The Circle, September 23, 2004.xml
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Part of The Circle: Vol. 58 No. 3 - September 23, 2004
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VOLUME 58, ISSUE 3
FOUNDED IN 1965
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2004
SGA class Candidates present political platforms
By
CHRISTINE ROCHELLE
Circle Contributor
Stephanie Markey both insisted Palmer, Omar Diaz, Colleen
that past leadership roles, their Sprague and Joe Ryan are com-
reliability and their organization-
peting to be elected class presi-
On Tuesday, Sept. 21, Student al skills clearly reflected their dent. Class unity was a common
Government Association (SGA) potential to succeed.
theme, as the candidates spoke
hosted a speech night in the
"I'm very neurotic with my about getting paper towels or
Nelly Goletti Theater, allowing organization," Sullivan joked. "I hand driers in the dorm bath-
the candidates running for class put post-it notes everywhere."
rooms.
office to introduce themselves
- - - - - - - - - - - - -
"I
will make sure hand driers
and their campaign for positions.
'I
am running because
I
are
installed in every dorm bath-
Student body president Linda
think that
I
can make a dlf-
room," Volsky said.
Crane started the night by
ference.'
He also promised to extend the
explaining that each candidate
_
Sean Palmer
cafeteria's grill hours.
would have a chance to give a
Candidate for freshman
All candidates mentioned that
short speech followed by a
Q-
class president
they could not make any promis-
and-A session with current SGA
es to their fellow classmates but
members and students.
insisted that their qualifications
"Regardless of the outcome of
Campaigning for the role of for the position should not go
the election next week,
I
encour-
freshman vice president, Katie unnoticed.
• age all of you to get involved and DeSena, Nicole Brooks-Donolli
"I am running because
I
think
get your voice heard," said Crane and Dan Scott gave similar that
I
can make a difference,"
, a junior, said as she addressed speeches that harped on their Palmer said.
the candidates.
desire of class unity.
Other students who spoke
The freshmen candidates spoke
"I
feel that
our
class can be one included
freshman
April
first, starting with those who of the best Marist has ever seen," Hewston and sophomore Brett
were running for the position of said
Brooks-Donolli.
Giarrusso for resident ,senator,
secretary. Sara Sullivan and
Freshmen Igor Volsky, Sean sophomore MaryEllen Conway
Presldentlel candidates
from left
to
right
Oma
Diaz,
Igor
Volsky,
Colleen Spregue. Joseph
Ryan, an
Palmer.
for student body secretary and
sophomore Amanda Nethaway
for student body treasurer.
Senior Garret Bergen spoke for
the position of commuter
SEE SGA, PAGE 8
Community voices concern over off-campus partying
By
ALEX PANAGIOTOPOULOS
Circle Contributor
Ear-splitting noise, garbage Lit-
tering the hallways, inebriated
neighbors urinating everywhere,
and the putrid stench of stale
beer: all reasons some students
choose to move to a different
dorm or off-campus.
Off-campus Marist students in
Poughkeepsie have their new
neighbors wishing there was
some other locale to which
they
could move to as well. In a city
hall meeting Sept.
13,
local offi-
cials revealed that they have
been inundated with complaints
from residents about student par-
ties on their streets. A task force
was proposed to
try
and "!lip this
in the bud/' city hall Ghairman
Frank
Mora
told
the
Poughkeepsie Journal. Increased
pressure is being put on land-
lords to have stricter rules and to
register
their houS"es with the
police as having college students.
The result? Last weekend, College is going to be more
complaints were down, a party hands-on in dealing with its off-
on Delafield
- - - - - - - - - - - - -
campus stu-
Street
was
'Rrst
weekend, boom, these
dents.
squashed, and
parties are popping up all over,
"In years
noise
viola-
past,
they
tioti
tickets
and the complaints are coming
weren't real-
were issued.
up a
lot
faster than usual.'
ly involved,"
Council-
Lawrence
man
John
-John C.
Tkazlk
said.
Lawrence, D-
Councilman
"They're
2
Ward (which
doing some
includes Delafield, Market, and things differently, because things
Cannon streets), said that Marist have gotten out of hand. The
Goven1or's helicopter
lands
on North Field
ERIC
KIMMEL/
THE Cl RCLE
Governor George E. Pa1akl uses North F'teld as a landmg pad
for
the
state
heficopter
prior to
attending a meeting
In
the
town
of
Poughkeepsie where
he
was scheduled
to
sign
a
piece
of leglstatlon.
The governor, who
Is
a
good
friend of
the Marist College,
used
the
secluded field
fOf'
security reasons.
college is being more proactive."
The college started the
Dutchess Campus Community
Coalition after receiving a New
York State grant to "form a team
addressing high risk beh;iviors of
college students living on their
own... It provides a meeting
place for local agericies and
organizations along with stu-
dents from Marist, The Culinary
Institute, Dutchess Community
College and Vassar to set goals
and discuss about off-campus
life.
Other members include
Poughkeepsie and Hyde
Park
police, Dutchess County Tavern
Owners, St. Francis Hospital and
the Dutchess County Council on
Alcoholism
&
Chemical
Dependency.
The Coalition meets once a
month, with their next meeting at
3 :30 p.m. Sept. 29
in
the PAR.
Steve Sansola, in his role as asso-
ciate dean for student affairs,
SEE
CAMPUS,
PAGE 8
A hairy situation
BY MELISSA DAVIS
Circle Contributor
Going to Marist's fashion
department at midnight and find-
ing an anti-fur sign posted on the
glass doors is not an everyday
occurrence. However, this is
what was found last Wednesday,
Sept.
15.
Signs reading, "Do you
have a
conscience?" were
accompanied by pictures of a
Richard Kramer.
The use of fur has been a heavy
debate in the fashion world.
Posters proclaiming, "The most
stylish way to beat the weather
this season ... think mink!" from
1972
in Vogue, hung in the fash-
ion department which may be
what provoked the protest
posters. "They put up these signs
in a guerilla manner, before we
[the fashion department] could
skinned ani-
- - - - - - - - - - - - -
respond, to tell
the world that
mat
were
'They
put up these signs in a
posted along
guerllla manner, before we
the hallway
[the
fashion department]
and on the
we
were
wrong,"
Osgood said.
glass display
could ~espond, to tell the world
PETA
(People for the
E t h i c a l
cases
Donnelly.
in
that we were wrong.'
Director of
the fashion
program
- Heather
Osgood
Treatment of
Director, fashion
program
Animals) has
- - - - - - - - - - - - -
had a number
Heather Osgood
said
that
although certain flyers on display
in department might seem to
advocate the use of fur
in
fash-
ion, that is not the case.
"Those signs were part of a
class where the goal was to learn
Photoshop and graphic layout,"
she said.
"It
saddens me that they
think we advocate
fur
use."
Students made the signs as proj-
ects in Principles of Apparel
Design, taught during the spring
semester of 2004 by Professor
of confrontations with former
Vogue editor Anna Wintour a
strong fur advocate. One of cur-
rent Vogue editor Sally Singer's
picks for the top
fall
fashion is a
"mushroom-hued mink," accord-
ing to Style.com, the online
home to Vogue and W maga-
zines.
PETA is known for its use of
guerilla protesting. During the
2000 New York City Fashion
Week,
PETA protesters threw
SEE
FUR,
PAGE 3
THE CIRCLE
845-575-3000
ext.
