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Part of The Circle: Vol. 59 No. 8 - October 27, 2005

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Distinguished figures awarded Four Freedoms medals
Bill Clinton, Tom Brokaw among honored recipients and speakers
By TODD
BIVONA
Staff Writer
Tom Brokaw, Bill Clinton,
Marsha Evnas, Lee Hamilton,
Thomas Kean, and Corne! West
were receiptients of the aMuat
"Four Freedom Awards" this past
Saturday at the Franklin Delano
Roosevelt Home in Hyde Park.
These four separate awards are
given to those who displayed the
four freedoms that President
Roosevelt outlined in 1941, as
being essential aspects to democ-
racy: "Freedom of Speech and
Expression,
Freedom
of
Worship, Freedom from Want,
and Freedom from Fear."
Individually,
Brokaw won the
'"Freedom
of Speech
and
Expression" medal. The former
face of
NBC
's
Nightly News
With Tom Brokaw,
the
T.
V.
per-
sonality turned to author and
wrote the critically acclaimed
"The
Greatest
Generation".
Brokaw made direct references
to the current separation in
America, during these difficult
wartimes.
"We have to make sure we wel•
come all parties," Brokaw said.
"All points of view are needed."
An animated West came to the
beliefs.
"Frep<Jom from Want" was
awarded to Evans who is the
president and chief executive
officer of the American Red
Cross. Her work with
the
mass
amount of people that were
podium
to
- - - - - - - - - -
affected by the
receive
the
'President's are not sup•
tsunami in Asia
in
2004 and_
most recenlly,
her organiza.
"Freedom of
posed to receive rewards.
:w~r~"~
h
~~
Merely being a President Is
author, theolo-
enough.'
gian,
and
activist, West
is a
professor
at
Princeton
University. He too promoted the
unification of American thought.
"These (Martin Luther
King
Jr.,
Malcolm X, etc.) were people
who gave so
much
of their minds
and hearts and souls to preserve
democracy," West said.
He went on to emphasize the
fight
necessary
in
order to unite
all "brother and sisters" no mat-
tion 's
res
pons•
es to the
multi-
- em
Clinton
pie hurricanes
Former
President that
have
pounded
the
southern
U.S.
this year, warrant•
ed the Roosevelt
Institute
to give
her
this
award.
"I
don't know how she
'does
what
she
does,"
Bryan
Vansteenburgen, a Marist senior
said.
Also an
usher
at the cere-
monies, Vansteenburgen was
impressed with
her
work with
the amount of
natural
disasters
ter what religious or
political
these past few years.
"It's incredible to think the
amount of lives lost to these
tragedies," Vansteenburgen said.
«Her organization's efforts at
helping
rebuild are phenome•
oat."
The "Freedom from Fear
medal" went to Hamilton and
Kean the vice chairman and the
chairman
of
the
9/11
Commission
(The
National
Commission of Terrorist Attacks
Upon the United States).
The "Four Freedoms Medal"
went
to
former
President
Clinton, who was
ushered
in
through a separate driveway with
the assistance of about seven
secret service agents hovering
around him and his wife, Senator
Hillary
Rodem Clinton.
"President's are not supposed
to receive rewards," Clinton
said. «Merel)' being a President
is enough. However,
I
can make
an exception for this prestigious
honor
Franklin
Delano
Roosevelt."
Fonner President em Clinton
was
the
recelplent
of
the
•Four
Freedoms
Medal•
at
the annual Four Freedoms Awards,
Saturday,
Oct.
22.
Trial runs to test
extended hours at
campus facilities
By KATE
GIGLIO
Managing
Editor
Responding to increased usage
of college facilities by students,
two popular student haunts have
decided to open their anns a
lit~
tle more.
In a press release,
it
was
announced that the McCann
Center has
temporarily
extended
director of the library, said that
the number of students in the
library during weekdays
has
gone up "significantly over the
previous year," and that the rea•
son for the trial hours is to see "if
this pattern extends to Friday
evenings.'' Usually, she said, the
library
experiences its least
amount of traffic as the weekend
gets
rolling.
evening
pool
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
But junior
A white OldsrnobUe rests on Its
roof
Frtoay afternoon, after the women drt\llng
It
seemingly
k>st control
of
the
vehlcJe end
flipped
01181.
Traffic
on Route 9
North
was becked up for mlles, and
diverted
south.
hours during 'I
think Instead of opening
Erik Schmitz
th
e
week.
later on Fridays when a lot of
said he st
ill
was
For a trial
not
saiisfied,
period
of
students aren't around, they
and that he usu-
three weeks,
should focus on extending
ally just went to
the pool wHI
them longer during the rest of
the computer
Woman's
car strikes curb,
pole
before flipping
be open for
the week.
lab because
it
is
ByTOOD BIVONA
Statt
Writer
'
., "al\..
on l mlay
Jl1 ap11roJch 1~, the
tem.ipl
J '"
h,:n a r
11
tr.n clmg outb
bound truck
t\loo curl><; .md
I
r,u11!
bcr,,
c,
n11n
1t1
r
on
t
hood
01
BJ"phlXlmatt
h· 1 45
pm
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·1 hr.ir<l
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np
\111.:,10111
11d
I h lkcd UJ' nd
w
11
g11
thmugh
lhe
mL•than
\1,;undin 10 hoth \11tcioll1
and other cycw1tnc s accoun1~
JI
the
L: ...
n.:
the
v.h1tc
O\d~mob1/e
dnwn bv un
le. fir I hit the
THE CIRCLE
845-575-3000 ext. 2429
wrltethecircle@hotmail.com
3399 North Road
Poughkeepsie, NY 12601
in,10 cr,,.~o,;;1111•
ymhol rn,
11
I he
\lch1dt
tltppeJ
O\oC and
on
ll ·
hood laCJnr
•~ume othe prop!
1lmfhl
i;ut 11
t-.111,;1,;mlh a1d. A cou-
ple c.irs a[m(lSI or 1111 on hoth
1unne<l
11
~
1.ilh
Sid

- - - - - - - - - - !'.;lid
··'ih
Ftv, polo«
'She seemed
more frantic
;;~';r',~,k
th;
than
hurt,
trying to gather
ti«
ch,
r
and
her
stuff,
despite us
telling
one
ambu
her
to hold on, and that help
1.1
1.:e
1mv
d
was
coming.'
ll
th
C
n
;\ I.inst
IICCUft
.... A
Idem M!cclollt
,, anti many
Senior
\olunti:er - - - - - - - - - -
~lude nl~o
t.untl
to
1ht an:1
seemed moo:-e
frantu.:
than
hun ,, '"
10
gc11h r
h\r
tufT. de
p11
us
I
lhn • her
to
h,1ld
011
nd
•hat
bcl1~
dcnl
Jl
for
l OHi~ lllllllC
·~
01
n:por1 of
II roI1
°'
t'"T
car

C apta n l
t n)
liallantc
tfllm the
f.11rv1~w fm:11 •htm
nil
aid
The
"')man
was
k1¥. ng th a ·,id n
c:mert:
m:y
crews
nonl1 bound
1ra1tu.:
a1 the .,;rn \\,
lk ,t0d 1r;il iic
~J
NEWS: NEW STEEL PLANT EXHIBITION FEATURES
PICASSO, CALLOT
James
Q.
Sheehan
reports
on
the
current
display
of classic
works
from
classic artists, able
to
be viewed
now
in the
Maris\ College Art Gallery.
PAGE 3
ah
fit'e
hud.: 011 tll
en-.:

lbdr.il 1cv.a h
LJ..cduplnr
miles
~IJn l
11m1or Br
nt.lw
Sm11h au.I
Sn11t arl1\
d
t ,
,
th
om:,.
the
'lat
bed
uh
t
wn
q,p .
pm
th1: \;
I
:mans
Ion;
trall.1.: slcrn. ly
n.•c:11\ 1
red
\Hird "as
1\CTI
b)
ihc
police m
Ji
fi
ht
on the co11d1tmn ol
th'\
m n
free
swim
open all the
from
9
p.m.
time.
until
11
-
Sarah
Gunner
"I
prefer
p
m
,
Junior Donnelly,"
he
M on d
a
y - - - - - - - - - - - said.
"The
through Friday. The trial is in
extended hours are still not
progress now and will continue enough for me; they never will
unlil Friday, Nov. 11.
be until the library is open 24/7."
Chad O'Brien, junior, said the
Library etnployee Sarah
extra pool time made it possible Gunner.junior, said thal !his was
for him to go on evenings he oth• "the first step" in what she said
erwise would not
be
able to.
she hopes is a process of extend-
"The extended hours are ing the library's hours more and
great," he said.
"Now I can
more. Howe\ler, she also said
swim even when
I
have
a
night that the
library
should consider
class."
staying open longer on week•
The James A. Cannavino days, when
students
are often in
Library,
as well, will be staying the
library
until close, leaving
open later, on Fridays. For a trial
grudgingly at midnight.
period that will'
last
until No\/.
"I think instead of opening
18, the
library
will be open until
later on Fridays when a
lot
of
10
p.m. on Fridays. Normally, it studenls aren't around," she said,
closes at seven.
"t
hey
should focus on extending
1n an e-mail to the College
them tonger during the rest of
community, Cathy Carl, assistant
the week."
FEATURES: GRIM MILESTONE IS REACHED AS
2,O00TH SOLDIER IS KILLED IN IRAQ
Daniel Black
on this particularly sad day in the history of
the war in the
Middle East.
PAGES













































































u
s
THURSDAY, OCTOBER
27, 2
O
Q5
www.
me
rlstclrc
l
e.com
Vote in the Security Briefs Contest!
And what's the deal with Oprah? I mean, she's fat
,
she's thin, she
'
s fat
,
she's thin, why can
'
t she pick
a body and stick with it?! Thanks
,
try the veal!
......
Cl■•
EVlnll
Dear Reader,
Yo
u
probab
l
y
n
ot
i
ced last
week's head
l
ine,
o11
don't want to
d
o
these
briefs
anymore."
Th
erefore,
I'm
going away for a
while. Just remember the sage
l
ast
words
of Vigo
the
Carpa
t
hian,
r
ecorded just before
he died in
1610.
"Death is but a
door, time is but a window.
I'll
be
back."
This is
a
contest to detcnnine
the new writer. Every Marist stu-
dent can vote once a round for
their favorite contestant. Using
your
MARIST E-MAIL
ADDRESS, se
n
d your votes to
briefscontest@gmail.com
by
Sunday at midnight. Next week
we'll narrow the field to three,
and then to two.
-
Alex Panagiotopoulos
10
/
1
3
5
:
50
P
.M
.
To
wnh
ouse B
The fire departmen
t
responded
to
an
a
l
arm caused by a towel sit-
ting on a stove. There was no
damage.
Daniel Cam..tthers:
I
know what
¥ou're thinking, why on eanh
wou14.l'ou
try
and cook a towel
but tiey,
ii
still beats the food in
the dini
n
g hall.
1
0/13 11:10
P.M.
Cha
m
pag
n
at
An RA caught a whiff of
m
arijuana smoke and found two
students imbibing.
A small
amount of the "stickiest of the
icky" was confiscated and turned
over to
l
ocal police.
Brian Sabella: So either Ted
Nugent is back or those crazy
Champagnat kids are just plain
b
ounci
n
g off the walls these
days. An
RA
smelled some ITlar-
ijuana in the halls and confiscat-
ed
i
t from the would
be
members
of S
n
oop Dog's posse.
The
wacky-tobaccy
was
"turned
over" to the police who will
"enter it" into "evide
n
ce."
Daniel Carruthers: That's the
last time we let Snoop Dogg
write up the security briefs.
10/
14
2:14 A.M.
M
i
drise
An unauthorized guest b
l
ew by
the security guard but was
caught inside the buildi
n
g. He
was from the Culinary
I
nstitute.
Andrew Slafta: Although
caught, the student said this was
much more successful then his
first attempt. Listing your name
as
the Hamburg
l
a
r
and using a
recipe for Cordon Bleu
as an ID
is apparently much less success-
ful.
10/14 4:01 A.M. Marhm
A
boyfriend/gi
r
lfriend argu-
ment was broken up.
Andrew S
l
afta: The coup
l
e was
separated for the
night,
while the
argument;
w
h
ethe
r
"Tipsy
Tuesday" is a valid name
for
a
child, remains unresolved.
Daniel Carruthers: Pam and
Tommy Lee were later escorted
off the premises.
10/14 10:30
P.M.
C
h
am
p
agnal
A one quart bottle of Wild
Turkey, two quans of Sol beer, a
sleeping bag,
a
pillow, a set of
antlers and an extension cord
were found sitting unattended
next to the first floor elevator.
Brian Sabella: So you're a
Marist Security officer. You find
a bottle of Wild Turkey, two
quarts of Sol beer, a sleeping
bag, a pillow, a set of antlers, and
an extension outside of the ele-
vator. Logically you think that
some crazy freshman prank has
occurred.
I,
however, know what
really happened.
It
was that
crazy Ted N
u
gent
l
eaving thi
n
gs
all over Marist CO
ii
ege. Crazy
guy. I bet we find a camouflage
ATV and a hunting bow lying
around before soon.
Christine Ricca:
I
cannot even
imagine what these assorted
items were intended for. Per
h
aps
an impromptu camping trip, or
an attempt to drunkenly recreate
the Fall Out Boy video? Who
knows? Marist students get more
creative everyday. P.S. what the
hell is "Wild Turkey?" That
sounds like a mouth watering
n
ame for a drink if
I
do say so
myself; the creative minds
behind that beverage rea
ll
y knew
that wild turkeys make people
thirsty. Kudos to them.
Caitlyn S
h
arp: Suspicions were
aroused at first, but campus
police lost interest in the case
because who drinks Sol anyway?
Ke
ll
y Lautumer:
I
guess Santa
got distracted from flying his
sleigh.
t
0/ IS S:00 A.M.
F
ul
ton B
ri
dge
A planter by the Beck-Fulton
br
i
dge was found sitting in the
m
i
ddle of the bridge, while
another was found in the midd
l
e
of Beck lot. Severa
l
hours
l
ater,
security found a car parked in
Fulton with planter dirt on it as
well as
a
damaged front bumper,
as
it
was driven down a Fulton
foot path and across the bridge.
The driver is not a student.
Andrew S
l
afta: He has been
charged with several violations,
inc
l
uding
"vehicu
l
ar
plantslaughter."
In a re
l
ated
story, the author of this brief was
given life
in
prison for
making that joke.
Kelly Lauturner: Somebody
has seen "The Dukes of
Hazard"
one too many times. Aim for
The Way We Were ...
Methods of
"
Cotraception
·
discusse,f
by
Dr~
··
Siall
oOCt
o
r
S•y ■ o
u
r·Stall..
• 1pena
in
tbo
,clml·ua .can
r:::=,f~o':n!~ ,.':'~~
=~
ni:! :,
~r:-c~=::
inform.live
.led:ure
oon.cerniftl
'Ille-
:tnt11t
~
rorm
ill
contnmpc.Jon.
01I
December 11.
mecbtnical
c
onlra~cption,
Ou
t
Unlng
.ii
the various
f«m1
~ontu.
to
Or
Stall,
ii
the
or contraeeptlon.,
Dr.
'
StaU
lllllokmdo•~
'Qidondolffhn
Ckplalaed
the
metJU,

