The Circle, November 2, 2006.pdf
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 60 No. 8 - November 2, 2006
content
With election day approaching, Marist weighs in
:
Iraq war top issue for voters
By
J
A
MffMARCO
N
I
whic
h
the war is spoken abou
t
H
owever, he,
t
oo, ment
i
oned
th
at
Ne
w
s
E
dit
o
r
and descr
i
bed have clo
u
ded the
I
r
aq
will
play an
i
mp
o
rtant
r
ole
entire issue, some students sai
d
.
i
n bo
t
h
the congressional and
If
there is one word that the
"It
confuses me," said fresh-
preside,ntia
l
elections.
While
Marist community associates man Paige Matetich. "The war Carey said he believes that
with
American politics, it's Iraq.
in lraq goes back so much fur-
America should get the job done
More
than
three years after U.S.
therthan 9/11-ifl don't have all
in Iraq, he predicted that
troops invaded the Middle the facts, I'm not going to choose whichever side wins the e
l
ection
Eastern country, the continued
a side."
is
"going
to stay in lraq, with
military
efforts there consti-
,
troop reductions, defi
n
ite
l
y."
tute a major issue for the
The war In I
r
aq goes back so much
While the war
r
emains
a
u
p
coming
congressional
further than 9
/
11-
If
I don
'
t have all
key issue among some vot-
elections,
according
to
the facts
,
I
'
m not going to choose a
ers, this e
l
ection is incredi-
some.
side
'
bly im
p
ortant to a
u
aspects
The war is important to
of U.S. policy because votes
English professor Donald
_
Pa
ige
M
a
t
e
li
c
h
~ several key states
co~d
Anderson because "from a
F
res
hm
a
n
tip the
b
alance of power
in
practical
standpoint,
it
Congress,
accordi
n
g
to
shouldn't have happened."
- - - - - - - - - - - - -
MIPO
Director
Lee
He said that it was
i
ll conceived
Frshman Emily Wiepe
l
agreed,
Miringoff.
and mismanaged from the begin-
adding that she doesn't think the
The ou
t
come of T
u
esday's
ning, "cost
i
ng American lives,
whole story is
being
presented to
e
l
ections will serve to
"s
h
ape the
Iraqi
lives,
and
lots
of the public at large, which makes
relationship with the Bus
h
resources."
it very difficult to support one
adm
i
nistratio
n
for the next two
That perceived misha
n
dling,
viewpoint.
years,"
Miringoff
said.
Anderson said, may well fore-
"I
never really followed poli-
According to him, the hype con-
s
h
adow a sh
i
ft in one or both
tics (closely]," though, she said.
ceming the midtenn elections
h
ouses of Congress to
a
"It
never rea
ll
y interested me.
will also set the tone for the
2008
Democratic majority.
Even in
Though he said he plans to vote
elections. "[It will
be)
a presi
-
the Bush White House, he said
in the congressional election by dentia
l
elect
i
on where there
will
an ideological ,hift is
"already
absentee
ballot,
freshman be no presidential or vice presi•
starting to happen. The vocabu-
Richard Carey said he is already
dential incumbent run
nin
g for
lary about the war
h
as shifted in
looking to the presidential cycle the first time since
1952," which
the administration - they're no
in 2008. Right now he said that could cause frantic races for the
longer a
ll
owed to say that
we he sees Senators
John
McCain,
presidential 5id,
lie said.
will
'stay the course.'"
Hillary Clinton,
and
Barak
Changes
in
the manner
in
Obama as likely candidates.
Marist Poll gears up for midterm elections
By
JAMES MARCONI
News
E
ditor
As congressiona
l
candidates
draw closer to the judgment of
E
l
ection Day on Nov. 7, the
Marist
Institute
of Public
Opinion is gearing up in prepara-
t
i
on for collecting and analyzing
the resu
l
ts, according to Director
Lee Mir
in
goff.
Throughout an e
l
ection cycle,
particularly the week before the
vote takes place, the
"pace
picks
up," M
ir
ingoff said.
"We've
been
polli
n
g - actually, we had a
huge story last week on the
A
l
an
Hevesi controversy ... at four
[in
the afternoon] Elliot Spitzer
wi
t
hdrew e
n
dorsement of Alan
Hevesi - at five we were revis-
ing the (po
ll
ing] questionnaire.
That's about as real time as you
get."
The state comptroller race is
not the only pre-election polls
conducted by MIPO. The insti-
tute plans to release results
regardi
n
g the senatorial race in
New York on Friday, and is cur-
rently con
d
ucting polls on the
race in New Je
r
sey between
incumbent, Robert Menendez
and challenger Tom Kean, Jr.
This, according to po
ll
ing
assistan
t
Danielle Cauchi, can
make things "a little hectic"
around the office and polli
n
g
area.
"It's rea
ll
y important that we
get a certain amount of respo
n
s
-
es," Cauc
h
i said. After all, she
said, there is a huge i
n
terest by
the outs
i
de wor
l
d in the work
be
i
ng genera
t
ed by
M
I
PO.
''When l'm in the office,
I
get a
SEE MIPO
,
PAGE 9
Some M
a
rlst
a
broad
st
uden
ts
pose
for
a
photo
I
n Frankfurt, G
er
man
y
du
rf
ng the spr
i
ng 2005 semester
.
THE CIRCLE
845-57 5-3000
e
xt
,
2429
wr
l
tethec
i
rcl
e@g
ma
ll.c
om
3399 North Road
Pou
g
hk
eep
sie
,
NY
1
2
60
1
FEATURES: TIME FLIES FOR MARIST SENIORS
W
h
a
t
the fu
t
u
r
e has i
n
store for soon-to-gra
d
uate Ma
ri
st
st
u
dents; things to do, activities
to
enjoy.
P
A
GE 6
M
I
PO
chief balances
polling with student needs
By
JAMES MARCONI
sJ.ow
duy·)
the informal lunch
News Editor
(unforL·rH:e
was
busine s a:t
u ual
.1long the mad \·hringo j11 -~ .
though, that shifting rcccptiCln
mnkt:s c\ en
cell phon~
prob-
lematic. at times.
··1
kno""
c\-CI)
!i:pot
on
the
Taconi..:
\\hen
I ha\'c ro ralk
fost,"" said
Miringoff
"In
the
had
70nCS you Jri\-c
rcall)
fo.,t.
IO
the goods zoni:-:-.
)OU
dri\-e
really
slowly."
The
8\lctngi.;
speed. he said. jusl about match-
es the -.pt.-cd I
11ml
Dc-.pih: frequent \ isio;, to
the
city, \tiringoff said 1hat h1$ role
a!> a
tcai.:hcr is
of
the
utmos1
importance.
\\-'hell he
talh
about hi!! studenL'i
and
the Y.ork
the) do
in
clrt'>5
and m MIPO a
kind
of .,.,annlh creeps mto
hi~
, ui1,e,
.and his eyes seem to
bng.hten. He
is
\/CT)'
quu.:k
to
,;ay
thal MlPO "" . a1 its humble
beginnings in
197~.
a
!ttltdcn
generated idea
''Tl
"as a
course
m
,otmg
hchnv1or. and a !tudcnt suggest-
c-J
th.at
\.\C
do
a
poll,"'
\iiuingo
sud. The clas aimed
to
do
v.it
poll$
of
Duchi:s,., Count)
\-olers
after
a
l\'Cal
elccuon,
'"'One
hun
drcd students 1hat day fanned
all
O\
<.:r
the
count).
unJ we did a
hand
;mal)-,,s
1.lf
die results.
Due
ltl lhe large
numhcr
of par-
t1cipant<, mtcr\lC-\\
ed_
Mirin~o
noted
that hb ~tudcnl$' r1.:sult
wen: parl1cularh accurate.
for some
lunch nour
i:. .1
tune
lo
n:chafE:e,
relax. and distance
1hcm~eh~s froru the
5lJC's~~
of
thl." day
For
~1IPO
Director Dr
Lee
Minngoff, it' an oppon.uni
~
to
gc..1
polling
operation~ set
tied.
fhough
tht:) ah:, JOkl."d.
and
IJugh ..
>d
like- others m 1he
workplace,
~-hnnion
ond ht
collea¥UCS
abo prcpnrcd
f1.11
1he
int1...'1lsc
f,;w
\h'fks
prccc"ding the
,·,mgre
!.Ion.al
m1d1cm1 ela:11011
Tl
rcs'I
b
hi
lof}.
ID Maris
Poll
\'as
one of
.1
handful
11.J
th
ou
I
n hecnm
mvoh·ed m
11111te
and
thc-n
nauonal
elecuon~
Sm..:c th ..
-n.
M1ringoff
described bim..-.clf and
MIPO
a
perpctuall) bus).
\1IP~~--
:~~;:ias:\!.:~:ti;c;~~
~:i·~~h~!~a\~~ :.~~~1ccr-and-a-
Public Opinion.
is
u-.ed
nauon-
llride h)
the media,
poli11c1ans.
and
the
public
ai
largi:.
Often.
Mirin~ofT
said. he find~ himsdf
lnl\'Clin~ to .
1
C'\\
York City lt
\\ork \\1th iinchors from
Channel
4 cuhc:r for
a
:-hon
sound
btl or
in
inh:n
1...-,,
regarding the- latest
polling duta
Comms alh.:r a d.1~ alrcad\
pep[X.-rcd wnh
tnll'T\
ie" phone
calls. and
thl."
l"l(;caimmal studeut
ad\.is .. ·e (\\hat \fmngoff e11llcd a
t't>r uch tnps .. there
1
:st1ll
11
nccJ to
Ix
111
lrequ1.n1
C<IOtad
"1th hi.-. colleagues to
act
a
steady
str1...~J111 of inform:mon
lnlm \,ork winch cell phone
m.,1,,.,c rar ea,:,.;r 1h.m
r11
top
Students
and
o,;tall 11ov. in an
l.•UI
of
his
oftice ,,., ith questions
and
concerns,
.md
hand-
scrawkiJ
~hecu
of paper detail
phone i::alls
10
be- made and
luturc acl1\11les ol MIPO to
coordinutcd. \Vhcn it's bus). h
remarked th.ir he might hnvc- to
do
25
mk'tv1c...,s
over
thr: phon~
hen
Miringofrs
profo.;"wna
l
hut imcnscl) pc anal offit.:e
;pa,.;e mirrur; lus Yworkdo)
800115, mosth \\ 11h
poli1ic:d
SEE MIRINOOff
,
PAGE 9
Abroad program encourages more applicants
By
MARION
HERBERT
Staff
Wr
iter
The Marist Abroad Program
puzzled stude
n
ts when it was
announced that spots were still
vacant for the Spr
i
ng
2007
semester, over a month past their
posted due date for app
l
icat
i
ons
that was September 15.
The real
i
ty is that this is not a
desperate attempt by the Marist
Abroad P
r
ogra
m
to fill up spots,
but an effort to allow more stu-
dents
to exper
i
ence goi
n
g
abroad.
Typically, the Marist
Ab
r
oad Program sends 125
stu-
dents overseas each
semeste
r
.
For the Sp
r
ing
2007
semester,
they were gra
n
ted addi
t
ional
20-
25
slots,
but few took them up on
the offer.
"It's unfortunate that we could-
n
't get mo
r
e app
l
icants," said
Ou
l
eep
Deosthale,
Ph.D.,
Assistant Dean of Jntemational
P
r
ograms. "I think it was the
fact that it was announced so late
that more people didn't jump at
the opportunity. They need time
to think about it over the summer
and many don't have the flex
i
bi
l
-
ity to juggle
courses."
The application process can
discourage
students,
as sustain-
ing ioterest throughout the sea of
paperwork is often the most dif-
ficult part.
"I think the ha
r
dest part for me
was filling out all the forms.
There was a lot of running
aro
u
nd to do," said Lea
n
ne
Cipolla, a
sophomore
at
·Marist
traveling to Italy next
semeste
r
.
A&E: COMEDIAN AND ANIMAL ACTIVIST DAN
PIRARO
VISITS MARIST
How P
i
raro uses humor
t
o illustra
t
e the gross h
u
ma
n
abuses towa
r
ds a
n
ima
l
s.
PA
GE
S
Deost
h
ale descr
i
bed the
process as "a mi
n
i application to
Marist all over agai
n
."
There
is-
an essay to write, letters of rec-
ommendation, copies of your
transcript, and other legal forms
that must filter into the Ab
r
oad
Office in a t
i
mely man
n
er.
Students described the finan-
cial aid factor as a
n
other sourct
of stress. Students can receive
financial aid through the FAFSI!:
-
and Financial Aid Office as
if
they were li\ling here on campus,
I
n
addition, they receive a cosi
sheet, which provides the break"
down of addit
i
onal expenses of
l
iving abroad.
It
dis
pl
ays what
ij
included and what is not inc
l
ud•
ed.
The cost of studyi
n
g abroad
SEEABROAO
,
PAGE 9
us
.
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER
2, 2006
www.mat1stclrcle.com
PAGE2
Security Briefs
Residents of
Foy Townhouse
A fail Grilled
Upcoming
Campus
Events
Cheese 101,
Forced to repeat next semester
Thursda).
ov.
2
Graduate School Forum
3-6
p.m.
Cabard
By
ANDREW MDLL
;
Leader
in
homeland 10/25
security
When sitting down to
do this week's security
briefs, l thought "Hey,
why
not do a Halloween
theme?!" Then I remem-
bered a
couple things;
One:
By
the
time
this goes
out to the public, it'll be
two days past Halloween,
so
it
would kind of outdat-
ed, making me look out of
the loop, when we all
know ('m incredibly hip
and in tune with popular
society. Two: As we all
learned last week, I'm not
the best when
it
comes to
...
writing creatively, so try-
ing to work in a theme
may not
be the best idea in
the world. So get ready
for another
set
of generic
and predictable security
briefs!
10125. 3:04
A.M.
erer
An unauthorized guest
attempted to gain entrance
in10 Leo Hall using a stu•
dent's ID card.
No such
luck,
as the guest was
asked to leave the campus.
Come on, buddy. This is
the country that requires
you have to 37 forms of
identification
and
to
undergo. a
full body cavity
search just to board a
transfer
flight
from
Albany
to
Pittsburgh.
What makes you
think
you
can just sneak into Leo
Friggin Hall? Consider it
a lesson learned: Don't
mess with Marist Security.
Security
received
an
anonymous
call
saying
that there was a strong
odor of marijuana coming
from the Fulton
7
area.
And Marist sent out its top
drug enforcers from SNAP
to
do
the
job.
They
brought along thcit trusty
sidekick, SNAPper, the
anti-drug dog, who uses
his keen sense of smell to
weed out(Gct it? "Weed''
out?! HA!) the pot heads
here at Marist. SNAP,per
was able to track down the
apartment, and
a
small
amount of marijuana was
confiscated. Another job
well done for SNAPper
and the gang.
I
0/26
Cr
In the North End park•
ing lot, a student reported
a theft from their car.
Apparently, they left their
drivers
side
door
unlocked, and their tem-
porary parking ticket was
stolen. This came after
they had been given a
ticket from security for
parking or something. Not
gonna lie,
I kind of forgot
exactly
what John Gildard
said,
so I'm going to just
end this one here before
I
say something stupid, or
go on
a
rant
about the way
parking is handled here.
Because the way parking
is handled here ain't the
best of ways. That's all
Marc
1s
I'm going to say on the
matter.
10/27 •
1:42
P.M.
Cr
A fire alarm was set off
in Townhouse A due to a
burnt cheese sandwich.
Right.
I don't even know
what to say.
10/27 • 10:20
A.M.
c,c,c,
Mkay.
In
Lower
West
Cedar some windows were
seen
smeared
with
ketchup, jelly, and choco-
late. How or why they got
there,
I'm
not exactly
sure.
I
mean,
it
does sound
a little kinky, but still, on
the window?
10128 · 12:37
A.M.
c,c,c,
An intoxicated student
was found in front of
Gregory after an apparent-
ly
entertaining
Friday
night.
I wasn't told the
name of the young stu-
dent, but sources close to
me tell me that the stu•
dent's name is Andrew
Russell, and that he was
on the
-ground
screaming,
"I'm
not an animal,
I am a
man!!"
10/28
erer
While a student was
sleeping
in their Gartland
residence, some attempted
And Debbie Formerly of Making
Faces
Have
Joined the Rest of the Returning
·
stam
Look for the following products
...
Redken
TiGi
Goldwell
Mizani
Paul Mitchell
FREE
Consoltation
on all
lBJm!'
~
Weaves
& Extensions
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c.u
,., .,.,..,,., •• ,., • r.u, •. ,.,, ,,,,,,, .... •
ou.,
L,
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454-9239
Jul,-,, All•ll-, •
0,,,Wl<•
11•.
l'r.-h IIHf'll•I •
II••
1t•O
IHI/ •
F,u
l'-t,-.
to
enter
their
house
through the unlocked front
door,
although
nothing
was found stolen. What's
the
point
of Cntering
someone else's place
if
you aren't going to take
anything? Are
you
just
there to admire the
home
furnishings?
Are
you
Michael Lowell? Just take
something!
A
lamp,
some
jewelry, a cookie, any-
thing!
Make
your
trip
worthwhile, at least.
I
0129
c,c,c,c,
Another fire alarm went
off in Townhouse A,
this
time due to an inability to
sear a roast. According to
my files(and by files,
I
mean my
spiral
notebook
J
jot my notes down in that
I
spilled Mountain Dew on
last semester) this
is
the
fourth time this semester
that there has been a fire
alarm
incident
at
Townhouse
A,
including
two
in this week alone.
That's not good, people.
Why are you
searing
it
Burnt
so
up. I
hope some•
body can tell me why
we're bringing
in so many
new students when at
lea
st
have of them are a threat
to burn down the campus
because of a toast inci-
dent.
I
0/30 • 7:30
P.M.
erer
There was a fire alarm
set
off in Champagnat,
too. No, not because of
burnt food.
It was due to a
fog machine, set
up
for a
Halloween party. Sounds
more like a Prince video
from the Eighty's to me.
But Prince
is
cool. So
I
have no problem with this.
A strobe light would have
completed
the effect, but
also turned
it into a rave.
And that means bad techno
music,
which
is,
of
course,
an
oxymoron
because all techno music
is
bad. Stick with the
Purple One. He'll lead 1he
way.
genius-o-meter:
C,
anyway?
E v e r y b o d y ~ - - - - - - - - ~
knows that searing results
~::c~=~';,,e;~/':; !::~ri':,./;~t
in a greater net loss of
pr01ec1ed
free speech under lhe
moisture versus cooking
Fit!il
A"'endment
of
the
to the same internal tern-
Constitutio,i.
perature
without
first
searing. This is common~;:::;::;;;::;;;;::;:::;:;::::;:::;::::;-;:
knowledge.
,ay
tO IS
yea
StOp
10
/30
· 3;00
P.M.
Cr
A Gartland fire alarm
went off, because of burnt
food.
The
culprit
this
time? Soup. That's right.
Spring
Break destinations!
Best
deals guaranleed! Highest rep rom•
missions. ~sit m.slslravel.rom or
call
1-800-648-4849.
Greal rou discounls.
Friday,
No,.
3
&
Saturda),
Nov. 4
.. T"alladega , ights: 1 he
Ballad
of Ricky
Bobhy ..
IOp.m.
Perforrmng
Arts
Room
Saturda)·.
·o,.
4
Curling
tnp
orfolk Curling
Club m
Conncclicut
Bus
lea,
es Midrisc at
noon
5
l\londn),
:\o,. 6
Eddie Daniels
"One
!'\fan·, Story
of Apartheid"'
l'.!:30 p.tn.
Wednesda),
Nov.
8
Communication Arts
Society
General
Meeting
9:15
p.m
SC room
349
DON'T
MISS Il!ISl
Wednesda),
Nov. 8
Kai Parsons
sing..:r song\.Hih.:1
P.\R
9p.tn
\\ednesda}, Nov, 8
Grad
School.
Scholarship, &
\ssistant,hips
Panel
12:30 I -15
LI
20
THE
CIRCLE
Christine Rochelle
Opinion Editor
Alexander Tingey
Health Editor
James
Rellly
Photography Editor
Ralph
Rienzo
Advertising Manager
Kate Giglio
Editor in Chief
Margeaux
Lippman
Managing Editor
Andy
Alongi
Sports Co-Editor
Eric
Zedalls
Sports Co-Editor
Isabel CaJulls
Features Editor
G. Modele Clarke
Faculty Advisor
James
Marconi
News Editor
Jessica
Bapr
A&E Editor
Sarah Shoemaker
Copy Editor
Chelsea Murray
Distribution Manager
The Circle
is the weekly student newspaper of Manst 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
staff can
be
reached at
575-3000 x2429 or letters to the editor can be
sent to wrltethecircle@gmail.com.
The
Circle can also
be
viewed on its web site.
www.manstcircle.com.
www.marlslclrcle.com
From Page
1
Midterm
elections could 'set
the
stage' for 2008 race
lot
of calls
from the media about
what's going on ... I think that
everyone is
very
interested
in ... the elections."
Questioning hundreds of
peo-
ple takes a certain amount of tact
and talent, according to
Cauchi.
Good
interviewers need to be,
first and foremost, enthusiastic
about
the job,
she
said.
Confidence also
is
a must,
as
well as neutrality
-
keeping the
pollster's personal beliefs com-
pletely
separate
from intervie-
wees. It can also be hard, at
times, to deal with the
variety
of
personalities
that
may
be
encountered.
Some,
Cauchi
said, are timid and thus hard to
keep on the line long
enough
to
complete a
survey.
Others are
the diametric opposite,
people
who
are "really
passionate"
about their political
views
and
will continue talking
on
the
phone
for
far longer than the
average survey should
run.
Especially in the weeks preced-
ing an
election,
interviewees
seem
more eager to ex.press their
political views.
So
there
is a
need for
a fairly
large
pool
of student workers
manning
the
phones.
On
Halloween,
"It
looks like
we
should
have
between
35
and
40
[pollsters] and that's actually
a
little light,"
said
Project Director
Meghann
Crawford. Typically,
she said, the number ranges from
50 to 60.
"They'll
be [working
from] 5:15 p.m. to 10:00 p.m."
Despite the
sometimes
frantic
pace, Miringoff said that every-
thing was going
along smoothly.
"It's multitasking," he
said.
"We're
doing the
New York
poll,
getting
ready for the
New
Jersey
polls, and
staying
in
tough with
what
'
s going
on [in the political
world]."
And despite long hours
and
hundreds
of
potential
surveys
to
complete, the job has
its
rewards,
said Cauchi.
The
fact
that
students
have
a
hand
in
something so widely
distributed
and used by the media
and
politicians is
a very gratifying
experience.
Seeing a
Marist poll
on
the
news
"definitely gives you a
sense
of accomplishment,"
Cauchi said.
From Page4
Elections in October
-ance for diversity between
many countries we influence.
It is also
widely
known,
well
documented
in
print, and
undisputed by the president
,
that
government subsidiaries
Miringoff
maintains dual
role as
teacher, pollster
titles,
fill
a quarter
of the left
wall. Right
nex.t to the bookshelf
lay
neat
stacks of
cassette tapes,
each
of
a television interview.
The inner doorknob is nearly
invisible
belleath
a collection of
press passes from
various
politi-
cal and
journalistic
conferences.
He probably wouldn't want it
any other
way. Politics
in gener-
al
has
always
been a part of his
life.
