The Circle, October 5, 2006.xml
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Part of The Circle: Vol. 60 No. 4 - October 5, 2006
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VOWME 60, ISSUE 4
FOUNDED
IN
1965
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 5, 2006
Banned books read, discussed
By
REBECCA ROSE
Staff Writer
On
Wednesday, Slpt. 27, a small group
of Marist students gathered at the
Banned Books Read-A-Thon to cele-
brate their freedom. The Banned Books
Read-A-Thon is just one of the many
activities that take place nationally dur-
ing
Banned Books Week every year.
The Banned Books Read-A-Thon was
orchestrated by junior Nicole Donolli.
Nicole is a resident advisor at Gartland
who became interested
in
banned
books
while researching programs that she
could run for students on campus.
Nicole discovered that books such as
"
Huckleberry
Fin~" "Goosebumps,"
"To Kill a Mockingbird," and "Of Mice
and Men" were among the list of banned
books.
The list contained
books
that
have themes such as sex, rape, indecent
language, violence, adolescence,
retar-
dation, religion, racism, wizardry
,
and
murder. Although these themes can be
harsh, they all play a role in our daily
lives.
One person who attended the
meeting said, "If you turn on the
news
for
ten
seconds, you'll see that someone
was raped."
Volleyball
aenlor tlk:aptaln Jaime Kenworthy recently overtook the number one
There were
many
excerpts read during
spot
on Martst's career kllls 11st.
She has
997
In
the
beginning of
her
flnal season.
the rcad-a-thon. Tom Goldpaugh read
~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ~
from "The Catcher in the Rye" by
J. D.
Remembering Amsterdam: Dutch pancake style
By
JACLYN LAWLOR
Circle Contributor
What do students normally remember
when they study abroad? The usual
answers
involve
the people they met, the
sights they saw, the places they traveled,
the nights they partied, and the FOOD!
When
I
look back on the semester
I
spent in Amsterdam,
I
have so many
amazing memories, and Dutch pancakes
are one of my favorites. Every country
has
its
staples: gelato in Italy, baguettes
in
France
,
fish and chips in England, and
Dutch pancakes in the Netherlands.
My favorite restaurant in Amsterdam
happened to be The Pancake Bakery on
the Prinsengracht, located down the
street from the Anne Frank House.
World News
What was once a warehouse owned by
the Dutch East India Company, is now a
hidden eatery renowned
for
"the best
pancakes in town." Townies and"'8uriats
alike flock to this
restaurant,
which
doesn't even open its doors until noon
but is packed until
11 :30
at night. So
what makes these pancakes so sensa-
tional?
I'll
let them speak for them-
selves:
Indonesian
Pancake filled with chicken, onions
:
mushrooms
and leek in an fndonesian
peanut sauce, served on a bed of bean
sprouts with seroendeng and a salad.
Canadian
Pancake filled with crispy bacon,
onions
,
mushrooms, ham, cheese and
curry sauce.
Brazilian
Pancake with walnut ice-cream,
mocca/caramel
sauce,
amaretto,
almonds and whipped cream
English
Pancake with William pears
,
vanilla ice
cream, chocolate sauce and whipped
cream.
These are just a few of the choices on
the menu. Think of them as crepe-like
omelettes and the clouds may clear a lit-
tle
. . . My mouth waters just glancing
over the menu and remembering the aro-
mas coming from the open kitchen. My
advice to anyone and everyone is to trav-
el to Amsterdam and try them for your-
self!
Visit http://www.pancake.nl/ to
learn
more about this
unbelievable
restaurant
and stop by the Study Abroad
Office
to
plan your semester in
Amsterdam ..
News Briefs
National News
Salinger.· This book was
banned
for its
use of profanity. Thomas said that ban-
ning books is a good thing because it
means that what was written
has
mean-
ing. People are frightened when words
have too much
meaning.
Thomas said
that banning books makes more people
want to read them. The only reason that
Thomas
read
"The Catcher
in
the Rye"
was because
he
was told that
he
wasn't
allowed to.
Dr. Moira Fitzgibbons read a passage
from "The Canterbury Tales" by
Geoffrey Chaucer.
In the excerpt, a
woman, who has been remarried several
times, is being ridiculed and called a slut
for all of the sexual acts that she has per-
fonned. She counters this attack by say-
ing that everyone has been given specif-
ic body parts that should be
used
for
pleasure. At the time that this book was
published,
it
was wrong to talk about
sex.
Also, the book was written
in
English. At the time, not many people
read in English. Most texts were
reli-
gious and written in Latin. The church
leaders
were unhappy by this
publishing
because it meant that
the public
was
more infonned.
Many issues were raised when Donolli
read a passage from "To Kill a
Mockingbird" by Harper Lee. Donolli
,aid she read the excerpt because it
showed
moral
character and integrity.
The book was challenged because of
its
mention
of rape
and racism
and its use of
language.
Those who attended the
Banned
Books
Read-A-Thon were appalled by
the
amount of books that had been banned.
One person who attended the
meeting
said, "Discussions at the right age by a
teacher about the sensitive
themes
men-
tioned in the books would
teach
[the
children] why these themes are wrong."
Everyone at
the
read-a-thon seemed
unanimous in their opinions
about
the
banned
books. The consensus was that
banning
books was wrong.
One
attendee said, "Why not
let the
ideas
in
and then let the people decide whether
they agree with them or not?"
It
seems
that
the onl,- upside to the
banning
is that
people
want what they can't. This
makes
banned books even
more
popular.
Raising awareness about banned books
is
not
an easy task.
It
is however.
a task
that Nicole will be taking on again
next
year. She is excited that she got to be a
part
of the Banned Books
Read-A-Thon.
"It's staring out very small," she said,
"but it's an important issue."
To read
more
about banned books or
Banned
Books
Week,
visit
www.ala.org/bbooks/.
MaristNews
Annual career conference
is
back
Democrallc People's Repuhltc of Korea
announces testing nf nuclear
\\'Capons
Pcnnsyl,ania sd1oolhouse killer re,ealed tcndencie-; to11ards mole,muon
The
·onh
K~lr<!an
so,emment
announ..:ed
Tm.·Mla)' that 1t plans to ~dw:t a nuclear
tesl
;II an
un~pc-citi
d finurr: dnte
rrior
10
the
t;1fl:rm'Tll,
issued
by 1hc
!'-:or1h
Korean
Pnre1gn fini$tr), 1hr:
OPRK h:Jd onlv as~ed Its
nght
10 \.."Ondud ._,u1.:h
le!ib.
Thus far both th~ l " MJ Japan
h,1n
LOndt:mncJ
U1c announcement as tx:lhgert!nl
:met
unfl.l!Lc
~nly
prm
Ol 13t1'te
Julu, 8(111,,n,
th1:
Atnen ..
an lln1N!.,.sndur
tr, 1h
t
N ,
said 1h l the m:mc:- houlJ
h\!
taken
to
lhe Secuncy Coun..:11
In i1s <.tatt1ment,
Mth
KL1rca
tnlinrnin~'d Lhat
nuclear te!>l Y.~r~ 11ccded to
ClhUrc
it~
e<"Unl)
as a
de.:tcmmt
,t~ain'll
militar\ action lrom
nat1on1
lil..c
the \Jmted Statc!i
S1x-y.ay rnultilatcrol talk,;
1eg.l.fdint
North 1',.orea s
po,
ess100
of nude-.1f weapo
~
had pte\ i'Ju,l)' bro-
kl!'n Jvwn. lesting vf mcJium and lt,ng
nmg1..' b,1llis.
tic m1<;..,:;d.:~ added further tethmn on 1he inkmat1on-
al stage
6i.
kin~ :-hooter
k1UeJ
fhc slttdents ma small
Am1~h ~ChllOlhou:e
in Lam:
!>tet
County Penns) lvania
on \fonda)· 111e
¥,Unman,
l harles Rohcrt:s I\.:
mh.•n~d
t.he S(h0t>I and
hdd
du.· m.:cupanb hu-,tage,
Aft.ct kn1m:. all malc-s and three womi.!n \\11h
habiel'i
loose, he bound ihe n:mainm!l fcnuks foct. He
~hot 10
!:1rJ,tat close ran)?:e.
and thct1 killed him,clr when poli~c forces t·ntcred 1-hrough a window
h\e l;trl~ arc
,till ho~p,tahze<l
four in
cntii:al
\:Ondilion
Police said I
ui.:'.sday
that smcidc
nutes nnd
1nlerv1c,1..~
with his,,
1te md1cah:d
that Robert.'>
nnl)
'ha\.c
inok~ri:ied
two younger
fomil) members
20 years. agtJ. and tha1 he des,re.d. to ,o rn'""'·
Congressman Fok) may have had cybcrscx wuh underage conb'Tes -ionnl page
Rcprcscmative
Mar~
Foley, R-Fla,
resig.neJ Frid.a) after
allcgarilm1
lha1
he
had scnl inappropnatc
anJ
sexu;.dl~
,..uggc:.ti\e e-mails
to
a former male con~-res~1oll.'.ll
pag,:
th"n
'1
)C8r'-
old
I
>thcr for-
mer p.igi:-s
have also come
forv.ard.
Jdhcnn~ tmrl'\cripb from
:!.001 ti)
ABt.
cws dctnilmg mt met
se, w1rh 1hi.: Congre mm
Hous.e Speaker
llcnnis lla.stcn , .. currentl) lcuding an imcshga,ion
10
detcnmm; Yrh3t
mformalilln
was
krM,\fl
pnor
10
the
Shlf:'
breaking l:bl week
It
,s un1mov.n
lt
th1.!:>
time
JU:.I
who. 11 an}ont had
\.'xrl1c11 L.n<w, lnifC
llf
Fnlc)··s alle~ed act\\ ilt("::.,
t-olev
rc\'e-aled Monday thal he-
It
an 11lcoht1lic. and
1s
currently rccch•ing m.•11tmcnl al a Florid ~en-
lcr His auome) rclca-1\.-d a 111.31'-·mcnt on
Tutsd!y that the ~ongrcssman wa~ lllOl~st,;d \l;hi ( a tcf'nag•
l..'.r
t,)
a
dcrgyn1t\n, and 1ha1 Fok} ¥1'3'- coming out n!t u
1Ul)
'\mcrirn11.
:v1anst
Colkgc \\ 111 N ponsonni n annuaJ
Cnrecr ·etworking Conreren1,;~
oa
Thunds),
October
5 m
the
J11n1~ J
McC1n11 R~-rearion
l enter on
the farist College Cam pus.
t
los~
to ... .., rmployers Ytill attend thts l;'vcnt
to
ink'ra<.:f
"1th ~1Udcnt..,
anJ
alumni
from
Mari
st
throughlltll the
Mid-Hudson Vall )' regfttdmg tll
1-
ume
empto1-ment,
internships
and umm~
JObs
Some
of the
fim,s
anendmg mdu~
Bank t\f
Ame1ica.
Hudson Ccntr11I F.ntcrpr
~
Rent-a-Car,
Ernst
&
Young
LLP IR. 1 Madi on Square
G
rden, \.forgan
Stanley.
Northw~ Munal
Pro~res'!li\.e
ln.1uran-.i:
St:1rc f rm lnsunm
fargcl
and 1 ruveler.s.
Inc
During
1hi~
year'~
career
nent
there
i
an
cinphas1s on finns seeking candidates for
tc.-chnol
og_v po!i11ton~.
In adJiti .. m.
I\
Big Four ccmmting
fiITTl
will he
participating in the nctv.orking con-
ference
r~
L""~:po
~t
Manst Coll~gc \\JI
be
held from
4:0U -
:00
pm.
t-or further infonnatv•n, con
Mansi Career Sen-ices at (8451 5 ~.3,;,4 .
THE CIRCLE
845-575-3000
ext.
2429
wrltetheclrcle@gmall.com
A&E: FORGET REGRET AND EXPERIENCE THE
WONDER THAT IS RENT
HEALTH: SLEEPLESS NIGHTS CONTRIBUTE TO
MORE THAN JUST TIRED MORNINGS
3399 North Road
Poughkeepsie, NY 12601
Brittany Fiorenza critically analyzes the amazing experi-
ence of the acclaimed play.
PAGES
Why a
lack
of sleep just might be contributing to any
number
of serious
health
problems.
PAGES
THE CIRCLE
C
am
·:t
us
,T
H
URS
D
AY, SE
PT
EMB
E
R 28, 2006
www.ma
r
lstclrcle.com
PAGE 2
·security
Briefs
.
Upcoming
Campus Events
Leo leaves new reputation with John Gildard
Thursda}, Oct.5 -
Verizon Wireless Tour
featuring the
All
American ReJccts
·
with St. Francis visits and Kung-Fu fighters
6y ANDREW
M
OL
L
seated on the floor of a 9/30 - 2:24 A.M.
Leader in homeland bathroom. Let me tell
security
A PSA from Security
'tl'ltettor
John Gildard
'fJ
!he young ladies at
Mar.1st. There has been
a
spate
of sexually
e:;xplicit phone calls to
1
women,
so
if
you
r.eceiv.e such a phone
call,
hang
up,
don't
en.courage the caller,
h
aV'e
a
'
male
friend
r~Cord the call, don't
,~Ut
your
names on your
incoming message, and
make su
r
e to call secu-
.r.ity.
9/26 - 7: 18
P.M.
you, I've been in the
bathrooms
in
Champagnat,
and
I
A Leo resident was
barely wanted to walk taken
to St. Francis
in there, let alone sit on after being a tad too
the floor. But maybe intoxicated. More on
things have improved. this in a minute.
Like, maybe they
got
a
paper towel dispenser. 9/30 - 3:19
A.M.
Lucky freshman.
9/27 - 9:30 P.M
.
Kids, watch your
cars: A student reported
that two hubcaps have
been stolen from their
car in the Fulton park-
ing lot. Either some-
body really needed to
fix up their vehicle, or
In front of Leo, a
couple students decided
to go at it, Kung-Fu
style
.
One kid attempt-
ed a karate kick, but the
other was able to block
it
with
his
knee.
Unfortunately,
this
resulted in what may
h
ave been a broken leg,
and the
student
was
Leo down and tell them
how their actions are
hurting us and that they
need to stop and think
about
what
they're
doing.
Then
maybe
they'll
end
up in rehab
with Pete Doherty.
(If
you get that joke, then
kudos to you.
If not,
wel
l
,
you're
really
missing out, not gonna
l
ie.)
9/30 - Noon
Around Fulton, a
student fell off their
bike
and
ended
up
breaking
their wrist.
This actually isn't
very
funny.
Wait.
Wait
a
I 0/1 - 3:30 A.M.
Over
at
St.
Peter's, a fight broke
out among a few
stu-
dents.
Once
secur
i
ty
showed up, the kids
said they were friends
and
everything
was
good.
Person
.
ally,
I
would have preferred to
have a huge Outsiders-
type rumble, only to
have SNAP show up,
and then we have a
Tarantino-esque stand-
off. Basically as many
violence/rumble
based
pop culture references
as
possible meshed into
8 p.m.
FridaJ, Oct.6
-
Sunday, Oct. 8
-
Family \\.eekend
Friday, Oct.6 -
Papa
Doo Run Run
9p.m.
Mccann Center Field
llousc
Saturday, Oct.
7 -
Band'Singers Concert
2p.m
McCann Center
Field
House
SaturdaJ, Oct.
7 -
Po,crty
Neck
Hill
Billies
security
is getting quite
A student attempted serious
about people
to enter Midrise with parking
without
the
four cans of Keystone
Light and
a
can
of
Busch L°ight. The cans
were
co.nfiscated
by
security
.
.aod.
t.he\l
promptly
destrffAd so
that no one could ever
speak of these beers
ever again. Consider
it
proper passes.
taken to St. Francis. minute. Yes it is.
It
Says
John
Gildard, sounds like
·
it would
"Practice your Ninja have been quite funny
Turtle moves on your to
see.
No offense.
pillow."
a
super
fight. And the
winner? The Celebrity
Boxing
champion,
Dustin Diamond. Don't
ask
me how he
got
involved, he just did.
What has
·
he been up to
J'lf(e
l!)G
llll:,i!m
,.l'
llu>
t
bing,,
-
d\'.tty,
k Mp~
;~
9
p.m.
Mccann
Center
Fidd
House
Sunda~-. Oct. 8
-
Ccili Ram
i
1something
thiit should
be a part of the Patriot
Act.
9/27- I :27
A.M.
In Champagnat, an
intoxicated student was
taken to
St.
Francis
after they were found
9/28 - 11 :40 P
.
M.
9/30 - 11 :00 P.M.
The Benoit RD report-
Another Leo rest-
ed that a
shopping
cart dent was taken to St.
was
sent
down the stair-
Francis by Fairview for
case to the lower level intoxication. Seriously,
of Benoit. Nobody is what the hell happened
too sure how the cart at Leo last Sa,turday?!
got there in the first You've got kids being
p
l
ace, and it was even-
taken to the hospital
tually
returned
to and other kids re-enact-
Eckerds.
I
blame ing
Mortal
Kombat.
Johnny Knoxville, actu-
Something
probably
ally. Or
Eckerds,
for needs to be done here,
making their carts so like a residence inter-
darn ride-able
.
vention. We'll al I sit
Miz
an
i
F
arouk
lBJ&m
~
Pa
u
l Mitchell
FREE
Conso
l
tation
ooall
Weaves & Extension.a
Hair
Wea
ving
Marc is back
..
.
and Debbie fonnely of Making Faces have joined
the Rest
of
the Returning Staff
Student Discoun
t
WithMaristlD
.
Walk-ins welcome
Please make
a
p
pointments
for prompt service
Ttil:
CUTT~
Coll f•r •ppe/11t••"'
•
W•lkl,.•ltu
ll"tlHM&
•
0/fu
l,iMIUtl
264 NORTH RD., POUGHKEEPSIE 454-9239
Ju,
,u,
lllb•p,vl •
o,,...,,. ,,
.
,, • ..,,.
,,_,,11., • " • -
z•o
D•J/
•
l',.u
,..,.l,J ...
9
/
30 - 11
:50
P.M.
St.
Francis
got
another Marist patient,
as
an
intoxicated
stu-
dent was found by the
Donnelly
greenhouse.
(Probably a Leo resi-
dent) It's a
good
thing
the
student
was found.
Because mowing grass
is the number one cause
of death amongst drunk
college students.
Disclaimer: The Securily Briefs are
intended as satire and fully protected
free speech under the First
Amendment of the Constitution.
genius-o-meter:
~
aplt
lflll .,._k 2007
c.lNNtl-
aoth
Aa■'""-rywtttrt
. .
11
~
,_
,,_Trlp
_
..._,.
12NforeNcw.l
, , . . ......
.. PartlN,Nattaet
DNls
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8NNlp
Dlaoollnta.