dladY1rttlpt and llaeir degNli:l
o
r
..rttr
to
tho scvdem:1.
"Th
c
ideal~pitlon."
di.led Dr. St.ii.,'
"ii
the
1uc.tbod
which b Joo,&
effec:tlYC, lfm~e
l
o use,
and
bl'fift&
■o
ill
11di:
cftcGU." 1'he loctwe then
!~nr:.fn:.
0:1~,~ldof
CO(ltn~tion.
An
old f1't(Jdt•
m.-t
h
o
d
, but fralldtlent, 11
dlldung. Tll!IO
aet of
dw:king
u
~
by
Dr. Stall
,
hu DO
U.o:'r.:f=
::!·t?.«::i::
ar;t i. comp
l
o,
ed
th• aper,a llU
abadynachodtbeot:onno-.
Tllis onti
r
~
p
r
o
c••• latfl
1pp
r
odmat.ty
two
t.o
tlucc.
l'llinulc&.
"C
u.p
," illothu ro,m
of
fl.tcbthk:al COlltnceptloft hU
dO
p
rot'Od
t
o
be
or
~
value,
llddld D!, Stall.
lt
atemt,.
tu
IPUJn wbfdi
is
mittOIOOplC
r=a;:o~p
11'°!"
,
~1::
ftrlWullon oonlro.l
which
tile
doctor
WfllCd
"'fnutratiq." Jc
l
aymen'• terms thb ad,o lllu
bee•
oro,-u
f■Ulbk,
bcca\fllt
any·
Dr.
Stall
··
bun 111,;twn .to bt
B
MS'li
e«octm.lbcl.LICo(jcllsill
lpptOXlfna.ld.)I
7ft
efftcliff.
Dr •
.sun
-,al
o
n
to dacd.bc
the
rll.Ythm.motfllOd.. tho
hlrth
eoatml method recommended
by th1
C.tbo&
Cbun:b. Tht
rflythro IMlllod, whlcllUlrt-oent
yeut
hu
dtowJl
to be
hi&h!Y
ineffectiv1.,
u.nJe:a
th&
womtn
• ., a
,a-
to
twdv•
111onth
menatNal
c.alendat that'
p.jde1
llu. hdo(t:ordlO wcct oa to
add lbt
Oftla
It lb
bat
thJ:
">'th.an
metbod
i n ~
I
tood
de&loldlk.
"
Th
e
r
e's
a
s
ong r
e
mind
s
me of th
e
w
ay
we w
e
r
e.
Wh
a
t
s
on
g Is I
t
?
The
Way Ws Wars
."
December 19
,
1968
.
What the hell l
s
duckin
g?
Th
i
s
w
as
one
s
o
cia
l
ly
llb
e
ral Cathollc schoo
l.
Visit the
Circle
arch
i
ve
s
at http
://ll
b
ra
ry
.
m
a
r
lst.e
d
u/
arc
hl
v
es/
Cl
rc
l
e/clr
cl
e.
html
easy stuff people, like that guy
from
J
ackass. Never mind, he
was in "The Dukes of Hazard".
1
0
/
1
S
9:
3
0
P
.M
.
Champag
n
a
t
At 9:30 pm on Saturday Oct 15,
The entry desk
guard of
Champagnat confiscated a
12-
pack of Natural Ligh
t
and
2
quarts of Budweiser.
Christine Ricca: Nobody beard
ano
t
her comp
l
a
i
nt out of him for
the rest of the night, just a few
burps.
1
0/1511:
1
5
P.M.
C
h
ampag
n
at
A
l
cohol was confiscated from
srudents and a guest. The guest
had been dri
n
king and was
allowed to .stay on campus
instead of driving away.
Daniel Carruthers: So there's a
lesson for everyone,
if
you want
your guest to stay but can't get a
guest pass, drink up!
Caitlyn Sharp: Now, the guest
can go home and tell his buddies
"Y" dude~. I partied like a Mari~t
College kid last weekend, suuuc-
ckkk on that." I'm still curious
where the put
tlm
guest?- .Maybe
he was the unclear random
that
ended up in my living room
asleep on the sofa the following
morning.
10
/
1
6
1
2:30 A.M.
C
h
a
mp
ag
n
a t -
7th F
l
oor
A
stude
n
t was found intoxicat-
ed in the ladies room.
Andrew Slafta: Suspicion arose
as
to her intoxication when the
toilet flushed, and she screamed
that she "LOVED" that song.
Fairview responded and the stu-
dent was a
ll
owed to return to her
room.
10/19
1
2:
01
A.M
.
UWC
sto
l
en from the top of their dress-
er.
Caitlyn Sharp: The flat screen
was later found, next door in
their neighbor's bathroom. He
couldn't miss the
E True
Hollywood story of Michae
l
Bolton that was on late at night.
while he was doing his business.
10
/
1
9 3:15
P.M.
Marian
H
a
ll
A bott
l
e of Ciante was confis-
cated by the
RD.
Brian Sabella: When
I
think of
Maria
n
a few things come to
mind.
Man size holes in the
wa
ll
s
,
broken toilets, and just
general good-natured fun by the
upper crust of the college. But
they have broug
h
t sophist
i
cat
i
on
to a new level this week. The
RD was forced to confiscate a
nice bottle of Ciante from these
aspiring socia
l
ites. At the time
of this printing, the liver and fava
beans were still missing.
Christine Ricca: Hannibal
Lector
i,; allegedl
y
not allow
e
d
back on can1pus until next
semester.
10f1J
2,00.rurJ:''iW;.~1:J
An off-campus stucfen't~S
°pla'ri'S
to sneak into Marian through a
window were q
u
ickly stopped a
security guard.
Kelly Lautumer: Where is
Rapun7el when you need her?
10/21 6.45
P.M.
Gar
tl
a
n
d
Many students reported the
heavy odor of natural
gas
in
Gart
l
and last Friday. The fire
depanment and Central Hudson
investigated and fixed the prob-
lem.
Christine Ricca: The cafeteria
will no
l
onger serve be'an butri-
A student reported that a 20-
tos.
inch Sharp flat screen TV was
Thursday
,
October 27
,
Lect
ure
"
Ove
rk
ill
: Ser
ia
l
Murder
"
D
r.
Jac
k
Levin
8 PM PAR
Fr
id
ay
,
Octo
be
r 28
Benad
e
tt
e
Paul
e
y
9 PM Cabaret
"
B
e
w
itc
hed
"
10
PM, Saturday 9 PM
PAR
S
und
ay,
October 30
Br
oad
way
Tri
p
:
A
ve
nu
e
Q
Bus Leaves at 9 A.M
M
o
nd
a
y, Octo
be
r
3
1
H
a
ll
o
w
ee
n
Don't forget to dress up!
Thu
rsd
ay
,
No
ve
mbe
r
3
Western Night w/ Michae
l
Pa
t
rick and the Subu
r
ban
Hillbillies 9PM Cabaret
W,ed~~~~y,
NO
Vlll)l
b
er
.
~
~onc.\\t
·
RainingJane n
' • Cabaret, 9 PM
Tu
es
day
,
No
v
embe
r
15
Surviva
l
Bingo
Cabaret, 9 PM
Th
u
rsd
ay,
N
ov
em
be
r
1
7
"What's Your Excuse? Socia
I
Dating with the REa
l
Life
Hitch" David Wygant
PAR, 9 PM
Disclolmer: The Security Briefs
ore intended os satire and fully
protected free
spuch
u
n
der the
First
Amendment
of
t
he
Constit
u
tion..
THE CIRCLE
Co
urtney
J.
Kretz
Co-Editor 1n Chief
Kate Giglio
Managing Editor
Jessica
Ba
gar
A
&
E Edrtor
Caroline Ross
Opinion Editor
G
. Modele Cl
a
rke
Faculty Advisor
Cassi
G.
Matos
Co-Editor
tn
Chief
Alex Panaglotopoulos
Campus Editor
Mark Perugini
Co-Sports Editor
Andy Alongi
Co-Sports Editor
Derek Dellinger
Copy Editor
AlexTingey
Health Editor
Anna Tawfik
Distribution Manager
Alec Troxell
Advertising Manager
Copy Staff: Kristen Billera, James Marconi
The Circle 1s the weekly student newspaper of Manst College Letters to the edi·
tors. announcements. and story ideas are always welcome, but we cannot publish
unsigned letters Opinions expressed
in
articles are not necessarily those of the
editorial board.
The Circle staff can be reached at 575 3000 x2429 or letters to the editor can b~
sent to wntethecircle@hotmail.com









































