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Part of The Circle: Vol. 60 No. 6 - October 19, 2006

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Fontaine Hell
hosts
'Una
Storie
Segreta,'
an exhlbttk>n
oetalUng
the
ttallan-Amertcen
hardships
during Wand

war
11.
lhls piece displays
the
number and
k>C:etlon of
1,521
such people
detained
durtng the war.
Seldom-covered story revealed
Exhibit displays WWII Italian-American
hardships
By
KAITLYN ZAFONTE
Staff Writer
Cannolis. Lasagna. The Gatti
Boys. This is what commonly
comes to mind when one thinks
of
Italian Americans. There are
over
26
million
ftalian
Americans in the United States
today,
making
it
the fifth-largest
ethnic group in the country
.
It is
not unusual for someone to know
someone of Italian ancestry or to
be influenced
in
some way
by
Italian culture
.
Many respected
members of our society are
Italian
Americans and affect our
lives
daily.
However,
this was
not always the case.
Italian
Americans,
like
most
immigrant
groups, had a
hard
time assimi-
lating
into what was
somet
im
es
an unwelcoming environmenl,
and while many discriminating
practices have
been
documented,
for many years Italian AmeriClJlS
have kept a part of their past hid-
den from most individuals in this
country
.
The tum of
the
century marked
a period of mass Italian migra-
tion
to the United States.
Italians,
like the Irish and
Germans
before
them
,
came
t)oping for a better life
.
They
settled in communities
that
recreated the small villages they
had left. Many immigrants
had
little
money and no skills
.
They
relied on manual
labor.
With
lit-
tle education and financial
r.esources,
many
Italians
remained isolated in their com-
munities
and Italian citizens. As
a
result,
their small communities
developed into what many called
''ghettos," which perpetuated the
negative connotations already
surrounding immigrant culture
.
The American public viewed
the
struggling immigrants as violent,
btzy, dirty, and
ignorant.
These
unwarranted stereotypes may
help
to explain the events that
TttECJRCLE
845-575-3000
ext.
2429
wrltetheclrcle@gmall.com
3399
North
Road
Poughkeepsie,
NY
12601
wou
ld
follow.
So why
bring
thi
s
up
now
?
October is Nationa
l
Italian
American
Heritage
Month, des-
ignated every year
with
the pres-
idential signing of an executive
order.
Coinciding
with
Columbus Day, it
recognizes
the
achievemems, contributions, and
successes of ltaJian Americans.
After all, our country shares its
namesake with
Italian
explorer
and
geographer
Amerigo
Vespucci.
Besides
celebrating
the accomplishments of
these
people, Americans must also
remember the hardships
they
endured.
This
year Mar
i
st
College
took part in
this celebra
-
tion
by
hosting
the
traveling pho-
tographic
exhibit "Una Storie
Segreta" on
the
first
floor of
Fontaine Hall. The exhibit docu-
ments what happens when igno-
rance and fear take over.
Presented from Oct.S through
Oct.
30, the wall of newspaper
clippings, government docu-
ments,
and photos attempts to
explain
the
"secret story" of
Italian Americans that
had long
been concealed. Some Italians
had
been restricted in their
movements, interned
in
prison
camps, and
denied
the rights of
the ordinary person. Professor
Lawrence DiStasi from
the
University of Ca
li
fornia at
Berkeley
is
the
curator of
the
Western
Regional Chapter of
the
American
Italian
Historical
Association and
project director
of the trave
l
ing exhibit. (Earlier
in the
month
,
DiS1asi
spoke on
"Una Storia Segreta: When
Italian
Americans were Enemy
Aliens"
in the
Nelly Galetti
Theater.)
Spanning the first
0oor of Fontaine, between the
characteristic bright
yellow
doors, are various black.
boards
with photos of people
and
cap-
tions explaining
their
story-
"Una Storie Segreta."
At
the
start of
the
ex
hibit
, a
propaganda
poster from lhc I 940s com-
mands,
"Don't
Speak
the
Enemy's
La
n
guage!
Speak
American!
"
The tone
has
been
set:
the vMwer is quickly aware
that racial intolerance,
not
rational thought, reigns. Despite
what history may have taught us,
it's always shocking to read first-
hand accounts of what
the
American
government
has
inOicted
upon
its
constituency.
One of
the
possible explana~
tions for the actions of
the
United
States
government
toward
Italian Americans might
be
the
fact
that many
of them
s
up
ported
Mussolini, the
fascist
dictator
of
Italy.
He
earned
respect for
transforming
Ita
l
y
into
a modem nation of conse~
quence.
Many families of
Italian
ancestry framed
photos
of both
FDR and Mussolini side by side
in their
houses. However,
being
pro-Mussolini did
not
translate
into being anti-American for
these individuals.
Once
the
United States
declared
war after
the
Japanese attack on Pearl
Harbor, the
government viewed
the Italian
American popu
l
ation
as a potential threat
to national
security.
As many
Americans
were being called
to fight in the
war,
thousands
of
Italian
Americans
were
deported
to
intemmenl camps
and
being
slripped of their
rights.
I
n
cluded
in
the
exhib
it
is
an
officia
l
docwnent
addressed
to
a
Domenico Sanqu
i
enetti.
It
reads:
''This certificate must
be
carried by the person
to
whom
it
was Issued and must be produced
if
required by any police officer."
I
found this somewhat ironic, as
it was eerily
reminiscent
of Nazi
Gennany and its
demarcation
of
Jews.
A country
that
was so
strongly opposed
to
fascism was
using techniques such as
this to
SEE
EXHIBIT, PAGE 3
OPINION: UN PASSES RESOLUTION TO
·
CONDEMN NORTH KOREAN NUKE TEST
Why sanctions and diplomatic negotiations Just won't
work
when dealing with a nuclear North Korea
PAGE
4
Student Development
head
launches anti-
violence
campaign
By
TRICIA CARR
Staff
Writer
1an Schunk,
l
umor
I os
Fc,llo\\ mg
up Ben-Atherton
pla~ er said • I
ilioug 1 1 " 35 pcrformanc~
Take B t=k hi.:
inform
111
,c
d
11
makl!!i me
N1ghf
ao ,
crnauonal
dlllflCS•
"''"' 11,Jl,m.
r
rt
t1• h1p
u-
t1~
and
s.:x.uaJ
violence 11warc
nc-
1.'\<!'0I.
\\ill
.;01k
ll, \tl11t I
'The
Corrections' author
to speak on
campus
By
MOLLY COLBURN
Circle Contributor
On Wednesday, Oct.
25
,
nov-
elist Jonathan Franzen will
be
coming to Marist to speak
.
Part
of the 2006-2007 Writers'
Lecture Series
,
this
event will
begin at
7
p.m.
in
the Nelly
Golleti
Theatre
in
the
S1udent
Center.
The
program
will consist of a
brief reading,
as well as a Q&A
sessio
n
conducted by assistant
dean
of academic affairs Meg
Fra
n
k
l
in.
Audience
members
will
be
given time
10
ask ques-
tions, and there will
be
a book
signing for anyone who wants to
attend. The
lecture
is
free
and
open to to
the
public.
Twenty-Seventh City" (1988),
"Strong Motion" ( 1992), "The
C
orrections" (2001), "How to
Be Alone" (2002), and "The
Discomfort Zone" (2006).
His latest appearances go along
with his most recent work
The
Discon,forl Zone.
The memoir
was written earlier this year,
describing
his
growth through-
out his childhood into adulthood
.
He ex.plains how he changed
from a "small and fundamentally
ridiculous person"
to
a success-
ful adult. Because of the popu-
larity of "The Corrections,"
Franzen
has
many faithful read-
ers who
have
helped to make this
new
memoir
a best-seller as
well
.
In September 2001, Franzen's
reputa1ion seemed under fire,
len1;
nlll
only
oJn campus.
but
m the
.:QmmunHy
as Y.c I ..
Senior mlddle hitter Sally
Hanson tallled her
1,000th
career
kllt
thls
weekend. She
ts
the second ptayer
In
school
his·
tory to
accompllsh this
feat.
See
Sports,
page
12
for
more
on
the
women's
volleyball team.
Franzen
has
been speaking for
many years about
his
work. He
has
won such honors as the
Whiting Writers Award in
1988,
a Guggenheim Fellowship in
1996,
the American Academy's
Berlin Prize in 2000, and the
National Book Award in 2001.
His popular works include
"
The
when he created a controversy
- - - - - ~ - ~ ~ , , . . . .
involving Oprah. Winfrey
'
s Book
However
,
sales
of
"The
Club.
After
agreeing to p.artici•
Corrections" did oot seem to suf•
pate, he then commented in an
fer, and Franzen even thanked
interview with The Oregonian
,
Winfrey
in
his
acceptance
'
'
I see this as my
book.
my ere-
speech for the National Book
ation, and
I
didn't want that logo Award
bestowed
on
"The
of corporate ownership on
it."
Corrections
.
"
FEATURES: TASTELESS SENSATIONS OVERRUN
THE DINING HALL
Everything
you ever wanted to know about the
state
of
food in the
campus cafeteria
PAGE6







































































cam-=~us
TliURSDA
Y,
O
CT
OBER ~
9, 200
6
www.
m
a
r
lstcl
r
c
l
e.com
PA
G
E
2
Security Briefs
.
Golf cart becomes poor substitute for white
Upcoming
Campus Events
Friday, Oct. 20 -
Sunday, Ocl. 22
Mid-Semester Break
Bronco in O.J.-style Marist escape attempt
By ANDREW MOL
L
Le
ade
r
in
h
omeland
security
A
lot of peop
l
e are
coming up to me and
asking
me,
"Hey
Andrew, why do you
always
make
fun
of
SNAP in your security
briefs?" (Note: No one
h
as asked me this. In
fact, practically nobody
I know has admitted to
reading the briefs, let
a
l
one enjoying them.)
We
ll
, I'll te
l
l you why.
Because it's funny. To
me, at least. So stop
being so uptight, Mr.
SNAP
off
i
cer.
And
p
l
ease don't hurt me.
I 0/10
A Champagnat fire
alarm went off due to
an unsuccessful attempt
to cook popcorn in the
microwave. Come
on
people, there are much
better options out there
than burning down an
e
n
tire dorm. Take it
from me, just buy bags
of that white cheddar
popcorn.
Delicious.
This is stuff is insanely
addictive
.
I'm
con-
v
i
nced they lace it with
cocaine or something,
that's why
I
keep buy-
ing
it
when
I
have
m
i
crowaveable popcorn
in my room.
10
/
11 - 2:27
A.M.
You may remember
last week, the story
about the young kid
who stole
a
golf cart as
a plan to get to the
deli? Well, this week a
security golf cart was
taken
,
and the perpetra-
tor
was
seen
going
south
bound
on
the
roadway
to
McCann.
Apparent
l
y their plan
was to drive through the
McCann
parking
lot
,
elude
security
,
a
n
d
make a break for the
bridge and freedom,
OJ-
style
.
You nearly made
it, kid. You nearly made
it.
10
/
13 - 10
:
30 PM
my Jay Leno impression
and not be funny at a
l
l.
10/14
-
3:10 P.M.
A
Gartland resident
returned to their house
to find their front door
handle
damaged
,
and
further damage inside
the
apartment.
You
know who I think it
was? The Hambu
r
glar.
But real
l
y, is stealing
hamburgers
suc
h
a
crime that one has to
dress in old-time prison
garb 24
h
ours a day?
Seems
a
little much.
Thin)<: about
it.
10/14 - 11:56 P.M.
QQ
Q
Two students tried to
i'
'f"
'f'
bring some guests into
Champagnat Hall, and
In Leo Hall
,
three one of the guests was
students
were
found carrying a
bag
with
with a small bag of them
,
which
was
marijuana and a pipe
.
searched by security.
What they planned on ln it, there was a half
doing with said items, gallon bottle of vodka,
l
1
m not too
s
ure
.
I cou
l
d and three 12 oz. bottles
make an easy joke here of Smirnoff Ice. Am I
about Bob Marley and the only one thinking
being hungry or some-
this guest may have
thing, or I could contin-
actually been M
r.
Me
l
ue my stupid trend of Gibson? Yes. Yes, J am.
making
fun
of Leo. (You think it's easy
Either
way,
I'm writing crap like this?)
screwed. I think I'll do
IDmi'
~
PRF.R
Cunso
l
Lalxm
on all
Weaves
&
Exlemium
Ha
ir
Weaving
Marc is back ..
_
Hn
d
l
lc
~
h
biu fom,r.ly or Making rm::c!S hHw~join,~1
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10/15
-
5:30
A.M.
Security found a non-
student lying on the
ground around Fulton 7,
and the student was
able to get up and sim-
ply walk away. He was
presumably a bit tipsy,
but I wasn
1
t so sure.
Maybe
he
had
been
stalking a celebrity or
something? But then I
realized
the
only
celebrit
i
es we have are
the cast of
11
That
1
s A
Shame
11
and those two
guys(whose
names
escape
me
at
the
moment}
who
I
see
hosting the "FoxDen" a
lot.
So yeah
,
h
e wa
s
drunk.
10
/
15 - 6:00 P.M.
A student said that
speakers
had
been
stolen from the trunk of
their car in the Beck
parkin
g
l
ot. According
to the student
,
the trunk
had been locked. and
there was no sign of any
forced entry.
So, how
exactly did
someone
take
the
speakers?
Magic?
Was
David
B
l
aine
involved?
Something's up here.
10/16 - 6:35 P.M.
In Townhouse C,
there was a burnt food
incident
in
which
Fairview showed up to
clear away the smoke.
Since
I
can't th
i
nk of a
joke
to
make
here,
allow me to take time
for an editorial. Hey
North
Korea:
Screw
you.
Thank
you.
I
expect to be hearing
from
The New York
Post any day now for
my
big
break
.
They
have no standards any-
way. Oh
,
and have
a
fun
Mid-Semester
Break
(aka
,
one day vacation)
,
everybody!
Disda
l
mu
:
Tiu