"I grew
up in a house
where
politics and current events were
discussed
daily,'' Miringoff said.
Since becoming a teacher at
Marist
in
1975, he has further
indulged and developed that con-
nection.
"I
like election day the best.
It's hard,
it's
physically demand-
ing, but
it's
a lot
of
fun. Thenex.t
best
thing [about my job) is the
idea
of
connecting people.
It
[MIPO] is
sort
of plugging
stu-
dents
into the whole
ex.perience,
which
is the biggest ongoing
positive."
A
balancing
act
between the
worlds of
teaching and profes-
sional
polling might seem
impossible, but
"they're
not
as
distinct
as
they
appear,"
Miringoff
said. "I
bring up
some
of
the
same people
that I
would
like Halliburton and KBR are
becoming immensely
wealthy
from our
presence
in
Iraq.
Halliburton,
a corporation
be meeting
in the polling world
[to class]." Many of his students
end up working as interns and
then employees of these media
figures. Eventually, some for-
mer students come back to
class
to teach the next generation,
completing the
cycle.
And that, according to
Miringoff, is
what
he and MIPO
are all about.
It is
a
very gratify-
ing experience, he said,
to
see
students succeed in such a con-
crete, tangible
way.
Theory
taught in a classroom is fine, but
actually doing
a poll and
seeing
the
results
on television, well.
tliat's something special. "Since
1978 when we started, it has
been a student education project;
the education has always been
what's paramount."
He placed his phone back in its
cradle and began typing up
a
midtenn exam.
that has
received
billions of
government dollars in "no
bid" contracts, happens to be
the vecy
same
corporati0n
THE CIRCLE •
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2006 •
PAGE
3
Marist Abroad looks to provide
foreign experience for all students
varies depending on the stu-
dent's program and destination.
It
includes
the credits they're
earning abroad, tuition, hous-
ing, insurance, some site visits,
and legal
aspects
that must be
covered.
"Each program is not a car-
bon copy of each other, as they
each respond to the cultural
components of each country,"
said Deosthale.
Deosthale agrees
that some
programs cost less than others
or even the regular tuition of a
semester
here at Marist, in
which case that particular pro-
gram will incorporate other
benefits, such as site visits of
that country.
Air fare is one charge
that
is
the responsibility of the stu-
dent.
"Air
fare is not included
in the abroad fee and I believe
that
it
shouJd
be or at least
some
of
it,"
said
Melissa
Harrington, a Marist
juni
or
currently
studying
in Ireland.
''However, there are some trav•
cling
costs included in the pro-
gram
fee. My program includ-
ed two three night field
trips
with
everyo
ne
in the program
that
was
all
inclusive.
that Vice President
Cheney
was CEO
of
from 1995 to
2000. These are
facts;
they
are not denied by those
However, we stayed in four-
star hotels, which was definite-
ly a nice perk at the time, but
I
would have rather stayed
in a
less expensive hotel and have
had some
of my flight paid for
instead."
Excluding the cost of living,
such as meals and travel
expenses while abroad, the
price is approx.imately the
same as a semester at Marist.
"It's worth the obstacles,"
said
Deosthale.
"My
dream is
to have every
student
go
abroad.
I
don't know
if
that
wil1 happen, but one can
dream. It's an incredible expe-
rience."
Any students that want to
leap at the opportunity to go
abroad still have the chance.
Students who go to the Marist
Abroad office within the next
week can begin the application
process and
see
if they're eligi•
ble for the Spring 2007 semes-
ter: and experience this for
themselves.
involved. And perhaps these
are the
sorts
of things we
ought
to bear in mind as we
go
to the polls.
"7INTER SESSION
O
O
T
GET AHEAD.
EARN 3 CREDITS
I N
DAYS.
WWW.MARIST.EDU/WINTER
~ARIST
THE CIRCLE
o-~~inion
Le
t the voices
of the Maris
t
comm
unity be
h
ear
d.
1111111111
. . _ ,
THURSDAY
,
NOVEMBER 2
,
2006
www
.
marlst
c
lrcle.com
PAGE4
October deaths in Iraq could affect results of election
By
DANIEL BLACK
Staff Writer
N
o
vem
ber
7 ap
pr
oaches, and
(hopefull
y
)
so
t
oo
th
e de
mi
se of
man
y
p
o
lit
ic
al
ca
r
ee
r
s
in
Wa
s
hington
D
.
C.
Ju
s
t
e
i
g
h
t
da
ys
befor
e
thi
s
l
ong awa
it
e
d
opportuni
ty
t
o o
ust
a
l
arge frag-
m
e
nt
of
arguabl
y
th
e
m
os
t d
es
p
i
-
ca
bl
e, s
elf-
se
rvin
g party from
public offi
ce,
the hundredth
U.
S
.
se
rvi
ce
m
a
n
's
d
e
ath
fo
r t
he
month
of
Octo
b
e
r
was
announ
ce
d b
y
th
e U.S. military.
Oct
o
b
er,
I beli
eve
it
h
as
b
ee
n
repo
rte
d
, ra
nk
s as o
n
e of
th
e
d
ea
dli
es
t month
s of t
h
e 44
m
on
th
-o
ld
ca
mp
a
i
gn, an fron
fa
c
t th
a
t
e
r
a
di
ca
t
es a
n
y
tru
th
o
r
m
ean
in
g fro
m th
e
h
ogwas
h
r
h
et-
ori
c o
f"
fi
n
a
l thr
oes of
th
e
in
s
u
r-
ge
n
cy
"
o
r "m
ajo
r
com
b
at ope
r
a-
ti
o
n
s
h
ave e
nd
e
d
".
It
makes
very
difficult th
e acce
pt
a
n
ce of
o
ur
gove
rnm
e
nt
's
i
ns
tru
ct
i
o
n
s
like ''
stay t
h
e co
u
rse," whic
h
s
u
gges
t
s
blind
acce
pt
ance of
gove
rnm
e
nt
be
ha
v
i
o
r
simp
l
y
be
ca
u
se
th
a
t
's w
h
at we
'
ve do
n
e
in th
e past.
With th
e arriva
l
of
Nove
m
ber 7, 's
ta
ying
th
e co
u
rse'
gove
rnm
ent officia
l
s (h
i
mse
lf
becomes an opt
i
o
n
, a choice
t
o
i
n
clu
d
ed) from facing justice.
be
d
ec
id
e
d
by
th
e
p
eo
pl
e,
and
as
This Act is tru
l
y mortifying for a
a
r
esult,
th
e congressmen whose cou
pl
e of si
m
ple reasons, a
n
power
i
s threa
t
ene
d
a
r
e attack
in
g a
ppr
ec
i
a
t
ion of which req
ui
res a
one another
ru
t
hl
ess
l
y an
d
li
tt
l
e backg
r
ound know
l
edge the
President Bush recently passed the "MIiitary
Commissions Act" -a harmless sounding title- which
allows him to Interpret the Geneva Conventions as
he pleases
.
s
h
ame
l
essly.
I
h
ave
r
e
m
ove
d
m
ysel
f
from
th
ese
r
e
p
re
h
e
n
s
ibl
e
fee
din
g fre
n
z
i
es beca
u
se, as
wi
th
mos
t
vot
i
ng seaso
n
s, s
l
ande
r
is
in abu
n
dance
bu
t t
ru
th
i
s in short
su
p
ply.
Le
t u
s bea
r
some facts
in m
i
n
d,
as the
li
be
l
campaigns an
d
ch
il
d-
i
sh m
u
.
d
fig
h
ts of po
l
i
ti
c
i
ans an
d
pote
nti
al po
li
ticia
n
s do
n
'
t
seem
to have any w
i
s
d
om to
b
e
g
l
eaned. Presi
d
e
nt
Bush rece
nt
-
ly
passed
t
h
e
"M
ilit
ary
Co
m
miss
i
ons Act" -a
h
a
nnl
ess
sou
n
d
in
g t
i
tle- w
hi
c
h
a
ll
ows
h
i
m
to
in
te
rpr
et
t
h
e
Ge
n
eva
Convent
i
o
n
s as he p
l
eases and
insu
l
ates
in
tellige
n
ce age
n
ts and
Gen~va Conventio
n
s
th
e
m
selves
an
d
th
eir
hi
s
t
ory.
I
n t
he wake of World War II,
jus
t
a coup
l
e of years afte
r
the
ato
m
ic bomb
,
a who
l
e bunch of
developed cou
n
tries gathe
r
ed
i
n
Sw
it
zerla
n
d with the common
i
n
t
erest
of preventing the
H
oloca
u
st
from
recurre
n
ce.
They
h
ad basically dec
i
ded that
the Holocaust was some
t
hing
very, very bad and
n
obody wa
n
t
-
ed to see history repeat itself.
They convened a series of mee
t
-
i
ngs, the substa
n
ce of w
h
ic
h l
ed
to the draft
in
g of suc
h
docu-
ments
as
the
Geneva
Convent
i
ons and the Unive
r
sal
LEITERS TO
THE EDITOR POLICY:
The Clrcle
welcomes letters from Marist students
,
faculty and
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 telephone number
or campus extension for verification purposes.
Letters without these requirements will not
be
published
.
Letters can be dropped off at
The Circle
office or submitted
through the
'
Letter Submission
'
link on MarlstC/rcle.com
THE CIRC
L
E
ttl>DfWJ'I~
Dec
l
a
r
at
i
on o
f H
u
m
an Rig
h
ts.
It
stra
t
eg
i
es
,
as em
b
raced by many
ly worse than
t
he ratio of Fre
n
ch
is
i
mpo
rtant
to re
m
e
m
be
r th
a
t
of those co
n
gressmen u
p
fo
r
c
iti
zens w
h
o co
n
si
d
e
r
e
d the
the sole, si
n
g
l
e,
l
o
n
e
l
y
purpo
se
ree
l
ect
i
o
n
, i
n
figh
tin
g our German Ges
t
apo an occ
up
y
in
g
of
h
o
ldin
g
th
ese
m
ee
tin
gs
a
n
d
"Glo
bal
Wa
r
o
n T
e
rr
o
r
"
t
h
e r
est fo
r
ce as o
p
posed
t
o a
li
be
r
at
in
g
writ
in
g
t
hese doc
um
ents was of t
h
e wo
rl
d c
ri
nges. This asse
r-
force at the he
i
ght of
th
e
Thir
d
co
nt
emp
t
fo
r th
e act
i
ons of the
li
on
-
a
ll
eg
in
g
th
a
t Bu
sh's foreign
Reich's power. Once aga
i
n,
w
e
Nazis an
d
a conce
it
ed atte
m
pt to
po
l
icy is com
p
arable
t
o that of are me
r
ely examin
in
g facts; we
lay
th
ose so
rt
s of atroci
ti
es t
o
Hitl
er's-is ext
r
e
m
e
l
y s
h
arp, w
ill
are u
n
i
n
te
r
es
t
ed
in
e
m
p
l
oy
i
ng
r
est in
t
he pages of
h
uman h
i
sto-
p
r
oba
b
ly
be
rejected by
m
any
im
mature tac
ti
cs of fact-
di
s
t
or
-
ry for a
ll
time.
peop
l
e o
n
acco
unt
,
b
u
t i
t is nev-
t
i
on as
u
sed by co
rrup
t
p
o
l
i
t
i
-
When any po
lit
ica
l l
eade
r
, of erthe
l
ess
p
ure
l
y fact
u
a
l.
c
i
ans and
m
edia
p
u
ndi
ts.
any co
un
try, es
t
a
bl
is
h
es p
r
oce-
Fo
r th
e
di
sm
i
ss
i
ve fo
l
~
I
invite
If
o
ur
representati
on
's arribi-
dures that fla
tl
y disregard a
n
d you to co
n
s
id
e
r th
e crumb
l
ing tions ha
d
a thing
t
o do wi
th m
a
k-
o
p
en
l
y
d
e
n
ounce the gu
i
de
l
ines p
ubli
c o
pini
o
n
of the I
r
aqi c
i
ti
-
ing the world
a
safer place
,
they
of
those
same
Ge
n
eva zens
th
emse
l
ves, who have to
mi
gh
t d
o well to pay so
m
e atte
n
-
Co
n
ve
nti
o
n
s
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
t
i
o
n
to how
th
e
(as Pres
;
de
nt
October,
I
believe It has been reported, ranks as one of
w o r
I
d ' s
Bus
h
h
as
the deadliest months of the 44-month-old campaign
,
an
responde
d
to
done, n
u
mer-
th
e "G
l
o
b
a
l
War
ous
,;
mes),
Iron fact that eradicates any truth or meaning from the
o
n
Te
rr
o
r"
.
It
;s
everyo
n
e else
hogwash rhetoric of "final throes of the Insurgency" or
we
ll k
nown
th
a
t
in t
h
e wo
rl
d
"major combat operations.
"
Bush's war in
cringes
and
I
r
aq has wo
r
ked
fee
l
s chi
ll
s u
p
won
d
e
r
s
for
an
d
down t
h
eir sp
in
es because
they, like those adm
i
rable gen
-
tl
eman
w
h
o
w
r
ote
th
e
Co
n
ve
n
t
i
ons
,
d
esire
t
o see the
H
o
l
ocaust exist on
l
y in
h
is
t
ory
tex
t
books and
mu
se
um
s where it
be
l
o
n
gs.
Beca
u
se of Bus
h
's
li
ve with
th
e daily p
r
ese
n
ce of
foreign troops in t
h
eir own. T
h
e
r
at
i
o of
Ir
aq
i
s who co
n
si
d
er the
U.S.
M
i
li
tary to
be
a
n
occupy
i
ng
force to
t
hose w
h
o co
n
side
r i
t a
li
bera
tin
g force was recently
assesse
d
at 12:
I.
This is actual-
S
c
hool of Managemen1
S<hod
ctNcn~omt NI\\ h Hdrfm< N-o,lt
recru
i
ting in
in
te
rn
a
ti
o
n
a
l t
e
rr
o
r
-
ist organizations, caused dec
lin
e
in
the world's percep
ti
o
n
of o
ur
co
u
ntry -co
n
s
i
dered by some
t
o
be i
rr
epa
r
ab
l
e, a
nd
ca
u
se
d
a
w
i
desp
r
ead brea
k
down betwee
n
intercu
l
tura
l
stability and tole
r
-
SEEELECTION
,
PAGE 3
MarlstClrcle.com
Vi::U
WWW.Ul1i0111jtl:!dW1e((,jlege.e.tl
O
R
(OHn
c
r
N-o,lt
&
1'<>1!•hl> Hu,m
Ro""'
N-o,lt
H,"1,m
N-o,lt
Fim:,
Mcrh1 (cJleg,i
GRADUATE
&
PROFESSIONAL
SCHOOL FAIR
The Circle
is published weekly on Thursdays during the
school year. Press run Is 2,000 copies distributed through-
out the Marist campus
.
To request advertising Information or to reach the
editorial board
,
call (845) -575-3000 ext. 2429
.
Opinions expressed In articles do not necessarily repre-
sent those of the editorial board
.
!onColloilot
tlireO!tr
6
1
S
tldl!n1 b.autnern
..
. 5
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TI-IE CIRCLE •
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2. 2006 •
PAGE 5
ONE MAN'S STORY
OF APARTHEID
A Conversation
with Eddie
Daniels
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 2006
12:30 PM
PERFORMING ARTS ROOM
SPONSORED BY:
THE
GILLESPIE FORUM
PI SIGMA ALPHA
POLITICAL
SCIENCE DEPARTMENT
MARIST INTERNATIONAL PROGRAMS
Marfst International Programs
I
845.575.3330
I
www.marfst.edu/fnternational
I
internatlonal@marist.edu
H
ealth
THUR
S
D
AY, NOVEMB
ER
2, 2006
www.marfstci
r
cle.co
m
PAGE 6
Act
i
ve Minds gives voice to
s
ilent suffering
By
B
RITTANY FIO
R
ENZA
C
i
rcle Staff
In a communal setting, especially a college cam-
pus, mental health is a vital issue and is defined as
a state of emotional and psycho
l
ogical well-being
in which an individual is able to use his or her
cognitive and emotional capab
i
lities, function in
society, and meet the ordinary demands of every-
m
i
tted suicide after suffering from mental health
disorders, later diagnosed as schizoaffective dis-
order, as well as depression and psychosis, for
three years. The devas
t
at
i
on of his death mot
i
vat-
ed his younger sis
t
er, Alison, to start a program
that would give college students
an
outlet to VQice
their distress and to deal with it effect
i
vely to pre-
vent suicide. Her program ge
n
erated so many fol-
l
owers that it sprea
d
throug
h
out her
campus
and
others before fanning a
day life. As college stu-
dents we are constantly
bombarded with all aspects
of life, heavy class loads,
stress, and relationships.
Additionally, we face the
need to reflect and focus on
ourselves. At some point in
our lives, we will all feel
overwhelmed, extremely
saddened, or lost. These
feelings have the ability to
weigh on our minds and to
hinde
r
our ability to over-
These are the times of our llves but
headquarters
in
Washington
D.C
and
there
I
s no shame In sometimes
feeling as If something Isn't
quite
right. Seek help
,
and seek aware
-
ness because even
If
you are not
feeling depressed, someone close
to you may be and the only way you
can effectively help them
,
Is by
learning more about what alls them
becom
i
ng what is now
known as Active Minds,
Inc. in 2003. "Suicide is the
2nd
l
eading cause of death
for college students" With
sta
t
istics such
as
this, the
reality comes crashing
down. The need for aware
-
ness and a certain sense of
openness is absolutely nec-
come even the most non
confrontational tasks. We
all need to understand what these fee
l
ings mean,
where they come from, and how
to properly deal
with them.
With
this in mind, a student based menta
l
health
awareness group, called Active Minds, travels
nation wide to enlighten students at diffe
r
ent col
-
lege campuses. Their website states: "By planning
campus-wide events that promote awareness and
education, the group aims to remove the stigma
that surrourn;is mental illness and create a com-
fortable environment for open discussion of men-
tal health issues." Using st
i
rring slogans such
as
"Silence is Suffering", the intention to b
r
ing about
awareness and a shift in the way mental health is
dealt with is apparent.
In 2001 a
college senior,
Brian Ma:lrrtfflP,"~~
By
ALEXANDER TINGEY
Health Editor
KFC FOUOWS TREND, DROPS TRANS F
A1S
KFl ,mm,1.m~J
la.<it
wa:k to
the \ssoc1ated
l"rt!s:; that 11 \\ ould begm tn n.-mov\!
the use c.if
tmn..,
fall}
oils
ill 11.S
on •mal, extra cospy and
pot1to
"1,.,J
•c recipe.
I his
mme 1,; a n:sfk)nst to
the
national
M:rul111y of
trans
fut:i
in
h
igh
trallic
cooki11gan:.M
Kt.:ccn1ly, Nt'\\
Yt11k
Cit}
announu:d that
it
would cuffililfer harn1ing
-.ome trans
fat, "'"ithin
i.:cnam
ar(":1!.
of
th(
i.;1ty
KFC Prcsicknt lircgg
01..-'drick
s.iid there would
be
no ..:h;ing.:- an thi.:
1as1~
of the chickt.-n
and
01her
food item:;.
"TI1m:
i!I.
no
cc;impromise."
he ~id at
u \.1.mhallan no.:\\
!J
cvnforeoc.:-
"Noth
i
ng
is
more
1mpot1ant
to us than the quali~ of our food and
rrt5\..n111g the tc:rrific ta,;k• or our
prodm:t."
rcpork•dthc,\P
0111..• lti.·m
th.at
ha:i
nor
~
,mnounc1..-d
as part
of the clwngt-'S are the rc'-laumm's b1scuiL..;. These
v.111 still be
m,1Jc
\\Ith some trans
fat,
as
nt1
other
ol1m1athc
i'i curr~ntly available 10 s.ub.!-Titutc
Cum:ntl), dungcs arc only planned for the
Linncd Slates, a':. the
tnre,g.n
counterparts of the
restaurant
will
rttain lheir current
rix-ipt!>
lor
now,
Trnni
fob-
an: n.-spoos1blc fut the constquent
rise in "bad'' cl1l,lc-sterol and HDL
leH•I,;;
m the
Mood
11lli
rtlic
of
W'tt.:I')
clogging marerial
i.s
essary, not only to improve
lives, but to save them.
Co
l
lege is a time of expansion and growth; how-
ever a certain amount of introspection is a
l
so nec-
essary. Therefore, at some point we all must step
back from the world that will never cease to exist
and focus on nurturing ourselves so that we may
exist healthily within
it.
Active Minds has severa
l
events at different campuses,
and,
is hosting one in
Washington D.C. this weekend. By visiting their
website (www.activemindsoncampus.org) you
can read more about their philosophies and
motives.
Marist is particu
l
arly sensitive when it comes to
dealing with the wellness of body, mind and spir-
it. The counseling center here at Marist (ext 2152)
ii' free and comp
l
etely confidential. You can
mtnd .tndividual sessions or group sessions tQ
oue
~fthr.:
major causes ofhCctn diseasev.hich is
respon,1bf.c tor
30,000
deaths
annually.
TAI
NTED FOOD MAKES
HEADUNESMWN
Eighteen
!ltatcs hr.e reponcd over 11?
~,no-
oella infci.:1.i{)fl!'i
in
the
pa.,1
fc1A.'. ,.,eeks and
t~
n..'\:cnl
1.l!Jtbreak
is
puu
li
ng
offh:1als The out.
!,real
\A.'lU
likely ~--aused h) tuinted produce, ler-
hl\X:
or
lun111h-.c..>e;,
yet
no one br.md, restauranl or
suptm1arket
hb
bct.'t'I
pmpoint1:d
a..,
the $1."lurcc.
\'<l
· While no one ha.-. died
ofsalnn'Oclla
from Ul1j
1,.lt1lbre-<1k
ro date,
1t 1,;
still v.orrying
as
the E. i.:oli
outbreak
I
few \\eeks ugo
left
the cuunlr)' reeling
in swpri1;c
or
""har was on their plat~
"We're
VC'f)
cilrl) in the im estigation." stud
O.ive
Daigle. a .~po~c-.man for lhc
l
.S
Centers
for l>i!\ca~ Control and Pn=\ention f\.'f)Ortl..'-0
the
AP. "Mo:ol of the c::ises arc
in
adults,,
and l'llotc
1han 60
percent
are
\.,omen.
said
f>f.
Chris
ijraJcn •.
t
crx•
epick.-miolog.ist inv~li~a1ing the
tluth~sk."
S.-ihnonella
i!>
identifii.:d
by
t
in
: particu1ar strain
thm
alft."tl'i
a given pt,ipulalion.
I
n Mns~hu...etts,
the large"-l concentration of illness
occurred
a.,
tht
state reported more than 20 c ~ of the ilhu ....
~
Snlmonellil occun, naturally in soil wa:1er,
and
on some uf our mon:
i;ornmonl)
purcha:.ed food
item...,
ioch
,\!:io
egg.-. and
r.w,
poultry.
One problem
"ith
rhe
r~ent outbreak
1li
lhat the-
Strain of Sdlmonella being reported bone of the
most
com1111l0
dnd
often
ditlicuh to
1denti()'
strau1,-.
T1m, Ms caused the Centers for
Di,~
Contrul
in
\\ashmgton to
i~!-UC
an 1nve-:t1sation
mto 1h~ source and probable cause for the
111fec-
t1llrlS.
talk about w
h
ateve
r
is on your mind.
