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Part of The Circle: Vol. 59 No. 24 - May 4, 2006

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Protesters speak out against racial discrimination
.Students organize
event
to express frustration, dissatisfaction
with
response to complaints
By
TOM CLANCEY
Circle Contributor
"I've
been tolerated my entire
life.
I
want
to
be
accepted.,"
said
Kadeine Campbell, a freshman
protestor at Marist College.
Student protestors, including
Campbell, marched to
prot
est
all
fonns of discrimination at Marist
in a group
of
about 30-40 people
on Thursday, Apr. 27 between 12
Center displaced the buildings
occupants
in time to witness the
event.
Literature
handed
out
by pro-
testors caJled for
stronger
pun-
ishments for perpetrators of hate
crimes,
as well as diversity train-
ing for
stude
nts
and faculty.
In a electronic response from
Patricia
Cordner, the Assistant
Dean for Student Life and
..
1
agree with the protestors that
faculty, staff and
stude
nts
alike
could benefit
from
what you
have termed
'divers
ity
train-
ing,'" said
Lusky.
Kadeine Campbell said she dis-
approved with the way Marist
has handled events of discrimi-
nation.
''There
are a
lot
of
hush hush
situations on campus," said
Development, she stated the Campbell.
"A
ll
presidenl Murray
p.m and I p.m.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - does is send out
memo-
randums by email. This
does not make the prob-
lem
go away."
"What
do we want?
'This
Is a protest against dlscrlmlnaUon
Acceptance! When do
of all types. We're not trying to target
we want
it?
Nowl"
what's coming Into Marlst, but we're
try•
chanted
the protestors.
Dr.
Bruce Lusl-y, the
Ing to target dlscrlmlnaUon against the
Dr. Dennis Murray,
president
of
Marist
College, responded via
email that some paints
lone faculty member to
generation that will come Into Marls! .'
march, explained the
problem as related to
him through
students.
.. . . .
There have been
some hate crimes and, many
more routine daily
gest
ures
of
interracial disrespect," Lusky
said.
"
I
had
been hearing since
January from informed sources
among my
students
that many
students of color arc increasingly
frustrated and. dissatisfied with
adminis1ra1ive responses 10 this
issue to date, and were planning
more direct actions outside of
formal
channe
l
s."
Protcston traveled the c.ampus,
finally
stopping
on the campus
green. They gained attention
when a fire alarm in Dyson
-
Siobhan Skerrltt
made by the protest ors are
Vice President, Student
Life
a good
starti
ng
point for
judicial process is the same for
everyone and special considera•
lion was taken for racist inci•
dents.
"Every one is treated the
same," said Cordner. "All cases
thought to
be
hate
crimes are
aggressively
pursued
both
through
th!!" campus
judicial
process and with local police
authorities and the courts."
Dr.
Lusk:y agreed that
an
incre&Nd Med

divoraity
training was needed and advo-
cated a class in social inequaJi-
ties be mandated for all students.
further dialogue .
"I
have said many times that
there is no place for
discrimina-
tion on this
campus,"
said
Murray.
Siobhan Skerritt, Vice
President
of Student
Life,
who
was
not
an
organizer but a will-
ing participant, explained rea-
sons
for
the
prot~t
"This
is a protest against dis-
crimination of all types," said
Skerritt.
"We're
not trying to tar-
get wh•t!s
ceming into Marist,
but Wf're
ttymg
to target
dis-
crimim1tion against the genera-
tions that will come into Mari
st."
Class hosts 'Spring for Prevention'
s.n1oni1rom
Pro1-u..nCOo1>1na.---""'-ca--1nst1tutato
~"" nrst
furdrolN<,
Sprtna
tor -
Victonan
Garden
Party,
ot
tho
C u M N n -
MIi
Cente<
Saturday,
April
29, 2006.
Ellz8betl1
McKenzie.
Kotetyn
0 ' -
end Knstlne _ , , , .
wor1<od
for
tnree , _ _
coonlinotln& ord
110111na
donations for
the
f u - .
The
Gorden Party
lneludod
o
lilllt
cocidoH - •
o
lllent
ouoUon
end
muolcol ente<1alnmenl
proYlded by
tho
Morlll
Col1ollo
Slrmi.
The
auction
- . . . : I
of
many
donatlonl
from
Rhlnollecl<.
-
Paltr
end
"°""'loNpllo
bull
, _ _ which
oHowed
the
fundralN<
to
raise $700
tor
!ho
o r p - . - •
V1<1fn1o
Monts of
PINco,
ttf
makes a bid
for
a
n1a,,1
at
the
Beekman
Arms.
THE CIRCLE
B45-575-3000
ext.
2429
wrltetheclrcle@hotmall.com
3399 North Road
Poughkeepsie
,
NY 12601
CAMPUS: GOOD LUCK, GOODBYE,
GOOD TIMES
The Circle's Co editors-in-chief reflect on their time as
members and leaders of this fine
publication
.
PAGE2
Student protestora
wrote
eye-opening
messages on the sldewalk outside the Rotunda, Thuraday, Af)r. 20.
A flyer with anonym
,
ous quotes
describing
different forms of dis-
criminatilln
was
handed
out
by
some
prote
stors.
The website,
http:
//accep
tancenow
.blogspot.c
om, was on the flyer. The site
expresses disapproval wilh the
college's handling of
a
specific
racist incident on campus.
..
Marist
is a
very tolerant
school,
it tolerates
all students,
but it
does
not accept
all
stu-
dent-;," reads the
'-'"Cbsitc'i;
intro-
duction.
"If
you
are
not
a
white
upper-class heterosexual conser-
vative
male, then
Marist could
care less about you and your
issues."
Tim
Massie, Chief Public
Affairs Officer at Marist College
responded
though email on
efforts to encourage diversity.
11
Mari,.t
has a
commitment
to
encourage all areas of diversity:
geographic, religious, ethnic,
racial, and sexual orientation.''
Massie
said
"We
must
ensure
that all who come hue, attend
classes here, and work here
feel
SEE PROTIST, PAGE 4
Marist rallies in D.C. for Darfur
By
AMBER SISSON
Circle Contributor
National Mall lawn and
lasted
three hours.
Some notable
of humor but also
re
cogn
ized
the
seriousness of the issue.
speakers included: Elie Wiesel,
"'This is the first genocide of
While most Marist College stu-
novelist, Nobel Peace prize win-
the twenty-first century, and it
dents
awoke on Sunday, April 30
ner
and
Holocausl
survivor; Al
will
be
the
last
,"
Madison said,
to enjoy a
day
out in
the
sun or Sharpton, Pentecostal minister which other speakers reiterated.
watch the concert on
the
Green,
and political activist; Manute
Prior to and
during
the event,
18
others rose before dawn to Bol, fonncr NBA player and
images were displayed across
board a bus for the nation's capi-
Sudanese expatriate; and actor-
screens showing
the
situation in
tal. The bus contained students dircelor George Clooncy. They
Darfur. The images are
part
of a
from Marist, Vassar, and SUNY spoke in favor of immediate 2, I 00 picture trail taken by
New Paltz, as well as members
action in
the Darfur
area of Captain Brian Steidle. Stcidle
of a local temple.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - -
was situated in the area as
Many have said our gen•
'My favorite part of the day was seeing
an
observer
of the
eration, is an apathetic
people from
every generaUon, race, and
African Union peacc-
one. We care
more
about
rellglon tum out to sho support.'
keeping
mission.
Many
our iPods and Friday night
of the images were
plans than politics and
_
Nicole Judd
graphic and exemplified
world issues. On Sunday a
Senior
the
human
suffering
bus full of
local
students
occurring in Darfur.
traveled five hours to join thou-
Sudan.
Numerous senators. congress-
sands of others in a rally on the
Wiesel compared
the
suffering
man, and elected officials spoke
National Mall in Washington,
in Darfur to that of the
Holocaust
during the rally to show their
D.C. The rally was
held to
raise
and said the world should be support. Sen.
Barack
Obama,
D-
awareness and caU for action
ashamed
to
let genocide happen
Ill., just
back
from Africa
concerning the genocide occur-
again.
received a wann welcome
and
ring in Darfur, Sudan.
Wiesel
boldly began
his
speech
Senior psychology
major
saying "Darfur
is
the world's
Nicole Judd organized the trip
capital of
human
suffering"
with a Vassar student. Judd was
Speaker after speaker took the
not a member of a club so
no
stage to speak of the atrocities in
advertising was possible for the
Darfur
and
the immediate action
trip. She was encouraged by the
needed to stop the current gcno-
Marist student attendees as well
cide.
Master of Ceremonies
as the large amount of other (MC) for the event was Joe
activists.
Madison.
Madison began his
"What really impressed me
career as a radio talk show
host
was
the
massive nurnbersofpeo-
and is now recognized as a
lead-
pie that turned out,
it
was very
ing
human
and civil rights
inspiring"
Judd
said.
activist.
Madison managed to
The rally began at 2 p.m, on
the
keep the crowd going with bits
A&E: MOTION CITY SOUNDTRACK'S MATT
TAYLOR GIVES EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW
Band bassist
muses on the group's beginnings,
rise
to
fame, and their campus tour across America.
PAGE
7
enthusiastic response,
"If we care, the world will care.
lfwe bear witness the world will.
If we act then the world will fol-
low," Obama said.
House Democratic leader
Nancy Pelosi of California spoke
in detail of the action she wished
Congress to take. She has
been
a
long
time
advocate of action in
Darfur and was
thrilled
to sec
thousands tum out and show
their support. She thanked the
crowd several times for their
SEE DARFUR, PAGE 4





























































cam ..........
us
THURSDAY, MAY
4,
2006
www.marlstclrcle.com
Security Briefs:
This is the end, my only friend
By
BRIAN
SABELLA
The happy
ending
to
the
massage
of life
To my little bear cubs,
It's me, Brian "I am so much cooler than
my roommate Steve Witzke
will
ever
be"
Sabella. This is
it kids. The last one. It's
very sad.
Over the
past year we've
laughed,
cried, snickered, smiled, and
have
had the time of our
lives.
It
kind of
reminds
me of the movie "Dirty
Dancing."
I
know not who will take my
place next year but please, be gentle with
them. They will need your help at first to
get through the hard
times,
so be as good
to them as you have been to me.
4/24 -
Lowell Thomas
Security on patrol noticed that some of
the p
l
anters that people enjoy sitting on
were
nipped
over outside of the Lowell
Thomas building. Now
I
can't figure this
one out. Were people drinking
by
LT?
Did
they go there with
the purpose of flip-
ping planters?
Because if you guys
planned this out ahead of time
,
consider a
hobby.
I
hear
ballroom
dancing is
quite
the rage amongst the kids these days.
with an empty stomach that
ni
ght.
BRIAN'S BRIEF OF THE
WEEK
4/26
-
Gartland
8AM
This one
I
still haven't decided how
I
feel about. A student
reported
her house
and many others in F block
had
figures of
the
male genitalia spray painted on
their
front doors. Tn addition, there were bags
of garbage thrown on top of the block
itself. Not only did they spray paint
man
sausages everywhere, they were on there
in pink, This is easily one of the crudest
things that
has
ever been done here at
Marist, and
I
find myself
laughing
quite
loudly
.
4127
Security found
flyers
alt over campus
warning students about the evils of VD
and being weary of sketchy girls. They
also
identified
two girls by means of pho-
tograph. Now let me say that
I
have
seen
these flyers and
1
know both
ladies
identi-
fied. The one on the left
is
disease free.
watched "Bring It On Again
,"
and did
it
all in
the
middle of the night.
In a related note, these
perpetrators have
been
shunned by their
friends and will be transferring to Vassar
next
semester.
THE "WHAT JOHN
GILDARD WOULD HAVE
SAID HAD HE BEEN
HERE THIS WEEK"
BRIEF
4/28
-
Cabaret
12:25AM
Security was wa
l
king through the
cabaret and found four shldents attempt-
ing to confuse the cashier and other
cabaret workers. Had John Gildard been
here this week, he would have said some-
thing like this:
"I
guess they were playing
a game
I
like
to call Musical
ID
Cards."
Oh John, you crack me up.
slapped her around for a spell so she
wonld stop whining. Hey
,
I
said he was
huge, not gentle.
GUEST BRIEF OF THE
WEEK
By Michael "Even my mother calls me
Walter now" Uttley
,
Hey guys, its me
.
Your old friend Walter.
Brian said
I
c0uld write another brief this
week,
so
I
said sure.
I
mean
,
he is basi-
cally the coolest and best
looking
person
ever
,
and if
I
said
no
he would have
kicked
my
butt. So here it is.
4/30 -
Steel
Plant
12:06AM
A
s
ecurity guard on patrol
noticed
that
the fork
lift
at the steel plant was mi
s
sing
from its usual parking space. The search
began and the fork lift was
located
in
some soft grass in Beck lot. Seems these
little gangsters went for a little joyride.