_ . .
HotlNt~
.,.__INMS
...U...
.t-a00-42 ..
7710
-
....
·
~-
12 p.rn.
Campus
tlirecn
TuesdaJ, Oct.
IO -
SPC Student
Coffeehouse
9p.m
PAR
•
I ickcts on
sale
for the
Verizon Wireless Tour
featuring
The
All-
American
Rejects
on
Oct.
5
in
the
McCann
Center.
rickcts
are
$
I 0.
TrIE CIRCLE
Kate Giglio
Editor
in
Chief
An
d
y
Alongi
Managing Editor
Chrlstfne Rochelle
Margeaux Lippman
Opinion Editor
Layout Editor
Alexander Tingey
ErlcZeda
l
ls
Health Editor
Sports Editor
Celtlln Tansey
Isabel CeJulis
Copy Editor
Features Editor
Ralph Rienzo
AndrewDICacc:o
James Marconi
News Editor
Jessica Bagar
A&E Editor
Derek Delllnger
Copy Editor
Chelsea Murray
Advertising Manager
Assistant Layout Editor
Distribution Manager
G. Modele Clarke
Faculty Advisor
The Circle
is
the weekly student newspaper of Maris\ College. Letters to the edi-
tors, announcements, and
story ideas
are always welcome, but
we
cannot
publish
unsigned letters
.
Opinions expressed in articles are not necessarily
those of
the
editorial board.
The
Circle staff
can
be reached at
575-3000
x2429 or letters to
the
editor can
be
sent to writethecircle@gmail.com.
The Circle
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THE CIRCLE
OQ!~iq!J.
Let the
voices
of the Marist
community be heard.
PAGEf
Connecticut calls No Child Left Behind unconstitutional
ByDAN BLACK
Staff Writer
lenge the federal government in
cases that concern the teaching
of that
state's
children. Whose
children
are they? Who rightful-
In dismissing some of
Connecticut's
more presSing
grievances, Kravitz stated that
the law canilot
be
challenged
until the state
As all other students ofMarist's
school
of
education probably are,
I
am very concerned with the
state of education in this country
and especially concerned
with
the government's influence upon
it.
It
was a comfort, recently, to
learn
that
the
state
of
Connecticut shares this concern.
This past August, Connecticut
Attorney
General
Richard
Blumenthal
sued
the U.S.
Secretary of Education, Margaret
Spellings, alleging that her inter-
pretation and implementation of
No Child Left Behind is uncon-
stitutional.
have read over Blumenthal's
appeal to the U.S. District
Court;
it
sounds reasonable. The people
of Connecticut believe the
stan-
dards
the Federal Government
imposes on their education
sys-
tem should
be
accompanied by
appropriate funding. They fur-
ther believe that their standard-
ized testing systems should be
acceptable alternatives to the
federal "high-stakes" standard-
ized tests, respecting that
Connecticut's students rank
with the highest achieving in
the country.
I'll ask the blatantly obvious question:
what about the child?
By whose
authority must a child fall to
learn In
order to stimulate the polltlcal leaders
responsible for his or her education Into
action that prevents the failure of
future children?
0
f
Connecticut
has, in fact,
broken it.
I
believe it
is
very
impor-
tant for us,
any of us that
have an inter-
child behind;' the curators of this
legislation are its own undoing.
But all irony aside,
I'll
ask the
blatantly obvious question: what
about the child?
By whose
authority must a child
fail
to
learn in order to stimulate the
political leaders responsible for
his or her education into action
that prevents the
failure
of future
children?
I
beli~ve
if
Blumenthal has a case then
it
ought to be addressed. the denial
a child's education
is
an
unneces-
sary step.
ty
that has overstepped
its
bounds to strike out against vic-
tims as
innocent
as they
an
defenseless: American children.
Connecticut has realized
its
role,
its obligation even, of speaking
truth to power and is
doing
just
that. If
indeed
this conflict
con-
tinues, so too will my
writing
about
it.
I am
confident that the
Bush'
Administration will keep
me
well
s
upplied
with raw materials
for criticism, not the least
of
which are
prevalent
already,
u
they've always been: the
abuse
of
exec
utive
power, the efforts
of
executive
power to expand
its
power,
and its continua"'
assaults on fundamental
human
riB,hts.
Now that these infrac:-
tions
are
targeting children,
it is
a:
fight in which
nearly
everyone
has
someth
ing
at stake.
Bravo Connecticut; how won-
derful
it
is to know there is a
political agenda in this
country
that focuses on
something
other
than money and exploiting
whomever it takes to
acquire
it.
I
Unfortunately, it doesn't appear
the federal government believes
Blumenthal has a
case.
Most of
the lawsuit was dismissed on the
premise of jurisdiction, the idea
that
Co
nnecti
cut
has no
grounds
to challenge federal power in this
particular arena.
I
find this inter-
esting, mildly anyway, that a
state government cannot chal-
ly exerts power over what and
how they learn and how,
specifi-
cally, that learning is measured?
These questions
,
poignant
they
may
be, cause
me less distress
than
does
the
statement
Federal
District
Court
Judge Mark
Kravitz made in regards to why
the
state of Connecticut
cannot
yet
bring
No Child Left
Behind
to trial.
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est in protect-
ing
the rights and futures
of
chil-
dren, to consider carefully the
meaning and implications
of
Krevitz's words.
By forcing
Connecticut
to break the law
before they can
l
egally appeal
its
legitimacy
,
the federal
govern-
ment is forcing the
state
to 'leave
a
child behind' before they can
challe
nge
the merits of the
very
Act that purports to 'leave no
The State of Connecticut has
reassured its citizenry that this is
not over, they
are
not
giving
up.
I applaud them, and
am
behind
them
I 00
percent. The federal
government
has promised to
deliver results that
are
not realis-
tically
attainable by those
responsible for doing
so
at the
ground
level. This is a
sus
tained
attack from institutional authori-
.
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~
LETTERS
TO
THE EDITOR POLICY:
The
Circle
welcomes letters
from
Marlst 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,
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(student,
faculty,
etc.) and
a telephone number or
cam-
pus e~tension for
verification purposes.
Letters without these
requirements wlll
not be published.
Letters can be dropped off at The Circle office or submitted
through the
'Letter
Submission' link on MarlstClrcte.com
THE
CIRCLE
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The Circle Is published weekly on
Thursdays
during ttie
school
year.
Press
run
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To request advertising
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editorial board, call
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Opinions
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do not necessarily
repre-
sent
those
of
the editorial board.
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THE
CIRCLE
•
THURSDAY, OCTOBER
5, 2006
•
PAGE 4
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THE CIRCLE
A&E
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 5, 2006
www.maristclrcle.com
PAGES
Forget regret
_
and experience
the
wonder that is RENT
By
BRITTANY FIORENZA
Circle Contributor
Mind blowing performances,
over-
.
flowing theaters
,
and profound
social
commentaries
-
these are the universal
expectations of any
play. However,
in
addition
to common
expectations, what
one
leaves
the
theater
actually enlight-
ened.
In today's
word,
that is
definitely
something
unique.
"Viva La Vie
Boheme"
captures the
essence
of the entire
play,
which follows
a group of friends and
lovers living
"at
the
end of
the millennium." The dive~e
group includes universal
representations
of
every
aspect
of
society,
from
an
intellectu-
al
philoso-
pher
(albeit
an anarchist)
to an
exotic
dancer.
The
intertwined
relationships
of
the
group
cover
all
aspects
of
other road
I
No other way/ No day
but
today."
When my friend and
I walked into the
Nederlander Theatre we were surprised
to see just
how
tiny
it
was
-
there was-
n't even room in the
audience
for a pit
The stage was simple, set
up
with fold-
ing
chairs, platfonns, spiral fire escapes,
and of course, Fender guitars. To the far
left of
the
stage the musicians were a
part
of
the
"grungelboho''
set.
If
any-
thing,
the fact
that the
musicians were
visible only added to the pulse of
the
show. Try and
picture
it: a jam-packed
theater
and a cast decked out in outfits
similar to Kurt Cobain and his infamous
green sweater, as well as plenty of plaid
and in the case of
the
Mimi, the exotic
dancer,
leopard
leggings. The feel of the
theater personified the communal social
commentary the play is known for, and
by the end
I
felt
like
I had just lived an
entire year
in
the Doc Martin's of these
bohemians.
Think
of your favorite picruresque
scenes
in the movies (refer Audrey
Hepburn
as Holly Golightly,
standing
in
front of
Tiffany
's
at six
in
the
morning,
if you must). Well, RENT is a culmina-
comes
in.
All
of $ese
peop
l
e
are
just trying
to
pay
their
rent;
it's
that
simple, and
still,
that
complicat•
ed).
During
this scene,
the audience
actually
began
acting
as
though
they were a
part
of
the
protest.
The
voices
of
.
these
actors
were
w1real;
I was
espe-
c
i
a
I I
y
impressed
with Crys
t
a
l
Hall's
so
l
o
d u r i n
g
Shown
above
Is
the art
on
the
walls outside of the Neder1ander
"Seasons
of
Theatre where RENT
Is
staged.
The
art serves as a
reminder
of
the
Love."
I
beauty
of
ltfe and forces
the
audience to continue
to think about
love and life
including the
controversial
issues
of
homosexual-
ity,
drug
use,
and
AIDS.
Furthermore,
this
play
embodies the
1990s
vibe:
tion of all those favorite scenes. One constantly
RENrs
message even
after the
completion
of
the show.
The Intertwined
relatlonshlps
of
the characters In RENT cover all
living
for
aspects
of
love and
life
lncludlng the controversial Issues of homosex
-
the sake of
uallty, drug use, and AIDS.
a
r
t
i
s
t
i
c
specific view that
really
pulled at my
had
c
h
i
ll
s,
street and
noticed the
art on the walls
heart
was when Roger, the tortured
and
the
energy
the performers
emitted
and
the
eccentricity of it all and
realized
musician, stands alone on ,tage and the
was something
inescapable. Their
emo-
just
how strongly RENT
had
affected
spotlight envelopes him as he belts out
tions were
reflected in the
audience.
me.
If
I hadn't
seen
the play
I would
"One Song Glory."
·
At the
end of
this
play
that deals
so
have never
known what
I
was missing
Equally amazing is
the
scene
in
which
c
l
osely with
love
and
death,
poverty and
but now that I have
,
I
am
50
in awe of
Maureen, the performance artist, puts on
"selling out"
the
audience gave a stand-
th.e
inctedible
message RENT sends
a one woman act protesting the eviction
ing
ovation to the cast and walked from
through
beautiful music and
8
moving
of Avenue A's tenants (for your infolll'la-
this tiny
theater into the bustling
streets
storyline.
expresSion
is
to be anticipated when you see RENT
and being defiant
towards
all confonni-
is
the unexpected.
The hopes
of
the
ty.
"There's only
us
/
There's only this/
audience are fulfilled
in
this play and Forget regret or life
is
yours
to miss
/No
tion, this is where
~th_e_t_it_le_
'
_'RE_N_T_"_o_f_N_ew_Y,_o_rk_C_ityc...._I_s_tare_d_d_o_w_n_t_he
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_,,
Belarusian poet
Valzhyna
Mort
shares
beauty and passion
with Marist community
By
JUSTINE MANN
&
CASSANDRA BOLGER
Circle
Contributors
Valzhyna
Mort's deep
a
n
d sou
l-
inspiration
for her poem, aptly
called,
loltery Wheel. She
notes
that
her
poems are usually sad;
she announces, ''And now a love
poem. I don't haVe
many,
that is
:~~;1~:~•;
[Mort's] poems are
never
the
you in. Even
same In different languages
.
in
a lang
u
age
She respects the music of the
~;in~tgi~~:
words and does not try to trans-
poetry
has
late her poems dlrectly. In one
rhythm
and
of her poems Mort decided
to
beauty.
Her
keep only two llnes of the ortgl•
first
poem of
nal and created the
rest
of
the
evening is
in
Be
l
arus
i
an
scratch.
and
the
audi-
- - - - - - - - - - -
why
I
a
I
ways
announce
[them,] so
[they]
seem
special."
The audi-
ence is alert
and
laugh-
ing
at
Mort's
unexpected
witticism.
Her
ence is capti-
vated. The
l
anguage
barrier is
overcome with
passion.
This
Wednesday, Sept. 27,
Mort came
to Marist
to
read
some of
her
work.
The poet
was
born
in
M
in
sk,
Belarus
and
has
been
taJcing the literary
wor
ld
by
stonn
with her
witty
prose
and
musical lyrics.
She started writ·
ing in
high school
but
"desper-
ately want( ed]
to be
an
opera
singer." She
remembers
spend-
ing the
best years of
her
child·
hood
in an opera
hall, playing
hide-and-go-seek.
Mort now
mixes her
two
passions, music
and writing, while combining
her
education as a
linguist
At
the
young age of 24, she is re
l
easing
her
first
book
of poetry
in
English and is al
r
eady an accom-
plished
author over seas.
Her
book,
Factory of Tears, will
be
released in the
spring of 2008.
poems are never
the
same in dif-
ferent
languages.
She
respects
the music
of the words and
docs
Mort's
poetry
is
based
on
her
life
experiences and
her
sur-
roundings. She tells
the
audi-
not
try to translate her poems
directly.
I
n one of her poems
Mort
decide0
to keep only two
lines
of
the
original and created
the
rest from
scratch. Mort
respects her
work by
taking
the
time to
value each line and
because
of this
meticulousness
it
so
m
etimes
takes her
years to fin-
ish
a poem. Her poem
Musical
Loc11srs
took
one full year to
comp
l
ete,
having
started in the
summer and then waited until the
next summer
to
finish
it. She
said by
the
end of
the
first sum•
mer the
feeling
was gone and it
became
"an autumn poem" or a
sadder poem. Mort's words are
bare
and real. She says:
"It
is
the
rhythm of
the music.
My poems
have
changed since
I am here.
I
am more tranquil."
ence of
her
chi
ldh
ood breakfasts,
On
Wednesday,
5ept 27, BeiarUSian poet Valzhyma Mort read
some
of
watching
the lottery
wheel every
her
poetry
at
Marlst College. At the young age
of
24, the poet writes In
morning
.
This
memory
is
the
English
and Belaruslan and her poetry
Is
full
of
rhythm and beauty.
*RSVP
by
October
16th to take
part!
*For
more
info, call
X3547
.\Uention ,luniors
&
Seniors:
lraduaa School
lnformaiion Session!
/
October I 8, I 1·1 p.m.
Henry Hudson Room
Find out about:
• The application calendar
• Components of a solid application
• Reasons to apply
&
reasons not to
•
Choosing the right graduate
program
*Refreshments
will
be served*
RSVP
to:
paltaylor@marisledu
THE ClRCLE
!
Features
:rHURSOAY, OCTOBER 5, 2006
www.maristclrcle.com
PAGES
The Circle editors
present ...
1 2 3 4 5 Numbers 5 4 3 2 1
Yeah, we know they're
everywhere
and no one really
notices 'em, but they need their five minutes of
fame.
So
we're
going to host a photography competition
about
them.
Submit your most
creative
display of numbers
and win a
$50 gift
certificate to Ritz Camera!
Submissions must be digital
in format
and
sent
to:
writethecircle@gmail.com
Please, no 35mm prints.
Thanks and
good
luck
shooting.
..
.
123456789
...
The Circle
welcomes reader contributions for
new features ..
.
I Saw You ...
Have you ever
seen
someone thal
caught
your eye?
You exchanged glances or even a few words, but
then they dissapeared and you never
saw
them
again? Well
'I
Saw You'
is
here to give you a sec-
ond chance.
Forget about regretting; send a message to that guy
or girl. And don'! forget to read, there might
be
a
message waiting for you.
Send
submissions
to writethecircle@gmail.com.
Example;
Last Tuesday you were bartending at the
Loft.
I
wou/dn
~
forget that blonde head of hair.
I
bought
a
few
drinks from you but I wouldn
~
tell you my
name.
1 was playing hard to get hut now I have
changed
my mind. Go ahead ask
for
my name
again
.
The column about nothing
Things to Do While Sexiled
By MORGAN NEDERHOOD
Staff Writer
Almost everyone will go through the experience
of being
scxiled
at least once in their
co
llegiate
lifetime. It is almost like a right of passage, and
you are bound to have times when you walk into
your
room, notice something doesn't quite add up,
and then realize that a quick exit is the best option.
In
case of emergency (as well as for my own
amusement while
l
postpone my
homework)
,
I've
developed a list of things to do when
scxiled.
I'm
not recommending that you do all
of
these
-
some
might result in
your
roommate punching
yo
u
in
the
face - but
you
can nonetheless imagine them in
your
mind and
smile
at the ideas. So, let the games
begin:
MAKE YOUR
PRESENCE KNOWN
- It's
your
room, too,
so
why should
you
have to shy out
of
your
own room? If they leave a
signal
or some
son of
warning on the door, then
I
guess
that they
are
somewhat
justified. But, if
you
walk into your
own
room and
your
retinas start bleeding from the
nastiness
in
front
of
you, then
s
hame
on them.
Stand proud, act
like nothing odd
is
happening and
make noisc
...
a
lot
of noise. Try
turnin
g
up
your
cell
phone to
full
volume on a fantastically bad
ring tone, and
pray
that your friends call you.
Or,
call
your friends, hang up when they answer, and
wait for them to call you back. If
you
hav
e
no
friends to call
you,
then
tum
on
your cell
phone's
alarm
and wait for the
obnoxious
ruckus
to
begin.
TAKE YOUR TIME -
If
you
rush to evacuate
your
room,
you're
likely to forget
someth
ing
,
which
will only result
in
you
needing
to re-enter
the
l
ove
den, Make
sure
you have everything you
need for
a
proper
sexile:
laptop,
money for food
at
the \cndmp
machines, headphone,,
iJ>od,
and
D\"D
s
(you
never know how long it will be).
\\-llile
you're at it, you should
sit down and make
a
quid checklist
of
supplies.
Grab
a
change
of
do11i~
and
yottrbooks for tomorrow's class just in
ca'><
you're sexife0
for the night. Most important-
!).
take
the numbers of some reliable friends who
will
let
you camp out
in
their room
in
case you
need to
stay
out for the night. No one wants
you
camping in the
stairwell
or any other
creepy
place
like some
sort
of odd troll.
TIME
LIMIT- Decide on a time
limit
for your
roommate. This is
something
that you should prob-
ably go over with
your
roommate beforehand, but
sometimes a crisis arises before you've ever
reviewed
the guidelines. In that case, you have to
decide what an acceptable time limit is for your
roommate
and his or her boy/girl-toys. My mono:
if
you
can't do something within two hours, t~en
you
shouldn't
be doing
it
at all. Honestly people,
two hours
sho
uld
be enough- this isn't a marathon.