These are the times of our lives but there is no
shame in sometimes feeling as if something isn't
q
u
ite rig
ht.
Seek help, and seek awareness
because even if you are not feeling depressed,
so
m
eone close to you may be and the only way
you can effective
l
y help them, is by
l
earning more
about what a
i
ls them. Just like studying for a test,
or spending time with friends, we need to under-
stand that our minds are crucial to our well being
and the more open we are..abo.ut our feelings, the
better off we will be.
tStiol&h Healtt:i .sta1isllcs'
Lo
ca
ted
at
t
h
e
co
mer
o
f
Rt.
9
& Dela
fi
eld S
t.
ac
r
o
ss
from c
a
mpus
8
45-48
5-
71
7
2
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go
u
{ZV
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av
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,
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oth
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ng qu
i
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e it!
!
Let Us
D
e
l
iver it to y
o
ur
door
!
($20 Minimum Order)
Marist College Special
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www.marlsteJn;la.eom
THE CIRCLE •
THURSDAY
,
NOVEMBER
2, 2006
•
PAGE 7
Marist College Swimming an
Diving
vs
Rider University Swimming
and Divina
C"omtz eb,z,zr on your 1azd Fox,z1,
a1,
th1Zg
takrz
on th,zir biggtz~f riva/1, in thtz Mflt1C'I
'1Jatardag. novrzmbtzr
4th
at
t:00
PM
.MeC"ann /:latntoriam
BusinessWeek Magazine Names Enterprise Rent-A-Car
Among Top Five Places to Launch a Career
Recognition builds on company's strong rankings by
other
leading sources
-
Princeton Review, Collegegrad.com, and Diverse
:
Issues in Higher Education
ST
.
LOUIS, Oct. 31, 2006 -
Ready to graduate? Sure
.
Robe? Check
.
Course require-
ments? Check. Future? Uh oh.
Enterprise Rent-A-Car
,
North America's largest rental car
company,
has again been list-
ed as one of the best places college graduates and young professionals can turn to for
a promising career
.
The company recently earned the No. 5 spot on BusinessWeek's
inaugural list of "Best Places to Launch a Career
.
"
·
BusinessWeek used three sources of data
-
a
survey
of career services directors, a sur
-
vey of employers, and a student survey conducted by Universum Communications
,
a
market-research firm based in Philadelphia - to develop its rankings
.
"It's a great honor to be on the BusinessWeek list and we thank everyone involved for
supporting our business and employees," said Marie Artim, assistant vice president,
recruiting at Enterprise
.
"We
especially appreciate the fact that career services direc-
tors surveyed ranked Enterprise as the No. 1 employer for entry-level workers
.
"
Enterprise, which hires about 7,000 college graduates a year, has a well-developed
management training program that teaches employees how to run their own business-
es. In fact, nearty 100 percent of Enterprise's current senior management - including the
president and CEO - sta{led as management trainees, learning the ins and outs of the
business.
Enterprise • BusinessWeek
The company's management training program enables employees who work in the
rental car offices to learn how to manage profit-and-loss statements
,
control expenses
and implement a comprehensive business plan
-
a sort of MBA
crash
course
.
Within
nine to 12 months
,
managers in training are typically eligible for promotion and get the
opportunity to run part of the rental branch business as if it were their own
,
including
sharing in the profits they help create.
"At Enterprise, we instill a fun, exciting atmosphere
,
where employees are in charge of
their careers and set their own pace for career growth
,"
Artim said.
"Because
we strong-
ly encourage a promote-from-within philosophy, as individuals learn, they move rapidly
into branch management positions and beyond
,
typically becoming branch managers
within two to three years."
Other recent recognition for Enterprise includes being named the No. 1 entry-level
employer by CollegeGrad.com, being featured in the 2007 Princeton Review book as a
best company for entry-level jobs, and the No. 1 spot on Diverse
:
Issues in Higher
Education's list of ''Top 30 National Firms Most Effective at Diversity Recruiting."
For students looking for an internship, Enterprise offers spots for more than 1,500
interns a year. Fortune.com named Enterprise one of the
"Five
Best Internships for Real
Work" during the summer of 2006. Interns at Enterprise are involved in all aspects of
running the business and are given the responsibilities of a full-lime employee.
For more information about Enterprise or its management training program
,
students
should contact their career center or go to www.enterprise
.
com/careers.
About Enterprise Rent-A-Car
Enterprise Rent-A-Car operates more than 850,000 rental and fleet services vehicles
worldwide and has annual revenues of more than $9 billion
.
Last year, Enterprise
opened more than 400 new locations
,
increasing
its total locations to nearly 7
,
000
.
The
company operates more than 900
offices
in Canada
,
United Kingdom
,
Germany and
Ireland
.
Enterprise is currently number 16 on the Forbes
'500
Largest Private
Companies in America' list. For more information about Enterprise visit www
.
enter
-
prise.com.
lttl>NSTER
TACI>
10%
discount for
all Marist students
and emploJees
EVERYDAY!
Bring in this ad
and get a FREE
order of Chips
(valid
through
1
J
/20/
2006)
WE l>EllYER!
Burritos - Tacos - Nachos - Quesadillas
260 North Road, Poughkeepsie NY
Across
from Marist College
&
St. Francis Hospital
www
.
monster-taco
145.452.3375
THE CIRCLE
:
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER
2, 2006
www.maristctrcle.com
:
Comedian and animal activist Dan Piraro visits Marist
:6Y
KAITLYN ZAFONTE
:Staff Writer
.
'
'
How do you
incorpor
ate
humor
:into a serious
situation
that is far
;from
funny? And why
would
:you want to?
Comedian Dan
:Piraro asked himself these very
:
questions and provided the
answers to Marist students
;
Friday evening in the PAR.
I
Piraro, creator of the award-win-
!ning
syndicated newspaper car-
toon
Bizarro,
presented
"Cartoons,
Comedy,
and
,Compassion"
in an effort to shed
:light
on the
horrific abuses to
:
which
humans
subject animals.
The show was sponsored by
'
FoxP.A
.
W., Marist's own organi-
.za
tion
for animal welfare.
In
,
their endeavors to· aid and save
'
potential victims of factory farm-
:ing,
the president of FoxP.A. W.,
:
Robin Henderson, and
Piraro
:
met through the Woodstock
·
Farm Animal Sanctuary. Piraro
was asked to
speak
because he
shares the same vision as the
,
club.
The subject matter of the pres-
entation was indeed a serious
one. Every year in the United
States alone, billions of animals
are sent to
slaughter
hou
ses
when;
tliey
m bM•llt
killed
The majority of Americans are
not aware that their
seemingly
innocent dinner is
supporting
the
cruel industry that is factory
Ploln
Onion
Cinnmnon/lai;n
SHOlllt
8111tbtny
Poppy
SWI
dried
Tomolo
$di
E~g
PW11ptmlcktl
EvtfYlhlng
Fttnch Tomi
Whole~
E11"9Y
grain
GarAc
fanning. The Woodstock Fann
Animal Sanctuary rehabilitates
the animals that
are
fortunate
enough to escape slaughter. At
the farm, "food-production ani-
mals" such as cows, pigs,
turkeys, and sheep
are
provided
shelter and a peaceful living
environment. The sanctuary pro-
motes the fair treatment of
ani-
mals by allowing peop
l
e to visit
with the creatures that could
have ended up on their plates.
This is the issue on which Piraro
focuses: vegetarianism/veganism
and understanding that anima
l
s
deserve equal respect as humans.
Piraro, however, eased the
crowd into this topic with his
humor. One of the cartoons he
projected summed up the attitude
and message of most of his show.
It
featured a pig
s
itting
in a
re
staurant
and asking the human
waiter, "Can
I
substitute the pork
chop for a fried chunk of your
left
buttock?"
Amusing?
Absolutely. Yet it
ha
s
a
strong
underlying message. This car-
toon, along with many of his oth-
ers,
stresses
how humans have a
tendency to treat others with dis-
respect, but if our actions are
turned around it is viewed as
simply
appalling.
One of
Pinuo's favorite quotes is
,
'"humans
aren't the only
species
on earth-we just act like it."
However, it wasn't until five
years ago that he actually
IYtl.llfMI
PartcerAve.Poughk
5-6771
reached this epiphany.
Before that time, Piraro was a
meat eater.
He joked that if
someone
had
then
told him that
he would become a vegan and
an
animal rights activist, he would
have
"covered
them
in
barbeque
sauce and eaten them."
Like
most people claim, he was com-
passionate for animals, in the
sense that cats and dogs deserved
the love and respect of
humans
.
But this feeling was not extended
to those animals that are used for
food consumption. Piraro fol-
lowed this hypocritical belief
until
he
became aware of factory
fanning and then visited an ani-
mal
sanctuary.
Seeing the res-
cued animals made him realize
that they were no different from
the animals we keep as house-
hold pets.
Disgusted
that
his
money was fueling such a cruel
trade,
Piraro
underwent
a
lifestyle change. Out went all
animal products from his diet
and in went abused foster
ani-
mals
to
his home.
This may
seem
like a severe
transfonnation,
but
Piraro
exp
lained
that its many benefits
and rewards make it more than
worthwhile. He
started
incorpo-
rating animal rights cartoons into
his usual
repertoire
,
using
a sar-
castic and incredibly
witty
tone
to
express
his opinions.
It
is
extremely
difficult for people to
be told that a lifestyle choice of
UPlUUDAYI!
PS
$,.99
Ask
AMI
our
A111ln91retkfut
Spedi~
theirs is hypo-
critical, heart-
less,
and
unhealthy.
Because of this,
many are closed
off to the idea
of going vege-
tarian,
let
alone
vegan.
The
idea seems too
radical because
it so severely
conflicts with
what they have
b~n brought up
to
believe.
Therefore,
efforts to make
people aware of
these injustices
often go in one
ear and out the
other. After all,
isn't ignorance bliss?
Dan
Piraro, however,
s
hatt
ered
this
wall of ignorance and penetrated
into a new realm of understand~
ing
using
one the most persua-
sive
mediums: humor. He did
not berate people for eating
meat, but
he
did explain why it
would be beneficial
_to
alter their
actions.
"Peace
begins on your
pl
ate,"
declares
one drawing
.
If
we are
to become a more compassionate
society,
how can we allow these
injustices to animals continue?
Piraro concluded his presents-
COURTESY OF WWW.BIZARRO.COM
tion by urging the audience to
make their lives significant You
have the choice to make it more
than
simply "the
trash you leave
behind."
To
take a
step
in the
direct of animal compassion is to
add worth to your life.
And
that's no joke.
Dan Piraro S
cartoons
can be
viewed
on
his
website
Bizarro.com.
To learn more
about
lhe Woods1oclc Farm
Animal
Sanctuary
and
animal
welfare,
visit
WoodstockFAS.org
or email FoxP.A.
W.
at
maristfox-
pqw@gm,ail
.
co,r,.
You will go
'Crazy'
for
MCCTA's fall musical
By
ALEXANDRIA BRIM
Staff Writer
The Marist
Co
ll
ege
Council on
Theatre Arts (MCCTA) will
stage
its
fall
mu
sical "Crazy
for
You" from Nov.
3-5.
All per-
formances will be held in the
Nelly Galetti theatre.
Junior Risa Pedzewick is the
assistant director for the show.
"It's good. It's better as
a
lot
of
high schoo
l
s produce this show,"
she said. "We're doing it pretty
professionally."
Matthew Wolfe, a sophomore,
plays lead character Bobby
Child.
"He's
from a rich family,
a banker," Wolfe says of his
character. "His mother has
been
grooming him to take over the
family business but all he wants
to do is dance. She sends him out
to Nevada to foreclose on a piece
of property, which happens to be
a
theatre
owned by a beautifuJ
girl."
This action sets the play into
motion
as
he
arrives
in
Dead.rock,
Nevada.
Bobby
decides to help
resurrect
the the-
atre by impersonating a famous
producer. "It all blows up in his
face," Wolfe says. Bobby falls in
love with Polly, who doesn't
return it when she finds out
Bobby is the banker who will
close the theatre. Bobby tries to
win her heart as the town puts on
the show to save the theatre. Will
Bobby succeed in winning Polly
and will the show change
Deadrock's luck?
"Crazy
for Y~u" features songs
from Ira and George Gershwin
as well as a book by Ken
Ludwig. The
show
was inspired
by
an
earlier one by
Guy
Bolton
and Jack McGowan called
"Girl
Crazy,"
which opened in I 930.
The revised
show
by Ludwig
opened
in 1992
and won the
Tony Award for Best New
Musical that year. The musical
contains on of the Gershwins'
best known songs,
"I
Got
Rhythm."
The show is directed by Tom
Berger with George Croom as
musical
director.
The same pair
also worked on last year's pro-
duction of "The Rocky Horror
Show," which had a
sold-out
performance.
Junior
Mark
Heftier is producing the musical.
MattAngrisani, a junior, is part
of the ensemble for this show.
"I've
been
in MCCTA every year
since
I
came here," he said. 'The
musical is always the big pro-
duction and
it
is great to be a part
of one of the more
special
moments at Mari st."
''The
cast is so tight," Wolfe
added.
"I
am
a transfer student
and they made me feel we
l
come.
It's
an amazing cast and an
amazing show."
The musical continues
MCCTA's fall season which will
later perfonn the Experimental
Theatre Guild production of
"The Long Christmas Ride
Home" and the HuMarist Big
Show. Next semester, the organi-
zation
features
William
Shakespeare's "The Taming of
the Shrew" as well as the
Children Theatre
mounting
of
"Puss in Boots." The annual fes-
tival of one-act plays and staging
of "The Vagina Monologues"
will also occur next semester.
MCCTA is a student-nm organi-
zation that allows students from
all majors to work on different
aspects of theatre. These range
from to directing to backstage
(such
as props or costumes) to
designing on the different
shows.
Pedzewick continued on about
PAGES
Been there,
'Saw'
that
answers
that ques1ion
w11h
thc!ir latest
lease, "Saw Ill." After the
intredibl) successful sequd,
the Jigsa\\ killer is back
fo
his third
gruc!some set
o
games
this
Halloween.
Howe\'er, "ith his
health
compromis«!d
because
of can•
·er. the deadly games t.lke on
different twist and the
stakes arc c\-cn
higher
It's
uscle-.s
tn
review
the
.. Sa,...·· 'ieries in the
tradition
al
approach of this
column.
The
ai.:1m~
and cmc:matogra•
h)
are
medioi.:n:
at bc:,t
and
10t
worth Jiscussinc. "Saw
IIJ''
1:;
a.
tilm
that
nl~cd~ to
be
. ken for Whal II IS
a mm HJ
mean\ to ~tanlc
und
di'irurb.
and m
this cnntc>.t it docs
·cry
well.
''Sa"
Ill" deviate~
111
one
\\.ay Imm
il'-
prcdi:ci:ssors in
lhat
it !oiceks
to
bt:
mon:
ot
a
psychologi~al thriller.
ln
attc!mptmg
this, its
dialogue
~,.:ome~
ru:-.hc!d
in an ulti-
mate
~uitst
to
fulfill 1Lc.
sur-
prise ending which have
c..:omc a standard
to
the
"Sa"•· series.
The
Mood
lc\cl
1s
alwut on par with
most
other ·'Sa" .. 1ilm1; and
thi..-
1onurc
de\ ices ..:crtainly
show inlluencc from the
Spam.sh
Inquisition.
making
is a hohday for gore fans.
··sa\i.·
Ill'"
1s
not
a great
mo\ ic.
Don
·1
go to sec
it
expecting your mind to bt::
blov. n.
fhlt
lilm is fun to see
leading up to llallowccn
if
)'l\U \\
ant a
gooJ
~ream
but I
wouldn't
rccommc:nd
it
aftc
October 3 I st
J
U.'il
~teal yo
friends cup)'
att~r
1t
coml.-s
out on
UVD
I l l
the show. "It has good comedy,
good gags" she said.
"It's
funny.
It
is
not
just a dumb little musi-
cal."
"Crazy for You" has perform-
ances on Friday, Nov. 3 and
Saturday, Nov. 4 at 8 PM
as
well
as Sunday, Nov. 5 at 2 PM.
Ticket prices are $5 for students
and alumni and $12 for the gen-
eral public. Tickets can
be
pur-
chased at the door before each
performance as well as by call-
ing the MCCTA box office at
extension 3133. They can also
be
purchased
on line
at
www.mccta.com.
www.mart1telrcle.eom
TliE CIRCLE •
THURSDAY
,
NOVEMBER 2, 2006 •
PAGE 9
- - - - - - -
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. . _
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. . . . . .
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
... . , _ ,
_ _ _ _ _
_
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THE CIRCLE
Features
THURSDAY NOVEMBER
2, 2006
www.marlstclrcte.com
Time flies for Mari st seniors
Talk
of
future graduation festivities stirs excitement
By ANDREW GOSS
Circle Contributor
The Class of 2007 is in the
process of finishing their last
year in Poughkeepsie while
keeping an
eye
towards their
futures.
Senior
class president
Mary
Cornetta
has
been
far too
busy
to even
worry
about
what
life
in
the
"real world"
will be
like.
"My
senior
year
has
been great
so
far,
but also
stressfu
l
," she
said.
"I'm finishing up the last
of
my
courses
which
in
cludes cap-
ping and
that's
proving to
be
harder than I thought
,
but I
know
it
will
be worth
it in
the
end and
everything else
is
going smooth-
ly.'
Senior act
ivi
ties
are
already
in
the
process of
being planned
.
The
2
1
Society's event
is tenta-
tively
scheduled for
the
Saturday
before
Thanksgiving
break,
November
18.
It
will
include
wine
tasting
from around
the
world.
In
addition, Setiior Day
for members
of
the
Mari.st
band
will
take
place November 11 at
the final home football
game.
Senior week, even
though it is
in
May. is also already
in the
plan-
ning
stages.
The majority
of
the
senior activities, in fact, are
expected to take
place during the
spring.
As
the
end of
the month
approaches, seniors should
be
aware
of November 27 when
undergraduate
graduation appli-
cations for
the May
2007
Commencement Ceremony
arc
due. Marist
College's 60th
Commencement Ceremony is
sc
h
eduled
for
Saturday, May 20
on
the
Campus Green at
11
:00
a.m. Soon
after that
day,
many
of
the new
Marist alumni
will
ven-
ture out
into the
real world.
Senior Mark
Perugini,
who is a
member
of Lambda Pi Eta and
the
section
l
eader of the Marist
band
drum
lin
e, isn't
scared.
"Honestly,
I
am
not
nervous
abo
ut
the
real
wo
rl
d," he said.
"Yeah,
it
is scary
to know that
you
have to
be fully responsible.
But
one of the
most
important
people in my
life
once told me
that
you
have to
live life one day
at a time, and by doing this, you
will learn
more
about yourself
and you will become
more
of
an
ind
i
vidua
l.
You can only
plan
out
your
future to
a certain extent.
The
best thing is
to live life to
the
fullest and
unders1and
your
passion
for living. Once you
understand your
passion
for liv-
ing, then
you will
not
only piece
together your
life
but you will
also find success."
Maryellen Conway, the
P
r
esident of
the
Student Body, is
among 1hose
\\ho
"ill
be hc.id-
ing
directly
for grad schoo
l
after
graduating.
"I
will
be
finisl\ing up a tive-
Y""'
prou,ill\
here
at
,¥arist,"
she said.
"I
will be getting my
BA
in
psychology
and MA in
educationa
l
ps
yc
hology
by
December 2007.
In January
2007,
I will hopefully be
starting
the advanced certificate
program
for school psychology here.
Later on, I would
love
to go
to
Col
um
bia
University
or
Fordham
U
ni
versity
to
get
a PhD
in
school administralion."
Lives of
the
senior students
who wiU graduate
in
May will
take many different paths after-
wards but
nearly
all agree
that
the one four-year experience that
brought all of
their lives
together
was a
memorable
one.
Perugini
holds his time
at Marist in
high
regard.
"Marist
has
been the best expe-
rience of my
life,"
he said.
"It
has
opened my eyes
to
what
is
truly
beautiful in
life.
I
will miss
hang-
ing out with
the
guys and my fra-
ternity brothers until the early
morning
.
I
will miss sleeping
in
late
and starting my day at two
in
the afternoon. I will
miss the
philosophica
l
and social
talks
with
my
friends about
life,
the
future,
and
of course, the mys-
tery of
understanding
the oppo-
site sex. Most importantly,
I
will
miss the freedom, the freedom of
helping
out people at all hours of
the
day and the freedom of my
young adulthood.
1t
is
going
to
be
hard
knowing
that
I will
be
l
eaving my utopia and temporar-
ily departing from the people I
love. Marist will always
be
home, and
I will
absolutely miss
the people who have helped me
find
my
self."
By
MORGAN NEDERHOOD
Staff Writer
I
am a
bit cha
llen
ged v.hcn
ii
comes
10
avoiding
solici-
tors, strangers,
and es~ciJlly
people who are
trying
to
sell
me candy. After
growing tired
of lhc:sc awkward
and honibly
inconvenient occurrences.
I
developed
a !;)'Stem
for avoid-
ing
any
unwanted
auen1ion.
Pretend
you
don't
speak
Engl
i
sh. Ob\'iou:;1},
this
is
a
ri~ky
approach since
someone
could c.tll your blutf by
auempting
Lo
speak your
'nauve'
tongue. but
n's a
risk
worth t.1king
r
speak
French
at the lc\'el of a
toddler,
but I
am able
to avoid pet.lple by
mumhling
some ,ort of
French nonsense
as
J
hurry
by
However,
let's
be
realistic.
no
one
wonts
to
hear
about suc-
cess i;tories,
and
1
don't \\artt
10
tell
thc.'TT1.
ff
I
am
advocat•
ing somethi
n
g,
I might
as
well
proper!)
warn readers
of
the
risks.
So, kt's.
review
some
dnngers
ot the
faux-J· rend,
wor
ld
.
I\
couple of
11.ummef'3
ago.
1
worked
downtown in
a
store
that
was
next
to the coffee
shop. My
town
is
fairly smaJI,
and
1
grew
accustomed
to see-
ms.
familiar' faces.
@na 6\tch
familiar face was George.
Probably
in his mid sixth:s,
George
had
gigantic,
bushy
eyebrows that seemed large
pooH
E,£AR
.
·
··
·
· ·
.
Bur
J:T
APPEAi2.S
you
HAVE
A
J-1 E FFA
Lv/\11P
PAGE 10
column about nothing
French kisses and disses
enoug
h
to
be
their own
species
of
m
a
mmal
,
a
lazy
eye
that
would
snap
in and out
of
sync
with
the
good eye.
and
the most crooked
teeth I have
ever seen. George would
s
huf
-
n
e
in
to
my
sto
r
e
and
imm
edi-
ately
start
talking to me about
"those
damned
motorcyclists"
or
whatever random tangent
struck
his
fancy.
I never had
another
coworker to rescue
me,
so
I
was
forced
to
listen
to
hi~
rants wbile
I
wondered
i
f
hi~
eyebrows crea
t
e
d
visibility
issues for
him.
After
he ha-,
exhausted his
s
ubject
ol
the
day.
Geo
r
ge
would
shuffie
into
lhc
coffee shop to
haras
s
whatever
unfo
rtunate cus-
tomer
happened
10
be
in
th
e
~tore.
Eve
ntually
,
I
quit
my
j
ob
and
was
bli
ss
fully free
of
crazy
Gcurge -
or so
I
thought. My
mom
a
nd I
were in the coffee
shop
when she
struck
up
con-
versation
v.ith a
friend
of
he
rs
11
a
comer table. At that
moment.