4/28
_
Champagnat
They're just super duper crazy
.
I'm from
JI
:04 PM
Rhode Island and we never do crazy shlff
Two crazy guests were entering the like that. Man
,
I think I
'
m gonna go steal
buildi
n
g and security found that their
bags
a fork lift when
I
go back home and
I'll
be
The one on the right.
.
.
well you decide
contained, get this
,
BEER! They were
gangster too.
4/25 -
Gregory
for
y
ourselves
.
very cooperative with security
,
but iheir
Well that
'
s it for me kids
.
My security
7
PM
host threatened to call her mother.
brief career is over. I hope you guys had
Our first fire alann of the week comes
~~!:
~MLeo
Because mom approves of underage
ahs muchTfialcun readingbthemh as I dihd ':""itindg
PAGE2
N
Friday,
Mays
Vo
ll
eyball
Tournament
1-3 PM
Campus Green
$3
Registration Fee
maristvballtourna-
ment06@gmail.com
Friday, May 5
'rime
Check &
TheSirens
A Capella Concert
7
PM
Nelly Golleti Theatre
Sunday,
May
7
2006
Media
Arts Festival
Nelly Galetti
Theater
7
PM
All Marist students eligible
to vote
for
best Movie/TV
Productions
at
Marist
Submit a video at
jeff.bass@marist.edu
from the
:,
\c.epcr
donn of the seme
s
ter
.
drinking eh? Very confusing.
1
did hear l cm.
c care, rus your iUT, an
Our old friends in Gregory decided to join
Seeing their friends in Gregory burning
that a giant of a man
named
Chris
u
1 can always remember these words of wisdom
Disclaimer: The Security Briefs are
in the fire alarm
fun
and set one off them-
popcorn and watching
"
Bnng
It
On"
Leo bench press the fattest kid at Manst a k
8
:rom Patric~ Swayze:
"
N~body puts Baby
;;~:
nd
:!:::'''::~:;"
11;:;01~~:s~
selv'§
,
The >!!"1F.
i
bµru1
J>!>p<;O(ll
,
I
ff""'"
fe))
lf:!;\pu~ TJ/i<Y
~rr•d</1
to
¥8j~f
,
W/
,
QR
,
i
,Alc,o
'.J-ltiot/
1
Faddllck add ton..,ltd
1111>
,
'll •
.
,em~\
,
h//lY,f
'Wi-01",l>
.
1
~1/,
1'h\~r
,
r//
,, ,
,,_,...,,~r•••
'
°"•stJr••;,,,..
someone was watchin~ "Bring It
On"
them
They oumed more
Ppr,-:?,?1
,
~00
)'..QUQg
lady...
Alldi
,
.b)'. J.Pl\.SoJ~ Jdneal\,i,
X~Y
i
Good
luck,
goodbye, good times:
graduating editors say
fond
farewell
It
is safe to say,
looking
back; we def-
initely
did not know what we were get-
ting ourselves into.
As
long
as we have been at Marist
,
The Circle has been a part of our lives.
For four years we have spent every
Tuesday evening, sometimes extending
well into Wednesday morning
,
in
Lowell Thomas 211.
When we showed up to the Activities
Fair way
back
in Fall of 2002
,
we
signed up to join the campus paper. We
had no
idea how that small act would
come to shape the next four years.
We signed
up
to help with the
l
ayout
of the paper, and less than a month later
found ourselves Co-Editors of the News·
section
.
Forget that we were freshman;
forget that we were stil
I
trying to get
settled into our new surroundings
,
we
were basically thrown right in.
Ha
l
fway through sophomore year
when the editor-in-chief and
managing
editor stepped down
,
we were asked to
fill their
roles
and it is safe to say we
were definitely overwhelmed.
From
that point on, the past two-and-a-half
years ha"ve been a whirlwind.
We admit there are many perks to
being the editors of a school. Like get-
ting
invited
to have IU{lch at President
Dennis Murray's home every year, and
attending
pressconferences
when
Hillary
Clinton makes a
rare
appearance
on campus
,
or
having
the ability to
secure press passes to every concert on
campus. However
,
trying to know what
is going on throughout Marlst campus
at all times can
be
a very,
demanding
task.
It is,
essentially impossib
l
e.
This is why we owe a tremendously
huge
thank
you to our entire staff of edi-
tors, both past and pre
s
ent and all those
who have
helped
us along the way.
Thank you to Bob Lynch for his sup-
port
and photographs, MCTV for
their
comrade
ri
e and company on late
Tuesday evenings, all the pizza boys
who
have
delivered to LT21
I
,
Dennis
Murray and Deb Dicaprio for always
being willing to help in any way they
can, and Of course Modele Clarke for
being
not
just our advisor,
but
our
friend.
Our housemates in Fulton 5C
get the biggest thank you for Wldi!i-
standing when we come
in
long past
their
bedtime, and when we sleep
late
on Wednesday mornings.
We have tried our best to serve the
Maris! campus and community and
thank you for your support as well as
criticism throughout the past four years.
We have watched the campus grow
and change over the past four years and
have been
honored
to be a part of it all.
CASSI MATOS
&
COURTNEY KRETZ
Co-Editors
in
Chief
Meritocracy or Maristocracy?
By ALEX PANAGIOTOPOULOS
Campus Editor
I know this firsthand,
because
I
didn't do anything
exemplary in high school.
If I
had
the same amount of effort
but
was
raised
in
Mississippi
by a
Wal-Mart
greeter
named
Amy, I'd
probably be fixing
someone a gordita with extra
cheese right
now,
or selling
drugs.
And after several
Marist courses where [ would
answer
questions
so
the
teacher
wouldn't want to go
home
and
take
a
bath with
their toaster
(my Ethics class
last
year at 9:30 a.rn
.
comes
to
mind, where 20 students
resolved to purse their
lips
and
doodle in
their
notebooks
for a
semester), I
KNOW
some
Marist students are
the
same
way.
One finance
major in
particular, who has made
the
Dean's
list,
didn't
know
that
rising
oil prices were a func-
tion of supply
and deman'rl,
and
defended
this
poinl
for
ten
minutes, concluding proudly
that if there's less oil, the
price
goes
up.
a cesspoo
l
of cu
l
tu
r
e here.
saw the
light
at Marist after a
couple of fascinating years of
watching
Will
Ferrell
movies
and showing up to 9:30 a.m
.
class with a
hangover
and a
penis
drawn
on my arm. If
Facebook's Pulse feature is
any
indication,
we
love
Nicke
l
back,
Bud
Lite and
standing
around
quoting
Wedding
Crashe
r
s.
There's
no option of
doing
cool
stuff
...
a
lot
of it
is
tailored to
the
lowest common
denomi-
nator.
Not
that there
'
s any-
thing wrong
with popular
stuff. ..
but we have the rest
of
our
lives to let it
get shoved
down our
throats. Why not
try
new
things?
THE CIRCLE
The idea of college is cool.
We
don't
have
to
hang out
with boring adults in our stag-
nant,
tepid hometowns.
We
are equipped with young
,
strong bodies and
developing
minds.
The dreariness of
the
real world is not suited
to the
growing that we need to do, so
we
all
live
together
at a cam-
pus
resort. At a
liberal
arts
college, students can learn
beautiful
,
incredible things
about
life
and the uni-verse,
and be
introduced
to people,
culture
,
and ways of
life pre-
viously
unimaginable
.
Here's where things get
ugly.
College costs a crap-ton
of money.
There are some
smart kids out there who
could definitely cut
it
here.
But
the dumb/uninspired
ones
with rich parents
made it
instead, thanks
to an SAT prep
course and a
handful
of
Addero
l.
It's not a meritocra-
cy
,
it's Maristocracy.
Not only that,
but
we
live
in
Our
diplomas
are
like
sµ.q_1-
mer
camp
badges: we came
,
we
dra~
we crammed
before
our
tests,
tricked someone into
giving
us
an internship,
had
risky sex with strangers ... and
now
it's over.
Hope
you feel
good about it. Now get
a
job,
and start saving so your kids
can come too.
Courtney
J.
Kretz
Cassi
G.
Matos
Co-Editor in Chief
Co-Editor in Chief
Christine Roehelle
Alex
Panag)otopoulos
Derek Dellinger
Opinion Editor
Campus Editor
Copy
Editor
James Marconi
Mark Perugini
Adam Guarino
News
Editor
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O....,....,,.inion
www.marlstclrcle.com
Let the
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of the Marist
community be heard.
PAGE3
.
U.S. aid needed to help save people of Darfur from genocide
BY JAMES MARCONI
News Editor
militias began to attack villages
and towns in that region.
(www.amnestyusa.com)
Jangaweit. Afterward, her father
was dismembered in front of
her." (www.state.gov).
I was
particularly struck by one tale of
a woman who was held captive
for a week and raped before the
eyes of her nine-month old
daughter.
"At
one point, the
woman was allowed
to
pick
up
the crying baby. When the baby
continued to cry, one of the men
something is done to prevent an
while the Holocaust occurred.
ethnic cleansing which is noth-
Because of that inaction, one of
ing short of genocide.
·
history's most infamous atroci-
others. Take the time to learn
more.
Spread this information
to others; with a simple phone
call, e-mail, or word of mouth,
you can let your friends and rela-
tives know what is happening in
Sudan was thrust into civil war
again in 1983 after Sharia
(Islamic) law was declared
in
the
country and a
military
govern-
ment
was
established
in
Khartoum, the nation's capital.
Ever since, the Sudanese govern-
ment has further divided north
The terri6le acts occurring
from that point to the present are
unspeakable.
Janjaweed
militias
in particular are responsible for
inflicting
a
veritable reign ofter-
ror upon civilians living in
Darfur. These men, women, and
children face the daily prospect
President Bush's administra-
ties claimed the lives of
millions.
tion
has
only recently recognized
A similar atrocity is being com-
and tenned the atrocities of mitted today. Whatever our eth-
Darfur as 'genocide.'
"Bush
met
with
Darfur activists at the
White
House
on
Friday and
lent
his
support to the week-
end rallies. 'For those
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Darfur. Toe more who
and south along eth-
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
grabbed the child and
nic and religious
President Bush's administration has only
hit her with !he butt-
lines, pitting
"the
end of his rifle."
Arabic groups of the
recently recognized and termed the atrocities of
(
ww w _ s I ate_ g
O
v) _
Whatever our ethnic, rellglous, or polltlcal
backgrounds, we can all agree that something
needs to be done to help the people of Darfur.
The questlon·ls, what can
we do?
know, the more who
can help.
Through sites like
savedarfur.org,
mil-
north against the
Darfur as •genocide.
1
While a so-called
Sudanese Africans
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
'peace' between the
of the south.
In 2003, the con-
of rape, torture, destruction of rebels and the Sudanese govem-
flict intensified when two new their homes,
starvation, slavery,
ment was declared in
2004,
the
rebel
groups,
the
Sudan and/or death at the hands of their abominable crimes against civil-
Liberation
Movement/Anny government.
ians
continue to occur. An esti-
(SLM/A) and the Justice and
Therearesomanystoriesofthe
mated
400,000 have died from
Equality
Movement
(JEM)
abuses suffered at the hands of the conflict or disease,
2.5
mil-
began attacking government Arabic militants. One such story
lion have been displaced, and
troops in Darfur. To quash this
was about a woman who was
approximately 200,000 refugees
new rebellion., Sudanese govern-
raped over and over in front of have fled to nearby Chad.
ment troops and the unofficially her father by "members of the Nearly 6,000 die every month,
sponsored Janjaweed
{Arab)
Sudanese
military
and
and will continue to die unless
of you who
are
going out to
march
for
justice, you
represent
the best of our country,' Bush
said." (www.cnn.com).
Those
rallies, which occurred
in
various
cities throughout the country,
aimed to raise awareness of the
genocide in Darfur and support
for efforts to stop the violence.
Such awareness and support,
though, comes all too slowly, at
least
for
those who
are
suffering
and dying right now.
During
World
War ll, good men and
women sat by and did nothing
nic, religious, or political back-
grounds, we
can
all
agree
that
something needs to be done to
help the people of Darfur. The
question is, what can we do?
The first step is knowledge of
the genocide occurring in Sudan.
This column gives but a brief
look into the horrors that inno-
cent men, women, and children
are
forced to endure. There is
a
weahh of knowledge on websites
like
iablolish.com
,
savedarfur.org,
and
amnestyusa.org, among many
lionvoicesfordarfur.org, and oth-
ers, you
can
donate money to be
used for relief efforts in Sudan.
Be sure to do research before
donating to make certain that the
charities you choose
are
legiti-
mate.