2429
writethecircle@hotmail.com
OPINION: THE INFAMOUS "'F".WORD
HEALTH: HUDSON IS SOURCE OF MARISrs
WATER SUPPLY
3399 North Road
Poughkeepsie, NY 12601
Not that "f" word; Catarino is talking about freshman as
an acronym for a fatal disease.
PAGE5
Classify the Hudson River as safe to drink and swim in? It
doesn't matter; the
Hudson
is Marist's main water supply.
PAGE 7
THE
CIRCLE
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER
2004
www.maristclrcle.com
The "Security Briefs" and the "Alcohol Fantasy
Beat" are intendet/. to be a parody and not a repre-
sentation of The Circles editoridl stance on drink-
ing - illegal or otherwise - nor is it intended to be
a statement regarding the official Marist College
policy on alcohol consumption
.
PAGE2
Securitv Briel$:
,
Flashback to the
This week i
n 1999
•
•
•
Compiled
by SCOTT NEVILLE
Former Campus Editor
Everyone is throwing back their product to yester
year styles. Starter, Reebok, Nike, JC Penny, I mean
I dare you to find a top merchandiser that's not. We
have hats and jerseys with color patterns that
haven't seen the light of day since before Rony
Seikaly could even palm a basketball. I mean I got
my Denver Nuggets rainbow jersey on right now.
So I was thinking, if all these cool companies are
doing this, why can't the Security Briefs? There is
nothing wrong with a little retro action every now
and then. Good movie by the way. So, I thought
this was the perfect idea after the secµrity office
stood me up for the interview this week. So without
any further ado, here are the security briefs of this
week in 1999.
-Dan Roy
9/14 -
An "Upper" Townhouse resident called security
officers for her collapsed roommate at 2:30 p.m. The
female student had regained consciousness before an
ambulance arrived, but she was transported to St. Francis
Hospital as a precaution anyway.
9115
=
A Marist worker loosened a tooth with hi§
wrench when it slipped off a damaged boiler he was
repairing in Gartland E block at 8 a.m. He reported the
incident at 3 p.m. and refused medical attention. The
wrench suffQl'ed no injuries.
city of Poughkeepsie's water treatment workers filled
tanker trucks with rising waste wl'l.ile a mechanic
repaired a damage pump and restored order to a poten-
tially messy situation.
·
9/17 -A missing dining hall cart may have been abduct-
ed from the stock room. The cart has been missing since
Friday and was reported to security officers Thursday,
Sept. 23 at 7: 5 5 a.m.
9/18 -
An estimated $800 in clothes, books, and Gap
products was reported stolen from
a
nonresident's locked
vehicle in Beck Place parking lot over the weekend
.
The
car had been parked at 8 p.m. and the larceny discovered
the following day at 8:30 p.m. The vehicle's owner
deducted the culprit used a coat hanger, found next to the
car, to gain access to the car through a partially opened
window. Officers at the Poughkeepsie Police Department
were notified and took a report of th
,
e larceny.
9/18 -
Security officers confiscated numerous empty
beer cans from Benoit House at 2 a.m. while escorting a
female visitor from campus after she accidentally provid-
ed identification with different names - one fake, one
real
-
to the RA and RD, respectively.
9/19
-
Security officers stopped a Champagnat resident
tramping to West Cedar from the K.
&
D Deli at 10:20
p.m. The student was observed lugging two 12-packs of
beer and promptly turned over a falsified ID when ques-
tioned.
9119
-
An aldohot confiscation on the first 'floor
of
Leo
cooking a hamburger. Though this resident pyrotechnic
used an extinguisher and saved the day, the extinguish-
er's powder set off the alarm anyway. The next alarm
came five hours later, when excess grease in an oven trig-
gered the alarm.
9/21 - A mechan
i
c pulling cable while working on the
chapel was smacked in the eye with a portion of the coil
at 3 p.m
.
, but
'
toughed it out refusing attention.
9/22
-
The alarms were silent on Tuesday, but on
Wednesday at 7:45 p.m. another cooking mishap sent
Fairview back to their home away from home
.
While
investigating the scene, Marist security
.
officers confis-
cated a construction barrel adorned with a functional
blinking light. They took the barrel to the grounds keep-
ers, who returned it to the DOT. Thutsday and Friday
each had a breakfast related fiasco, one from smoking
.
toast and one from burning bacon.
9/23 - A 1999 Chevrolet Cavalier collided with a pass-
ing Chevrolet Suburban when pulling out of
a
parking
space in the Midrise parking lot at 5 p.m. There was
minor damage to both vehicles, but no injuries were
reported .
.
9/23 -
A laptop computer valued at $2
,
500 was report-
ed §to}en from the ShEahan Hall lounge
Thur§day, at
10:40 p.m. A Sheahan resident left the lounge at 10 p.m.,
leaving her $2
,
500 computer alone to fend for itself for
40 minutes
.
Town of Poughkeepsie police officers were
notified
;
but their investigation has turned up nothing
.
,
...
,_
11■11
1••
Friday, Sept 24, 2004
Comedy Club
DC Benny
·
9PM
Cabaret
Saturday, Sept. 25, 2004
Outdoor Movie
"The Stepford Wives"
9PM
Champagnat Green
Tuesda~Sept.28,2004
Solazo
9 PM
Nelly Goletti Theater
Wednesday, Sept. 29, 2004
Elisabeth Romano,
Bassoon and Friends
8 PM
PAR
•
Saturday, Oct 2, 2004
Band, Singers and
Women's Choir Concert
2PM
Mccann Center
Sunday, Oct 3, 2004
Carl Rosen
12
PM
Campus Green
.
.
9/15-9/17
-
Gartland Commons' F block has taken the Hall yielded 15 cans of beer at 1 :55 a.m., narrowly beat-
lead on Fairview Fire Department
'
s frequent caller list,
ing out a 14-can round up in Gartland F block on Friday,
setting off two alarms this week, Sept. 15 and 17 respec-
Sept. 17 at 11 p.m.
Back
to
2004 •..
Total alcohol-related incidents:
1.
Gartland - 5
2. Leo- 3
Tuesday, Oct. 5, 2004
Sex
Signals
9
PM
Nelly Goletti Theater
.
.
tively, including one burning French toast and one smok-
ing cigarettes. Gartland E block did have one mishap: a
student ignited a piastic container while cooking on the
·
range top. Townhouses' A block also kept Fairview bust
on Thursday, ~ept. 16, turning on a burner under a plas-
tic tray and setting off the alarm.
9/20-Coming in at a
'
dismal second place with one fire
alarm, residents of the F block overheated a frying pan
Monday at 7 p.m. Upon entering their common area, fire
fighters observed a large number of street signs mounted
around the room. Student Affairs was notified
.
9/16
-
Tropical Storm Floyd toyed with Marist College
,
9/20
-
Gartland E block has kept Fairview Fire
tearing down limbs from trees, clogging overworked Department busy this week, evacuating the block five
,
water drains, and pushing sewage levels dangerously times. The first evacuation came on Monday, Sept. 20 at
close to eruption. Luckily, Marist's physical plant and the
12:20 p.m. when a resident started a grease fire while
3. Champagnat - 2
4. Old Townhouses • 1
5. Gregory - 1
Wednesday, Oct. 6, 2004
·
Pocket Opera
6 .
.
Upper West Cedar - 1
7.
Midrise - 1
8PM
PAR
V
i
s
it www.MaristCircle.com each week to take our opinion poll!
THE
CIRCLE
Cassi
G. Matos
Editor in Chief
Courtney
J.