S
e
rnri1y B
r
iefs
a
r
e intended as satire and fully
pro1ec1ed free speech under the
First
Amendment
of the
Constilution.
genius
-
o
-
meter:
(w
s,,i
nc
11n11t2001
Ct1e11r1t1ott
20tll
A1
1
ivffllrywllllllll
lplllll
TOIII
F
rt1
Trip
on
M1J
12
btfOlt
Nor.1
Fltl Malt&
Pll1IN,
HotltllDNII
Ew,
QJOIII
DllcoHlt
Otl
I+
HottettSprlnf
Brt1k
Dlltllllllonl
WOMH,7710
www
.ltltlljllaNlot11.COt11
Saturda), Oct.
21 -
Symposium: Ernlution,
Faith and C'o-creauon
Nelly Galetti Theatre
free
with college ID
Tuesday,
Oct. 24
W1llrnm and Sadie
Eflron I eclure in
Jc11
ish
Studies
7 p.m
m
Jhc
Ndly
Ciolclli
Wednesdt1), Oct. 25 -
SP(' Cotfochousc:
f.asily
Amused
9
p.111
.
tn
the
PAR
Wednesday, Ocl. 25 -
2006-2007
Lecture 5cnes:
Writer
Jonathan
r
nm1en
in
the
Nell}
Goktti
7
p.111.
'lluu:sdt1), Oct
.
26

t..·v1c
Sturr
"The
Rcgurgitator
"
9
p.m
.
m
the
PAR
Friday, Oct. 27 -
SPC trip
:
2"th Annual Putnam
t
ounty
Spelling Bee
S'.!5
\I
ilh
Marisl
If)
Saturday,
Oct. 28 -
SPC
Trip:
Si,
Flags
Fright Fest
tickets $20
on sale now al
College
<\cti,
ities
TrIE CIRCLE
Christine Rochelle
Opinion Editor
Alexander Tingey
Health Editor
James Reilly
Photography Editor
Ralph
Ri
e
n
zo
Advertising Manager
Kate Giglio
Editor in Chief
Margeaux Lippman
Managing Editor
Andy Alongi
Sports Co-Editor
Eric Zedalls
Sports Co-Editor
Isabel CaJulls
Featur~s Editor
James Marconi
News Editor
Jessica Sagar
A&E Editor
Mark Perugini
Assistant Sports Editor
5arah Shoemaker
Copy Editor
G. Mode
l
e Clarke
Faculty Advisor
C
h
elsea Murray
Distribution Manager
The Circle
is the weekly student newspaper of Maris\ College. Letters to the edi-
tors
.
announcements
.
and story ideas are always welcome, but we cannot publish
unsigned letters. Opinions expressed in articles are not necessarily those of the
editorial board.
The Circle
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l
etters to the editor can be
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www.m•rlstclrde.com
From Page One
'
Exhibition shows
secret Italian story
contro
l
its
own population.
A series of photographs also
struck me
as
espec
i
a
ll
y poignant.
Various faces of
elderly tnen
and
women stared back at me, the
caption underneath describing
them
as
internees. These were
primarily older individuals who
.
h
ad not
l
earned English well
enough
to obtain citizenship, this
was eno
u
gh to consider them a
threat.
I
could easily
see
my
grandfather's distinct
l
y
Ita
l
ian
face mixed among those
on
the
wall, and the exhibit no longer
felt like some removed
piece of
history
.
What if
something
like
this happened today?
It
seems
like
it
never cou
l
d; however, this
event took place only less than
70 years ago-and that
is
fright-
ening. There is the hope that
exhibitions
such
as
these
will
thwart future injustices, for there
is
no better way to put
an
end to
h
atred than by divulging the
cold, hard facts.
The exh
i
bit is aptly titled "Una
Storia Segreta" because to this
day, the
country
has never fully
acknow
l
edged these events. In
Nove
m
ber of
2002,
President
Clinton signed
a fonnal apology,
but
several government
docu-
ments
remain
top
secret.
Moreover, many fami
l
ies still
shy away from
speaking
of their
experiences
duC to
extreme
anger and humiliation. To be
treated
in
such
a
way is an injus-
tice to which few can relate.
Italian Americans
suffered
from
this
"secret
history" for far too
long, and people
such
as
DiStasi
are looking to end the
silence;
it
is the only way to guarantee that
a future ethnic group will not
face similar intolerance. In an
article from
North
Coast Journal
Weekly,
DiStasi
says, "Are
we
to
l
erant of people that are new to
this country? Are we tole
r
ant of
people with a different look and
ethnic background? Time and
.
time again we prove that we are
not." The exhib
i
t poi
n
ts out that
during
any
time of war. the
United
States is quick
to
con-
demn its
own
ethnically diverse
inhabitants. Russian and
Cuban
internment was considered dur-
ing the Cold
War.
Detainment
even
posed a threat to Iraqi
Americans during the 1990 Gulf
War.
Let us
r
ecognize
our
past
mistakes, shed light on the
secrets,
and hinder future injus-
tice
.
2
0
0
6
,2
00
7
Wr
i
t
e
r
s'
L
e
ctur
e
S
e
rie
s
pr
ese
nt
s
National Book
Award recipient
Jonathan
Franzen
Wednesday,
October 25
7:00
p.m.
Nelly Galetti Theatre
free and open
to the public
BRtOOET SULLIVAN
/
THE
CIRCLE
Performers
rehearse In preparation for this
semester's musical feature,
Crazy
For You,
which w1II be debuting
on
November
3 In the
Nelly
Golettl
Theater.
THE
CIRCLE

THURSDAY,
OCTOBER
19.
2006

P
AGE 3
News Briefs
World
Vews
Nutionq/ News
Ntlrth Korea
,tnnuunce:s 11 ,,111
test
mnr1.: bornPs
Sectarian
light,n°
lea-. do,cns dead m Ila! d
n-e rh
nulitan
gradua
vlark Foley
lo
re,eal name ol ahtt:<l\e
priest
Wa,hington send
Appro:uma1el'.v S46
m1lhu-11
wurch
n1. urcd a~ a
result
t
an
e,'U1hquak.l!'
1ntl1al """-IUrnttcs
rcp,1rt
ngam.1gt1Ht1tlci.Jl6.7
hlllbe
UI
tederal go rrum:nt h
nd a
I
F
the mount I e damage







































































THE CIRCLE
0
,_tinion
THURSDAY,
OCTOBER 19,
2006
www.maristclrcle.com
Let the voices
of the MJt.rist
community
be.
heard.
PAGE4
UN passes resolution to condemn North Korean nuke
test
By
JAMES MARCONI
News Editor
Air
tests
have definitively
con-
finned that
North
Korea detonat-
ed
a nuclear weapon
last
Monday, though the blast was
unusually
small,
less than
a kilo-
ton.
Now
nations around the
world are
scrambling
to deal
with
the
fallout. The announce-
ment
of such an explosion
has
forced countries
like the
United
States
to
face a question
that has
remained unanswered
for years -
what
to do
with
a
nuclear
DPRK?
One possibility, as always, is
that
of economic sanct
i
ons.
The
United Nations Security Council
passed a reso
lu
tion on Saturd~y
strongly condemning the test
and
imposing
"trade, travel and
other sanctions
[on
North Korea]
as
punishment
for
its ...
nuclear
weapons
test"
(www.cnn.com).
The Chinese ambassador
has
promised
to detain and search
shipments to
and from
North
Korea across China's borders,
but has
avoided
fully committed
to
enforcing
the measures
of
the
sanctions,
including interdiction
of cargo ships at sea.
In my mind, this
essentially
kills the
effectiveness of
the res-
olution. If China is
not
willing
to
jwnp onboard
and
impl
emen
t
the
resolution's provisions to
their fullest
extent,
then
eco-
nomic
pressure
on
North Korea
will fail. For one, China
is the
most
powerful
country in
that
region
-
therefore
their coopera-
tion
with the resolution serves as
a potent
model. More
i
mpor-
tantly,
close to one
third
of all
North Ko
r
ea's annual
imports
come from China (www.world-
factbook.com).
Should China
fail
to curb some
of
these
imports,
the
effect on
the
DPRK's
economy would
not
be
as substantial, and
therefore
would
not represent
a real pun-
ishment.
Another so
lu
tion suggested by
some
to ensure
North Korea's
peaceful intentions
would
be
either bilateral or six-party talks,
aimed at nuclear 'negotiation.'
Agaiq, such
talks
would be a
dead
end, for two
reasons.
Number one, North Korea is
already a
nuclear
state. Granted,
they have not yet
perfected
the
technology,
as
evidenced by the
laughably low
yield of their
bomb.
But they are nuclear
nonetheless - and
their program
can only improve with time and
technology. To deny
this
would
be comparable to an ostrich
burying its head
in
the sand; that
is to say, we would only be
deceiving
ourselves.
The second
reason
talks would
fai
l
rests primarily on
the
shoul-
ders of the North Korean gov-
ernment
itself.
They don't want
to negotiate,
and they don't want
to
play fair -
history
has proven
this fact beyond any shadow of a
doubt. Take, for examp
l
e, the
a_greement
brokered
back'. in
lj194. As /inimy Carter )"W,e
in
a
colu~n p_ubfished
OCt
I
.
f
~
"1
went to Pyongyang
and!i~gotlai-
etl.
an
agrc.trhent
under.
~
which
4/qrth ls;o,,~
,
.l"Pl!ld
!"l'I'"
..jts
nuclear
·
program
at
'tongbyong ... Tlie Uniled
slales
assured
the
North
Koiearts
th8t
there would
be
no miliwy
threat
to them, that it would supply
fuel oi
l
to replace
tbe
lost
nuclear power
...
(Www.
riytimes.com).
"
Carter goes on
to
describe fur
-
ther
incentives granted
to the
North Koreans, and how
sud-
denly
in
2002
the
United States
branded North Korea a
member
of
the
'Axis of Evil,' "threa
t
ened
military action and
endtd ship-
ments of fuel
oil ... and
refused
to
consider further bilateral
talk.s"
(www.nytimes.com).
In
his stat-
ed opinion, these actiolJS on
the
part of tt1-e
U.S.
only
,
further
alienated North Korea and
led
to
the present
hostilities.
What
he
fails to exp
l
ain is
that
while America was b1.1&y appeas-
ing
Kim
Jong-11 with eco
n
omic
incentives,
North Korea waS
busy
violating
the
tenns of
the
iroo µu:y
.
)lacJ
signed
iQ.
~11..
We
had
knowledge of this,
and
so we took action. The
United'
States
has
not alienated
North
Korea -
it has already done that
itself.
In
fact,
the
DPRK announced
this
week
that the
sanctions
imposed
on it constituted an 'act
of war' (www.cnn.com).
Oh,
and
it
also stated its intention to
conduct another
nuclear
test,
taking a stance of clear beltiger-
ence and
defiance towards
the
rest
of the world. Clearly, they
have
no intentions
to denu-
clearize and disarm.
Nuclear North Korea
is
here to
stay. Aside from direct military
action (unlikely, in
the
words of
Condoleezza Rice), the only
other option is
good
old fash-
ioned
nuclear
deterrence, Cold
W~
styJe.
1
The
best
parj.
is
1
there
is
no chance of mutually assured
destruction, as with the Soviet
Union - North
Korea,
simply
doesn't have the capacity.
However
1
evCh tlie
threat
of
America's
0
arseri.aJ looming over
it may not prove sig
ni
ficant.
After all, Carter
dici
get one
thing right - North K,oi:ea is
essentially backed into a comer
both economically and militari-
ly. The analogy
l like to use
is
that of a Risk game: When one
person
is assUJed of defeat, he
figures
th3.t he
might
as well take
someone down w
·
itb him, and
l.wncJw,s an all,:.pu\ ~1,1icidal
assault.
North Korea has proven
that
it
is capable
of
that
,
kind of rash
decision. Toothless
resolutions
and paper treaties have had no
discernible effect.
I'm
not
sure
what the SOiution is, but talking
anO appeasing certainly
has
been
an
utter
fai
lu
re.
Column in Generator Magazine evokes response from student athletes
To
Marist Athk1c5.
l'\e
bct.·n rcuding your letters,
I'\'~
talked
to m,m) of you. and
have
heard
ho..,. )OU feel atx>u1
the
recent "Christine
Cackle"'"
in
thi:
{,encrator. Those l,f_rou Yo-ho arc
familiar
with
1he
Ciencratorkno"'
that
l\C
fcawrc
\c:'T)
td'
ou1spoke11
upm1on columru. th.1t
~mJ lo
pu~h
th
cm1.:k1rc and
~\t::tl
up:.\..1 a number ol
pet'J)IC
lna.t
bemg
said.
pl~