Another way you can help is by
lobbying
the United States gov-
ernment. Write a letter, send an
e-mail, or make a phone call to
your Congressional representa-
tive, senator, and the White
House. If you need sample let-
SEE DARFUR, PAGE 4
Grieving
family
of Jill Carboni gives
thanks to
Marist community
for support
Dear
Man.st
Communit)",
rhcrc are so milll)' people
l('I
l.hanL: ror gl\'mg Jilrs
farDII)
su~
10\e
during.
th11 1rag1c tm11:
in
our
h\C"'i and
y<1ur
Ji..'CS u well Ir
stru:1.S
with
lhe
adm1ni~1ra[1vn
fc-d b) Denn.ii.
Murra}.
and thm
going
to the
Mlitim
Poll
.tn-
UW,
1:hun:h rnm1::4t'y, lllC ~unty dq11rtme,u
and too man} otlwB to cnunt
fo lhe Man'lt
1:itudtnt'i,
led b> all her
2F
f-uhon buddies,
tlten: '"'ill
he ne\oer be enough "ordsto
teUyou
'"hm it ha-; mcam to Jilrs lamil~
ilS
ll'll
triOO to
softtn outgnd as
)'OU
were going thn:n.1gb
}Our
ov.:n grief MnriBr
,s
trUl,y a
~omrnu
nit). Whal
wa.c; c;:ud b)
lht" adm1ss1ons
office
""hffl
aying to
n!\.TUit
\\ide•e~·ed high school
f.C"moN
and their amuous
pam1ts
\\o8io
all
true-and
more.
,l)U
cnrc.tbilUI
om:anothcr, 111sa Imme awa)'
from
horn..: \\re alway!!' knew Jill kwt"d
M..t.ru.t..
In fact. 11\Sked htt that
lnaJlksgn•mg we1:kenJ
,
f
!>he fo1t
c;hc
had
madt I~
Cl1rrect
,hoico
in Marist
\\i1holtl
hesilmi11n ~he rcpltcd. "Yes."" NI of you
ton
lributcJ to that "Yes." Thank ou, Mansi
It
1s
vet)
cJl!:u
in
01)
mind
"hrn
we:
came for '1llt collcg~
YI 11
to
M:mst
that Jill
wuuld
he
~
Mari1l 1uJen1.
\\-C'
had only heen on
campus
fi
minutt.'S, " 1lk.ing
up
the ~ltlirs near lhe: lrnl1mm donns.
"hen
J f,
If
ti."ql
In
nl)
hean. ~Jill
1hi11
1S
)OU 1"
SM
Wllt.
JLlSl J15
1:XC1ted. As
mAny
of you kn('I\\-, her
I
ur
gmde
wa~ "'ho
Jill wanted
10
be:
when "!.he
grc.·w
up•· (Jill
11.nOYo
you "'ant me 10 delete
that,
~ut
this
15
ffl)
stof},) l'he) 100.keJ sc,mcwhm ahko. had the ume
anuc1p,tcd ma1ur 11nd h:id a \-c."f') 11n1lar pcr.i.onahty. When the
guide taUr~cd ab..'lltl Y.orking
u1
the Mar1o;;t Poll we,
both
knew that
Jill woulJ \\oor.k there some d.a\
L1nle
did
'-'C'
know th.ar she-would
walk in the
fnolSh;
ps of th1!\ ~~•de and make
~e
foo1~rtp1 of
hez
ov.n The Mari
t
Poll helptd Jill bch,ni Y.hilc
s.ht
was so far away
from homl" She h,\.:J ,he
respon5tbilily
and the dttp rtlationsh1p&
LETrERS
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The
Circle
Is
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sent
those
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she
built
there. nus will
he
a la.sting <:omton
for
her
family.
\\e
ha\e
been able
to \isit MJPO
o\'et the year..~
and alwe.) came
awa) from them 1,:.,;.urc m
the
Mlowledg.e
that
J1ll
'\\.'i.S
u-ell guided
as she pew m her new
role
II
led to
mllll)
wonderful mternsh1ps
an M8$!a4;hU:k'Us and in New Yod. City She \\otas
able
to toliow
her
Jr-tam and work m childn.-n s
JrJni
100 1n
bor
lut
uueitiship af
~iclu:lodcon ·ni~rc
\\'ill
nov.
l
an award namtid m 1ll's honor
Thank
)Ou,
Man.st
The other
opponunit1e.s
[tl\.e!l
at
Marist
al!JO
playai ~h an
important role Asa
in,
th~rc ,re too many
io
bJt. l know
there
are
more than I am e,en
BY.aJt.•
of Remember I am
h1.-rmo1'ht..-r
Tam~.
she: was itudy1ng. stud)
ing.
studvmg, .and wnung
paper
after paper.
The education lill recei\ed wa,; top~nob:'h. even thoug:h
when
J
tofd
pearl¢ Jill "-'fflt
to
Manit., most of
lbi.-m
from
~huse1ts did
not kno"Pt \\ehtrc u WD.'J I always told them that the\·
shou)d
Wt.!'
v.CR"
so proud wbtn she"'~ named 10
the-
Hano
Circle
JiU
took
advantage ot ro rmmy of the opponun1111.-s otlered at Maml. \\'hen
Jill
,mnounced that !'ihC-\\iould
bt-
~tUd)ing
in II.al)'
for
:.1
sem~ICC, I
replied,
"No
you're- not." Not
ffl)
Jill \\ho \\as a hometown !tlfl for
to
ffllin)·
years of her life
M)
JiU
would
be loo homesick. Of
eoursc,
sh~
"\\on, and off
she
went
10 flortnct-
Aftc1 the
~uln11·c-
$hotk
\Ii-OR:
«•ff.
every
da)
w;s5
an adventure:~ whether n was e111mg
ha
tavontc Ua'wot of
Uclato
or
admiring Italy'• mwicum,. archit«
ture.
and c0Wlft'\'lo1dc.
Thi:\ ad"·enturt
I!
now «uch a 1.·omron when
Jtll'!!i hf~ "iU
cul
down so
hart.\\ hen
\t,lt
VU11tcd
h~ m l1aly.
it
Y..as
obv,ous lhc- 't\as in hC"r ch:mcm She:'.'
Y.u
m lo,c
with
JtaJv and
wt:
ha\.'e
so
mall\
wunduiul p1dure
tQ
pto\'e 1t. Thank. you: Mart 1
Mansi !tudcnts are
t,y
far
me
o(
the: mos1 mature a.nd caring
young people wr
ha"t
e\oer
met.
Aj;arn .,..e ~et:1ve romfon from
chc Journal of
tribu~
to Jdl, m addJIIOII to tM
ards
nd
the won-
Dough Boys Pizza, Wings
51 Fairview Ave
454-4200
Call For
Our
Award
Winning
Wings!!
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FAST DELIVERY
Dirediou: "'""'' from Mari,t
Collqjo
Main ..
tl'lntc:
go
up
F■k••
St
Go
l<n>P
l
RR
lnldis.
Mok;
nest
Ri"'L
Go
threw
I
Licht. We are
:HO
Yant, don••
left.
wn1
Cedar
Do,mo:
Go
to
top
■om.
Mako
ril!lt go
lllt
yard~
We'tt .. Ibo
ldl.
All
crrdll unit
llfflllCfd.
Marist Money Accepted!!
d\:rful
collages
of
Jill with
her fricnm.
Maris& ,~
also
about
the
gen•
erosity of the students who raise money for Jilrs scholarshir fund
and Tc.-dd) Bear dm,
1 now koo" Man"! "'~ way morr
thin
Stud\1ng
anJ
papers'
It
'.U
al,;o aholll making
ml
fbo<pruns.
C11J<J,1Dtl
c.:ns.Z)
mumrms
1 s1i1 ..
k1c:s. 1h+.: facready Dtn«,
bargain
~'hoprmg
1&nci
ro
1uch
more
To ht'f
roo
mmes.
man)' v-ho
b.ivt
lx.:n
't\.lth
hl•r
the maJonl} ofhc.r :,,t,m al
Man!J.
there are ttul) no
WI.lids
that
1.:an
t-.1.-r
~AprtS.!.>
the d<ep t1,ratitudc
N I
we have You
enriched Jill's hfe: and alll,wtd h\!r rn be :.tll of who 11-te WK You
brought out the
he:si:
in Jill and I k.no\lo ~he did thc< :w.me for '\ou.
Vc,u shat~
deeply
in
our griet
111111\k
you Marist for
helping
.stu~
dents lhn\'c
The bus load of studi.mt~
"h~,
came to J,lrs
ien•1ees
no, only
loui.hed ourheatt:,, but
the:
h\"ar~ of
.11\
o(thosc: who
wcrt
acanding
in that lnng hne lhit cold mih1
RS
tbl'
bu._
dmH'
m
S<l
many
i,eo-
plc have: remarked
to
tnc
about
that
ama..-mi:;
pour
ll( youn~
peo-
ple.
It
wa,oh\1ou---"t.Ut\.1.'1)onc
Mo.mt
tsa
\et)'21~ctal place
fr-Oro
the ohvillUS lo,C' 1rum
the-
&tudcnts., and r\C'n more unportantl)
how caring
the
a.dn11ni~rration
j ..
tu
aUo"'
these students lo c:ome
lt.'gt."thct
In
their
grief
~fdy
Jill's
!>pint
will h\'e on al M.anst.
\fanst
~
ill
live
()11
111
our he
rt
fo
Imo"
that
a;uch a
commumt)
h.lvc:d Jill \\ill helJl u5 for yt."tlrS lo cume
It
1, wuh
pea,
sadoesi
that
our
{!':oodhyt
hitS
to
cnJ
th1!1
"'ay Ma\ all of those who ttrc
!ilerp1ng
out InI0
vour
fuIu,c:.
please trul:e
a
little:
bit bf J1tr1 love of
hte and spre,ed it an~und the
"or!J
J1unk
)OU
Mans fr•r
C\'\!'r')'thmg.
Cher)'
C
tlrrrucr
(Jill'
mom,
Jnd ht.T enb~
famih
r•,
H,11bu
V•llr.1'1
Prt11titr
fi11is,x '"'•"
/I
f11rl St,
., Aw., fr11•
M11rl1I
(
•ll,.~,1
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www.marlstclrcle.com
THE CIRCLE •
THURSDAY,
MAY 4, 2006 •
PAGE 4
ResNet
will not
support online gaming but still offers network
access
fo
the Edihlr
I"hc
'\pr;J 20 ~006 ,~uc of The Cir!.ih: \..-Onlaincd
Jn
,ufo;I~ lltlcJ
''Re
·er provu.Je.s
C1n-li11e g.1mm~" 1hat
presents
an
maccuratc
pi..:-
rurc
of nem-orking JnJ onhn gamil'!g at Murist.
\\I~
\\OuJd
like
1ll
se1 file
record
s1raigh1 su
th.n
lhere an: no
mi~~Jli.•ept1ons
Rei.Net., a pnrt
Llt
lnfrumarion
·1~hnolug,
lll) ls
llll\\
otfermg
nct\lrl1rl;: ac~e~ tor man)
kind,;
ofnet\\od appliance:;. -\.
ncrnork
aprhani,.c
1s
a Jc, ice Ul.lt u":>es network.
mkmct n:soun.:es
for l)Omc
ddd.:J
tiun:11L1nality
Ihe
mL1st
common
nemork
appliam:e-s that a
studem
would hnn~ tn \.fan,1 rnclude
Xbox~~- Xhox 360~
Pia> Stati,102'-. Gam~cu~ and riVos to name a
f~v.
rhese
dev11,;es
arl!
htncthm,11
,,ithout
im~mc1 a.::i:e-.s:
however w11h
inter-
net acce~') :1dd1tional
k.irures
arc 3\aiJabk such .as onlinc p:ammg
for gammg con'.>olcs
K.l.!S
d
J,ie!i
no! endtirst!' or run any ~anung
Sf..ncrs.
StuJt:nts
\\ho
have a occl,nd
JI' adclr~i:.
arttvnted
ror .a.
gaming
con;;olc \\ill
be
able
10
corm~d to ~cn.:cr'- oms;,de ot the
Marist network tc
g,
Xbo:x l1vet
If
)OU
hil\oC
a
n~1wod
apphancc you
'AOllld
lile.
to ha\t· on the
network.
stop
by
the kcsNct offo.:i:-.
loca1cJ
in
Donnell~- Hall, Room
101 - Mon-Thur.,;, 10-"' & Fri. l0-~
fake sure
)'1U
brmg the MAC
(nc:rwork}addres:s for
the appliance•
1hc- MAC'
ad<lrc:,s
i
a
l2•digit
alphanumerii: code (e.g
..
00-IJ-Do-AJ--l'l-l<l) that tmi~l1ely 1dt'O-
utics ,·our
appliance
If
you are unable
to hnd the MA½
bring the
appliance wnh you and we \\ill
1t!is1s1 )OU
m locatln~ the infonna•
lion.
ResNer
d~ not
pr.,1\·1de
An.)
S\lppon for
the.i.e networl apph-
am:c~. Re'iNct
"ill
enable n~>t...,.ork
cti,:i.;C\>S
for the,;e Jc:, kes.,.