So, assign your roommate a time restraint (with or
without their knowledge), and don't feel obligated
to say a second past your limit.
SUSTENANCE - I
can't
stress this enough: scx-
ile is based upon
survival
of the fittest. Most
humans
can live up
to
seven days without water
and up to ten days without food, so plan according-
ly. Pack
yourself
ple,uy of food, and it's usually
wise to
store
extra food in
strategic
l
ocations
around your residence hall. Be
sure
to keep frozen
meals in a friend's fridge, and feel free to freeze
just about anything you want
so
you can thaw
ii
out during limes of emergency. No one
s
hould
eve
r
be sexiled withoul having a
jar
of peanut butter on
hand.
Peanut huller is the universal food as you
can
spread
it on just about anything, and it
eve
n
tastes good by itself. Whatever you do, make
su
re
to pack
enough
for a long-tenn banishment from
your
room.
I
would hate to catch you hunched over
your
last
red M&M whispering,
"My
precious;"
nor would
I
enjoy seei
ng
you
try
to ration anything
else in your third hour in the basement
l
ou
ng
e.
In
all,
sexilc
is an adventure. It's a jungle out
there,
and :;urvhal
i
s
h,bed
on
~ho
can
and can'!
adapt
to the
harsh
world of
foraging
for
candy,
fighting the
squirrels for
fallen
crumbs,
and
learn-
ing to
store
emergency
sustenance
in odd loca-
tions. Oh, and you might want to invest in
an
inflatable mattress
-
you never know how long
)OU
might
be
stuck
in the
loung
e.
A VIBRANT, INTELLECTUAL
COMMUNI1Y •
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LOCATION IN ONE OF THE MOST INFLUENTIAL REGIONS.
A
SINGULAR FOCUS ON
THE
STUDY OF LAW.
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ALBANY LAW SCHOOL
TEL: 518-445-231
I
WWW.ALBANYLAW.EDU
www.maristclrcie.com
THE
CIRCLE
•
THURSOAY
,
OCTOBER
5,
2006
•
•
PAGE
7
- -
MARIST ABROAD
NEWS ALERT!
ADDITIONAL
SPACES AVAILABLE
FOR SPRING '07
PLEASE APPLY ASAP
FOR MORE DETAILS
___
CONTACT THE MAP
LIB334
I
x3330
THE CIRCLE
Hea
l
th
'
nt
URSDA
Y,
O
CTO
BER
5, 2006
www.ma
r
lstclrcle
.
co
m
PAGES
;
Sleepless nigh~s contribute to more than just t
ir
ed mo
rnings
'
By ALEXANDER TINGEY
'
H
ea
l
th Ed
it
or
According to a recent sur-
vey, Americans sleep two
ho
ur
s less on average than
they did 40 years ago.
In
addh
i
on, the quality of s
l
eep
r
eceived today is less fulfill-
ing according to researchers.
With sleep deprivation comes
more than just an extra slap on
the 'snooze,' according to a
C
h
icago University study
individuals who are in a con-
tin
u
al state of s
l
eep depriva-
t
i
on were more susceptible to
a myriad of ailments.
In the past two years alone
we have seen the rise of brand
name sleep aids, such as
Lunesta and A.mbien.
The
n
atio
n
al average is around
: seven hours a night, with
'
many people getting less than
h
alf that
amount Lawrence
:
Epstein, M
.
D., the regional
;
medica
l
director for S
l
eep
, Health Centers
in
Boston,
l
Massachusetts, and former
: p
r
esiden
t
of the American
!
Academy of Sleep Medicine
suggests that individuals need
between e
i
ght and nine hours
of sleep per day to be fully
func
t
ional, as reported by
CNN.
A simple way to determine
whether or not you are receiv-
ing an ample amount of s
l
eep
can be judged by how quickly
you
fall
as
l
eep when you do
go to bed.
On
average, people
fall asleep in 15 minutes,
though some will take less
time and some will take more.
Epstein notes that
if
you are
fa
ll
ing asleep within one or
two minutes of going to bed
that you are indeed sleep
deprived.
Another way to
monitor your s
l
eep is to keep
track of daytime drowsiness.
Chronic daytime sleepiness is
not norma
l
, says Michael
Twery, Ph.D., acting director
of the National Center on
Sleep Disorders Research.
Aside from a bad case of bed
head
·
and some expected
crankiness, researchers have
found that s
l
eep deprivation
can lead to abrupt changes in
appetite, weight gain, diabetes
Heal
thy Habits
!
IIY
SARAH GUNNER
Writer
nuuk candii:.,
nd clw,:u-
a
t
e
Amr,;b MatM:t
1.;;
a refut1vd
MtJ-Hud~im
,
is a grt:at pln~e for
:
wn produce that 1s.
nd di:lictou:-. T\'. o
dent groccty ..
wre~,
Also
1:arrying trcsh
prod11i.::c,
f"a1racn:
Fanns and they ha,-e
d
\\Onderful hak-
!Jl
Market, arc"- ithin ~rj and n.-ad ..
•made
s.cx:t1on
nute drive
or
Mari~t.
that ..:arne:,, e-,cl)thmg lrom
of
them carry
fresh
fried plantarn::, to salmon
crbs.
fn11ts.
find
c
a
k
l!
s
e t a t,
I
c ,
Thcs1.• t"o gmcc.·n..:~
Adams
F.1iracr(
u.r(
great ,tltcmattH"S to
~hop-
s located on Route 44
ping at a trad1hon,1l chain
ghkc-cps1e. h "as store 111e) ha\ c s.,gmficcmt-
hed
in
the
l!ilrl)'
ly
ltJ\\..Cf
prC\d1J1,,C price.,_
a."
a fann und and
i
1.:Mry
plenty nl hard-to-lmc.l
1ly•owncd
and run
w
spcl·1alt)'
tlems.
and
als1.
1
su~
. They choow Ii) .;;ell
port thi.: loc.:Jl fannmg t:i.:um,-
ucc as uflen us pos-
nn 1n tht: Jh ...
J
,,e ,.;all home
d th1~ alkrn~ tht'
,hilc
111 M,uist. Shorr,inll al
be far lmH·r than at them
1.,
a.h\ ay:1
1111
ad\ cnum.~
Shop, Not cmly do
in
ldsk
I
sight~ anJ ,mdb
.
..:k locally
g1
own ;mJ u is
hard
to
il'U\ I.' \\
ithout
y
also h,n
i'I
hup:c
a
little?
treat for
your,clf 01 3
JiiCcUon carry hard
f
i
d
eats and
lhh.
and
, on'I
o..,
risk, the strength of your
immune system, and even
your chance of deve
l
o
p
ing
depression.
A 2004 Chicago University
research team discovered that
restricting a night's s
l
eep to
four hours had dramatic
effects upon
l
eptin and ghre-
lin, two brain chemica
l
s
which regulate eating patterns
and hunger. Researchers con
-
cluded that receiving less than
seven hours of s
l
eep per night
puts individua
l
s at a much
greater risk for obesity (which
is good news for all you late
Sunday sleepers).
Epstein explains this phe
-
nomenon: stating that "chron-
ic sleep deprivation causes
changes in metabolism that
produce a state that stimulates
hunger
.
" Those who are sleep
deprived are also more like
l
y
to forego daily physical activ-
ity, and are more likely to
drink beverages which con
-
tain caffeine.
It's a universal morning sta-
ple
:
coffee. But recent studies
indicate that increased con-
~
AUXANDER TINGEY
Health
fdrtor
gcnc1ic
s
or 1101 on!) 111i.:h1•1tllomimi.1
hut
any
Jic;.-
orJi:r ,\ht'rC' pcopk have \111\\
~
n,-.d
bd1av111ts
th,ll lhc-) 1;.an't
o:<inlwl
s
a1J
Dr.
AIIL,;l,n \)hh:\
Koch, lh\:
s
1ud) , nuth r anJ .1
n.:
"ard1e-r
at th<!'
D115'e I rm cnn) ( cm._-r
fnr I lum1111 l
11.'fu:tu.~
Tm:id
of
pulling
out your hail?
Study
finds genetic
caLL<;e
Tnd10t11Joman1a, u
ps,
choh1iii.11l
1.hsorJer
which dri"C-1 un 1ndn1dual ll1 Cl.1mpub1vd> pull
our.
their hn1r cyeltt,hes tmd C\ebr1w~s ttffccts
approxima
t
ely 1 10 5 percent ol the <\meric3n
populatum. Appeanng:
tn
~rl_y ,utult:~t.'.'nce
~ch
gin
v.rcd,.
ha\oc
~11h
a ;ouni p(rson·,
utr-cste\.'ffl.
n,crc
IS
rnod
m:\\ •
ho\l.~l'r
resean::htn
at
Duke
lJmvt:r-;Hy
h;1\'c
h,und
1.ha1
ttich
ma}
be
t>rought on h}
.1
gen ...
11c
mrnahon
• ll
n
s
i.\
11n important
lir-.t
in
11ndmL1nding
th('
When
research
bci;an. cxpt·rl focu)1.'tl
111
on a
\;'°"'-'
kn11v.11 a, SLITRK I
nu.-:,-
hC'ht>Vt' this
~enc ts also Ct.1tUH."CICd
wuh
a rel:lrcd
1mp11I~
l'<.lntrl.11
di~orJl•t lnureues )yndr
t
,mc
\\.hilc
rh~1r
r..:-.earch
lc"u.
c;
cd
on
44 fomihes.
·xrert
found
th!!.! mUl3tcd Sl.lTRK 1
i
~nt:
<; l
tccountcd
to, near])
~
P<-'Tcenl uf case:. "•hl:'rl" trkh
was;
prc,r111
fhc inutalion
m
que~uon ha some
8('f1nu\
rool", a!-i thisg~nc 1 ,n\Ohcd m the
lonm,tion
of
l,i()Oll('Cll\
'
I;
liSiUC
:i
btt"'-n'I\ t'lram
C
·Us
.
One
l•f
the rc<,emch\ main g.o:1ls
1:-.
roi.,mg the J...,'l1ri;-~
nc. thu1 these pt"Ople .1tc1\'t
i:-tlll),
~u1 rrlthet
l.hc-
re-:ult of
.1
bmlo~kal lucrnp 11H
rcscardu:r'I
hope "1II rmsl' the ,,.lf.c"
,
ti.:(111 ol 1hosc ami~ted
\'1th trh •
.:h
,
and help to
t
reat
!111
s
sumption of coffee can be a
cause of insomnia, and may
help perpetuate the visc
i
ous
sleep deprived cycle of life.
Accordi
n
g to
r
esearchers at
Chicago Univers
i
ty, consum-
ing five or more caffeinated
dr
i
nks per day could provoke
further sleep deprivation.
Aside from the obvious
physical effects of shorting
yourself in the sack, the cur-
rent trend
in
med
i
ca
l
research
suggests that sleeplessness
i
s
a contributing factor to clini-
cal depression.
"Positive
moods are lower in peop
l
e
with s
l
eep loss," reports
Van
Cauter, a professor of medi-
cine at Chicago University,
"and mood isn't stable over
.
the 24-hour cycle. People
have lower moods in the
morning. They also have
highe
r l
evels of cortisol, the
stress ho
r
mone. All those
changes are typical of clinica
l
depression."
Among
a
group of women,
ages 30 to 35, it was found
that those receivi
n
g less than
6.5
hours of s
l
eep per night
were twi
ce
as
li
ke
l
y
to d
eve
l-
op resistances to insulin
,
a
condition which if continued
has been shown to cause some
types of diabetes. CNN news
reports that "the study shows
so far, that individuals need to
produce 30 to 40 percent more
insu
l
in to dispose of the same
amount of glucose when
receiving less than 6.5 hours
of sleep a
n
ight."
comer
,
and your roommate's
all night toga parties
,
but with
a little time management and
some coercion on the part of
the roomy
,
a good night's rest
can still be had.
If
you or a
loved one suffers from chron-
ic
s
leep deprivation, please
contact Health Services or
your general care physician
.
Maristln"'"'4tlcnal
"'°9Wm
I
845.575.3330
www.mamt.edu/l-
I
t _
_,_"°'
Be sure t
o
chec out MCTV's
Friday night line-up:
6:00 - MCTV News
6:30 -
FoxDen
7:00 - THAT'S A SHAME! (repeat)
7:30 -
howcase Presents
•Line-up re-airs lour times ead1 day, at
9 a.m., 2
p.111.
,
6 p.m. and 10
(l
111
.
MCTV - Your Campus, Your Station.
--rneristdtde.com
Marilt
opens
an
ect,t-court tennis
facilrty
near
tne
Fulton Townhouse&.
Some
of the
most advanced
court
technology avallable
was
used
to
create
the
Pavllk>n,
gMng
Marlst one of the
premier
faclltties
In
the
area.
Successful tennis programs earn stellar new facility,
mens tennis team shows they deserve their new
courts
TH£ CIRCLE
•
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 5, 2006
•
PAGE 9
Red
Foxes
look forward to
Metropolitan Championships
By
DANIEL
BARRACK
Circle Contributor
For
the
second consecutive
meet, the Red Foxes
ran
a
partial
squad, and for
the
second con-
secutive time, it
had little
effect
on the team's performance. The
men's cross cowitry
team
fin-
ished
19th
out of 42 teams at the
Paul Short Jnvitational at Lehigh
Unive
r
sity on
Friday
.
The
Red
Foxes finished the meet with
4?8
points,
trailing
first
place
Villanova with 103 points.
Ginna Segni again lead the
Red Foxes with a time of 25:01
in the 8,000-meter course. That
time
placed
Segni 26th out of
277
runners.
Sophomore David
Raucci and junior Tom Williams
contributed
to the
team's success
as well. Raucci finished 42nd
overall with a
time
of 25:12,
while Williams finished
in
the
top half of the field at
108th
with
a
time of 25:5
I.
the top
half
of the field,
but to
be
perfectly
honest, l
thought we
were
flat.
I
was impressed with
David Raucci and Tom Williams,
they had
a
good
day,"
head
coach
Pete
Co
l
aizzo said.
The
team's
next meet will
be
the
Metropolitan Championships
on Oct. 6 at Van Cortlandt
Park.
If anyone questioned
the
team's
focus, they do
not
need to ques-
tion the preparation the team has
put in for this next meet.
"This next
meet
has
been
the
team's focus since the
season
began," Colaizzo said.
Besides the
Metro Atlantic
Athletic Conference (MAAC)
Championship on Oct. 27,
this
meet is
the most important
for
the team right
now
.
The
end of
the
season
is
crucial.
After
the
MAAC
Roarin'
Red
Foxes
\tanst's male
and
lcmale
tar
pcrfom1er
for
the
\\ eekend of
Sept.
29 -
(kt
I
.
Pedro
(,eno,ese
1
enms, Se111or
By
NATE
FIELDS
the US Tennis Center in New
tional, HeneghM
said
that
there
Staff Writer
York City.
In
addition, state of are still
improvements to
be/
the art lighting from Musco made. A pergola is bemg added
In
its' first contest at
the
glis-
Incorporated
allows the tennis
to the south side of the couns,
tcning
new
Marist
Tennis teams to host night matches.
and will provide
a
covered
area
Pavilion
,
the mcq's tennis team
Marist's President, Dr. Dennis
for spectators. Windscreens are
proved themselves worthy of Murray, was in attendance, and
being erected on
the
three
other
their new home. The Foxes man-
called it, ·•an exciting day for
fenced sides
to
sheller pla}crs
hMdled vis11ing Siena 7-0 las1
Maris! and the tennis program."
from the elements, and
benches!
Wednesday, winning all three
In
discussing lhe courts,
for the players Md spectators arc
doubles matches and losing only Murray doled out praise lo both
still in the works.
''l
am glad that
we finished in
Championships,
the Red
Foxes
set
their
sights on
the
NCAA
Northeast Regional on Nov.
I I
and the IC4A
Championships on
Nov.
1
8.
Greyhounds outrace Foxes
By
ANDY ALONGI
Managing Editor
had 62 assists during
the
five-
game
match.
one set
in
six singles matches.
head coach Tim Smith and the
While the facility is intended
The Loyola Greyhounds out-
raced
the
Red Foxes
in
a five-
game women's volleyball thriller
on Sunday at Loyola on its par
-
ents' weekend.
The win for Marisl came in
players,
for use by the entire
colkge
both
its'
first Metro Atlantic
MWe
now have courts as good
community, a major factor in the
Athletic Conference (MAAC),
as our players," Murray said.
decision to add the courts
"a.s
and dual contest this fall. The
..
And
I
have to give Tim [Smith]
the men's and women's
IL'1lRI
second doubles tandem of senior credit for developing this pro-
teams
'
success in recent years.I
Ray
Josephs
and junior Greg gram without adequate facilities,
According to the athletic depart-
Marks blanked their opponents so this is
a
tribute to him."
rnent
website, the men's learn
After the Red Foxes jumped
out to
a
2-0
lead
,
the Greyhounds
rallied to win the final three
games to
take
the match.
The
match contained 32 ties and
15
lead changes.
The final score favored Loyola,
28-30, 25-30, 30-28, 30-28,
16-
14
Defensively, the Foxes had a
strong effort
from
four players
including senior tri-captain Kim
McEathron,
Jan,
sophomore
Kelsey Schaffer and
Kenworthy.
The quartet
all
had double-digit
digs.
McEathron
led
with
24 digs
while
Jan
and Schaffer followed
with 14 and Kenworthy added
12.
Loyola proved to be
100
strong;
they
had
four players
who
ta11ied
double-digit kills
to match the
Foxes offensive ou
tput
(u:nmese
W('on thl'
Flight
I
mgles champmn hip and
f
ltght
A douM
t1tle
with
1.::las~malc FreJenco
Rolon
at
the
liLO
ln\-1tat1on
I
On the horizon:
8-0, and Josephs later rolled to a
Murray was
not the
only
digni-
has carried a 66--19 record
smi;e
6-0,
6-4 victory
at third
singles.
tary
in attendance, however.
as
200 I, to go along with four
cop,.
The only Marist player requir-
virtually the entire a1hle11c
seL-UllH'
MAAC
champiot
hir-
ing a third set was senior Frankie
department administration was
between 2000-2003.
Algier, who dropped his first4--6,
on hand to witness the match.
