point."
The
Red
Foxes
defeated
their
biggest rival, Wagner, in compet-
itive matches twice this season.
St. Francis proved to be a tough
competitor for the Red Foxes
this year with both match-ups
proving to be exciting, both ulti-
mately ending in Marist wins.
In
addition, Marist beat conference
rival Iona twice on the way to
receiving the No. 1 seed in the
'
By
DEANNA
GILLEN
Features Co-Editor
Dr. Keith Strudler's Public
Relations Class to hold Marist
Combine,
an
event which aims
to show how Marist Students
stack up against NFL's Draft
prospects,
which
combines
~peed and agility tests (40-yard
dash, 20-yard shuttle, three-cone
drill) as well as the vertical leap
and standing long jump.
It
will
take place at Marist's state-of-
the-art Tenney Stadium at
Leonidoff Field
0,11
April 27 at
I
p.m.
-4p.m.
"You have heard plenty from
Mel Kiper and other NFL Draft
Analysts, and a lot of the analy-
sis has
to
do with prospective
players' performances in the
NFL Combine,"
said Eric
Zedalis, a senior in Strudler's
P.R. class. "Now's your chance
to
see how you would do in these
drills."
All proceeds from the event
will be donated to Matt's
Promise Foundation
"This past winter, my friend
from back home died of cancer.
He had had it since he was a jun-
ior in high school," said Kristen
Casamento, a junior at Marist
College, and a member of
Strudler's P.~. class. " I knew
I
really wanted to do something in
his memory, so when I wasn't
able to attend the walk they had
in Old Tappan, New
Jersey
for
him, I decided our group could
donate our proceeds in his name
to
Matt's Promise Foundation."
"This is a really cool event,
because we'll really get to see
how athletic the non-athletes at
Marist College are. Maybe some
were really
.
talented in high
school, but didn't get recruited
here.
"If you love to compete, this
event is for you," said Travis
Miller of Strudler's class. "You'll
see just how fast and
versatile
you really are.
Students can sign up in the
McCann Center on Apr. 19 from
9 a.m. -3 p.m., and Apr. 23 from
12
p.m.
3
p.m.
The cost is $1 per event or $3 to
participate in all five events.
Free pizza courtesy of Rocco's
Pizzeria and door prizes for all
particiP.ants
courtesy
of
Dutchess
Distributors.
Individual event winners and
overall male and female winners
will be awarded prizes. See the
event page
on
Facebook (Marist
Combine presented by Dr.
Strudler's
Sports
Public
Relations class) or e-mail marist-
combine@gmail.com for more
information.
Roarin'
Red Foxes
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and
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team ·
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the,;
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April
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www.maristcircle.com
THE CIRCLE •
THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 2008 •
PAGE 11
~
Women's lacrosse drops final home match to Le Moyne
:By
MATT SPILLANE
:News
Co-Editor
In
its last regular season game
:of 2008, the Marist women's
.lacrosse team put forth one of its
:best overall performances of the
;year. With balanced offense,
:aggressive
defense, and consis-
:tent
goaltending, the Red Foxes
:had all facets of their game in
:synch.
To
Marist's dismay,
though,
the
:;same could
be
said for Le
;Moyne. The Dolphins went toe
:to toe with the Red Foxes
~oughout the course of an
:evenly
matched contest,
but
it
:was Le Moyne that ended up
f
with the final tally.
The Dolphins clung to a
one
goal lead for the
final
10:23 of
over Marist on Sunday, April 20,
putting a damper on the Red
Foxes' senior day. Being the la~t
home game of the season, Marist
honored seniors Lindsey Diener,
Liz
Burkhard
,
Ali Carnabuci,
Caitlin Bergin, Jessica O'Brien,
and Kelsey Haggett beforehand.
The senior class led Marist to
was really nice to each other out
there. You could tell there's a lit-
tle rivalry in there."
In
a physical bout, each team
had a controlling half, with Le
Moyne's coming in the second.
Sophomore midfielder Liz
Falco split two Le Moyne
defenders and scored with nine
an 8-8 record this season and the seconds left in the first half to put
second seed in this weekend's'
Metro
Atlantic
Athletic
Conference
(MAAC)
Championship at Iona. The Red
Foxes lost last year's MAAC
title game to
Le
Moyne in a 14-
13 overtime nail biter.
The bitter taste from last year's
loss to the Dolphins carried over
to the teams' matchup last week-
end.
"You could definitely feel the
her team llp 6-5 at the break.
Falco also had the game's first
score earlier in the half, and the
teams proceeded to trade goals
throughout the rest of the period.
Marist would go up one with Le
Moyne quickly tying it.
Marist broke the trend, tallying
the first two goals after halftime.
However, Le Moyne amped up
its transition defense and trig-
gered a four goal
run that
(
:the game for an 11-1
O
victory tension," Diener said. "No one allowtd the Dolphins to take a 9-
8 lead midway through the sec-
ond half.