!;)\it
d.1..-,es not provide
troubleshooting_ suppon If a ~udi:nl experien.;<"S
r,roblems connecting to
online gam~ or do\\nloading program
data..
the)
will
ha\lc
to
contact the de\Jcc:- manufocturr."t for help.
Wirell~
ni:tworking is c.:urreutl:, availalik
in
the follcrwmg
locaw
tions·
Shl!l.han. Leo, Champ<qmat. Mid-Ri~. Lampo!> Center,
Dining Hall, Cabaret.. Benoit. Grcµw), Fulton
~t
1\1w11hou~.
Jan:man
care,
Mc<
ann and the Canna\
1110
[.ibrarv B) the end (lf
th!!
summer
Ir
pluns
I.O
C;l\ptmd
th!! 1ur1t..1x \\
irch:~:) nt1work
w
nlf
residence halls. f'or a l.'.nmpletc, ur-10-dau:
li:-ot
ol
wirde...~ lreas
and instructions lln how 10 ~onncct ro lh..: \\irdc:
s
s 11en,,xk. pl~&S4"
, 1si1:
http:
i'r('S.Jlet.mansr.edu wirek
ResNet
1s
here all
)C'3r round
to
help
.
\tudCOl!s
r.:onnect
and
Sl3)
conne;.;ted
to
die m:tworl as well a ... ht:lr, \\ 1th g~·nc:rul PC trou-
bh:shooling
support. 1hc Re!INet
""ebs1\~
lhitp. re
nctman$tc.<lu)
1s
updated t'requentl)
with the
la1c-s1
infom1a1t11n
vn
scn-1u.~ th..11.
Re'>N~I
Pf<'"'idcs
for smJ1.·1m. lf::,.ou hm·c :in) questJoM
~arding
these scr"i""es. feel
th.:~ 11,.1
1;c,ntact
Rc$Net
ua ~mu! at
f'C!tnet
1
a"lmansi.edu
Chri:..tmc Mul\·C)
Dim.:torofSpeeial
Proj!!r.:h. Tele-commumca:ion,1
&..
'cf\l.orkmg
Relay for Life director, Colin Lacey, omitted from last week's article
D1:ar Cin:I~ Editor.
I was one ot the
ll1lll)
pan1cip,u11~
\'tho
took part 111 1he Rda)
for
Lif..,
\\,1U..
H11we"cr,
l
\\a!.
rcaiJing the article tb.i.t
)OUT
p,tper
From Pa
ge
Th
ree
pu1 out on the eH·nt and 1 rr:3Jized tha1 YOU
never once nH.-ntionr:J
!.chool
;1.nd raisc-d
the
amounl of mone) we did
Colin
I
ar.:e)·
m
it.
\\
llich
is
unfor1un·1tc
:-;1.:\,•ing as he
w,1s
tht:
direc-
tor of the enl~ e¥e11t and 1s the reason
11
\\a~ held al Marist
in the
Th8.1'1k
)OU,
first
place He is one- of
the
reasons
\\e
were so succ~ful
a,
a
Kira Bro~anc1
Genocide atrocities unfold in Darfur as U.S. recently recognizes growing issue
ters or messages, some of the
our
leaders
know that you want
websites listed above have this nation to play a greater role
model scripts you can use. Let in ending the
human tragedy
News Briefs
World
News
AU granls udancsc go,cmmenl, rebels more
time
to end fighting
in llarliir
l'he African
nmn \\lll extend
1t
daadlmt•
tor
peace,
3llfCCment
bet,,
cm rebels and the
udant!
e
gO\ mment
c,
c:¥~•IIO
I
,1/1
llar11<
reg,
I
!>u
C
11111
IC
DoputySecn.-i.ry ol Stat Rohen ll Zoell ,·k
In
Sudanese
pemmem has ~1d
1hat I\ \\
111 acct:pt the
proposed
deaL
but
rebel
fighters
hi:IJ { ut
dcmandmg
o.m,
ions regard
tfltC hared control o
th~
,ountry
[h1
rec~t extenslOO,
which has
ct
rn
he
gH
n
J
hmh: date ts 1hc -:cond uch
cxten&1 n, after
the AU
ranlc.:d
m11r1.
umc ~hen
rebel
R'J
t1.~
a
hrst
pc.·ac1.: agn.-emcnt on Sunday.
National
News
Day
"1thou1 1mm1gran1s
sees
hundreds
of
thou-
sands
a\\a} from Jobs. schlk>I
llundrcJ
ot
t
f
prote-.t..,·rs
left
the
roornis
and their Job 10
111
ht r 1mm1 a11011 la\\s
1n
the
\\
,Jc

Da
mm1grant~
Pc
1plc took
h.>
the
m
1,:
1tu:s
uuotr) mcludmg
Los
ant sco ,
h01!n1x. imd Atlanta
) of
111
gal
1mn11grant
u~
\\l,rkl;rs
und cun umer
T
mout.
howcv1.:r Y.a:, far lnw-ct than
the
expc-1.:tcd
million!(
imrl1cr
pr~d1ctcd
It 1s un~l1.:ar \\ ht:lhl.!r the
lac:k
of onm1grant
busn~ hod an~ mcasur-Jhle
cffcrl on the
tconomy.
Mac
opcmlmg S)Slcm np)(lllcd
by
,irn
threat
10
OS X
users'
securi1y
The
Mai.: OS X
opcra1m
y-ttcm, wluch has
hcim
sau.1
to
v1nuall) 1mulm:rahlc
tll
,1ru l:S. had si;\eral secunt
flaw exploited rccenll;
\ l ahlnmia man \\ s surfing the
b \\hen ht•
·ntcreJ <I \\-chlj1k 1hnt rcka~"f.J 3,
lt\J'i,
mlo ha
em. ""'
such
report
c-onlinnl!J
1at
\1ac la1,.:\!S its firs1 maJor ~urtt
llcngic
mcc
ti
en1 n:d th\. market m .2000
..,~~-
COMPLITT AUTO
~ERVICE
s
~LE!!
6 Fairview Awnuo
Ect.
Pll<lghl<Aiopeio, Now
Yorlt 12601 -
1959
47:1.-4240 _
Show Your Studcn1 I.D. & Receive
1()%
OH Labor
happening
in Sudan.
unfolding before the world's
political
backgrounds.
Please
,
tion.
Do
it for the people of
Darfur.
Genocide is not,
unfortunately,
eyes.
It
is
a
horror that tran-
don't stand by the sidelines
a thing of the past.
One is scends all ethnic, religious, or watching -
be
a part of the solu-
From Page One
Students join thousands in Washington to save Darfur
involvement
and
care.
"The American people care,
you are a demonstrntion of that
care." Pelosi said
The rally closed with
much
anticipated speeches by George
Clooney and his father Nicholas.
Bdlh recently reti.JrRed from
Darfur where ,he,r. met citizens
in
refugee
camps a:nd document•
ed the dire situation.
They
spoke
of
the
power
the
crowd
had
and
the
opportunity of all involved,
specifically
directing
their com-
ments tO the generation of young
people in attendance.
"What
a
great opportunity you
y
oung people have •
to
tell
y
our
grandkids that back in the sum-
mer of 'O'/) you were
there
when
this new generation stopped
genocide
in its
tracks," Nicholas
Clooney sSid.
George Clooney
.ended
the
event with a strong call to action.
He,
like
many other speakers
asked that supporters spread
the
word about Darfur and the geno-
cide occurring there.
"If we turn our
heads
and
look
away and hope that it'll all disap-
generation, race, and
religion
pear,
then
they will, all of them
tum out to show their support,"
an entire
g
eneration
of
pco

she:
sa
id
pie," Clooney said.
Each
s
tudent could not wait to
Marist students
left
the event
return home to read and watch
excited and thankful for being news on the event. Hi
s
tory was
able to attend.
The
reactions
made Sunday when over ten
afterw•hl
centered on
lht
scope
lnou'saHH
peoph!
"
cohv~tted
'lh
of
!he
.Illf4<,
Man;c
CQllllll""1l:
Washington, D.C. to rally for
on how
diverse
the audience in
action to stop genocide in Darfur.
Washington, D.C. was.
Marist students were determined
Judd
was truly excited and
and lucky en~ugh to
be
a part of
inspired
by what she saw.
that crowd
.
"My favorite part of the day
was seeing
people
from every
Protest against racial discrimination starts open debate
welcome."
According to Cristin
Rogowski, a student tour guide
at
Marist, the
flyer
was
handed
to
a
bus
tour
that
consisted of
most-
ly minorities
whom she was
guiding around Donnelly Hall.
"I was taken back when some•
one approached my tour, to give
them
1
propaganda,
I guess," said
Rogowski.
"It
could
potentially
affect
people
that come to col-
lege here,
but if it's going to
heighten people's
awareness on
diversity
and race relations, then
they deserve
to be
aware of
it."
The
protest
wrapped
up
on
the
campus green where members
etched messages of
hope
and
anti-discrimination
into
the side
walk.
"Together! United! We'll never
be defeated!"
was
the final call
of
the
day.
Throughout the protest differ-
ent people joined and
left
casual-
ly. Many agreed the goal was to
heighten
awareness toward
all
,-----------,
:
$1.00 Off
:
I
I
I
•m•t
I
I
I
I
I
I
Any
Edy's SUndat
I
1
wltea
yo■
prete■t
t'11<oupo<1 at
I
1
dme or
pordla...,_
1
I
Vallcl-4127-MI
I
Available
in
the
Cabaret
.....,.,Maris1Dinin~om
issues
of
discrimination
at
Marist.
Dr.
Lusky
said
that
there's a
need for increased awareness.
"I
believe
that
if
the Marist
administration
held
a wide-open
campus forum on the
issue to
elicit and assess such evidence,
many of
the
white faculty and
students would be shocked at
the
extent of the problem," said
Lusky.
An. open forum on race rela-
tions is scheduled
for
Wednesday
Watt 1111 you
see what you
can flt In our
storage
!ocker
butlfnol ...
May
3
and will be hosted by the
Service Employees
International
Union, Local 200United, the
Marist College Black Student
Union
,
and the NAACP at
Donnelly
Hall. Local S.E.I.U.
chapter chair, as well as the
President of the Local Chapter of
lhe N.A.A.C.P
.
will
be
in atten-
dance. President Murray
is
also
invited.
Includes 2 oversized p1eces
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Health
THURSDAY, MAY 4, 2006
www.marlstcircle.com
PAGES
Sexual Dysfunction afflicting younger age group
By
ALEXANDER TINGEY
Co-Health
Editor
Tum on any television and
you'll quickly realize that med-
ications aimed at treating erectile
dysfunction focus their advertis-
ing on a generally more mature
client base. However, the compa-
nies who manufacture the drugs
Cialis, Levitra, and Viagra may
want to rethink their advertising
strategy as recent studies have
begun to reveal an alarming
trend of sexual dysfunction
among younger men, a report
filed on Tuesday by ABC news
indicated.
The study began with 234 col-
lege-aged
males in downtown
Chicago after
Dr. Najah S.
Musacchio,
a
fellow
at
Children's Memorial
Hospital
in
Chicago
,
realized the
relative
lack of research in the field and
tailored the project to patients
whom
she
might
encounter in
her practice. Thirty of the partic-
ipants
involved in the study told
researchers that they had experi-
enced erectile dysfunction, and
25
percent of the study
reported
having lost
an
erection while
putting a condom on.
Dr.
Rufus Green Jr.
an
urolo-
gist at St. Paul's
medical
center
in Dallas, TX estimated that "in
the United States
today,
10-20
million men experience com-
plete erectile dysfunction (and)
another
10
million experience
partial
erectile dysfunction with
the majority of these men over
the age of 65
.
" While ED can be
caused by either psychological
or physiological factors, it is
important
to
differentiate
between the two. Most cases of
ED are
caused
by physiological
factors such
as
inadequate vascu-
lar
contfaction which
leads
to an
inability
to trap blood.
A
number
of outside factors
also influence the onset of ED in
men.
Smokers
and
heavy
drinkers are often among the first
men
of
their age group
to
experi-
ence significant ED. Some pre-
scription and illicit drugs can
also alter
an
individual's ability
to maintain
an erection. Among
the
psychological
facto~s
,
depression and stress seem
to be
the most commonly reported by
participants in
Dr.
Musacchio's
study.
The
report
is worth considering
because while
the
findings point
to a problem not usually associ-
ated with young
men,
they suffer
more from ED than
people
might
think. Estimates
range
that
between
25
and
30
percent of the
college age maJe
population
has
experienced one
form
of ED or
another and are not uncommon.
However,
Dr.
Irwin Goldstein,
a Boston-based urologist special-
izing in sexual medicine said that
if we were to examine the flip
side of
the
coin, "the
prevalence
of sexual dysfunction among
females
is
nearly
30
percent."
Of the males who reported
experiencing ED, none had spo-
ken to their primary health care
provider
.
Musacchio was con-
cerned because ED often
leads
to
other problems such as
depres-
sion, anxiety, and decreased sex-
ual
satisfaction.