Kretz
Managing Editor
Allssa Brew
News Editor
Jessica Bagar
A
&
E Editor
Sara
Stevens
Features Editor
Dan
Roy
Campus Editor
carollne Ross
Opinion Editor
PaulSeach
Sports Editor
Mark Perugini
Assistant Sports Editor
Eric S. Kimmel
Photography Editor
Kate Glgllo
Copy Editor
Louis
P.
Ortiz Ill
Assistant Editor
Kristen Alldredge
Health Editor
Alec
Troxell
Advertising Manager
Joe
Guardino
Distribution Manager
G. Modele Clarke
Faculty Advisor
The Circle
is the weekly student newspaper of Marist College. Letters t() the
editors, announcements, and story ideas are always welcome, but we
'
cannot
publish
unsigned letters. Opinions expressed in articles are not necessarily
those
of
the editorial board.
The Circle
staff can be reached at 575
:
3000 x2429 or letters to the editor can
be sent to
wrltethecircle@hotmai
l
.com
Sept. 23 -
"Get Carded"
-
SGA
will
be dis-
tributing information to students about sexual
assault on college campuses.
Sept. 23
-
Starting at 9:30 p.m. in the PAR,
SGA will be hosting a social
,
"Meet the
Candidate," giving the students an opportunity to
meet with the candidates faee-to-face
.
Sept. 24
-
Don't forget to register to vote! Last
day to pick up information at the SGA office,
located in the Student Center across from
College Activities
.
Sept. 25
-
SGA is sponsoring "Rock the Vote
/
Battle of the Bands." The event will take place
on the Champagnat green from 1-3 p.m. Any
bands interested in participating
,
please contact
Alyssa.Oxford
@
marist.edu.
Sept. 26
-
Campaigning for all candidates ends
at midnight.
Sept. 27-29
-
Elections begin at 11 a.m. on the
Marist homepage
,
www.marist.ed
u,
and end at 7
p.m. Votes will be tabulated and results will be
posted outside the SGA office at 9 p.m. on
Sept. 29
.
Sept. 26 -
Campaigning for all candidates ends
at midnight.
Oct. 3· -
The junior class is sponsoring a show-
ing of the movie
"
King Arthur'' from 1 :00-
3
:
00pm on the green in Upp~r West Cedar.
A
M A R I ST
S tudenteGovernmen t•Associ at
i
on
THE
CIRCLE
' '
A
person who goes by the rules
should not be penalized by
having nowhere to park
because someone else does not
feel like following the rules.
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER, 23 2004
www.maristcircle.com
''
- John Gildard
Director, safety&:
security
PAGE3
Inside Out gives gay community a voice
By ALISSA BREW
News Editor
months for a total of six times a
year.
Sacks said.
Myers, who writes the column
Inside Out
is
the
Hudson River Walk
the
Talk, said that
she can-
problems
same-sex
couples
might face when planning to
have a baby.
The
Paltz and Kingston, and primari-
ly the publication serves the
Hudson Valley.
------------
"There's
nothing
else
that serves this
community up
here,"
said
Myers.
·
Another feature oflnside Out is
the campus view column written
by calendar editor and contribut-
ing writer Nicole Sacks. Sacks
writes about news that affects
students
on
local campuses.
Sacks also said that the maga-
zine wants form communication
between all the different groups
in the community.
Valley's first gay lesbian bi-sex-
ual
trans-gender
(GLBT) maga-
zine and has
gained enormous
popularity after publishing its
premiere
issue
in
March of
2004.
JoAnn
Myers, assistant profes-
sor of
political science
and direc-
tor of
women's studiesat
Marist
College, said
the
publication
has
been
embraced
universally
despite having
a limited target
audience.
"It
was meant
for the lesbi~
-
gay
- transgender
- queer - com-
munity,
but
it is read by every-
one,"
said Myers.
The magazine is
a
free
publica
-
tion that
comes out
every two
not
distribute enough magazines
around
campus.
"I
put
copies around
and
they
disappear," she
said.
Myers said
that Marist has
shown
its
increasing openmind-
edness by txtending
health ben-
efits
to
same-sex couples.
"Marist is
becoming more
open
in
its own little
way," Myers
said.
Inside
Out
includes articles
on
pet care, politics, business, and
community news as well
as
book
and music reviews.
In his article
published
in the
March/ April 2004 issue James
Tissot wrote about some of the
May/June issue
includes
Jay
Blotcher's
account of his
marriage with
Brook Garrett.
They were one
of the 35 cou-
ples
married
by
New
Paltz's
mayor, Jason
West.
'It was meant for the lesbian
- gay - transgender - queer -
community, but it is read by
everyone.'
Inside Out
also profiles
-
-JoAnn
Myers
community
Assistant professor, polltlcal
members that
science/
Director,
have
con-
women's studies
tributed to the
GLBT
com-
Myers said people subscribe to
Inside Out from phwes as far
away
as
California,
New
Mexico; Florida and Arizona.
But the magazines offices, how-
ever, are based locally in New
munity.
Assistant professor of
history
at
Marist College John G White
was one of the first people pro-
filed in Inside Out's March/April
2004
fSUe.
Her column in the March/April
2004 issue dealt with the anxiety
a student faces when deciding
whether or not to be openly gay.
The article included quotes
from local college students from
Marist and SUNY New Paltz.
Her
column
in
the
September/October 2004 issue
provided scholarship informa-
tion for GLBT students.
Sacks wants to write articles
that
inform
and enlighten stu-
dents about the GLBT communi-
ty.
"I hope I can play a small part,"
"The main goal of the maga-
zine is to merge these groups,"
Sacks said.
Currently Inside Out has a
Webpage; however, Saoks said
that its goal is to produce a
Website that community mem-
bers can visit to access informa-
tion about events in the Hudson
River Valley.
She also said that Inside Out is
not averse to change.
i"We're
pretty open to new
ideas," she said.
Parking permits may not permit parking
MARISTCIRCLE.COM
WEEKLY
.
POLL
By
CASSI MATOS
Editor
in Chief
Ne,\
parking sl1 k rs
will
make
n
en ier
for
c uri1y
_gµa.rds
to
ident1
fy
parking ,
10la-
·ors
St;u1wg Sept. l
S
ticketiny has
begun for all illegally parked
and unregistered cars. For the
first
two weeks of school,
stu-
dents were granted a grace~.:;
od
and instead of ftS'l:leivin.g
tick~·
~ts,
courte
notic~
were
i
ucd.
o , s
nt. \
111
b
. tm-tl:,, enforcing the mlc
.
While some students
t.naY
be
upset with the crackdown,.
ot~
ers mclud111g
Kate
fanzella.
senior,
resident
of
f
o
To,..,nho c ..
said
he
\\ill
not
mind s ctng people getting
tick.;
eted.
·• I
think parking
1~
an issue
that
they
[Marist]
need to
address
prell) soon," Manzella
said.
A1:1:on.ling
to John ( Jldard.
head
l'f
security, campus park-
From ·Page One
iri&
includes ppro 1mat1.:ly
900
resident
parking pots. Pennits
fot all
of the
e I
01
were
issued
rior to
ihe
beginning of 1hc
chool
y~
II th ·
who
did
not receive campus parkmg
were issued
parking
stickers for
Beck Place. A final number of
how: many permits were issued
to non-commuter students for
this lot
is
not yt,1; available. In
additjoµ,
acford,iqg
to
the
num-
bers available through security,
neady 1300 commuter students
received parkwg p
rr 1its.
Brian 81.:i.;k resident ofLowcr
New
To\\ nhouse .
i.
unhappy
with the
!Wfl.Y,
p rking p nnit
v.
n:
,1
igned
this
year.