"We couldn't get the ball safe-
ly into our attacking end," Marist
head coach Tanya Kotowicz said,
"and when we did we rushed
things."
The teams traded a pair of goals
before junior attacker Kate
Noftsker found junior midfielder
Carolyn Sumcizk, who knotted
the score at 10-10 with 12:44 left
in the contest. Le Moyne did not
take long to recapture the lead,
however.
Junior attacker Michelle
Lissner dodged from behind the
cage, drew a double team, and hit
freshman defender Mia Valletta
on the crease for an easy goal.
With 10:23 left, Marist had plen-
ty of time to retake the lead.
The Red Foxes could not get
anything going on offense,
though. Marist's best scoring
opportunity came with 0:10 left
as Le Moyne lost possession and
Falco snagged the loose ball. As
the seconds ticked off the clock,
Falco raced downfield, quickly
faked a defender, and got off a
shot that went just wide of the
net.
Falco finished the contest with
four goals and five groundballs,
while Carnabuci scored twice.
Diener had a goal and an assist
and Burkhard stopped 14 shots
and grabbed two groundballs.
Although the team lost its reg-
ular season finale, Marist still
heads into the MAAC tourna-
ment on a strong note, coming
off a passionate performance
against Le Moyne.
The
Red
Foxes will play third-seeded
Canisius on Friday, April 25, at
noon at Iona.
Marist earned a 15-14 victory
over the Griffs on April 11, and
knows what challenges Canisius
presents. However, the Red
Foxes cannot help looking for-
ward to a potential rematch with
top seed Fairfield. The Stags
defeated Marist 11-10 in over-
time earlier in the year for the
Red Foxes only MAAC lo
.
ss, and
Marist would love a second shot
at them.
"Our head is there
[Canisius],"
Diener said, "but we still have
Fairfield in the back of our
minds."
[
M
en's and women's rowing teams win conference titleS
I
:By
SARAH SHOEMAKER
:
staff
Writer
:
The Marist men's and women's
:rowing
teams had an excellent
:showin.g
this Sunday, capturing
:Yet another Metro Atlantic
:Athletic Conference
(MAAC)
:championship
title.
I
The men managed to capture
tfirst place in all but one of the
!day's
eight events while the
!women
completely swept the
~ompetition,
placing first in
:every
entered
event.
!
This is the 11th MAAC title for
:the men and the eighth for the
I
:women's team.
:
Even though the conditions
:were tough with a strong head-
:wind blowing against all of the
'
;
boats
,
Marist was able to handle
'the situation at hand.
"Both squads
did
Marist proud
in bringing home both the men's
and the women's MAAC cham-
pionships," remarked senior cap-
tain Brad Gagnon.
"I'm proud of the positive race
results in the face of good com-
petition from our conference
rivals and challenging weather
conditions."
Junior coxswain Lindsay
Wright, who coxed three events
including the winning Women's
Varsity 8 boat, was ecstatic about
her second MAAC champi-
onship title.
"I'm really proud of everyone
on
the team. We all wanted the
win and we all stepped up and
got it. .. victory is a great feeling
in general, but getting there with
amazing people makes it that
much more fabulous."
The men's final-points trophy
scores were 186 points ahead of
second place Fairfield with 157
points, 138 against hird place
Loyola, Iona, 125 points, and
Manhattan
48
points.
The women's team finished with
165 points, followed by Fairfield
University with 135 points, Iona
College, 118 points, Sacred
Heart University, 111 points,
Loyola College, 101 points, and
Manhattan College, 20 points.
We would like to specially rec-
ognize the "Love Boat" Men's
Lightweight 4+, Matt Moreau,
Logan Johnson, Graham Bullis,
and Brenden O'Bryan with their
record-breaking time of 9:30.05,
for proving that coxswains can
row.
Courtesy of Janet Mathes
The Marlst men's and women~ crew teams swept the MMC
champi-
onships
this past
weekend
at Mercer Lake. The
men
have won eight
consecutive titles
while the women won seven of
their
eight events.
"omen's result
1.
Ma1i
t
!.
◄
1rficld
3.
Iona
4. S crcd
Heart
5.lo)ola
6.
1 ah,ttt m
Men's Re u1ts
1.
Man
t
2.
h1rfield
3.
Lo)ol1
4.
Iona
5.
f\1anhatl'ln
THE CIRCLE
THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 2008
www.maristcircle.com
Upcoming Schedule:
Baseball: Saturday, April 26 - vs. Saint Peter's, Noon.
Women's Lacrosse: Friday, April 25 - at Iona, MAAC
Championships.
PAGE
12
Marist defense sets pace vs. Providence, Mount St. Mary's
ByCODYLAHL
Staff Writer
A defense that had allowed
upwards of
10
goals a game
~lamped down this week to
secure Marist mens lacrosse's
first victory and first winning
streak of the season. At the other
end of the field, the Red Foxes'
offense was propelled by sopho-
tnore attack Ryan Sharkey's two
goals and one assist in their
7-6
win over Providence. Freshman
attack Corey Zindel's three goals
(luring their 6-5 double-overtime
win over Mount Saint Mary's
sparked the team.