The women's team has
be'ffl
but rallied for back to back 6--3
Especially involved in the addi-
successful
as
well, holding
an
victories
to
take sixth singles.
tion
of the
P3vffi0h
to
Manst'I:
ftnpresd'I:~
re-ma
·
The Foxes notched
a
resound•
sports facilities was Marisl 2001, and capturing the regular
ing victory, but their new home Assistanl Athletic Director for
season MAAC title in 2005.
was
the real
star of the afternoon.
facilities., Tim Heneghan, who
Assistant Sports lnformauonj
Opened for the
stan
of the cur-
recognized the valuable addition
Director, Mike Ferraro,
!.hared
rent
semester, the still unfinished
to the campus and a1hle1ic similar praise
as
Murray for the
eight-court facility is located department.
two tennis programs.
across
Route
9 near the Fulton
.. lts gratifying for the team to
"It's sootething
that
's
reall)
Townhouses. Some of the most finally have a facility of their special for two programs th
11
advanced spon coun technology
own, it's a jewel in their crown," have achieved so much in thel
available was incorporated into
he
said. •·1t•s flattering
that
we
last
few years," he said.
the Pavilion, giving Marist one [the athletic
department)
were
With pcrfonnances lile
of the premier tennis facilities in
able to build something that the Wednesday's domination
of
the area.
whole campus
has
been using.
Siena,
1he team
proved
the
col-
Among the notable features
is
It's
been
packed right up
to
II
lcge and athletic
dcp;_irtrt1ent\
the
playing
surface,
Deco
II,
p.m. when
it
closes.'
effons were not misplaced.
which is the same surface used at
Although the courts arc func-
Women's soccer continues to struggle
By
GREG
HRINYA
Fairfield sealed the victory well, along with Ah:,andra
Circle
Contributor
when Frobey scored in the 63rd
Lauterbon," Roper said.
The Marist Red Foxes continue
to struggle as they lost
to
Metro
AtlMtic Athletic Conference
(MAAC) opponent, Fairfield, 3-
1
on
Sunday.
Fairfield
freshman, Casey
Frobey, provided the offense for
the Stags and frustrated the Red
Foxes all game. Frobey had a
goal and two assists on five
shots.
Marist
got behind early when
Frobey fed Faifield's Ahna
Johnson, who netted the first
goaJ of the game in
the 14th
minute.
Late in the first half, Marist fell
into
a hole
they
wou
ld
not recov-
er from when Alex Caram scored
in
the 41st minute off of another
Casey Frobey pass. The Caram
goal would stand as the gamc-
winner.
Red Foxes coach, Elizabeth
Roper,
said that Frobey was the
difference
and
she
frustrated the
defense on Sunday.
"Casey Frobey really played
well for Fairfield," Roper said.
..
We were able to shut down a
couple of their other key players,
but Frobey brought her 'A'
game."
minute to give Marist its' second
Coach Roper believes
that
straight MAAC loss.
Despite
those plnyers who have
con-,
1
the Red Foxes' struggles, they
tributed sig.nificanlly in rnu:1icc
1
were able to draw some positives
may stan to see more time on
the
out of
the
loss.
field.
Marist junior captain, Melanie
"We might be able to get
more
Ondrcjik,
tallied
her second goal
players time,
those
who ha"el
of the season when freshman
stepped
up,
"
Roper said
"I
hc,pc
Teresa Ferraro fed her
a
cross to get some players in who
ha\e
that Ondrejik would chip in dur-
worked hard in practice and
cun-
ing the
87th
minute
of play.
tributed positively
to
the team."
The goal came
in
the
final
10
Next up for the Red Foxes
i!i
minutes
of
the
game and put an
another MAAC rival, the
2-91
end to the Red Foxes' streak of Saint Peter's Peahens, Y.hol
bad luck, so they look to use lhat Marist will face at Saint Pc1L-r·s1
spark as a building block for
Friday at 4 p.m.
going forward in the season.
Coach Roper is
looking
for-
..
We were pleased we were able
ward to seeing how her team
to score and play strong in
the
rebounds
Friday, and hopes the)
last 10 minutes of the game," can tum things around
against
Roper said
"The
team was able
the Peahens.
to
get that monkey off of their
"Hopefully we can step on
thc:I
back.''
field and domi
n
ate and put
some:/'
Some other positives
included
balls
in
the back of the net,"
the strong play
from
some of the
Roper said. "We have to
mnke
Marist reserves who came
in
sure everyone's confident for the.
during the second
half.
next two games. We have
an:
Coach Roper was pleased to
uphill battle in all of our
upcom-
see some of her players who
ing MAAC games, but if
an)
have worked
hard
in
practice team
is
capable of doing it, Yoe
come in and contribute late in the believe we arc.
We know
it
game.
won't
be
easy but
this team
has
..
Lauren Dziedzic and Teresa great leadership and
rem in '
Ferraro stepped up and played
positive."
Sally
Hanson and Jaime
Kenworthy
,
who had a
match-
high
27 kills and 14 kills, r<Spec-
1ivelyt
both
paced Marist during
the
conte:!tl. Hanson also
hit
an
impressive
.553
on the match.
Junior Christy Lukes added
10
kills in the
losing
effort
The pair of senior captains
are
now
ranked
first
and second on
the Foxes all-time kills list.
Kenworthy has
997
kills on her
career
while
Hanson
is
second
with 976.
Marist volleyball
head
coach.
Tom
Hanna,
said the milestone is
great for both players.
"It's a great milestone for both
of them to be so highly regarded
in
program history," he
said.
.. Both
players will go over
1,000
kills.
That speaks highly to
their
contributions to the
program
."
Freshman setter,
Dawn Jan,
Marist is on a two--match losing
streak and its Metro Atlanuc
Athletic Conference (MAAC}
record fell to 2-4. Loyola
improved
to
3-3
in the
co
n
fcr-
enc«i The Greyhounds'
ate
in
a
three-way tic for fourth
place.
The
Foxes return
to
action this
weekend when
they take
to
the
road to face the founh
place
Rider Broncs
for
a
MAAC
match-up on Saturday,
Oct.
7.
The
match is
scheduled to begin
at3
p.m
.
Hanna said every
MAAC
match
gives
the
team two oppur-
tunites.
"E
very
MAAC
match
docs
two
things
,"
he
said
"It
gives
us
a
chance to impro"·e our seeding
for
the
confere
n
ce
tournament
time, and it gives
us an
opportu-
nity
to
perform at a
higher
level
consistently against
an
outside
opponent."
Men
's
soccer
drops
a
heartbreaker
By
JOSEPH FERRARY
his team's
effon.
Staff Writer
"We
had
a very solid showing
The Marist
men
's
soccer
team
dropped
a heartbreak.er to Metro
Atlantic Athletic Conference
(MAAC)
rival
Fairfield as
the
Stag's
Sam
Bailey scored the
game's only goal with 32
sec-
onds left in regulation on
Sunday.
With the win, the Stags
improved to
6-2-1
and 2-0
in
MAAC play, while the Red
Foxes
dropped
to 3-5• I
and
0-1 •
I in
the
MAAC. This was
the
fifth time in nine games
that the
Red Foxes were shutout.
The only goa1 of
the
game was
sci-up by a free kick
from
mid-
field which was taken by Tom
Clements. Clements' kick trav-
eled into the Red Foxes'
18
yard
box were it was misplayed by
two Red Fox defenders.
Marist goalkeeper Daniel
Owens was caught in no-man's
land
as the ball bounced to
Bajley who
headed the ball
into
the
open
net in the 89th minute.
Although
his
team did not win
the game, Marist head coach
Bobby Herodes was
pleased
with
as
a team today against the best
team in the MAAC,
Fairfie
ld,
"
Herodcs
said "Even though we
were out-shot
in
the game, we
clearly had the
m
ore
dangerous
opportunities
in
the game."
The Stags dominated all of
the
offensive catego
ri
es
including
shots (13-5) and shots on goal
(8-3).
Fairfield
also
took
five
comer kicks while
the
Red Foxes
had
none.
The
Red
Foxes
had
several
opportunities
to
score
in the
sec-
ond
half,
but all of
their attempts
were cleared
out by
the
Fairfield
defense.
Fairfield junior goalie Jon
Paul
Fmncini stopped just three shots
to post
h.is
fif'St career shut out.
In
the loss, Daniel
Owens
made
seven stops for the Red Foxes.
On
the
seaso
n
,
the Red
Foxes
have only scored six goals
in
nine
games, which can be attrib-
uted
to an
injury to
MAAC
pre-
season p
l
ayer of the year Keith
Detelj
.
Coach
Herodes
said
the
injury
was devastating
to
the team.
"When your goal scorer
[Oetelj) is only at 50 percent, it is
Manst
~,n
be
al home
to
tale
on
Montrea.1
and
Hartford
at
8:30 • m and
12:30
p.m.
re~rc
uvcly
Jaime
Kmworttty-
VolleybalL
Senior
Ken"orthy
tallied
14
kills
m
yola
he
1s
1mc on
the
SI
"tth
997
as
ol Tuesday Oct 3
On the Horizon:
fhc
Fox
tnlll
tr,l\cl to
Rider
on
Saturday
to
face-
the Hrnn s
tn
a \1AAC
\:ontest
•
Photo1
courtesy of
"'""·l?ol'f'dfous.com
tough
on a team,
..
Herodes
said.
"'We
need
him to play, and we
can't hold him back because of
conference play."
In the first game of the season
against Anny, Oetelj and Anny
goal
keeper
John-Michael
Ga
ll
ogly both went after a
ball in
the Anny box. Gallogly won the
challenge and in the
pr
ocess
injured Oetelj 's ankJe.
The Red Foxes hope to find
their
offensive stride as they play
host to MAAC
rivals
Saini
Peters on Friday at 7 p.m. and
Manhattan o
n
Sunday at 1 p.m.
Both games will be played on
Leonidoff Field.
Upcoming Schedule:
Men's Soccer: Friday, Oct. 6 - vs. St. Peter's, 7 p.m.
Football: Saturday, Oct. 7
-
at LaSalle, I p.m.
THURSDAY,
OCTOBER 5, 2006
www.mar!stclrcle.com
PAGE 10
Foxes score late, fall short as Bucknell spoils homecoming
By BRIAN
LOEW
NO
left in
the half,
Wilson and
be made by Marist as Ray
Fiumefreddo took the hand-off
from Marist's
second
quarter-
back of the
game,
Mike
Sangiorgi, and made a 4-yard
touchdown run to close the gap a
bit to 42-13 with 3:19 left in the
Staff Writer
Kizekai
hooked
up on the same
Last minute fanfare from
Mari st
quarterback
Matt
Semerano was
not
enoug
h
to
save the Red Foxes from defeat
play and turned their second 35-
yard run into
another
touchdown,
and
it
looked
like Bucknell
would go into the half tip 28-0.
But Marist quarterback Steve
as the Bisons rained on the Red
McGrath had other ideas, as he
game after Marist kicker Bradley
Rowe failed to convert the extra-
point kick.
Fox homecoming parade.
Bucknell
ran
off with a 48-19
victory on Saturday at Leonidoff
field.
found wide receiver Tim Keegan
open in the end zone. Keegan
was immediately leveled but
held onto the ball and gave
Bucknell improved to
3-2
with
Marist a touchdown with 19 see-
Fiumefreddo's first collegiate
touchdown came after
running
back Keith Mitchell broke off
on
a 53-yard run, bringing the ball
down to the 4-yard line. Though
it was exciting, Fiumefreddo said
it
was bittersweet.
the win as Marist fell to 1-4 dur-
ands left
in
the half. Bucknell
ing their final game of
a
four-
game home" stretch in front of
2,417
fans.
Bucknell's ground attack
struck
early when wide receiver Daniel
Zvara broke off down the right
sideline for a 51-yard
touchdown
run that put Bucknell up
7-0
with
I
I :42 left in the first quarter.
Zvara was the first of six Bisons
to put six points on the board.
Just
44
seconds
into the
second
quarter, running back Peter
Kaufman added to the Bison lead
with
a
12-
yard
touchdown run up
the nearside to make
it
14-0
Buckne
l
l.
Not four minutes later, with
I 0:42 left in the half, quarterback
Terrance
Wilson pitched the ball
to A.J. Kizekai who
stonned
for
a 35-yard touchdown run down
the far-side to tack up another
score,
making
it
21-0 in favor of
the Bisons.
Two possessions later, with
would walk into the half with a
28-
7
lead, as Marist barely
avoided being shut out for eight
consecutive quarters.
On Bucknell's
second
posses-
sion
of the
seco
nd
half, they
cushioned
their lead
as
full back
Josh DeStefano took the hand off
from
quarterback
Marcello
Trigg, converting
a
9
-
ya
rd
run
into a touchdown
,
and putting
Bucknell up 35-7 at 9:59 left in
the third quarter.
Starting
quar-
terback., Terrance Wilson, who
went 0-5 passing, was taken out
of the game after he was hit hard,
injuring
his
shou
lder
on
Bucknell's first possession oftbe
half.
Trigg had no problem
stepping
in for Wilson as he took the ball
into the
end
zone himself on a I-
yard
quarterback
sneak
uppin
g
the score to 42-7 Bucknell with
l4:..l5 left in the game
.
The next end
zone
trip would
"It
didn't feel the same being
down 30 points,'' Fiumefreddo
said.
"We've
got to get those
'W's'
on the board."
Bucknell converted its final
touchdown with
1
:28
left
in the
game when Corin Erby, who had
three rushes for 61 yards, rushed
the ball 47 yards to put the final
seven points for the Bisons on
the board, making it 48-13
Bucknell.
With just
11
seco
nds
left in the
game, Semerano, who completed
seven passes for 74 yards, found
wide receiver Mike DiGiaimo
and completed a lofting 41.-,yard
pass. DiGiaimo's
leapioj
Catch,
his only one of the game, put the
Foxes
on
the 9-yard
line
which
segue
d
into Semerano's 9-yarcf
pass
to
wide receiver Chris
Ferguson
as
time
ran
out. This
senior captain
Nick
Salls
(10)
makes e
tackkt
against
the
Bucknell offense In
Martst's
homecoming
loss
on
Saturday
at
Leonlndoff
Aeld. Salls
had
nine tackles Including
two
solo
tackles
In the Foxes
48--19
defeat.
made the final score 48-19, end,-
at
this
point and move forward."
Bucknell.
"I
mean we
'
ve been struggling,
'Fiumefreddo commented that
Though the Red Foxes rally at quite honestly, offensively," he
the offense is
goi
n
g
to
need
to
the end was not enough to save
said. "Mike DiGiaimo made a
come out with more intensity
the game, Coach Jim Parady was
great catch on that, and we kept
earlier
in the games to get the
glad to
see
that his team kept
competing so that was a
posi
-
win.
fighting until the end.
tive."
"We've
got
to
come out in the
"I
was pleased that we kept
The Red Foxes ailing offense
first quarters and put some more
competing at the end of the foot-
worked on being consistent this
points up," Fiumefreddo said.
ball game," Parady said.
"We
week,
Parad
y
said, but
it
was not
"We've
got to come out with
were able to get it down there (in
enough.
some
more intensity."
the red zone], and I
think
it's
"We
focused a lot on our con-
Marist looks to tum things
important for our team
.
"
s
i
stency. Again
we didn't get it,
around as they go on the road on
With the Red Foxes' offensive
we were third down and three in
Saturday for the first time in a
J)Oint total
in
the lllSt two games the first half a couple times, and
month to play their first Metro
being seven and zero, Parady
we didn't get the first down,"
Atlantic Athletic Conference
said it was nice to see an offen-
Parady said.
"We
just have to
go
(MAAC) game in Philadelphia
sive spark, even if it came at the
back and re-establish who we
are
against La Salle at
I
p.m.
Marist campus honors
football player
Sherwood Thomas
with memorial
service.
TER
OHrtaft
The Marist College
community gathered
to mourn one of its'
members
taken
over
the summer
last
Wednesday. Oct. 4.
Friends and fellows
student remembered
a life and potential
ended all too soon.
Sherwood Thomas
died this past June,
following a fight in
Poughkeepsie.
The
cause or death was a
stab wound. Thomas
had just finished his
sophomore year at
Marist. He had played
football for the school
his freshman year.
The
memorial
service was held at
9;15
C h
p.m.
a
p
in
e
the
I
Marist Red Foxes roll through all flights
and six teams at UCONN Invitational
By JONATHAN KNOTH
Circle Contributor
This past weekend, the Marist
men's tennis team traveled to the
University of
Connecticut
where
they
sq
uared
off against prime
competition.
Other teams in the
tournament
included the University of Rhode
Island, Uconn, Holy Cross, Boston
University, Quinnipiac, and Sacred
Heart University, all prestigious
tennis programs.
Marist sent six players to the
finals, with five to come out
victo-
rious.
Senior Pedro Genovese battled
through Flight A only to find him-
self down 5-2.
However
,
with per-
sistent play, he won five straight
games.
Head coach Tim Smith said
Genovese never gave in, especially
with his serve.
''He then threw professional-like
serves, and broke [his opponent]
once in the second set to win 6-4,"
he said.
Furthermore, Marist continued to
stun its opponents in Flight B as
Ray Joseph and Greg Marks sailed
through their
competi
tion
to face
each other in the Flight B finals. It
was a match that Coach Smith said
"was
not
indicative
of
the score."
Marks defeated Joseph
in straight
sets,
6-4, 6-2.
Flight C was almost identical as
two Marist players reached the
finals as well. Unlike the afore-
mentioned Flight B, the finalists
in
this match-up, Federico Rolon and
Frank Algier, elected to decide the·
winner at the Marist tennis courts
for a
very
respectable reason: both
play
ers
have tests early in the
week. Later in the week, these two
Maris! students will play, and
Coach Smith will hand out the
hardware.
When asked why Rolon and
Algier did not finish the tourna-
ment at Uconn, Smith
saidd
,
"Marist
is committed to the term
student-aililete, not athlete-stu-
dent.
Henceforth, with both of
them having exams early in the
week, we thought
it
would
be
best
to get them back early so they
could
hit
the books rather than the
hard-works."
Jeff
Nguyen saw great success in
Flight D, and his victory was hard
fought.
In a grueling
match
that
lasted over two hours, Nguyen
finally efnerged the champipn,
winning the third set 10-8, which
is known as a super tie-breaker.
Moreover, in doubles play,
Genovese and Rolon teamed up to
win the Flight A doubles match
against Quinnipiac University, &-5.
Precision
serving
and aggressive
net play allowed them to control
the
last
five games of the match
and win four of them.
Marist plays its'
last
fall home
match of the year this weekend
against international competition,
the University of Montreal, at 8:30
a.m.
on
Saturday,
Oct.
7.
Following their University of
Montreal
match-ups,
the Red
Foxes will oppose the University
of
Hartford
at 12:30 p.m.
ti
I
j,
I
'
J
1'
ti
If
I'
f'
Take
Off
10-20 Inches
in
ONE HOUR
BENEFITS & ADVANTAGES
✓
nohcrablt diffenencr in
ant visit
;'
works
for
both men
and
women
✓
!reals unsightly
ceUulite
;
no
pills
or shots
;
~~
1
e::~~~
i!rs"Tlption
:
tob;a:~
:r:rte:J:eanu
.;
skin feels
lighltr,
dearu'r &
,ilky
..,fl
,
a
great
mamlenance program
o
II
ls
lncredlbl
nd
It
Isl
S
We Prove
111
Every
Hour
Every Dey!