I
heard George's
sig-
nature
VOICI!
behind me.
I
jumped onto a seat ot the
counter
nnd
thrust
my
nose
into
my
book.
George
must
have sensed my fear,
hecausc
be made a
bee-line
ti.,r my
scat.
As be lried
to
verbally
beat me to
death
with
his
senseless
rant-.,
I
decided thal
I
wouJd beat
tum
in
his
own
game.
With eyes wide,
I shook
my
head
said, "Jc ~uis
dcsol~. mais je ae par
l
e pas
anglais."
("tm
sorry, but I do
nol
speak
English.") True.
George
has
seen me before
and conversed
with me,
but he
talks to everyone
-
whether he
knoy,.~
them
or
not
- and he
is
seni
l
e
enough
to
not
remem-
ber
me.
As
I
soon found out,
George
was
not
as ..cnilc as I
had
thought.
George\ eyes
bulged
out as
he
immediately
called my
bluff
with,
"No,
I
know you,
you
wo
rk
next door." Damn.
Jn th
e
heaviest
French accent
I
could
manage,
1
explamed
that I was visiting: my
American cousin whom
I
hap-
pen to
clo!>cly
resemble.
Georgi: continued
to stare at
me like I
had
just g
r
own a
beard \,hile
I
fnmt1cally
tried
to co
lle
ct
the
s
h
ards that had
once been
my dignity. I
con-
lmucd to switch from broken
Engfo,h to French gibberish
until my
mom
walked by.
1
blurted
out some story where
my
mom
was my
American
aunt, and
I
practically
ran out
of the shop after my
mom.
When I
looked back.
C:cC'f~c
was
still
standing,
not speak ..
ing, just staring at
me,
A
month
later,
t
was in
the
coffee shop when George
managed
...
~
com~r
D"I<"
di
assumed
my
'American
cousin' identity and he actua
l
-
ly believed
me.
That
was
the
l~t l ever saw of George.
cartoon corner
by
Vinnie
Pagano
_ _
mari,tclrcle.com
THE CIRCLE • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2006 •
PAGE
1i
Seniors make good on senior day, beat Siena in finale
By GREG HRINYA
Staff
Writer
The Marist Red Foxes capped
off its season in dramatic fashion
as they beat MAAC rival Siena
I
-0
in
overtime on Friday night.
In a game that saw six seniors
finishing their athletic careers
here at Marist, the Red Foxes
willed their way past the second
seeded team in the MAAC.
Marist and Siena played to a
90-minute stalemate that saw
neither
team
score a goal, but in
the 96th minute, Red Fox senior,
Lauren
Dziedzic, buried the
game-winner for her first career
goal.
Dziedzic
capitalized on a mis-
ta1ce by Siena goalkeeper Patti
Carroll where she misplayed a
ball in front of her own net.
Marist coach Elizabeth Roper
said the team wanted to chal-
lenge Siena in the box because
they believed they could cash
in
on a
mistake
similar to the one
that won the game.
.. Their goalie
looked
a little
shaky and we talked at halftime
about trying to Put some pressure
on her," Roper said ...
The goalie
bobbled several balls and we
made the effort to challenge her
inside the
I
8
,
and Lauren
Dziedzic
took advantage of an
opportunity."
For Marist, goalkeepers Anna
Case and Caitlin Nazarechuk
combined for a five-save shutout
to cap a season in which both
goalkeepers were plagued by
injuries.
"We were unlucky because
both
of our keepers battled
injuries all season long," Roper
said. "We were also inconsistent
defensively which was surpris-
ing since we were so good defen-
sively
last
year, but we improved
offensively this season. Our goal
is to get more of a balance from
here
on out."
The win for Marist was a satis-
fying end to a frustrating season
where the Red Foxes had a
chance to win in almost every
game. It was even more fulfill-
ing that the team couJd give
its
six
s
eniors a proper send-off on
senior night.
"It
was a great testimony to the
s
e
niors
,
and we felt going in that
we could beat a very good Siena
team," Roper said. "We started
and finished the game with all
six seniors on the field
,
and they
played as a cohesive unit and
everyone contributed."
Despite losing some imponant
members of the team, the Red
Foxes will build on some key
players to carry this momentum
into next season.
"We have some players
like
Ashley Chase
,
Maria Baez,
Melanie Ondrejik
,
and Keri
Koegel returning who were
instrumental in shutting down
our opponents' best players,"
Roper said. "We have a strong
core returning. and we hope to
build on this in the off-season.
We showed a lot of motivation
and fight this year, and we want
to have that carry over."
The Red Foxes ended a frus-
trating season that saw Marist
finish at 5-12-l and 3-5-1 in the
MAAC.
"The season was frustrating
more than it waS disappointing
because we played very well
,
"
Roper said.
"We consistently
played four to five freshmen, and
that allowed them to gain some
good experience for their future
here at Mari st."
Second place finish to Iona a victory for men's cross country
By
DANIEL BARRACK
For the second consecutive
is to finish second, which would personal best time of 25:38.7.
With 12
members
selected to the
Staff Writer
year, and the fourth time ever,
be just as good as winning first
Stand-out
freshman
Conor team, Marist led all school
_
s,
The Marist men's cross country
team
finished runner up to
nationally-ranked Iona College
on Friday. The second place fin-
ish was its best in school
history
in the Metro Atlantic Athletic
Conference
(MAAC)
Championships. The Red Foxes
ended
the
day with a school
record low
52 points, but still fell
short of Iona who finished with
17
points on the afternoon. The
victory for Iona College was its
16th consecutive MAAC Cross
Country Championship.
Marist placed second behind the
place itsel["
Shelly finished ninth overall
earning three more spots than
goliath
of
the
MAAC
Not only did Marist finish sec-
with a time of25:46.
I.
Loyola who had nine. Genna
Conference. Going back to
1998,
Ond, but the school record time
If these names look familiar,
Segni was included in the
list
of
Marist has placed atop every
exceeded expectations.
these were the three runners that
runners to
b'e
selected, along
team besides lona in 2003, 2005,
The biggest contributor on Coach Colaizzo named as per-
with four sophomores
,
five jwi-
.
and now this season. After the
Friday was Marist's top runner haps the three best on the squad.
iors, and two seniors.
Junior
team's
record-setting perfonn-
all season, and the favorite to Along with the top three, senior Mike Rolek had the highest
ance on Friday, Marist goes into
win the Coaches Award at the captain Justin Harris finished
grade point average of all Marist
the NCAA Northeast Regional's
end of the season, sophomore
18th,
and senior captain Matt runners selected with a GPA of
on Nov.
11
ranked
13th
overall.
Germa Segni. Segni finished
Syzmaszek recorded a time of 3.86.
This performance is just what
fourth overall and was the only 26:47 .6
,
placing him in the top
Marist was hoping for. Coach
runner
in the top five that did not 20.
Peter Colaizzo stated
in
an
inter-
run
for Iona College.
view last week that "lona is
Fell ow sophomore David
equivalent to Duke Basketball. Raucci finished three spots
No
one
can touch them. Our goal
behind
Segni, and recorded a
Finishing second on
Friday h'ad no effect on the selec-
tion of
the
MAAC Men's Cross
Country All-Academic Team.
Coming off of an out-
standing performance
,
the Red
Foxe,s
look
to cany
its
momen-
tum
into
the Northeast Regional
Championships on Nov.
11.
Genovese and Rolon claim Flight A doubles championship at Cornell
By
NATE FIELDS
Hatisubroto
8-3.
er] Leo Rodriguez won, so I Smith said
,
adding that Algier nine teams there, some very
Staff Writer
Genovese and Rolon started
hopewearestartingatradition."
had been in Europe for several
strongteamslikeNavyandobvi-
their weekend by defeated
Marist's Frank Algier also
days last week.
ously Cornell."
After several weeks of disap-
Binghamton's Justin Salkin and
played
himself
into a champi-
Rolon and fellow senior Ray
He also reflected positively on
pointing
play, Red Fox tennis
Pierre
Clavel 8-5 on Friday, and
onship match, dominating in four Josephs both won their first the season, which winds up next
s
enio
rs
Pedr
o
G
e
n
o
v
e:s
e
an
d then
took
down teams from
Navy
cons.ecutive contests
during the round
fli
g
ht
A
"-in
g
\e
s
match{l
S
weekend
.
Federico Rolon proved last
and Cornell
.
8-5 and 8-2 respec-
first two days of the tournament.
Friday, winning
6-4,
6-3
,
and 6-
"It's been a good season
,
we
weekend why they are Marist's tively
.
Algier handily defeated oppo-
I,
6-4 resp"ectivel
y.
Both were seem to always have people in
top doubles team.
Coach Tim Smith was away
nents frOm Farleigh Dickinson
felled by the racquets of hosting the finals and semifinals
,
"
The pair claimed the Flight A
from the team to attend the birth and Temple on Frid3.y
,
and
Cornell on Saturday however
.
Josephs said.
Doubles champi6nsl"Up at the i>f his grandchild, but was ComeTI and·Cotgai@ oi'l'Saturd!Y,
AU60Ug6
'-
.YOSi:j:;h
S
Oiiln1 eiijOy
'the'"'
te'ain'
~ e w
Cornell Fall Indoor
Invitational
pleased with the results, nonethe-
before dropping the Flight C
the same success as his team-
Hampshire for
the Dartmouth
in
Ithaca,
defeating
the less.
finals 7-5, 7-6 (2) to Cornell's mates, he was however happy
Invitational next weekend in
University of Buffalo's Nikesh
"I
was happy that they won the
Bryant Yung on Sunday.
with h.is 1eammatcs
'
play.
what will
be
the final contest of
Singh
Panthlia
and
Yules
tournament,"
Smith said. "And
"
Frankie
doing that well in the
"
Overall, we had some good
the fall season for the Foxes.
,
last year Pedro and
[fom1er
play-
C division was very refreshing
,
"
results
,
" he said.
"
There were
Marist women's cross country beats out Manhattan in race for second place
By
RICH ARLEO
Bums. and Kerry Mannino
fin-
Coach Phil
Kelly
said that they
was just to run solid as a group
Staff Writer
ished
13th
14th and 15th respec-
all
did what they had to do.
and to edge out Manhattan for
The Mari st women's cross
country
team
beat
out
Manhattan College in the race
for second place on Friday at the
2006 MAAC Cross Country
Championship at Van Cortland
Park
in
the
Bronx.
Manhattan had placed three
runners ahead of Marist, ~ut
the
Red Foxes then had seven
run-
tively; with Domermuth and
"Sarah didn't have her greatest second place
,
and they succeed-
Bums finishing back to back at
race, but she did what she had to
ed
.
23:08 and Mannino finished
do." Kelly said. "A lot of the
Marist led the MAAC once
right behind them at 23: 10. All
girls
in
the back of the race did again with 11 MAAC All-
three were named AII-MAAC
particularly well.
"
Academic Team
s
elections
,
for their top-15 finishes.
Kelly went on to mention that something Coach Kelly referred
Juniors Caitlin Garrity and junior Christine Snyder, who to
as,
"
busines
s
as usual..
.
over
Christine Wahl finished out the
had
been strugiling
lately
,
came the last
10
to 12 years, the guys
scoring for Marist
,
finishing
up with a nice individual per-
and the women hav
e
won [this
23rd and 24th with times of formance on Friday.
honor] more than any other
23:51 and 23:53, respectively.
Marist was able to pull outthe school.
"
ners cross the
line
before The top five women for Marist second place finish, which was
The team is now looking for-
Manhattan's fourth and fifth run-
all set personal bests at Van
its goal heading into the race
ward to its next meet - the
ners finished to seal second
Cortland Park for the 6K, along knowing that Iona was the
Northeast
Regional.
Coach
place.
with six other Marist runners.
favorite, and they were basically
Kelly had much to say on how
Sarah Domermuth, Brittany
Commenting on each
individ-
untouchable.
According
to
he felt headin
g
into the regional.
ual
runner's
performances
,
Kelly, their strategy going in
"
We'd love to come in the top
20 ... we'II
have
to run really
well," Kelly said. "Running in a
pack won't cut
it.
We need one
person, or two people, in the top
20
or 40. Our goal
is
to have a
few girls over l 00 and a few
girls Wlder l00.
"
Coach Kelly went on to say
that the Northeast Region is
extremely tough, so they have
set reasonable goals, and he has
confidence that his group can
perform reasonably well given
the circumstances.
The Northeast Regional Cross
Country Qualifier will take
place at
10
a.m. on Sat.,
November 11.
a ...... '5-...:as...,.--42e>c>
- ■ ca
.,..e>'T"
a . & ,
. .
e
-
-- ----·-
----
--
-·
-w-
Roarin'
Red Foxes
Mari st\ mak and
female
star performer
for the weekend uf
Oct. 27
-
30.
Girnia Scgni
X-Countl)
,
Sophom,,re
Sophomm
·
e-
G
im
i;.
1 SC"gni
\\a.,
fourth overall "-"d the
only runner m the
race
tu
break up Iona'!! lop-5 run-
nt:rs in th
e
MAAC
Champion~h1ps. He hdpcd
Marist to its
IO\\l.!''it
point
total (52) at the
MAAl
Champion,hip in school
historJ.
On the
horizon:
The Red f
·
o-
.
c \
\
ill com
•
pde in
the
'Nl .\A
f\onhc3
s
1 Re
g
i
o
n
a
l
l)O
'Sa1.,
Nov. 11. nnd
conclude
the
year
with
the
IL\\ \A
Champion,h1ps
on Sat.
No\, 18.
Lauren Dzied,ic
Women's Soccer, Sr,
Mans1 senior l
a
uren
J>1ied11c 1appt>J
home
the
garnc-~\.\
mncr
m ,,,
erumc
f
rida) to lead the Red
Foxes
'
\.\Un11:n'.., socl.'cr
s4u.id to a I
..
o
ll\
ertirnc
,1ctory
on S
e
mor
:--Jig.ht
at
Lconiduff l"icld
On the llori,on:
This \\
ill
h1.: the
I.ht
game
played
on
gra~
s
at
this
complc>...
Next )i;ar
the
nc" Lc0111d\)ffficld "ill be·
completed "nh
I
1eld
turf.
*
Photos c.·our1e~~
,
of
l\W".gorcdfol.C',.l'Om
Upcoming Schedule:
Football: Saturday, Nov. 4 - at Georgetown, I p.m.
Men's and Women's Swimming and Diving: Saturday,
Nov. 4 - vs. Rider, I p.m.
THURSDAY,
NOVEMBER 2,
2006
www.ma,lstclrcle.com
PAGE1.2
Red Fox offensive triumphs over downpour and Peacocks
By
BRIAN LOEW
Staff
Writer
Wind and rain could not stifle a
spectacular offensive perform-
ance with a dominating show
by
junior running back Adam
Hansen as he helped to carry the
Marist Red Foxes to a 35-18 vic-
tory against the St. Peter's
Peacocks on Saturday evening at
Leonidofffield.
Hansen tied a Marist school
record for touchdowns in a single
game with four, helping Marist
record its highest yard-produc-
tion game of the year
with
406
offensive yards. The Red Foxes
improved to 3-6 overall and 2-1
in the Metro Atlantic Athletic
Conference (MAAC). St. Peter's
fell to 1-7 overall and 0-2 in the
MAAC.
The Marist special teams unit
wasted no time in setting the
tone
for the game. On the opening
kickoff, the Peacocks were only
able to return the ball to the 14-
yard
line
before freshmen O
'
Neil
Anderson caused a fumble that
was
recovered
by senior Dan
Peckham
.
The Marist offense capitalized
on the turnover as Hansen's first
of four touchdowns came at the
12: 14 mark in the first quarter
with a I-yard plunge, putting
Marist on top Nl
.
Seven more points would come
for the Red Fbxes j\lSt before the
end of the quarter. With
I
:31 left
in the quarter, Hansen tacked on
his second
I
-yard score of the
game completing the 10-play
,
49-yard drive that began with an
interception by sophomore Paul
Rabito, making it 14-0 Marist.
Shortly into the second quarter,
St. Peter's quarterback Scott
Bonnono capped off a 70-yard
march down the field with a
l
0-
yard floater to Jaleel Kindell
with 12:32 remaining in the half.
After a blocked extra-point kick,
the Peacocks trailed Marist 14-6.
Just under
four
minutes later
,
Marist answered back with
an
80-yard drive topped off by
Hansen's third I-yard touchdown
run
at 8:42 left in the half, cush-
ioning Marist's lead 21-6.
On St. Peters' next drive with
5:39 remaining in the half,
Bonnono found Kindell once
more for a 12-yard touchdown
pass cutting Marist's
lead
to
nine. A failed two-point con¥er-
sion pass by Bonnono made the
score 21-12 in favor of Marist.
Just before the end of the half,
Hansen added his fourth score of
the game with a 2-yard rush with
2:39 left on the clock. Junior
kicker Bradley Rowe's extra
point sailed through the uprights
making the score 28-12 Marist at
!he half.
With 4:19 left in the third quar-
ter, Marist drove in for its final
touchdown of the game. Senior
running back Frankie Farrington
dove in for a 3-yard touchdown
run making it 35-12
.
Marist.
Farrington's score capped off an
I I
•play, 92-yard drive that began
with a 50-yard pass
from
junior
quarterback Steve McGrath to
senior wide receiver Prince
Prempeh. McGrath finished the
day completing 13 passes for 265
yards through the air.
Bonnono and the Peacocks
offense had one final score with
a 13-yard desperation pass to
wide receiver
John
Bond with
2:51 left in the game making the
final score 35-18 Marist.
The biggest story of the day
was the
Red
Fox offense. With
over 400 total yards
,
Marist
Head Coach Jim Parady said that
the week's focus on fundamen-
tals made all the difference.
"Going into the game we went
back to the fundamentals and the
real basics and concentrated on
those, and I
think
that paid off for
us," Parady said. "We executed
our game plan well and we won
our individual match-ups, and
that is something that in the last
few weeks we've had trouble
doing."
Hansen agreed with the coach
saying that the offense worked
very well together as a unit to get
lhc
viciory.
"Offensively we had great
blocking from the offensive
line," Hansen said. "People real-
ly stepped it up and made some
great plays that got us down on
the goal line numerous ·times.
From there
I
was just able to
punch it in and get us on the
scoreboard."
Hansen said that coming out
with the win was the result -of a
great overall team effort that
never gave up.
"As
a team, everyone just kept
pushing, and we were able to get
the job done."
Although the offense was dom-
inating, Coach Parady said that
the Marist defense also played a
key role in Saturday's victory.
Although they gave up 417 yards
to the Peacock's offense, keeping
the Peacocks out of the end zone
was crucial.
"Even
though
we bent
.
a little
bit, we did not break," Parady
said. "We had two great goal line
stands that changed the course of
the game, We stood up when it
was time to down in the red zone,
and
I
think that those were two
key points in the game. The big
thing was that we kept them off
the scoreboard."
Marist goes head to head
against another Patriot league
opponent this weekend as they
make the trek .down to the
nr.tion's capital to take on the 1-7
Georgetown Hoya'J Saturday
afternoon at 12:30
pm.
Coach
Parady said that the team feels
Fairfield snaps Marist's four-game
win
streak, Foxes fall to 6-8 in MAAC play
By
DREW
BUDD
Staff Writer
Strength is a word that' can be
used to describe many things.
Using it to describe Fairfield's vol-
leyball team could be deemed suf-
ficient.
The Fairfield Stags came
to
the
McCann Center Saturday with a
vengeance to get their 13th straight
win and stay undefeated in the
Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference
(MAAC). They got it in convinc-
ing fashion beating Marist in three
straight sets.
In the first game, Fairfield never
relinquished
the lead
having
runs
of six and eight points. They would
go on to win 30-13.
Early in game two, Marist took a
1-0
lead
on a kill by Sally Hanson.
The Stags however would tie it at
one point apiece and never look
back. They went on runs of six and
five points and would win the
out of posi1ion.
Coach Hanna
believed it was the play of Fairfield
that made it appear that way.
"They were exploiting spots," he
said.
The Red Foxes put together a
strong come back and went on their
first real run of the day with six
straight points and took the lead
11-8 before Fairfield head coach
Jeff Wemeke called a timeout.
After the timeout, Fairfield came
out and went on an eight-point run
to take the lead 17-11.
Marist
fought well throughout the game
but fell by a score of 30-24.
One key stat
the
Red Foxes could
blame for their demise was the 19
unforced hitting errors they had
throughout the match.
Coach
Hanna felt the offense was lacking
all day.
"Our blocking assignment was
OK, our passing went well, but
it
was our offense that just didn't do
well today," he said.
"We also had the 19
game 30-13 as well.
Fairfield from the beginning of unforced
hitting
wann-ups to the end of the match
errors. You cut
that
in
had great intensity. Marist
head
half, that's nine points
coach Tom Hanna felt that his team
right there that could
lacked
that same intensity from the go either way and real-
beginning of the first game.
ly change the momen-
"I felt that we played very flat
tum
either way for
from the beginning," he said. "We either team."
need to come out and play with a
Christy Lukes
led
higher level of intensity."
the Red Fox offense
Game
three
was a bit different with
nine
kills.
than the first two. The score was
Stephanie Miksch had
tied four different times throughout
eight digs while Sally
the game and there were two
lead
Hanson had four aces.
changes, a stat that was vacant in
Dawn Jan had 23
the first two
games.
assists.
For the first three points of the
Lindsey
Lee
had 15
before this loss to Fairfield. They
had just beaten Rider 3-1 the previ-
ous night. With the Joss, they
fall
to
6.,8
in MAAC play
,
8-15 overall.
·
Coach Hanna believes
long
streaks in volleyball are a big part
,
inside and outside, of the game.
"They're a huge part of the
game," he said. "Whether it's a
streak inside the match or whatev-
er
amount of games you've won
beforehand, it gives you nice
momentum."
Fairfield has not lost a game
since September
16
and is now on
a 13-game winning streak. They
beat the Iona Gaels 3-0 last
Thursday. The Stags are so hot
right now they have not lost a sin-
gle game since October 8. The last
game they lost was against Siena,
but they eventually won the match
3-1. Fairfield improved to 13-0 in
the MAAC and is
16-6
overall.
confident going into the contest,
but knows Georgetown will be a
tough opponent.
"I think the guys have confi-
dence coming off of a good vic-
tory, and I know that we want to
make sure that we're focusing on
this game," Parady said. "We
know that Georgetown has
played a tough schedule, and that
they've played a lot of close
games, so we know it's going to
be
a good challenge for us down
there."
Hansen had
a
career
day
against
St Peter's
scoring four toucnoowns
on
greet
blocklna; from
his
offensive
llne.
Martst
had
406
total
yards.
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game, both Marist and Fairfield
kills to lead the Stags.
went back and forth with the lead
Brandi Higa had nine
until Fairfield was able to put digs and Katie Mann
together a six.point run and take
had
three aces. Barbie
the
lead
7-2.
Thistle
led
the floor
At points throughout the day it
appeared that the Red Foxes were
back on their heels and maybe even
with 34assists.
R
T 9 Hyde Park
(845)229-9900
open
7days
Marist was on a
four-Senior
Stephanie
Mlksch had eight
digs In
the loss
game winning streak to the
Stags
and Manst had Its four-game winning
streak
snapped
ln CT
on
Saturday
afternoon.