THE CIRCLE
News
THURSDAY,
OCTOBER
27, 2005
www.marlstclrcle.com
PAGE3
New Steel Plant exhibition
features
Picasso,
Callot
By
JAMES
Q,
SHEEHAN
Staff Writer
close."
Students
like Matt DeVita
are
really the target audience
for
the
Beginning
on
Thursday,
Oct.
exhibition according
to
Mr.
27
and
cont
inuin
g
until
Edward Smith, the
Gallery
December
2
the
Marist College
Director.
Art
Ga
ll
ery,
located at the
Steel
"The exhibition is
being
held
as
Plant,
wiJI
be hosting the
exhibi-
a
teaching aid
for
the
students
tion entitled "Regiona
l
Imprints:
here
at Marist," said Smith.
Collections and Selectio
n
s".
"This is an opportunity for sru-
The exhi-
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
dents to
bition
will
draw
from
works
in
both
local
collections
and works
by
local
artists.
There will
'I've
been a big fan of Picasso for a
see
few years now.
I'm
really pumped
:a;•;r~
that some of his prints wlll be
right
close
up,
across Route 9; you can't beat hav•
w
h
e
r
e
Ing
that level of culture so close.'
t
h
e Y
might
-
Matth
ew
OeVlta
Junior
have
only
had
the
be
over
50
- - - - - - - - - - - -
opportu-
works on
display.
Some of the
nity
to
see them on a slide or on
prints are extremely
rare
coming a computer before."
from world-renowned artists
One element of
the
exhibition
such as Pablo Picasso and continually stressed by Mr.
Jacques Callot. One print in par-
Smith was the
r
arity of some of
ticular, a Picasso, is one of six
the pieces and what that means
still
in
existence
in
the world.
for Marist on a g
l
obal
level.
Having
such a piece available at
The works as a gro
up
have no
Marist
is truly remarkab
l
e.
cohesive
theme.
A piece such as
While
many of the works on
Skull
Blue
by Tim Ross is rather
disp
l
ay are
prints
there are also dark and abst
r
act while Card
some books on
display
from
Playing Fishermen
by Von
local
artists such as My
9
Neumann portrays
a
rather
l
ively
Migraine
Cures
by
Ann scene.
Pibove,
"Card
Playing Fishermen• Robert Von
Neumann, 1953.
Below
•e1rd Snau• Tlm Ross monotype, pastel,
collage
and oll
stick
on paper.
These, and other pieces wl/1 be on
dlsplay In
he
Art Gallery In
the
Steel Plant, beginning October 27 and continuing untll December 2.
Kalmbach.
Brendan
Smith,
a
student in the
Matthew
- - - - - - - - - - - -
art
depart-
De Vita,
a
Some of the prints are extremely
junior and
rare
coming
from
world•
~:~~al
waa~
renowned
artists
such
as Pablo
extremely
Picasso and Jacques Callot.
ment,
had
good
feel-
ings
about
the exhibi-
tion.
exc.ited
about such world-class works
being available for his viewing.
"I've been a big fan of
Picasso
for a few years
now,"
DeVita
said. "I'm really
pumped that
some of his
prints
will be right
across Rt.
9;
you can't beat
hav-
ing that level of culture so
"I feel that
this
exhibition will be a big step
for the art
department
as
well as
the college.
It
will definite
l
y
bring
in
a
diverse
crowd of
peo-
ple
that
will
not
only be able
to
see the work in
the
ga
ll
eria but
also the work of the students in
the department," B
r
endan said.
"Hopefully this galle-
ria opening will lead
to more galleria open-
ing's
in
the future,
focusing both on stu-
dent art work as well
as professionals."
The Marist College
Art
Gallery is located
in the Steel Plant stu-
dios and is open from
12
p.m. to
5
p.m. on
Monday
.
through
Friday and 12 p.m. to
4
p.m. on Saturdays.
Counterfeiters now wax nostalgic
on the days
of easily-faked IDs
By
Al.EX
PANAGIOTOl'OUL.OS
Opinion
Editor
The
clock is ticking on a cot-
tage
industry for campus criptl-
nals.
In
every college
town
on
the
eastern seaboard,
there
are
hun-
dreds, if
not thousands,
of stu-
dents who buy beer with
an
over-
ly
shiny,
flimsy
piece of paper
that has
a
1983
date of
birth and
a fake New
Jersey
address. This
is slowly changing,
however,
thanks
to the
New Jersey Motor
Vehicle Commission Act of
2003. It will soon
be
impossible
to use
a fake New
Jersey
driver's
license in
June 2008, as the cur-
rent
generation of
the ubiquitous
fake
IDs
will be
phased
out and
expired.
One
reformed
counterfeiter,
speaking on
the
condition of
anonymity,
explained how
the
Garden State
Department
of
Motor Vehicles will
be the
laugh-
ingstock of bouncers
no
more.
"The
new IDs
that are being
distributed in most
of
Jersey are
basically
counterfeit-proof.
they're
printed on credit cards
with magnetic stri_ps,''
he
said.
"With proper equipment, some-
one can tell
if
it's a
real
ID
because the strip has
to
be pro-
grammed in such a way. Th
'
ere's
a picture as well as a watermark
picture on the card, which is hard
to duplicate.
And there are a
number of
holograms
that show
up at different angles and differ-
ent light."
According to a 2004 survey by
the United States Bureau of
Justice.
70.6 percent of all high
school seniors reported alcohol
use within the last year, while
Mothers Against
Drunk
Driving
report that 44 percent of college
students participated in binge
drinking in 200 l. Ostensibly, a
great number of underage stu-
dents are somehow purchasing
and consuming alcohol before
they turn 21.
Lindsay Webster, a senior, esti-
mated that 90 percent of under-
age drinkers at Marist own a fake
ID.
She said that some
Poughkeepsie bars have almost
exclusively underage clientele.
"If you're
underage,
you
can
usually get into most places as
long as you get there early
enough and you act like you're
21 and say hi to the bouncers,"
said Webster.
Tom Riedel, a junior, said on
Tuesday that he could probably
get a fresh New Jersey fake
lD
by Friday.
"I could pay like anywhere
from 40 to 60 bucks for one that
works here
the bar owners
and bouncers know they've gotta
let kids in," Riedel said.
Joe Davey, a senior, said that
the Motor Vehicle Commission
Act of 2003 has
raised
the stan-
dards a little bit from when his
peers were underage.
"Back when I was a freshman,
for some bars all you
need
is a
signed permission slip from your
momma to get
in,"
said
Davey.
"These days they seem to be a
little
tougher."
Webster said the higher stan-
SEE 105
,
PAGE 10
For Hunger Awareness Month, Campus
Ministry organizes annual
activities
Once again, Campus
Ministry
will
give
the
Marist Community
the
chance
to become
a part of
the
fight against
hunger by host-
ing National Hunger Awareness
Month
in
November.
Throughout
the
month
events
will take place encouraging stu-
dents,
faculty, and
the local
com-
munity
to take action against
hunger.
Events include a Hunger
Walk/Run,
Buck Hunger Days,
Petitio
n
Days,
Food Co
ll
ection
Drive and
the
annual
H
unger
Banquet.
Hunger
Awareness will
kick
off
in
the Champagnat
Breezeway
on
Wednesday, Nov. 2 with the
Hunger Walk/Run
at
12:15 p.m.
To
participate, a $3 ( cash or
Marist
Money) contrib
u
tion
must be made. On-campus clubs
and
organizations,
athletic
teams, and residence halls are
being fervently urged to unite for
the walk/run.
"Buck
Hunger
Days" will take
place on November
IO
and 11.
There will be collection stands
set up on various locations
throughout the Marist College
campus. Students and faculty
will have the opportunity to
donate
$
I to support the fight
against hunger.
During the week of November
13-20 the Marist community and
local residents are encouraged
to
help local organizations with a
food drive of non-perishable
items. Food collected will be
gathered in the chapel and
blessed in a Catholic Mass on
November 20th.
Campus Ministry will also hold
its annual Hunger Banquet on
Wednesday, Nov. 16. The ban-
quet will take place in the
Cabaret at 6:30 p.m. This event
will allow participants to experi-
ence and understand the dispro-
portionate
food
distribution
throughout the world. Attendees
will be divided into a First,
Second or Third World society
where they wil\ then be fed a
meal normal for its people.
Tickets are $3 for students and
$5 for faculty and staff.
The final event will be the
Marist Petition on Thursday,
Nov. 17. Students with mea
l
plans will be able to sign peti-
tions for the fight against
hunger.
Sodexho, the college's food serv-
ice vendor, will make a
donation
of$ I for every signature.
For further information on
Hunger Awareness Month, co
n
-
tact Brother Robert Clark at the
Office of Campus Ministry at
(845) 575·3000,
ext.
2275.
SGA's year-long fundraiser for St.
Jude Children's Hospital to run through February
The Marist College Student advisor
Patrick
Ki
l
li
l
ee from
were 67 teams totalins over 230
Research Hospital. On February
Government Association has
Housing,
is coordinating Up 'tit Marist students. Their task was
24, there will be the Up 'til
begun
their
fundraising efforts
Dawn, a unique St Jude's to address donation letters to
Dawn celebration, which is the
on be
h
alf of St. Jude Ch_ildren's
fundraising program. This pro-
friends and family. Throughout culmination of all fundraising
Research Hospital on Mo
n
day,
gram
began with a letter writi
n
g the semester there will be addi-
efforts at Marist. At this time,
Oct.17.
campaign on October
17
from
tionalsmalleractivitiestofurther thetotalamountofmoneyraised
The Student Government, with 7:00 p.m, to
12:00
a.m. TO.ere
promote St. Jude Children's throughout the year will be
announced.
shares its discoveries with sci-
. St. Jude Children's Research
ence and medical communities
Hospital is internationally recog-
around the world.
No family
nized for
its
pioneering work in ever pays for treatments not cov-
finding cures and saving children ered by insurance, and families
with cancer and other catastroph-
without insurance are never
ic diseases.
St. Jude
'
s freely
asked to pay.






