TANNll'!O UOl'I
0
FOUNDED
IN
1965
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 5, 2006
Banned books read, discussed
By
REBECCA ROSE
Staff Writer
On
Wednesday, Slpt. 27, a small group
of Marist students gathered at the
Banned Books Read-A-Thon to cele-
brate their freedom. The Banned Books
Read-A-Thon is just one of the many
activities that take place nationally dur-
ing
Banned Books Week every year.
The Banned Books Read-A-Thon was
orchestrated by junior Nicole Donolli.
Nicole is a resident advisor at Gartland
who became interested
in
banned
books
while researching programs that she
could run for students on campus.
Nicole discovered that books such as
"
Huckleberry
Fin~" "Goosebumps,"
"To Kill a Mockingbird," and "Of Mice
and Men" were among the list of banned
books.
The list contained
books
that
have themes such as sex, rape, indecent
language, violence, adolescence,
retar-
dation, religion, racism, wizardry
,
and
murder. Although these themes can be
harsh, they all play a role in our daily
lives.
One person who attended the
meeting said, "If you turn on the
news
for
ten
seconds, you'll see that someone
was raped."
Volleyball
aenlor tlk:aptaln Jaime Kenworthy recently overtook the number one
There were
many
excerpts read during
spot
on Martst's career kllls 11st.
She has
997
In
the
beginning of
her
flnal season.
the rcad-a-thon. Tom Goldpaugh read
~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ~
from "The Catcher in the Rye" by
J. D.
Remembering Amsterdam: Dutch pancake style
By
JACLYN LAWLOR
Circle Contributor
What do students normally remember
when they study abroad? The usual
answers
involve
the people they met, the
sights they saw, the places they traveled,
the nights they partied, and the FOOD!
When
I
look back on the semester
I
spent in Amsterdam,
I
have so many
amazing memories, and Dutch pancakes
are one of my favorites. Every country
has
its
staples: gelato in Italy, baguettes
in
France
,
fish and chips in England, and
Dutch pancakes in the Netherlands.
My favorite restaurant in Amsterdam
happened to be The Pancake Bakery on
the Prinsengracht, located down the
street from the Anne Frank House.
World News
What was once a warehouse owned by
the Dutch East India Company, is now a
hidden eatery renowned
for
"the best
pancakes in town." Townies and"'8uriats
alike flock to this
restaurant,
which
doesn't even open its doors until noon
but is packed until
11 :30
at night. So
what makes these pancakes so sensa-
tional?
I'll
let them speak for them-
selves:
Indonesian
Pancake filled with chicken, onions
:
mushrooms
and leek in an fndonesian
peanut sauce, served on a bed of bean
sprouts with seroendeng and a salad.
Canadian
Pancake filled with crispy bacon,
onions
,
mushrooms, ham, cheese and
curry sauce.
Brazilian
Pancake with walnut ice-cream,
mocca/caramel
sauce,
amaretto,
almonds and whipped cream
English
Pancake with William pears
,
vanilla ice
cream, chocolate sauce and whipped
cream.
These are just a few of the choices on
the menu. Think of them as crepe-like
omelettes and the clouds may clear a lit-
tle
. . . My mouth waters just glancing
over the menu and remembering the aro-
mas coming from the open kitchen. My
advice to anyone and everyone is to trav-
el to Amsterdam and try them for your-
self!
Visit http://www.pancake.nl/ to
learn
more about this
unbelievable
restaurant
and stop by the Study Abroad
Office
to
plan your semester in
Amsterdam ..
News Briefs
National News
Salinger.· This book was
banned
for its
use of profanity. Thomas said that ban-
ning books is a good thing because it
means that what was written
has
mean-
ing. People are frightened when words
have too much
meaning.
Thomas said
that banning books makes more people
want to read them. The only reason that
Thomas
read
"The Catcher
in
the Rye"
was because
he
was told that
he
wasn't
allowed to.
Dr. Moira Fitzgibbons read a passage
from "The Canterbury Tales" by
Geoffrey Chaucer.
In the excerpt, a
woman, who has been remarried several
times, is being ridiculed and called a slut
for all of the sexual acts that she has per-
fonned. She counters this attack by say-
ing that everyone has been given specif-
ic body parts that should be
used
for
pleasure. At the time that this book was
published,
it
was wrong to talk about
sex.
Also, the book was written
in
English. At the time, not many people
read in English. Most texts were
reli-
gious and written in Latin. The church
leaders
were unhappy by this
publishing
because it meant that
the public
was
more infonned.
Many issues were raised when Donolli
read a passage from "To Kill a
Mockingbird" by Harper Lee. Donolli
,aid she read the excerpt because it
showed
moral
character and integrity.
The book was challenged because of
its
mention
of rape
and racism
and its use of
language.
Those who attended the
Banned
Books
Read-A-Thon were appalled by
the
amount of books that had been banned.
One person who attended the
meeting
said, "Discussions at the right age by a
teacher about the sensitive
themes
men-
tioned in the books would
teach
[the
children] why these themes are wrong."
Everyone at
the
read-a-thon seemed
unanimous in their opinions
about
the
banned
books. The consensus was that
banning
books was wrong.
One
attendee said, "Why not
let the
ideas
in
and then let the people decide whether
they agree with them or not?"
It
seems
that
the onl,- upside to the
banning
is that
people
want what they can't. This
makes
banned books even
more
popular.
Raising awareness about banned books
is
not
an easy task.
It
is however.
a task
that Nicole will be taking on again
next
year. She is excited that she got to be a
part
of the Banned Books
Read-A-Thon.
"It's staring out very small," she said,
"but it's an important issue."
To read
more
about banned books or
Banned
Books
Week,
visit
www.ala.org/bbooks/.
MaristNews
Annual career conference
is
back
Democrallc People's Repuhltc of Korea
announces testing nf nuclear
\\'Capons
Pcnnsyl,ania sd1oolhouse killer re,ealed tcndencie-; to11ards mole,muon
The
·onh
K~lr<!an
so,emment
announ..:ed
Tm.·Mla)' that 1t plans to ~dw:t a nuclear
tesl
;II an
un~pc-citi
d finurr: dnte
rrior
10
the
t;1fl:rm'Tll,
issued
by 1hc
!'-:or1h
Korean
Pnre1gn fini$tr), 1hr:
OPRK h:Jd onlv as~ed Its
nght
10 \.."Ondud ._,u1.:h
le!ib.
Thus far both th~ l " MJ Japan
h,1n
LOndt:mncJ
U1c announcement as tx:lhgert!nl
:met
unfl.l!Lc
~nly
prm
Ol 13t1'te
Julu, 8(111,,n,
th1:
Atnen ..
an lln1N!.,.sndur
tr, 1h
t
N ,
said 1h l the m:mc:- houlJ
h\!
taken
to
lhe Secuncy Coun..:11
In i1s <.tatt1ment,
Mth
KL1rca
tnlinrnin~'d Lhat
nuclear te!>l Y.~r~ 11ccded to
ClhUrc
it~
e<"Unl)
as a
de.:tcmmt
,t~ain'll
militar\ action lrom
nat1on1
lil..c
the \Jmted Statc!i
S1x-y.ay rnultilatcrol talk,;
1eg.l.fdint
North 1',.orea s
po,
ess100
of nude-.1f weapo
~
had pte\ i'Ju,l)' bro-
kl!'n Jvwn. lesting vf mcJium and lt,ng
nmg1..' b,1llis.
tic m1<;..,:;d.:~ added further tethmn on 1he inkmat1on-
al stage
6i.
kin~ :-hooter
k1UeJ
fhc slttdents ma small
Am1~h ~ChllOlhou:e
in Lam:
!>tet
County Penns) lvania
on \fonda)· 111e
¥,Unman,
l harles Rohcrt:s I\.:
mh.•n~d
t.he S(h0t>I and
hdd
du.· m.:cupanb hu-,tage,
Aft.ct kn1m:. all malc-s and three womi.!n \\11h
habiel'i
loose, he bound ihe n:mainm!l fcnuks foct. He
~hot 10
!:1rJ,tat close ran)?:e.
and thct1 killed him,clr when poli~c forces t·ntcred 1-hrough a window
h\e l;trl~ arc
,till ho~p,tahze<l
four in
cntii:al
\:Ondilion
Police said I
ui.:'.sday
that smcidc
nutes nnd
1nlerv1c,1..~
with his,,
1te md1cah:d
that Robert.'>
nnl)
'ha\.c
inok~ri:ied
two younger
fomil) members
20 years. agtJ. and tha1 he des,re.d. to ,o rn'""'·
Congressman Fok) may have had cybcrscx wuh underage conb'Tes -ionnl page
Rcprcscmative
Mar~
Foley, R-Fla,
resig.neJ Frid.a) after
allcgarilm1
lha1
he
had scnl inappropnatc
anJ
sexu;.dl~
,..uggc:.ti\e e-mails
to
a former male con~-res~1oll.'.ll
pag,:
th"n
'1
)C8r'-
old
I
>thcr for-
mer p.igi:-s
have also come
forv.ard.
Jdhcnn~ tmrl'\cripb from
:!.001 ti)
ABt.
cws dctnilmg mt met
se, w1rh 1hi.: Congre mm
Hous.e Speaker
llcnnis lla.stcn , .. currentl) lcuding an imcshga,ion
10
detcnmm; Yrh3t
mformalilln
was
krM,\fl
pnor
10
the
Shlf:'
breaking l:bl week
It
,s un1mov.n
lt
th1.!:>
time
JU:.I
who. 11 an}ont had
\.'xrl1c11 L.n<w, lnifC
llf
Fnlc)··s alle~ed act\\ ilt("::.,
t-olev
rc\'e-aled Monday thal he-
It
an 11lcoht1lic. and
1s
currently rccch•ing m.•11tmcnl al a Florid ~en-
lcr His auome) rclca-1\.-d a 111.31'-·mcnt on
Tutsd!y that the ~ongrcssman wa~ lllOl~st,;d \l;hi ( a tcf'nag•
l..'.r
t,)
a
dcrgyn1t\n, and 1ha1 Fok} ¥1'3'- coming out n!t u
1Ul)
'\mcrirn11.
:v1anst
Colkgc \\ 111 N ponsonni n annuaJ
Cnrecr ·etworking Conreren1,;~
oa
Thunds),
October
5 m
the
J11n1~ J
McC1n11 R~-rearion
l enter on
the farist College Cam pus.
t
los~
to ... .., rmployers Ytill attend thts l;'vcnt
to
ink'ra<.:f
"1th ~1Udcnt..,
anJ
alumni
from
Mari
st
throughlltll the
Mid-Hudson Vall )' regfttdmg tll
1-
ume
empto1-ment,
internships
and umm~
JObs
Some
of the
fim,s
anendmg mdu~
Bank t\f
Ame1ica.
Hudson Ccntr11I F.ntcrpr
~
Rent-a-Car,
Ernst
&
Young
LLP IR. 1 Madi on Square
G
rden, \.forgan
Stanley.
Northw~ Munal
Pro~res'!li\.e
ln.1uran-.i:
St:1rc f rm lnsunm
fargcl
and 1 ruveler.s.
Inc
During
1hi~
year'~
career
nent
there
i
an
cinphas1s on finns seeking candidates for
tc.-chnol
og_v po!i11ton~.
In adJiti .. m.
I\
Big Four ccmmting
fiITTl
will he
participating in the nctv.orking con-
ference
r~
L""~:po
~t
Manst Coll~gc \\JI
be
held from
4:0U -
:00
pm.
t-or further infonnatv•n, con
Mansi Career Sen-ices at (8451 5 ~.3,;,4 .
THE CIRCLE
845-575-3000
ext.
2429
wrltetheclrcle@gmall.com
A&E: FORGET REGRET AND EXPERIENCE THE
WONDER THAT IS RENT
HEALTH: SLEEPLESS NIGHTS CONTRIBUTE TO
MORE THAN JUST TIRED MORNINGS
3399 North Road
Poughkeepsie, NY 12601
Brittany Fiorenza critically analyzes the amazing experi-
ence of the acclaimed play.
PAGES
Why a
lack
of sleep just might be contributing to any
number
of serious
health
problems.
PAGES
THE CIRCLE
C
am
·:t
us
,T
H
URS
D
AY, SE
PT
EMB
E
R 28, 2006
www.ma
r
lstclrcle.com
PAGE 2
·security
Briefs
.
Upcoming
Campus Events
Leo leaves new reputation with John Gildard
Thursda}, Oct.5 -
Verizon Wireless Tour
featuring the
All
American ReJccts
·
with St. Francis visits and Kung-Fu fighters
6y ANDREW
M
OL
L
seated on the floor of a 9/30 - 2:24 A.M.
Leader in homeland bathroom. Let me tell
security
A PSA from Security
'tl'ltettor
John Gildard
'fJ
!he young ladies at
Mar.1st. There has been
a
spate
of sexually
e:;xplicit phone calls to
1
women,
so
if
you
r.eceiv.e such a phone
call,
hang
up,
don't
en.courage the caller,
h
aV'e
a
'
male
friend
r~Cord the call, don't
,~Ut
your
names on your
incoming message, and
make su
r
e to call secu-
.r.ity.
9/26 - 7: 18
P.M.
you, I've been in the
bathrooms
in
Champagnat,
and
I
A Leo resident was
barely wanted to walk taken
to St. Francis
in there, let alone sit on after being a tad too
the floor. But maybe intoxicated. More on
things have improved. this in a minute.
Like, maybe they
got
a
paper towel dispenser. 9/30 - 3:19
A.M.
Lucky freshman.
9/27 - 9:30 P.M
.
Kids, watch your
cars: A student reported
that two hubcaps have
been stolen from their
car in the Fulton park-
ing lot. Either some-
body really needed to
fix up their vehicle, or
In front of Leo, a
couple students decided
to go at it, Kung-Fu
style
.
One kid attempt-
ed a karate kick, but the
other was able to block
it
with
his
knee.
Unfortunately,
this
resulted in what may
h
ave been a broken leg,
and the
student
was
Leo down and tell them
how their actions are
hurting us and that they
need to stop and think
about
what
they're
doing.
Then
maybe
they'll
end
up in rehab
with Pete Doherty.
(If
you get that joke, then
kudos to you.
If not,
wel
l
,
you're
really
missing out, not gonna
l
ie.)
9/30 - Noon
Around Fulton, a
student fell off their
bike
and
ended
up
breaking
their wrist.
This actually isn't
very
funny.
Wait.
Wait
a
I 0/1 - 3:30 A.M.
Over
at
St.
Peter's, a fight broke
out among a few
stu-
dents.
Once
secur
i
ty
showed up, the kids
said they were friends
and
everything
was
good.
Person
.
ally,
I
would have preferred to
have a huge Outsiders-
type rumble, only to
have SNAP show up,
and then we have a
Tarantino-esque stand-
off. Basically as many
violence/rumble
based
pop culture references
as
possible meshed into
8 p.m.
FridaJ, Oct.6
-
Sunday, Oct. 8
-
Family \\.eekend
Friday, Oct.6 -
Papa
Doo Run Run
9p.m.
Mccann Center Field
llousc
Saturday, Oct.
7 -
Band'Singers Concert
2p.m
McCann Center
Field
House
SaturdaJ, Oct.
7 -
Po,crty
Neck
Hill
Billies
security
is getting quite
A student attempted serious
about people
to enter Midrise with parking
without
the
four cans of Keystone
Light and
a
can
of
Busch L°ight. The cans
were
co.nfiscated
by
security
.
.aod.
t.he\l
promptly
destrffAd so
that no one could ever
speak of these beers
ever again. Consider
it
proper passes.
taken to St. Francis. minute. Yes it is.
It
Says
John
Gildard, sounds like
·
it would
"Practice your Ninja have been quite funny
Turtle moves on your to
see.
No offense.
pillow."
a
super
fight. And the
winner? The Celebrity
Boxing
champion,
Dustin Diamond. Don't
ask
me how he
got
involved, he just did.
What has
·
he been up to
J'lf(e
l!)G
llll:,i!m
,.l'
llu>
t
bing,,
-
d\'.tty,
k Mp~
;~
9
p.m.
Mccann
Center
Fidd
House
Sunda~-. Oct. 8
-
Ccili Ram
i
1something
thiit should
be a part of the Patriot
Act.
9/27- I :27
A.M.
In Champagnat, an
intoxicated student was
taken to
St.
Francis
after they were found
9/28 - 11 :40 P
.
M.
9/30 - 11 :00 P.M.
The Benoit RD report-
Another Leo rest-
ed that a
shopping
cart dent was taken to St.
was
sent
down the stair-
Francis by Fairview for
case to the lower level intoxication. Seriously,
of Benoit. Nobody is what the hell happened
too sure how the cart at Leo last Sa,turday?!
got there in the first You've got kids being
p
l
ace, and it was even-
taken to the hospital
tually
returned
to and other kids re-enact-
Eckerds.
I
blame ing
Mortal
Kombat.
Johnny Knoxville, actu-
Something
probably
ally. Or
Eckerds,
for needs to be done here,
making their carts so like a residence inter-
darn ride-able
.
vention. We'll al I sit
Miz
an
i
F
arouk
lBJ&m
~
Pa
u
l Mitchell
FREE
Conso
l
tation
ooall
Weaves & Extension.a
Hair
Wea
ving
Marc is back
..
.
and Debbie fonnely of Making Faces have joined
the Rest
of
the Returning Staff
Student Discoun
t
WithMaristlD
.
Walk-ins welcome
Please make
a
p
pointments
for prompt service
Ttil:
CUTT~
Coll f•r •ppe/11t••"'
•
W•lkl,.•ltu
ll"tlHM&
•
0/fu
l,iMIUtl
264 NORTH RD., POUGHKEEPSIE 454-9239
Ju,
,u,
lllb•p,vl •
o,,...,,. ,,
.
,, • ..,,.
,,_,,11., • " • -
z•o
D•J/
•
l',.u
,..,.l,J ...
9
/
30 - 11
:50
P.M.
St.
Francis
got
another Marist patient,
as
an
intoxicated
stu-
dent was found by the
Donnelly
greenhouse.
(Probably a Leo resi-
dent) It's a
good
thing
the
student
was found.
Because mowing grass
is the number one cause
of death amongst drunk
college students.
Disclaimer: The Securily Briefs are
intended as satire and fully protected
free speech under the First
Amendment of the Constitution.
genius-o-meter:
~
aplt
lflll .,._k 2007
c.lNNtl-
aoth
Aa■'""-rywtttrt
. .