:
Iraq war top issue for voters
By
J
A
MffMARCO
N
I
whic
h
the war is spoken abou
t
H
owever, he,
t
oo, ment
i
oned
th
at
Ne
w
s
E
dit
o
r
and descr
i
bed have clo
u
ded the
I
r
aq
will
play an
i
mp
o
rtant
r
ole
entire issue, some students sai
d
.
i
n bo
t
h
the congressional and
If
there is one word that the
"It
confuses me," said fresh-
preside,ntia
l
elections.
While
Marist community associates man Paige Matetich. "The war Carey said he believes that
with
American politics, it's Iraq.
in lraq goes back so much fur-
America should get the job done
More
than
three years after U.S.
therthan 9/11-ifl don't have all
in Iraq, he predicted that
troops invaded the Middle the facts, I'm not going to choose whichever side wins the e
l
ection
Eastern country, the continued
a side."
is
"going
to stay in lraq, with
military
efforts there consti-
,
troop reductions, defi
n
ite
l
y."
tute a major issue for the
The war In I
r
aq goes back so much
While the war
r
emains
a
u
p
coming
congressional
further than 9
/
11-
If
I don
'
t have all
key issue among some vot-
elections,
according
to
the facts
,
I
'
m not going to choose a
ers, this e
l
ection is incredi-
some.
side
'
bly im
p
ortant to a
u
aspects
The war is important to
of U.S. policy because votes
English professor Donald
_
Pa
ige
M
a
t
e
li
c
h
~ several key states
co~d
Anderson because "from a
F
res
hm
a
n
tip the
b
alance of power
in
practical
standpoint,
it
Congress,
accordi
n
g
to
shouldn't have happened."
- - - - - - - - - - - - -
MIPO
Director
Lee
He said that it was
i
ll conceived
Frshman Emily Wiepe
l
agreed,
Miringoff.
and mismanaged from the begin-
adding that she doesn't think the
The ou
t
come of T
u
esday's
ning, "cost
i
ng American lives,
whole story is
being
presented to
e
l
ections will serve to
"s
h
ape the
Iraqi
lives,
and
lots
of the public at large, which makes
relationship with the Bus
h
resources."
it very difficult to support one
adm
i
nistratio
n
for the next two
That perceived misha
n
dling,
viewpoint.
years,"
Miringoff
said.
Anderson said, may well fore-
"I
never really followed poli-
According to him, the hype con-
s
h
adow a sh
i
ft in one or both
tics (closely]," though, she said.
ceming the midtenn elections
h
ouses of Congress to
a
"It
never rea
ll
y interested me.
will also set the tone for the
2008
Democratic majority.
Even in
Though he said he plans to vote
elections. "[It will
be)
a presi
-
the Bush White House, he said
in the congressional election by dentia
l
elect
i
on where there
will
an ideological ,hift is
"already
absentee
ballot,
freshman be no presidential or vice presi•
starting to happen. The vocabu-
Richard Carey said he is already
dential incumbent run
nin
g for
lary about the war
h
as shifted in
looking to the presidential cycle the first time since
1952," which
the administration - they're no
in 2008. Right now he said that could cause frantic races for the
longer a
ll
owed to say that
we he sees Senators
John
McCain,
presidential 5id,
lie said.
will
'stay the course.'"
Hillary Clinton,
and
Barak
Changes
in
the manner
in
Obama as likely candidates.
Marist Poll gears up for midterm elections
By
JAMES MARCONI
News
E
ditor
As congressiona
l
candidates
draw closer to the judgment of
E
l
ection Day on Nov. 7, the
Marist
Institute
of Public
Opinion is gearing up in prepara-
t
i
on for collecting and analyzing
the resu
l
ts, according to Director
Lee Mir
in
goff.
Throughout an e
l
ection cycle,
particularly the week before the
vote takes place, the
"pace
picks
up," M
ir
ingoff said.
"We've
been
polli
n
g - actually, we had a
huge story last week on the
A
l
an
Hevesi controversy ... at four
[in
the afternoon] Elliot Spitzer
wi
t
hdrew e
n
dorsement of Alan
Hevesi - at five we were revis-
ing the (po
ll
ing] questionnaire.
That's about as real time as you
get."
The state comptroller race is
not the only pre-election polls
conducted by MIPO. The insti-
tute plans to release results
regardi
n
g the senatorial race in
New York on Friday, and is cur-
rently con
d
ucting polls on the
race in New Je
r
sey between
incumbent, Robert Menendez
and challenger Tom Kean, Jr.
This, according to po
ll
ing
assistan
t
Danielle Cauchi, can
make things "a little hectic"
around the office and polli
n
g
area.
"It's rea
ll
y important that we
get a certain amount of respo
n
s
-
es," Cauc
h
i said. After all, she
said, there is a huge i
n
terest by
the outs
i
de wor
l
d in the work
be
i
ng genera
t
ed by
M
I
PO.
''When l'm in the office,
I
get a
SEE MIPO
,
PAGE 9
Some M
a
rlst
a
broad
st
uden
ts
pose
for
a
photo
I
n Frankfurt, G
er
man
y
du
rf
ng the spr
i
ng 2005 semester
.
THE CIRCLE
845-57 5-3000
e
xt
,
2429
wr
l
tethec
i
rcl
e@g
ma
ll.c
om
3399 North Road
Pou
g
hk
eep
sie
,
NY
1
2
60
1
FEATURES: TIME FLIES FOR MARIST SENIORS
W
h
a
t
the fu
t
u
r
e has i
n
store for soon-to-gra
d
uate Ma
ri
st
st
u
dents; things to do, activities
to
enjoy.
P
A
GE 6
M
I
PO
chief balances
polling with student needs
By
JAMES MARCONI
sJ.ow
duy·)
the informal lunch
News Editor
(unforL·rH:e
was
busine s a:t
u ual
.1long the mad \·hringo j11 -~ .
though, that shifting rcccptiCln
mnkt:s c\ en
cell phon~
prob-
lematic. at times.
··1
kno""
c\-CI)
!i:pot
on
the
Taconi..:
\\hen
I ha\'c ro ralk
fost,"" said
Miringoff
"In
the
had
70nCS you Jri\-c
rcall)
fo.,t.
IO
the goods zoni:-:-.
)OU
dri\-e
really
slowly."
The
8\lctngi.;
speed. he said. jusl about match-
es the -.pt.-cd I
11ml
Dc-.pih: frequent \ isio;, to
the
city, \tiringoff said 1hat h1$ role
a!> a
tcai.:hcr is
of
the
utmos1
importance.
\\-'hell he
talh
about hi!! studenL'i
and
the Y.ork
the) do
in
clrt'>5
and m MIPO a
kind
of .,.,annlh creeps mto
hi~
, ui1,e,
.and his eyes seem to
bng.hten. He
is
\/CT)'
quu.:k
to
,;ay
thal MlPO "" . a1 its humble
beginnings in
197~.
a
!ttltdcn
generated idea
''Tl
"as a
course
m
,otmg
hchnv1or. and a !tudcnt suggest-
c-J
th.at
\.\C
do
a
poll,"'
\iiuingo
sud. The clas aimed
to
do
v.it
poll$
of
Duchi:s,., Count)
\-olers
after
a
l\'Cal
elccuon,
'"'One
hun
drcd students 1hat day fanned
all
O\
<.:r
the
count).
unJ we did a
hand
;mal)-,,s
1.lf
die results.
Due
ltl lhe large
numhcr
of par-
t1cipant<, mtcr\lC-\\
ed_
Mirin~o
noted
that hb ~tudcnl$' r1.:sult
wen: parl1cularh accurate.
for some
lunch nour
i:. .1
tune
lo
n:chafE:e,
relax. and distance
1hcm~eh~s froru the
5lJC's~~
of
thl." day
For
~1IPO
Director Dr
Lee
Minngoff, it' an oppon.uni
~
to
gc..1
polling
operation~ set
tied.
fhough
tht:) ah:, JOkl."d.
and
IJugh ..
>d
like- others m 1he
workplace,
~-hnnion
ond ht
collea¥UCS
abo prcpnrcd
f1.11
1he
int1...'1lsc
f,;w
\h'fks
prccc"ding the
,·,mgre
!.Ion.al
m1d1cm1 ela:11011
Tl
rcs'I
b
hi
lof}.
ID Maris
Poll
\'as
one of
.1
handful
11.J
th
ou
I
n hecnm
mvoh·ed m
11111te
and
thc-n
nauonal
elecuon~
Sm..:c th ..
-n.
M1ringoff
described bim..-.clf and
MIPO
a
perpctuall) bus).
\1IP~~--
:~~;:ias:\!.:~:ti;c;~~
~:i·~~h~!~a\~~ :.~~~1ccr-and-a-
Public Opinion.
is
u-.ed
nauon-
llride h)
the media,
poli11c1ans.
and
the
public
ai
largi:.
Often.
Mirin~ofT
said. he find~ himsdf
lnl\'Clin~ to .
1
C'\\
York City lt
\\ork \\1th iinchors from
Channel
4 cuhc:r for
a
:-hon
sound
btl or
in
inh:n
1...-,,
regarding the- latest
polling duta
Comms alh.:r a d.1~ alrcad\
pep[X.-rcd wnh
tnll'T\
ie" phone
calls. and
thl."
l"l(;caimmal studeut
ad\.is .. ·e (\\hat \fmngoff e11llcd a
t't>r uch tnps .. there
1
:st1ll
11
nccJ to
Ix
111
lrequ1.n1
C<IOtad
"1th hi.-. colleagues to
act
a
steady
str1...~J111 of inform:mon
lnlm \,ork winch cell phone
m.,1,,.,c rar ea,:,.;r 1h.m
r11
top
Students
and
o,;tall 11ov. in an
l.•UI
of
his
oftice ,,., ith questions
and
concerns,
.md
hand-
scrawkiJ
~hecu
of paper detail
phone i::alls
10
be- made and
luturc acl1\11les ol MIPO to
coordinutcd. \Vhcn it's bus). h
remarked th.ir he might hnvc- to
do
25
mk'tv1c...,s
over
thr: phon~
hen
Miringofrs
profo.;"wna
l
hut imcnscl) pc anal offit.:e
;pa,.;e mirrur; lus Yworkdo)
800115, mosth \\ 11h
poli1ic:d
SEE MIRINOOff
,
PAGE 9
Abroad program encourages more applicants
By
MARION
HERBERT
Staff
Wr
iter
The Marist Abroad Program
puzzled stude
n
ts when it was
announced that spots were still
vacant for the Spr
i
ng
2007
semester, over a month past their
posted due date for app
l
icat
i
ons
that was September 15.
The real
i
ty is that this is not a
desperate attempt by the Marist
Abroad P
r
ogra
m
to fill up spots,
but an effort to allow more stu-
dents
to exper
i
ence goi
n
g
abroad.
Typically, the Marist
Ab
r
oad Program sends 125
stu-
dents overseas each
semeste
r
.
For the Sp
r
ing
2007
semester,
they were gra
n
ted addi
t
ional
20-
25
slots,
but few took them up on
the offer.
"It's unfortunate that we could-
n
't get mo
r
e app
l
icants," said
Ou
l
eep
Deosthale,
Ph.D.,
Assistant Dean of Jntemational
P
r
ograms. "I think it was the
fact that it was announced so late
that more people didn't jump at
the opportunity. They need time
to think about it over the summer
and many don't have the flex
i
bi
l
-
ity to juggle
courses."
The application process can
discourage
students,
as sustain-
ing ioterest throughout the sea of
paperwork is often the most dif-
ficult part.
"I think the ha
r
dest part for me
was filling out all the forms.
There was a lot of running
aro
u
nd to do," said Lea
n
ne
Cipolla, a
sophomore
at
·Marist
traveling to Italy next
semeste
r
.
A&E: COMEDIAN AND ANIMAL ACTIVIST DAN
PIRARO
VISITS MARIST
How P
i
raro uses humor
t
o illustra
t
e the gross h
u
ma
n
abuses towa
r
ds a
n
ima
l
s.
PA
GE
S
Deost
h
ale descr
i
bed the
process as "a mi
n
i application to
Marist all over agai
n
."
There
is-
an essay to write, letters of rec-
ommendation, copies of your
transcript, and other legal forms
that must filter into the Ab
r
oad
Office in a t
i
mely man
n
er.
Students described the finan-
cial aid factor as a
n
other sourct
of stress. Students can receive
financial aid through the FAFSI!:
-
and Financial Aid Office as
if
they were li\ling here on campus,
I
n
addition, they receive a cosi
sheet, which provides the break"
down of addit
i
onal expenses of
l
iving abroad.
It
dis
pl
ays what
ij
included and what is not inc
l
ud•
ed.
The cost of studyi
n
g abroad
SEEABROAO
,
PAGE 9
us
.
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER
2, 2006
www.mat1stclrcle.com
PAGE2
Security Briefs
Residents of
Foy Townhouse
A fail Grilled
Upcoming
Campus
Events
Cheese 101,
Forced to repeat next semester
Thursda).
ov.
2
Graduate School Forum
3-6
p.m.
Cabard
By
ANDREW MDLL
;
Leader
in
homeland 10/25
security
When sitting down to
do this week's security
briefs, l thought "Hey,
why
not do a Halloween
theme?!" Then I remem-
bered a
couple things;
One:
By
the
time
this goes
out to the public, it'll be
two days past Halloween,
so
it
would kind of outdat-
ed, making me look out of
the loop, when we all
know ('m incredibly hip
and in tune with popular
society. Two: As we all
learned last week, I'm not
the best when
it
comes to
...
writing creatively, so try-
ing to work in a theme
may not
be the best idea in
the world. So get ready
for another
set
of generic
and predictable security
briefs!
10125. 3:04
A.M.
erer
An unauthorized guest
attempted to gain entrance
in10 Leo Hall using a stu•
dent's ID card.
No such
luck,
as the guest was
asked to leave the campus.
Come on, buddy. This is
the country that requires
you have to 37 forms of
identification
and
to
undergo. a
full body cavity
search just to board a
transfer
flight
from
Albany
to
Pittsburgh.
What makes you
think
you
can just sneak into Leo
Friggin Hall? Consider it
a lesson learned: Don't
mess with Marist Security.
Security
received
an
anonymous
call
saying
that there was a strong
odor of marijuana coming
from the Fulton
7
area.
And Marist sent out its top
drug enforcers from SNAP
to
do
the
job.
They
brought along thcit trusty
sidekick, SNAPper, the
anti-drug dog, who uses
his keen sense of smell to
weed out(Gct it? "Weed''
out?! HA!) the pot heads
here at Marist. SNAP,per
was able to track down the
apartment, and
a
small
amount of marijuana was
confiscated. Another job
well done for SNAPper
and the gang.
I
0/26
Cr
In the North End park•
ing lot, a student reported
a theft from their car.
Apparently, they left their
drivers
side
door
unlocked, and their tem-
porary parking ticket was
stolen. This came after
they had been given a
ticket from security for
parking or something. Not
gonna lie,
I kind of forgot
exactly
what John Gildard
said,
so I'm going to just
end this one here before
I
say something stupid, or
go on
a
rant
about the way
parking is handled here.
Because the way parking
is handled here ain't the
best of ways. That's all
Marc
1s
I'm going to say on the
matter.
10/27 •
1:42
P.M.
Cr
A fire alarm was set off
in Townhouse A due to a
burnt cheese sandwich.
Right.
I don't even know
what to say.
10/27 • 10:20
A.M.
c,c,c,
Mkay.
In
Lower
West
Cedar some windows were
seen
smeared
with
ketchup, jelly, and choco-
late. How or why they got
there,
I'm
not exactly
sure.
I
mean,
it
does sound
a little kinky, but still, on
the window?
10128 · 12:37
A.M.
c,c,c,
An intoxicated student
was found in front of
Gregory after an apparent-
ly
entertaining
Friday
night.
I wasn't told the
name of the young stu-
dent, but sources close to
me tell me that the stu•
dent's name is Andrew
Russell, and that he was
on the
-ground
screaming,
"I'm
not an animal,
I am a
man!!"
10/28
erer
While a student was
sleeping
in their Gartland
residence, some attempted
And Debbie Formerly of Making
Faces
Have
Joined the Rest of the Returning
·
stam
Look for the following products
...
Redken
TiGi
Goldwell
Mizani
Paul Mitchell
FREE
Consoltation
on all
lBJm!'
~
Weaves
& Extensions
Farouk
Hair
Weaving
c.u
,., .,.,..,,., •• ,., • r.u, •. ,.,, ,,,,,,, .... •
ou.,
L,
.. ., ••
264 NORTH RD.,
POUGHKEEPSIE
454-9239
Jul,-,, All•ll-, •
0,,,Wl<•
11•.
l'r.-h IIHf'll•I •
II••
1t•O
IHI/ •
F,u
l'-t,-.
to
enter
their
house
through the unlocked front
door,
although
nothing
was found stolen. What's
the
point
of Cntering
someone else's place
if
you aren't going to take
anything? Are
you
just
there to admire the
home
furnishings?
Are
you
Michael Lowell? Just take
something!
A
lamp,
some
jewelry, a cookie, any-
thing!
Make
your
trip
worthwhile, at least.
I
0129
c,c,c,c,
Another fire alarm went
off in Townhouse A,
this
time due to an inability to
sear a roast. According to
my files(and by files,
I
mean my
spiral
notebook
J
jot my notes down in that
I
spilled Mountain Dew on
last semester) this
is
the
fourth time this semester
that there has been a fire
alarm
incident
at
Townhouse
A,
including
two
in this week alone.
That's not good, people.
Why are you
searing
it
Burnt
so
up. I
hope some•
body can tell me why
we're bringing
in so many
new students when at
lea
st
have of them are a threat
to burn down the campus
because of a toast inci-
dent.
I
0/30 • 7:30
P.M.
erer
There was a fire alarm
set
off in Champagnat,
too. No, not because of
burnt food.
It was due to a
fog machine, set
up
for a
Halloween party. Sounds
more like a Prince video
from the Eighty's to me.
But Prince
is
cool. So
I
have no problem with this.
A strobe light would have
completed
the effect, but
also turned
it into a rave.
And that means bad techno
music,
which
is,
of
course,
an
oxymoron
because all techno music
is
bad. Stick with the
Purple One. He'll lead 1he
way.
genius-o-meter:
C,
anyway?
E v e r y b o d y ~ - - - - - - - - ~
knows that searing results
~::c~=~';,,e;~/':; !::~ri':,./;~t
in a greater net loss of
pr01ec1ed
free speech under lhe
moisture versus cooking
Fit!il
A"'endment
of
the
to the same internal tern-
Constitutio,i.
perature
without
first
searing. This is common~;:::;::;;;::;;;;::;:::;:;::::;:::;::::;-;:
knowledge.
,ay
tO IS
yea
StOp
10
/30
· 3;00
P.M.
Cr
A Gartland fire alarm
went off, because of burnt
food.
The
culprit
this
time? Soup. That's right.
Spring
Break destinations!
Best
deals guaranleed! Highest rep rom•
missions. ~sit m.slslravel.rom or
call
1-800-648-4849.
Greal rou discounls.
Friday,
No,.
3
&
Saturda),
Nov. 4
.. T"alladega , ights: 1 he
Ballad
of Ricky
Bobhy ..
IOp.m.
Perforrmng
Arts
Room
Saturda)·.
·o,.
4
Curling
tnp
orfolk Curling
Club m
Conncclicut
Bus
lea,
es Midrisc at
noon
5
l\londn),
:\o,. 6
Eddie Daniels
"One
!'\fan·, Story
of Apartheid"'
l'.!:30 p.tn.
Wednesda),
Nov.
8
Communication Arts
Society
General
Meeting
9:15
p.m
SC room
349
DON'T
MISS Il!ISl
Wednesda),
Nov. 8
Kai Parsons
sing..:r song\.Hih.:1
P.\R
9p.tn
\\ednesda}, Nov, 8
Grad
School.
Scholarship, &
\ssistant,hips
Panel
12:30 I -15
LI
20
THE
CIRCLE
Christine Rochelle
Opinion Editor
Alexander Tingey
Health Editor
James
Rellly
Photography Editor
Ralph
Rienzo
Advertising Manager
Kate Giglio
Editor in Chief
Margeaux
Lippman
Managing Editor
Andy
Alongi
Sports Co-Editor
Eric
Zedalls
Sports Co-Editor
Isabel CaJulls
Features Editor
G. Modele Clarke
Faculty Advisor
James
Marconi
News Editor
Jessica
Bapr
A&E Editor
Sarah Shoemaker
Copy Editor
Chelsea Murray
Distribution Manager
The Circle
is the weekly student newspaper of Manst 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
staff can
be
reached at
575-3000 x2429 or letters to the editor can be
sent to wrltethecircle@gmail.com.
The
Circle can also
be
viewed on its web site.
www.manstcircle.com.
www.marlslclrcle.com
From Page
1
Midterm
elections could 'set
the
stage' for 2008 race
lot
of calls
from the media about
what's going on ... I think that
everyone is
very
interested
in ... the elections."
Questioning hundreds of
peo-
ple takes a certain amount of tact
and talent, according to
Cauchi.
Good
interviewers need to be,
first and foremost, enthusiastic
about
the job,
she
said.
Confidence also
is
a must,
as
well as neutrality
-
keeping the
pollster's personal beliefs com-
pletely
separate
from intervie-
wees. It can also be hard, at
times, to deal with the
variety
of
personalities
that
may
be
encountered.
Some,
Cauchi
said, are timid and thus hard to
keep on the line long
enough
to
complete a
survey.
Others are
the diametric opposite,
people
who
are "really
passionate"
about their political
views
and
will continue talking
on
the
phone
for
far longer than the
average survey should
run.
Especially in the weeks preced-
ing an
election,
interviewees
seem
more eager to ex.press their
political views.
So
there
is a
need for
a fairly
large
pool
of student workers
manning
the
phones.
On
Halloween,
"It
looks like
we
should
have
between
35
and
40
[pollsters] and that's actually
a
little light,"
said
Project Director
Meghann
Crawford. Typically,
she said, the number ranges from
50 to 60.
"They'll
be [working
from] 5:15 p.m. to 10:00 p.m."
Despite the
sometimes
frantic
pace, Miringoff said that every-
thing was going
along smoothly.
"It's multitasking," he
said.
"We're
doing the
New York
poll,
getting
ready for the
New
Jersey
polls, and
staying
in
tough with
what
'
s going
on [in the political
world]."
And despite long hours
and
hundreds
of
potential
surveys
to
complete, the job has
its
rewards,
said Cauchi.
The
fact
that
students
have
a
hand
in
something so widely
distributed
and used by the media
and
politicians is
a very gratifying
experience.
Seeing a
Marist poll
on
the
news
"definitely gives you a
sense
of accomplishment,"
Cauchi said.
From Page4
Elections in October
-ance for diversity between
many countries we influence.
It is also
widely
known,
well
documented
in
print, and
undisputed by the president
,
that
government subsidiaries
Miringoff
maintains dual
role as
teacher, pollster
titles,
fill
a quarter
of the left
wall. Right
nex.t to the bookshelf
lay
neat
stacks of
cassette tapes,
each
of
a television interview.
The inner doorknob is nearly
invisible
belleath
a collection of
press passes from
various
politi-
cal and
journalistic
conferences.
He probably wouldn't want it
any other
way. Politics
in gener-
al
has
always
been a part of his
life.
"I grew
up in a house
where
politics and current events were
discussed
daily,'' Miringoff said.