H
eal
th
THURSD
AY, O
CTOBER
27, 2
00
5
www.marlstclrc
l
e.co
m
PA
G
E4
New policies adapted in OR monitoring protocol
By
ALEXANDER
TI
NG
EY
Health Editor
When they met in Atlanta, the
American
Society
of
Anesthesiolog1s1s adopted new
standards
in
preventing a 1emble
situation in
which
their patients
awake during surgery.
The
group went so far as to adopt
new guidelines in patient moni-
toring
but
held back from man-
dating new operating room
equipment.
USA News reports that the
Jo
i
nt
Commission
on
Accreditat
i
o
n
of Healthca
r
e
Organizations
,
which accredits
hospita
l
s and surgical centers
that meet
its
safety criteria, said
that while these events occur
infrequently - between 0.tper-
cent and 0.2 percent of all sur-
geries - there is cause for alann
with
21
million operations pcr-
fonned each year: 50 to I 00
times a
day
nationally. The com-
mission's
president
Dennis
O'Leary comments that
when
this s
i
tuation arose
,
"
..
. [patients)
reported that it was their worst
hospi
t
al experience ever."
Carol W
el
h
r
er
,
le
ft,
talks
with
O
r
.
S
h
elley
Free
m
a
n
e
t
a
n
Amerlce
n
SOcle\Y
of
Anesthesiologists
meeting.
Caro
l
Weihre
r
experienced this
first hand as she became painful-
ly aware of her surgeons as they
remove
d
her diseased eye in
1998. Weihrer reports remem-
bering everything she heard, a
common report made by patients
whose anesthesia is metabolized
prematurely.
During her procedure Weihrer
reports "For something like two
hours
I was awake
,
" which trans•
lates into nearly half of
the
five
and a half hour surgery
.
Disco music was playing in the
operating room as she heard doc-
tors saying "cut deeper-- you
need to cut deeper," at this point
Weihrer tried to scream.
"1
knew
nothing was coming out of my
mouth, meanwhile
1
could feel
them pulling
,
pulling on the
eye."
Following the procedure
Weihrer infonned doctors of her
experience and now campaigns
for stricter medical standards.
Patients who undergo general
anesthesia, a procedure in which
a state of total unconsciousness
is achieved
through
the adminis-
tration of sedative drugs
,
during
a major surgery, may awake
when the drugs ware off and
if
not properly monitored could
become
aware
of their surround-
ings while still paralyzed by the
drugs.
Most often the drugs in
question
are
a cocktail mix of
pain killers, sedatives
,
and
immobilizers.
The problem
occurs when the sedatives wear
off but the paralyzing drugs are
still in effect, thus leaving the
patient in helpless condition.
A study published in the Brit
i
sh
Journal of Anesthesia repo11ed
mterv,ews
conducted
with
Adequate supply of flu vaccines
contrasts with last year
'
s shortage
By
JESSICA BAGAR
A
& E Editor
wanted , - - - . - - - - -
In sharp contrast with last
year's s
h
ortage of i
n
fluenza vac-
cines, the Centers for D
i
sease
Control and Preve
n
tion are con-
fident that with over 70 mi
ll
ion
doses available this year, there
will be no problems in ~dminis-
tering the flu shot to the public
.
The New York Times notes that
while there are some spot short-
ages of the flu vaccine, top fed-
eral health officials ensure that
.. overall
,
supplies should be ade-
quate
.
" There are some doctors
and public health clinics that
seem to have limited supplies of
flu vaccines. but this situation
should change in the coming
weeks.
0
n e
Priority
groups, such
as senior cit-
izens and the
chron
i
ca
ll
y
ill had been
given suffi-
cient time.to
receive the
vaccine
prior to
yes-
t e rd a y • s
general
release and
Health and
Human
Services
Secretary
Be
sure to
reoeiYe your annual flu shot
this
season
to
M
i
c h a e I
p
rotect yourseff from thll contagious r•plratory Illness.
Or.
Julie L. Oerberding, direc-
tor of the Centers for Disease
Contro
l
and Prevention, te
ll
s the
New York Times that spot short-
ages of the vaccine are only a
Leavitt told
CNN reporters that "there is no
reason for anyone to delay or go
w
i
t
h
out their annual flu shot.
"
In past years, the amount of
Americans receiving flu vac-
cines has been
min or
setback
that
will
be
cor-
rected
immedi-
ately.
"We
The most common s
i
gns of the flu,
according for the Center
s
for
Disease Control and Prevention
,
Include
"
fever
,
headache
,
extreme
tiredne
s
s
,
dry cough
,
sore throat
,
runny or
s
tuffy nose and muscle
dangerou
s
ly
low as only
65 percent of
the 185 mil-
l
i
o
n
Americans
who
are
thought to be
at high risk of
influenza-
~x::c!
aches
."
where -
-
- - - - - - - - - -
they lack vacc
i
nes
,
the situa1ion
will improve," she said. "This is
the same pattern that we see
every year, and over time we will
catch up."
The shots are designed to pro-
tect against the flu, a contagious
respiratory illness, and were
made available to the public on
Oct. 24.
According to The
Boston Globe
,
.. shots were made
available to any patient who
related complications
,
including
death, were vaccinated last year
.
according to CNN.
The Boston Globe reports that
"on average
,
36
,
000 people die
each year from the flu and its
complicatio
n
s." With flu vac-
cines now in abundance. there is
a greater chance of securing a
less abrasive flu season this
coming winter.
Each year the flu va
ct:
ine is
rcfonnulated and designed to
match curTCnt circulating strains
of the flu, CNN reports. The
most common signs of the flu,
according for the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention
,
include
"
fevi;r
,
headache,
extreme tiredness
,
dry cough,
sore lhroat
,
runny or stuffy nose
and muscle aches
"
In addition to receiving an
annual flu shot, 1he CDC outline
other way
s
that can be helpful in
pre .. entmg the spread of the flu
this season.
Be
sure to avoid
close contact wtth people who
are s1clc, stay home when you are
sick, cover your mouth and nose
when coughing or sneezing
,
wash your hands often and avoid
touching your eyes, nose or
mouth. These seemingly simp
l
e
procedures will curb the spread
of the illness and provide for a
healthier and happier winter sea-
son.
patients who had experienced
differing levels of awareness
during a major surgery.
Most
often patients repo11ed an urgent
sense of panic and a percewed
inability to breath
Eleven
patients of the forty five inter-
viewed rated the pain they felt
during surgery at moderate to
severe in intensity.
All patien1s involved reported
auditory awareness and over half
could recall recognizing items
and or faces while under general
anesthesia.
This issue
h
as been djs
m
isse
d
by many healt
h
care p
r
ofession-
By
KATE GIGLIO
als for years, and the commission
urged hospita
l
s to educate their
staff with
the
latest infonnation
available. "People in health care
have been reluctant to talk about
this, primarily be.cause they were
afraid of scaring patien1s,"
O'Leary
says. "You have to say
honestly that this is a problem
and we
are
going to do every-
thing we can to
make
sure it
doesn't happen." Along with bet-
ter mon
i
toring procedures hospi-
tals are now asked
t
o speak with
patie
nt
s
fo
ll
owing
s
u
rgery
specifica
ll
y
r
ega
r
di
n
g
the
i
r
awareness.
Monitoring devices, such as the
commonly made BIS, keep tabs
on patients' brain waves and pre-
dict the mathematical probability
that they
are
awake.
While
there
is
some
debate
over these machines, some
physicians swear by
them. The
equipment remains relatively
expensive, checking out at a
$9,500 per unit, some physicians
cite lack of clinical evidence to
support their investment.
Weitirer claims the new poli-
cies adapted by the commission
are merely "baby steps."
difficult
rn
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Managing Ed,tor
N
a
i-y so
nar
s
p
e
culated
as
cause
R
odent
o
n
the
nm
for
n
ea
rl
y
fou
r
of d
e
ath in "bal
es a
nd dolphins
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on
t
hs
b
e
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Its
captur
e
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THURSD
AY, OC
T
O
BE
R 27,
2
00
5
www.marlstcircl
e.
com
PA
G
E
5
A grim milestone is reached as 2,000th soldier is killed in Iraq
By
DANIEL BLACK
S
taff Writer
Since we, as Americans, began
Operation Iraqi Freedom in
March of 2003, over two and a
half years of bloody conflict
have transpired and, very re'cent-
ty, the toll of U.S. serviceman's
lives has reached 2000. Men and
women from
aJI
over our coun-
try,
and serving in our mi
l
itary
from foreign nations, have sacri-
ficed their lives for this cause.
Young and old people of all eth
-
nicities, from the entire spectrum
of socio-economic classes, with
every sort of political, ideologi-
cal, and theological beliefs and
perspectives, have die4 overseas
for the freedom of Iraq's citizens.
The overwhelming majority,
93.15 percent, of U.S. service
-
man that have died in lraq, or as
a
r
esult of their wounds sustained
in
Iraq, died after President Bush
declared
"Mission
Accom
p
lished'
1
on the first day
of May in 2003. Well over three
quarters were killed after the
capture of Saddam
in
December
of the same year. Over
half
died
in
action since the "tum-over" of
co
ntr
ol to the new
Iraqi
govern-
ment, and almos
t
600 were killed
in action since the elections on
J
anuary 3 of this year.
To put
it
into terms we can
more easily perceive, that's
approximately 41 2/3 perce
n
t of
Marist College's total undergrad-
ua~
miaent oody.
~
fl~~
ume
yciu're in your statistics class or
art seminar of
25
other students,
imagine
11
of them dead, spread
that over our entire schoo
l
's pop-
ulation and you've got a pretty
clear picture of what this conflict
has cost our country in terms of
it's citizens. These soldiers are
mostly
our
age, many of simi
l
ar
walks of life, from
h
ometowns
and cities just
l
ike
ours.
The 2000 deaths
men-
spread throughout that
r
egion of by
a
si
m
p
l
e
the world.
There is
p
rofound
un
ders
tand
ing of
irony behind this particu
l
a
r
rece
n
t wo
rl
d his
-
course of action which is seem-
tory
and
a
basic
ingly unknown to Americans b
u
t
aware
n
ess of the
transparent to D
r
. Adel G
h
affour,
p
o
lit
ical cl
im
a
t
e
an
Iraqi
docto
r
who
li
ved an
d
in
today's
Mi
d
dl
e
tioned
herein
are
not inclu-
sive
of
the
num-
ber
of
matricu-
East.
He states
'Iraq was an unwllllng participant,
late
d
in t
h
at "
T
he
u.s.
drafted
i
nto a fight it did not sollclt.
t
h
e expe
r
ience
in
The Americans brought a revolut
i
on
~; s ·
~
~
!::!oco;;s
0~
without amb
i
tion and an upheaval
y e a
r
,
America's
br
oad-
soldiers,
without design
.'
unde
r
a
ma
r
ines,
sa
i
!ors
and air-
student