Although
Lm11er
C\\
h:a&
it$
own
parking
lot.
and
is
nght
near Rn r.tcw
lm;
Beck was
as 1gned
a
parking pa for B ck
Pine
''\\
hy
should 1 h \.c
to park
across the street
from
my donn
when
underclassmen
are able
to
park
right behind
it)"
Beck said.
''They
should not be given
the
pm
deg
to
park
in
R1\'CI'\
1cv.
br.:for· I am,"
The
parking
sticker
has
under-
g<>,ne a
few
.
ignific<lnt change,
. m1:1.:
last
year,
including a
reducti<>n in
·12c,
a chang in the
t}
pe
of sticker material bemg
used, and
the layout
and grapics
have also
been
modified.
According
to Oildard, this
} ·c1r·
parking tic
et,
which
now
g~~
plact!d
on
the outside
oJ
the
rear
driver's
side
windQW
has
tnany
added advantages.
"J
ru;t
car one of
the issue&
we
had
was that students were
being ticketed
at
mght bcl'.'au. e
the
pet®t could not b
seen
through
tinted
wmu \
s,"
Gildard atd.
"\i
e a}_s() got com-
plain1<1
about
th.¢ ,11c. so
We
"an1cu
to
mab
1t
more ucsth
t-
ically plea. mg. '
He
added that
th
nc . thinner
sticker is made out a
tnaterla.J
designed
to
hd offth1.:
car"
in-
dow
with a razorblade,
but
as
11
is rem \ d
it
will
separate
into
piec1:s
to
prevent sticker theft.
In
addition, ecurity
i
11
be
implementing
a
new
parking
manage,rnent
sy
tern,
u ing
handheld
scanners
to
read the
barcodes
on
the
tic
.
N'h
n
the barcode ts
c,1nn
tl.
th
per-
son whom the
sticker
i
regis-
tered to will come up, in
addi~
tion to the
make
and
model
of
the car
1
and die license plate
number
If
the license plate
number
I
punched
in,
security
will
be
able to tell
whether or
not
that car
1.
rc
0
1
stt:rl!d
and has-
been
issued a parking tick r.
h tickets
will
then
be
i~sued
through :this
new
machine.
While students
v.b
br ak the
tulea
may
be unhappy with
this
ne,\ ly
improved
sy rem,
G1ldard
sai.dit
Will
benefit
tho
\ ho
do
fotfow
th1- rules.
'';A,
p • on ,, ho goe,
by
the
rule
hould not
be
pen
lizcd.~y
having
!10\\
here to
park
bccaus
someone cl e docs nol feel like
ollowm
the
rule , · (rildard
·aid.
Are you satisfied with your assigned parking
lot at Marist?
35
30
■
v-. rm
parked
close to
where
I
live
25
Dlwfeh I
was
close,
but
I
can
deal
20
Cl
Nol My lot
is
a
mile away
16
□ I
Just
park
wherever
I
10
want
■
I
don't have a
6
car
0
Marist working with Poughkeepsie to curb off campus partying
works with the coalition.
"The coalition is something
we're working with the commu-
nity on," Sansola said. "A lot of
students aren't aware
·
ofthe rules
and regulations."
Several local officials
Parker,
·said
that the parties real-
ly took the community by sur-
prise.
First weekend, boom, these
parties are popping up all over,
and the complaints are coming
said that
'an
inordinate
'We all want the Marlst teams to
number of student par-
ties in Poughkeepsie
spurred the proposal of
the
task
force.
Councilman John C.
lose, because when they win, all
hell breaks loose.'
Tkazik, R-3rd Ward,
who has about 45 student-rented
houses in his district's streets of
Fairview, washington, Clark,
Garden, Taylor, Orchard and
-
Rose Graziano
Community
representative
up a lot faster than usual," he
said. "Things seem to be happen-
ing a lot sooner than expected."
Lawrence said he has not seen
this many parties
,
in his district in
a long time.
"It's been a good four or five
years since we've had a problem
with parties," Lawrence said.
"Minivan taxis are pulling up for
these parties; that usually is a bad
sign."
Rose Graziano, a community
representative for the 2nd Ward
on Taylor Avenue, said that
sometimes there is a
connection
between Marist sports success
and the intensity of the student
shindigs.
"We all want the Marist teams
to lose, because when they win,
all hell breaks loose."
Measures are being taken to
provide Marist students with bet-
ter ties to their community. A
effort, sending out packets of
information to off-campus stu-
dents that provide information
community block party - - - - - - - - - - - - -
for off-campus students
has been scheduled
from 3 to 5 p.m. Sept.
26
at
Fairview
Community Park (cor-
ner of West Cedar and
'Minivan taxis are pulling up for
these parties; that usually is a
bad sign.'
-
John Lawrence
Councilman
-------------
Fairview
streets).
Students will have the chance to
meet other students, other resi-
dents and local politicians.
There will be music and free
food and beverages.
The Marist Office of Student
Affairs has also been making an
about open container laws, noise
violations, and other community
rules and regulations. It has also
distributed pamphlets in the
cafeteria titled "Off Campus
Guide for On Campus Students".
"Studen
ts
with friends on cam
-
pus visiting them off-campus are
an issue in the cormnunity," said
Sansola. "There are issues with
them being loud while they wait
in the street for cabs
...
when
they park their cars they don't
leave any room on the street, and
leave at 3 or 4 a.m., et cetera."
Lawrence referenced the
"Marist
students
have 0-4
drinks" flyers in deploring the
underage drinking issue.
"It's claiming that 14 percent of
Marist students abstain from
alcohol completely,
·
"Lawrence
said. "I don't think even 14 per-
cent of them are even of· legal
age."
Fashion department posters cause controversy over animal rights
pies at designers who used
fur
in
their designs.
PETA head ReaLann Smith
said that designers who continue
to
support
the
fur
industry are
looked down upon by others
inside the
industry.
"You can't beat the messenger
for the way the message is deliv-
ered,"
RaeLann Smith said, in
a
New York Times Magazine mals fashion
victims,
h~ might as
interview. "We do what we need well be walking around with a
to. Any
tofu-cream-pie
designer
The people who put these signs
target on him,
w h o
'
s
up obviously feel that the Marist
quite frankly."
continu-
fashion department is advocat-
The people
ing
to
who put these
support
ing the use of animal products.
signs
up obvi-
an indus-
ously feel that
try
that
profits from making ani-
the Marist fashion department
is
advocating the use of animal testers have gone to
College
Kannengeiser
said
students
products in
Activities to
should
be able to voice their
the fashion
'We should be able to voice both
get
their opinions without
getting
prior
w
O
r 1 d
'
sides of the same debate.
I
am
poSters
out permission.
though
it
and
their
"[The
Fashion Department]
seems that
glad these posters
·
are up.'
o p i n i on didn't have to
get
their posters
the depart-
'""Kerri
Kannengeiser
heard?
approved.
We should be able to
ments stance
Senior
Senior psy-
voice
both
.
sides
of the same
depends on
chology
/
debate
.
I am
glad
these posters
whom you ask. Should the pro-
special education student Kerri are up."
THE CIRCLE
-
Let the
voices
of the Marist
community be heard.
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2004
www.maristcircle.com
PAGE4
That's
it
•••
I'm going on a hunger strike
I
1t
just m1:,
or - - -..
does
any<>ne
~·
feel
like
mey.
have
to
take
om
a loan
henc
r
they
want to
go
to
the
Cabaret
for a
late-
night
nae
?