rcmt:n1hcr
rh111 ll,c- Cicncra1ot
,s
,vout ml\iazin~
as
1m1dtf'.9if'
arn•l.ltlcelw'
A1Kl1WJ
ID\
\'1lutoff1mdus,our
lt'1.l1..-r.i:
in ri.
po'®
1 ..
t
us am le tor
out
nat
ill8UCI
I ~
lbnw&llt
t,,
heuring trnm ) ou
fo
The{.
1rclt,
• AmanJa
"-.tu~
t
di1or-in-t..'h1d
Gc:ncr~tur
~ogi.umt
In
a
rcan1 cJ.niou 0t the on
campu, inag1tnne
nmcrueor,
lht"n
appeared .an 11rt1cli: th:.11
nu1
only ofknd,:d. bu1 tncd HI ,.;(lmpromhe
lht: crl!dih1hl\.
llf
the M::,qst l ollc11-c.: dl'ranmcnt ol 11thlet1cs and
1t-s
i,p[lroA1ln:H,:ly
57S
Jt1.1J.:nt
;uhlctc.<;
The
p11!\:C
tidal
~chn'IUl11:
C»ckks hJ' lhnsti11,,_. Rochclh: anad;j
the
~tudcnt-wlhl1.1e~
w11h
false tmd ignomn1
:,tntt'ltl1;nh
In
lht
arUl.'.h~, 11,hc mlCN>
that~
~1u•
<k'Tn-alhlt.1c~ ht·re ha't-e
c-vcrythlhg handed
10
them oo a
SJh1tr plat-
ter.
Shl
suggc.<;ts that the
<itudent-ethlcii.'!! rn·c1\.t:
money,
fint pick
Qf
dn..,c!i. aod h.a\.c
their
~houl ',\ork
J~i.n.:by
rrec
tutors
and
"l,a,.-
k1o.1h.-U
,wuur1c.,," Shi! Abo '>tatr:s, witb "'' basis for
her
a,yum1."flt
''[Jo
{the mhlete-sl nlu linov. \."-htf't'
1h~
libral')
i~ ..
and
"Do
we
need
M
tlold
fth~
mhlctes'j
haoJ
lhrough
l'\11:'f)
a1:ademic tibstaclc''"
I
undi:rslan<l th.ti
11!-~
Rochdlc
tnk"nded
thi..-
ed1hi.rial
to be
satirical
in nuture-. lf~ou look
llpthe delinltmn
ofi»Alire
)OU
\\ill
not find
hes
or
slandi..7 .uiywh~re
m
it.
Bcmg a studrn1-atl1lc1l' dad a me::mbcr of the men 'i ba.'ikctball
prop-dm h1."1~ al Mar1s.t [ felt attacki::d
pt'Th,Oflttlly
Q)'
this
anick.
for thn:e
y~r-s
I ha\'e been working hard to maru1ge both m!,'
&a·
Jcrnk und arhh.1-ic
1.:ndc..t"PfS
Jnd to
~ugg~~t th;n
t,
or
u.u)·
otht"r sru.
dent a1hfoh.: h:nt
~en
gnen $p.:cinl .:idvaru.agc:( m
the
~laszsroom
1s
~imph
tah,e, The
m~"fc fact
lhat Mihl> N.i.~lu:lle
li'uggc~ts
that
I
ha\\! h.1d "bw,kci.ball _groupies," and all the tuton,
Marn,t
.:i;thletJcs
1.:~m bu}'.
hold
my
hand
thr(lugh eret)' academic <ibsuck
~
ridicu-
lou,;
I
am
just
,1n"·
e~amp!i.!
,1f
the coundtss studt!nl•athle1es that
nor
onl)
gct
by
m the clas!in,om. but
excel
there.
J
curreml~ ha..,e a
3
~
l,P·\
and am on pac.c to graduate in
tht~ and a
half
yam.
I
"ill
cor11plc1i: the-
ti,
c-:,-car \.IBA
fll'O_gram
in
the
5f111Hi
of 200~.
M.ari:-t'-, Si'S
studcnt-athlcte!f.
carried a J.1
1
GPA
fc,r the .spnus
.'.!OU6 semcsi.er, anJ
Jet.I
th.:- Meno Atf4ntic AtWeuc- Conferenc(
(Mi\AC'J
\,.,th 129 ofib
stucltnt
Jthlct~!j on
the
200'i..{lf>
MAAl'
1:1ll-acaJC"m1 .. · eam.
fo
receJ\C
this award the ,rudl!nt-.1\hle1t.!
mu1,1
achieve a J,2 cumulati\
c-
GPA. Behtvc
1t
or not.
I.
along
with
th-e
THE CIRCLE
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The Circle is published weekly on Thursdays during the
school
year.
Press run
is 2,000
copies distributed through-
out the Marlst
campus.
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editorial
board
,
call
(845)
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Opinions
expressed in
articles do not necessarily
repre-
sent those of the
editorial
board
.
rcl>I. of the
student
alhlet~ on
cmnpu.<.. managed
to do this
wilhout
"teams
of g:ruupies.•
I
sincere!)
hope
that
the
gcnt..-ral
student bod) doe!i
Ml fed the
same wav aOOut
athletes a'i
Mi<.
Rochelle I
hm-c llC\ier had
pcob-
lem.1 ...,11h
tn)' ot m" re
~
t)r
r,rokssol'!,,,
,mJ
\\.\)lild
hl.c
ro
1hint..
Wa&
Jthkte-.
.re Mt ICll•~J
1111n:i
lliffcr~ntly
thw1 !hctr
r,ctis
m
the
1,.:Lei,sroom ~he
clt11111~ IJ111l
lh
·t1.: l'i
a cparuhon l\l
1h,.• 1udcnt ath-
lClC · fr('lm !hi.: T""e~I
~
!ht
Wlldt:nl
hnlly bu1'ighNRrt1.
'littitudd
hke
lh,a
oq..-
di pl,. t-ll
111 1!1
nhlori1I
cnh ,,
tJS
ijf\
,ifbrt,
lh,1~
n'1
there
hc'hi.r.:
I
I
:am 1111\v
lorc-i;d It•
de;.u ur
-.oine
l,t
rJ1c lie,; told h)
\-ti!l!I
J<.nchdlc StuJ,:nt•11thkt<:
di,
no1 n.:\.1.·1,c tin~ ptck
,t
cl
~ts. and
1hcy do nut
r\'.1.·ci\c:
allu\,.1nc1o.--s 1udl·11t-:nhl..:t~ do
not
ha,
a
tra-
dition
of r,a,~mg
tlu"'ll
h:sN. nr
,1ttc11d111g
tudcnt-athli.-tc
urJ)'
" tUd>
~ion · 'tudo:ni-athl .. "tcs .:an rccch-c
l
tutor
pu1J
for
hy
1he
athletic di:rannw111, hut the
lllll•l"S
do
not Y.\1rk. "Uh
the
t'O!Kh
es or dll the.: \H)rk
tor
th(' \.tudent•athlck l'hl!'V
ttr1.·
aS'-tttflCd h) the.:
c1,llc~t:·
;1.,;i.1dc.-m1c
l~ttming
center the same cntil)' that a
tK_rt.i
tutoU IM all
tudt.'nts. Studen1.-a1hlch:!I
k.,111¥. "hcr, tht' lilfflll"\l
11
It
is 1hc lhrce•'illll)'
tall :.lone huilJmg
1r1
the
L"t"lltc::r
of
Qmpu.,;.
(
am
ft'
ll1at
lhi: iuuilcnt~thlct,:s woulc.l ln\ll' ll'
k1."t:p
)'OU compan)
in
)OU1
.:omcr
there: the~ pn"lb,1hly have ·~m,c things they would like
todiscw.~
Ry;m
Stilphen
To lhc
Cfrck-,
There
\l.tL.\
a bua: lhi:-. c, enin,g in the cateternt.
I
heard a hunch
of m)· l'ncndj fwm the laeros<.e rc:im t11lkin1-1. ulx•ut .1n artir,;k writ-
ten m llenm1tor \.1:i~:vinc
I,)
Chrisime Rt.i.chdle that ca.c;t a \'UY
peguivc hght
on anhlctc'> here at .\.ta.nsl CC\llc~e. TI1C!IC WI}~
I
fianJly
M~t
time:
ltl
\Hite
tOt
The
Cirdi:: (\omc
ma)
rcm1o.-m'tx.-r
me
writing quite
ol'kn
3
fc-\\ )C'Ar.:.
backl.
bm I am domg so tontt,h110
stick
ur
for
my
fdlm,
uthh.1cs and to get '>omL-thinJ mai~t th~L
Christim: RCM.:ht:llc Jocsn'i :1ctuall\ kno\\ ~,..ha1 she's talkjng,ihout.
Smee
l.hrist1ne
,,..ttil('
her anick from
th~
51Jndpom1
of:.
hill'd-
v,ork.111~.
dedicated s1udcnl (which I'm ~ure -.he!
i!.,
good for~)
J
wanttudrtril)'
:,omi.'lhmg
t-cfun:- I
bi:gm.
I do no1
MW1o.·thot-c~
at;teristic~ with her The
truth
i1-,
T h,1, c gonl.' thnuiµ, four
~
car;
hi
study
in
an area thnt I rc..::o~mitcd
Y.U!>
no\ m) p1tSSton when Ir-was
way
11•1
late. \-. an
"a'w'Cf"Jge"
student. I W{'ltAld
like
toputnt otJCfh•t
we
do
nut
receive
any "advamngc:," .,hmwcvc:r in the
c l ~
Jfy;e
did.
l m1~ht actualb bn:ak the
3.0
mark.
for a scm~let,..IQme
thing
I ha\c
yei
to a~·l.:'omplish.
Chrnmnl' dies that
athletes
rec¢iH· "'free"
tutoring. r'il'-1
s.,l.ollh-
let"
arc very Mrd~y,.orking pi:1..•ple.
-Part-ic1pn1i:11g_
in
nn.e of
thlt0-
1 sporti l1~. JoJ the 11m...- we put into 1ht'm each day somrumes
\.."quah, lh,U of
J
full-tune
JOb
As a .. malkr 1,chool onl)
;1
It!\\'
MU
dmb per
team
acmslly
rc,i.:ivt:" :;cholar-.h1ps.
most of
the
umc
th~
LETTERS
TO THE
EDITOR POLICY
:
The
Circle welcomes lette~s from Marist
students~ faculty !ind
staff
as
well
as
the'
public. Letters
may
be
edited
for length
and style.
Submissions must include
the
person
's
full name
,
status
(student,
faculty
,
etc.) and a
te
le
phone number
or campus
extens
ion
for verification purposes.
Letters
without these
r
eq
uir
ements
wlll
not
be
published
.
letters
can
be
dropped
off at
The Circle
office
or submitted
through
the
'
Letter
Submission' link on
MarlstClrcle
.co
m
arc only panial-~ I. for one.
get nothing.
I al'\o f.ul to 4\J.1lif)
fof
any
t}-pe
of financial
aid. Con:i.idcrmg 1h1.· facl
that athleh:~
!oft\..1ld
nlllll)
hou~
a
d3)' IT)tng 10
v.in
games for
1h1o.•ir
school.
:md
g1,I.' the
..ilUdcnl t-iody SQmcthin~ to
be
proud of
be
1dc:
a
trJn1't"\\'ll \
lttc
tulohn& ruch
a
\crnhle 1hin~
to
r('..<!1vc' II
Ail)tlUni!: 11 ~\~•ulJ
he
Ct\fllmcndcd
·\lhlt'tcs th,lt VUt•U1.. Ullntlnl? r
._hl
1
,..,in..: th:tl lh,."
'-art: ab1..t1.1t more
1han their
pla"
tn>;,
time
or S!,111!<>11i:s- thnr _grad.:t.
and•~~
ure,.import.-mt
h~J1
~
..111.;..11'1~,11 Y('U li;aQI )'t:Q,
~uk.k.1¥ lh.tl 'w'OU gd
1I.-,lutd)
l\tt1h111~ ti1t
1
r
1101
onl;t
hi::r.:
hut
en fife a-.
wl'lt.
Chmlinc
als~1 ,;ccm
to
ne~dc ..
1
to
r1.'t;upute
1mdhmg tha1 I .;on-
,idl.-r
a
hul.!c
bit'~"
hl her I.Ul(UmC'nl as
11.
\\hole•· 011.
l,hl
tha1 atl1le1c
Ot)pitn11.:"if"(1k'
mutr.t-c:um ul1ract1 11,.:: be-s1d-.5tht.·ir!lpon .... -\I
ont'
pomt
I
wa:1
a
mant-ic,
l)f
the
\a,,;tw,s.c- 1~£1m
1.on.:crt
h.111J \\
,nd
s)mphany
pcl' b;mJ. l.Lud a r,utcrnirv
1'111u
Y.,u after 1 crtdt:d
ni~
rela11ons
with
a
nurnlx:r
of
other
Jct
I\ 111\!-.
.t~ "-
·II I IMVC' ll\'(:d uff-
,
. .-runpus
'iincc m) 1,ophorn11r1:: vc.u, o ITI) 1v,,u, 1111011
lnr
part1~1pnt
mg
m
the~
a.;m·ir1...-
g
)I.:'
deeper lh.111 th~ thnug;ht ol
r:.1.,.ll.111g:
up
priomy win\s. We c,m: abc,ut
l11tr ~.1mpu (
hn~lm\!, md that ,~
"-hY ....,e Jo whal \\C Jo N-:vctdouh1 an
athlete'
d~J1cali,,n lo their
6pl1n
and
inore 1mpommU)
then ...
boul In domr
Jill
)OU
put
us
down
for !.-omt:thing thul
we 1n-
m
essen .. c J~linu. for~
CJU
l'v"
ncwr gouen tc<..rs "himJl!d d,mn" I (Ult pr,1bi1hly
grelluating
fate fur
the
simpl~ fact Umt I l:.:ln m·\t:r ~ch~dulc all
thl."
co:,ur\es.
J
need
(during. lacro<..~t:
:;c:-;u.011
\\e g~"Tlcralf)
um't have dn,;sca
~-1.-..:n
noon
and
fa~
o'dod,;)
w
her
(Xlmt about us ha\iog
fir:--,
choice
dunng
11-Jd·drop
j._ l'x"o!.!LIS:.
!\h
lextbov~-s
tend lo 1..1.,.,r
me
m
least
30f>t ixr ,emesl..:r. and l IIB) for
dm11er
all 1he umt: ow
or
my own
pock<
I
'Afk,wance·•·.
1
I haven't ~oltcn un a11{'1wancl!
:,1111:e:
n1y
molhcr gave me
J
dollar
a
<l.a~
for a Sn:ippl<!' In
.1unil,r high
S1mpl> put, you
unJLTmi1w
the- ~tfon that athle~ put in on a
Jail) biu,i:,
YoLinut)
hcn11gr, ur1
amu-,1ng1nie1thi:da<,:-.~)uU.
ne1.'tl
fo~
lht t1))C(lm10g
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hut
rememl:'11.·r
lh:U
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ii1hl1:h!~
are
tight
thtll:'
al"1ngside you .... buI only .after our
b
am lifts, '-Prinl.'>,
and
othL'f
wcirk.outs. W~ haH~
it
e.asyJ I
thint.
not There
isn't:,
rut~
that
gU('!>
hy
thal
r
don't dream :ihnm
htHlEt
ahlc to-slCS\:pidl da)
~'1
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tla'i!>,
and
sk:q'.I scm1i: mo1'\! but the trufh
i\
I \\ouldn'I ha-Ye it any
olhcr
V.J)
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rnaucn, i-s
'"e-
know lh.at
,\l!'TC'
do111!;lil'ltn.eih11tg
~ood
foF
lhil- t.:l1lleg1.'-- something JU.'tl a-. adtnirJhh:
::ii:
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bl:'.lnY,3
~01.ld
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~tuJc:m,
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long
wttk
L'f clJsS\..'S
uud \\ork..
don'I
ycnt enj1.1)
h1.·mg o.blc: 111 watch yonr dasMlUitcs cCTmp.:w someplace
other than the
d.c.sromn·~
fl
not we're snrT) bul we'll still he up
the follo""ing momin! -.a.enticing
our
bodi~·:i.. g(liO~
throutth
pnm
und lov111g. etet) '><:COltJ uf
it-- 'klu.1'-"ing th.tl"
c-·rc 1mly t;ctting tkt-
tct
1ha11 , ... e v.ert tht Ja) bcfure. '\ftcr all.
tha1
is th\!
"h•U
1hc
Cl\f-
legr mes
to
make its student<.
'ilM\'I!
tOr.
rave w1
o
1s year s
op
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www.marlltdrcle.com
THE ClRCl.£ •
THURSDAY,
OCTOBER
19,
2006