-A
nt
h
on
y
Shad
i
d
v
i
sa and
wa
r c
or
r
es
pondent
has since
man who
- - - - - - - - - - - - -
res
id
ed
in
have
died
in
support
of
Operation Enduring F
r
eedom in
the mountains of Afghanistan. It
does not include losses incurred
by the British or any other coun-
tries involved
in
the coalition.
Furthennore, and worst of all,
the coa
l
ition's losses cumulative-
ly pa
l
e in comparison to the
number of i
n
nocent Iraqi citizens
who have died in the crossfire.
The overall losses they've sus-
tained is unknown, but estimates
range from at least 5,000 to over
10,000 as compi
l
ed by vo
l
unteer
British and American academics
and researche
r
s, according to
Simon Jeffery of The Guardian
,
UK.
The cost of
freeing
the Traqi
peop
l
e from the reign of a ruth-
less tyrant is insunnountable and
con
t
inues to grow.
In
an attempt
to J>Io1i~te Amencan.demofii:
cy, we have chose
n
Iraq as our
model to exhibit how
it
can func-
tion
in
a Midd
l
e Eastern society.
We hope it
will
serve as an exam-
ple and this way of life
will
n
u
merous Arab coun
tri
es befo
re
returning
to
hi
s
home
in
Baghdad. Like many others w
h
o
live there, he insists that of
th
e
Arabs, the Iraqis were most s
iJn
-
i
l
ar to Americans
in
the way they
WQrked, the way they lived, and
the way they enjoye
d
them
-
selves.
After libe
r
ating
th
e
oppressed people
,
o
ur
o
b
jec
ti
ve
was to instill an Ame
ri
can way of
l
ife, the very one
I
raqi citizens
already had.
Tragica
ll
y, the p
l
anning phases
of this campa
i
gn had minima
l
p
r
eparatio
n
and preceded
qui
ck,
decisive
m
i
li
tary dep
l
oyme
n
t
with a less-than-ca
l
cu
l
ated fol-
l
ow-up strategy; the overa
ll
oper
-
ation was
executed
poorly
bu
t
was not assessed as such unt
i
l it
was too late. Anthony Shad
i
d,
a
Pulitzer Prize-winning war co
r
-
r~o~d~.!_lf
who
served
in
Baghdad before, d
ur
ing, a
n
d
afte
r
O.1.F.
and author of Night
Draws Near, believes this was a
foreseeable catastrop
h
e
th
at
cou
l
d have eas
i
ly been ave
rt
e
d
e
r
s
tru
gg
l
e with
th
e Arab wo
rl
d, a
ge
n
e
ra
tio
n
al
bat
-
tle
th
at
h
as s
p
un
aro
und
axes of
r
e
l
ig
i
o
n
, culture,
an
d
ide
n
tity,
wage
d
by two
c
ultur
es
so
estranged
tha
t
th
ey
ca
nn
o
t
occ
up
y
th
e same
place. Iraq was
an unw
illin
g par
-
Co
u
rtny
of
WWWNfflWAA
.
COM
United
States
se
rvice
m
e
n
f
ro
m
Do
ve
r
Ai
r F
orce
Base
In De
la
wa
re
piay
the
roles
of
pall
-
bearers
as
they
ca
rry h
o
m
e
a fall
e
n
so
l
die
r.
t
i
ci
p
a
n
t,
d
ra
ft
ed
would
u
ltimately be responsible
General George Casey, forme
r
into a fight it d
i
d not solicit. The
for. Politicians agree that proper
overseer of U.S. forces in Ira
q
, to
Ame
ri
cans bro
u
g
ht
a
r
evol
u
tio
n
means of resolve include con-
Congress. The report
i
n
d
icate
d
wi
th
out
a
m
bi
ti
o
n
and
an structing an Iraqi military com-
the
n
umber of Iraqi
b
atta
li
o
n
s
uph
eava
l
wit
h
o
u
t
design.
prised of its own 'citizens that is
capable of"standing up'' (opera
t
-
'Libera
ti
on' was
t
he U.S. mantra
,
self-sufficient and able to main-
·
ing effectively
in
forwar
d
areas
r
e
i
te
rat
ed
- - - - - - - - - - - - -
tain law
autonomous of American influ-
at every
0 CC
a -
s
i
on.
"
E
v e
n
ln an attempt to prollferate American
and order ence) decreased
from
its peak of
democracy
,
we have chosen Iraq as
:~::~:;
~::tir
0
:ar
!~
0
:~:~::::
1
~
~
our model to exhibit how
I
t can func
-
involve• t
h
ousand troops, far less than
th
e
to
d
ay.
as
!Ion
In
a Mlddle Eastern society
.
m e n t . 150,000 that the U.S. mil
i
tary
A
l
though
has had continuous
l
y dep
l
oyed in
this has been the Qbjectiv,; of our Tr:tq. Some perceive a commit
-
pursuit for much of the 'postwar'
ment that yields one combat-
occupation, efforts to furnish
ready Irasi battalion evdlry 29
Iraq with such a military have, so
months not as transitiona
l
, but
we
are
faced with a dire situation into
whjch we have mired ourselves
and are desperate for a way out,
we see that
a
hasty withdrawa
l
would leave behind s
u
ch acute
i
nstabi
li
ty that wo
ul
d soon result
i
n
a
n
a
r
chy the Uni
t
ed States
far. been slow and ineffective.
perpetual.
Testimony to this sluggish tran-
Another g
l
oomy reality is t
h
e
siti
,
on was recently reported by
SEE IRAQ, PAGE 6
Life
,
lib
erty and the pursuit of inebriati
on
bar !Jiles I
J....11:,w
kw
v.
ti
per
f~1nn the \!H~nt. tnppmg
J,mH
to unJerwea:i Juu,ing IIH:m-
~clvc-s
111 "
er
and tu
1mg
acrvss
lh
surtat·..,
rnto
1he urm
t'l1Sh1..lUtlll
':ilUlfct.
Althllu ll I d1J
nvt
sl3y lnng
1::noug.h lcot t 1e 1, r slide , Ou"
p.N
t. mLly
lcnl
t!rtou<>h
mate
nal
1t1
wnl .1h, ut
tM
thret
...,~ks.
le1
,ucml
mtcth1nty durmg
the
fir')t
pi11.hcr ,~
ml1~1ly
the
cons~--
4ul.!11t.:1.
111
.a
-..mc:1 th...-ol)'
f have
th:tl
a,smnt:
if
one
,oc1:1lill:t.;
1,11h1~u1
th1.:
prof".-r
8>\L dunng
M1}nct.1}' Night KL-nn11; s i1 is
almo
l
sai.:nlt.>glm,.,
.inJ ....
nt..'11-
i;;tH
'
to R~nmcs·
ra1rons
:s ..
,on
atkr the t\'.·cualion of 1he fif);t
p11ch~r
rhc night ~amc fanta'i•
IH:;Ji
I
:,
Jennifer Shahade
,
two-tJme U
.
S
. wo
men
's
ch
ess c
hamp
i
on
, s
urm
ises
one
of
about 40 chess games she
took
part
ln-5lmultaneously--on Sa
tu
rd
ay,
Oct..
15
.
S
h
eh
ad
e
is
a
fierce
s
uppo
fte
r
of
women In
c
hess
.
All
1
hc
Monda~, rolled
t
owards.
the
tH
uJdks
of an
unpa,e<l parkmg
(Lit
The)'
wluspcrtd in
du~k.,
~,attmg
fo1
the
00~
1
of annlhe-r .:reaking
e,cnmg Never i;~n m
dJ},
!he
houi.c
ot
inebriation
lo'1k'i
mu'"h like- a condemned i,.lw .. k
waumg for ckstrnctiun On lhc-
!iide,
ju.«
past
the tiltro con,.r ~te
of a i
i
Jewalk where d(Ct.•n-..
L'f
pt.'-Ople
mu)
be
wniUng
wh~n
the innard1
become
cong\!steJ
1
s
a
siin
that
rt:ads.
··Rena
i
S!iaflce Pub, .. mJ tins
Ls
"'
h
ere I
,.pend one.:
even in}.! a
.-eek
alone one
Unbeknownst to me there m
u
st
ahMml
~;;: k,\
havebeenaspelllngbeegolngon
we/,m:~;
, n , , d c
as a
bunch
of guys wearing green """
8, the
around , "
and white Je
r
seys were sh
o
uting,
b,utds on
0
'
1.: lock,
"J-E•T·S.•
In)'
v.at h
Ir..., h 11,1m - - - - - - - - - - - - pu-,hc-J off
a tumblm • i.:-tr nJc
and
tmwlm~
th~
number h\-elve auJ
nt)
heaJ
ram
\~scnin!\
ii
nice huu
'"1 mhcJ tlnVllfd:--
the
doud
Chess champ visits Marist
By
MIRANDA McAULIFFE
Ci
r
cle Contributor
J
ennife
r
Shahade, two-time
U.S. women's chess champion,
spent four hours on her feet last
Sat
u
rday
,
Oct. 15,
wa
l
ki
n
g
aro
un
d
in a circle
in
the Student
Center. Oh, and she was also
playing
40
peop
l
e in chess whi
l
e
doing so. Forty people -
all at
the same time. Did we mention
she is only 24 years
old?
At the start of the tourname
n
t a
h
andshake, smile, and "good
luck"
were offered
to
all of her
opponents.
By 4:30
p.m., she
had already elimi
n
ated half the
competition.
While no Marist
Chess Club players obtained a
win or draw, two members of the
Vassar Chadwick Chess Club
were able to walk away with a
win:
Rick Linden, a USCF
expert from Orange County and
Bob Apgar, a USCF expert from
Poughkeepsie. Obtain
in
g draws
were Evan Atlas, a freshman at
Ar
li
ngton High School and Steve
Gore of Poughkeepsie.
"Ms. Shahade was the most
gracious and
fun
guest," said Dr.
Craig Fisher, who worked tire-
less
l
y in p
l
anning the simu
l
tane-
ous tournament as advisor to the
Marist Chess Club. "She is an
excellent role model for young
women and men who want to
compete in the ultimate intellec-
tua
l
sport.'
'
Before starting the tournament,
Shahade gave an infomml lecture
to
'
an aud
i
ence of about
70
peo-
ple. She talked about he
r
expe
ri
-
ences com
p
eting aro
u
nd the
world
in
a
sport dominated
b
y
men, all of w
h
ich iire discussed
in her new book, Chess Bi
t
c
h
,
which she sold and autogra
ph
e
d
at the event. "I think a great way
to promote women
p
laying chess
would be to have a fema
l
e c
h
ar-
acter on a TV show t
h
at plays
chess," said Shahade
,
w
h
en
asked about e
n
co
u
raging young
females to learn the game. She
a
l
so said she hopes tha
t
mo
r
e
classes and tournaments for
young girls will form in the U.S.,
because women's chess is much
less developed in America than it
is in other countries, like R
u
ss
i
a
and China.
Lning
under 1he
alia.-.c!,
Rcmuc' ,
R_tm·~.
1hc Put,~l)"
or
Dilapidated Side
of a House,
the precise"
ulk of 1h-: bar
depends on
v.hat iroup of
pe11-
plc is rcferrmg
to
II
ly lr,en,l-..
,-i
mp
ly
~k.
'"M . R .,
.
,
Anti
th.u
1s enough for complc1e eompre-
hen~100. Pl~-ed ltl the hcgm•
nmg of lhc Wi.-ek... \foni.!ay
!'-.ight Rennie·s
1s
a lcmporally
peculiar event that
bed(
11'
only t
h
e ~uon_g
"tiled
and
st10
h
v ~
But dtJ not
b,:
Jt>t\!m!<l
as the f~tj\al docs n,ll
h,)!d
bclea[lucrcd eyes and ~ll-1.:on-
~ncd
d
1
~ucs;
It ,,.,
a
ga1l..11:nng
mcan1
fo,
!he jo\
pf
the lketms
cclcbralioo 1hal
h
college
f
h
o.e palron!I of ,.:on umphon
relish m th<' fc,er ,u1rountim~
J
rh
i
lt) foot ltlUg -.lnh of
\H'lol\
\,\,
h
~po
h h
j,..
pu,cl)
mi.:::1111
It)
reduce,, rnct:10n dw mi:r n
1k.
d
t,lazc illld I hod hcen Jmplmg
n tnsh b:1llad
JlngleJ
\1ur
Jumcion
~C'IJ
k-.:1me
dunng
thl
n r,('-.. .rnd
hook the:
lfoP
r
es?:-Cnt!JI
rrt-galTh! routine
pr~
bourd
I hopflCd ilJld ,wuug
v1t1u
lo bc111g
rid..eli
up
by
.1b11ul holding
01110 thd
s.bou
l
-
M1k~'c; irlfnend and her a
so-
dcrs
111
l\,o frtcnJ~ at
IO)
side°'
1.:1,1tb.
de
p11~~ Ilk 1.act 1ha1
rHr
balance
\\hile
I
.ith:mp1e<l il1
Mike"Jlin·1 wnh
u..,
'-tC"r,
d:m~c the rune
111
hono
r
of
l
nbekm)\\-Jht
10
m'-'
tht:rc:
my hentn!!,<:. I
h11, ii.lea cau~h1
mus! havt bocn
11
~pelllng b<e
on anJ
wme
01her; bcg.m 1hc:ir
gom\! un as
hunch ol
,uvs
O\\ll
jigs kic.k1ng
,.,ff
ix."l.11
hul
\o\L"SOllg:
sr«n
an,I \.,.Jutt" JC'r•
furiously
11.1 th.e mu.,.,c: One }!lrl
-i.c)S "'ere hvuun~ 'J-1· T-S,
twirled io ihe ct:nler ma
thyrhR
althuugh
tll
,·h,rnt tlldn I
m1c
.:adencc. hamh pen.·hcd on
chrin~e
\\hilt: hl lnod:i II gank
her h1_p. houul·U,g \l\aciou!>ly
v.a
llll
l'\e grit lirs1
ro1111t1:·
in an
1rnrre.,..,1ve ruultnc The
I
tL1IJ
(daze
a
.. I
)t;;::ideJ
-.tra1.gh1
guy ... aruunJ h,,i,;;k•d
thctr
hand.-;
for 1hc counti.r.
\\11hm
.1
,1bn\e th~ir hi;.atl . loudly dnp-
m1nu1.ie
!ft
pour
anJ
lour
dl,11:l.fs
plrif
10 !ht' heat "'h,lc
1-\omping
afte1, I
\t.1
111!Jm •
m,
1
,t
tht"
WOlXi ,111
\l.luch the) ,10{}J
r1td1 r Thi
rMnlC
thn r111.:hl"f
I lnn"-':d
•lVt'r
1he mom. can-
wcnr
~1111
fi
\\
h
(ib.u \RJ
mnv.
tor foirultar foces. oohod)
I focu1.cJ
our
tknuon
lln
rh
•av
c c,111,k -.·
't)(\in¥
ilar\'.'
u1
bus,ne.
or dram g
011
ti
cold turn.
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www.ma
r
lstclrele.com
THE CI
R
C
L
E