Am
1
the
n
I
one
who feels
like
blowmg
the rape whistle
their
mom makes them
carry
wh n-
ever
they g t to th cht.-ck-out
!me? I'm sorry.
but
foe dollars
tor a
salad
i
unacceptable
\ hat,
are
rhc.> mocking
u
?
I
reah1.c
that
a
Mari
t
College
tudents, we arc
fortunate
to
get
all
of the
food
options
that
we
do,
bccau
e a
lot ot tudent
who auend other 1.:ollcge
ar1:n't
as
lucky.
And
in
all
honest).
I
have
no business
going to
the
Cabaret
·at
au.
I'm
on the
Platinum
Dining Plan,
which
allows
me to enter
the
cafeteria
as
many times a
I want.
I
can
ha\oe
three breakfast , fi-.c
lunches.
rn
o dmners. '"hate\ er.
And that' all fine
and
dandy
Monday through Fmlay Bu oh
man
,
-hen
.
atur<la>
arid
und.1)
come ·iround,
forg
t
11.
The Marist (
ollege cafeteria is
run
on
the
"'cekends
hkc the)
want
us
to
go
home H
c\ L'r
I
live
six
hours
m,
.ly
so
for
me,
that's not an
opt
,on.
Those of us
, ho.
u1y
for the weekends
have
to put up "'tth
the considerably
le s
delectable dining
t:ho1ce
and limited cafeteria hour
.
Op n
11 ;00-1.30
pm.
and
4:30-
6:00 p.m.'.
Is
thataJokc? Well,
Cm not laughing.
I'm pr
·lt)
un: th,
every
in-
gt student
on
mpu::· loc-,n
't
lci.:p m until 11
:00
, .m.
on
Saturdays
nnJ
unda
We
want
breakfa
t.
And
I
d
I
o
like
10 ,
dd.
on
a person 1 note,
and
rm
sure
rm
not
ah:
111.: 111
hi,, I'd really
like the
rainbow
prink
k
10
be out more
often;
So,
until the.Cabaret's
pr
Le·
are
low~red, the dining
hall' hours
on the
weekends are extended,
and
thee
rainbow sprinkles
are
pllt
out more
tr1:quently, I'm
going
on ah
n 1.:r tn e.
rll
.
let
y,,u
J..1
o\\
h \
It
goes,
Student groups deserve more funding, more attention
By
GREGORY PARIS
Circle Contributor
Marist College
claims
it is
committed to excellence in edu-
cation, the pursuit
of
higher
human values, and
the
principle
of service. To continue
meeting
these goals, Marist should focus
on how it
can
improve student
life.
The McCann Center, a relative-
ly new complex, has terrible
hours. It often closes early and
students are even told to finish so
employees may leave early.
Students should not have to
change their workout schedule
because
the
employees
at
McCann are too
lazy
to
close at
the posted
time.
McCann should also be open
all
night on
Fridays and
looks like rqad kill.
College Activities and the SPC
are the most efficient, student-
conscious organizatioJ}s
on
cam-
Saturdays,
instead of closing
at 7 p.rn. Those
in charge of its
operations might
be
surprised at
how
many
stu-
dents
show up.
'If Marist is serious about keeping stu-
dents safe, then why does it allow vans to
to take underage students to venues in
which the college knows there will be
heavy alcohol consumption?'
Speaking of
hours,
the Cabaret's should be
extended to 2 a.m. on Fridays
and Saturdays. Students are left
with few eating options on week-
end nights. Campus Deli ~nd
Palace Diner serve food that
pus. Every year, their members
bring quality performers and
speakers to campus.
Instead of buying for security
another golf cart (allowing offi-
cers to avoid walking) the col-
The president should check his numbers
By
IGOR VOLSKY
Circle Contributor
As the 2004
presidential
cam-
paign moves into its final stages,
President Bush has moved from
framing Massachusetts senator
John Kerry as a wook and indeci-
sive flip-flopper to defining the
major issues. Last week, he
spoke about health care.
On Sept. 9, President
Bush
said
that "in order to make sure health
care is available and affordable,
we've got to do something a\1out
the frivolous
lawsuits
that are
running good doctors out of
practice ... we must protect small
business owners and workers
from the explosion of frivolous
lawsuits that threaten jobs across
America."
But scratch below the surface
of this rousing rhetoric and you
will find that it is not the small
business owners Bush seeks to
protect,
•
but rather the corporate
interests that have funneled mil-
lions of dollars into his re-elec-
tion campaign. In this election
cycle,
President Bush has
received over $4.4 million from
insurance
companies,
and
between
2000 and 2002, more
than
100 companies
have
employed 475 different lobbyists
to push for tort
reform,
convinc-
·
ing Congress to pass a measure
requmng
sanctions
against
lawyers
who file frivolous law-
suits.
Ever since John Kerry selected
fri ala ttorney-turned-N orth
Carolina senator
John Edwards
as his running mate, the Bush
campaign has condemned trial
lawyers
with more vitriol than
with which they have damned
Osama
bin Laden. The former is
ridiculed while the latter has
been forgotten.
The president's charge that trial
lawyers are driving up
healthcare
costs with frivolous
lawsuits
just
doesn't hold up. Data compiled
by the Department of Justice's
Bureau of Justice Statistics
showed that from 1992 to 2001,
the number of civil trials has
actually decreased by 4 7 percent.
In 2001, overall damage awards
shrank from the 1992 high of
$65,000
to
just $37,000.
According to an article in the Los
Angeles Times, "these cases
included automobile accidents,
medical malpractice and
tprod
-
uct-liability claims."
Meanwhile, a study from the
nonpartisan congressional budg-
et office has concluded that
"malpractice costs account for
less than 2 percent of healthcare
spending" and even a sharp drop
in premiums would reduce the
nation's healthcare bill only by
less than half of one percent.
.
But facts have no effect on the
president. Let's just hope they
still compel the American peo-
ple.
Making
!E
1
aces
New ownership! New hours! New prices!
,I
Special rates for Marist students
Sun,
Mon,
Tues
Men's Haircut:~ $10
Facials:
~
$20
Eyebrow thread:
)it(
$6
Women's Haircut:
~
$15
&
up
Facial Waxing: Up to
50%
Discount
Coloring: 20% Off
Across
the
street
from
MARIST
next
to
Campus Deli
845-452-7170
Walk
-i
ns
always
welcome!
Open 7 days
a
week
9:30
am
- 7:30 pm
lege should increase the funding
of College Activities and SPC so
they may be able to provide stu-
dents with options other than
drinking alcohol
on
the week-
ends.
It
is difficult to write about
improving Marist without men-
tioning safety and security.
If
Marist College is. serious about
keeping its students safe, then
why does it allow vans to pull up
in front of Donnelly and take
underage students to venues in
which the college knows there
will be heavy alcohol consump-
tion?
.
Vans transporting students to
bars and frat parties should only
be allowed on areas of the cam-
pus where upperclassmen live.
The college could also keep
unwanted visitors from entering
the campus and
terrorizing
stu-
dents by blocking two of the
three vehicle entrances to the
college
between
11 p.m. and 5
a.m.
on
weekends.
It
is .about
time those CRV's are put to good
use.
This editorial serves to begin a
discussion within the Marist
community. Those who agree
with any of these suggestions
should contact the Student
Goven)inent Association.
If
SGA is the voice of the stu-
dent body, then it should stop
making excuses for why its
members won't pursue policy
changes and start standing up
to
a stagnant administration.