PAGE
5
No Child Left Behind Act disadvantages minority children
By
DANIEL BLACK
St
a
ff W
r
iter
1be
past
two weeks I've written
critica
ll
y about No Child
Left
Behind,
focusing
first
on
Connecticut's recent criticis
m
s
and
appeals, and then reviewing with a
critical eye the ac1uaJ education act
itself. Bo
th
articles
interp
r
et the act
in very negative light,
as
NCLB
leaves litt
l
e allemative for the
rational, functioning mind. As
neg-
ative as both articles were, however,
neither of them purported
peffipec-
tives tha1 were outlandish
or overly
radicaJ. This week's examination. in
stark
contrast to the two that preced-
ed
it, mu.,t propose
things
radical
and
outland
i
sh
indeed,
as
any alter-
native would require that
I ignore
the facts.
A
glance
a
t
the
White
House's
home page for NCLB reveals a mor-
bid. almost frigtuen
in
g
threat
10 the
act's critics,
"We
have come too far
to
rum
back.
now".
It
is
as
though
we've
d
iscovered a serious
err
in
our
ways, but fee
l
that the situat
i
on has
become hopeless, essentially
l
ike
we've crossed some thresho
ld
whereas before we could have saved
the c
h
ildren, but now it
is
senseless
to even
try.
Th
is standpoint, as with
n
early every other approach behind
Bush's decision making, fails to
even
inquin
the will of the citizenry
Bush's government alleged
l
y repre-
sents. A massive number of educa-
tional advocates. activists, and
I
arc
more
than
willing to withdraw
from
this cultish educational movement,
even
though much has a!ready been
invested, and work very hard to pro-
pel publ
i
c educat
i
on into a positive
direction
-
for the benefit of all chil-
dren, wealthy and poor, inne
r
city
and
rural
country, mino
ri
ty an
d
other. Po
li
tic
i
ans backing NCLB
do
n
't know this;
they
don'
t
ask and
don't seem to care. The agenda of
this administration operates on its
own exclusive and
very
inwardly
focused contin
u
um.
I think this
real
i
ty
was
never more apparent
than whi:n. according
to
the Civil
Rights
Project
of
Harvard
University,
the
Bus
h
administration
had
"not commissioned
independent
research
on
the i
m
plementation of
the policy [NC
L
B} and refused to
adm
i
t rather obvious mistakes until
virtual
rebellion took hold in
the
field." (For those of us who are
unfam
il
iar with the concept, Bush's
retreat
from
criminal policy in
response to "vinual rebellion"
of
America's citizens is
an
example
of
"submitting
to people's co
ll
ective
will,"
something commonly seen in
'functioning
democratic' societies,
and occasionally seen in
'
paper dem
-
ocratic' societies, such as ours, as
well.)
·
These strugg
l
es for the liberatio
n
of public schooling
n
otwithstand-
their
own
inner
circles, indeed their
own race, at the ex.pcnsc of others'
oppommiries an
d
basic civil rights.
This so
rt
of
disregard fo
r p
rogres-
sive po
li
tics
i
s characteristic ofBush
and those respons
i
ble for
the
come-
uppance of No Chi
l
d
Left
Behind,
in
fact it has
ne
ver been
a
p
ri
o
ri
ty fo
r
the executive to adhere to
the
will of
the court, not in
1
954
, n
ot in 2006.
The prejudices an
d
ethnocentrism
those of New York
City,
arc
still
rigidly divided on p
r
etense
of
race.
Some
critics
who have spoken
oul
against
this injustice,
pointing
out
that it flagrantly breaks the p
r
omise
of perhaps the most
cited
U.S.
supreme court decision
in history,
arc i
r
onical
l
y
l
abeled racists for
sug-
gesting that minority children need
the presence of privi
l
eged
white
c
h
il
dr
e
n
in order to
succeed
in
a
white chi
l
d's proximity, but
because the
shared
educational
experiences of
several
nu::cs, side by
side,
straight jackets the abilities
of
malicious politicians to curate their
racist ideologies in the public educa-
tion envi
r
onment.
Constructing
divided learning environments may
not be naturally identica
l
to de
n
ying
ethnic minorities and econom
i
cally
disadvantaged chi
l
dren a fair shot at
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
education. and
a
fair
Justice Thurgood
Marshall.
8lC
still
taught in social studies courses.
even
though
teaching
them
is
tanta-
mount to teaching the
works of
Shakespeare,
Dickinson
,
or
Fitzgerald
:
beautifully
articulated,
perhaps
,
but leaving
want for
the
substance
of reality. Marshall's
will,
in effect the will
of
the nation's
highest
court authority,
has never
been
truly upheld through imple-
menta1ion.
It
is
respected in
the
sense that it
is studied year after
year in classrooms, but never to the
extent that
apartheid education
is
actually
eradicated
,
eradicated so
that
someday Marshall's words
may
be
studied by white
children
,
black
children,
and
I lispanic
children,
all
in the
same classroom.
That
No
Child
Left
Behind drives
hard the
wedge bcaween rich and
poor,
and
ignores
the rights
and humanity
of
the
minority races that
it so clearly
lives to
oppress,
bas
reached a point
of
extreme hazard and
alarm,
but
not
a point
100
far.
I
believe
that
for
America to
"come
too far to tum
back
now" is impossible; we can
never
be taken too far from equality
,
or too far from justice
,
to embark
on
a
progressive
path,
in
solidarity
with
the peoples marginalized and
oppressed
by
our government,
and
pursue
them.
Many Involved parties on both sides of the struggle appear Ignorant or dismissive of
one very real consequence of the No Chlld Left Behind Act: that
It
Is -by measure of
Its
effects on education rather than the endless and valueless discourse of polltl-
clans- the enforcement of continued apartheid education. Our nation
'
s tradition of
dividing children Into separate !earning environments on the basis of ethnicity was
promised to end over 50 years ago.
shot at life, but it
sure-
ly
is
its
enabler.
Integration
is
a
step
toward equality while
apartheid
,
whether
i
nstitutional
or
de
facto,
is
its inhibitor.
Black, White, and
Hispanic teachers need
ing,
many invo
l
ved parties on both
sides of the struggle appear ignorant
or dismissive of
one
very
real
conse-,
qucnce
of the No Child
Left
Be
hin
d
Act:
that
ii is -by
m
easure of its
effects on ed
u
catio
n
rather
than the
endless
and valueless
d
iscourse of
politici
an
s- the enforce
m
ent of con-
ti
n
ue
d
aparthe
i
d ed
u
ca
ti
on.
Our
na
tion's tra
di
t
i
on of dividing chi
l
-
dren
into separate learn
in
g environ-
ments on
the
basis of ethnicity was
promised
to
en
d
over fifty yean ago.
Progressive movemcnl5 to
m
ake this
promise reality have
surfaced
and
receded over the
d
eca
d
es, b
u
t
although they've
been
in
a
slump
lately, the priority of NCLB claims
to supersede the wi
ll
of the
court
order to
i
ntegrate schools. Though
they
certainly wi
ll
not say
so
o
n
camera,
those responsib
l
e for this
•rcpnoritization"
desire very m
u
c
h
to see apartheid
fully
restored and
permanently estab
l
ished
so
that chil-
dren of different ethnicities are
i
so-
lated.
I will point out, for the benefi1 of
anyone who believes
this
accusa
t
ion
is too much to believe, tha
t th
e find-
ings of the
very same Supreme
Court
that penned Brown vs. Board
of Education in 1954, the
"Warren
Court", were openly denounced by a
man
who
I believe we
~
.U.
~
exerts
scrioll.!
influ
ence
an
American society from within our
currenl government: Chief Jus
t
ice
Samuel Alito. It was no secret
that
Alito
disagreed
with these findings,
even before he
was
appointed lo the
Suptcme Court, bur
that
didn't con-
cern the current administration.
These men have
been
collaborating
since
the Reagan years to further
of NCLB is not
l
imited
t
o merely
s
h
o
rt
changing
B
l
acks
and
Hispanics. NC
L
B ignores
th
e right
·
and
d
ignity of
al
l
pop
uJ
a
t
ion sub-
groups other
than
those fro
m
whom
it was crafted,
and
this i
n
to
l
erance is
self-evident.
The very s
pi
rit of
broad-sweeping. all-enco
m
passing
s
tan
dar
d
iza
ti
on of ed
u
c
a
t
i
o
n
,
th
e
re
n
deri
n
g of everyth
in
g
wi
ifonn,
that respects
n
o diversity
in what is
learned and how it is demonstra
t
ed
by
the
t
eamer flatly rejects nearly al
l
mod
em p
revalent
th
eories pertain
-
ing to education.
Education and
deve
l
opment are cultural
l
y contex-
tual.
marked
by
variance from one
ed
u
cational setting to another
depending upon community, gcog-
~hy, ethnicity, and demography.
An
u
pper--class c
h
ild from a quiet
sub
u
rban to
wn t
eams diffe
r
ently
from
a
l
owe
r
-c
l
ass chi
l
d i
n
an
inner
city sc
h
ool whose education also
diffen
from
a chil
d
's who grows
up
in
a
ruraJ
f
arm
ing town, an
Amish
village, an Native American reser-
vation, etc. Each of these children
are able to learn. each ca
p
able of
flouris
h
ing in thei
r
own uniq
u
e edu-
cational conte1t1.
These beliefs
arc
outlined in detai
l
by
nearly al
l
ofthe
most influen
1i
al
and
respected edu-
cat
i
onal t
h
eorists in our history.
JQM
·~WC)''J
comtruet
ofa
p
ub
l
tc
scbeic>l
tt.a
""'11qratory
of
democra-
cy" has
stood
!<>lid and been
admired f« over a h
un
dred years;
the legacy of NCLB
is
a
meager
five, and has met with more contro-
versy than Dewey's pedagogy has in
over a centwy.
In
oppos
i
tion to what most people
whom I
speak
with
tend to believe,
inner city
p
ublic schoo
l
s,
especially
school.
This
counterargument
denies the wisdom that tC'Ok nearly a
century for
our
country
to
discover
(the
89
years between the Civi
l
War's end and the decis
i
on of Brown
vs. Board of Ed.), and over half a
ce
n
tury of
that
wisdom
h
asn't e
v
en
yet delivered on the promise of the
court: to in
t
egra
t
e the races
and
fo
nn
a cross-c
ul
tural
l
earning com-
munity in public sc
h
ools. History
has
taugh
t
us that these minority
c
h
i
l
dren do,
in
fact, need the pres-
ence of white children in order to
succeed,
not
because there's some-
thing mystically enlightening about
to teach together; the children
of
these
ethnic groups
need
to learn
together.
As
aduJts they will
share
one world, therefo
r
e, as children
they
ought
to share one c
l
assroom.
"Docs
segregation
of
children in
public schools
solely
on the basis
of
race, even though
the
physical facil-
ities and other 'tangib
l
e' factors may
be
cquaJ,
d
eprive the c
h
i
l
dren of the
minority
race
of equal educationa
l
opportunities?
W
e believe it does.",
"the doctrine of 'separate but equal
has
no
place'", "Separate education-
al
facilities
arc
inherently unequal."
These immortal words, written by
Poor P. R. does not justify
vandalism
To
the
Ednoc,
No"•
I
don't
normally
consider myselflO
be
rehiaous.. but i(there's
10111ethmg
I
Just
cannot
stand
for. u· .. di,criminihon -
including
f"C'Ji
-
gtous discrirmnauon.
On
Sunday.
October
lSlh, I -
to
find
more
dtan
a
cto,,m
n,m posced
by
Campus
Minisl1)
pro,;lannmg Got
God?"
111d
pmmoc
-
ina
Ibo
rqpilar Sunday Man
def-
duough-
out
Midri><
Whereas •
coupl<
of ldlen111,a
~
had
me
IJCI
IO
rip
out
God"
and
rq,lace
II with
"Satan • other leu artful -.
andab
Just
lOrc
the
fhcrs
Imm
1beir ""l)«ti, •
5J)OII
IJ1d
shredded
thanl0pl«e1.
Pmaall),
as a
sclf-idcntlftod _ . . ,
lbat
toels
God
has
abandoned us, I am saddcnod and
deeply
di$Appomlcd
b) this d1ild1:\h
hcha\
·or:
Even lhou@h Campu Mim!>lr)
h.lsn't
ah\ay"
bad the
best
puhhc
rda11on
11Skmg
1f
the:
Mari:st
communny l1as
(i(,1
(,od?"
and then
promotes only
1he
C'.nholii.:-1.:vnccption
\,If
n,
a,:;
sigmtied by the Chapel's cru..:11ix. lhis
need,;:
ll'
--
Unle,s
It~
11
memNT ol tfle lulh:g.\!
Act,,
1t1t."S
Office thar Rppro..,cd
the fhc:rs
01
a
t.tmpu
Mimstf)' reprcsc-ntal1\C'~
nohod) -
b,11lutd~
~
-haslhenghl 10okfacc1bc
""'J'C" ,
another dab
or
n,g~ma..1111
11
,:ami
I
encourage
41l)bod;,
\\iln
1ng
d\csc n ,Jenc-
to
report 1hem to
a
R1.: 1dent
Ad\
•!ior
or
,,n J1tl}
Security Guard
This asn't
JUS'l
rcprch~-ns,blc-
ir Dm<>ral.
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THE CIRCLE
Features
T
HUR
S
DA
Y, OC
T
O
BER
19, 2
006
www.
m
arlstclrcle.com
P
AGES
Tasteless sensa
t
io
ns
overrun the Marist dining hall
D
i
n
nert
i
me
d
is
h
es are far from stellar
By
AL
I
SHA BROWN
C
i
rcle Contributor
You walk into the Marist cafe-
teria
with
your group of friends,
and immediately drop off your
stuff at one of the many open
tables. Then proceed to wait
in
one of the many short lines for
food. Any of the meals
you
choose
will
be
mouthwateringly
delicious, but you
choose
to
wait
in line for
Cu
l
inary
Classics.
Tonight's
feast
includes
c
h
icken
grilled
to perfection, delicious
no-sal
t
-needed mashed potatoes,
and
evenly
cooked vegetables.
Then,
even
though you've had
more than
enough
food,
there is
still
dessert. The
soft serve
is
coming
out of the machine
smoothly
and has the
consistency
of pe
r
fect
soft
serve ice cream.
There are plenty
of spr
i
nkles to
spruce
up your
dessert as well.
Or, if
you're
not
a
fan of the
soft
serve,
you
go
for the regu
J
ar ice
cream. There is an array of fabu-
lous flavors that
are
not too
soft,
but not frozen.solid either. Either
way, dinner was fabulous.
But that's not the end
of
the
dining hall magic.
No,
now
you
can
spend
a little extra time fin-
ishing
your
dessert and ta
l
king
about the days events with
your
friends. And you don't have to
rush the meal as you wait for the
few
friends
attending
a late
class.
Nobody
will kick
you
out
because
the dining hall has rea
ll
y
convenient
hours. Even if
you
have
sports
practice, you'
l
l defi-
nitely have
enough
time to eat.
If any
of
the
readers right now
eat dinner
iri
the Marist dining
hall
on
a
regular basis, they will
not recognize
apy
of the
afore-
mentioned co
n
ditions. Maybe
one or two will occur on any
given day, but overall, this per
-
fect situation is hard to come by.
However, what you
will
often get
when asking how dinner was is a
response simila
r
to, "lt
sucked,"
as I overheard one girl sa)'lng in
the cafeteria the night this article
was written.
First of all, anyone who comes
to the cafeteria with a grouP. of
friends usually does not arrive
early. Most people arrive during
peak dinnertime hours, between
6:15 and 6:45, which leaves your
By
J
U
STINE MANN
Staff Writer
group
l
ooking for tables
that
aren't taken up by the mob of
Marist
students
looking for
a
good meal.
It's
okay
though. In the time
you
spend waiting
in line
for
food another group
of
people
might leave and free up some
seating.
And this brings up
another point, the really long
lines.
If
you
get to the dining hall
at around 6:30,
you'll
find
your-
self
waiting at least ten
minutes
in line
for a
meal.
By
the
time
you get
back to the table,
espe-
cially on weekends, you
have an
extremely
short
time
to eat, as
you
race
against
the
clock
to
fin-
ish your meal by the
7:30
closing
time. This leaves
you
no
time to
build d
i
ning hall memories
because
you're
too
busy eating,
and it's rude to talk with
your
mouth
full.
So, the
story
moves
on
to
the
food
aspect of
dinner
at
Marist.
The
safest
bet is usually the
pizza.
Everyone
has discovered
this coveted
secret of
Marist din-
ing,
so you
may have to
wait
until
t
omorrow to
get a slice.
And by that time, it will probably
be
lunch. Bui
rest
assured, your
pizza will
still
be piping hot.
Then,
ma~
lfil1
decide
to
wait
io
line
for
lhe main
course.
To
n
ight,
it
will
be chicken.
YOU
also get
mashed potatoes
and
some
veggies.
The
chicken will
be cooked
one of
two
ways,
overcooked
or
undercooked.
Maybe if
you're
the te,Hhou-
sandth
Marist diner that night,
you'll get a
perfectly
cooked
piece. The
vegetables are iffy
too.
Some
days,
they will be
real-
ly
crisp and
well
cooked.
Other
days they'll be a little mushy.
They may even
be an
odd
combi-
nation of both. The mashed
pota-
toes at the dining hall are usually
pretty good. lf anything, add
a
little salt and
you're golden.
Oh, and if
your
food
is
a little
chilly, just heat it up in the tech-
no
l
ogically
advanced microwave
by the
soda
machines. It's the
brown thing with the metal dial,
a
very
modem looking
appli-
ance ...
Speaking. of soda machines,
there
usually
isn't too much to
complain about. However, if
you're looking to change it up,
go
for some mystery milk or
some
flavored
water.
What
is
mystery milk?
It
may
be
sour,
it probably
won't
be. But
it might be, and that's what
gets
most people.
The dining hall has flavored
water? No,
the di
n
ing hall offers
watered
down juice,
or as one
freshman put it,
"Appled
up
water." But go for the
cranberry
juice.
It
is pretty good
for
most
likely being from
concentrate.
And it helps fight urinary tract
infections.
At this point, who wants to wait
for
"real"
food anymore? You've
most likely
stuffed yourself with
the fixings
of
the
salad
bar.
Why
not
go for some
ice
cream?
You
almost shou
l
dn't
because you're
so
full, and
you've already
had
too
much
to eat
as
it
is,
but
you
cannot
resist the urge.
You have
a choice
between
half-melted or
barely coming out
soft serve.
Some days
you'll get
the perrect
bowl of soft serve,
but then have it melt ha
l
fway
because the bowl is
freshly
washed and still
wann. Maybe
the
spr/nk.Jes
ran out too. If the
soft serve
is
being a
little diffi-
cult,
try
the hard
ice cream.
Hard
is
actually an
understate-
ment.
Under
nomrnl
circum-
sian~~1
YAYi
11-~R4
1.wr,
ry~~d,~
t9
scoop out part of the
boulder that
is
the
ice
cream. Sometimes,
it
takes
so
much
as breaking the
scoop
to
get some
ice
cream out.
Even
then,
you
probably won't
get enough
out to
satisfy an
jce
cream
craving, and
back to the
uncooper.ative
soft
serve
machine
you go.
One thing you can always
count on at
the dining hall is
a
swprise. Some days, you'll get
something
really delicious
for
dinner or real apple juice. Maybe
the
ice
cream
won't
be rock
solid
or ultra melty. Sometimes your
milk might be
sour,
and
yes,
that
has happened
at
the dining hall.
Nobody said
anything about a
good surprise.
Many of the aforementioned
problems can be prevented.
For
one thing, the food
should
be
monitored more
closely. There
are plenty of kitchen
staff
mem-
bers to ensure that the
quality of
food is top notch.
If
food
starts
to
SEE
"ANE"
DINI
NG, P
AG
E 11
The
Go
tha
m Conn
ect
io
n:
Want To Go To Candy Land?
CANDY!
Now I knew
that
intro would
dray, you in. A
Mariststudent'sJO\c
of
all
things sweet
j..,
what
keeps the
Cabaret or,cn
until midnight
and
the
vending machines
well
stocked.
As
ir cand) \\asn't
enough
or an
appeal, add
the "1.0rd 'bar'
to
any locati('ln\,
name
and you
have
instant
campus
cr.:d
It
seem,
that
Dylan
Lauren
kne\\ all of this when ,he opened
up a
chain or stores called
Dylan's
Candy
Bar. Being the daughter
of
upscale prtpp)' designer Ralph I
:iurcn Dylan
knows
da,~.
Her
Manhattan
candy shop
reruse.s to
only sell
the simpk
fore of jumbo
rainbow
lollipop:-,
and foil
¼rapped chocolate
kisses. Instead. D)'lan opts
for
~cllow
and
oranic duel-., made out
,,r
rich white chocola1e.
gumm) can-
dies in Chinese take-out
1ins.
and a yard long:
tube of
multi-colored gumball
goodnes.;,.
With 4,000
dit:.
ferent
kinds
of
candy
and
JOO different kinds of ice
cream
Dylan:- Cand)
Bar
is
a
palace won.by of King
Wonk.a
himselL At
Dylan's
every customer
is
a\\ed al 1hc
vast display
of
merchandise.
From
the
21
tow-
crs of
M&Ms to
the ormy of chocolate bunnic::.,
every ounce
of cafl<ly
has been carefully designed
and
chosen.
Even the
step, arc
filled
wilh gummy bears
and
skittles.
Dylan
stieh
to her
roots with
a
18sh-
ion line that
accompanies the store.
The
lt>,,.,er level
1-.
dc\olcd
to clothing featuring candy bars
and beau-
t)'
products th11t ta<;te like them. Dylan
didn't miss a trick
in making
a \is11
to her
store
an
exciting rec-
111cle. The
cavit} 'n-archouse
reside-.
at
1011 fhird
Strce1 (li,,r
other location
see Dylanscandybar.com)
right
acros"i the street from
Bloomingdules.
and a culo:--.al
H&M
lor
us poor
colk.1u:
~tudents. which pro-
vide-. u wonderful
day
of shopping and mundung.
Cafe
t
eria
pi
zz
a
:
th
e
onl
y
culinary
cl
a
ss
i
c?
By
TYLER
THURSTON
Circle Contributor
Most
chefs
these days have their own
specialty
-
some sort
of culinary forte for which to exemplify
their
sophisticated skills.
Rachael Ray is
somehow
able
to make delicious meals in less than 30 min-
utes, and dinner out of less than $40 a day. Emeril
Lagasse just adds a few
spices
and a whip of the
hand, and Barn! the meal is
complete.
I,
on the
other
hand,
I
don't mean to brag, but I can make a
mean
waffie.
If drowning
your sorrows
in
a sea of map
l
e syrup
isn't
your
idea
of a good
time, the dining hall here
at
Mari
st College
has an array
of
food to offer
you.
Does your
mouth water
at
the tho
u
ght
of processed
cheese
and
oily
french fries? They've got you
cov-
ered.
How
about
a
horizon of p
i
zza,
pizza, and oh
wait
1
what's
that? Oh
yeah,
pizza. - Hungry yet?
But,
the din
i
ng hall
experience
isn't all bad.
Well,
that's
a slight
but. lflhad to break it down, it would
go something
l
ike this:
The Food:
Considering
it
closes
at
7:30,
l
rea
ll
y
wouldn't know what the food is
l
ike. Actually,
that's
a
lie;
I
just have to
stuff
my face at 5:30 -
roughly
the
same
time as my 65-year-old grand-
mother.
I
don't know about you. but I'm a
sucker
for
an
early-bird spe~ial.
Really, the food isn't even
that
bad if bagels,
waffles,
bread, and any form of
carbohydrate
are
your
thing. The salad bar is good
too; if you
can
ignore the fact
that
a countless
num-
ber of people
have been throug
h
it. When I
say
through it,
l
mean
sneezed
on it, coughed on it, and
rnos,,
li,tc-~]}' trQn~{llitted
whatever germs
they are
~af1i)'Jn9ntlqfo0t,HAA found,y,our way to
it.
lt'.s
easy
reail)'; just.
,laac.
your eyes
and chew. That being
said, there
are
vegetarian
and
vegan
options for
those
of
us feeling less
carnivorous
on most days,
which
is
a welcome
inclusion. The pasta's usually
pretty
good,
not
straight
out
of
Rome but not
straight out of a microwave either. And the cheese
steaks ... well, they aren't shipped in from
Philadelphia, but beggars can't be choosers l
sup-
pose. There are also plenty of desserts at every
meal, which is probably the co
ll
ege's way
of
telling
you to bu
l
k up for the frigid winter.
The At
m
os
p
here: Picturesque
views
of the
Hudson River, scenic landscapes of the aununn
l
eaves, all gazed upon through the hazy stare of an
early breakfast. Other than the distorted gaze in
which
I
view the river, the atmosphere is
surpris-
ingly
p
leasant. Unless
yo
u
're an attract
i
ve fresh-
man fema
l
e, then
you're
rea
ll
y
just
a baby
zebra
being thrown to the lions.
Sorry,
just try not to
scream,
and keep walking.
The Service: The
,women
that greet
you at
the
entrances are quite fTiend
l
y, and probab
l
y
would be
more
so
if
I
could manage to function properly as
an adult and not
stumb
l
e over my ID card
every
time. As far as the food
service goes,
they are quite
considerate,
making
sure
1
don't choke on my food
by barely
giving
me enough to feed a
small
child.
I
appreciate that.
The Atti
r
e: Black tie is required
...
just kidding.
Guys, anything with a
suitab
l
e
hood and
sweats
is
probably
your safest
bet to blend in. Girls,
any sort
of pant covered in stars and moons or with the
word "pi
n
k"
scrawled
across the back is the norm.
Overall, the
experience
at the· din
i
ng hall isn't the
worst dini
n
g
experience I've ever encountered, but
it certainly makes me long for the days
of
cassero
l
es wanning in the oven at home. Well. it
was actually the faint
smell
of
a
take-out bag
wait-
ing on the
counter,
but time plays tricks on
our
memories. The food is edible for the most part, lhe
attire is
casu~J
to
~Y
the
~ast,
and the atmosphere
is
perfect when surrounded
by
good
friends. But if
you sample
the food
and
it
still
isn't for
you,
don't
worry, Quizno's and App
l
ebce's
accept
Marist
money. I'm telling
you,
though;
you'll
be missing
out on one mean waffle.
Ha
unting memories serve as lesson
By
JOSEP
H GENTILE
Circ
l
e Contributor
"It
went into a holocaust," said
former police chief Richard
Hellman. "There were peop
l
e
screaming,
running and yelli
n
g
in all directions.''
Now,
the incident described by
Mr. Hellman isn't referring to the
grisly string
of school shootings
that has plagued the country
in
recent months.
In
fact, this quote
had been uttered to a New York
Times reporter more than 30
years ago
on February 19th,
1975, the day after She
ll
ey died
in
the
Cafeteria.
Shelley Sperling had been a
quiet but intelligent girl, accord-
ing to Christina Hope, a
Marist
alum that operates an online
memorial for Shelley, called The
Hauntings of Shea
h
an Hall,
throug
h
her
homepage,
http://www.christinahope.com.
So, when a
gunshot
to the chest
from an ex-boyfr
i
end. Louis
Acevedo, cut short the life of
this young co
ll
ege co
-
ed.
it
brought the entire Marist com-
munity to
a
standstill.
According
to Reverend Rhys
Williams, in an article composed
a year after Shelley's death
in
the
Circle, "One ofus
was her room-
ma1e: a few of us were her close
friends; twenty some of us lived
on the same floor as she, and
approximately
nine hundred of
us lived on the same campus
with her," he
said. ''That's
pretty
close
by
to have somebody mur-
dered."
However, who's to say that
time
·heals
all
wounds? Just as
teachers thro
u
ghout the cou
n
try
polished their chalkboards for
another year of learning, out-
siders easily infiltrated tbe
a
tm
osphere of false safety
and
security and began polishing off
students.
In
Cana
d
a, Colorado,
and Pennsy
l
vania, wild-eyed
September.
Co-sponsored by
the
Department of Housing and
Residential Life, the Department
of Athlet
i
cs,
and
College
Activities, Athe
rt
on-Zeman,
a
l
ecturer on the
h
yperse
n
sitive
subject of violence against
fefnales, reminded the
l
arge
l
y
male au
d
ience in the
Ne
ll
y Goletti Theate
r
that chauvinism still
exists. It also can be
criminal.
"Every twe
l
ve seconds,
somewhere
ln
the United
States, a man abuses the
person be loves," said
Atherton-Zeman, q
u
ot-
ing
the findings of the
Rape, Abuse, and Incest
National
Network.
"Every two m
i
nutes, he
comm
i
ts
a
rape."
However,
it
wasn't all
serio
u
s.
Even
a couple o
famous pop culture icons
" "
made guest appearances,
.,
courtesy of Atherton-
IP
· '" '
Zeman, that exp
l
ained
gunman surpassed basic security
the ways that ma
l
es sexist atti-
to inflict as m1,1ch harm as possi-
tudes towards fe
m
ales had per-
ble, inc
lu
ding instances of sexu-
sonally affected them. Rocky
al assault upon their victims.
Ba
l
boa talked to the audience
Obvious
l
y. as illustra
t
ed
by
the
about his recent break-up with
tragedy that occurred here at
longtime girlfrie
n
d, Adrian, after
Marist Co
ll
ege more than 30 he refused to respect her wishes
years ago, nobody, especially and coerced her into being inti-
here, ca
n
be
i
nvu
l
nerab
l
e to the
mate. James Bon
d
ta
l
ked about
horrors just outside the gates.
his re
l
a
t
io
n
ship to his abusive
Yet, life at co
ll
ege doesn'
t
need
nephew, Jo
h
ntiy, and his
subse-
to be
so
uncertain, particu
l
ar
l
y in
quent involvement
in
a domestic
regards to domestic abuse and abuse
program
for
me
n
sexual assault, as indicated by
Ben Athe
rt
on-Zeman at the
"Vo
i
ces of Men" lecture last
SEE SHELI.EY'S GHOST
,
PAGE11


























