11
~
,_
,,_Trlp
_
..._,.
12NforeNcw.l
, , . . ......
.. PartlN,Nattaet
DNls
--
8NNlp
Dlaoollnta.
_ . .
HotlNt~
.,.__INMS
...U...
.t-a00-42 ..
7710
-
....
·
~-
12 p.rn.
Campus
tlirecn
TuesdaJ, Oct.
IO -
SPC Student
Coffeehouse
9p.m
PAR
•
I ickcts on
sale
for the
Verizon Wireless Tour
featuring
The
All-
American
Rejects
on
Oct.
5
in
the
McCann
Center.
rickcts
are
$
I 0.
TrIE CIRCLE
Kate Giglio
Editor
in
Chief
An
d
y
Alongi
Managing Editor
Chrlstfne Rochelle
Margeaux Lippman
Opinion Editor
Layout Editor
Alexander Tingey
ErlcZeda
l
ls
Health Editor
Sports Editor
Celtlln Tansey
Isabel CeJulis
Copy Editor
Features Editor
Ralph Rienzo
AndrewDICacc:o
James Marconi
News Editor
Jessica Bagar
A&E Editor
Derek Delllnger
Copy Editor
Chelsea Murray
Advertising Manager
Assistant Layout Editor
Distribution Manager
G. Modele Clarke
Faculty Advisor
The Circle
is
the weekly student newspaper of Maris\ College. Letters to the edi-
tors, announcements, and
story ideas
are always welcome, but
we
cannot
publish
unsigned letters
.
Opinions expressed in articles are not necessarily
those of
the
editorial board.
The
Circle staff
can
be reached at
575-3000
x2429 or letters to
the
editor can
be
sent to writethecircle@gmail.com.
The Circle
can also be viewed on
Its
web site,
www.maristc,rcle.com.
THE CIRCLE
OQ!~iq!J.
Let the
voices
of the Marist
community be heard.
PAGEf
Connecticut calls No Child Left Behind unconstitutional
ByDAN BLACK
Staff Writer
lenge the federal government in
cases that concern the teaching
of that
state's
children. Whose
children
are they? Who rightful-
In dismissing some of
Connecticut's
more presSing
grievances, Kravitz stated that
the law canilot
be
challenged
until the state
As all other students ofMarist's
school
of
education probably are,
I
am very concerned with the
state of education in this country
and especially concerned
with
the government's influence upon
it.
It
was a comfort, recently, to
learn
that
the
state
of
Connecticut shares this concern.
This past August, Connecticut
Attorney
General
Richard
Blumenthal
sued
the U.S.
Secretary of Education, Margaret
Spellings, alleging that her inter-
pretation and implementation of
No Child Left Behind is uncon-
stitutional.
have read over Blumenthal's
appeal to the U.S. District
Court;
it
sounds reasonable. The people
of Connecticut believe the
stan-
dards
the Federal Government
imposes on their education
sys-
tem should
be
accompanied by
appropriate funding. They fur-
ther believe that their standard-
ized testing systems should be
acceptable alternatives to the
federal "high-stakes" standard-
ized tests, respecting that
Connecticut's students rank
with the highest achieving in
the country.
I'll ask the blatantly obvious question:
what about the child?
By whose
authority must a child fall to
learn In
order to stimulate the polltlcal leaders
responsible for his or her education Into
action that prevents the failure of
future children?
0
f
Connecticut
has, in fact,
broken it.
I
believe it
is
very
impor-
tant for us,
any of us that
have an inter-
child behind;' the curators of this
legislation are its own undoing.
But all irony aside,
I'll
ask the
blatantly obvious question: what
about the child?
By whose
authority must a child
fail
to
learn in order to stimulate the
political leaders responsible for
his or her education into action
that prevents the
failure
of future
children?
I
beli~ve
if
Blumenthal has a case then
it
ought to be addressed. the denial
a child's education
is
an
unneces-
sary step.
ty
that has overstepped
its
bounds to strike out against vic-
tims as
innocent
as they
an
defenseless: American children.
Connecticut has realized
its
role,
its obligation even, of speaking
truth to power and is
doing
just
that. If
indeed
this conflict
con-
tinues, so too will my
writing
about
it.
I am
confident that the
Bush'
Administration will keep
me
well
s
upplied
with raw materials
for criticism, not the least
of
which are
prevalent
already,
u
they've always been: the
abuse
of
exec
utive
power, the efforts
of
executive
power to expand
its
power,
and its continua"'
assaults on fundamental
human
riB,hts.
Now that these infrac:-
tions
are
targeting children,
it is
a:
fight in which
nearly
everyone
has
someth
ing
at stake.
Bravo Connecticut; how won-
derful
it
is to know there is a
political agenda in this
country
that focuses on
something
other
than money and exploiting
whomever it takes to
acquire
it.
I
Unfortunately, it doesn't appear
the federal government believes
Blumenthal has a
case.
Most of
the lawsuit was dismissed on the
premise of jurisdiction, the idea
that
Co
nnecti
cut
has no
grounds
to challenge federal power in this
particular arena.
I
find this inter-
esting, mildly anyway, that a
state government cannot chal-
ly exerts power over what and
how they learn and how,
specifi-
cally, that learning is measured?
These questions
,
poignant
they
may
be, cause
me less distress
than
does
the
statement
Federal
District
Court
Judge Mark
Kravitz made in regards to why
the
state of Connecticut
cannot
yet
bring
No Child Left
Behind
to trial.
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r
~ . . . A P A
PPfNO
est in protect-
ing
the rights and futures
of
chil-
dren, to consider carefully the
meaning and implications
of
Krevitz's words.
By forcing
Connecticut
to break the law
before they can
l
egally appeal
its
legitimacy
,
the federal
govern-
ment is forcing the
state
to 'leave
a
child behind' before they can
challe
nge
the merits of the
very
Act that purports to 'leave no
The State of Connecticut has
reassured its citizenry that this is
not over, they
are
not
giving
up.
I applaud them, and
am
behind
them
I 00
percent. The federal
government
has promised to
deliver results that
are
not realis-
tically
attainable by those
responsible for doing
so
at the
ground
level. This is a
sus
tained
attack from institutional authori-
.
,,
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• 1
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~
LETTERS
TO
THE EDITOR POLICY:
The
Circle
welcomes letters
from
Marlst students, faculty and
staff
as
well as the
public.
Letters may
be
edited
for
length
and
style.
Submissions
must
Include
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etc.) and
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pus e~tension for
verification purposes.
Letters without these
requirements wlll
not be published.
Letters can be dropped off at The Circle office or submitted
through the
'Letter
Submission' link on MarlstClrcte.com
THE
CIRCLE
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during ttie
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year.
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To request advertising
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THE
CIRCLE
•
THURSDAY, OCTOBER
5, 2006
•
PAGE 4
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THE CIRCLE
A&E
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 5, 2006
www.maristclrcle.com
PAGES
Forget regret
_
and experience
the
wonder that is RENT
By
BRITTANY FIORENZA
Circle Contributor
Mind blowing performances,
over-
.
flowing theaters
,
and profound
social
commentaries
-
these are the universal
expectations of any
play. However,
in
addition
to common
expectations, what
one
leaves
the
theater
actually enlight-
ened.
In today's
word,
that is
definitely
something
unique.
"Viva La Vie
Boheme"
captures the
essence
of the entire
play,
which follows
a group of friends and
lovers living
"at
the
end of
the millennium." The dive~e
group includes universal
representations
of
every
aspect
of
society,
from
an
intellectu-
al
philoso-
pher
(albeit
an anarchist)
to an
exotic
dancer.
The
intertwined
relationships
of
the
group
cover
all
aspects
of
other road
I
No other way/ No day
but
today."
When my friend and
I walked into the
Nederlander Theatre we were surprised
to see just
how
tiny
it
was
-
there was-
n't even room in the
audience
for a pit
The stage was simple, set
up
with fold-
ing
chairs, platfonns, spiral fire escapes,
and of course, Fender guitars. To the far
left of
the
stage the musicians were a
part
of
the
"grungelboho''
set.
If
any-
thing,
the fact
that the
musicians were
visible only added to the pulse of
the
show. Try and
picture
it: a jam-packed
theater
and a cast decked out in outfits
similar to Kurt Cobain and his infamous
green sweater, as well as plenty of plaid
and in the case of
the
Mimi, the exotic
dancer,
leopard
leggings. The feel of the
theater personified the communal social
commentary the play is known for, and
by the end
I
felt
like
I had just lived an
entire year
in
the Doc Martin's of these
bohemians.
Think
of your favorite picruresque
scenes
in the movies (refer Audrey
Hepburn
as Holly Golightly,
standing
in
front of
Tiffany
's
at six
in
the
morning,
if you must). Well, RENT is a culmina-
comes
in.
All
of $ese
peop
l
e
are
just trying
to
pay
their
rent;
it's
that
simple, and
still,
that
complicat•
ed).
During
this scene,
the audience
actually
began
acting
as
though
they were a
part
of
the
protest.
The
voices
of
.
these
actors
were
w1real;
I was
espe-
c
i
a
I I
y
impressed
with Crys
t
a
l
Hall's
so
l
o
d u r i n
g
Shown
above
Is
the art
on
the
walls outside of the Neder1ander
"Seasons
of
Theatre where RENT
Is
staged.
The
art serves as a
reminder
of
the
Love."
I
beauty
of
ltfe and forces
the
audience to continue
to think about
love and life
including the
controversial
issues
of
homosexual-
ity,
drug
use,
and
AIDS.
Furthermore,
this
play
embodies the
1990s
vibe:
tion of all those favorite scenes. One constantly
RENrs
message even
after the
completion
of
the show.
The Intertwined
relatlonshlps
of
the characters In RENT cover all
living
for
aspects
of
love and
life
lncludlng the controversial Issues of homosex
-
the sake of
uallty, drug use, and AIDS.
a
r
t
i
s
t
i
c
specific view that
really
pulled at my
had
c
h
i
ll
s,
street and
noticed the
art on the walls
heart
was when Roger, the tortured
and
the
energy
the performers
emitted
and
the
eccentricity of it all and
realized
musician, stands alone on ,tage and the
was something
inescapable. Their
emo-
just
how strongly RENT
had
affected
spotlight envelopes him as he belts out
tions were
reflected in the
audience.
me.
If
I hadn't
seen
the play
I would
"One Song Glory."
·
At the
end of
this
play
that deals
so
have never
known what
I
was missing
Equally amazing is
the
scene
in
which
c
l
osely with
love
and
death,
poverty and
but now that I have
,
I
am
50
in awe of
Maureen, the performance artist, puts on
"selling out"
the
audience gave a stand-
th.e
inctedible
message RENT sends
a one woman act protesting the eviction
ing
ovation to the cast and walked from
through
beautiful music and
8
moving
of Avenue A's tenants (for your infolll'la-
this tiny
theater into the bustling
streets
storyline.
expresSion
is
to be anticipated when you see RENT
and being defiant
towards
all confonni-
is
the unexpected.
The hopes
of
the
ty.
"There's only
us
/
There's only this/
audience are fulfilled
in
this play and Forget regret or life
is
yours
to miss
/No
tion, this is where
~th_e_t_it_le_
'
_'RE_N_T_"_o_f_N_ew_Y,_o_rk_C_ityc...._I_s_tare_d_d_o_w_n_t_he
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_,,
Belarusian poet
Valzhyna
Mort
shares
beauty and passion
with Marist community
By
JUSTINE MANN
&
CASSANDRA BOLGER
Circle
Contributors
Valzhyna
Mort's deep
a
n
d sou
l-
inspiration
for her poem, aptly
called,
loltery Wheel. She
notes
that
her
poems are usually sad;
she announces, ''And now a love
poem. I don't haVe
many,
that is
:~~;1~:~•;
[Mort's] poems are
never
the
you in. Even
same In different languages
.
in
a lang
u
age
She respects the music of the
~;in~tgi~~:
words and does not try to trans-
poetry
has
late her poems dlrectly. In one
rhythm
and
of her poems Mort decided
to
beauty.
Her
keep only two llnes of the ortgl•
first
poem of
nal and created the
rest
of
the
evening is
in
Be
l
arus
i
an
scratch.
and
the
audi-
- - - - - - - - - - -
why
I
a
I
ways
announce
[them,] so
[they]
seem
special."
The audi-
ence is alert
and
laugh-
ing
at
Mort's
unexpected
witticism.
Her
ence is capti-
vated. The
l
anguage
barrier is
overcome with
passion.
This
Wednesday, Sept. 27,
Mort came
to Marist
to
read
some of
her
work.
The poet
was
born
in
M
in
sk,
Belarus
and
has
been
taJcing the literary
wor
ld
by
stonn
with her
witty
prose
and
musical lyrics.
She started writ·
ing in
high school
but
"desper-
ately want( ed]
to be
an
opera
singer." She
remembers
spend-
ing the
best years of
her
child·
hood
in an opera
hall, playing
hide-and-go-seek.
Mort now
mixes her
two
passions, music
and writing, while combining
her
education as a
linguist
At
the
young age of 24, she is re
l
easing
her
first
book
of poetry
in
English and is al
r
eady an accom-
plished
author over seas.
Her
book,
Factory of Tears, will
be
released in the
spring of 2008.
poems are never
the
same in dif-
ferent
languages.
She
respects
the music
of the words and
docs
Mort's
poetry
is
based
on
her
life
experiences and
her
sur-
roundings. She tells
the
audi-
not
try to translate her poems
directly.
I
n one of her poems
Mort
decide0
to keep only two
lines
of
the
original and created
the
rest from
scratch. Mort
respects her
work by
taking
the
time to
value each line and
because
of this
meticulousness
it
so
m
etimes
takes her
years to fin-
ish
a poem. Her poem
Musical
Loc11srs
took
one full year to
comp
l
ete,
having
started in the
summer and then waited until the
next summer
to
finish
it. She
said by
the
end of
the
first sum•
mer the
feeling
was gone and it
became
"an autumn poem" or a
sadder poem. Mort's words are
bare
and real. She says:
"It
is
the
rhythm of
the music.
My poems
have
changed since
I am here.
I
am more tranquil."
ence of
her
chi
ldh
ood breakfasts,
On
Wednesday,
5ept 27, BeiarUSian poet Valzhyma Mort read
some
of
watching
the lottery
wheel every
her
poetry
at
Marlst College. At the young age
of
24, the poet writes In
morning
.
This
memory
is
the
English
and Belaruslan and her poetry
Is
full
of
rhythm and beauty.
*RSVP
by
October
16th to take
part!
*For
more
info, call
X3547
.\Uention ,luniors
&
Seniors:
lraduaa School
lnformaiion Session!
/
October I 8, I 1·1 p.m.
Henry Hudson Room
Find out about:
• The application calendar
• Components of a solid application
• Reasons to apply
&
reasons not to
•
Choosing the right graduate
program
*Refreshments
will
be served*
RSVP
to:
paltaylor@marisledu
THE ClRCLE
!
Features
:rHURSOAY, OCTOBER 5, 2006
www.maristclrcle.com
PAGES
The Circle editors
present ...
1 2 3 4 5 Numbers 5 4 3 2 1
Yeah, we know they're
everywhere
and no one really
notices 'em, but they need their five minutes of
fame.
So
we're
going to host a photography competition
about
them.
Submit your most
creative
display of numbers
and win a
$50 gift
certificate to Ritz Camera!
Submissions must be digital
in format
and
sent
to:
writethecircle@gmail.com
Please, no 35mm prints.
Thanks and
good
luck
shooting.
..
.
123456789
...
The Circle
welcomes reader contributions for
new features ..
.
I Saw You ...
Have you ever
seen
someone thal
caught
your eye?
You exchanged glances or even a few words, but
then they dissapeared and you never
saw
them
again? Well
'I
Saw You'
is
here to give you a sec-
ond chance.
Forget about regretting; send a message to that guy
or girl. And don'! forget to read, there might
be
a
message waiting for you.
Send
submissions
to writethecircle@gmail.com.
Example;
Last Tuesday you were bartending at the
Loft.
I
wou/dn
~
forget that blonde head of hair.
I
bought
a
few
drinks from you but I wouldn
~
tell you my
name.
1 was playing hard to get hut now I have
changed
my mind. Go ahead ask
for
my name
again
.
The column about nothing
Things to Do While Sexiled
By MORGAN NEDERHOOD
Staff Writer
Almost everyone will go through the experience
of being
scxiled
at least once in their
co
llegiate
lifetime. It is almost like a right of passage, and
you are bound to have times when you walk into
your
room, notice something doesn't quite add up,
and then realize that a quick exit is the best option.
In
case of emergency (as well as for my own
amusement while
l
postpone my
homework)
,
I've
developed a list of things to do when
scxiled.
I'm
not recommending that you do all
of
these
-
some
might result in
your
roommate punching
yo
u
in
the
face - but
you
can nonetheless imagine them in
your
mind and
smile
at the ideas. So, let the games
begin:
MAKE YOUR
PRESENCE KNOWN
- It's
your
room, too,
so
why should
you
have to shy out
of
your
own room? If they leave a
signal
or some
son of
warning on the door, then
I
guess
that they
are
somewhat
justified. But, if
you
walk into your
own
room and
your
retinas start bleeding from the
nastiness
in
front
of
you, then
s
hame
on them.
Stand proud, act
like nothing odd
is
happening and
make noisc
...
a
lot
of noise. Try
turnin
g
up
your
cell
phone to
full
volume on a fantastically bad
ring tone, and
pray
that your friends call you.
Or,
call
your friends, hang up when they answer, and
wait for them to call you back. If
you
hav
e
no
friends to call
you,
then
tum
on
your cell
phone's
alarm
and wait for the
obnoxious
ruckus
to
begin.
TAKE YOUR TIME -
If
you
rush to evacuate
your
room,
you're
likely to forget
someth
ing
,
which
will only result
in
you
needing
to re-enter
the
l
ove
den, Make
sure
you have everything you
need for
a
proper
sexile:
laptop,
money for food
at
the \cndmp
machines, headphone,,
iJ>od,
and
D\"D
s
(you
never know how long it will be).
\\-llile
you're at it, you should
sit down and make
a
quid checklist
of
supplies.
Grab
a
change
of
do11i~
and
yottrbooks for tomorrow's class just in
ca'><
you're sexife0
for the night. Most important-
!).
take
the numbers of some reliable friends who
will
let
you camp out
in
their room
in
case you
need to
stay
out for the night. No one wants
you
camping in the
stairwell
or any other
creepy
place
like some
sort
of odd troll.