An institution may improve
itself only through constructive
criticism. Happy students will
take pride in their school and
advocate the college. This is why
student
life
should be a funda-
mental issue to the administra-
tion. By making its students a
priority, Marist College will con-
tinue to fulfill the virtues of its
mission statement.
Interested in studying abroad??
U.S.
STUDENT PROGRAM
JONATHAN AKELEY,
THE FULBRIGHT
U.S.
PROGRAM MANAGER FOR
EAST
AsIA AND THE
'
PACIFIC AR.EA, WILL CONDUCT AN INFORMATIONAL
SESSION ON:
FULBRIGHT
GRANTS
Asia Fulbright
U.
S. Student Program
Freeman-Asia Undergraduate Awards
for
Study
in Asia
ALL STUDENTS INTERESTED IN EITHER
UNDERGRADUATE STUDY
IN AsIA OR POST-MARIST
STUDY ABROAD ARE
STRONGLYENCOVRAGED
TOATTEND.
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2004
2~3PM
LOWELL THOMAS #125
.
THE
CIRCLE
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2004
www.maristcircle.com
PAGES
:
Teachers,
.
plea
se raise yo
ur expectations
By
BRIAN GOODRIC
H
·
Circle Contributor
Speaking on behalf of the stu-
dent body, I would like to call
upon all the various teachers
across the Marist College cam-
pus to help us all achieve more
than we ever have before in our
classes this semester. Whether
you'~e been teaching here at
Marist for 20 years or are just
starting your career, please help
us work harder. Don't be afraid
to test our limits-we welcome
an academic chllenge.
Not
only will we gain the important
skills that we will need to enter
the job market when our college
years are over, but we will gain
an immeasurable sense of pride
in our fellow students, our
teachers, and our school as a
whole.
Now I understand that this
appeal may come as a surprise to
both teachers and students alike,
but entertain this request and
place some faith in the leaders of
tomorrow for just a moment.
The student body here at
Marist is filled with bright, ener-
getic students who have great
academic potential.
Although
we come from different parts of
the country and even different
parts of the world, we are all the
same in the sense that we have
the capacity to accomplish great
things when we are prodded to
do so. While a laudable portion
of the Marist student body is
currently striving to do the best
they can (with the help of some
very devoted teachers), popular
opinion across campus surmises
'
that the majority of students take
a far more relaxed approach
·
to
their studies.
Teachers ,can do an immeasur-
able service for the student body
by helping students achieve
more in their
harder.
Tougher classes can
result in changes not only in the
classroom but also across cam-
pus in the non-academic realm.
If students are pushed to work
harder and think more about
their
class-
classes.
Raise
The student body is filled
es-there will
the
level
of
with bright, energetic stu-
no doubt be
expectation, and
less time for
students
will
dents with great academic
the juvenile
accordingly raise
potentia
I
.
tom f o o 1 e r
.
y
the level of their - - - - - - - , . - - - - - - - that seems to
academic effort and scholastic
interaction. Tougher classes will
yield higher results for students
than just the ability to answer
questions correctly on Jeopardy
( although this may be viewed as
an important skill in the eyes of
some). Classes themselves will
become livelier as students who
are asked to aim higher
try
occur on a regular basis here on
campus
.
I am by no means saying that
students should devote every
single remaining hour of the
semester to their studies. Yes,
occasional ''partying" is indeed
an important part of the college
experience
.
This may come as a
surprise, but the student body
•
will come to cherish its "down-
time" even more if further atten-
tion is devoted to classes result-
ing from teachers raising their
expectations.
Weekend talks
about "that good-looking person
in your morning class" will sud-
denly be transformed info dis-
cussions about "the conflicting
interpretations of contemporary
applications of Adam Smith's
The Wealth of Nations"
(well
that may be a stretch-but at
least give it a chance).
In closing, I have an appeal for
the students. Your teachers can
only push you so far. No matter
how high teachers raise theii:
levels of expectations this
~emester, there will still be holes
that even the best the teachers
cannot
fill.
However, we do not
attend college in order to have
our teachers alone lead our aca-
demic pursuits (that's what high
school was for). The burden is
on us-the students-to do bet-
ter. While it may be hard to
admit right now we will thank
ourselves down the road for hav-
ing made a stronger academic
effort while pursuing our under-
graduate degrees. Four years is
a very short time--dQD 't wait
until they've passed by and only
then regret that you did not
make the best effort possible
during your college years.
Unwittingly, what we do now
will indeed affect the course of
our futures.
If
both students and
teachers do their part to increase
the level of academia here at
Matist, the limits of our future
achievements are endless.
The best music al
ways co
mes in a twelve-pack
By
RA
C
HA
EL CRONIN
Circle Contributor
Three years ago, John
Santiago was concentrating on
his trumpet playing, not his
guitar skills,
Mike
Lowe would
have told you that singing in
front of people just wasn't his
thing, and Will Van Carpels
had never even touched a bass
guitar. But with 13 years of
experience on drums, Kevin
Cronin saw these unlikely can-
didates as perfect material for
an awesome rock band. Today,
this close group of friends is
known as the band
Nine
Pints
Later, and they have everyone
at Marist talking.
Nine Pints Later had its first
professional gig last Friday at
Toucan's Bar & Grill, laying
the foundation of a great fan
following for the Battle of the
Bands to be held this Saturday
,
Sept.
25.
Although their reper-
The infamous
'
f'
word
By
C
HR
ISTI
NE
CA
T
A
RINO
time, you'll begin to notice in
_ Circle Contributor
at least one of these newly-lib-
erated teens a recognizable
'
Every year, we bid farewell
sense of naivete and even eeri-
,
to a class of decorated multi-
ly familiar patterns of behav-
'
taskers. We say goodbye to a ior.
If
you look hard enough,
:
class of established, diploma you will find the kid who
1
possessing students and, more resembles you when you were
:
sentimentaliy, to a class of a freshman. It's hard not to
:
beer pong record holders, laugh at the wide-eyed group,
:
drinking buddies
,
and friends.
so happy to finally be free of
I
, Somehow though, the overall curfew and house
'
rules. But
!
personality of Marist has a
it's
even
harder
not
to
'
way of remaining the same. It acknowledge the striking simi-
•
seems as though each graduat-
larities between members of
•
ing class is reincarnated in this group and your younger
'
younger, more optimistic, and self.
,
altogether less liver-damaged
The word 'freshman', other-
:
form every fall. These ama.z-
wise known as the
"f'
word,
.
ing near-clones are usually can be thrown around with a
referred to as freshmen.
widely varying and impressive
Here's a scary concept, but a range of negative connota-
:
fairly exact scientific study: go tions.
(Walk into the girl's
out to any frequented Marist bathroom at Hatters at 2 a.m.
'
bar and observe the freshmen.
and you might understand
After any decent period of what I mean. Listening to the
comments of the belligerent,
you would think 'freshman'
was an acronym for a fatal dis-
ease.) The truth of the matter,
however, is that by the end of
your senior. year you hold
nothing but envy for every sin-
gle awkward orientation tour
member
timidly
walking
through t~e library.
It
is at that
point that the
"f'
word
becomes a nostalgic
,
sentimen-
tal memory
.
When you return
old and wrinkled for alumni
weekend, at the ripe age of 23,
you will still be able to pick
out the younger version
t
of
yourself.
That
'
s because
Marist will never fail to repro-
.
duce our quasi-clones.
So, while the personal mean-
ing of the word "freshman"
will never stop evolving for us,
our perception of the personal
-
ity of Marist College, will ever
remain constant in our minds.