THE C[RCLE
Health
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2006
www.marlstclrcle.com
PAGE7
Preparation is the key to
_
flu season stamina
By
ALEXANDER
TINGEY
Health Editor
. The first few chilly nights of
autumn are
upon us
and as
the
leaves a]ong
the
Hudson change
color and drop, we will quickly
be
imme
r
sed
in
the
depths of a
cold winter in Poughkeepsie,
NY. Along with building snow-
men and tobogganing across the
campus green, winter promises
some of our other favorite pas-
times. Flu season,
in
the past,
has taken up weeks of winter
breaks, and days of class,
this
year however could prove to
be
different.
Influenza
is a viral
infection
first
described
by Hippocrates in
452 B.C..
The virus affects
mammals and some other v.erte-
brates including birds.
Influenza
should not be confused with the
common cold, or a "24 hour
bug." Ailments which come on
quickly and
leave
within a 48
hour period are
usually the result
of gastroenteritis which is not
related to
the
influenza virus.
The flu travels r.apidly world-
wide during the cold season, and
has resulted in isolated
and
glob-
a
l
pandemics in the past. Most
recently, between
t
968-1969 a
particularly volatile strain of the
flu killed nearly a million
in
Hong Kong over the span of a
few weeks. The most
devastat-
ing pandemic recorded in
recent
history
occurred
ln
%p.iin
By
ALEXANDER TINGEY
Healtll Editor
between 1918-1920, 40 million
peop
l
e died, and near
l
y 500 mil-
lion were
infected.
The Avian
flu
has
caused quite a stir since
its
discovery in
1997; however,
its mortality and infection rates
have and continue to be main-
tained
by
officials who
are
mon-
itoring
the situation.
The
Infl
uenza virus attac~
host
cells and forces them to
replicate
the
virus'
RNA
sequence, which in
tum pro-
duces more infectious cells that
attack the host. Due to its expo-
nential spread through the body
during
the
first day or so of
infection, symptoms are general-
ly delayed up
to
48 hours before
the
host
feels noticeable ill.
The virus enters the body
through water droplets in the air
and through contact with infect-
ed surfaces.
Doorknobs,
desk-
tops and
h
andrails are potentia
l
viral hotspots come flu season.
Although some cases of the flu
will begin to appear as early as
December, the
officia
l
flu season
begins
some time in January and
begins to settle down in late
March.
Experts cite dryer air,
more
time spent indoors in close
proximity
with others and the
cooler
ambient temperature of
the
room
as
possible causes of
the virus' season.
Symptoms of the flu
include:
chills, fever, body aches espe-
cially in
the
lower back, loss of
appet
i
te, naµsea, weakness- and
fatigue. Most people will
take
between one
and
two weeks to
recover from
the flu however, to
the elderly and
the
chro
ni
cally
ill,
the
flu
can be a fatal a
ilm
ent.
Chronic
bronchitis,
pneumonia
and ear infections are signs of
a
weakened
immune
system,
and
individuals
who are subject to
this are encouraged
to
get
the
vaccine annually.
The Center for
Disease
Control
estimates
that
between
10
and 20
percent of the US population will
come
down
with
the flu
each
season,
with the number
of peo-
ple affected depending on
the
severity of
that
season's
particu-
lar
strain. One
reason
for
the dif-
ficulty
in
treating and
preventing
influenza is due to
the rapidly
multiplying and
mutating
forms
of the virus. Technically,
there
arc
three parent strains of
the
virus, known simply as
Influenza
A, B and C.
However there are
thousands of
mutations
between
the parent and the common
virus,
thus making total
preven-
tion nearly impossible.
The
highly mutable
forms of the
virus makes it futi
l
e
to
reuse vac-
cines and each year a
new
strain
of weakened virus
is
chosen to
represent
what is essentially
the
American Idol of viruses.
Accoriding to the CDC, "the
viruses in
the flu
shot are
inacti-
vated, so you cannot get the
flu
from a
flu
shot.
The risk
of a
flu
ffltlt