TIME
LIMIT- Decide on a time
limit
for your
roommate. This is
something
that you should prob-
ably go over with
your
roommate beforehand, but
sometimes a crisis arises before you've ever
reviewed
the guidelines. In that case, you have to
decide what an acceptable time limit is for your
roommate
and his or her boy/girl-toys. My mono:
if
you
can't do something within two hours, t~en
you
shouldn't
be doing
it
at all. Honestly people,
two hours
sho
uld
be enough- this isn't a marathon.
So, assign your roommate a time restraint (with or
without their knowledge), and don't feel obligated
to say a second past your limit.
SUSTENANCE - I
can't
stress this enough: scx-
ile is based upon
survival
of the fittest. Most
humans
can live up
to
seven days without water
and up to ten days without food, so plan according-
ly. Pack
yourself
ple,uy of food, and it's usually
wise to
store
extra food in
strategic
l
ocations
around your residence hall. Be
sure
to keep frozen
meals in a friend's fridge, and feel free to freeze
just about anything you want
so
you can thaw
ii
out during limes of emergency. No one
s
hould
eve
r
be sexiled withoul having a
jar
of peanut butter on
hand.
Peanut huller is the universal food as you
can
spread
it on just about anything, and it
eve
n
tastes good by itself. Whatever you do, make
su
re
to pack
enough
for a long-tenn banishment from
your
room.
I
would hate to catch you hunched over
your
last
red M&M whispering,
"My
precious;"
nor would
I
enjoy seei
ng
you
try
to ration anything
else in your third hour in the basement
l
ou
ng
e.
In
all,
sexilc
is an adventure. It's a jungle out
there,
and :;urvhal
i
s
h,bed
on
~ho
can
and can'!
adapt
to the
harsh
world of
foraging
for
candy,
fighting the
squirrels for
fallen
crumbs,
and
learn-
ing to
store
emergency
sustenance
in odd loca-
tions. Oh, and you might want to invest in
an
inflatable mattress
-
you never know how long
)OU
might
be
stuck
in the
loung
e.
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I
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THE
CIRCLE
•
THURSOAY
,
OCTOBER
5,
2006
•
•
PAGE
7
- -
MARIST ABROAD
NEWS ALERT!
ADDITIONAL
SPACES AVAILABLE
FOR SPRING '07
PLEASE APPLY ASAP
FOR MORE DETAILS
___
CONTACT THE MAP
LIB334
I
x3330
THE CIRCLE
Hea
l
th
'
nt
URSDA
Y,
O
CTO
BER
5, 2006
www.ma
r
lstclrcle
.
co
m
PAGES
;
Sleepless nigh~s contribute to more than just t
ir
ed mo
rnings
'
By ALEXANDER TINGEY
'
H
ea
l
th Ed
it
or
According to a recent sur-
vey, Americans sleep two
ho
ur
s less on average than
they did 40 years ago.
In
addh
i
on, the quality of s
l
eep
r
eceived today is less fulfill-
ing according to researchers.
With sleep deprivation comes
more than just an extra slap on
the 'snooze,' according to a
C
h
icago University study
individuals who are in a con-
tin
u
al state of s
l
eep depriva-
t
i
on were more susceptible to
a myriad of ailments.
In the past two years alone
we have seen the rise of brand
name sleep aids, such as
Lunesta and A.mbien.
The
n
atio
n
al average is around
: seven hours a night, with
'
many people getting less than
h
alf that
amount Lawrence
:
Epstein, M
.
D., the regional
;
medica
l
director for S
l
eep
, Health Centers
in
Boston,
l
Massachusetts, and former
: p
r
esiden
t
of the American
!
Academy of Sleep Medicine
suggests that individuals need
between e
i
ght and nine hours
of sleep per day to be fully
func
t
ional, as reported by
CNN.
A simple way to determine
whether or not you are receiv-
ing an ample amount of s
l
eep
can be judged by how quickly
you
fall
as
l
eep when you do
go to bed.
On
average, people
fall asleep in 15 minutes,
though some will take less
time and some will take more.
Epstein notes that
if
you are
fa
ll
ing asleep within one or
two minutes of going to bed
that you are indeed sleep
deprived.
Another way to
monitor your s
l
eep is to keep
track of daytime drowsiness.
Chronic daytime sleepiness is
not norma
l
, says Michael
Twery, Ph.D., acting director
of the National Center on
Sleep Disorders Research.
Aside from a bad case of bed
head
·
and some expected
crankiness, researchers have
found that s
l
eep deprivation
can lead to abrupt changes in
appetite, weight gain, diabetes
Heal
thy Habits
!
IIY
SARAH GUNNER
Writer
nuuk candii:.,
nd clw,:u-
a
t
e
Amr,;b MatM:t
1.;;
a refut1vd
MtJ-Hud~im
,
is a grt:at pln~e for
:
wn produce that 1s.
nd di:lictou:-. T\'. o
dent groccty ..
wre~,
Also
1:arrying trcsh
prod11i.::c,
f"a1racn:
Fanns and they ha,-e
d
\\Onderful hak-
!Jl
Market, arc"- ithin ~rj and n.-ad ..
•made
s.cx:t1on
nute drive
or
Mari~t.
that ..:arne:,, e-,cl)thmg lrom
of
them carry
fresh
fried plantarn::, to salmon
crbs.
fn11ts.
find
c
a
k
l!
s
e t a t,
I
c ,
Thcs1.• t"o gmcc.·n..:~
Adams
F.1iracr(
u.r(
great ,tltcmattH"S to
~hop-
s located on Route 44
ping at a trad1hon,1l chain
ghkc-cps1e. h "as store 111e) ha\ c s.,gmficcmt-
hed
in
the
l!ilrl)'
ly
ltJ\\..Cf
prC\d1J1,,C price.,_
a."
a fann und and
i
1.:Mry
plenty nl hard-to-lmc.l
1ly•owncd
and run
w
spcl·1alt)'
tlems.
and
als1.
1
su~
. They choow Ii) .;;ell
port thi.: loc.:Jl fannmg t:i.:um,-
ucc as uflen us pos-
nn 1n tht: Jh ...
J
,,e ,.;all home
d th1~ alkrn~ tht'
,hilc
111 M,uist. Shorr,inll al
be far lmH·r than at them
1.,
a.h\ ay:1
1111
ad\ cnum.~
Shop, Not cmly do
in
ldsk
I
sight~ anJ ,mdb
.
..:k locally
g1
own ;mJ u is
hard
to
il'U\ I.' \\
ithout
y
also h,n
i'I
hup:c
a
little?
treat for
your,clf 01 3
JiiCcUon carry hard
f
i
d
eats and
lhh.
and
, on'I
o..,
risk, the strength of your
immune system, and even
your chance of deve
l
o
p
ing
depression.
A 2004 Chicago University
research team discovered that
restricting a night's s
l
eep to
four hours had dramatic
effects upon
l
eptin and ghre-
lin, two brain chemica
l
s
which regulate eating patterns
and hunger. Researchers con
-
cluded that receiving less than
seven hours of s
l
eep per night
puts individua
l
s at a much
greater risk for obesity (which
is good news for all you late
Sunday sleepers).
Epstein explains this phe
-
nomenon: stating that "chron-
ic sleep deprivation causes
changes in metabolism that
produce a state that stimulates
hunger
.
" Those who are sleep
deprived are also more like
l
y
to forego daily physical activ-
ity, and are more likely to
drink beverages which con
-
tain caffeine.
It's a universal morning sta-
ple
:
coffee. But recent studies
indicate that increased con-
~
AUXANDER TINGEY
Health
fdrtor
gcnc1ic
s
or 1101 on!) 111i.:h1•1tllomimi.1
hut
any
Jic;.-
orJi:r ,\ht'rC' pcopk have \111\\
~
n,-.d
bd1av111ts
th,ll lhc-) 1;.an't
o:<inlwl
s
a1J
Dr.
AIIL,;l,n \)hh:\
Koch, lh\:
s
1ud) , nuth r anJ .1
n.:
"ard1e-r
at th<!'
D115'e I rm cnn) ( cm._-r
fnr I lum1111 l
11.'fu:tu.~
Tm:id
of
pulling
out your hail?
Study
finds genetic
caLL<;e
Tnd10t11Joman1a, u
ps,
choh1iii.11l
1.hsorJer
which dri"C-1 un 1ndn1dual ll1 Cl.1mpub1vd> pull
our.
their hn1r cyeltt,hes tmd C\ebr1w~s ttffccts
approxima
t
ely 1 10 5 percent ol the <\meric3n
populatum. Appeanng:
tn
~rl_y ,utult:~t.'.'nce
~ch
gin
v.rcd,.
ha\oc
~11h
a ;ouni p(rson·,
utr-cste\.'ffl.
n,crc
IS
rnod
m:\\ •
ho\l.~l'r
resean::htn
at
Duke
lJmvt:r-;Hy
h;1\'c
h,und
1.ha1
ttich
ma}
be
t>rought on h}
.1
gen ...
11c
mrnahon
• ll
n
s
i.\
11n important
lir-.t
in
11ndmL1nding
th('
When
research
bci;an. cxpt·rl focu)1.'tl
111
on a
\;'°"'-'
kn11v.11 a, SLITRK I
nu.-:,-
hC'ht>Vt' this
~enc ts also Ct.1tUH."CICd
wuh
a rel:lrcd
1mp11I~
l'<.lntrl.11
di~orJl•t lnureues )yndr
t
,mc
\\.hilc
rh~1r
r..:-.earch
lc"u.
c;
cd
on
44 fomihes.
·xrert
found
th!!.! mUl3tcd Sl.lTRK 1
i
~nt:
<; l
tccountcd
to, near])
~
P<-'Tcenl uf case:. "•hl:'rl" trkh
was;
prc,r111
fhc inutalion
m
que~uon ha some
8('f1nu\
rool", a!-i thisg~nc 1 ,n\Ohcd m the
lonm,tion
of
l,i()Oll('Cll\
'
I;
liSiUC
:i
btt"'-n'I\ t'lram
C
·Us
.
One
l•f
the rc<,emch\ main g.o:1ls
1:-.
roi.,mg the J...,'l1ri;-~
nc. thu1 these pt"Ople .1tc1\'t
i:-tlll),
~u1 rrlthet
l.hc-
re-:ult of
.1
bmlo~kal lucrnp 11H
rcscardu:r'I
hope "1II rmsl' the ,,.lf.c"
,
ti.:(111 ol 1hosc ami~ted
\'1th trh •
.:h
,
and help to
t
reat
!111
s
sumption of coffee can be a
cause of insomnia, and may
help perpetuate the visc
i
ous
sleep deprived cycle of life.
Accordi
n
g to
r
esearchers at
Chicago Univers
i
ty, consum-
ing five or more caffeinated
dr
i
nks per day could provoke
further sleep deprivation.
Aside from the obvious
physical effects of shorting
yourself in the sack, the cur-
rent trend
in
med
i
ca
l
research
suggests that sleeplessness
i
s
a contributing factor to clini-
cal depression.
"Positive
moods are lower in peop
l
e
with s
l
eep loss," reports
Van
Cauter, a professor of medi-
cine at Chicago University,
"and mood isn't stable over
.
the 24-hour cycle. People
have lower moods in the
morning. They also have
highe
r l
evels of cortisol, the
stress ho
r
mone. All those
changes are typical of clinica
l
depression."
Among
a
group of women,
ages 30 to 35, it was found
that those receivi
n
g less than
6.5
hours of s
l
eep per night
were twi
ce
as
li
ke
l
y
to d
eve
l-
op resistances to insulin
,
a
condition which if continued
has been shown to cause some
types of diabetes. CNN news
reports that "the study shows
so far, that individuals need to
produce 30 to 40 percent more
insu
l
in to dispose of the same
amount of glucose when
receiving less than 6.5 hours
of sleep a
n
ight."
comer
,
and your roommate's
all night toga parties
,
but with
a little time management and
some coercion on the part of
the roomy
,
a good night's rest
can still be had.
If
you or a
loved one suffers from chron-
ic
s
leep deprivation, please
contact Health Services or
your general care physician
.
Maristln"'"'4tlcnal
"'°9Wm
I
845.575.3330
www.mamt.edu/l-
I
t _
_,_"°'
Be sure t
o
chec out MCTV's
Friday night line-up:
6:00 - MCTV News
6:30 -
FoxDen
7:00 - THAT'S A SHAME! (repeat)
7:30 -
howcase Presents
•Line-up re-airs lour times ead1 day, at
9 a.m., 2
p.111.
,
6 p.m. and 10
(l
111
.
MCTV - Your Campus, Your Station.
--rneristdtde.com
Marilt
opens
an
ect,t-court tennis
facilrty
near
tne
Fulton Townhouse&.
Some
of the
most advanced
court
technology avallable
was
used
to
create
the
Pavllk>n,
gMng
Marlst one of the
premier
faclltties
In
the
area.
Successful tennis programs earn stellar new facility,
mens tennis team shows they deserve their new
courts
TH£ CIRCLE
•
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 5, 2006
•
PAGE 9
Red
Foxes
look forward to
Metropolitan Championships
By
DANIEL
BARRACK
Circle Contributor
For
the
second consecutive
meet, the Red Foxes
ran
a
partial
squad, and for
the
second con-
secutive time, it
had little
effect
on the team's performance. The
men's cross cowitry
team
fin-
ished
19th
out of 42 teams at the
Paul Short Jnvitational at Lehigh
Unive
r
sity on
Friday
.
The
Red
Foxes finished the meet with
4?8
points,
trailing
first
place
Villanova with 103 points.
Ginna Segni again lead the
Red Foxes with a time of 25:01
in the 8,000-meter course. That
time
placed
Segni 26th out of
277
runners.
Sophomore David
Raucci and junior Tom Williams
contributed
to the
team's success
as well. Raucci finished 42nd
overall with a
time
of 25:12,
while Williams finished
in
the
top half of the field at
108th
with
a
time of 25:5
I.
the top
half
of the field,
but to
be
perfectly
honest, l
thought we
were
flat.
I
was impressed with
David Raucci and Tom Williams,
they had
a
good
day,"
head
coach
Pete
Co
l
aizzo said.
The
team's
next meet will
be
the
Metropolitan Championships
on Oct. 6 at Van Cortlandt
Park.
If anyone questioned
the
team's
focus, they do
not
need to ques-
tion the preparation the team has
put in for this next meet.
"This next
meet
has
been
the
team's focus since the
season
began," Colaizzo said.
Besides the
Metro Atlantic
Athletic Conference (MAAC)
Championship on Oct. 27,
this
meet is
the most important
for
the team right
now
.
The
end of
the
season
is
crucial.
After
the
MAAC
Roarin'
Red
Foxes
\tanst's male
and
lcmale
tar
pcrfom1er
for
the
\\ eekend of
Sept.
29 -
(kt
I
.
Pedro
(,eno,ese
1
enms, Se111or
By
NATE
FIELDS
the US Tennis Center in New
tional, HeneghM
said
that
there
Staff Writer
York City.
In
addition, state of are still
improvements to
be/
the art lighting from Musco made. A pergola is bemg added
In
its' first contest at
the
glis-
Incorporated
allows the tennis
to the south side of the couns,
tcning
new
Marist
Tennis teams to host night matches.
and will provide
a
covered
area
Pavilion
,
the mcq's tennis team
Marist's President, Dr. Dennis
for spectators. Windscreens are
proved themselves worthy of Murray, was in attendance, and
being erected on
the
three
other
their new home. The Foxes man-
called it, ·•an exciting day for
fenced sides
to
sheller pla}crs
hMdled vis11ing Siena 7-0 las1
Maris! and the tennis program."
from the elements, and
benches!
Wednesday, winning all three
In
discussing lhe courts,
for the players Md spectators arc
doubles matches and losing only Murray doled out praise lo both
still in the works.
''l
am glad that
we finished in
Championships,
the Red
Foxes
set
their
sights on
the
NCAA
Northeast Regional on Nov.
I I
and the IC4A
Championships on
Nov.
1
8.
Greyhounds outrace Foxes
By
ANDY ALONGI
Managing Editor
had 62 assists during
the
five-
game
match.
one set
in
six singles matches.
head coach Tim Smith and the
While the facility is intended
The Loyola Greyhounds out-
raced
the
Red Foxes
in
a five-
game women's volleyball thriller
on Sunday at Loyola on its par
-
ents' weekend.
The win for Marisl came in
players,
for use by the entire
colkge
both
its'
first Metro Atlantic
MWe
now have courts as good
community, a major factor in the
Athletic Conference (MAAC),
as our players," Murray said.
decision to add the courts
"a.s
and dual contest this fall. The
..
And
I
have to give Tim [Smith]
the men's and women's
IL'1lRI
second doubles tandem of senior credit for developing this pro-
teams
'
success in recent years.I
Ray
Josephs
and junior Greg gram without adequate facilities,
According to the athletic depart-
Marks blanked their opponents so this is
a
tribute to him."
rnent
website, the men's learn
After the Red Foxes jumped
out to
a
2-0
lead
,
the Greyhounds
rallied to win the final three
games to
take
the match.
The
match contained 32 ties and
15
lead changes.
The final score favored Loyola,
28-30, 25-30, 30-28, 30-28,
16-
14
Defensively, the Foxes had a
strong effort
from
four players
including senior tri-captain Kim
McEathron,
Jan,
sophomore
Kelsey Schaffer and
Kenworthy.
The quartet
all
had double-digit
digs.
McEathron
led
with
24 digs
while
Jan
and Schaffer followed
with 14 and Kenworthy added
12.
Loyola proved to be
100
strong;
they
had
four players
who
ta11ied
double-digit kills
to match the
Foxes offensive ou
tput
(u:nmese
W('on thl'
Flight
I
mgles champmn hip and
f
ltght
A douM
t1tle
with
1.::las~malc FreJenco
Rolon
at
the
liLO
ln\-1tat1on
I
On the horizon:
8-0, and Josephs later rolled to a
Murray was
not the
only
digni-
has carried a 66--19 record
smi;e
6-0,
6-4 victory
at third
singles.
tary
in attendance, however.
as
200 I, to go along with four
cop,.
The only Marist player requir-
virtually the entire a1hle11c
seL-UllH'
MAAC
champiot
hir-
ing a third set was senior Frankie
department administration was
between 2000-2003.
Algier, who dropped his first4--6,
on hand to witness the match.