T
H
URSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2005

PAGE 6
Milestone reached as 2,000th soldier dies in Iraq
constan
t
strengt
h
and vigor of the
insu
r
gency that plagues our
in
volvement at every turn. The
co
ll
ec
t
ive resistance against the
coali
t
ion's occupatio
n
is so tire-
less, extensive, and unceasing
th
a
t
it has incurred the rese'rved
and unspoken admiration of our
own m
ili
tary
leaders. A serious
isSue that our mili
t
ary grapp
l
es
with, t
h
e inability to
fi
ll
the
ranks
of the armed services
,
is bereft of
a peasan
t
mili
ti
a that routinely
and successfully attacks our p
r
o-
f
essionally trained and well-
equip
p
e
d m
il
i
tary.
Our young
Ame
ri
cans' dwindl
i
ng will to
take
u
p arms for a foreign coun-
try's ca
u
se
,
coup
l
ed with the
b
ru
te pass
i
on of the
im
pover-
ished. and almost leaderless
,
young Arabs' will to die for that
same cause
,
generates much
political frustration in our gov-
ernment but is confined behind
tight lips.
The will of the
I
raqis whom we
have enfranchised is also subor-
dinate to that of their oppone
n
ts'.
According to tom E
n
gelhardt, a
joumal1st who composed a
detailed perspec~ive o
n
the situa-
tion of the new Iraq
i
anny, states
"This phenomenon - two sides
that seem to come from differe
n
t
p
l
anets: our
n
atives who just
don't or •can't or wo
n
't fight, who
need years and vast sums of
money and equipme
n
t
,
a
n
d the
n
hard
l
y stand up without an
American 'backbo
n
e'
n
earby; an
d
theirs, who fight w
i
lling
l
y
,
eager
-
ly, fie
r
cely
,
brave
l
y, and w
i
th i
n
i-
tiative - was a
l
so a phenomenon
of the Viet
n
am War era. The
n
,
s
i
de by side,
n
o compariso
n
s are
made, and t
h
e farce of attem
p
t-
ing to
'
stand
up
'
an Iraqi army
simp
l
y goes on." ("F
ri
edman's
piece"
appears
in
t
he
30
A
m
e
ri
c
an - - - - - - - - - - - -
Se
p
tember
For so many countries Involved,
200s
New
off
i
ce
r
s
reg
u
lar
l
y
lives have been lost and the memo-
Y o
r
k
s P
O
k e
ry
of a conflict that is understood
~1:~:~~
by few
will
be forever retained by
Tim"es
on
Pg
.
A31)
In sum-
side,
th
e
the lamenting famllles of many.
mat
i
o
n
,
a
Vietco
n
g,
- - - - - - - - - - - -
confl
i
ct
the NVA, 'C
h
a
rl
ie,' as brave,
th
at
h
as ensue
d
fo
r
947 days
resource
ful fi
ghters a
n
d
h
a
d
rema
i
ns as
p
erilous now as the
scorn for 'au;' V
i
etnamese.
B
ut day it
began
.
For so many coun-
genera
ll
y, even w
h
en, as
i
n tries
in
vo
l
ved, lives have been
Friedman's piece, the desc
rip-
lost and the memory of a co
n
flict
t
i
ons of
Ir
aq
i
s who fight an
d
tha
t
is un
d
ers
t
ood by few will
be
those who do
n
'
t
can
be
found
fo
r
ever retained
b
y the
l
ame
n
ting
Tb, H11d.1°" V11//ty'.1 Pr,111i1r
I
11i1t:x \
<1/~11
1.1
11,
1 J'
1,p
,
.,.,
fro•
M,1ri,1
C.•llttrl
THE CUTTERY
WELCOMES BACK
THE MARIST
STUDENT BODY
Marc is back ...
and Debbie
&
Enelcy fonnerly of Making Faces
have Joined the rest of Iha returning staff
r
I
I
With
Mar(st ID
famil
i
es of many. The cause fo
r
freedom is a noble one, consid-
ered worth dying fo
r
by t
h
e
majority of cu
lt
ures. The war in
Iraq serves as vivid testimony to
this
fact as it has cla
i
med the
lives of two thousand fine
American citizens and
,
on this
day as
all
others, should draw the
undivided attent
i
on and aware-
ness of all that remain. Young
and
old
,
rich
and
poor,
Republican and Democrat, we all
sha
r
e the common thread of
American freedom and inde-
pendence. A cal
l
to engage in
deadly quarre
l
with the annies of
corrupt oppressors, wrestle the
rights and
l
iberties from their
grip, and deliver them into the
hands of foreign s
tr
angers who
neve
r
knew or experienced them,
was answered by ove
r
a
mill
ion
Americans of whom 2000 paid
fo
r
their involvement with t
h
eir
lives. Such selfless devotion by
ris
kin
g
ultim
ate sacrifice s
h
ou
l
d
evoke the reflection, respec
t
, an
d
grat
illld
e of a
ll.
May the ini
t
ia
l
2000 Amer
i
cans who have died,
alo
n
g with those st
ill
alive today
who will soon
d
ie for Operat
i
on
Iraqi
F
reedom, rema
i
n
in
our
fondest
m
emo
ri
es until our fi
n
a
l
day.
Re
c
ycle Mug
As
p
a
rt
o
f th
e
coll
ege's
commitm
e
nt to
impl
e
m
e
ntin
g ec
o-fri
e
ndl
y
and su
s
tainable
p
r
o
gr
am
s
in
ca
mpu
s
Dining S
e
rvice
s
,
S
ode
x
ho
,
in
c
o
o
p
e
r
at
ion with SGA
,
SEED
a
nd the
Di
v
i
s
ion of
S
tudent Affair
s
i
s
pleased to
continu
e w
i
t
h th
e ca
mpu
s
R
ec
ycle Mu
g
pro
g
ram.
R
ece
i
ve a co
mplim
e
n
t
a
ry
Rec
y
cl
e
Mu
g
w
hil
e s
up
p
l
ies
l
ast.
·
R
eceive a Disco
un
t
wh
e
n
yo
u use
y
our
mug
for pu
r
c
h
ase of a
n
y
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ee
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ed Time





























































































THE CIRCLE
"
A&E
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2005
www.marlstclrcle.com
The viewer really
has an opportu-
nity to identify with Bloom's char-
acter in "Elizabethtown."
, ,
- James Q. Sheehan
Film Critic
PAGE7
Death Cab delivers true-to-album performance
By
ROB CELLETTI
Staff
Writer
Seattle's
Death
Cab for Cutie is
the antithesis of the modem live
rock and
roll band.
It
seems as thou_gh
most bands
today are competing to
be
the
loudest,
most raucous band this
side of the
Hudson and
are sacri-
ficing
the
quality
of
their
per-
formances
to do
so.
Death
Cab
is not that sort of
band.
Perhaps the New York Times
put
it
best when
they reviewed
Death Cab for Cutie's headlining
set at
the
Siren Music Festival on
Coney
Island
two summers ago,
claiming that "more
than
any
band that played all day, Death
Cab
delights
in the possibilities
of
lightness
and
quiet."
Truer
words have never
been
written
about one of
rock's
most
talented
up
and coming acts.
The
band
began
its tour
on Oct.
3 and arrived in the New York
area for
a two-night stand at the.
elegant
Hammerstein
Ballroom
in midtown
Manhattan. Both the
Oct.
19
and Oct.
20
dates were
sold out,
a
sight
Death
Cab is
used
tO
seeing as it continues to
support its
latest
record and
first
major
label
release, "Plans."
"Marching Bands
of
Manhattan,"
the
opening track
from
"Plans," kicked
off
the
set
in appropriate fashion as the
crowd
cheered
loudly
for
lead
singer
Ben
Gibbard's lyrical
ref-
erences
to
the East River and
Hudson.
The
band then
rattled off some
standards from its
back
catalog,
including "We
Laugh
Indoors"
and
their first
semi-hi
t
"The New
Year."
The
high
point of the early set
was
far
aod away "Title and
Registration''
as the
band broke
away from its Fender guitar driv-
en sound for the first time of
many during the course of the
night.
As Gibbard sang the
lyrics,
he also banged out a
steady beat on two small elec-
tronic
drum
pads
set up
in front
of
him.
When the bridge came around,
lead
guitarist
Chris
Walla
jumped behind
the
keyboard
for
a solo which emulated the
reminiscent of Gibbard's Postal
Service side project.
Death Cab's attention to detail
sounds of a xylophone. Gibbard is
probably
the most
impressive
switched
back
to guitar at
this
aspect of their
live
show. They
point.
are not satisfied with just getting
All of
the
shuffling of instru-
the point across. They want the
ments did
not affect the perform-
songs to sound perfect.
ance at all;
To do this,
the
band
The high point of the early set
they success-
turned
out
was far and away "Title and
fully use gui-
a
perfect
tar
effects and
ver,ion of
Registration" as the band broke
sound samples
the
song
away from Its Fender guitar drlv-
to their fullest
which
had
en sound for the first tlme of
potential. No
its
own
click, beep or
flavor
in
many during the course of the
bang you hear
compari-
night.
on a Death
son to
the - - - - - - - - - - - -
Cab record
is
studio
rendition
from
"Transatlanticism."
Death Cab
then
turned back
to
their newest material and the rest
of the set was heavy on songs
from "Plans." The
R
.E.M.-esque
single "Soul
Meets Body"
trans-
lated
well into a
Uve
song as did
"Different Names for the Same
left
out of the show.
Gibbard
and company played it
safe with their set-list
choices
throughout
the night and
stuck
mostly to recent
relea
ses.
This
may have left some hardcore
fans disappointed but
cate
r
ed
nicely to the throngs of teenagers
who
learned
"The Sound of
Thing," which
transitions from
a Settling" from the television
piano
ballad
to
a break down
show "The O.C."
The
lack
of ambition with the
set-list
did
not
hold true
in
the
encore, however. After Gibbard
played his
"I
Will
Follow You
Into the Dark" solo, Walla,
drum-
mer Jason McGerr and bassist
Nick
Harmer
rejoined
him
on
stage for a sparkling and melan-
choly take on "We Have
the
Facts and We're Voting Yes,"
the
title track from the band's second
album. This song is
usually
an
opener and its position
in
the
encore may have been a pleasant
surprise for many
longtime
fans.
After
18
songs and almost an
hour
and a half on stage,
Death
Cab closed with "Tiny Vessels"
(which features both Walla and
Hanner on bass guitars) and
"Transatlanticism." Members of
the opening act Youth Group
joined Death Cab and
the
2,000
in attendance screaming
"I
need
yoU
so much closer, so come on"
at the top of their
lungs.
It was a rather
loud
and bom-
bastic ending
to
a show which
relished its own delicacy and
nuance.
'Elizabethtown· is
successful in bring-
ing
the
masses
together
Drew
Ba)'lor,-,...,,....-,
(Orlando
Bloom) is in
Jeep shit
After dedi-
cating
ten
years
of his
Despite shaky start, "In Her Shoes" comes together
life ro design- ._
_ _
....,...
ing a t.hoe that
1-.
supptKcd
o
he
~qu1"akm
1t1
walking
on
cl,1ud.
th.:
rroducl
lads
anJ
coshi his
company
an
estim;.11
d
llR('
billion
1Joll,1r
I hs folhds
death
hnn~s
h,m
10
"
L· I
itabethto\\ n.
;i
smull commu
nity an Kc-ntuck), to retrieve lht
body
On the 111ght down
he
ha,;
a strange
cni.:ounter with
li
flight
ottenJant. ( 'l.u~ Cv!burn
(Kimcn Ouus11.
The r\1m,1ncc
bll1!45(1ms o,er
the course of the
film
a.-.
they
learn nwre
aht,111
eal·h 11thcr
and
()re\,
k•an,!.
11
1ti1Juable leswn
about hO\, ·o
measure
success and failure
II' really good to
&c:c
Orlandi,
Jlh)(1m rn a i:unh:mporary
human rol~ aftctpl,1v1n2,.L'har
aclers SUC"h .a Lcgol·
m
"I he
1
ord ot
the Rings" mlogy \\ di
Turner
111
··r11a1es ,
f
Conbbcan ·•
and
P,
'Truy." onl! m1gh1
fi
By
KERRI MARKS
Staff Writer
The newly released movie "ln
Her Shoes" gets off to a ques-
tionable start but
irr
the
'Clfd
delivers a complete package of
entertainment to the viewer.
"In
Her Shoes" is
the
director
Curtis
Hanson's
first attempt at a
light-hearted
movie compared to
his past movies ofa more serious
tone such as
"L.A.
Confidential"
and
"8
Mile." The
movie, based
on a novel by
Jennifer
Weiner, is
about two close but extremely
different sis-
ing the average viewer wonder-
ing whether the movie will sim-
ply serve
as another chick flick
or actually achieve some more
depth
with
its plot.
Surprisingly
enough, the movie actually doe&
reach
beyond
the average chick
flick.
Diaz
delivers
a convincing per-
formance
in
her role as Maggie,
a
beautiful
but
less-than-bright
woman struggling to make
it on
her own. While her acting
lives
up
to the role, it is
more likely
that
her
stunning
looks
and
revealing clothing keep many of
the
men
in the audience focused
ters played
I was Interested to see this movie
on.
by Cameron
As for
Diaz
and
because
I
enjoyed Jennifer
the
role
of
T
o n
i
Welners first book
'Good
In
Bed'
R
O
s e ,
Collette.
and now
I
look forward to reading
Collette
old:~~s!:.
'In Her Shoes' as well.
:Iso
~~:~
R
O
s e
-Kate Rayder mendable
(Collette), is
Marlst College Senior
perform-
mature and
- - - - - - - - - - - -
a
n
c e .
serious about her job,
the
other
However, the
hands-down
best
sister, Maggie
(Diaz), struggles performance given in the
movie
in
her day-to-day
routine and is from Shirley MacLaine.
seems to be more absorbed in a
MacLaine
plays
Ella,
the long-
world of drinking and men.
lost
grandmother of
both
girls
Problems arise between the pair who
is
both
caring
but stem
in
and the plot of the movie ensues.
her attitude about how she
"In
Her
Shoes" begins by
leav-
should treat both women. Later,
we find out that she has her own
Toyota
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gA~
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Show Yo\lr Student T.D,
&
Receive
1()%
Off J.abor
reasons
behind
her
motivations,
adding
depth
to her character.
The
movie does what many
movies
in the past have failed to
do
and accurate!)' relates
to
the
book
&hat
it is
based
on.. Though
it was slightly shortened for the
rrlovie, the script keeps
to
the ta1e
told by
Weiner in
her
book.
Lauren
Tricarico, a Marist
College senior, saw "In Her
Shoes" after reading the
book.
She says that she was cautious to
do
so since many movies do not
accurately portray the
book they
are based on.
"I am
usually hesitant to
see a
movie
based
on
a book that
I
really liked,"
said
Tricarico
.
"But
this
movie was
a lot
like the
book and
tells the
story well,
I
enjoyed
it."
As for people Who have never
read
the book, "In Her Shoes"
delivers
a well-rounded story
about the struggles within fami-
lies and personal relationships,
as well as within
the individuals.
Kate Rayder, a senior at Marist
Co!Jege,
had
read another book
by
Wiener
and said
that
despite
the
fact that
this
type
of movie is
not usually
her favorite choice,
she still enjoyed it.
''Usually I'm not a fan of chick
flicks,"
said
Rayder.
"But
I
was
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TONI
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In Her
SHOES
COURTESY OF WWW.GOOOLE.COM
•1n
Her
Shoes,·
starring
Cameron
Diaz and Toni Collette, is director
Curtis Hanson's
first
attempt
at
a ttght-hearted movie.
Based
on the
novel by
Jennifer
Weiner,
thls
movie proves to
be
quite
enjoyable.
interested
to see this movie
because I enjoyed Jennifer
Weiner's first book "Good in
Bed'
'
and now I look forward to
readmg
'In Her Shoes' as well."
Overall, "In Her Shoes" is an
entertaining way to spend two
hours if you are a fan of
light-
hearted movies that border on
the chick-flick
category.
IJJ Violet Ave.,
Pougbk,t,eptie-, NY
454-5100
has lx.-c-n a victim of the
t\pc,
cast.
The \
ICYtt:r
re.ill h
1-. 111
opp1.lrtunity
tn 1dcnt1fy
\\Ith
Bloom's
charact
r
m
"FIJ1.abc1htov.n," appc·tlm•~ to
the same
do:mograph11.
ac;.
the
character Andrew
Largeman
1n
7ach Araff),
ind11.·
t.1lc of the
quarter hfc
l'rtSti, "(
,anlcn
State."
In fact, thts film 1s
J
Jiulc too
1,,1milar tu "Ci,mk:n St.ttc
l (.,
break 1t J01,,.n:
a dead par
·11
a
return home
for the foneral,
Y.c1rd rtlali\i:"-, and a
beautiful.
yet
slightly off, girl throv.
111g
her.;elf
at
the protagonist.
I
btnell a larie lloll)"'IOd
studm
attempt
at jumping on
lht
band-
wagon.
De<ipitc the Mmtlan-
tics.
ho,,
e\
er,
I \\ ould
still
highly
recommend
going
t11
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''Elizabl!thlo\\n,"c:-.pcc1oilly
1
you were
turned
ulf lhe
.. Garden State" becau.'ie
)
ou
\\ ~"fcn't hip enuugh
li
rid,
ur
on the Shms reforen1..·es
Winter Hours:
Tuesday· Sunday: 7 AM