Among the 234
participants
,
an
odd demographic started appear-
ing
as Dr.
Musacchio continued
her survey. A fair sized popula-
tion of participants who
had
not
reported any signs of ED told cli-
nicians that they
had
taken ED
medications in hopes of improv-
ing their sexual performance,
However,
as ABC news
illus-
trated through
an
interview with
Dr.
Ira
Sharlip, a clinical profes-
sor of urology at
the
University
of California at
San
Francisco,
healthy
young
men
using drugs
to enhance sexual performance
might
find
themselves
disap-
pointed.
"You cannot
make
a superman
out of a normal
man,"
Sharlip
said.
"If
a young
man is
having
normal erections, taking one
of
the meds will
not do
anything.
You can't
have more than
a
100
percent erection."
New study reveals large imbalance of fast foods items
By
KATE RUPPAR
Staff Writer
also from city
to
city
within the
same nation.
Hungary,
a large hot wings and
fries order had
19
grams or
more
of trans fats, versus
5.5
grams for
wings and fried potato wedges in
New York.
But in Germany,
Russia
,
Denmark and Scotland
,
the same meal has less than a
gram.
One of the great ideas behind
the fast-food industry is that
they're identical all over the
world
,
or
so
we think. A new
report on fast-food chains,
in
particular KFC and McDonald's,
shows that the french fries and
chicken served in the United
States contain much more artery-
clogging trans
·
fat than those
served in the rest of the world.
Not only can remarkably wide
variations in trans fat be found
fro9,1
one country to pno~er, but
Researchers say that the differ-
ence has to do with the type of
oil used for frying
,
and the prob-
lem
is partially hydrogenated
vegetable oil, which is high in
trans fats.
At a New York City
McDonald's, a
large
fries and
chicken nuggets combo meal
was found to contain
I 0.2
grams
of trans fat, compared with 0.33
grams in Denmark, and about
3
grams in Spain
,
Russia and the
Czech Rcputilic.
A large order of french fries at
a New York City McDonald's
contained
30
percent more trans
fat than it would at an Atlanta
McDonald's
,
Partially hydrogenated
veg~
etable oil is cooking oil that has
been injected with
hydrogen
to
harden
it and give
it
a
lpnger
At
,
J<.f.S:
:
i
.in
.,
J'.o/Ard
Nlr!
By
ADAM GUARINO
CO-Health Edrto,
NEEDLE LESS
R.U
VACCINE
A new
Lid)'
has ~own 6
1gmtkart1
10<.Yta.-.e 111
the
rwol.C'\:11,..c-, f'O\\CT of a !!pray nu \&.'CUM! for
,h,ldren
~
year
11.nd
}Oungcr
n,e
rra,-. \l.hu:h ts
po,nn.-d J.treeLI) at tht:
bah)'_:! ~ -
has
bec.,1
r,t'OH~n
10
be
55
pm:cnt m~,n: cficctJ\c lhM
tra<l.i•
nonal h1')ts ""hffl
g1\en
hl
nearl) $.000 children m
pre-.-enlln~ the 1dnrn
lhe
mam
difference
hetw""eft
lhc
twc,
aprlicatinn mtihods
is
found
In
1he Ulc1
lhar
the
spra~
ha-.
Yleakcned but live
influenza viru.\ mSJde or
it
lh "'
mems that 1he
h\·c-,irus
rut'ial
:.pra)
mlll1il'S reH.1 nu mfoction h)
..ttmul ting tmmunc def(llSCS
first
m the no,c and
thm hod) \\
t.k
Flu shots. made wilh dead
mflucnza ,
1rus.
lhm
t
g1\c
the e,ctm
005e
rca1.-tio11.
"So i.,.h,le flu
of.hots
arc grod at
boo,;ting
prei.
ious
immunity
in
health~ pcoph.·
v.ho\'-"
caugh1 flu
bdarc
,,,. lxcr\
111.xulatcd
man) bmt$. mon:
immune-n;uvc bablfS and
prcschoolen
may need
that
mor('
rlulike-
nasal ~pon~
~,u
Dr.
Robert
BelW.
a promanen\.,vacc1ne s~1ali1t al
'it LoulS
tiu"rr.my
li'tho lt:d
!he
ne...,
-.tudy
l1h! rcscarc·h.
ho\\
\'er
did
fi11d
a
.A.fef) cOOCffl'I, •
lew
of the
,cry
)oun_gat pancots, those ages
b
tm,nths
till
,em.
hod
lUl
epi~
of
asthma lite \llhtt,ing in
the
"'-cdcs
afli:r the first~-
L.uckil;,
though, tlk'.'
iflCt'Cti<J
risk
>AltS
sllghl.
I
percent
more ch1ldr~u
w.hec.zed1dler
1hc~<1)' 1han
11fu.-r
nu 4'.)t,;and lhc
rea1.1i11n "'"'-"
lfmr,t,rar,. But
Bdshc -.till
l"i
an;tlp•
mg 'Ahclher
1he
risk "ould ,,If~
1h
tm.'1
:t
d llu
pint :t1'-1n. tmd
1c,,;ula1or~ undoubted!)
wrll ,1sk
wbt.1her
1t
mew~
the
t.prJ)
Jmuld ht>
tl!l(;:d
onl}
bilct age
l
HWJNG PLANT FACES EXTINCTION
Ramfon:S1
rrc~1vat10n
ha~ ah,
<I')
been
a ~rn-
ccm as
logging
and othetmc.:thoJs t,fcul1,.,attog
trees
h;tvr
bttt1mc sud1 a l:ug~ ,oJrn,tr)'
That
'-\lllc~m tonhm1c:»
to
irl\:Jl~~
&'I
1he
demand
tnr
timhec rise,. Plants th,1ught to hdp
trea1
or cure:
~~er. l\lUS and malaria h we ix-en luund sn
rf1('
ramforc~b al nomeo
J
rcrxin l'mm the S\, is,;
ba.:kd global cooscn--ati~~n •!roup \\
V.T
said
Um1.1.·ver th~e rue
1
..tfC
fanng rupid
dcstrui;-
h(tfl
and \liith that, am, 1,hanc·c of using. th~t.• di~
rn,..enl!!. lo
fi¢'t
1t'.;nn.-,1
d1sca.,.c In
3J
42:
nc\\
plan!
a;pcc1
had ~ n di ..
~o\crc<l
in B,,meo
whi..:h ,s ,;ham.I b)
Ma.larsia.
ln<l<,nt'!>tJ
·md
1ln.mC"1,
1n
the la:-1
2~ .
tar~ and m,my r,ther,
were
belie-.«!
to he there whu,:h could ha,·c
mcdictnal .1pplication, 8u1 all thcsc promising
Ji-.c1Jveti<.-s c{luld t\.entuall)
he h,st 11 rhc- dis.1p-
pt:an11g ra111ti,restst'lfthc hea11 ol
Romwme
n11t
aJcqualel~
prqtt:cl¢d.
tlu:
\V\\
f
said.
Accordine,
to
Murr.t)
Tait. vu.::e prt"sldcnt nf
Drut Oelivery
a1
Cer) lid Bioscn:n,.;es, 1hc
Australian coinp3n) that 1dtnl1fi,:d 1he unti-can-
c,:r
c(1m.pnund,
"more: fort"SI dc:-sttw .. ·uon c1uild
\\ell den)
sc1cni.:e the ,,pponllnit~
lo
Ji1;co\•er
and <lo:H:l\1r 1urthcr po1cn1,al :o;mrrC'\:':; of l1fe--.a,...
mg .rnl.'dtc111ion
Bumeo'11 Incest cover ha
s.hnU1k
tv
'0
rer1.-ent ol
11.i
tcmtoF)· 1oJa)·
frc•m
-s
rn-tent m
1hc
mid~l9~0~
shelf
life.
The appeal to restau-
rants
is that the oil can be used
over and over for frying,
it
does
not spoil, and it's a money saver.
By
switching
to
oils such as
canola,
com,
olive or soy, trans
fats can
be
eliminated, as seen in
Denmark with a
2004
law allow-
ing only miniscule amounts of
trans fat
in
food. Unfortunately
,
as
nutrition
expens
·
and con•
sumer activists argue, it's about
money,
and using frying oil high
i
n
trans
fo
t
i
s
ch
ea
per
.
mulin
g
that switch less of a reality.
The FDA is passing some pos-
itivo
legii;l~}iqo
hqwFv•,
•ml
ii>
January began requiring package
labels
to
list
trans fat content.
KFC and McDonald's
both
list
the
trans fat and other compo-
nents
of their foods on their
Websites,
in
stores, or on tray
liners
and
brochures
,
making
healthy
e
ating a consumer
responsability.
Trans fat raises bad cholesterol
and
lowers
good cholesterol.
Research
shows that eatingjust
5
grams of it per day increases the
ri
s
l of henrt di
s
ea<:e 25 percent.
and
that
up until
a
few years ago
trans fats prematurely killed
~0,QQO
to
75,000
Americans
a
year.
In
a paper
published
by
Harvard doctors and
specialists,
they point out
that,
although
it
may be
hard
for restaurants
and
food manufacturers to eliminate
partially
hydrogenated
vegetable
oil
,
other countries
have
done
it
and have seen
health
benefits.
Doing this might even
prevent
thousands
of
heart
attacks and
strokes each year in the United
States, they wrote.
MARIA'S
PIZZERIA
·
37 N. Cllnton
St,
Poughkeepsie
c:;.:fc!,.
I: (8451483-7483 / Fax: (8451483-0560 ,
ear
c•
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THE CIRCLE
Features
TH
U
R
S
D
AY, MAY 2, 2006
www.marlstclrcle.com
PAGEG
Myspace,
·
Facebook addicting yet helpful
By
JUSTIN CALD
E
R
O
N
A&E Editor
Ever since the birth of the
Internet in the early 90s our soci-
ety has been undergoing rapid
growth in how we communicate.
Now with online social networks
like Facebook and Myspace
peo-
p
l
e have adapted to a form of
comm
u
nication that is both con
-
troversial and ground-breaking.
As a Harva
r
d senior Mark
Zuckerberg devoted most of his
college nights to creating the
foundation for what would be
Facebook.
Facebook, unlike
Myspace, was originally created
so that Ivory League students
could interact with one another.
Soon, Zuckerberg expanded and
now Facebook has begun rival-
ing the massive international net-
work of Myspace.
Myspace is represented in aver
I
00 countries and is the most
popu
l
ar social network in the
wo
r
ld to date.
Both Myspace
and Facebook are enormous
l
y
popular with college and high
school students today and act as
a major forum for communica-
tion.
The massive amount of
profiles o
n
these networks has
turned it int6
.an
opportunist's
site for communication and even
dating.
NYU
senior Yuni Iwata,
who
can
remember
when
Facebook was strict
l
y for Ivory
League studepts, recalls be
i
ng

~poked" by her current boyfriend
twe yea
r
s ago.
"Apparently my boyfriend
browsed through my page a cou-
ple of days before he actually
met me,'' said Iwata, "The fact
that he knew abo
u
t me before we
met and that
I
didn't know is
scary.
If he told me the fact that
he browsed my page a few days
Profi
l
es generally revea
l
an
enormous amount of information
about the person
r
anging from
pe
r
so
n
a
l
p
h
otographs to political
and gene
r
al interests.
Marist
College
sophomore
Risa
Pedzw
i
ck thinks that profiles can
be used as a posit
i
ve form of
expression but fears for privacy.
"A lot of people put personal
stuff up the
r
e ... like addresses
,
phone
numbers,
screen
before
we
met, I'd think
less of him."
Some
Myspace pro-
files contai
n
suggestive
sexual mate-
Myspace and Facebook are
enormously popular with col-
lege and high school students
today and act
as a
major
forum for communication.
names ... or
even
class-
es,"
said
Pedzwick.
"Some peo-
ple think that
even schoo
l
s
rial and even nude p
h
otographs
that haven't been caught by
the
management. This can be a dan
-
ge
r
ous encounter for younger
users because of how easy it is to
view and contact others onl
i
ne.
Marist College junio
r
Virgi
n
ia
Lobel has a yo
u
nger brot
h
er that
uses Myspace reg
u
larly, b
u
t
trusts her family would be
responsible if they ever encoun-
tered a suggestive profile.
"I
know my brother well
enough to trust that he uses
Myspace to keep in close contact
with his friends and would be
smart enough to stay away from
those other profiles," said Lobel.
a
n
d
names
are da
n
gerous because if some-
one is really trying to find
you ... they can access you; same
goes for towns."
The idea of stalke
r
s on social
networks has always been mo
r
e
of a worry
for
females then
ma]es.
Marist College junior
Pao
l
a Mo
l
ina has been one of
many girls that have experienced
stalker.. online.
"I
h
ad an experience my soph-
omore year when a senior sent
me a Facebook message ... He
was a student here at Marist and
I
saw no harm," said Molina.