;
Angels follow Tony K
ushner
'
_
from Poughkeepsie
t
o
L.A.
By
M
ELISSA DA
VI
S
Circle Contributor
.
"And the winner is ... 'Angels
.
In America."' This phrase was
heard a total of 11 times at the
.
Fifty-Sixth
Annual
Emmy
'
Awards this year. Students at
Marist College had the honor
of hearing Tony Kushner, the
author of this ground-breaking
screen-play, last Thursday in
the Nelly Goletti Theatre, cour-
.
tesy
of
the
Student
:
Programming Council and the
Marist Honors Program.
Kushner, a Pulitzer Prize
winner, spoke on many issues
·
which ranged from the wars in
·
Iraq and Afghanistan, the pres-
ident, the education syste
_
m,
and even managed to throw in a
dream sequence.
Kushner
wowed the audience with his
up-front views and his remark-
able way with words. The
words "extreme" and "outra-
geous" barely do his narration
justice. He compared our cur-
rent president George W. Bush
to a devolving parasitic organ-
ism then proceeded to com-
ment, "I watched him address
the country with that ever-pres-
ent smirk, the one that takes the
place of intelligence." Kushner
spoke to an eager crowd that
devoured every word.
Kushner also made a point of
encouraging students to take
the power of knowledge into
their own hands to make posi-
tive changes in our world
.-
He
questioned our choice of chan-
nels for receiving information
,
saying
,
"Most of us get our
news from the comedy chan-
nel, and though I love Bill
Maher
,
maybe it is not the best
place." He went on to express
his belief that voting is a fun-
damental aspect of life in a
democratic society
,
and to urge
every student to take advantage
of this right and privilege.
Kushner left the audience
with an optimistic note: "The
arc of the universe is long but it
bends towards justice." Well
sai~, Mr
.
Kushner
.
toire is mainly made up of
upbeat cover-songs penned by
classic rock idols such as Pink
Floyd, Led Zeppelin and the
Red Hot Chili Peppers, the
band really shines through
their slower-paced
'
originals.
Their true musical talent is
most apparent in these tunes,
as is the inevitability of their
promising career in music.
Whether performing their own
material or their parents' vinyl
favorites, their energy and tal-
ent makes each song their own,
bringing any room in which
they play to life.
To witness this
musical
mar-
vel for yourself, join the crowd
on the campus green down the
hill from the James Cannavino
Library for the Battle of the
Bands this Saturday from l
p.m. to 3 p.m., or you can catch
them Friday, Oct. 1, at 11 p.m.
back at Toucan's
.
Be ready
for some serious
rock 'n' roll!
•••
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TI-IE
CIRCLE
' '
I've been swimming in it [the
Hudson River] for years, and
have never had any medical
problems.
, ,
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2004
www.maristcircle.com
- Steve Schwartz
Marist sailing instructor
PAGES
Hudson is
.
source of Marist's water supply
By
KRISTEN ALLDREDGE
Health Editor
Do you know where your water comes from? Many members of the
Marist community are unaware that their water comes from the
Hudson River and is purified by a plant on campus. Common knowl-
edge of the Hudson's polluted waters creates shocked and disturbed
reactions.
KRISTEN ALLDREDGE/
THE CIRCLE
The Hudson shore at the Marist Brothers' retreat center in Esopus.
Contamination from polychlorinated
biphenyls
(PCB's)
was
recognized in
1974,
primarily
at the
fault
of General Electric
Company. They
were dumping PCB
's into the river and ground
between
plants,
and when
the dam was removed the pollutants
washed downstream and collected in basins,
called hot
spots.
The
organization, Essential Information
founded
by
Ralph
Nader,
reports that
PCB's can damage the immune, reproductive,
nervous and
endocrine systems, and
can
impair children's
phys-
ical and
intellectual
development.
Research
by the International
Agency
For Research on
Cancer shows
that
PCB's cause cancer
in animals and are strongly linked to human cancer.
PCB's
won't
It is no surprise that newcomers to the Marist community raise
health concerns upon realizing Marist's water
source.
"I'm very surprised to hear that," freshman
Danielle Morrison
said. "I'm a little nervous, actually. Is it well purified?"
Hold
on
to your Britas. Although Marist's water supply
originates
in the
Hudson
River, it undergoes purification
through
the
Poughkeepsie Water Treatment Facility (PWTF)
located between
campus and the river.
Despite
its
location, many
students and staff
members are unaware of the connection
this
plant has with the river
and the water we drink.
"I never connected the water treatment center
on campus
with
fil-
tering
water from
the Hudson,"
said sophomore Alyssa
Hanley.
PWTF's
mission statement declares, "We consistently,
profes-
sionally and economically produce
a
high quality drinking water
that meets the
needs
of
our
customers." They install additional
chemical treatments to reduce lead from plumbing
fixtures and
chlorine to disinfect disease-causing organisms. A
detailed process
of water
purification
can
be
found at their website,
Pokwater.com
In
addition to the
purification process,
they monitor
PCB
content
of
the water and report to have found no
detectable
levels
in the water
t
KRISTEN ALLDREDGE/
THE
CIRCLE
Train crossing on the Hudson at Mills Mansion, north of Marlst
supply. Other techniqttes have also found only traces
of contaminants in the river sediment. The health
department of Duchess County agrees that the water
does not have a threatening level of PCB contamina-
tion.
Steve Schwartz, sailing instructor, told his class that
the section of the river by Marist is the cleanest part.
"I've been swimming in it for years and have never
had any medical problems," Schwartz said.
Currently,
Poughkeepsie
is recognized as the
national leader in water filtration.
Th.¢
only water
quality issues that arise are when the salt front from
the Atlantic
ocean pushes
up the
Hudson
during peri-
ods of drought. PWTF reports that the last time cus-
tomers were affected by this was in 2002. Their Web
site contains a link to the
Annual Drinking
Water
Quality Report for the city of Poughkeepsie.
naturally
disappear because they are persistent organic pollutants
The cleanest
part
of
the Hudson, along Marlst College. Poughkeepsie Water Treament Facility
So, who wants a glass of tap water? How about a
swim?
that cannot decompose.
in background.
IF YOU'VE GOT WHAT IT TAKES TO BE A LEADER IN
OUR COMPANY, THIS COULD BE YOUR NEW OF
.
FICEI!
• Summer training for
college men
and
women.
• Financial
assistance
o
r
college Is
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• No
training or classes
during the school
year.
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Leading
M
ari-nes is one of the greatest
challenges a person can choose to accept
.
To
stand in front of
the
smartest. toughest,
most
elite forces in the world, rank is
not
enough.
Before you can say, "Follow me," you
must
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develop intellect. human understanding, and
character to the point where you can inspire
others to follow you
.
If you are ready for a
physical, mental, and leadership challenge then
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.
Guaranteed pilot, flight officer and law
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'5
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OSOALB@1mcd.usmc.mil
• You don't learn
leaderstip, you Ii ve it.
• Push yourself to the
limit Then
take
it
even
further.
•This In not R.O. T.C.,
it
is the
primary
source of
all
Marine Officers.
www
.MARINEOFFICER.com
The U
.
S. Marine Corps offers programs for
undergraduates and graduates
that allow
you to get started now on mastering the art of
leadership
and earning a commission as a
Marlne
Officer. They're called
:
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ace
Find out if you have what it takes. Call or email
for
an
appointment.
Seats are still open so contact our
office in Albany for further
information NOW!t!