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Closed Mondays
Better
than home
cookin
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&
PIZZA

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Large Screen TV:
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game!
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Service
and Take
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Credit Cards Accepted
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www.maristelrcle.com
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SESSION ON NOVEMBER 12. CALL (203) 365-7619
OR VISIT SACREDHEART.EDU
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THEClRCLf

THURSDAY
,OCTOBER27,2005

PAGES






















www.merlstclrcle.com
THE CIRCLE •
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2005

PAGE 9
Marist CA,llege
Graduate School Forum
.
Tuesday, November 8
Student Center Cabaret
3pm-6pm
When you're from Fordham, you can. The Graduate
School of Education's focus on academic excellence
challenges students to exceed their own expectations
and prepares them to become mindful citizens of the
world
.
With foundations in the Jesuit tradition of service
to others, our students and faculty share a commitment
to the professional development of the whole person.
A major doctoral degree granting
institution,
Fordham
prepares master's and doctoral candidates in Initial or
Advanced Teacher Education,
·
eounseling, School and
Educational Psychology, Educational Leadership and
more. Through in-depth training
in
theory and practice,
program participants are primecHo develop the competency
and ethical awareness necessary to help address the
challenges in education today.
So make that change. You can, at Fordham.
Stop by
the Fordham
table
at the Graduate
School Fair on
November 8,
or visit
www.fordham.edu/gse/c~ for more information.
FORDHAM
The Jesuit University
of New York
Forth6m
Un/versily.
S/leplng
lea<Jers
N>
ectucat,on
for
mor&
than 85
...-s
.





























































College coalitions stand against
federally-mandated computer updating
By
ALEX PANAGIOTOPOULOS
Opinion Editor
A October
23 article in
the
New
York
Times
reported
that a
Jus1ice Department
order to
upgrade
computer
networks
of
universities na1ionwide in the
name
of monitoring
collegiate
terroris1
activit
i
es
will
cost
at
least
$7 billion to
execute.
The anicle, titled
"Colleges
From Page Three
Protest
Call
to
Upgrade
Online
Systems,"
went
on
to
say
tha1
many
college coaJitions
and
uni-
versity advocate
groups
stood
firmly against the order and were
readying a mighty
salvo
of litiga-
tion and protest.
,
Queries to the Marist
Information
·
Technology
Department were unanswered by
press time,
although several
employees promised to have
answers
for
next week"s
issue.
Tim
Massie, Marist's
Chief
Public
Affairs
Officer, said that
an
October
27
President's
Cabinet
meeting migh1 shed light
on the
order's effect
on Marist.
"We
upgraded our whole
sys-
tem a couple of years ago, so
I
don't know if this would apply to
us," Massie
said.
New, altered
state
licenses hinder home-
made creation of New Jersey fake IDs
dards have
affected
the
extreme-
ly free market on fake IDs.
"I
think it's
getting
harder
now," said Webster
"If you
could find someone who'd make
one, it would probably cost
around $80."
Director of
Security
John
Gildard said that
m
the past few
years, only
one
counterfeiter
has
been
caught
in the
act
..
Two
years ago, a couple of
students
were doing it
for
peo-
ple," Gildard
said. ''They got
it
from a
web!:;1te, and the
state
police
investigated it and
took
the
kids'
computer."
The
Circle's "Deep
Throa1"'
of
the lucrative
fake
ID
business
said that
the
risks
eventually out-
weighed the reward
for
him.
"Someone got arrested
with
one
of
my
IDs,
and
got taken
to
the
Poughkeepsie
Police
Depanment." he
'ltlid
"The
cops
actually
asked
him where he got
the
ID, and
he [didn't rat me
out). The
stress
level probably
didn't justify the amount
of
money
J
made
,
for the amount of
work I put in."
Although
Gildard
elucidated
the most common me1hod of
learning how to make fake IDs,
Deep Throat said it was a magi-
cal process of self-discovery and
exploration.
"I
slarted
working out how
10
pull it off with a few friends,
simply
because we wanted to go
to b~. and didn't want to pay
$100
in
[New
York
City],"
he
said.
"f
made
it
all up.
Basically, photoshop, a paint-
brush, an
x-acto
knife and inge-
nuity."
''New
Jersey
's
id is basically
a
laminated piece of paper.
Every
average
household has
a
printer
that
can
print a similar piece of
paper. lt's
not
too
hard
to come
across
a laminator, which leaves
only the problem
of
the holo-
gram,
which
I
made with
a
sten-
cil
of my own design and holo-
graphic
paint."
Another
former
counterfeiter,
also
speaking
on the condition of
anonymity, calculated that each
ID
cost
him about $0.96 and
took about 45 minutes to make.
Deep Throat said that he did his
business mostly as a favor to
friends.
"When
I
finally made a con-
vincing
ID
for
myself, people
started
to
ask where
J
got it,
and
word spread,•·
he
said.
"I
limited
my
customer
base to people that
I
knew and people that
I
trusted.
"
Although so-called counter-
counterfeiting
legislation has
been framed
as
part
of
the
new
Global Struggle Agamst
Violent
Extremism,
Deep Throat
said
that he doesn't
consider
hunself
a threat to
Our
Way of Life.
"I
certainly
committed
a crime,
and
as
far
as r
know a felony
,
but
I
don't feel like
I
committed
a
moral
injustice,"
he 'lt11id
.
"It's
certainly not on the
same
level as
a
teJTOr:ist flying an all'J)lane into
a
building
."
You're in or you're out!!!
99
MILES OFF MADISON
Muerli~ing
Club
Meeting
This
is
a very important meeting!
Attendance and information
will
be collected
We
are
trying to create a member list,
so
if
you don't show up
or give us a
really
good excuse for not being there,
then you're
not
a member and
won't
receive any priority points!!!
Send good excuses to Sumnne.Ciancl@Marist.edu
To be held: Wednesday November 2nd
in LT208@11:00
THE CIRCLE •
THURSDAY, OCTOBER
27,
2005 •
PAGE 10
Dough Boys Pizza, Wings
& Ale House
51 Fairview Ave.
454-4200
College Specials - We Deliver
....
Pizza Party Special!
3
large
pizzas (includes 4 total
toppings), 36 Jumbo Wings,
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tray salad, fried dough, 2-
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Family Combo's
1
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2 large Pizza
+
24 wings $22.99
1 large Pizza
+
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+
2
Liter
$18.99
60 wings 24.99
Directions: Across
from
Marist college Main entrance: go up Fulton St. Go across 2 RR
tracks. Make next Right. Go threw
1
Light. We are
200
Yards down on left.
West Cedar Oorms: Go to top of hill. Make right go 200
yards.
We're on the left
Attention
Studentsll
Marist Money Accepted!!
Hey you ... here's a little known fact ...
Our 20th President James Garfield was actually
named after Garfield the cartoon cat ... in fact his
nickname was "Fat Cat" ... Yeah ... Crazy ...
GOTCHA! .•. HAHA you so fell for It ... ok
so anyway,
MCTV'S TALK/VARIETY
SHOW
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A SHAME"
with Host
John Larocchla
has an
all new episode on now ... catch It at
9:30 a.m., 1 p.m., 5 p.m., 10 p.m. or 2:30 a.m.
EVERYDAY ... ROCK ON RED FOXES!
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U:
RAVE REVIEWS FOR OUR MBA
The Quinnip1oc University School of Business MBA program continues to
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MASTERING THE ART OF TEACHING
Sheila Wycinowski, Director of Curriculum and Stoff Development at
Amity
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They
hove o clear understonding of lesson planning and classroom management
and the balance between them. She also characterizes Qu,nnipioc sludents
as orticulote, creolive, able to encourage higher-level thinking in sludents,
and able to incorporate technology into their teaching.
mYOUR NEXT MOVE
Quinnipiac University
offers graduate programs in
17
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or visit
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QUINNIPIAC UNIVERSITY
Hamden,
Connecticut





































































































www.marhltclrcle.com
THE CIRCLE •
THURSDAY, OCTOSER 27, 2005 •
PAGE 11
Red Foxes' offense looks
sluggish, Dukes capitalize
By
BRIAN HODGE
Staff
Writer
While most Marist students
spent
this
past Saturday in
com-
fort - hOme for the weekend,
per-
haps enjoying some fine cook-
ing, and their warm
beds
-
the
football team was busy battling
both
the elements
and league
superpower Duquesne for Metro
Atlantic Athletic Conference
(MAAC) supremacy.
ishing with
16 rushes for
39
yards.
Junior
wide
receiver
Andrew
Smith acknowledged the tough
defense as
the main factor
responsible
for
derailing the
potent
Marist offense.
"We could
not
get
anything
going offensively,"
Smith
said.
"We
just
were
not
successful
in
anything we
were trying to
_
do.
[Duquesne] is a
good
team, with
a solid
defense."
down
of the
game, cutting
the
score
to 22-14.
However,
a
short
kickoff
by
Bradley Rowe was handled by
Duquesne. The Dukes
ran
1'ff
what
was
left of the clock
,
seal-
ing their
second conference
win
of the
season.
Marist has a
short
week
of
practice and preparation before
traveling to
MAAC
opponent St.
Peter's. facing
off
Thursday night
at
seven.
The Red Foxes' offense began
an
offensive play via signal caller, James tun. The Dukes' defense contained
Marist
to
a mere 113
yards
of
total offense. This Is 211
yard
difference from the average Red
Fox
offensive
output
M
a result
of
the
powerful
defense of the Dukes, they gained their 35th consecutive Metro Atlantic
Athletic Conference
(MAAC) victory.
The
Marist athletlc
community
retJred
the
JefSeY
of
deceased running
beck
JJ.
Allen, the
Red
Foxes'
an time leading rusher. The ceremony was
conducted
at halftime.
The
Red
Foxes
could
not put
together enough
momentum
offensively, and
fell to the
Dukes
22-14.
With
the loss, Marist
drops to 4-3 overall, and suffers
their first conference defeat of
the season,
dropping to
1-l.
Duquesne's
offense got
on the
board first, following a 13-yard
run
by Jeremy McCullough at
the 10:33 mark. The touchdown
capped
off a
37-yard
drive that
included a
conversion
on
fourth-
and-11.
Upcoming Schedule:
Thursday, Oct. 27 •
at St.
Peter's, 7 p.m.
\I \ \C
Football
Standings:
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Duquc:,ne
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AO\•~w $E
Duquesne,
also
4-3
overnll,
now has sole possession of
first
place with a 2-0 record
in league
play.
The w~n
for
Duquesne
marks their 35th consecutive
league
victory. This streak is
the
longest active of
its
kind, and
the
third-longest
in
Division
l
histo-
ry.
The offensive firepower of
Marisl was kept in check for
much of
the
game,
due
to
a
com-
bination of
slippery
field condi-
tions and
a
staunch
Duquesne
"D". The Dukes currently
lead
the MAAC
in
scoring
defense,
pass defense, rushing defense,
and
not
surprising
ly,
total
defense.
The Red Foxes offense was
held
to just
113
yards of total
offense, a
far
cry from their aver-
age of 324 yards· per game.
Senior signal-caller James Luft
nnlsh1..'\I
!he· day ()-32 p.1sslng. for
74 yards, and
three
interceptions.
Bo Ehikoya, Marist's standout
running
back, also struggled, fin-
Marist
showed
they could
play
some defense of their own, when
sophomore
defensive
back
Daniel Diaz
ran
back
an
inter-
ception
off Duquesne quarter
back Scott Knapp for
a
touch-
down
,
giving
Marist
a 7-6
lead at
the end
of
the first quarter.
Following
a
Duquesne inter-
ception of
Marist's quarterback
Luft,
the Dukes found the
end
zone again,
taking
a
13-7 lead
into halftime. Duquesne opened
the
second
half with
a 5-play,
74-
yard
drive to push the lead to
19-
7. A20-yard
field
goal
by Dukes
kicker Mark Troyan
extended
the
lead to
22-7.
ln
the fourth quarter, the Marist
offense
breached the Duquesne
red zone
for the first time
all
game.
The Red Foxes
set
up
by
a 62-yard
punt-return by
senior
wide receiver
Guy Smith,
laking
1he b.111
to th~
opponent's
12-yard
line. Luft
then found junior wide
receiver
Prince
Prempeh
for
Marist's first offensive touch-
Saturday, Nov.
5 ·
at
Iona, I
p.m.
Saturday, Nov.
12