'eao!tng
-serious harm; or
)C,tr!>.
had ;Jn episode of
.1 ...
1hmll. am.I ,om'-·
111innr
rcsp1rat0f)
d1fficl1hy
in the weeks foltnv.mg
~\posure to
the vims
Re.S1::archcrs
will. fortht>
monu.·nt. recommend rh:it the- va(,:cint
be u <:d
primarilJ for
111,,~i:
ag«i
~h1
and ubovc.
MANY CHILDREN WHO NEED THE
FLU
VACCINE AREN'T
RECEIVING
IT
A PAINLESS WAY 10 PREVENT
THE
FLU
/\ -.1u<l)
;ii
t
l OlJi~ t.Jni..-cn.ny has ~w.,,,11
~
s,g.
niticant
inl.'n!'tL<;~
in
the
pruto.:tivc-
puv.
er of a
spra',· tlu \·uu;im:
tor
t:hi!Uren
~
"'-";m;
Md
vou~~cr The
!.-prdy. \\
hkh
i~
in~n'--d Jirec.:tl} in
th'-
inthnt's nose, has been pro\-en
to
be 55 per•
cent
more
ettl!\:ttYe
th.an traditional ino...--uhnion.
't\hc-n
gi..-..-n
10
the11C""~1')
8,00'1
ch1Jdrc11
mvolvcd
in
lh~ -.tud)~
in
prcvcntmg the ..
,ckn
J
hL" main
diflCn:.·ncc bctwern
the
tv,,·o arphcauon methods
is found
iJl
lhc fact that the
!".pf/3\
ba:,
\\Caketwd•-
~111 li,,e inOucnz.1
~
111JS
insi<lt- of
It.
lhe
tr.W1•
tional moculation
fl\J!thod
mv\•I
vcs
inacti\-
e fonru
Clf the "1ms'
protein
llw, means thnt
the In
i:-
1,
inis na~l
-.pnt)'
mt'rt' ac<..·ttJ';tldy IJl(Jlli-.:S
th..:
real
tlu infC\.1'ion hJ stllllulating immurn:
d~fcn~
Ji.rst
in ,~
no-.c:
and then acro:,s
the
~nnt't'
hod)
nu
MM". made ,,.irh i'.kad
intlui:111:t
vims.
don't
g.J\IC
th,
no,;c
reaction
prndu~--d wtth the nc" spray.
'So
-...bile
t1u
:i:.hots
are good at 000!.ling
p&C\
ious
11nmu11ity
m
healdl) pct)fllc 1\ ho\ e cnught 1lu
before or b..:cn imx·uh.it~d man~
linu.·s.
mort'
immuni.--naive
bahies and prcschnole~ may n~cd
that more
llu
lihc nasal re:-ponsc,"
11ai<l
Dr
Robt.-rt
Rch,hc,
u
prom1nt:111 \U<.....:inl.' spt:dalist at St
Lou10:
Lini\"ers;ity \\
ho led th('
~rud~
Tht." rc~h.
hu\\C'\er. did tind a
$Ufo-c:-,
concern; a J,e\\ nfthi:
h·I)
voung~·~t po!it.'l'IN. tlh)-..: .tgt,, 6 months
f\)
2
According
lo
thC'
A,;~ociated Press.
ncarl)
h,tlf
of
all )'uung
children
v. ho -.buulrl
t,t
g~·l11ng an
annu,11 Jl1,.1
-.hol
arc not. anJ
<1~
one stud) p1lints
oul
1,1,
ith
1n'-·reased
carri-
er~. i.:v1111::-
an
1nten-.itied
nu
sc;hon
tkalth offir.;iab
ha,'-' als<1 e,tcnJcd
the
range of crillcal aged l.'hitdren from ~ix
months to
t,,,.o
yea,~ all 1he wa) up
10
fh·c
},..a,3
The :\P .,1 .. u
n::rmrtcJ thal
''fflr chil-
dren t,"'tY.ctn the ages of 2 and i
1here
is
11
higher
une
ot
clinic and emergency
room
, ,sits
due
ro nu-relateJ illncs,;; than with
,.;11hcr illn~s,ts.
"
!'his
11 1>
1mperat1ve 1hu1
a.11 children in a
gi, tn household rece1\·e
thl! vaccm.:
in
order
ln
protect
the
) ounger
~ibhng-..
Wl11h.:
£'-'"1:archer$ at
fohns-
llopkins
~iedical
center
1.·1te a f1ft:,. recent
comph;m..:e ratt Jor tnoculation, :mother
sunc)
,,,.hich
re~uir.;J
a \erificd
age
b)
~
pnm:-i~ health
.:art
pm\ 1dcr cl.urns
that as
fey.
as:
one third of nil children who should
hi: vucc.:inalciJ
3re
rccl!t\ ing the
1r~atmcnl.
"'I
h<..•
real mes ugc
h,
no
matl\!t \\hat
Slit~
,ey you look al, we'.rc nowhere near pro•
1ec1tng
the numhc-r <1f children that we're
!-oUpp11scJ lt.1,' said Pr Jeanne S,mh)li,
a.
pedi.atrician at the CDt told AP
report~rs
last
week
death
,
is
ext
r
emely
small.
However, a
vaccine, like an.y
medicine, may rarely
cause seri-
ous
problems, such as severe
allergic
reactions.
Almost all
people who
get
influenza
vac-
cine
have no
serious problems
from
it."
One step towards
defeating
the
winte
r'
s
nastiest
cold
comes
in a
syringe.
The flu
vaccine has
proven
to be
effective in
i
n
creas-
ing
the
recipient's
immune sys-
tem,
making it
easier
to defend
agai
n
st a
full
sca
l
e infection.
Nurse
O'Brien
at
Marist
College's
Health Service's
Office
strongly suggests Marist students
to make an
appo
inbnent
for the
vacci
n
e
which
they are
now
offering.
The
program which started at
the beginning
of
the
month has
a
lr
eady seen over 100 students
'who
have
paid
the nominal
$20
fee
to
be
inoculated for
this
sea-
son.
Health
Services is accept-
ing cash, check and Marist
Money as paymen
t
for
the
vac-
cine, which
requires an
appoint-
ment.
Those who
may
be
preg-
nant or anyone who
has
an aller-
gy
to
eggs shou
ld
not
receive
the
vaccine,
but
may conlact Health
Services for alternative solu-
tions.
Althoug_h O'Brien did
admit
that the
vaccine is
not 100
to fight an
infection.
College dorms are an especial
-
ly hard
place to stay
healthy dur-
ing
the
peak
of cold season, as
the close proximity between stu-
dents and
increased time spent in
the building lead
to a
fluid
dis-
ease pool. One simple way for
students to avoid
infection
this
year, according
to O'Brien
is as
simple as washing with
hot
soapy water
before meals.
Avoid
contact with your face during
the
day, and dispose of any used tis-
sues are also measures which
help prevent
the
spread of
dis-
ease.
O'B
r
ien also advocates
coughing or sneezing
into the
crook of your arm,
a
move I've
used
since freshman
year,
because
it
avoids contact
with
a
person's
hands.
ew
or
age
n-Fr!.ot6AMQ1
.
-Scm
,al7AM
;
Pu •
One way to minimize
the
greater effect of the
flu
this sea-
son is to contain the infection. If
you do become
ill
with the
flu
this season, please
,
do everyone
a favor and stay in for a few
days .. O'Brien urges students not
to go to class or attend the
dining
hall if they are feeling seriously
ill.
The most common treatment
for
the
flu is fluids and rest, a
pain
reliever
such as
Tylenol
or
Advil can help alleviate body
aches and fever making you
more comfortable during the ill-
ness.
lf
symptoms worsen after
the first few days of infection, a
follow up visit should be made to
Health Services or your primary
care provider.
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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2006
www.marlstclrcle.com
The
Trapps are
.'
Solid Rock' on new album
By
JESSICA
SAGAR
A &
E
Editor
Outside
of New Paltz
lies
a
par-
ticular area
of
the
Shawangunk
Mountain
Range coveted
by rock
climbers from
all
over the world
called
"The Trapps."
It
is the
longest and most popular cliff
formation of
the Shawangunk
Mountains,
created
by the colli-
sion of
the
Earth's
crust, whose
rocky formation proudly boasts
the largest
·
number
of climbing
routes
in
the entire mounlain
range. Much like the
formation
of ..
The Trapps," a local band of
the same name
could
not have
fonned without the merging
together
of
the unique musical
influences that unite the ba.nd.
Simply
put, The Trapps are
"solid
rock" in more ways than
one.
The first track of the album is
introduced and concluded with a
chilling flute solo that
immedi-
a~ely draws the listener in, with
its sound creating images of a
lon
ely
battlefield where the only
sign
of
life
are the melancholy
cries of the flute. Right away,
"History"
exemplifies the band's
peaceful nature, with Schenker
singing
"'I've been so mellow
throughout my whole
life
I
Mellow beginning with a sadder
ending. /
My only
son,
pray that
you stay
young
I
And find some
peace and hope of understand-
ing." Throughout the song, he
explores
such themes as the loss
of innocence and the destructive
nature of man without coming
right out to say such things. The
lyrical content of the song, cou-
pled with a
smooth
tune and
intensifying guitar
solos,
show-
case the talents of each band
The Trapps formed in the win-
ter of 2003 and is made up of member and set the lone for the
Sean
Schenker
on lead vocals
rest of the album.
and gui1ar, Warren Gold on lead
guitar and slide guitar, and Jason
Sarubbi as backing
vocals
and on
h~~s. Three years
later, the band
has birthed and nurtured their
first
self-produced,
ftJ!J.Jength
CD
entitled "Good
Luck or
Goodbye?" which is dedicated to
the
pursuit of peace everywhere
and which fuses together
tradi-
tional rock-and-roll and bluesy
jam-rock undertones
to
create
the
sound
found on the
album.
"A
lright
Now," starts off more
upbeat with gentle percussion
and a quick guitar solo to get the
track
rollin
g.
As their most well-
known song,
"Alright
Now" is
played regularly on Off The
Beat-n
-
Track Radio Show, 98.1
WKZE, was listed in the Top Ten
Songs of 2004 by Music Writer
John
Barry
for the Poughkeepsie
Journal and was accepted as part
of the
2006
Woodstock Film
FeS'tival