Since becoming a teacher at
Marist
in
1975, he has further
indulged and developed that con-
nection.
"I
like election day the best.
It's hard,
it's
physically demand-
ing, but
it's
a lot
of
fun. Thenex.t
best
thing [about my job) is the
idea
of
connecting people.
It
[MIPO] is
sort
of plugging
stu-
dents
into the whole
ex.perience,
which
is the biggest ongoing
positive."
A
balancing
act
between the
worlds of
teaching and profes-
sional
polling might seem
impossible, but
"they're
not
as
distinct
as
they
appear,"
Miringoff
said. "I
bring up
some
of
the
same people
that I
would
like Halliburton and KBR are
becoming immensely
wealthy
from our
presence
in
Iraq.
Halliburton,
a corporation
be meeting
in the polling world
[to class]." Many of his students
end up working as interns and
then employees of these media
figures. Eventually, some for-
mer students come back to
class
to teach the next generation,
completing the
cycle.
And that, according to
Miringoff, is
what
he and MIPO
are all about.
It is
a
very gratify-
ing experience, he said,
to
see
students succeed in such a con-
crete, tangible
way.
Theory
taught in a classroom is fine, but
actually doing
a poll and
seeing
the
results
on television, well.
tliat's something special. "Since
1978 when we started, it has
been a student education project;
the education has always been
what's paramount."
He placed his phone back in its
cradle and began typing up
a
midtenn exam.
that has
received
billions of
government dollars in "no
bid" contracts, happens to be
the vecy
same
corporati0n
THE CIRCLE •
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2006 •
PAGE
3
Marist Abroad looks to provide
foreign experience for all students
varies depending on the stu-
dent's program and destination.
It
includes
the credits they're
earning abroad, tuition, hous-
ing, insurance, some site visits,
and legal
aspects
that must be
covered.
"Each program is not a car-
bon copy of each other, as they
each respond to the cultural
components of each country,"
said Deosthale.
Deosthale agrees
that some
programs cost less than others
or even the regular tuition of a
semester
here at Marist, in
which case that particular pro-
gram will incorporate other
benefits, such as site visits of
that country.
Air fare is one charge
that
is
the responsibility of the stu-
dent.
"Air
fare is not included
in the abroad fee and I believe
that
it
shouJd
be or at least
some
of
it,"
said
Melissa
Harrington, a Marist
juni
or
currently
studying
in Ireland.
''However, there are some trav•
cling
costs included in the pro-
gram
fee. My program includ-
ed two three night field
trips
with
everyo
ne
in the program
that
was
all
inclusive.
that Vice President
Cheney
was CEO
of
from 1995 to
2000. These are
facts;
they
are not denied by those
However, we stayed in four-
star hotels, which was definite-
ly a nice perk at the time, but
I
would have rather stayed
in a
less expensive hotel and have
had some
of my flight paid for
instead."
Excluding the cost of living,
such as meals and travel
expenses while abroad, the
price is approx.imately the
same as a semester at Marist.
"It's worth the obstacles,"
said
Deosthale.
"My
dream is
to have every
student
go
abroad.
I
don't know
if
that
wil1 happen, but one can
dream. It's an incredible expe-
rience."
Any students that want to
leap at the opportunity to go
abroad still have the chance.
Students who go to the Marist
Abroad office within the next
week can begin the application
process and
see
if they're eligi•
ble for the Spring 2007 semes-
ter: and experience this for
themselves.
involved. And perhaps these
are the
sorts
of things we
ought
to bear in mind as we
go
to the polls.
"7INTER SESSION
O
O
T
GET AHEAD.
EARN 3 CREDITS
I N
DAYS.
WWW.MARIST.EDU/WINTER
~ARIST
THE CIRCLE
o-~~inion
Le
t the voices
of the Maris
t
comm
unity be
h
ear
d.
1111111111
. . _ ,
THURSDAY
,
NOVEMBER 2
,
2006
www
.
marlst
c
lrcle.com
PAGE4
October deaths in Iraq could affect results of election
By
DANIEL BLACK
Staff Writer
N
o
vem
ber
7 ap
pr
oaches, and
(hopefull
y
)
so
t
oo
th
e de
mi
se of
man
y
p
o
lit
ic
al
ca
r
ee
r
s
in
Wa
s
hington
D
.
C.
Ju
s
t
e
i
g
h
t
da
ys
befor
e
thi
s
l
ong awa
it
e
d
opportuni
ty
t
o o
ust
a
l
arge frag-
m
e
nt
of
arguabl
y
th
e
m
os
t d
es
p
i
-
ca
bl
e, s
elf-
se
rvin
g party from
public offi
ce,
the hundredth
U.
S
.
se
rvi
ce
m
a
n
's
d
e
ath
fo
r t
he
month
of
Octo
b
e
r
was
announ
ce
d b
y
th
e U.S. military.
Oct
o
b
er,
I beli
eve
it
h
as
b
ee
n
repo
rte
d
, ra
nk
s as o
n
e of
th
e
d
ea
dli
es
t month
s of t
h
e 44
m
on
th
-o
ld
ca
mp
a
i
gn, an fron
fa
c
t th
a
t
e
r
a
di
ca
t
es a
n
y
tru
th
o
r
m
ean
in
g fro
m th
e
h
ogwas
h
r
h
et-
ori
c o
f"
fi
n
a
l thr
oes of
th
e
in
s
u
r-
ge
n
cy
"
o
r "m
ajo
r
com
b
at ope
r
a-
ti
o
n
s
h
ave e
nd
e
d
".
It
makes
very
difficult th
e acce
pt
a
n
ce of
o
ur
gove
rnm
e
nt
's
i
ns
tru
ct
i
o
n
s
like ''
stay t
h
e co
u
rse," whic
h
s
u
gges
t
s
blind
acce
pt
ance of
gove
rnm
e
nt
be
ha
v
i
o
r
simp
l
y
be
ca
u
se
th
a
t
's w
h
at we
'
ve do
n
e
in th
e past.
With th
e arriva
l
of
Nove
m
ber 7, 's
ta
ying
th
e co
u
rse'
gove
rnm
ent officia
l
s (h
i
mse
lf
becomes an opt
i
o
n
, a choice
t
o
i
n
clu
d
ed) from facing justice.
be
d
ec
id
e
d
by
th
e
p
eo
pl
e,
and
as
This Act is tru
l
y mortifying for a
a
r
esult,
th
e congressmen whose cou
pl
e of si
m
ple reasons, a
n
power
i
s threa
t
ene
d
a
r
e attack
in
g a
ppr
ec
i
a
t
ion of which req
ui
res a
one another
ru
t
hl
ess
l
y an
d
li
tt
l
e backg
r
ound know
l
edge the
President Bush recently passed the "MIiitary
Commissions Act" -a harmless sounding title- which
allows him to Interpret the Geneva Conventions as
he pleases
.
s
h
ame
l
essly.
I
h
ave
r
e
m
ove
d
m
ysel
f
from
th
ese
r
e
p
re
h
e
n
s
ibl
e
fee
din
g fre
n
z
i
es beca
u
se, as
wi
th
mos
t
vot
i
ng seaso
n
s, s
l
ande
r
is
in abu
n
dance
bu
t t
ru
th
i
s in short
su
p
ply.
Le
t u
s bea
r
some facts
in m
i
n
d,
as the
li
be
l
campaigns an
d
ch
il
d-
i
sh m
u
.
d
fig
h
ts of po
l
i
ti
c
i
ans an
d
pote
nti
al po
li
ticia
n
s do
n
'
t
seem
to have any w
i
s
d
om to
b
e
g
l
eaned. Presi
d
e
nt
Bush rece
nt
-
ly
passed
t
h
e
"M
ilit
ary
Co
m
miss
i
ons Act" -a
h
a
nnl
ess
sou
n
d
in
g t
i
tle- w
hi
c
h
a
ll
ows
h
i
m
to
in
te
rpr
et
t
h
e
Ge
n
eva
Convent
i
o
n
s as he p
l
eases and
insu
l
ates
in
tellige
n
ce age
n
ts and
Gen~va Conventio
n
s
th
e
m
selves
an
d
th
eir
hi
s
t
ory.
I
n t
he wake of World War II,
jus
t
a coup
l
e of years afte
r
the
ato
m
ic bomb
,
a who
l
e bunch of
developed cou
n
tries gathe
r
ed
i
n
Sw
it
zerla
n
d with the common
i
n
t
erest
of preventing the
H
oloca
u
st
from
recurre
n
ce.
They
h
ad basically dec
i
ded that
the Holocaust was some
t
hing
very, very bad and
n
obody wa
n
t
-
ed to see history repeat itself.
They convened a series of mee
t
-
i
ngs, the substa
n
ce of w
h
ic
h l
ed
to the draft
in
g of suc
h
docu-
ments
as
the
Geneva
Convent
i
ons and the Unive
r
sal
LEITERS TO
THE EDITOR POLICY:
The Clrcle
welcomes letters from Marist students
,
faculty and
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 telephone number
or campus extension for verification purposes.
Letters without these requirements will not
be
published
.
Letters can be dropped off at
The Circle
office or submitted
through the
'
Letter Submission
'
link on MarlstC/rcle.com
THE CIRC
L
E
ttl>DfWJ'I~
Dec
l
a
r
at
i
on o
f H
u
m
an Rig
h
ts.
It
stra
t
eg
i
es
,
as em
b
raced by many
ly worse than
t
he ratio of Fre
n
ch
is
i
mpo
rtant
to re
m
e
m
be
r th
a
t
of those co
n
gressmen u
p
fo
r
c
iti
zens w
h
o co
n
si
d
e
r
e
d the
the sole, si
n
g
l
e,
l
o
n
e
l
y
purpo
se
ree
l
ect
i
o
n
, i
n
figh
tin
g our German Ges
t
apo an occ
up
y
in
g
of
h
o
ldin
g
th
ese
m
ee
tin
gs
a
n
d
"Glo
bal
Wa
r
o
n T
e
rr
o
r
"
t
h
e r
est fo
r
ce as o
p
posed
t
o a
li
be
r
at
in
g
writ
in
g
t
hese doc
um
ents was of t
h
e wo
rl
d c
ri
nges. This asse
r-
force at the he
i
ght of
th
e
Thir
d
co
nt
emp
t
fo
r th
e act
i
ons of the
li
on
-
a
ll
eg
in
g
th
a
t Bu
sh's foreign
Reich's power. Once aga
i
n,
w
e
Nazis an
d
a conce
it
ed atte
m
pt to
po
l
icy is com
p
arable
t
o that of are me
r
ely examin
in
g facts; we
lay
th
ose so
rt
s of atroci
ti
es t
o
Hitl
er's-is ext
r
e
m
e
l
y s
h
arp, w
ill
are u
n
i
n
te
r
es
t
ed
in
e
m
p
l
oy
i
ng
r
est in
t
he pages of
h
uman h
i
sto-
p
r
oba
b
ly
be
rejected by
m
any
im
mature tac
ti
cs of fact-
di
s
t
or
-
ry for a
ll
time.
peop
l
e o
n
acco
unt
,
b
u
t i
t is nev-
t
i
on as
u
sed by co
rrup
t
p
o
l
i
t
i
-
When any po
lit
ica
l l
eade
r
, of erthe
l
ess
p
ure
l
y fact
u
a
l.
c
i
ans and
m
edia
p
u
ndi
ts.
any co
un
try, es
t
a
bl
is
h
es p
r
oce-
Fo
r th
e
di
sm
i
ss
i
ve fo
l
~
I
invite
If
o
ur
representati
on
's arribi-
dures that fla
tl
y disregard a
n
d you to co
n
s
id
e
r th
e crumb
l
ing tions ha
d
a thing
t
o do wi
th m
a
k-
o
p
en
l
y
d
e
n
ounce the gu
i
de
l
ines p
ubli
c o
pini
o
n
of the I
r
aqi c
i
ti
-
ing the world
a
safer place
,
they
of
those
same
Ge
n
eva zens
th
emse
l
ves, who have to
mi
gh
t d
o well to pay so
m
e atte
n
-
Co
n
ve
nti
o
n
s
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
t
i
o
n
to how
th
e
(as Pres
;
de
nt
October,
I
believe It has been reported, ranks as one of
w o r
I
d ' s
Bus
h
h
as
the deadliest months of the 44-month-old campaign
,
an
responde
d
to
done, n
u
mer-
th
e "G
l
o
b
a
l
War
ous
,;
mes),
Iron fact that eradicates any truth or meaning from the
o
n
Te
rr
o
r"
.
It
;s
everyo
n
e else
hogwash rhetoric of "final throes of the Insurgency" or
we
ll k
nown
th
a
t
in t
h
e wo
rl
d
"major combat operations.
"
Bush's war in
cringes
and
I
r
aq has wo
r
ked
fee
l
s chi
ll
s u
p
won
d
e
r
s
for
an
d
down t
h
eir sp
in
es because
they, like those adm
i
rable gen
-
tl
eman
w
h
o
w
r
ote
th
e
Co
n
ve
n
t
i
ons
,
d
esire
t
o see the
H
o
l
ocaust exist on
l
y in
h
is
t
ory
tex
t
books and
mu
se
um
s where it
be
l
o
n
gs.
Beca
u
se of Bus
h
's
li
ve with
th
e daily p
r
ese
n
ce of
foreign troops in t
h
eir own. T
h
e
r
at
i
o of
Ir
aq
i
s who co
n
si
d
er the
U.S.
M
i
li
tary to
be
a
n
occupy
i
ng
force to
t
hose w
h
o co
n
side
r i
t a
li
bera
tin
g force was recently
assesse
d
at 12:
I.
This is actual-
S
c
hool of Managemen1
S<hod
ctNcn~omt NI\\ h Hdrfm< N-o,lt
recru
i
ting in
in
te
rn
a
ti
o
n
a
l t
e
rr
o
r
-
ist organizations, caused dec
lin
e
in
the world's percep
ti
o
n
of o
ur
co
u
ntry -co
n
s
i
dered by some
t
o
be i
rr
epa
r
ab
l
e, a
nd
ca
u
se
d
a
w
i
desp
r
ead brea
k
down betwee
n
intercu
l
tura
l
stability and tole
r
-
SEEELECTION
,
PAGE 3
MarlstClrcle.com
Vi::U
WWW.Ul1i0111jtl:!dW1e((,jlege.e.tl
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Mcrh1 (cJleg,i
GRADUATE
&
PROFESSIONAL
SCHOOL FAIR
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is published weekly on Thursdays during the
school year. Press run Is 2,000 copies distributed through-
out the Marist campus
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Opinions expressed In articles do not necessarily repre-
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!onColloilot
tlireO!tr
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tldl!n1 b.autnern
..
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-.marlstelrcle.eom
TI-IE CIRCLE •
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2. 2006 •
PAGE 5
ONE MAN'S STORY
OF APARTHEID
A Conversation
with Eddie
Daniels
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 2006
12:30 PM
PERFORMING ARTS ROOM
SPONSORED BY:
THE
GILLESPIE FORUM
PI SIGMA ALPHA
POLITICAL
SCIENCE DEPARTMENT
MARIST INTERNATIONAL PROGRAMS
Marfst International Programs
I
845.575.3330
I
www.marfst.edu/fnternational
I
internatlonal@marist.edu
H
ealth
THUR
S
D
AY, NOVEMB
ER
2, 2006
www.marfstci
r
cle.co
m
PAGE 6
Act
i
ve Minds gives voice to
s
ilent suffering
By
B
RITTANY FIO
R
ENZA
C
i
rcle Staff
In a communal setting, especially a college cam-
pus, mental health is a vital issue and is defined as
a state of emotional and psycho
l
ogical well-being
in which an individual is able to use his or her
cognitive and emotional capab
i
lities, function in
society, and meet the ordinary demands of every-
m
i
tted suicide after suffering from mental health
disorders, later diagnosed as schizoaffective dis-
order, as well as depression and psychosis, for
three years. The devas
t
at
i
on of his death mot
i
vat-
ed his younger sis
t
er, Alison, to start a program
that would give college students
an
outlet to VQice
their distress and to deal with it effect
i
vely to pre-
vent suicide. Her program ge
n
erated so many fol-
l
owers that it sprea
d
throug
h
out her
campus
and
others before fanning a
day life. As college stu-
dents we are constantly
bombarded with all aspects
of life, heavy class loads,
stress, and relationships.
Additionally, we face the
need to reflect and focus on
ourselves. At some point in
our lives, we will all feel
overwhelmed, extremely
saddened, or lost. These
feelings have the ability to
weigh on our minds and to
hinde
r
our ability to over-
These are the times of our llves but
headquarters
in
Washington
D.C
and
there
I
s no shame In sometimes
feeling as If something Isn't
quite
right. Seek help
,
and seek aware
-
ness because even
If
you are not
feeling depressed, someone close
to you may be and the only way you
can effectively help them
,
Is by
learning more about what alls them
becom
i
ng what is now
known as Active Minds,
Inc. in 2003. "Suicide is the
2nd
l
eading cause of death
for college students" With
sta
t
istics such
as
this, the
reality comes crashing
down. The need for aware
-
ness and a certain sense of
openness is absolutely nec-
come even the most non
confrontational tasks. We
all need to understand what these fee
l
ings mean,
where they come from, and how
to properly deal
with them.
With
this in mind, a student based menta
l
health
awareness group, called Active Minds, travels
nation wide to enlighten students at diffe
r
ent col
-
lege campuses. Their website states: "By planning
campus-wide events that promote awareness and
education, the group aims to remove the stigma
that surrourn;is mental illness and create a com-
fortable environment for open discussion of men-
tal health issues." Using st
i
rring slogans such
as
"Silence is Suffering", the intention to b
r
ing about
awareness and a shift in the way mental health is
dealt with is apparent.
In 2001 a
college senior,
Brian Ma:lrrtfflP,"~~
By
ALEXANDER TINGEY
Health Editor
KFC FOUOWS TREND, DROPS TRANS F
A1S
KFl ,mm,1.m~J
la.<it
wa:k to
the \ssoc1ated
l"rt!s:; that 11 \\ ould begm tn n.-mov\!
the use c.if
tmn..,
fall}
oils
ill 11.S
on •mal, extra cospy and
pot1to
"1,.,J
•c recipe.
I his
mme 1,; a n:sfk)nst to
the
national
M:rul111y of
trans
fut:i
in
h
igh
trallic
cooki11gan:.M
Kt.:ccn1ly, Nt'\\
Yt11k
Cit}
announu:d that
it
would cuffililfer harn1ing
-.ome trans
fat, "'"ithin
i.:cnam
ar(":1!.
of
th(
i.;1ty
KFC Prcsicknt lircgg
01..-'drick
s.iid there would
be
no ..:h;ing.:- an thi.:
1as1~
of the chickt.-n
and
01her
food item:;.
"TI1m:
i!I.
no
cc;impromise."
he ~id at
u \.1.mhallan no.:\\
!J
cvnforeoc.:-
"Noth
i
ng
is
more
1mpot1ant
to us than the quali~ of our food and
rrt5\..n111g the tc:rrific ta,;k• or our
prodm:t."
rcpork•dthc,\P
0111..• lti.·m
th.at
ha:i
nor
~
,mnounc1..-d
as part
of the clwngt-'S are the rc'-laumm's b1scuiL..;. These
v.111 still be
m,1Jc
\\Ith some trans
fat,
as
nt1
other
ol1m1athc
i'i curr~ntly available 10 s.ub.!-Titutc
Cum:ntl), dungcs arc only planned for the
Linncd Slates, a':. the
tnre,g.n
counterparts of the
restaurant
will
rttain lheir current
rix-ipt!>
lor
now,
Trnni
fob-
an: n.-spoos1blc fut the constquent
rise in "bad'' cl1l,lc-sterol and HDL
leH•I,;;
m the
Mood
11lli
rtlic
of
W'tt.:I')
clogging marerial
i.s
essary, not only to improve
lives, but to save them.
Co
l
lege is a time of expansion and growth; how-
ever a certain amount of introspection is a
l
so nec-
essary. Therefore, at some point we all must step
back from the world that will never cease to exist
and focus on nurturing ourselves so that we may
exist healthily within
it.
Active Minds has severa
l
events at different campuses,
and,
is hosting one in
Washington D.C. this weekend. By visiting their
website (www.activemindsoncampus.org) you
can read more about their philosophies and
motives.
Marist is particu
l
arly sensitive when it comes to
dealing with the wellness of body, mind and spir-
it. The counseling center here at Marist (ext 2152)
ii' free and comp
l
etely confidential. You can
mtnd .tndividual sessions or group sessions tQ
oue
~fthr.:
major causes ofhCctn diseasev.hich is
respon,1bf.c tor
30,000
deaths
annually.
TAI
NTED FOOD MAKES
HEADUNESMWN
Eighteen
!ltatcs hr.e reponcd over 11?
~,no-
oella infci.:1.i{)fl!'i
in
the
pa.,1
fc1A.'. ,.,eeks and
t~
n..'\:cnl
1.l!Jtbreak
is
puu
li
ng
offh:1als The out.
!,real
\A.'lU
likely ~--aused h) tuinted produce, ler-
hl\X:
or
lun111h-.c..>e;,
yet
no one br.md, restauranl or
suptm1arket
hb
bct.'t'I
pmpoint1:d
a..,
the $1."lurcc.
\'<l
· While no one ha.-. died
ofsalnn'Oclla
from Ul1j
1,.lt1lbre-<1k
ro date,
1t 1,;
still v.orrying
as
the E. i.:oli
outbreak
I
few \\eeks ugo
left
the cuunlr)' reeling
in swpri1;c
or
""har was on their plat~
"We're
VC'f)
cilrl) in the im estigation." stud
O.ive
Daigle. a .~po~c-.man for lhc
l
.S
Centers
for l>i!\ca~ Control and Pn=\ention f\.'f)Ortl..'-0
the
AP. "Mo:ol of the c::ises arc
in
adults,,
and l'llotc
1han 60
percent
are
\.,omen.
said
f>f.
Chris
ijraJcn •.
t
crx•
epick.-miolog.ist inv~li~a1ing the
tluth~sk."
S.-ihnonella
i!>
identifii.:d
by
t
in
: particu1ar strain
thm
alft."tl'i
a given pt,ipulalion.
I
n Mns~hu...etts,
the large"-l concentration of illness
occurred
a.,
tht
state reported more than 20 c ~ of the ilhu ....
~
Snlmonellil occun, naturally in soil wa:1er,
and
on some uf our mon:
i;ornmonl)
purcha:.ed food
item...,
ioch
,\!:io
egg.-. and
r.w,
poultry.
One problem
"ith
rhe
r~ent outbreak
1li
lhat the-
Strain of Sdlmonella being reported bone of the
most
com1111l0
dnd
often
ditlicuh to
1denti()'
strau1,-.
T1m, Ms caused the Centers for
Di,~
Contrul
in
\\ashmgton to
i~!-UC
an 1nve-:t1sation
mto 1h~ source and probable cause for the
111fec-
t1llrlS.
talk about w
h
ateve
r
is on your mind.
These are the times of our lives but there is no
shame in sometimes feeling as if something isn't
q
u
ite rig
ht.
Seek help, and seek awareness
because even if you are not feeling depressed,
so
m
eone close to you may be and the only way
you can effective
l
y help them, is by
l
earning more
about what a
i
ls them. Just like studying for a test,
or spending time with friends, we need to under-
stand that our minds are crucial to our well being
and the more open we are..abo.ut our feelings, the
better off we will be.
tStiol&h Healtt:i .sta1isllcs'
Lo
ca
ted
at
t
h
e
co
mer
o
f
Rt.