at
San Diego, I
p.m.
Saturday, Nov. 19 • vs.
Stony Brook, I p.m.
*
*
denotes Senior Day.
October Broadcast Schedule
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Upcoming Schedule
THE CIRCLE
t
J)
_
Q
,
r
s
__
Men's Soccer:
Saturday, Oct. 29 - vs. Siena
,
7
p.m.
Football:
Thursday Oct. 27 - at St. Peter's, 7
p.m.
PAGE 1a
Graci scores four to lead Foxes
By
ANDY ALONGI
Co-Sports Editor
Red
Fox men's soccer
has
found a
rhythm,
winning
their
third
game in as
many
tries while
netting
five goals
in their latest
contest
against the Purple
Eagles
of Niagara,
wiMing
5-2 on
Sunday.
Junior
midfielder An
th
ony
Graci carried
the offensive load
for Marist, scoring four goaJs
while
taking
seven shots
in the
game.
These four
goals
were
Graci's
fifth,
sixth, seventh and
eighth
goals of
the
year.
The
fifth
goal scored
for the
Red
Foxes
came off the foot
of
senior
Peter Rea on a break-a-
way in
the
openi
ng
stages of
the
second
half.
Graci's
offe
n
sive
prowess has
l
ed
him
to
the top
of many
offen-
sive categories
in the Metro
A
tlanti
c At
hl
etic Confe
r
ence
(MAAC). He
is
third in points
and
goals with
20
and eight
respective
l
y.
Two
of
his
goa
l
s
were game winners
.
Graci
is
fourth in
points pe
r
game with
1.43.
Other Red
Foxes
posting
poi
nt
s
were freshman Chris
Nacca
who
contributed
three
assists to
the
offensive attack. Keith
Dete)j
added
two assists as well while
talcing
four shots
to
increase
his
season
total to
53 which
is
good
for first in the
MAAC
.
Defensively, Marist gave
up
its
first goal afte
r
two shutouts by
sophomore goa
lk
eeper Danie
l
Owens.
Owens had
a shutout
streak of 255
minutes
was
bro-
ken
by freshman midfielder
Eric
Brodfuehrer
of
the
Purple
Eagles.
Owens
boasts a goals
agai
n
st average of
1
.13 whi
le
making
about five saves
per
game.
After a big week offensively
,
the
Red
Foxes
had
two players
named MAAC
Player
of the
Week. Graci was honored as the
offensive
player
of the week and
Nacca was named rookie of the
week for their outstanding con-
tributions
to
the team in their two
wins over
the
weekend.
Moreover, the
Red
Foxes as a
team have
bee
n
recognized by
Acquista Trattoria
/
BigAppleSoccer.com
poll.
The
two big wins over the weekend
helped
the Foxes rank ninth in
this weeks edit
i
on of the poll.
The Red Foxes are in a second
place tie
in
the MAAC with a 4-
2
record
in
conference play. This
weekend Marist will take on
archrival Siena on Saturday Oct.
29 with kickoff scheduled for
7
p.m.
on
Leonindoff
Field.
Genovese upsets seeded Corace at
ITA Northeast Regional Tournament
By
JOSEPH FERRARY
Staff Writer
court grinder," said Smith. "He 7-5,
I0-7.
doesn't have
any weapo
n
s and
he
In
doubles action
,
the Red
is
better
than
he
looks."
Foxes were swept right out of
the
Pedro Genovese's win over
the
Some of
the
other
Red
Foxes first round.
12th
y,eed
,
Brandon
Corace. of
thatjoinedGenoveseintheroain
Genovese and
Rodrigue
z._
lost
Virgi
n
ia
Tech, highlighted the draw
inclu
d
ed Mark Santucci.
to
Boston College'
s
Jason
men's tennis team perfonnance Santucci won
both
of his
qualify-
Sechrist and Brain
Hartness
9-7.
at the
I
ntercollegiate Tennis
ing
matches,
beating
Santucci and Rolon fell to
Association

Geprg_etown's
Qeorgetown's Ted Twyang and
(
J
T A )
'This was Pedro's best co lie•
Andy Clayton
Andy Clayton of Georgetown
8-
N
°
rt
he a
5
t
glate match so far. That Is in
6-2, 3
-6,
6-
1

regiona
l
at
a
n
d
Coach Smith said he was not
Dartmouth
tenns of combining his power
Princeton's
frustratedwithhisdoublesplay.
Co
ll
ege
this
with his patience.'
A
1
e
x
"I was disappointed with
the
past weekend.
K
rue
g e
r
-
r
esults of our double teams
Genovese,
-Coach Tlm Smith
Wyman
7-6 because of the
how
they have
who
was
- - - - - - - - - - -
(8-6), 6-2.
played in• the past,"
he
said. "I
unranked and
came into
the 128
Santucci's
run
was short lived
am hoping that this tournament
men
sing
l
es field
,
first beat
as
he lost
in
the
first
round of the
is a wake
up
call for this upcom-
Co
lwnb
ia's
Jared Drucker
2-6, 6-
main draw to Anny's Max Good
ing
tournament at Cornell
.
If our
2, 6-2
to make
it to the fie
ld
of
64
6-0, 6
-
3.
doubles
teams can win at
to
face Corace. Ge
n
ovese
Jost
In
the co
n
solation bracket for
Cornell, they can be regional
the
first
.
set
to
Co race 3-6,
but
doubles
l
osers, Federico Rolon
ranked."
quick
l
y
regained momentum
wo
n
his
first
-,,---,--~~'""'=-c--~--~
The ITA
from the freshman
to
win the
r
o u
n
d '
I
am hoping that this tournament
Northeast
next
two sets 6-4, 6-4.
m a t c
h
Is a wake-up call for this upcoming
Reg
i
O
n a I
Head coach
Tim
Smith said
h
e as gca o'
n,s
:
tournament at Cornell
.
'
;eoauturn,cadmc4n0t
was
very
i
mpressed
with
••
Genovese
'
s perfonnance.
Adams
of
of the best
"This was Pedro's
best
colic-
St.
Joseph's
,
Coach Um Smith
t
e n n i s
giate match so far," he said.
6-1, 2-6, IO-
teams from
''That is
in
tenns of combi
n
i
n
g 4. However, Rolon lost in the
Maine to Virgmia and some of
his
power with
his patience."
next
round
to Navy's Nate the best tennis players in the
However,
Genovese Jost in the
Nelms, 6-4, 6-0.
country
.
Round of 32 to the 23rd seed,
Fellow teammate Leonardo
The Red Foxes are in action
Milosz Gudzowsk
i
of Yale in
Rodriguez
lost
in the first round
this weekend as they travel to
straight sets, 6-4,
6-1.
of
the
consolatio
n
bracket to
Ithaca, N.Y to compete in the
"G
u
dzowski is a true back-
Michael James of
Penn
State 3-6, Cornell Tournament.
Fordham
hits past Marist in
straight games,
Foxes fall to 5-15, Fordham improves
16-9
By
DREW BUDD
Staff
Writer
The Fordham Rams defeated
the Red Foxes volleyball squad 3
- 0 this past
Wednesday
night at
the
McCann Center.
Fordham's
14
service ace's and
combined .301
hitting
were key
to
the victory
.
Tasha
Johnston
posted a double-double for
the
Rams with
11
kills and
13
digs
to
help
them get past Marist.
Sop
h
omore
middle blocker
Christy Lukes and junior middle
b
l
ocker Jackie
Poston kept
Marist alive in game one, com-
bining for seven kills and hitting
.444 and .600, respective
l
y.
Fordham would go on
to hit
.381
as a team thoug
h
and take game
one, 30 - 21.
Head
coac
h
Sarah
Hu
tto
n
said
the
Rams gave Marist a chal-
l
e
n
g
in
g adversary throughout the
contest.
"Fordham
is
a good team," she
said. "We knew they were going
to
be
tough."
The Red Foxes kept it close in
game two. Junior outside hitter
Jamie Kenworthy came off the
bench
to hit
.600, but Fo
rdh
am's
Marija Markovic was even
bet-
ter.
Markovic totaled 15 ki
ll
s
and paved
the
way for a 30 - 25
win for the Rams.
"We
didn't
make much errors
as a team; we just
were
not put-
ting
th
e ball down," Coach
Hutton
said. "We also
had
been
b
l
ocking real well this season,
that's something we didn't do.''
Fordham
dominated
much of
game three, taking a lead late in
the game
.
Senior setter Meghan
Cochrane kept the Red Foxes in
the game by serving four-straight
points toward the end but the·
Rams were just too much and
went on to win the game 30
-
21.
Cochrane kept
her
solid season
rolling with another doub
l
e-dou-
ble totaling 21 assists and 11 digs
along with five kills
.
Lukes
led
Marist with seven kills while
Kenworthy had six kills and
Poston totaled five kills.
The Red Foxes fell to 5 - 15
overall with the
loss
while
Fordham improved to 16 - 9
overall with the wiil.
Marist returns to action
Saturday
afternoon
at
the
McCann Center against Canisius
College at 2 p.m.
Jun or forward Miles Orman slam dunks one
ot
hts 11,ree
chances
during tne slam dunk contest ar
the
Red
Fox Tlpcff
last
Friday
nljhL Orman·s competitors ln
tho
dun~
contest included redsturt fresh
manguam
Ka)"/len Gregoryendsenk>r guard
Carl
Hood The
purpose
of
the
tipoff
is to announce the
official start of
NCAA baskelball
practice.
Other festivities during
the
course
ot
the
night Included a
student
dod,geba:11 tournament e bllndfolded money grab, various raffles n
add!Uon
to
the
tntroduc
uon
d
both
the
men·• and women s
basketball
team.
The
other
competition between
the
two taams
was a
three point
shootfng
compotftlon
whleh
the
men's team of frestunan guard
Gerald
carter
end
Junior &,uard W\11 Whittington
defeated
the
women's team of
sophomore
guard
Courtney KC>e!8r and
redshlrt freshman guard Jul!esnne
V1anl.
Both
teams
have chalHtnglng non conference sehedufes.
The men race
two
e,g
East
teams In
Seton
Hall on
Saturday
Nov. 19
at
1 p.m. and St John's on
Saturtla)'.De<.17 at2
p.m.
Ill Ma<llson Square Gllrllen. The men also Ol1llOOO NCAA toomamem Qual
tfler
Ohio
et
the
McCenn
Center
on
Tuesdey,
Dec. 6
at
7·30 p.m. The
women take on UCONN
In
a
pre-
season NIT
matehup
at
UCONN on
Saturday,
Nov 12
at
7 p.m. and
take
on
VIilanova tn
their
home
opener on
Friday,
~ov.
18
at
7 p.m
over 68 Beds
Join
at
t,
tan at am