0I)c.Gompilation·debut-
1:,1m
.!tfllll.::ih:1
1
The
Trepps, made up
of
Sean
Schenker,
Warren Gold,
and
Jason
Sarubbl, shown above, wHI
be
playing
at
The Bearsvllle Theater on
Frlay, Oct. 20
In Woodstock
,
NY
,and
at
Uve at Oasis
on Friday,
Nov.
3
In
New
Pattz,
NY.
ing
in
October 2006. For such a
well-received
song,
though
undeniable catchy the chorus
seems a bit trite and almost too
sugar-coated, standing apart
from the tone of the rest of the
album. The song does, however,
keep one's
spirits
up with its
"s
ing-along
"
quality which is
important.
Taking on a more bluesy-jam
tone, "I'm Through" explores
more
introspective themes as
Schenker
sings
of loneliness
,
the
"poor-boy blues" and missing
out on certain things growing up.
More notably, however, this
track's brilliantly placed
instru-
mental breaks exemplify the
expertise
of
the guitarist and
seem to mirror the lyrics in their
anguish and intensity.
The fourth track,
"B
lood
on
Our Hands," brings back senti-
ments of disillusionment that
were introduced earlier on the
albwn.
This is the first truly
political song on the album, not
so much in the way of govern-
ment but more concerned with
that which we are losing as a
society
given our current martial
situation.
The heartfelt lyrics on
SEE TRAPPS, PAGE 11
PAGES
'T
Sleep'
is a dream come true
After the
nnmeose
success of
the
his
2004
block.buster
..
Elcmal
Sunshine
of the
Spotless
Mind.''
director
Michael Gondry takes lhe view-
er mlo
tM
depths of the
hWTWl
mind
onu
again with
"The
Science or Sleep."
The film
tdls
the
talc of Stephane lGael
Garcia
Bernal).
a
young
Mc,i,ican man
tricked
into
com-
mg
to
FnOC< by his
mother.
and
his diffwulty distinguishing his
ms
from
reality. While in
France,
he
meets and falls for
his
ncrj,
door ncighhor, ironical•
ly
named StCphanie (Charlonlc
Gainsbourg). Their n:latioruh1p
·omes 1.:omplica1ed because
of Stephanc's lack of contidence
oupled "-" ilh hi~ tendcnc) 10
slip
inlo
his dream
v.
orld at an~
given po1n1 of the
da)
The cinema10iraph)' m this
film
is
bc:allttful.
crt.atiug
a
pja)'•
ul a1mosp ere t at ma cs
1
easier
to tell \\-hether the situa•
tions occumng are real or part of
StCphane's
dream
world.
Hov. ever,
C\len
with tht-sc du~
the
\-'itv.tr
is often
let\
question-
ing what is real and what
i~
not,
making
the
iJentifa.:ation with
the protagonist mu1;h more
pow-
erful.
The
dialogue is otlen
times
comic.al. mo..,
ins
almost seam-
lessly
from French
to
English
to
Spanish and back. Stcphanc's
ioabilit)
10
speak cohcrcn
French makes for
mtercsting
lran~lations and
many a ruse
played on
h,ni
b) other charac-
trn,.
·•The Science of Sleep
..
is
trUly
a nice departure from the
Holly>Aood ordinary ot bi
names and big stories. This sim-
ple film takes us inside one
man
·s
dreams and pcrhap~ gwes
us a different \iew on our own.
3.114.0
,,.,
WE'RE LOOKING FOR A
FEW
EXCEPTIONAL STUDENTS.
At Quinnipiac University School of
Law,
you'll find everything you need to succeed
.
From a challenging
yet supportive academic environment
to
faculty·members who will become intellectual colleagues.
From live-client clinics to real-world externships. Plus annual merit scholarships ranging from $3,000
to full tuition
.
For more information, visit
law.quinnipiac.edu or
call 1-800-462.-1944.
VISIT l S
OS
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OVEMBER
a
AT TIIE MARIST
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-.m ■ mtclrd■ .com
"Fine" dining in the Marist cafeteria
cool do\\-n, heat it back up. Keep the cheese on the pizza melted, even at two in the afternoon,
even
if
it isn't fresh out of the oven.
Most
of
all,
make sure the
milk.
is not going
sour.
Increasing
the cafeteria hours would also help eliminate some problems.
Spons
teams could
shower before coming to dinner. People wouldn
1
t
be
forced to come down at a specific time after
class ends and rush to finish dinner. Even keeping the dining hall open until
8:00
or
8:30 will
eliminate some of the
dinnertime
congestion that clogs the dinner lines every night at
Marist.
Hopefully
this article raises awareness about
the
less
than
stellar service
that
Marist students
are sometimes faced with
in
the dining
hall.
If
anyone
reading this can identify with some of
it,
talk
to your student government
representatives.
There is room
for
improvement
in
our dining
hall, but it's
up
to the students to fill that void.
t
Shelley's ghost raises awareness of domestic
abuse; Atherton-Zeman talk urges prevention
after
Johnny assaulted his girl-
friend, Grace. Even the notori-
ously "randy" Austin Powers
dropped in to enlighten the audi-
ence
that
all feminists aren't
female, nor are they "man-
haters,"
and that "feminism"
ded-
icates itself
to
eradicating racist,
sexist, and homophobic attitudes
from society.
ln
Atherton-Zcman's opinion
,
today's male celebrities aren't
ashamed of treating their part-
ners similar to "luggage," and
that
perhaps
entenainment
mag-
azines directed at younger guys.
such as FHM and Maxim, should
include an article about "listen-
ing to your partner."
In
retrospec~ perhaps
if
the
information broadcasted at that
lecture had
been
accessible to
Acevedo, maybe he wouldn't
have fractured Shelley Sperling's
skull
in
September of
I
974, or
proceeded
to
murder
her
several
months
later
in
cold-blood.
Acevedo went on to be acquit-
ted of the charge of murder due
to his mental inability to stand
trial, yet his act against a•mem-
ber of the
Marist
community still
hasn't
been forgotten after
all this
time. It's the spirit of Shelley
Sperling
that
refuses to let the
residents of Sheahan Hall
forget
her sudden demise. Shelley bad
been
added to a memorial
in
the
Grotto. a monwnent for all the
deceased students of the Marist
community
.
Today, that has been
replaced by a statue of Jesus
Christ and
Mary.
Where and why
this memorial disappeared
hasn't
been fully
investigated,
and,
according
to
Christina
Hope,
may
be
Why "she is a spirit
in
limbo and that this will help send
her to Heaven."
Still,
as
Atherton-Zeman clear-
ly illustrated, it's not too late to
start
creating heaven on Earth by
spealung out against domestic
abuse.
THE CIRa..E.

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2006 •
PAGE 9
Domermuth
stays consistent, paces Marist
women's
cross country to seventh place finish
By
DANIEL BARRACK
Three other
runners finished
ful and consistent runner for the
Staff
Writer
within the field's top
50,
includ-
Red Foxes.
ing
Kerri
Mannino in 37th,
Her 18:57 time in the team's
Sarah Domennuth led the
Marist Women1 Cross Country
Team to
a seventh
place
finish at
the
University of Albany
last
Saturday
in the
team's
final meet
before
the
MAAC
Championship on Oct.
27.
With a time of 18;57.l,
Domennuth led the Red Foxes
by placing 21st
.
Christine
Wahl in
39th, and
Caitlin Garrity
in the
40th
posi-
tion.
All three
times were
under
the
20:00 mark.
The 21st overall
finish
at
the
University of Albany placed
Domennuth ahead of aU Marist
finishers for the
fifth
time in as
many
meets.
She has been the most
success-
first meet this season at the Stony
Brook
Invitational
was almost
identical to her latest finish of
18:57.1
on Friday.
With
the
MAAC
Championship coming up this
Friday, look for Domennuth to
step up and lead the pack of Red
Foxes once again
The Trapps are 'Solid Rock' on new
album
this track surely overpower the
gentle melody behind them as
Schenker sings "There's
blood
on our
hands
/
And
we can't go
on
like this
/
A
thousand
wishes
been wished /
A
million
hearts
been
dreamed /
The
aftermath
gets ugly/ Only got ourselves to
blame/
The division has
me
rest-
less
/
And the fear has got you
hooked
/
If
you can't see what is
comin;.
babe.
then perhaps it's
time to look./ It's all just smoke
and mirrors
/
Cover up yoWlg
dust and bones
/
A generation's
lost everything if it loses sclf-
control."
The track surely
evokes a great deal of emotion,
suggesting that if we don't
take
care
of ourselves in troubling
times,
no
one will.
Reverting back to a bluesy jam-
rock sound, track'five
utilizes
a
catchy
beat
and intensifying
background instrumentals to
cor-
,e<;pond with 1ll•
lyric:,
Whil•
I
did not find
this
track
to
particu-
larly stand-out it was by no
means unimpressive. Again, the
band is able to utilize wailing
guitar solos and interesting
rhythms to
produce
a song worth
listening
to, albeit
not
one of my
favorites.
"Your
time
is
now
/ You're
waitin', a
n
ticipatin', /
Your
time
is now
/ To be
holdin'
on alone
is
just no way to
roll," declares
The
Trapps the
sixth track on the
album
,
"Your Time is Now."
This rock-influenced song, like
"Alright Now," boasts catchy
lyrics and a
fun
tune to sing
along to, encouraging listeners to
take
action
rather
than
wait for
good things to
come.
The remaining tracks
on ..
Good
Luck or Goodbye?'' progress
similarly to the
first
six, with
lyrics
bringing in such themes as
peace and
living
full
lives and
what makes
life full.
Each track
presents unique musical blends,
especially track
nine,
"Therapy."
The
Trapps are
experts
in
com-
bining
their musical
talents to
cre11te
1'
musical canvas on whi<:h
to put their
lyrics;
wailing guitar
solos and solid
musical
interplay
and
illI!\i.
ar< lillll,i,ssJ\11 in
keep-
ing the listening interested and
entenamcd..
"Good Luck or Goodbye?" is a
wonderful showcase of the talent
present
within
this group.
Though sometimes dealing with
themes that could
be
considered
clich~. The Tmpps are able to go
beyond such clichCS and bring a
fresh spin to otherwise common
themes.
Their rock-and-roll
i"fluence is
seen
on each track
,
with ~manerings of blues placed
perfectly throughout. Interesting
lyrics and strong ,
1
ocals also con-
tribute to the album's im~ive
sound as The T rapps bring musi-
cal
genius to their albwn
.
The Trapps will
be
playing at
the Bcars..-ille Theater Lounge
in
Wood.stock.
NY
on Friday,
Oct
20, 2006
at
9
:
00
p.m
.
and at Live
at Oasis in New Paltz, NY on
Friday, Nov.
3
at
11 :00
p.m. If
you have the chance
,
don
'
t miss
out on The Trapps
;
their time
certainly is now and
I
would
cncm11·1\~• vN1 to
M "
,-.art

that.
For more information
,
visit
www.thetrapps.net
Tuesday,
Oct.
24
The
William and Sadie
Effron Lecture
in
Jewish Studies
30th Annual Program
I
Jabotinsky:
What Would
He
Say Today?
a lecture
by
Hillel Halkin
7 p.m.
Nelly Galetti Theatre
































www.martltclrde
.
com
THE CIRCLE •
THURSDAY
,
OCTOBER 11, 2008 •
PAGE 10
SENIORSI
Thinkina
about
Grad School?
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3-6
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www.marltlcircle.com
TME CIRCLE •
TMURSOAY,
OCTOBER
19,
2006

PAGE
l l
Swimming and diving teams begin quest defending titles
By
JOSEPH FERRARY
Hartmann
and
freshman
In
addition,
the men's team
medley relay at the MAAC
Staff Writer
Jenny
Serino caught
Van
finished in
third
place in the
Key
Losses:
Championships.
The quest to
defend the
Metro
Atlantic
Athletic
Conference
(MAAC)
champi-
onship
began
for
both the
men's and women's
swimming
and diving teams
on Saturday
.
\!'
the Red/White
Challenge.
This competitive
inter-squad
match was the first match
of
Wagner's attention
during the Eastern
College
Athletic
On
the women's side, the
match.
Conference
(ECAC)
In
order for both teams
to Red Foxes will look to replace
"In
the men's 200
yard Swimming
and
Diving defend their MAAC titles
and
Meghan Duffy, who was
freestyle,
Hartmann
swam a Champio
n
ships
held
in their preseason number one named MAAC diver
of
the
I
:44.89 which
was
.0
8 sec-
Pittsburgh.
ranking
in the
MAAC
polls, year
the previous two seasons.
onds away
from his personal
The women's team, after the Red Foxes will have to
Junior Melissa Mangona
,
best.
At this time during the winning the
MAAC
title,
went
rebuild from
some
key
lo
sses.
who placed
seco
nd
to Duffy in
season,
most
swimmers
are
on to finish in first place at the
Joe Pilewski
will
be
sorely
the one and three-meter com-
four
to five
seconds away ECAC
Swimming and Diving missed by the men's team
for
petition
at
the
MAAC
from
their personal best
Championship.
During the his
versatility.
Pilewski holds
Champions
hips
,
will get her
the season
for
the Red
Foxes. times,"
Van Wagner said. three-day
competition,
the the records
for
the 106 tum
to
shine
in
Duffy's
The Men's Red Team defeated
''Jenny was a very
pleasant Red Foxes broke
10
confer-
Breaststroke, 200 Butterfly,
absence.
the White Team by
a score of
44-42, while the Women's Red
Team won by
a score of
58-
28.
surprise.
She had two
very
ence records and established and was a member
of
the 200
Mangona has shown her
good
races in the
50-yard
and
LI
new school records.
Medley Relay team.
potential in the past as a fresh-
100-yard freesty)&."
On
the
individual
revel, sen-
Coach Van Wagner
will
look man
at
Marist.
During her
Director
of Swimming.
Larry
Van
Wagner
,
was
pleased by his team's perform-
ances this
weekend.
Las/ Year:
ior diver Meghan
Duffy to junior
Greg
Jablonski to
fill
rookie year, Mangona quali-
became the
school's
first top-
the
void
left by Pilewski.
fied for the NCAA Zone A
eight finalist at the NCAA
"Greg is a
very
versatile ath-
Regional Championships, as
Regional
Diving lete, just like Joe was," Van well as taking home
silver
Championships.
Wagner
said.
"Greg has
a
lot medals
in the one and three-
"We had a
very good
per-
formance in
the
Red/White
Last year both the men's and
women's teams won the
MAACtitle.
For their efforts, both the of talent
since
he is able to meter competitions at the
The men's team finished men's and women's team were
swim
the breaststroke, indi-
MAAC.
Challenge," Van Wagner
said.
"This is a unique match
because it is inter-squad
and
it
is raced at high
school
dis-
tances, which is half
of
the
college distance."
with a
9-1 record in dual
rec
ogn
ized
by collegeswim-
vidual
medley,
and
the team
The Red Foxes will start
meets, and won its tenth title
in
eleven years.
The lone loss
in its last 60 MAAC dual
ming.com final Mid-Major medley as well."
their 24 week competitive
sea-
poll. The men's team finished
Pilewski finished in
second son
this Friday as they host
ranked
21st,
while
the place
in the 200-yard breast-
Army
and
Syracuse
matches came at the hands of women's team was ranked
stroke,
400-yard individual University in the Red Fox.
the Rider Broncs.
25th.
medley, and the 200-yard Invitational at 3 p.m.
Both
sophomore Spencer
Women's
soccer
second half woes continue in loss to Loyola
By
GREG HRINYA
Staff
Writer
The Marist Red Foxes were
team's
first halfperfonnance was
the best
she
has
seen
this team
play all
season.
"ln
the
first
half
we
dominate-cl
defeated
by
the
Loyola
the game," Roper
said. "Every
Greyhounds Sunday 2-0 despite
player knew their
defensive
yet another
impressive first half.
responsibilities and all the
play-
The
Red Foxes held perennial ers
stepped
up
and
gave
us a
conference
power Loyola to no
chance
to
win."
shots
in
the first half and con-
Several
Marist players were
trolled play while registering key
in
shutting
down the
opposi-
lhm
shols o
f
their own
lion'%
fo!Wlllll!.
tl'nl
00\
s\l~wing
After
going into
the half
tied
0-
a shot
in the
first
half.
0
,
Loyola
broke through first in
"Teresa Ferraro
and
Ashley
the
57th minute
when
Lea
Da)I
Chase
did
a great jc;,b
in
shutting
~ ~ h o i
w.id
end,.u~
-.Jtown
.Jl,._otlte.i.t~•s
ll>'l'•rds,''
1he
winning
gCal
in
the
"
gatne.
Roj;°Er
Sft{c)'
•Ktn'
K&:gel
also
Her
shot
from over
20 yards
played well defensively
,
but
away
found its
way
past Marist everyone on the defense
stepped
goalkeeper Caitlin
Nazarechuk,
up and
showed
their
true
poten-
and the unlucky
break
would be tial."
all
that Loyola
needed to win the
The Red
Foxes'
breakdown a
game.
.
Loyola would tack
on
an insur-
ance goal in the
62nd
minute
when
Co
ll
een
Kinealy
scored
on
a perfect header off
of
a free kick
to make
it 2-0.
little more than
IO
minutes into
the
second
half
allowed
the
Greyhounds
to tally
two
quick
goals and hold the lead for the
rest of the match.
Coach Roper
said
the team
knows they were the
better
squad
for the first 45 minutes and just
need to
stay
focused to
continue
to
challenge
in
the
conference.
against
a team that is
15
to
16
players deep," Roper said. "We
got
a little deflated after the first
goal,
and
that ultimately led to
the
second goal."
With the loss, the Red Foxes
dropped to 2-4 in MAAC play,
but they have
several
key match-
es
coming
up that could help
propel them into the
final four
teams that will face off for the
MMC
Cllilrnpiomllip.
1n
the upcoming games, Marist
will face
Co
lumbia
,
Niagara,
Canisius,
and Siena. According
to Roper,
if the Red Fcaa
play
like they did in the first haJf
against
Loyola, all
of
these
games
are
winnable.
"We
should fee_l confident
about our upcoming conference
games,"
Roper
said "If
we play
like
we
did
in
the first
45
minutes
against
Loyola, we have a great
shot.
We need
to
keep our focus
and not be mentally taken out of
the game."
Marist
will next face the
Niagara Purple Eagles at Niagara
University on Friday at
3 p.m
and
follow that up with a game
against
Canis
iu
s
on Sunday.
Defender Kerl Koegel
controls
the
bell against Loyola. Man&'s
defense
held
the perennial conference pawer without a shot In
first
hatf
action.
In
spite
of the loss, Marist put
forth
an
impressive effort against
a
team that will likely challenge
for the MAAC
championship.
Marist Red
Foxes
head coach
Efa.abeth
Roper
said
that the
"We
were definitely the better
team out there in the
first half
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Roarin'
Red Foxes
Mari,t's
male and
female
"tar
performer
for the "eek
end of
Oct. I l-1,.
Huck
Corrd:1
l·oo1b,1ll,
Senior
Corr1."1a
w~
niimed dcfc.:n-
s1H• phi)
ot the Y.cck.
hy
the MAAl
ol, ices on
MonrJay. lie
had
,l le:1111
high mnc
tal'kh:s and one
mtcrccpt111n
m Man:-,t"s
I
3.
9
lo
~
tu
f-
ordham
on
Saturdyu.
(
lHTe1a ts
ttcJ
second
on
the
1c.1m \\
ith
47
t.iddcs,
On the horiLon:
Man
t
"·ontlnuc
th~
1r
Lhrce
~amc
r d
p th1i \\Cc:k-
end
\\h n 1hcy take
on
MA~C
ma\
Duquesne
K1._:k•off
1"
scheduled for
1
pm
Sally Hamon
Volleyball
Senior
I
lanson
a
scntor middle
tuner
1,
the
second
ml·m-
bt:r
of
the
\(\lh:)hal1 kam
t<>
tJll) 1.(IOO
k,11,
tlus
sea-
son
!lead
C uach 1
>m
1
lanna
s,nJ.
It
J.llla7Jng
that
you
ha\C
tv.u kid:-. do
1t 111
~uch
a
hon
l!mC
frame-
,,.hen it
ha~n't
l,t.-cn
Joni;.:
in lhl" h1,1ory
"'f the
progrmn
On the Hori,on:
The
k.ec.J
F,1xc return
homC'
aller r.hrcc ro3J
gam~
co
tak!l on
I
oyola
( Ill) S,tt
rd.) I
~
pm
• Photo courlt:\)
ur
"" ".gorcdto:u·'i..com























