9
& Dela
fi
eld S
t.
ac
r
o
ss
from c
a
mpus
8
45-48
5-
71
7
2
Ha VfZ
go
u
{ZV
{Z
r t
ri{Zd -wood fir{Zd pizza?
It's thin, crispy,
deliciou
s, fu
ll o
f
fl
av
or
,
and there's n
oth
i
ng qu
i
te lik
e it!
!
Let Us
D
e
l
iver it to y
o
ur
door
!
($20 Minimum Order)
Marist College Special
Wo
o
d
Fire
d
Pizzas
Get 2 wood fired
cheese pizzas tor S10.00
with vour Marist ID
We De
l
iver'
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t
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t Mon
ey!
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ONEY
www.marlsteJn;la.eom
THE CIRCLE •
THURSDAY
,
NOVEMBER
2, 2006
•
PAGE 7
Marist College Swimming an
Diving
vs
Rider University Swimming
and Divina
C"omtz eb,z,zr on your 1azd Fox,z1,
a1,
th1Zg
takrz
on th,zir biggtz~f riva/1, in thtz Mflt1C'I
'1Jatardag. novrzmbtzr
4th
at
t:00
PM
.MeC"ann /:latntoriam
BusinessWeek Magazine Names Enterprise Rent-A-Car
Among Top Five Places to Launch a Career
Recognition builds on company's strong rankings by
other
leading sources
-
Princeton Review, Collegegrad.com, and Diverse
:
Issues in Higher Education
ST
.
LOUIS, Oct. 31, 2006 -
Ready to graduate? Sure
.
Robe? Check
.
Course require-
ments? Check. Future? Uh oh.
Enterprise Rent-A-Car
,
North America's largest rental car
company,
has again been list-
ed as one of the best places college graduates and young professionals can turn to for
a promising career
.
The company recently earned the No. 5 spot on BusinessWeek's
inaugural list of "Best Places to Launch a Career
.
"
·
BusinessWeek used three sources of data
-
a
survey
of career services directors, a sur
-
vey of employers, and a student survey conducted by Universum Communications
,
a
market-research firm based in Philadelphia - to develop its rankings
.
"It's a great honor to be on the BusinessWeek list and we thank everyone involved for
supporting our business and employees," said Marie Artim, assistant vice president,
recruiting at Enterprise
.
"We
especially appreciate the fact that career services direc-
tors surveyed ranked Enterprise as the No. 1 employer for entry-level workers
.
"
Enterprise, which hires about 7,000 college graduates a year, has a well-developed
management training program that teaches employees how to run their own business-
es. In fact, nearty 100 percent of Enterprise's current senior management - including the
president and CEO - sta{led as management trainees, learning the ins and outs of the
business.
Enterprise • BusinessWeek
The company's management training program enables employees who work in the
rental car offices to learn how to manage profit-and-loss statements
,
control expenses
and implement a comprehensive business plan
-
a sort of MBA
crash
course
.
Within
nine to 12 months
,
managers in training are typically eligible for promotion and get the
opportunity to run part of the rental branch business as if it were their own
,
including
sharing in the profits they help create.
"At Enterprise, we instill a fun, exciting atmosphere
,
where employees are in charge of
their careers and set their own pace for career growth
,"
Artim said.
"Because
we strong-
ly encourage a promote-from-within philosophy, as individuals learn, they move rapidly
into branch management positions and beyond
,
typically becoming branch managers
within two to three years."
Other recent recognition for Enterprise includes being named the No. 1 entry-level
employer by CollegeGrad.com, being featured in the 2007 Princeton Review book as a
best company for entry-level jobs, and the No. 1 spot on Diverse
:
Issues in Higher
Education's list of ''Top 30 National Firms Most Effective at Diversity Recruiting."
For students looking for an internship, Enterprise offers spots for more than 1,500
interns a year. Fortune.com named Enterprise one of the
"Five
Best Internships for Real
Work" during the summer of 2006. Interns at Enterprise are involved in all aspects of
running the business and are given the responsibilities of a full-lime employee.
For more information about Enterprise or its management training program
,
students
should contact their career center or go to www.enterprise
.
com/careers.
About Enterprise Rent-A-Car
Enterprise Rent-A-Car operates more than 850,000 rental and fleet services vehicles
worldwide and has annual revenues of more than $9 billion
.
Last year, Enterprise
opened more than 400 new locations
,
increasing
its total locations to nearly 7
,
000
.
The
company operates more than 900
offices
in Canada
,
United Kingdom
,
Germany and
Ireland
.
Enterprise is currently number 16 on the Forbes
'500
Largest Private
Companies in America' list. For more information about Enterprise visit www
.
enter
-
prise.com.
lttl>NSTER
TACI>
10%
discount for
all Marist students
and emploJees
EVERYDAY!
Bring in this ad
and get a FREE
order of Chips
(valid
through
1
J
/20/
2006)
WE l>EllYER!
Burritos - Tacos - Nachos - Quesadillas
260 North Road, Poughkeepsie NY
Across
from Marist College
&
St. Francis Hospital
www
.
monster-taco
145.452.3375
THE CIRCLE
:
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER
2, 2006
www.maristctrcle.com
:
Comedian and animal activist Dan Piraro visits Marist
:6Y
KAITLYN ZAFONTE
:Staff Writer
.
'
'
How do you
incorpor
ate
humor
:into a serious
situation
that is far
;from
funny? And why
would
:you want to?
Comedian Dan
:Piraro asked himself these very
:
questions and provided the
answers to Marist students
;
Friday evening in the PAR.
I
Piraro, creator of the award-win-
!ning
syndicated newspaper car-
toon
Bizarro,
presented
"Cartoons,
Comedy,
and
,Compassion"
in an effort to shed
:light
on the
horrific abuses to
:
which
humans
subject animals.
The show was sponsored by
'
FoxP.A
.
W., Marist's own organi-
.za
tion
for animal welfare.
In
,
their endeavors to· aid and save
'
potential victims of factory farm-
:ing,
the president of FoxP.A. W.,
:
Robin Henderson, and
Piraro
:
met through the Woodstock
·
Farm Animal Sanctuary. Piraro
was asked to
speak
because he
shares the same vision as the
,
club.
The subject matter of the pres-
entation was indeed a serious
one. Every year in the United
States alone, billions of animals
are sent to
slaughter
hou
ses
when;
tliey
m bM•llt
killed
The majority of Americans are
not aware that their
seemingly
innocent dinner is
supporting
the
cruel industry that is factory
Ploln
Onion
Cinnmnon/lai;n
SHOlllt
8111tbtny
Poppy
SWI
dried
Tomolo
$di
E~g
PW11ptmlcktl
EvtfYlhlng
Fttnch Tomi
Whole~
E11"9Y
grain
GarAc
fanning. The Woodstock Fann
Animal Sanctuary rehabilitates
the animals that
are
fortunate
enough to escape slaughter. At
the farm, "food-production ani-
mals" such as cows, pigs,
turkeys, and sheep
are
provided
shelter and a peaceful living
environment. The sanctuary pro-
motes the fair treatment of
ani-
mals by allowing peop
l
e to visit
with the creatures that could
have ended up on their plates.
This is the issue on which Piraro
focuses: vegetarianism/veganism
and understanding that anima
l
s
deserve equal respect as humans.
Piraro, however, eased the
crowd into this topic with his
humor. One of the cartoons he
projected summed up the attitude
and message of most of his show.
It
featured a pig
s
itting
in a
re
staurant
and asking the human
waiter, "Can
I
substitute the pork
chop for a fried chunk of your
left
buttock?"
Amusing?
Absolutely. Yet it
ha
s
a
strong
underlying message. This car-
toon, along with many of his oth-
ers,
stresses
how humans have a
tendency to treat others with dis-
respect, but if our actions are
turned around it is viewed as
simply
appalling.
One of
Pinuo's favorite quotes is
,
'"humans
aren't the only
species
on earth-we just act like it."
However, it wasn't until five
years ago that he actually
IYtl.llfMI
PartcerAve.Poughk
5-6771
reached this epiphany.
Before that time, Piraro was a
meat eater.
He joked that if
someone
had
then
told him that
he would become a vegan and
an
animal rights activist, he would
have
"covered
them
in
barbeque
sauce and eaten them."
Like
most people claim, he was com-
passionate for animals, in the
sense that cats and dogs deserved
the love and respect of
humans
.
But this feeling was not extended
to those animals that are used for
food consumption. Piraro fol-
lowed this hypocritical belief
until
he
became aware of factory
fanning and then visited an ani-
mal
sanctuary.
Seeing the res-
cued animals made him realize
that they were no different from
the animals we keep as house-
hold pets.
Disgusted
that
his
money was fueling such a cruel
trade,
Piraro
underwent
a
lifestyle change. Out went all
animal products from his diet
and in went abused foster
ani-
mals
to
his home.
This may
seem
like a severe
transfonnation,
but
Piraro
exp
lained
that its many benefits
and rewards make it more than
worthwhile. He
started
incorpo-
rating animal rights cartoons into
his usual
repertoire
,
using
a sar-
castic and incredibly
witty
tone
to
express
his opinions.
It
is
extremely
difficult for people to
be told that a lifestyle choice of
UPlUUDAYI!
PS
$,.99
Ask
AMI
our
A111ln91retkfut
Spedi~
theirs is hypo-
critical, heart-
less,
and
unhealthy.
Because of this,
many are closed
off to the idea
of going vege-
tarian,
let
alone
vegan.
The
idea seems too
radical because
it so severely
conflicts with
what they have
b~n brought up
to
believe.
Therefore,
efforts to make
people aware of
these injustices
often go in one
ear and out the
other. After all,
isn't ignorance bliss?
Dan
Piraro, however,
s
hatt
ered
this
wall of ignorance and penetrated
into a new realm of understand~
ing
using
one the most persua-
sive
mediums: humor. He did
not berate people for eating
meat, but
he
did explain why it
would be beneficial
_to
alter their
actions.
"Peace
begins on your
pl
ate,"
declares
one drawing
.
If
we are
to become a more compassionate
society,
how can we allow these
injustices to animals continue?
Piraro concluded his presents-
COURTESY OF WWW.BIZARRO.COM
tion by urging the audience to
make their lives significant You
have the choice to make it more
than
simply "the
trash you leave
behind."
To
take a
step
in the
direct of animal compassion is to
add worth to your life.
And
that's no joke.
Dan Piraro S
cartoons
can be
viewed
on
his
website
Bizarro.com.
To learn more
about
lhe Woods1oclc Farm
Animal
Sanctuary
and
animal
welfare,
visit
WoodstockFAS.org
or email FoxP.A.
W.
at
maristfox-
pqw@gm,ail
.
co,r,.
You will go
'Crazy'
for
MCCTA's fall musical
By
ALEXANDRIA BRIM
Staff Writer
The Marist
Co
ll
ege
Council on
Theatre Arts (MCCTA) will
stage
its
fall
mu
sical "Crazy
for
You" from Nov.
3-5.
All per-
formances will be held in the
Nelly Galetti theatre.
Junior Risa Pedzewick is the
assistant director for the show.
"It's good. It's better as
a
lot
of
high schoo
l
s produce this show,"
she said. "We're doing it pretty
professionally."
Matthew Wolfe, a sophomore,
plays lead character Bobby
Child.
"He's
from a rich family,
a banker," Wolfe says of his
character. "His mother has
been
grooming him to take over the
family business but all he wants
to do is dance. She sends him out
to Nevada to foreclose on a piece
of property, which happens to be
a
theatre
owned by a beautifuJ
girl."
This action sets the play into
motion
as
he
arrives
in
Dead.rock,
Nevada.
Bobby
decides to help
resurrect
the the-
atre by impersonating a famous
producer. "It all blows up in his
face," Wolfe says. Bobby falls in
love with Polly, who doesn't
return it when she finds out
Bobby is the banker who will
close the theatre. Bobby tries to
win her heart as the town puts on
the show to save the theatre. Will
Bobby succeed in winning Polly
and will the show change
Deadrock's luck?
"Crazy
for Y~u" features songs
from Ira and George Gershwin
as well as a book by Ken
Ludwig. The
show
was inspired
by
an
earlier one by
Guy
Bolton
and Jack McGowan called
"Girl
Crazy,"
which opened in I 930.
The revised
show
by Ludwig
opened
in 1992
and won the
Tony Award for Best New
Musical that year. The musical
contains on of the Gershwins'
best known songs,
"I
Got
Rhythm."
The show is directed by Tom
Berger with George Croom as
musical
director.
The same pair
also worked on last year's pro-
duction of "The Rocky Horror
Show," which had a
sold-out
performance.
Junior
Mark
Heftier is producing the musical.
MattAngrisani, a junior, is part
of the ensemble for this show.
"I've
been
in MCCTA every year
since
I
came here," he said. 'The
musical is always the big pro-
duction and
it
is great to be a part
of one of the more
special
moments at Mari st."
''The
cast is so tight," Wolfe
added.
"I
am
a transfer student
and they made me feel we
l
come.
It's
an amazing cast and an
amazing show."
The musical continues
MCCTA's fall season which will
later perfonn the Experimental
Theatre Guild production of
"The Long Christmas Ride
Home" and the HuMarist Big
Show. Next semester, the organi-
zation
features
William
Shakespeare's "The Taming of
the Shrew" as well as the
Children Theatre
mounting
of
"Puss in Boots." The annual fes-
tival of one-act plays and staging
of "The Vagina Monologues"
will also occur next semester.
MCCTA is a student-nm organi-
zation that allows students from
all majors to work on different
aspects of theatre. These range
from to directing to backstage
(such
as props or costumes) to
designing on the different
shows.
Pedzewick continued on about
PAGES
Been there,
'Saw'
that
answers
that ques1ion
w11h
thc!ir latest
lease, "Saw Ill." After the
intredibl) successful sequd,
the Jigsa\\ killer is back
fo
his third
gruc!some set
o
games
this
Halloween.
Howe\'er, "ith his
health
compromis«!d
because
of can•
·er. the deadly games t.lke on
different twist and the
stakes arc c\-cn
higher
It's
uscle-.s
tn
review
the
.. Sa,...·· 'ieries in the
tradition
al
approach of this
column.
The
ai.:1m~
and cmc:matogra•
h)
are
medioi.:n:
at bc:,t
and
10t
worth Jiscussinc. "Saw
IIJ''
1:;
a.
tilm
that
nl~cd~ to
be
. ken for Whal II IS
a mm HJ
mean\ to ~tanlc
und
di'irurb.
and m
this cnntc>.t it docs
·cry
well.
''Sa"
Ill" deviate~
111
one
\\.ay Imm
il'-
prcdi:ci:ssors in
lhat
it !oiceks
to
bt:
mon:
ot
a
psychologi~al thriller.
ln
attc!mptmg
this, its
dialogue
~,.:ome~
ru:-.hc!d
in an ulti-
mate
~uitst
to
fulfill 1Lc.
sur-
prise ending which have
c..:omc a standard
to
the
"Sa"•· series.
The
Mood
lc\cl
1s
alwut on par with
most
other ·'Sa" .. 1ilm1; and
thi..-
1onurc
de\ ices ..:crtainly
show inlluencc from the
Spam.sh
Inquisition.
making
is a hohday for gore fans.
··sa\i.·
Ill'"
1s
not
a great
mo\ ic.
Don
·1
go to sec
it
expecting your mind to bt::
blov. n.
fhlt
lilm is fun to see
leading up to llallowccn
if
)'l\U \\
ant a
gooJ
~ream
but I
wouldn't
rccommc:nd
it
aftc
October 3 I st
J
U.'il
~teal yo
friends cup)'
att~r
1t
coml.-s
out on
UVD
I l l
the show. "It has good comedy,
good gags" she said.
"It's
funny.
It
is
not
just a dumb little musi-
cal."
"Crazy for You" has perform-
ances on Friday, Nov. 3 and
Saturday, Nov. 4 at 8 PM
as
well
as Sunday, Nov. 5 at 2 PM.
Ticket prices are $5 for students
and alumni and $12 for the gen-
eral public. Tickets can
be
pur-
chased at the door before each
performance as well as by call-
ing the MCCTA box office at
extension 3133. They can also
be
purchased
on line
at
www.mccta.com.
www.mart1telrcle.eom
TliE CIRCLE •
THURSDAY
,
NOVEMBER 2, 2006 •
PAGE 9
- - - - - - -
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Marist: Col., Circle
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QUINNIPIAC UNIVERSITY
Hamden,
Connecticut
THE CIRCLE
Features
THURSDAY NOVEMBER
2, 2006
www.marlstclrcte.com
Time flies for Mari st seniors
Talk
of
future graduation festivities stirs excitement
By ANDREW GOSS
Circle Contributor
The Class of 2007 is in the
process of finishing their last
year in Poughkeepsie while
keeping an
eye
towards their
futures.
Senior
class president
Mary
Cornetta
has
been
far too
busy
to even
worry
about
what
life
in
the
"real world"
will be
like.
"My
senior
year
has
been great
so
far,
but also
stressfu
l
," she
said.
"I'm finishing up the last
of
my
courses
which
in
cludes cap-
ping and
that's
proving to
be
harder than I thought
,
but I
know
it
will
be worth
it in
the
end and
everything else
is
going smooth-
ly.'
Senior act
ivi
ties
are
already
in
the
process of
being planned
.
The
2
1
Society's event
is tenta-
tively
scheduled for
the
Saturday
before
Thanksgiving
break,
November
18.
It
will
include
wine
tasting
from around
the
world.
In
addition, Setiior Day
for members
of
the
Mari.st
band
will
take
place November 11 at
the final home football
game.
Senior week, even
though it is
in
May. is also already
in the
plan-
ning
stages.
The majority
of
the
senior activities, in fact, are
expected to take
place during the
spring.
As
the
end of
the month
approaches, seniors should
be
aware
of November 27 when
undergraduate
graduation appli-
cations for
the May
2007
Commencement Ceremony
arc
due. Marist
College's 60th
Commencement Ceremony is
sc
h
eduled
for
Saturday, May 20
on
the
Campus Green at
11
:00
a.m. Soon
after that
day,
many
of
the new
Marist alumni
will
ven-
ture out
into the
real world.
Senior Mark
Perugini,
who is a
member
of Lambda Pi Eta and
the
section
l
eader of the Marist
band
drum
lin
e, isn't
scared.
"Honestly,
I
am
not
nervous
abo
ut
the
real
wo
rl
d," he said.
"Yeah,
it
is scary
to know that
you
have to
be fully responsible.
But
one of the
most
important
people in my
life
once told me
that
you
have to
live life one day
at a time, and by doing this, you
will learn
more
about yourself
and you will become
more
of
an
ind
i
vidua
l.
You can only
plan
out
your
future to
a certain extent.
The
best thing is
to live life to
the
fullest and
unders1and
your
passion
for living. Once you
understand your
passion
for liv-
ing, then
you will
not
only piece
together your
life
but you will
also find success."
Maryellen Conway, the
P
r
esident of
the
Student Body, is
among 1hose
\\ho
"ill
be hc.id-
ing
directly
for grad schoo
l
after
graduating.
"I
will
be
finisl\ing up a tive-
Y""'
prou,ill\
here
at
,¥arist,"
she said.
"I
will be getting my
BA
in
psychology
and MA in
educationa
l
ps
yc
hology
by
December 2007.
In January
2007,
I will hopefully be
starting
the advanced certificate
program
for school psychology here.
Later on, I would
love
to go
to
Col
um
bia
University
or
Fordham
U
ni
versity
to
get
a PhD
in
school administralion."
Lives of
the
senior students
who wiU graduate
in
May will
take many different paths after-
wards but
nearly
all agree
that
the one four-year experience that
brought all of
their lives
together
was a
memorable
one.
Perugini
holds his time
at Marist in
high
regard.
"Marist
has
been the best expe-
rience of my
life,"
he said.
"It
has
opened my eyes
to
what
is
truly
beautiful in
life.
I
will miss
hang-
ing out with
the
guys and my fra-
ternity brothers until the early
morning
.
I
will miss sleeping
in
late
and starting my day at two
in
the afternoon. I will
miss the
philosophica
l
and social
talks
with
my
friends about
life,
the
future,
and
of course, the mys-
tery of
understanding
the oppo-
site sex. Most importantly,
I
will
miss the freedom, the freedom of
helping
out people at all hours of
the
day and the freedom of my
young adulthood.
1t
is
going
to
be
hard
knowing
that
I will
be
l
eaving my utopia and temporar-
ily departing from the people I
love. Marist will always
be
home, and
I will
absolutely miss
the people who have helped me
find
my
self."
By
MORGAN NEDERHOOD
Staff Writer
I
am a
bit cha
llen
ged v.hcn
ii
comes
10
avoiding
solici-
tors, strangers,
and es~ciJlly
people who are
trying
to
sell
me candy. After
growing tired
of lhc:sc awkward
and honibly
inconvenient occurrences.
I
developed
a !;)'Stem
for avoid-
ing
any
unwanted
auen1ion.
Pretend
you
don't
speak
Engl
i
sh. Ob\'iou:;1},
this
is
a
ri~ky
approach since
someone
could c.tll your blutf by
auempting
Lo
speak your
'nauve'
tongue. but
n's a
risk
worth t.1king
r
speak
French
at the lc\'el of a
toddler,
but I
am able
to avoid pet.lple by
mumhling
some ,ort of
French nonsense
as
J
hurry
by
However,
let's
be
realistic.
no
one
wonts
to
hear
about suc-
cess i;tories,
and
1
don't \\artt
10
tell
thc.'TT1.
ff
I
am
advocat•
ing somethi
n
g,
I might
as
well
proper!)
warn readers
of
the
risks.
So, kt's.
review
some
dnngers
ot the
faux-J· rend,
wor
ld
.
I\
couple of
11.ummef'3
ago.
1
worked
downtown in
a
store
that
was
next
to the coffee
shop. My
town
is
fairly smaJI,
and
1
grew
accustomed
to see-
ms.
familiar' faces.
@na 6\tch
familiar face was George.
Probably
in his mid sixth:s,
George
had
gigantic,
bushy
eyebrows that seemed large
pooH
E,£AR
.
·
··
·
· ·
.
Bur
J:T
APPEAi2.S
you
HAVE
A
J-1 E FFA
Lv/\11P
PAGE 10
column about nothing
French kisses and disses
enoug
h
to
be
their own
species
of
m
a
mmal
,
a
lazy
eye
that
would
snap
in and out
of
sync
with
the
good eye.
and
the most crooked
teeth I have
ever seen. George would
s
huf
-
n
e
in
to
my
sto
r
e
and
imm
edi-
ately
start
talking to me about
"those
damned
motorcyclists"
or
whatever random tangent
struck
his
fancy.
I never had
another
coworker to rescue
me,
so
I
was
forced
to
listen
to
hi~
rants wbile
I
wondered
i
f
hi~
eyebrows crea
t
e
d
visibility
issues for
him.
After
he ha-,
exhausted his
s
ubject
ol
the
day.
Geo
r
ge
would
shuffie
into
lhc
coffee shop to
haras
s
whatever
unfo
rtunate cus-
tomer
happened
10
be
in
th
e
~tore.