The women's team has
be'ffl
but rallied for back to back 6--3
Especially involved in the addi-
successful
as
well, holding
an
victories
to
take sixth singles.
tion
of the
P3vffi0h
to
Manst'I:
ftnpresd'I:~
re-ma
·
The Foxes notched
a
resound•
sports facilities was Marisl 2001, and capturing the regular
ing victory, but their new home Assistanl Athletic Director for
season MAAC title in 2005.
was
the real
star of the afternoon.
facilities., Tim Heneghan, who
Assistant Sports lnformauonj
Opened for the
stan
of the cur-
recognized the valuable addition
Director, Mike Ferraro,
!.hared
rent
semester, the still unfinished
to the campus and a1hle1ic similar praise
as
Murray for the
eight-court facility is located department.
two tennis programs.
across
Route
9 near the Fulton
.. lts gratifying for the team to
"It's sootething
that
's
reall)
Townhouses. Some of the most finally have a facility of their special for two programs th
11
advanced spon coun technology
own, it's a jewel in their crown," have achieved so much in thel
available was incorporated into
he
said. •·1t•s flattering
that
we
last
few years," he said.
the Pavilion, giving Marist one [the athletic
department)
were
With pcrfonnances lile
of the premier tennis facilities in
able to build something that the Wednesday's domination
of
the area.
whole campus
has
been using.
Siena,
1he team
proved
the
col-
Among the notable features
is
It's
been
packed right up
to
II
lcge and athletic
dcp;_irtrt1ent\
the
playing
surface,
Deco
II,
p.m. when
it
closes.'
effons were not misplaced.
which is the same surface used at
Although the courts arc func-
Women's soccer continues to struggle
By
GREG
HRINYA
Fairfield sealed the victory well, along with Ah:,andra
Circle
Contributor
when Frobey scored in the 63rd
Lauterbon," Roper said.
The Marist Red Foxes continue
to struggle as they lost
to
Metro
AtlMtic Athletic Conference
(MAAC) opponent, Fairfield, 3-
1
on
Sunday.
Fairfield
freshman, Casey
Frobey, provided the offense for
the Stags and frustrated the Red
Foxes all game. Frobey had a
goal and two assists on five
shots.
Marist
got behind early when
Frobey fed Faifield's Ahna
Johnson, who netted the first
goaJ of the game in
the 14th
minute.
Late in the first half, Marist fell
into
a hole
they
wou
ld
not recov-
er from when Alex Caram scored
in
the 41st minute off of another
Casey Frobey pass. The Caram
goal would stand as the gamc-
winner.
Red Foxes coach, Elizabeth
Roper,
said that Frobey was the
difference
and
she
frustrated the
defense on Sunday.
"Casey Frobey really played
well for Fairfield," Roper said.
..
We were able to shut down a
couple of their other key players,
but Frobey brought her 'A'
game."
minute to give Marist its' second
Coach Roper believes
that
straight MAAC loss.
Despite
those plnyers who have
con-,
1
the Red Foxes' struggles, they
tributed sig.nificanlly in rnu:1icc
1
were able to draw some positives
may stan to see more time on
the
out of
the
loss.
field.
Marist junior captain, Melanie
"We might be able to get
more
Ondrcjik,
tallied
her second goal
players time,
those
who ha"el
of the season when freshman
stepped
up,
"
Roper said
"I
hc,pc
Teresa Ferraro fed her
a
cross to get some players in who
ha\e
that Ondrejik would chip in dur-
worked hard in practice and
cun-
ing the
87th
minute
of play.
tributed positively
to
the team."
The goal came
in
the
final
10
Next up for the Red Foxes
i!i
minutes
of
the
game and put an
another MAAC rival, the
2-91
end to the Red Foxes' streak of Saint Peter's Peahens, Y.hol
bad luck, so they look to use lhat Marist will face at Saint Pc1L-r·s1
spark as a building block for
Friday at 4 p.m.
going forward in the season.
Coach Roper is
looking
for-
..
We were pleased we were able
ward to seeing how her team
to score and play strong in
the
rebounds
Friday, and hopes the)
last 10 minutes of the game," can tum things around
against
Roper said
"The
team was able
the Peahens.
to
get that monkey off of their
"Hopefully we can step on
thc:I
back.''
field and domi
n
ate and put
some:/'
Some other positives
included
balls
in
the back of the net,"
the strong play
from
some of the
Roper said. "We have to
mnke
Marist reserves who came
in
sure everyone's confident for the.
during the second
half.
next two games. We have
an:
Coach Roper was pleased to
uphill battle in all of our
upcom-
see some of her players who
ing MAAC games, but if
an)
have worked
hard
in
practice team
is
capable of doing it, Yoe
come in and contribute late in the believe we arc.
We know
it
game.
won't
be
easy but
this team
has
..
Lauren Dziedzic and Teresa great leadership and
rem in '
Ferraro stepped up and played
positive."
Sally
Hanson and Jaime
Kenworthy
,
who had a
match-
high
27 kills and 14 kills, r<Spec-
1ivelyt
both
paced Marist during
the
conte:!tl. Hanson also
hit
an
impressive
.553
on the match.
Junior Christy Lukes added
10
kills in the
losing
effort
The pair of senior captains
are
now
ranked
first
and second on
the Foxes all-time kills list.
Kenworthy has
997
kills on her
career
while
Hanson
is
second
with 976.
Marist volleyball
head
coach.
Tom
Hanna,
said the milestone is
great for both players.
"It's a great milestone for both
of them to be so highly regarded
in
program history," he
said.
.. Both
players will go over
1,000
kills.
That speaks highly to
their
contributions to the
program
."
Freshman setter,
Dawn Jan,
Marist is on a two--match losing
streak and its Metro Atlanuc
Athletic Conference (MAAC}
record fell to 2-4. Loyola
improved
to
3-3
in the
co
n
fcr-
enc«i The Greyhounds'
ate
in
a
three-way tic for fourth
place.
The
Foxes return
to
action this
weekend when
they take
to
the
road to face the founh
place
Rider Broncs
for
a
MAAC
match-up on Saturday,
Oct.
7.
The
match is
scheduled to begin
at3
p.m
.
Hanna said every
MAAC
match
gives
the
team two oppur-
tunites.
"E
very
MAAC
match
docs
two
things
,"
he
said
"It
gives
us
a
chance to impro"·e our seeding
for
the
confere
n
ce
tournament
time, and it gives
us an
opportu-
nity
to
perform at a
higher
level
consistently against
an
outside
opponent."
Men
's
soccer
drops
a
heartbreaker
By
JOSEPH FERRARY
his team's
effon.
Staff Writer
"We
had
a very solid showing
The Marist
men
's
soccer
team
dropped
a heartbreak.er to Metro
Atlantic Athletic Conference
(MAAC)
rival
Fairfield as
the
Stag's
Sam
Bailey scored the
game's only goal with 32
sec-
onds left in regulation on
Sunday.
With the win, the Stags
improved to
6-2-1
and 2-0
in
MAAC play, while the Red
Foxes
dropped
to 3-5• I
and
0-1 •
I in
the
MAAC. This was
the
fifth time in nine games
that the
Red Foxes were shutout.
The only goa1 of
the
game was
sci-up by a free kick
from
mid-
field which was taken by Tom
Clements. Clements' kick trav-
eled into the Red Foxes'
18
yard
box were it was misplayed by
two Red Fox defenders.
Marist goalkeeper Daniel
Owens was caught in no-man's
land
as the ball bounced to
Bajley who
headed the ball
into
the
open
net in the 89th minute.
Although
his
team did not win
the game, Marist head coach
Bobby Herodes was
pleased
with
as
a team today against the best
team in the MAAC,
Fairfie
ld,
"
Herodcs
said "Even though we
were out-shot
in
the game, we
clearly had the
m
ore
dangerous
opportunities
in
the game."
The Stags dominated all of
the
offensive catego
ri
es
including
shots (13-5) and shots on goal
(8-3).
Fairfield
also
took
five
comer kicks while
the
Red Foxes
had
none.
The
Red
Foxes
had
several
opportunities
to
score
in the
sec-
ond
half,
but all of
their attempts
were cleared
out by
the
Fairfield
defense.
Fairfield junior goalie Jon
Paul
Fmncini stopped just three shots
to post
h.is
fif'St career shut out.
In
the loss, Daniel
Owens
made
seven stops for the Red Foxes.
On
the
seaso
n
,
the Red
Foxes
have only scored six goals
in
nine
games, which can be attrib-
uted
to an
injury to
MAAC
pre-
season p
l
ayer of the year Keith
Detelj
.
Coach
Herodes
said
the
injury
was devastating
to
the team.
"When your goal scorer
[Oetelj) is only at 50 percent, it is
Manst
~,n
be
al home
to
tale
on
Montrea.1
and
Hartford
at
8:30 • m and
12:30
p.m.
re~rc
uvcly
Jaime
Kmworttty-
VolleybalL
Senior
Ken"orthy
tallied
14
kills
m
yola
he
1s
1mc on
the
SI
"tth
997
as
ol Tuesday Oct 3
On the Horizon:
fhc
Fox
tnlll
tr,l\cl to
Rider
on
Saturday
to
face-
the Hrnn s
tn
a \1AAC
\:ontest
•
Photo1
courtesy of
"'""·l?ol'f'dfous.com
tough
on a team,
..
Herodes
said.
"'We
need
him to play, and we
can't hold him back because of
conference play."
In the first game of the season
against Anny, Oetelj and Anny
goal
keeper
John-Michael
Ga
ll
ogly both went after a
ball in
the Anny box. Gallogly won the
challenge and in the
pr
ocess
injured Oetelj 's ankJe.
The Red Foxes hope to find
their
offensive stride as they play
host to MAAC
rivals
Saini
Peters on Friday at 7 p.m. and
Manhattan o
n
Sunday at 1 p.m.
Both games will be played on
Leonidoff Field.
Upcoming Schedule:
Men's Soccer: Friday, Oct. 6 - vs. St. Peter's, 7 p.m.
Football: Saturday, Oct. 7
-
at LaSalle, I p.m.
THURSDAY,
OCTOBER 5, 2006
www.mar!stclrcle.com
PAGE 10
Foxes score late, fall short as Bucknell spoils homecoming
By BRIAN
LOEW
NO
left in
the half,
Wilson and
be made by Marist as Ray
Fiumefreddo took the hand-off
from Marist's
second
quarter-
back of the
game,
Mike
Sangiorgi, and made a 4-yard
touchdown run to close the gap a
bit to 42-13 with 3:19 left in the
Staff Writer
Kizekai
hooked
up on the same
Last minute fanfare from
Mari st
quarterback
Matt
Semerano was
not
enoug
h
to
save the Red Foxes from defeat
play and turned their second 35-
yard run into
another
touchdown,
and
it
looked
like Bucknell
would go into the half tip 28-0.
But Marist quarterback Steve
as the Bisons rained on the Red
McGrath had other ideas, as he
game after Marist kicker Bradley
Rowe failed to convert the extra-
point kick.
Fox homecoming parade.
Bucknell
ran
off with a 48-19
victory on Saturday at Leonidoff
field.
found wide receiver Tim Keegan
open in the end zone. Keegan
was immediately leveled but
held onto the ball and gave
Bucknell improved to
3-2
with
Marist a touchdown with 19 see-
Fiumefreddo's first collegiate
touchdown came after
running
back Keith Mitchell broke off
on
a 53-yard run, bringing the ball
down to the 4-yard line. Though
it was exciting, Fiumefreddo said
it
was bittersweet.
the win as Marist fell to 1-4 dur-
ands left
in
the half. Bucknell
ing their final game of
a
four-
game home" stretch in front of
2,417
fans.
Bucknell's ground attack
struck
early when wide receiver Daniel
Zvara broke off down the right
sideline for a 51-yard
touchdown
run that put Bucknell up
7-0
with
I
I :42 left in the first quarter.
Zvara was the first of six Bisons
to put six points on the board.
Just
44
seconds
into the
second
quarter, running back Peter
Kaufman added to the Bison lead
with
a
12-
yard
touchdown run up
the nearside to make
it
14-0
Buckne
l
l.
Not four minutes later, with
I 0:42 left in the half, quarterback
Terrance
Wilson pitched the ball
to A.J. Kizekai who
stonned
for
a 35-yard touchdown run down
the far-side to tack up another
score,
making
it
21-0 in favor of
the Bisons.
Two possessions later, with
would walk into the half with a
28-
7
lead, as Marist barely
avoided being shut out for eight
consecutive quarters.
On Bucknell's
second
posses-
sion
of the
seco
nd
half, they
cushioned
their lead
as
full back
Josh DeStefano took the hand off
from
quarterback
Marcello
Trigg, converting
a
9
-
ya
rd
run
into a touchdown
,
and putting
Bucknell up 35-7 at 9:59 left in
the third quarter.
Starting
quar-
terback., Terrance Wilson, who
went 0-5 passing, was taken out
of the game after he was hit hard,
injuring
his
shou
lder
on
Bucknell's first possession oftbe
half.
Trigg had no problem
stepping
in for Wilson as he took the ball
into the
end
zone himself on a I-
yard
quarterback
sneak
uppin
g
the score to 42-7 Bucknell with
l4:..l5 left in the game
.
The next end
zone
trip would
"It
didn't feel the same being
down 30 points,'' Fiumefreddo
said.
"We've
got to get those
'W's'
on the board."
Bucknell converted its final
touchdown with
1
:28
left
in the
game when Corin Erby, who had
three rushes for 61 yards, rushed
the ball 47 yards to put the final
seven points for the Bisons on
the board, making it 48-13
Bucknell.
With just
11
seco
nds
left in the
game, Semerano, who completed
seven passes for 74 yards, found
wide receiver Mike DiGiaimo
and completed a lofting 41.-,yard
pass. DiGiaimo's
leapioj
Catch,
his only one of the game, put the
Foxes
on
the 9-yard
line
which
segue
d
into Semerano's 9-yarcf
pass
to
wide receiver Chris
Ferguson
as
time
ran
out. This
senior captain
Nick
Salls
(10)
makes e
tackkt
against
the
Bucknell offense In
Martst's
homecoming
loss
on
Saturday
at
Leonlndoff
Aeld. Salls
had
nine tackles Including
two
solo
tackles
In the Foxes
48--19
defeat.
made the final score 48-19, end,-
at
this
point and move forward."
Bucknell.
"I
mean we
'
ve been struggling,
'Fiumefreddo commented that
Though the Red Foxes rally at quite honestly, offensively," he
the offense is
goi
n
g
to
need
to
the end was not enough to save
said. "Mike DiGiaimo made a
come out with more intensity
the game, Coach Jim Parady was
great catch on that, and we kept
earlier
in the games to get the
glad to
see
that his team kept
competing so that was a
posi
-
win.
fighting until the end.
tive."
"We've
got
to
come out in the
"I
was pleased that we kept
The Red Foxes ailing offense
first quarters and put some more
competing at the end of the foot-
worked on being consistent this
points up," Fiumefreddo said.
ball game," Parady said.
"We
week,
Parad
y
said, but
it
was not
"We've
got to come out with
were able to get it down there (in
enough.
some
more intensity."
the red zone], and I
think
it's
"We
focused a lot on our con-
Marist looks to tum things
important for our team
.
"
s
i
stency. Again
we didn't get it,
around as they go on the road on
With the Red Foxes' offensive
we were third down and three in
Saturday for the first time in a
J)Oint total
in
the lllSt two games the first half a couple times, and
month to play their first Metro
being seven and zero, Parady
we didn't get the first down,"
Atlantic Athletic Conference
said it was nice to see an offen-
Parady said.
"We
just have to
go
(MAAC) game in Philadelphia
sive spark, even if it came at the
back and re-establish who we
are
against La Salle at
I
p.m.
Marist campus honors
football player
Sherwood Thomas
with memorial
service.
TER
OHrtaft
The Marist College
community gathered
to mourn one of its'
members
taken
over
the summer
last
Wednesday. Oct. 4.
Friends and fellows
student remembered
a life and potential
ended all too soon.
Sherwood Thomas
died this past June,
following a fight in
Poughkeepsie.
The
cause or death was a
stab wound. Thomas
had just finished his
sophomore year at
Marist. He had played
football for the school
his freshman year.
The
memorial
service was held at
9;15
C h
p.m.
a
p
in
e
the
I
Marist Red Foxes roll through all flights
and six teams at UCONN Invitational
By JONATHAN KNOTH
Circle Contributor
This past weekend, the Marist
men's tennis team traveled to the
University of
Connecticut
where
they
sq
uared
off against prime
competition.
Other teams in the
tournament
included the University of Rhode
Island, Uconn, Holy Cross, Boston
University, Quinnipiac, and Sacred
Heart University, all prestigious
tennis programs.
Marist sent six players to the
finals, with five to come out
victo-
rious.
Senior Pedro Genovese battled
through Flight A only to find him-
self down 5-2.
However
,
with per-
sistent play, he won five straight
games.
Head coach Tim Smith said
Genovese never gave in, especially
with his serve.
''He then threw professional-like
serves, and broke [his opponent]
once in the second set to win 6-4,"
he said.
Furthermore, Marist continued to
stun its opponents in Flight B as
Ray Joseph and Greg Marks sailed
through their
competi
tion
to face
each other in the Flight B finals. It
was a match that Coach Smith said
"was
not
indicative
of
the score."
Marks defeated Joseph
in straight
sets,
6-4, 6-2.
Flight C was almost identical as
two Marist players reached the
finals as well. Unlike the afore-
mentioned Flight B, the finalists
in
this match-up, Federico Rolon and
Frank Algier, elected to decide the·
winner at the Marist tennis courts
for a
very
respectable reason: both
play
ers
have tests early in the
week. Later in the week, these two
Maris! students will play, and
Coach Smith will hand out the
hardware.
When asked why Rolon and
Algier did not finish the tourna-
ment at Uconn, Smith
saidd
,
"Marist
is committed to the term
student-aililete, not athlete-stu-
dent.
Henceforth, with both of
them having exams early in the
week, we thought
it
would
be
best
to get them back early so they
could
hit
the books rather than the
hard-works."
Jeff
Nguyen saw great success in
Flight D, and his victory was hard
fought.
In a grueling
match
that
lasted over two hours, Nguyen
finally efnerged the champipn,
winning the third set 10-8, which
is known as a super tie-breaker.
Moreover, in doubles play,
Genovese and Rolon teamed up to
win the Flight A doubles match
against Quinnipiac University, &-5.
Precision
serving
and aggressive
net play allowed them to control
the
last
five games of the match
and win four of them.
Marist plays its'
last
fall home
match of the year this weekend
against international competition,
the University of Montreal, at 8:30
a.m.
on
Saturday,
Oct.
7.
Following their University of
Montreal
match-ups,
the Red
Foxes will oppose the University
of
Hartford
at 12:30 p.m.
ti
I
j,
I
'
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1'
ti
If
I'
f'
Take
Off
10-20 Inches
in
ONE HOUR
BENEFITS & ADVANTAGES
✓
nohcrablt diffenencr in
ant visit
;'
works
for
both men
and
women
✓
!reals unsightly
ceUulite
;
no
pills
or shots
;
~~
1
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i!rs"Tlption
:
tob;a:~
:r:rte:J:eanu
.;
skin feels
lighltr,
dearu'r &
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a
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TANNll'!O UOl'I
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