"I
used to have my class informa-
tion up and then
I
recognized
,
C
hi
c
ken
4 Childre
n
F
oxes Chow down
at lo
ca
l
event
By
MICHAEL MAYFIELD
Staff Writer
l'h1s past ~unda.y .1 grnup
,.,f
Marn•t
'SlUth:nL~
hdd
n
charity
t\lcnt
calktl
l
hu:J..en
for
{1uldren
TI\(' r,roce-cJs "'ere
don.1tcJ
10
the {.'hildrcn',;; Home
'
of Pt1ughl.c:c:p:sie afld a portnin
aJ!'oo wcnl ba-.;k
10
the h~t of lhe
event,,
The-
Hungry Fox
The l,ramduld of John
Su,nlt'r, ()trol f-emmella.. Jne,
Addesa
aJu.l Luurn Strada.
Chicken for Childr~n
1;,
a car-
pinw; project de!o1~ncd to pro-
mote the dminl[ r:~tJhlhlurumt
but ,11,o
to
aiJ
the C hi!d,cn'
Homl!,
SpN1sored h) The
Hungt) t-u~ tof \\hich
OLI
ire
all so J\"ore of noY. aller m)
first Hrtide). the
c-,
cnt fCatured
a hu1fr1.-.1ylc drnni."T
fot
fivt
dl,llars and
&
.:h1d,;~n
wing_ eat-
ing contest
henc~ the name.
As ah.1.a)li the food \'.a~
\et)
gi.){>d..
and tor tivc:
bucks. lt'li a
,;teal.
t \\
hat am
I.
a
rum,011'(
.ak-..;man•.M) Sc:riousl} fo
l
k&. if
)\lU J1dn't
ho"-,
ynu mi~scd
out
rhe wmg t!&ting
i;-0t1lrll
pitteJ
the tia ... rliaJl
ream a_sa111St lhc:-
hasketball tC'am
rlu.s
d
few
e:mas
It wa.s
a fierce bauic: bur
m th~ end. one Ja:.on St,>ek pre-
,oilcd.
I h,1d a chance h1 speak with
nur
v.1nn.1.'!
aJierward. He kne""
he could dn
it·
he\ named loni;.
and
bL1rd
for
tlw
comest
/'>O
he
kn.:w
be- ,1,,ouldn
t
lose Hts
"eat
fint.
breathe
l
ater"
i;trate.b'Y \\
a.~
prntmbl) !he k~) 10 -.
it:tiJf')
Ii
~.!IS
a tough c<Jmpcttlton. but
only
strOn};
urv,ve as he-
walked
awu}
donniog hi~
ne\\
shut along "'Ith ll~il11,;ertifkatc
and of course-,
lir3¥£ing rights
Blll thb Ylrll~
more
than JUM
"food, bi~nds .ind fun".
11 \\8
a
time
to gr1,,e
It
J1ttl~ htl
tl"
th,
foca
l
duu-ities Jlnd to suppon
loca
l
area bu.sirtes!,e'S.
After aJI \\as
~1J
and doni.:,
!.ht
evem raised
~
$0hd
1.:!0U:
3
oflhc $5
\\Cm
to the Children'~
Home of Poughlu'\:p~11!, and the
other 2
wcn1
001."l
to th~
Hungn
fox
l\.nd
so,
we left lull
\\e
left hupp~·. and
"c
lelt
fi.:cluh!
gPOd .thout vur..,ch
-
es
llllow:
- a l
the
chal,ty-.t
'Chicken 4 Chlkfro
n
,
.loll•-·
Caftll
Fem-
Joey-.
ond
........,_
him outside of one of my ciass-
es." The situation proved awk-
ward and Molina became vexed
whenever it was time to go to
class.
"He later sent me a message
saying I looked pretty," said
Molina,
"I
took my classes off
my profile, but he kept showing
up at that one class.
I
sent rum a
final Facebook message telling
h
i
m that
I
didn't want to talk to
him ... he never answered and
I
never saw him again."
Alt
h
ough there can
be
many
peri
l
s on social networks, both
Myspace and
gral part of high school and col-
lege students lives. Stony Brook
University junior Wei Wei Z
h
ang
believe~ the wor
l
d of commun
i
-
cation will
be
heavi
l
y affected by
these
n
etworks.
"l check it about once or twice
a day, so
[
would say that
I
am
addicted," said Z
h
ang, "Peop
l
e
are becoming dependent on
Facebook and Myspace and
I
think
there will
be
more things
like this to come."
Face
b
ook has begun capitaliz-
ing on the countless profiles it
owns by creating a stat
i
stics page
called Pulse
Face
book
'I check It about once or twice
that lists cur-
rent favorite
movies,
music and the
changing
trends which
is
updated
provide
access
to
in
t
ernational
pro fi
I
es
.
Myspace
was the first
a day
,
so I would say that I am
addicted
.'
- W
ei
W
ei
Z
h
ang
S
to
n
y
Br
ook
Un
lve
rsl
y
major social network and is
being used by all age groups
from Iceland to Japan. Iwata is
an international stude
nt
from
Tokyo at
NYU
and uses
Myspace to keep in touch with
her friends abroad.
''Being an international stu-
dent, it
'
s easy to kCep in touch
with a lot of my friends who are
scatte
r
ed in USA and Austra
l
ia,"
said Iwata.
Facebook and Myspace are
becoming, if not already
,
an
inte-
weekly.
According to Pulse, on the
week of April 24 "1025 photos"
were uploaded at Marist April
27.
Facebook displays trend pat-
terns in curre
n
t
m
usic, books,
movies, and television at your
co
ll
ege and t
h
e enti
r
ety of
Facebook.
According to
Pul
se, the number
of Marist stu
d
ents who list
"I
don't read" as a book option has
gone up
1
4
points in the past
week. So as it turns out there is
good chance not many Marist
st
u
dents will read tlus.
Myspace has even been used
by a great number of bands and
mode
l
ing agencies as a fonn of
publicity. Matt Taylor, bassist of
Motion
City
Soundtrack,
be
l
ieves that band profiles
"make the band more accessible"
to the fans and give easy access
to tour schedules and general
information.
These systems have begun to
play such
a
big part in our lives
that older users have began using
them ,as a source for busi
n
ess
n
etworking and job hiri
n
g.
Marist College senior Eddie
Grosskreu
z
Googled his name
ana the first thing that was dis-
played was his Myspace profile.
He immediately decided to
delete his name from Myspace.
"I
just had some things on there
that I didn't want peop
l
e who
d
i
dn't know me that well to see,"
said Gro
ss
kreu
z
.
The idea of using online social
networks as a job hir
i
ng tool may
be intimidat
i
ng but as long as
profiles are openly access
i
b
l
e to
the
public
anything
goes.
Generations that will
be born
into Myspace and Facebook will
know a world of adults that have
been on the network since they
were in high school. This satura
-
SE
E MY
S
P
A
CE
,
PAGE 11
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THE CIRCLE
A&E
THURSDAY, MAY 4, 2006
www.marlstclrcle.com
Motion City Soundtrack's Matt
Taylor giv~s exclusive interview
(Bottom
Left) Matt T9ilor
sipping tea. (Main)
Justin Pierre plays
on
Marlst
Green.
By
JUSTIN CALDERON
the
tour as a
platform
for
up-and-
toWTI in
Pennsylvania
.
A&E Editor
coming bands to
launch
from.
"Have
you heard of Milton,
"Bands [like Motion
City
Pennsylvania?"
questioned
The sunset
s
ilhouetted
the
Soundtrack) who arc
poi
se
d
to Taylor,
"Yea, no
one
has."
musicans as
Motion
City
Soundtrack took the stage
with
the glowing mountains of !he
Hudson
River as their backdrop.
Motion
City
Soundtrack
ba
ssist,
Matt Taylor, was excited
.about th~ perfaQJJMC!: and
enthused to play on such a placid:
break big
have benefited from
Motion
City Soundtrack
has
.a
past tours," said Rezepka.
unique
sound of punk and pop
Motion City
Sout'ldtrac.k
was
that
Taylor
jokingly
describes as
fonned
in
Minneapolis,
"aggressive pop."
Minnesota in
1999
but didn't
"We listen to a
lot
of the Pixies,
truly
come
together
until they Supercbunks,
Fugazi.
and Ben
met IayJoc..aud.
~
Iba,uOJl.
F~lcJ:;,"
said TayJot, "Tony and
I
during- a small
tour.
have
blw?,)'S
been
big Beatles
spring
evening,
"Me and Tony
have
known
fans."
"This tour has been laid back each other since
ninth
grade,"
Motion
City Soundtrack
will
said Taylor, "Our
band
was orig-
conclude the mtvU Campus
inally
called Submerge.
I know
Invasion
tour
on
May
5
and
will
it's a
terrible name
...
we
didn't
then proceed
onto a
large inter-
even sound
like
a Submerge."
national tQur making
stops at
compared to what we
are
used
to
pla
y
ing
,"
said Taylor over
his
cup of tea.
"We
are
used to
being on
the
road for
up to
six
months."
The two bands
didn't meet until
Tokyo,
Osaka, Sydney, and
MtvU Communication
an
untitled
tour propell
e
d them
Melbourne over
the next
month.
Manager
Jason
Rzepka promotes into each others
path in
a small
Madness
In V for Vendetta Natalie Portman was c/rosen fort/re role of Evey over Searle/I
Jo/ransson and Bryce Dallas Howard.
In Jarhead Jake Gyllenhaal's no,·ebleed during the prank bramfing scene was
digitally added in post-production.
Kathryn Beaumont, who was the voice of Alice in Alice in Wonderland, nar-
rates the "Alice in Wonderland'' ride at Disneyland.
Toy Story was the first fully
computer-generated
full-lengl/r feature film and
each frame took 4 to 13 hours to render.
In Eurotrip the band playing "Scotty Doesn't Know" also wrote and are actual-
ly performing the song on the soundtrack.
Courtesy of
WWW.IMDB.COM
\\&ce Relatlons At Marlst College:
An Open Forum
Date: Wednesday, May 3
rd

Time: 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm
Place: Donnelly Hall Room 237
Agenda:
A panel of invited speakers
will address the issue of race relations on
the contemporary college campus, specifically here at Maris! College.
The Panel of speakers is:
1
.
Gerard Lyons, SEIU Local 200United Chapter Chair and
Executive Board Member [confirmed];
2
.
Elouise Moxely, President of the Local Chapter of the
NAACP (confirmed];
3. Victoria Banks, President of the Maris! College Black
Student Union (confirmed];
4.
Dennis Murray, President of Maris! College [invited].
This
will
be an
exciting
and important event. All members of the campus
community
are ~ncouraged to attend.
This event is cosponsored by the Service Employees International Union, Local
200United, the Marist College Black Student Union, and the NAACP.





www.mafflltclrde.com
THE CIRCLE •
THURSDAY
,
MAY 4, 2006 •
PAGE 8













www.marlstc:
l
rde.
c:om
THE CIRCLE •
THURSD
AY,
MAY 4
,
2
006 •
P
AGE
,
9
,i
l
TIRED OF HANGING AROUND?
CHECK OUT THE MARIST ABROAD PROGRAM
WEBSITE THIS SUMMER FOR MORE INFO
ON SHORT-TERM PROGRAMS!
MARIST INTERNATIONAL PROGRAMS
www.marist.edu/i nternational
i nternationa l@marist. ed u

















www.mart11c1rcle.com
THE CIRCLE •
THURSDAY, MAY 4, 2006 •
PAGE
1.0
FULL TUITION SCl!OI.ARSttf'S AYAJlABlI
Ml aoout

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I
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ra1
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train
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at
Ft. If.nm, KY
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onhani: j'OUr
slil
$
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'#WW.mertltckde,com
Commencement speakers
By
MICHAEL MAYFIELD
Staff
Writer
Cornwall Hospital, then at Saint Environmental
Enterprise
Luke's Hospital as CFO.
In
Assistance Fund, she is having
1985,
he started to work for the
no trouble whatsoever. Her list
The commencement speakers Hospital for Special Surgery and of achievements continues but
for this year's ceremonies are
from there climbed his way up
her message is what's most
none other than John Reynolds
the promotional
ladder
eventual-
important.
I
had
the pleasure of
and
Dr.
Mary Pearl. They will
ly attainting CFO and finally
speaking with
Dr.
Pearl and what
address the Marist com-
- - - - - - - - - - - - - -
she said was most inspir-
'Tlle
happiest people
•..
119
U -
that
119
ing. As the state of the
attached tu sometlll~ bllflf9r than
them·
environment
deterio-
selves. •
rates, she stresses that
munity on May
19
and
May 20, respectively. On
the 19th, Mr. Reynolds
will
receive
the
Distinguished
Alumni
Medal.
The following
day, Marist will award
pr. Pearl
an
Honorary
Doctor
of
Science
degree.