Eve
ntually
,
I
quit
my
j
ob
and
was
bli
ss
fully free
of
crazy
Gcurge -
or so
I
thought. My
mom
a
nd I
were in the coffee
shop
when she
struck
up
con-
versation
v.ith a
friend
of
he
rs
11
a
comer table. At that
moment.
I
heard George's
sig-
nature
VOICI!
behind me.
I
jumped onto a seat ot the
counter
nnd
thrust
my
nose
into
my
book.
George
must
have sensed my fear,
hecausc
be made a
bee-line
ti.,r my
scat.
As be lried
to
verbally
beat me to
death
with
his
senseless
rant-.,
I
decided thal
I
wouJd beat
tum
in
his
own
game.
With eyes wide,
I shook
my
head
said, "Jc ~uis
dcsol~. mais je ae par
l
e pas
anglais."
("tm
sorry, but I do
nol
speak
English.") True.
George
has
seen me before
and conversed
with me,
but he
talks to everyone
-
whether he
knoy,.~
them
or
not
- and he
is
seni
l
e
enough
to
not
remem-
ber
me.
As
I
soon found out,
George
was
not
as ..cnilc as I
had
thought.
George\ eyes
bulged
out as
he
immediately
called my
bluff
with,
"No,
I
know you,
you
wo
rk
next door." Damn.
Jn th
e
heaviest
French accent
I
could
manage,
1
explamed
that I was visiting: my
American cousin whom
I
hap-
pen to
clo!>cly
resemble.
Georgi: continued
to stare at
me like I
had
just g
r
own a
beard \,hile
I
fnmt1cally
tried
to co
lle
ct
the
s
h
ards that had
once been
my dignity. I
con-
lmucd to switch from broken
Engfo,h to French gibberish
until my
mom
walked by.
1
blurted
out some story where
my
mom
was my
American
aunt, and
I
practically
ran out
of the shop after my
mom.
When I
looked back.
C:cC'f~c
was
still
standing,
not speak ..
ing, just staring at
me,
A
month
later,
t
was in
the
coffee shop when George
managed
...
~
com~r
D"I<"
di
assumed
my
'American
cousin' identity and he actua
l
-
ly believed
me.
That
was
the
l~t l ever saw of George.
cartoon corner
by
Vinnie
Pagano
_ _
mari,tclrcle.com
THE CIRCLE • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2006 •
PAGE
1i
Seniors make good on senior day, beat Siena in finale
By GREG HRINYA
Staff
Writer
The Marist Red Foxes capped
off its season in dramatic fashion
as they beat MAAC rival Siena
I
-0
in
overtime on Friday night.
In a game that saw six seniors
finishing their athletic careers
here at Marist, the Red Foxes
willed their way past the second
seeded team in the MAAC.
Marist and Siena played to a
90-minute stalemate that saw
neither
team
score a goal, but in
the 96th minute, Red Fox senior,
Lauren
Dziedzic, buried the
game-winner for her first career
goal.
Dziedzic
capitalized on a mis-
ta1ce by Siena goalkeeper Patti
Carroll where she misplayed a
ball in front of her own net.
Marist coach Elizabeth Roper
said the team wanted to chal-
lenge Siena in the box because
they believed they could cash
in
on a
mistake
similar to the one
that won the game.
.. Their goalie
looked
a little
shaky and we talked at halftime
about trying to Put some pressure
on her," Roper said ...
The goalie
bobbled several balls and we
made the effort to challenge her
inside the
I
8
,
and Lauren
Dziedzic
took advantage of an
opportunity."
For Marist, goalkeepers Anna
Case and Caitlin Nazarechuk
combined for a five-save shutout
to cap a season in which both
goalkeepers were plagued by
injuries.
"We were unlucky because
both
of our keepers battled
injuries all season long," Roper
said. "We were also inconsistent
defensively which was surpris-
ing since we were so good defen-
sively
last
year, but we improved
offensively this season. Our goal
is to get more of a balance from
here
on out."
The win for Marist was a satis-
fying end to a frustrating season
where the Red Foxes had a
chance to win in almost every
game. It was even more fulfill-
ing that the team couJd give
its
six
s
eniors a proper send-off on
senior night.
"It
was a great testimony to the
s
e
niors
,
and we felt going in that
we could beat a very good Siena
team," Roper said. "We started
and finished the game with all
six seniors on the field
,
and they
played as a cohesive unit and
everyone contributed."
Despite losing some imponant
members of the team, the Red
Foxes will build on some key
players to carry this momentum
into next season.
"We have some players
like
Ashley Chase
,
Maria Baez,
Melanie Ondrejik
,
and Keri
Koegel returning who were
instrumental in shutting down
our opponents' best players,"
Roper said. "We have a strong
core returning. and we hope to
build on this in the off-season.
We showed a lot of motivation
and fight this year, and we want
to have that carry over."
The Red Foxes ended a frus-
trating season that saw Marist
finish at 5-12-l and 3-5-1 in the
MAAC.
"The season was frustrating
more than it waS disappointing
because we played very well
,
"
Roper said.
"We consistently
played four to five freshmen, and
that allowed them to gain some
good experience for their future
here at Mari st."
Second place finish to Iona a victory for men's cross country
By
DANIEL BARRACK
For the second consecutive
is to finish second, which would personal best time of 25:38.7.
With 12
members
selected to the
Staff Writer
year, and the fourth time ever,
be just as good as winning first
Stand-out
freshman
Conor team, Marist led all school
_
s,
The Marist men's cross country
team
finished runner up to
nationally-ranked Iona College
on Friday. The second place fin-
ish was its best in school
history
in the Metro Atlantic Athletic
Conference
(MAAC)
Championships. The Red Foxes
ended
the
day with a school
record low
52 points, but still fell
short of Iona who finished with
17
points on the afternoon. The
victory for Iona College was its
16th consecutive MAAC Cross
Country Championship.
Marist placed second behind the
place itsel["
Shelly finished ninth overall
earning three more spots than
goliath
of
the
MAAC
Not only did Marist finish sec-
with a time of25:46.
I.
Loyola who had nine. Genna
Conference. Going back to
1998,
Ond, but the school record time
If these names look familiar,
Segni was included in the
list
of
Marist has placed atop every
exceeded expectations.
these were the three runners that
runners to
b'e
selected, along
team besides lona in 2003, 2005,
The biggest contributor on Coach Colaizzo named as per-
with four sophomores
,
five jwi-
.
and now this season. After the
Friday was Marist's top runner haps the three best on the squad.
iors, and two seniors.
Junior
team's
record-setting perfonn-
all season, and the favorite to Along with the top three, senior Mike Rolek had the highest
ance on Friday, Marist goes into
win the Coaches Award at the captain Justin Harris finished
grade point average of all Marist
the NCAA Northeast Regional's
end of the season, sophomore
18th,
and senior captain Matt runners selected with a GPA of
on Nov.
11
ranked
13th
overall.
Germa Segni. Segni finished
Syzmaszek recorded a time of 3.86.
This performance is just what
fourth overall and was the only 26:47 .6
,
placing him in the top
Marist was hoping for. Coach
runner
in the top five that did not 20.
Peter Colaizzo stated
in
an
inter-
run
for Iona College.
view last week that "lona is
Fell ow sophomore David
equivalent to Duke Basketball. Raucci finished three spots
No
one
can touch them. Our goal
behind
Segni, and recorded a
Finishing second on
Friday h'ad no effect on the selec-
tion of
the
MAAC Men's Cross
Country All-Academic Team.
Coming off of an out-
standing performance
,
the Red
Foxe,s
look
to cany
its
momen-
tum
into
the Northeast Regional
Championships on Nov.
11.
Genovese and Rolon claim Flight A doubles championship at Cornell
By
NATE FIELDS
Hatisubroto
8-3.
er] Leo Rodriguez won, so I Smith said
,
adding that Algier nine teams there, some very
Staff Writer
Genovese and Rolon started
hopewearestartingatradition."
had been in Europe for several
strongteamslikeNavyandobvi-
their weekend by defeated
Marist's Frank Algier also
days last week.
ously Cornell."
After several weeks of disap-
Binghamton's Justin Salkin and
played
himself
into a champi-
Rolon and fellow senior Ray
He also reflected positively on
pointing
play, Red Fox tennis
Pierre
Clavel 8-5 on Friday, and
onship match, dominating in four Josephs both won their first the season, which winds up next
s
enio
rs
Pedr
o
G
e
n
o
v
e:s
e
an
d then
took
down teams from
Navy
cons.ecutive contests
during the round
fli
g
ht
A
"-in
g
\e
s
match{l
S
weekend
.
Federico Rolon proved last
and Cornell
.
8-5 and 8-2 respec-
first two days of the tournament.
Friday, winning
6-4,
6-3
,
and 6-
"It's been a good season
,
we
weekend why they are Marist's tively
.
Algier handily defeated oppo-
I,
6-4 resp"ectivel
y.
Both were seem to always have people in
top doubles team.
Coach Tim Smith was away
nents frOm Farleigh Dickinson
felled by the racquets of hosting the finals and semifinals
,
"
The pair claimed the Flight A
from the team to attend the birth and Temple on Frid3.y
,
and
Cornell on Saturday however
.
Josephs said.
Doubles champi6nsl"Up at the i>f his grandchild, but was ComeTI and·Cotgai@ oi'l'Saturd!Y,
AU60Ug6
'-
.YOSi:j:;h
S
Oiiln1 eiijOy
'the'"'
te'ain'
~ e w
Cornell Fall Indoor
Invitational
pleased with the results, nonethe-
before dropping the Flight C
the same success as his team-
Hampshire for
the Dartmouth
in
Ithaca,
defeating
the less.
finals 7-5, 7-6 (2) to Cornell's mates, he was however happy
Invitational next weekend in
University of Buffalo's Nikesh
"I
was happy that they won the
Bryant Yung on Sunday.
with h.is 1eammatcs
'
play.
what will
be
the final contest of
Singh
Panthlia
and
Yules
tournament,"
Smith said. "And
"
Frankie
doing that well in the
"
Overall, we had some good
the fall season for the Foxes.
,
last year Pedro and
[fom1er
play-
C division was very refreshing
,
"
results
,
" he said.
"
There were
Marist women's cross country beats out Manhattan in race for second place
By
RICH ARLEO
Bums. and Kerry Mannino
fin-
Coach Phil
Kelly
said that they
was just to run solid as a group
Staff Writer
ished
13th
14th and 15th respec-
all
did what they had to do.
and to edge out Manhattan for
The Mari st women's cross
country
team
beat
out
Manhattan College in the race
for second place on Friday at the
2006 MAAC Cross Country
Championship at Van Cortland
Park
in
the
Bronx.
Manhattan had placed three
runners ahead of Marist, ~ut
the
Red Foxes then had seven
run-
tively; with Domermuth and
"Sarah didn't have her greatest second place
,
and they succeed-
Bums finishing back to back at
race, but she did what she had to
ed
.
23:08 and Mannino finished
do." Kelly said. "A lot of the
Marist led the MAAC once
right behind them at 23: 10. All
girls
in
the back of the race did again with 11 MAAC All-
three were named AII-MAAC
particularly well.
"
Academic Team
s
elections
,
for their top-15 finishes.
Kelly went on to mention that something Coach Kelly referred
Juniors Caitlin Garrity and junior Christine Snyder, who to
as,
"
busines
s
as usual..
.
over
Christine Wahl finished out the
had
been strugiling
lately
,
came the last
10
to 12 years, the guys
scoring for Marist
,
finishing
up with a nice individual per-
and the women hav
e
won [this
23rd and 24th with times of formance on Friday.
honor] more than any other
23:51 and 23:53, respectively.
Marist was able to pull outthe school.
"
ners cross the
line
before The top five women for Marist second place finish, which was
The team is now looking for-
Manhattan's fourth and fifth run-
all set personal bests at Van
its goal heading into the race
ward to its next meet - the
ners finished to seal second
Cortland Park for the 6K, along knowing that Iona was the
Northeast
Regional.
Coach
place.
with six other Marist runners.
favorite, and they were basically
Kelly had much to say on how
Sarah Domermuth, Brittany
Commenting on each
individ-
untouchable.
According
to
he felt headin
g
into the regional.
ual
runner's
performances
,
Kelly, their strategy going in
"
We'd love to come in the top
20 ... we'II
have
to run really
well," Kelly said. "Running in a
pack won't cut
it.
We need one
person, or two people, in the top
20
or 40. Our goal
is
to have a
few girls over l 00 and a few
girls Wlder l00.
"
Coach Kelly went on to say
that the Northeast Region is
extremely tough, so they have
set reasonable goals, and he has
confidence that his group can
perform reasonably well given
the circumstances.
The Northeast Regional Cross
Country Qualifier will take
place at
10
a.m. on Sat.,
November 11.
a ...... '5-...:as...,.--42e>c>
- ■ ca
.,..e>'T"
a . & ,
. .
e
-
-- ----·-
----
--
-·
-w-
Roarin'
Red Foxes
Mari st\ mak and
female
star performer
for the weekend uf
Oct. 27
-
30.
Girnia Scgni
X-Countl)
,
Sophom,,re
Sophomm
·
e-
G
im
i;.
1 SC"gni
\\a.,
fourth overall "-"d the
only runner m the
race
tu
break up Iona'!! lop-5 run-
nt:rs in th
e
MAAC
Champion~h1ps. He hdpcd
Marist to its
IO\\l.!''it
point
total (52) at the
MAAl
Champion,hip in school
historJ.
On the
horizon:
The Red f
·
o-
.
c \
\
ill com
•
pde in
the
'Nl .\A
f\onhc3
s
1 Re
g
i
o
n
a
l
l)O
'Sa1.,
Nov. 11. nnd
conclude
the
year
with
the
IL\\ \A
Champion,h1ps
on Sat.
No\, 18.
Lauren Dzied,ic
Women's Soccer, Sr,
Mans1 senior l
a
uren
J>1ied11c 1appt>J
home
the
garnc-~\.\
mncr
m ,,,
erumc
f
rida) to lead the Red
Foxes
'
\.\Un11:n'.., socl.'cr
s4u.id to a I
..
o
ll\
ertirnc
,1ctory
on S
e
mor
:--Jig.ht
at
Lconiduff l"icld
On the llori,on:
This \\
ill
h1.: the
I.ht
game
played
on
gra~
s
at
this
complc>...
Next )i;ar
the
nc" Lc0111d\)ffficld "ill be·
completed "nh
I
1eld
turf.
*
Photos c.·our1e~~
,
of
l\W".gorcdfol.C',.l'Om
Upcoming Schedule:
Football: Saturday, Nov. 4 - at Georgetown, I p.m.
Men's and Women's Swimming and Diving: Saturday,
Nov. 4 - vs. Rider, I p.m.
THURSDAY,
NOVEMBER 2,
2006
www.ma,lstclrcle.com
PAGE1.2
Red Fox offensive triumphs over downpour and Peacocks
By
BRIAN LOEW
Staff
Writer
Wind and rain could not stifle a
spectacular offensive perform-
ance with a dominating show
by
junior running back Adam
Hansen as he helped to carry the
Marist Red Foxes to a 35-18 vic-
tory against the St. Peter's
Peacocks on Saturday evening at
Leonidofffield.
Hansen tied a Marist school
record for touchdowns in a single
game with four, helping Marist
record its highest yard-produc-
tion game of the year
with
406
offensive yards. The Red Foxes
improved to 3-6 overall and 2-1
in the Metro Atlantic Athletic
Conference (MAAC). St. Peter's
fell to 1-7 overall and 0-2 in the
MAAC.
The Marist special teams unit
wasted no time in setting the
tone
for the game. On the opening
kickoff, the Peacocks were only
able to return the ball to the 14-
yard
line
before freshmen O
'
Neil
Anderson caused a fumble that
was
recovered
by senior Dan
Peckham
.
The Marist offense capitalized
on the turnover as Hansen's first
of four touchdowns came at the
12: 14 mark in the first quarter
with a I-yard plunge, putting
Marist on top Nl
.
Seven more points would come
for the Red Fbxes j\lSt before the
end of the quarter. With
I
:31 left
in the quarter, Hansen tacked on
his second
I
-yard score of the
game completing the 10-play
,
49-yard drive that began with an
interception by sophomore Paul
Rabito, making it 14-0 Marist.
Shortly into the second quarter,
St. Peter's quarterback Scott
Bonnono capped off a 70-yard
march down the field with a
l
0-
yard floater to Jaleel Kindell
with 12:32 remaining in the half.
After a blocked extra-point kick,
the Peacocks trailed Marist 14-6.
Just under
four
minutes later
,
Marist answered back with
an
80-yard drive topped off by
Hansen's third I-yard touchdown
run
at 8:42 left in the half, cush-
ioning Marist's lead 21-6.
On St. Peters' next drive with
5:39 remaining in the half,
Bonnono found Kindell once
more for a 12-yard touchdown
pass cutting Marist's
lead
to
nine. A failed two-point con¥er-
sion pass by Bonnono made the
score 21-12 in favor of Marist.
Just before the end of the half,
Hansen added his fourth score of
the game with a 2-yard rush with
2:39 left on the clock. Junior
kicker Bradley Rowe's extra
point sailed through the uprights
making the score 28-12 Marist at
!he half.
With 4:19 left in the third quar-
ter, Marist drove in for its final
touchdown of the game. Senior
running back Frankie Farrington
dove in for a 3-yard touchdown
run making it 35-12
.
Marist.
Farrington's score capped off an
I I
•play, 92-yard drive that began
with a 50-yard pass
from
junior
quarterback Steve McGrath to
senior wide receiver Prince
Prempeh. McGrath finished the
day completing 13 passes for 265
yards through the air.
Bonnono and the Peacocks
offense had one final score with
a 13-yard desperation pass to
wide receiver
John
Bond with
2:51 left in the game making the
final score 35-18 Marist.
The biggest story of the day
was the
Red
Fox offense. With
over 400 total yards
,
Marist
Head Coach Jim Parady said that
the week's focus on fundamen-
tals made all the difference.
"Going into the game we went
back to the fundamentals and the
real basics and concentrated on
those, and I
think
that paid off for
us," Parady said. "We executed
our game plan well and we won
our individual match-ups, and
that is something that in the last
few weeks we've had trouble
doing."
Hansen agreed with the coach
saying that the offense worked
very well together as a unit to get
lhc
viciory.
"Offensively we had great
blocking from the offensive
line," Hansen said. "People real-
ly stepped it up and made some
great plays that got us down on
the goal line numerous ·times.
From there
I
was just able to
punch it in and get us on the
scoreboard."
Hansen said that coming out
with the win was the result -of a
great overall team effort that
never gave up.
"As
a team, everyone just kept
pushing, and we were able to get
the job done."
Although the offense was dom-
inating, Coach Parady said that
the Marist defense also played a
key role in Saturday's victory.
Although they gave up 417 yards
to the Peacock's offense, keeping
the Peacocks out of the end zone
was crucial.
"Even
though
we bent
.
a little
bit, we did not break," Parady
said. "We had two great goal line
stands that changed the course of
the game, We stood up when it
was time to down in the red zone,
and
I
think that those were two
key points in the game. The big
thing was that we kept them off
the scoreboard."
Marist goes head to head
against another Patriot league
opponent this weekend as they
make the trek .down to the
nr.tion's capital to take on the 1-7
Georgetown Hoya'J Saturday
afternoon at 12:30
pm.
Coach
Parady said that the team feels
Fairfield snaps Marist's four-game
win
streak, Foxes fall to 6-8 in MAAC play
By
DREW
BUDD
Staff Writer
Strength is a word that' can be
used to describe many things.
Using it to describe Fairfield's vol-
leyball team could be deemed suf-
ficient.
The Fairfield Stags came
to
the
McCann Center Saturday with a
vengeance to get their 13th straight
win and stay undefeated in the
Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference
(MAAC). They got it in convinc-
ing fashion beating Marist in three
straight sets.
In the first game, Fairfield never
relinquished
the lead
having
runs
of six and eight points. They would
go on to win 30-13.
Early in game two, Marist took a
1-0
lead
on a kill by Sally Hanson.
The Stags however would tie it at
one point apiece and never look
back. They went on runs of six and
five points and would win the
out of posi1ion.
Coach Hanna
believed it was the play of Fairfield
that made it appear that way.
"They were exploiting spots," he
said.
The Red Foxes put together a
strong come back and went on their
first real run of the day with six
straight points and took the lead
11-8 before Fairfield head coach
Jeff Wemeke called a timeout.
After the timeout, Fairfield came
out and went on an eight-point run
to take the lead 17-11.
Marist
fought well throughout the game
but fell by a score of 30-24.
One key stat
the
Red Foxes could
blame for their demise was the 19
unforced hitting errors they had
throughout the match.
Coach
Hanna felt the offense was lacking
all day.
"Our blocking assignment was
OK, our passing went well, but
it
was our offense that just didn't do
well today," he said.
"We also had the 19
game 30-13 as well.
Fairfield from the beginning of unforced
hitting
wann-ups to the end of the match
errors. You cut
that
in
had great intensity. Marist
head
half, that's nine points
coach Tom Hanna felt that his team
right there that could
lacked
that same intensity from the go either way and real-
beginning of the first game.
ly change the momen-
"I felt that we played very flat
tum
either way for
from the beginning," he said. "We either team."
need to come out and play with a
Christy Lukes
led
higher level of intensity."
the Red Fox offense
Game
three
was a bit different with
nine
kills.
than the first two. The score was
Stephanie Miksch had
tied four different times throughout
eight digs while Sally
the game and there were two
lead
Hanson had four aces.
changes, a stat that was vacant in
Dawn Jan had 23
the first two
games.
assists.
For the first three points of the
Lindsey
Lee
had 15
before this loss to Fairfield. They
had just beaten Rider 3-1 the previ-
ous night. With the Joss, they
fall
to
6.,8
in MAAC play
,
8-15 overall.
·
Coach Hanna believes
long
streaks in volleyball are a big part
,
inside and outside, of the game.
"They're a huge part of the
game," he said. "Whether it's a
streak inside the match or whatev-
er
amount of games you've won
beforehand, it gives you nice
momentum."
Fairfield has not lost a game
since September
16
and is now on
a 13-game winning streak. They
beat the Iona Gaels 3-0 last
Thursday. The Stags are so hot
right now they have not lost a sin-
gle game since October 8. The last
game they lost was against Siena,
but they eventually won the match
3-1. Fairfield improved to 13-0 in
the MAAC and is
16-6
overall.
confident going into the contest,
but knows Georgetown will be a
tough opponent.
"I think the guys have confi-
dence coming off of a good vic-
tory, and I know that we want to
make sure that we're focusing on
this game," Parady said. "We
know that Georgetown has
played a tough schedule, and that
they've played a lot of close
games, so we know it's going to
be
a good challenge for us down
there."
Hansen had
a
career
day
against
St Peter's
scoring four toucnoowns
on
greet
blocklna; from
his
offensive
llne.
Martst
had
406
total
yards.
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game, both Marist and Fairfield
kills to lead the Stags.
went back and forth with the lead
Brandi Higa had nine
until Fairfield was able to put digs and Katie Mann
together a six.point run and take
had
three aces. Barbie
the
lead
7-2.
Thistle
led
the floor
At points throughout the day it
appeared that the Red Foxes were
back on their heels and maybe even
with 34assists.
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Marist was on a
four-Senior
Stephanie
Mlksch had eight
digs In
the loss
game winning streak to the
Stags
and Manst had Its four-game winning
streak
snapped
ln CT
on
Saturday
afternoon.