Upcoming Schedule:
Volleyball:
Saturday, Oct. 2
I -
vs. Loyola, 2
p.m.
Football:
Saturday, Oct. 2 I - at
Duquesne,
I p.m.
Men's
Soccer:
Sunday,
Oct. 22 - vs. Canisius,
l
p
.
m.
THURSDAY,
OCTOBER
19,
2006
www.marlstclrcle.com
PAGE 12
Foxes fall at
.
Fordham, preparing for rival Duquesne
By
BRIAN LOEW
Staff
Writer
After a scoreless fourth quarter,
the Fordham Rams held on to a
four point
lead
to hand the Red
Foxes their fifth loss of the sea-
son in a nail-biter on Saturday at
Coffey Field in the Bronx.
In
a contest that could have,
and should have, come out favor-
ably for the Red Foxes, it
became a battle of the defenses.
The Rams'
12th
nationally-
ranked
rush defense held the Red
Foxes (2-5) to
three
field goals to
grab their second win as they
improved
to
2-4
overall.
The first score came from
Marist's kicker, junior Bradley
Rowe, as
he
split the uprights for
a 33-yard field goal to cap off a
60-yard drive and put Marist on
top 3-0. The field goal, which
came with 4:20 left in the first
quarter, was Rowe's first of the
season.
Rowe would strike again with
9:0
I
left in the second quarter
nailing
a 34-yard field goal to
make it a 6-0 Marist lead.
After a strong first half, it
appeared that Marist would make
it to halftime unscathed. With no
time left on the clock, however,
the Rams'
.quarterback
John
Skelton, the Patriot League
Rookie of the Week, launched a
36-yard bomb to junior wide
receiver
Sylvester Clarke for the just under five minutes
left to
touchdown. Fordham went ahead
play turned the ball back over to
at the half7-6.
the Rams.
Marist came back fighting in
the
second half, and pieced
together a 4:02 drive that went
53
yards down the field.
Unfortunately, Marist's junior
quanerback Steve McGrath and
the Red Fox offense were unable
to finish their effort with a touch-
down. Therefore, with 8:38 left
in the third quarter, Rowe tacked
on his third score of the game
with his second 33-yard field
goal, pulling Marist in front 9-7.
McGrath completed 17 of 24
passes for 237 yards and one
interception and rushed 14 times
for 50 of Marist's 74 rushing
yards
The final blow from the Rams
would come with 10 seconds left
in the third quarter. The Rams
charged down the field and fin-
ished off their drive with a
I -
yard diving touchdown by
Skelton.
After a failed two-point conver-
sion, Skelton's
touchdown
put
the Rams in the lead with a score
of
13-9.
Marist would remain behind by
four throughout the remainder of
the game as both defenses held
off their opposing offenses in the
scoreless iounh
quarter.
The ReJ
Foxes had the opportunity to pull
out the win, but a costly fumble
in the end zone by McGrath with
Despite walking out with the
loss, Marist head coach Jim
Parady said he thought the Red
Foxes played well and even out-
played the Rams.
"We felt we played a very good
football game," Parady said.
"If
you
look
at us statistically, we
out-gained
[Fordham].
Our
defense played an outstanding
game, and our offense played a
great game
as
well."
Coach Parady said that the
offense was tripped up in the red
zone, where Marist could
not
convert yardage into touch-
downs.
"Where we bogged down
was
in the red zone," Parady said,
"We got down there a few limes
and all we got were field goals,
which put points on the board,
but unfortunately at the end of
the game we had the ball down
on the one, and we turned it over.
If
you look back, you can see two
or three different plays in that
game, and we come out on top."
The Fordham rush defense
would hold Marist to only 74
yards on the ground, their third
lowest rush yardage total of the
year. Marist's defense
held
strong tl1roughou1 most
or
the
game.
Senior
safety
Huck
Correia was honored by the
Metro
Atlantic
Athletic
Conference
(MAAC)
office
as
Defensive Player
of
the
Week.
Correia said
that
he
thought
the
Marist
defense
played a great game
overall, and despite
a few break
downs,
the
defense
played
well as
a
unit.
"We
made
some
mistakes and we
had a
couple break
downs,"
Correia
said. "We stopped
playing at the whis-
tle a few times. Other
than
that,
we played a pretty
solid
game.
I
don't think
it
was too
much
of a
downer."
Over the past few weeks,
Marist has shown great improve-
ment in its play, according to
Coach Parady. He said he attrib-
utes this to the players playing
to
their potential and being able
to
play a complete game.
"More
than
anything we're
looking
to
play to our potential
and our
level
and
that's
what
we've
been
able to do
the
past
couple of weeks,"
.Parady
said.
"We've
limited
our mistakes on
both sides of the football. These
guys
ha\'C
just been
nhle 10
play
to the
level
that they're capable
of and that's why we've been
where we are."
Foxes
snap five 1natch losing streak
Marist completes s1,1•eep of
Peahens,
Hanson
is
second player
to
collect
l,000th
kill this season
By
ANDY
ALONGI
Co-Sports Editor
l hi." R d i'oXL'S \(\II ;bull lC,un
,mokcd the rclhl!'n as i1 cornph:t-
ed
the
CJsnn ~,,cep
oi,
Sunday
winning
3-1
anJ e ming ii
lin.t
road"
in in
thl"
200b
sea!-on.
1 he
final score pn)\cd Maris1
was a
~lwngcr
learn
despite
a \',eak
third gaml!', wmnmg 10-25.
~()...~!.
"7-30, JO-I~
He!!d eoar..:h
fom
H nna
sa1d
lleating: St Pek:r's. l\\
1.;e
i
a big
confidence hooster u:. lhe) a,,ait
the ,1rri\al or 1hc ~ktro Atlantic
Athletic Confcrc:m.:c (MA.\C)
tounlamc-nt.
.. I
thmk kno,,,.mg
"'e·,\.:
done 1t
alrt"Jd) will
he
an important c nlt-
d!!ncc ~10,1er,,. he said. I \\ ould
like to
SCI! IIS
t-tnn.g
lll{!Cthcr tY.Q
or
Lhree-MAAC v,in,;
111
,t
10Y.. \\e
,e
got a ~tr~ak of matches of
tL·ains
'-'"C llU\C' he-en rornpetniVt" \'-)th.
mduding I O)Ola and Rider. to
huild
offlhe Sl
Peter'~"''"·
l'he,
1
.iting
Red l·oxcs had l\-\lO
players
pt~t
douhk-douhl.
s
trcshman Akxandn Schul11.c end
faune
Ktnw111tt1).
c111or
m1Jdlc
hiller Soll, I
lanson
al!io J'IO"h:'d
ll~)ulil.:-Jrg1t k1il'i 10
it1
along"' 1th
an excellent servmg game ,,hich
1ndudcd
fo
c-
1n!''-
Hansnn also posted lu:r 1,000th
career kill 0\'er
11k
"'e<..•k1::nd, mak
in,g her rhc
second Mari!i.t
pla)cr lu
rc.1ch this mil tone this M!A~lll
and
m sch(•ol
hi::.lory
Coach Hanna sait.l this
1s M
int.-red1ble milcslonc in the pro-
~rdnl':.
histt•l)
••fl's ,unazmg thal
)Oll
hJ\C l\\ll
}..id'>
d,1 11 111
,uch a
short
11111e
tramc \\hen tt h 1.,n·t been Jone
111
th!! histvr)
l1I
1hc
pro~m."' h
:-aid.
1'..l11wurth}' pn:ncd n mntch-high
.i."'
kills nnd 12 digs whik hitting
::!31 Schulvc.• had an equal
m11n
her
nl l.ills and d1{!~. tallying : 5 01
c:u.:h
On ill\: dd,:11s1H· ·hk of the hall.
senior St1.:phan1e-
\11ksch
had
2A
(llgs to
k-ad
1hc
Red ht."(L"
.1nil th~•
m.1tch
HI
that Matn11ical category
l'he Pc 1hens
¥.ere
hc!!.ded h)
"it:rru
So;lu \\ho kd th<.•
te.1m
"ith
20 1,.ill!i
und
India
\\alkcr
\I.ho
aJded I'\ digs
in
the losmg effmt
Marist
v.
111
cunlinuc
lb MAAC
sd1\.:Julc \\ 1th lhe
sl-cond
~ame
of
11
th
c-g,unc home
stand against
Lo,ola tf\1Dl on S:1turd1) al
~
pm. in !he
James
J
Mccann
f'cntc:r tidd
hou.i;e
Last tune
ou1
against the
C,reyhounds the Fox.es fell in Che
g,1me,
aft.er
kading
the
match
2-0.
Com.:.h
Hannu
said the
ditlerence
hc1ween the "in and the loss will
he ..:am,ng pomt-s
··Jl's a
111a1~
ol reduc-mg ,,ur
rrt1r~ anJ going out u11d camm~
thl! points, instead of ¼ailing
fo1
the
L"tTOr 10
comi:
10
ti',.
he said.
senior
mlddle
blocker Sally Hanson tamed her 1,000th
lc:111
over the
weekend.
She ranks second all time on Ul8
career kill
list
In Martst hiStOry.
The
Red Fmtes return
to
ect1on 1h16 weekend against
LO)'Okl
fMD)
on Saturday.
Marist
will
conclude
1ts
three~
game
road
trip in Pittsburgh,
hoping
to
snap MAAC rival
Duquesne's 38-game MAAC
win streak on Saturday at
I
p.m.
at Rooney Field.
Coach Parady said that if
the
Red Foxes continue to
play
well
on offense, defense
and
special
teams,
Marist
could come out on
top.
"If
we go out and play our
game, we feel confident that
we're going to come out on the
right side of
the
scoreboard," he
said.
Coach
Parady
said that the
team plans
to go into the
Duquesne match-up with a well-
rounded
game plan.
"Defensively they can hurt you.
They're one of the top
teams
in
the country
throwing
the foot-
ball, so you
ha.,·e
to
be
able
to
stop that,"
he
said. "But
if
you
spend too much effort stopping
thft, they have a great running
back
that
can
rip
you apart. So
we need to equally stop both
phases. Offensively, you can't
just
rely on throwing the foot•
ball. You
need
lo
be
able
to run
the ball so
that
it takq a
little bit
off the offensively
line."
Correia agreed with Coach
Parady.
He
said
if
Marist plays
well on both sides, Marist should
be able to pull out the win
against Duquesne.
"We just need to play a com-
plete game on both sides of the
ball," Correia said. "If we play
like
we can on both
side~.
and
on
special
teams, I
think
we can
give these guys a good run like
we usually do."
Take
Off
10-20 Inches
In
ONE HOUR
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