Currently, Mr. Reynolds is the
CEO of the Hospital for Special
Surgery located in New York
City but his
roots
are here, in
Hyde Park. He began his career
at the oh-so-familiar St. Francis
Hospital
right across the way
and
then moved to Vassar Brothers
Medical Center only minutes
away.
After, he worked at
From Page 6
"when
we
make
peace
_ Dr. Mary
Pearl
with the environment,
President WIidiife
Trust
we will make peace with
CEO of one of the most presti-
gious
institutions
for orthope-
dics, rheurnatology, and
rehabili-
tation worldwide.
the world."
We are
beings of our surrounding and
we therefore
have
a
responsibili-
ty to it, whether we like it or not.
But most of all, she said that the
"Dr. Pearl's life and work
"
happiest
people she knows,
are
exemplify the Marist ideals of those attached to something big-
excellence
in
education, commu-
nity and
service,"
writes Dr.
Murray. That's a
lot
to live up to,
but
as
the current president of the
Wildlife Trust, a trustee of the
Belize Audubon Society and the
ger
than
themselves." She
hopes
that this year's class leaves with
that in mind; to always think out-
side the box. So go now, and be
fruitful!
Myspace, Facebook communication
tion of the market could result in
global network. Only one thing
how our world plans to commu-
a variety of
different
networks
is for certain: as time goes on and
nicate.
unique to each social group, or
technology gets ever
more
intri-
simply
link
us all together in one cate only the future knows just
Have any plans at 7:00 this Friday night?
How about taking a stroll on down to the Nelly Golletti for
some quality a cappella entertainment. That's right • Time
Check and
9"&
Siwu!
will be singing lh1e for your hearing
pleasure. Forget those finals for a while, throw your worries
out the window, and just enjoy the music. That's Friday
eve11ing, May 5, at 7:00 in the Nelly Gollettl.And bring your
friends • and their friends. We'll see you then!
.
..........................................................
THE CIRCLE •
THURSDAY, MAY 4, 2006 •
PM£
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www.m11ristclrde.com
THE CIRClE •
THURSDAY. MAY
-4,
2006 •
PAG
E
1.2
S
EAR
C
HIN
G FOR
RE
NTALS
?
Search millions of aparbnents,
condos, .townhomes, and
houses for rent at
www.maristcircle
.
com/register
Donkey
'
s beat out Team Colangelo for ch
a
mpionship
Tuenty-four teams participated
in
the
3-on-3
Basketball
Tournament, Sunday, Apr. 30 in
the McCann Fieldhouse.
After five rounds of play
,
the
Donkey's -
Wiwat Jaksam,
Doug
Caruso,
and
Steve
Whitlow
-
beat out Team
Colange
l
o
Anthony
Co
l
angelo, Dan Sturdevant. and
Lawrence Gamm
-
in the
championship game,
I
S-4.
"The p
l
ayers played their
hearts out and did a
n
amazing
job," sopho
m
ore Katie Roos, one
of six event coordinntors, said.
"II wn1 fim watchinl! them have
fun p
l
aying
.
It was exciti
n
g all
the way to the end."
Tourname
n
t winners recieved
commemorat
i
ve basketballs and
gift certificates to the Hungry
Fox. Runners up recieved
a
gift
certificate to Foam
& Wash
.
The final four teams, received
tournament T-shirts
with tourna-
ment logo.
Orga
n
ized and run by stu-
dents from Keith S
1
rudlcr's
Sports PR class
,
tournament
sponsors included the Hungry
Fox and Special Tees Plus.
Tourname
n
t dono
r
s i
n
c
l
uded
Mo
d
ells
,
Foam
& Wash, CoCos
,
Pa
l
ace Diner, Q
u
iznos, and
rovoteOrill
The event also inc
l
uded fou
l
tests
,
for a
ll
p
l
ayers and fans,
At the com
pl
etio
n
of eac
h
round, raffle prizes were give
n
out to players and fans. Prizes
included a variety of gift certifi-
cates and T-shirts from touma~
ment sponsors and donors.
"I
think it was a great event that
r
an very smooth
l
y," sophomore
Greg Marks said.
"
I
rea
ll
y
enjoyed to see the competitive
nature
of all the players.
I
was
surp
r
ised with how successfu
l
everything
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t
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and
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www.marlstclrele.com
THE CIRCLE •
THURSDAY, MAY 4, 2006 •
PAGE 13
Water Polo earns seven seed; awaits Stanford
By DAVID HOCHMAN
Staff Writer
All sport fans know about
Selection Sunday, but May
I
was
Selection Monday. The Marist
water polo team gathered with
coaches, administrators, and a
few curious onlookers to find out
its seed for the upcoming NCAA
tournament.
To say excitement filled the
atmosphere would be a huge
understatement.
The women
screamed and cheered as CSTV
displayed the name Marist as one
of the five automatic bids in next
weekend's tournament.
When the first contest, the one
seed vs, the eight seed game, was
announced
,
more cheers and
applause filled the Cabaret from
the team and their supporters
because it meant that the Red
Foxes would not
be
playing
the
top seed in the Country.
About a minute later, the chan-
nel
announced Marist earned the
seventh seed, and would
be
fac-
ing the second-seeded Stanford
Cardinals in the opening round
on May 12. Head Coach Andrew
Silva said this seed was a result
of respect for the program.
"We knew there was a possibil-
ity
[of
being number seven,}"
Silva said after the announce-
ment and a
team
meeting.
"It
speaks very
highly
of our team
that the championship committee
felt we were deserving of a high-
er seed."
Just minutes after the
announcement he told his team,
"This shows just how much they
respect you."
Even President Dennis Murray
attended
the
selection party. His
words for the team spoke of how
highly-regarded
Marist
is
becoming in the country and
what the school can expect in
future years.
"One of the greatest schools
here on the east coast will be
playing one of the great schools
from the west coast,
"
he said.
"And it looks like our best years
are ahead of us."
If the best years are still ahead
of the program, the future is
looking bright. However,. the
ladies know there is business to
attend to this season. They are
not sitting back and enjoyingjust
being
in the tournament. From
what freshman leading goal scor-
er, Katelin McCahill, said, they
will be focused on their game in
California.
"It's an
honor
to
play such a
great team with a great history,"
she said. "But coach isn't
letting
our minds wander. We have a
tough week of practice ahead of
us. And what we've done all year
works, so we're going to keep
doing what we've been doing."
MAAC Tournament MVP
Elizabeth Davis said this may be
a difficult task
due
to the timing
of the tournament. Finals will
take place before the team jets
off and the women on the team
will have plenty on their minds.
"We just have to keep in mind
what we're there for,
"
Davis
said. "It's going to be hard with
everything else going on, but this
is a once
in
a lifetime opportuni-
ty, and we have to take advantage
ofit.
"
Davis
,
CA and the campus of
UC-Davi
s,
await this squad from
the east. While almost every stu-
dent on campus will have already
left school for the summer
,
these
women will be playing their
hearts out and showing why they
garnered the respect they did.
Baseball takes two of three games against Jaspers
By
DREW BUDD
Staff Writer
The Marist Red Foxes baseball
team defeated the Jaspers of
Manhattan at the McCann
Baseball
Field on Sunday by a
score of
4-3
in
IO
innings.
Junior
right fielder, Travis
Musolf, hit the game winning
two-run single in the bottom of
the
10th
to win it. Musolf, along
with junior third baseman
,
Pat
Feeney,
junior designated
hitter,
Adam Pernasilici and freshman
center fielder,
Max
Most, all had
two hits each.
Head coach Dennis Healy said
it was a good weekend for his
team, but they could still play
better.
"We played well," Healy said.
"We
really
battled [Manhattan],
and they were expected to win
the conferenc~
But, we still
need
to play bener"
The two teams were stuck at
two runs apiece going into the
10th i1ming until Manhattan's errors you are going to
lose.
But,
junior
catcher, Nick Derba, hit a
we need some timelier hitting.''
sacrifice fly to center off of
Musolf
had three
RBI
to go
Marist junior
reliever,
Erik along
with
his
two
hits.
Supplee. Sophomore right field-
Sophomore left fielder, Eric
er
,
Nunzio Franzese, scored the Nieto, junior third baseman,
run.
Dom
Lombardi,
and Franzese all
The Red Foxes
battled
back
in
had two
Manhattan
'
s senior reliever,
Kyle Wirtz, gave up the winning
run. Wirtz is now 2-2 after the
loss. He gave up one earned run
on two
hits
with one strikeout
and three walks. He pitched the
Jaspers
final three innings.
their half of the frame with a h i , s
'We really battled them [Manhattan],
double
.
by senior catcher Brian
each for
and they were expected to win the con-
Towler. Senior shortstop
Andy
.
t
h e
ference. But, we still need to play bet-
Kiriakedes got on base via an
NJas,.pee
1
rs
0
.
ter,'
error by Jaspers junior shortstop
Coach
Healy
s a
i
d
t
h
a
t
while
some of
I h
e
Rene Ruiz, and then freshman
led
his
second baseman
,
Kyle Meyer,
drew a walk to load the bases.
- Dennis
Healy
players
Head
Coach
Musolf then hit a 2-t single into
team in
RBI on
the
day
with two.
--------------TI
O
!
the outfield to score Towler and
Kiriakedes for the win.
Coach Healy said Marist bad a
lot of chances to manufacture
runs all game, but did not always
take advantage.
"We had a
lot
of chances
to
get
runs in with runners in scoring
position
,"
Healy
said
"Manhattan did have five errors
and anytime
·
you make that many
Supplee, who is
now
4-1
on the
season
,
got the win, pitching the
final two innings. He gave
up
one run on two hits and one
walk. freshman starting pitcher,
Josh
Rickards,
threw a very nice
game going eight innings and
giving
up
two runs on six hits
.
He also had two strikeouts and
gave
up
two walks.
directly in the spotlight, they
made valuable contributions.
"Rickards threw the ball very
well even though he didn't get
the win
,
" Healy sai.d.
"Max
Most had two hits; he did well,
but
1
think the story was really
our pitching.
They did really
well
.
"
With the win, Marist took the
series two games to one. They
lost the first game of the double-
header on Saturday. 3-1, with
Manhattan's
senior
starting
pitcher Chris Cody pitching a
gem. He threw a complete game
giving up only one run on
four
hits along with nine strikeouts.
Derba led the Jaspers with two
RBI.
The Red Foxes won the second
game of the doubleheader 4 - 3 in
11
innings. Senior starting pitch-
er, George Heath, had a perfect
game going into the fifth inning,
but his win was spoiled when the
Jaspers came back to tie it in the
top of the seventh inning. Senior
first baseman Kevin Grauer got
the game-winning hit in the bot-
tom of the
1
J
th to win the game.
Errors hurt both teams this
weekend
.
Manhattan made six in
the series while Marist commit-
ted four. However, errors obvi-
ously hurt the Jaspers more,
especially in the last g3mt where
they made five.
The Red Foxes have taken sole
possession of fourth place
now
by winning the series, and
improved their chances of earn-
ing the final spot for the Metro
Atlantic Athletic Conference
(MAAC)
tournament, Marist is
now 18 - 24 overall and
11 -
6 in
the MAAC
.
Manhattan drops to
20 • 18 overall and 10 -
7
in
MAAC play.
Coach Healy said he has his
team focusing more on how well
they play rather than the out-
come.
"1
told the team after the game
we lost against Anny that we
have to focus more on playing
well than winning baseball
games
,
" Healy said. "Le Moyne
coming up will be tough on the
toad, but as long as we focus on
playing well we should be fine
the rest of the season."
Marist will be home this week-
end for a three-gam
e
set against
rival Siena
.
G
a
me time is 'ilated
for 12 p.m.
White team dominates red in spring football scrimmage
!
By
LUKE CAULFIELD
38-0.
White
up
21-0.
The White team continued its teams was
legitimate.
The night
Staff Writer
The attack began with one
Both defenses performed well
dominance in the third quarter before the scrimmage (and, iron-
pleased with how both
teams
performed today
,
" Parady said.
"We don
'
t have a starting quar-
terback yet, but we ha
.
ve three or
four solid options."
It
only took a scrimmage to
draw a crowd of Marist faithful,
and to offer a sneak
peak
at the
Marist football team for the Fall
2006 season.
On
Saturday, Apr. 29 at
10
a.m., Marist College football
hosted the annual spring scrim-
mage on the
Gartland Athletic
Field. Parents, friends, and alum-
ni watched as the White Team
minute left in the first quarter,
and
had
strong stops. Nick when Steven McGrath came in at ically, the NFL Draft) captains
when sophomore quarterback, Teodosio
,
a sophomore line-
quarterback and threw an 11-
Tim Aulet and Nick Salis drafted
Antonio Lopez, completed a 17-
backer, helped
lead
the White
yard touchdown to junior wide-
the Red Team, while captains
yard touchdown pass to team
defense,
which shut out the Red
receiver Daniel Dulac with 3:05
Huck
Correia
and
Prince
captain and wide-receiver Prince offense the entire game. He has
left.