On Wednesday, April
16,
the
Red Foxes used a five goal sec-
ond quarter and 12 save perform-
ance by junior goalie Ryan
Penner to outlast Providence
7-6.
During the second quarter, the
Red Foxes would make use of a
~
minute equipment penalty on
the Friars' Thomas Wenskus to
net three consecutive man-up
goals. Sharkey assisted senior
attack Pat VanHall with the first
at the
14: 17
mark to even the
~coi;e at 1-1. Zindel would assist
sophomore Matt Francis with the
go-ahead
goal
with
13:48
temaining. Seventeen seconds
later, VanHall assisted sopho-
more attack Matt Teichmann in
extending Marist's lead to 3-1.
Providence would cut Marist's
lead to 3-2 on a goal by Devin
McBride at th~
6: 17
mark; how--
ever, senior Pete O'Hara and
Sharkey would answer with
goals of their own at the 3:49 and
2:02 marks, respectively, to
extend Marist's lead to
5-2
enter-
ing the third quarter.
After a third quarter that saw
each team record a goal, the
Friars would make a desperate
fourth
quarter comeback attempt
in which they would outscore
Marist 3-1, out-shoot Marist 12-
7
and go a perfect
6-6
on clears.
However, Zindel would assist
Sharkey in netting Marist's even-
tual
game-winning goal at the
5:53 mark and the Red Foxes
would hold on to earn their first
victory of the year.
Marist head coach James
Simpson expressed satisfaction
with his team's performance
against Providence.
"It
felt fantastic to put together
a solid
60
minute performance,"
Simpson said, "This is great for
the guys and their confidence."
In
the second game of the
week,
the Red Foxes outlasted
Mount Saint Mary's to earn a
6-5
double-overtime
victory
on
Saturday, April 19. Again, the
Red Foxes defense put forth a
solid effort by spreading five
Mount Saint Mary's goals over
the course of regulation play
while holding the Mountaineers
without a shot in either overtime.
Mount Saint Mary's would
record the game's first points
during a man-up opportunity
when Joe Derwent assisted Dan
Mohr in giving the Mountaineers
a
1-0
lead at the
10:11
mark.
Marist would answer
4:11
later
when junior defensive midfielder
Matt Schunk assisted Zindel in
evening the score at 1-1. Marist
took its first lead of the contest,
2-1, 5:48 later when Teichmann
netted
an
unassisted goal.
Mount Saint Mary's tied the
game at
2-2
when Dan Mohr was
assisted by Jon Rodrick in find-
ing the back of the net 3: 14 into
the second quarter. Seven min-
utes later, Zindel would notch his
second goal of the contest to give
the Red Foxes the lead, 3-2.
However, Mohr would record his
second goal of the contest at the
2:05
mark to tie the score at
3-3
going into the second half.
Over the course of the first half,
Marist was able to outshoot the
Mountaineers 20-17 and record
16
ground balls to Mount Saint
Mary's eight while senior defen-
sive midfielder Dan Needle went
a perfect 8-8 on face-off
attempts.
Marist would record the only
goal of the third quarter as Zindel
would tally his third and final
goal of the match on a cross-net
feed from junior Paul Santavicca
at the
6:01
mark. Freshman
attack Ryan McNiemey would
extend Marist's lead to 5-3 at the
9:19 mark of the fourth quarter.
However, Mount Saint Mary
'
s
constructed a last minute come-
back where Joe Derwert assisted
Geery Grant in cutting the Red
Foxes' lead to one with
00:41
seconds left before notching an
unassisted goal of his own with
00:06
remaining to tie the game,
5-5,
and force overtime.
After an evenly played first
overtime, Santavicca was assist-
ed by Teichmann in making the
most of a Mountaineers
30
sec-
ond holding penalty committed
at the end of the first overtime to
record the game-ending goal
14
seconds into the second over-
time. Santavicca's goal gave
Marist its second victory of the
year and secured the Red Foxes'
first winning streak of the sea-
son.
Marist Head Coach James
Simpson attributes the Red
Foxes' recent defensive perform-
ances to multiple aspects of their
game.
"We preach team offense and
team defense," Simpson said.
"We made a few personnel
changes, guys stepped up, we
have great leadership from our
seniors and we received great
stops from our keeper."
Marist will look forward to
playing at home against Wagner
on Saturday, April 26 at 1 p.m.
GoReclFoxes.com
Freshman
attack
Corey
Zindel led the Red Foxes
In
their
first
two
wins
of
the season.
He notched
a hat trick In the team's double over-
time win
against
Mount
St. Mary's and earned
his
third MAAC rookie
of the week award.
Zlndel
leads
Marlst with
1.
7
goals
and
24 assists.
Upcoming Schedule
Vagn1.:r
~
umam nt
Ma)
4 -
oumrunent