Freshman
Christopher Prempeh drafted the White
Even after losing tight end
coach Juwan Jackson and run-
Prempeh.
Freshman quarterback,
high hopes for the 2006 season.
Manning kicked a 22-yard field
Team.
ning back coach Donald Clark,
Matthew Avallone, took
part
in
"If everybody keeps up with
goal at the end of the third quar-
Head coach Jim Parady has
Parady is excited about the fall,
the
next two scores.
He recov-
the work and stays focused, we ter, and sophomore Obozua
faith that his captains will be at
and thinks his team is ready to
ered his own fumble in
the
end
have
a good shot at winning
the
Ehikioya provided the final score
the forefront of the Red Foxes'
win the conference title.
zone to end the first quarter, and
MAAC [Metro Atlantic Athletic with a six-yard run at 7'.30
in
the
run for the MAAC champi-
"Our main goal for the fall is to
threw a 26-yard
desperation
pass Conference]," Teodosio said.
fourth quarter to put White on onship
.
take the MAAC
,"
Parady said.
for a
touchdown to
junior wide "We've come close my first two
top
38-0.
"Our captains have already
"We haven't won it in a while
,
destroyed its Red Team opponent
receiver Kevin Frederick at
the
seasons, but
I
think next year
Although it seemed like a one-
proved they can carry the team
,
and it would be great to bring it
in an inter-squad scrimmage
,
close of the second quarter to
put
we'll
be
even better."
sided contest
,
the picking of the and even with the score
,
I'm very
home again."
Strudler's class to hold volleyball charity tournament on May 5
On
Friday, May
5,
a volleyball
tournament will be hosted on the
Marist College campus green to
support
the
Meningitis
Foundation of America's (MFA)
research efforts.
Hosted
by
Professor
Keith
Strudler's
Sports
Public
Relations class, the tournament
will begin at I :00 p.m., and fea-
ture student and staff teams of
six players each, all competing
for first place
prizes.
Free bracelets for all players
will be provided by the MFA, as
well as free food and prizes by
Modell's Sporting Goods,
the
Eveready Diner, Endless Sun
Tanning
and the
Hungry
Fox.
A three dollar registration fee is
required
for
participation,
but
additional
donations
for
the
MFA
will
be
accepted at the event.
The Meningitis Foundation of
America began in
1997
as the
first
national
organization dedi-
cated to fighting a serious, some-
times fatal, infection causing
inflammation of the membranes
that protect the brain and spinal
cord.
Meningitis is most common
among
teenagers
and adults ages
16 to 25 years old, and certain
types are easily spread through
the constant contact common to
donnitories, making college stu-
dents the most susceptible.
For more infonna1ion or to reg-
ister a team to play in the touma-
BARTENDJNG
I
MIXOL
~,..
..
EATING COMPmNT
&
CONFIOEN1'
lrrfNDlltS SINCE 19 ...
-
I
«
2
wad.
fl<\Wl,09
in u
lully eqt,ippe</
bir
' Day
&
IWlll"9
cio~1el
·
lob
pom,-,1
\'l'WQilal:d.
lo
all
g1<1dua~
( 914-949-8888
ment, please contact Laura
Dempsey at maristvballtourna-
ment06
@
gmail.com
.






































































Upcoming Schedule:
Softball: Today - vs. Niagara, 3 p.m. (DH)
Baseball: Saturday, May 6 - vs. Siena, noon (DH)
www
.
marlstclrcle.co
m
Foxes advance to
national tourney
By
DAVID
H
OCHMAN
Staff Writer
The Red Foxes won their first
ever Metro Atlantic Athletic
Conference
(MAAC)
Championship
by
beating con-
ference foe, Wagner, for the
first
time in the program's history.
The women on the squad provid-
ed another
splash
of excitement
in
its final match of their season.
Players found it difficu
l
t to
explain just what occurred in the
water that
day. Of
course they
were all happy; anyone could see
that on their faces.
At
least one
young lady knew she was show-
ing everyone just how happy she
was.
"I smile a lot," said Elizabeth
Davis,
Marist
's
sophomore
goalie who was
n
amed the tour-
nament's
MVP. "And I
couldn't
stop smiling since Sunday, so
that must be
good."
Good does not begin to
explain
this modest, happy-go--lucky ath•
lete's outstanding play. Davis
stopped
18
shots against Iona on
Saturday to lead her team to a
come-from-behind 9-3
victory.
She then made eight saves in the
5-4
title victory.
"Libby
·
[Davis] doesn't
·
get
nearly enough credit," said
freshman Katelin McCahill, the
team's leading goal-scorer, who
netted the game-winner with
only 1 :43 left to play. "'She was
MVP
of the weekend, she p
l
ayed
so
great."
Of those
8
stops
in
the final
contest, all were equally impor-
tant, but none were as dramatic
as the last one. With under a
minute left, Davis saved the day,
the game, the championship, the
season ..
.
everything, with one
stop.
"When they had the ball I was
about basketba
ll
from the Marist
men's and women's teams on the
other side of the wan in the
McCann Center. Even a three-
on-three basketball tourname
n
t
had started across the hallway in
McCann.
However, though this excep-
tional group of athle
t
es has hard-
ly
been
recognized at its own
school,
they have earned the
right to go to Davis, Ca. to battle
the Stanford Cardina
l
s
in
the
so nervous,"
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
NCAA tour-
she
said.
'There was such a relief that
nament on
"When it was
May 12.
coming at me,
we
finally did
It
. And I
'
m so
The Red
it
was
so
grateful lo have had this
Foxes
fol-
ncrve-wrack-
opportu
n
ity
.'
lowed
last
ing.
I
mean, lf
year's
cham-
1
don't stop
- An
n
alyse Ar
qu
e
ll
es p i o n s
,
this, I'll hate
Fres
h
man Wagner, as
myself forcv- - - - - - -
- -
- - - the second
er.
I
was just so happy when it MAAC team ever to cam
such
was over."
an invite. This is only the
second
Freshman Annalyse Arque
ll
es
year the MAAC is awarded
an
said shock ran through everyone automatic bid to the NCAA tour-
when the time ran out.
nament.
"There
was such a relief that
No matter how many people
we finally did it," she said
.
"And know right now, more will learn
I'm so grateful
to
have had this
about the team's successes
.
opportunity."
These women are not going
MTVU invaded our campus. away either; they are going to be
Marist's baseball team edged a
successful
group for years
Manhattan in extra innings to
down the road. This is an
better their conference tourna-
extremely
young team with two
ment chances. Young children
sophomore goalies
and their two
from the
community
learned
l
eading scorers freshmen.
M
arks' c
o
m
p
etitive edge returns after
o
ne
s
e
a
s
o
n
hiatus
fr
om
g
a
me
o
f
t
ennis
By
MA
TT
A
N
GRI
SA
NI
Staff Writer
After finishing his high school
tennis career, Greg Marks did
not think he was going to
be
back on the court.
However,
after taking one year
off
from the
game, Marks is happy to be play-
ing again and
seeki
n
g a Metro
Atlantic Athletic Confe
r
ence
(MAAC) title.
Marks played high school ten-
nis for Newburgh Free Academy
in Newburgh,
NY,
where he was
the ace on the squad. During his
time there, he led his team
IO
the
OClAA
Section
IX
Championship and was named to
the All-State Team as a New
York State quarterfina
l
ist.
Marks said that it was his older
brother that got him into the
game.
"I started playing when
I
was
four years old," he said
.
"My big
brother played so I wanted to do
things he did.
I
was always pret-
ty
fast, so
I
liked to chase all the
balls down and my brother
inspired me to keep p
l
aying."
However, once his
high
school
days were done, and he came to
Marist College, Marks decided
to hang up his racket and tehnis
shoes.
"I debated for
m
onths duri
n
g
my senior year of high school
whether or not to play in col-
lege," he said. "I finally decided
not to, coming to the conclusion
that I was a little burnt out, need-
ed a break from the game, and
wanted to enjoy co
ll
ege for what
it has to offer."
Without tennis, Marks, who is
often called "the Hammer" by
his close friends, stayed active as
a member of the Accounting
Club and in intramural
sports.
In
addition, Marks obtained a per-
fect 4.0 his first semester of col-
legc, making him a
m
ember of ended up making the lineup and
the Dean's Circle.
bei
n
g a
significant
contributor to
Despite his accomplishments
,
Marks was still missing some-
thing in his life.
"During my freshman year,
I
realiz.ed how much
I
really love
the game and missed it so
m
u
ch," Marks said.
"I just
missed the atmosphere of com-
petition."
After his freshman year was
over, Marks decided that he
wanted back on the court. He
contacted Tim Smith, the coach
of the Marist tennis team, and
told him he would like a shot to
p
l
ay on the team. Marks tried
out and earned his spot on the
roster.
Marks described the process of
getting back on a tennis team and
earning a spot.
"It
was
a
pretty
long process of
ups and downs," he said.
"Coach Smith based his decis
i
on
on the individual tournament
resu
l
ts of our
fall
season and
how we did against each other
dur
i
ng practices day in and day
out. It took a while to solidify
my spot."
Marks talked about his feelings
of being back on the tennis court.
"I had such as blast," he said.
"They arc a great group of guys
and there is a big difference from
high school in the level of tennis
being played.
It
was
a little
weird getti
n
g used to playing
towards the bottom of a lineup,
but after all, each match is worth
the same. In reality, it was so
much
fun
just to get out and
compete again."
Marks mentioned that at first,
things were not go
i
ng as well as
he would have liked.
"During the year, I wasn't play-
ing my best, and things were
looking questionab
l
e for making
the
li
neup, but I kept fighting and
the team."
Marks was definitely a contrib-
utor to the team during their
recent MAAC Championship
run.
The Marist tennis team
competed
io
the
MAAC
Championships in April and lost
4-2
to Manhattan in the finals
,
despite great efforts by Marks.
He defeated Filip Szymik
6-1
and 6-0, differe
n
t from the regu
-
lar season where Szymik. defeat-
ed him. Marks and teammate
Ray Josephs also won in their
doubles match during the finals.
Being so close to w
i
nning the
MAAC title,
Marks
said that he
is now focused on winning it all.
"I'm obvious
l
y going to try my
best to repeat my performance of
this
year's
MAAC
Championship match in the next
two years," he said.
"As
for the
team, we just have to work as
hard as possib
l
e throughout the
year and peak at the right time.
The team just has to encourage
each other and help each other
out in any way possible. After
being so close this year,
I
want at
least
one
MAAC
Championship."
"I want to improve as much as
po~sible to play higher in the
line
u
p," he said. "This summer,
I want to work on getting my
serve b
i
gger and more consis-
tent, improve my backhand, and
increase my stre
n
gth.
Despite
my laid-back personality, I am
probably one of the most com-
petitive people you will meet. I
want to win so badly, which is
why I run down every sing
l
e
ball, even if it's out of my reach."
However, Marks has just one
idea in his mind for next year.
"Manhattan is _going down," he
said.
Head Coach Andrew Silva
attribute
d
the team's success to
the combination of leadership
and recrui
t
ing.
"We had a strong core of
returning athletes with leaders
MAAC
B
aseba
ll
like Jillian Jefferds, Allison
S
t
a
ndin
gs
Rader, Caillie Andrysiak, and
our goalies, Davis and Katy
T
ea
m
MAAC
Ove
r
a
ll
Pct.
Zweifel," the second year coach
said.
"We
were also fortunate in
w
L
w
L
recruiting, being able to bring in
Rider
14
4
20
23
.465
some ta
l
ented freshmen. This
LeMoyne
12
5
26
II
.
703
combination led to our quick
Niagara
12
6
22
20
.524
success."
That fast track to success is evi
-
Ma
r
ist
II
6
19
24
.
442
dent just by looking at the
final
Manhattan
IO
7
20
17
.541
records over the last three years.
Siena
9
9
19
24
.443
In 2004, Silva's tint year as an
Fairfield
7
10
13
25
.342
assistant,
the team set
a
school
Canisius
5
13
14
30
.318
record with eight wins. Last year
Iona
4
13
8
34
.190
Silva took over the team and
St.
Peter's
3
14
10
31
.244
won
13
games. This season the
squad
is up to 23 as they head
to
MAAC So
ft
ba
ll
S
t
a
nd
ings
California.
If they make it to
24,
there
should not be anyone around this
T
eam
MAAC
Overa
ll
Pct.
campus that does not know.
w
L
w
L
Marist
10
28
9
.
757
Canisius
10
2
25
20
.556
Fairfie
l
d
7
5
29
22
.567
Rider
6
21
22
.488
Manhattan
7
23
21
.523
Niagara
4
6
22
18
.550
Siena
4
8
14
33
.298
Iona
3
7
9
27
.250
St.
Peter's
9
19
22
.464
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