THE
CIRCLE
Upcoming Event:
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2004
www.marlstclrcle.com
"Rock the Vote" Battle of the Bands
Saturday,Sept.25
1 -
3
p ..
m.
Champagnat Green
PAGE7
'Typical college band' enjoys uncommon success
Stephen Kellogg is welcomed back to Marist, this time as headlining act
By
ALEXANDRIA BRIM
Staff Writer
Echoing throughout the
Student Center on Friday, Sept.
17 were the sounds of guitars
and drums mixed with enthusias-
tic laughter as curious freshmen
and
excited
upperclassmen
inside the Nelly Goletti Theater
were treated to a
remarkable
concert by returning act Stephen
Kellogg and the Sixers.
Stephen Kellogg and band-
mates Brian Factor, Keith
Karlson and Chris Soucy were
happy to return to Marist as the
main act, a significant jump from
when they were here as an open-
ing act a few years ago. "The
main event ... wow ... I'm excit-
ed," Kellogg .said about the con-
cert.
Relaxing in the Student
Center's green room before the
show, the Sixers look like the
average
.
college band, sitting
around strumming guitars and
playing around with each other
as the musicians on campus tend
to do. Except, oh yeah, they have
a record contract.
"We actually just finished
recording an album down in
New York City," Kellogg
said.
going on to expltrin. that he
is
enjoying all aspects of
life
in
midtown Manhattan, specifically
mentioning the food. "We've
been eating at some good restau-
rants---:-and when I say restau-
rants, I mean delis," Kellogg
said, smiling. He and the other
Sixers recounted some other
New York experiences, includ-
ing playing at the College of
Staten Island. "I like it here [at
Marist] better," he said.
Preceded by Marist guitar duo
F~ankie and Davy and country
singer Kristin Diablo, Stephen
Kellogg and the Sixers took the
stage, filling the room with the
playful atmosphere that had per-
meated from the green room ear-
lier. Playing
·
music off their lat-
est CD,
Bulletproof Heart, the
band members missed no oppor-
tunity to make fun of each other.
To the audience's pleasure, the
band playfully performed a med-
ley of popular music, including
Nelly's
"Hot
in Herre" and
Kelis'
"Milkshake."
During
"Milkshake,"
Stephen addressed
the audience,
saying
how he
always
wondered what the
"milkshake"
was.
An enthusias-
tic audience member soon sup-
plied the answer. "It's this!" she
cried, shimmying. Satisfied-
and
amused-Kellogg
continued
singing.
The
concert concluded
with
a
group rendition of Billy Joel's
"Piano
Man" as Kellogg,
along
with all of the evening's per-
formers,
returned
to the stage,
providing a remarkable ending to
an
exceptional
concert.
Returning act Stephen Kellogg and the Slxers entertained Marlst students on Friday, Sept. 17. The crowd present
in
the Nelly Golletl Theater was
enthusiastic and seemed to enjoy the band's energetic performance. Stephen Kellogg and the Slxers played music off of their latest CD,
Bulletproof
Heart, which the band just finished recording In New York City.
A rock opera that thrives in its turbulent political context
Green Days latest musical endeavor stimulates both sides of the brain
By
ROB CELLffil
Staff Writer
"I'm
not a part of a
redneck
agenda," Billie Joe Armstrong
sang with
conviction
while his
band Green Day performed on
The Late Show with David
Letterman two Mondays ago.
Not
far
from the band
stood
United States senator and presi-
dential hopeful John Kerry, who
had been a guest on the
show
·
earlier that evening. When the
band
finished
its
rousing
"American
Idiot"
-
the title track
and first single
from
their first
studio release in four years
-
Letterman
shook
their hands and
said, "Good
luck in
November,"
which brought a
smile
to
Armstrong's
face.
Clearly, David Letterman
knows what's
at
stake this
fall,
and by the lyrics on
"American
Idiot," it
is
obvious that
so
does
Green Day.
They
have
created
their best and most
socially
and
politically conscious album to
date. What
is even more
impres-
sive is that they've done it in the
form of a punk-rock opera.
That's
right,
a
punk-rock opera.
This is not just an album that
tells a
story
like
The
Who's
"Tommy" or Andrew
Lloyd
Weber and
Tim
Rice's
"Jesus
Christ Superstar." It is
an
album
that
expresses disgust with
the
current state of America
through
the
stories
of
three
fictional char-
acters:
Jesus
of Suburbia, St.
Jimmy,
and
Whatsemame
.
These
characters represent the
suburban youth of America (who
comprise the majority of Green
Day's audience), who
feel
disen-
franchised by the big machine
that American politics has
become.
Evidently,
this album is not
.
a
collection of songs about teen
angst. The first song,
"American
Idiot," sets the stage lyrically,
proclaiming Green Day's current
feelings
about
America o'i the
listener, for the
"redneck agen-
da" line
is
not the only one that
takes a
shot
at the Bush
Administration. This
is
't
he
only
song that does not
directly con-
tribute to
the stories being told
but instead serves
as an opening
statement,
allowing
lyricist
Armstrong
to explore
the
charac-
ters and the different
ways they
react to their
surroundings,
AMAZON.COM
Green Day's American Idiot, their latest full length studio album, expresses
·
the band's disgust with the cur
-
rent state
of
America. Targeted
toward
the suburban youth of America, this album (album art shown above)
follows the stories
of
three fictional characters, Jesus
of
Suburbia,
St. Jimmy and Whatsemame.
which
have been affected by
war,
television,
drugs
and
parents.
The sharp
sarcasm
and
can-
dor
expressed
in
genre-bending as it
·
becomes the-
atrical, sounding at times like the
"We will not let him go" section
of Queen's clas-
sic
"Bohemian
These characters repre-
sent the suburban youth
of America that feel dis-
the
songs'
lyrics
is
impressive.
The
lyrics
in
"Holiday" are
a
great example
of
this:
"Pulverize
the Eiffel
Towers
enfranchised by the big
machine that American
Rhapsody
."
Later, it transi-
tions to '50s-
sounding rock 'n'
roll,
complete
with a saxophone
line
and backup
"oohs"
and
1
Who
criticize
politics has become.
your government
/
Bang Bang
goes
the broken
glass
and
/
Kill
all of
those
that don.'t agree."
This is
Green Day's
version of
"God
Save the Queen." The Sex
•
Pistols would be
v~ry
proud.
The lyrics
aren't
even half
of
what makes this
album
so spe-
cial. The music behind them is
some of the
best that
Armstrong,
bassist Mike Dirnt, and
drum.mer
Tre Cool have
ever written.
It
is
ambitious
and pushes
the genre
of pop-punk to another
level.
Yes, there are times
when
Green
Day falls
back on
its traditional
three-chord, hook-laden formula
that has worked for
over
l
0
years, but the moments when
they stray from
that make
this
album extraordinary.
Two songs
-
"Jesus of
Suburbia"
and
"Homecom
ing"
-
are over
nine minutes long and
divided
into
five
parts.
Transitions between sections are
so smooth and expertly executed
that
you almost forget that you
are
listening
to Green Day.
"Homecoming"
is especially
"ahs." That sec-
tion
is
aptly titled
·
"Rock and
Roll
Girlfriend."
The
nine-minute epics are
not
the only
highlights
,
however.
On
"Boulevard of Broken Dreams"
and "Are We Waiting?" the band
eschews its pop-punk roots com-
pletely and opts for a more alter-
native sound. Pretty guitar lines
blend
wonderfully and build into
soaring choruses. L~ter on, the
band
experiments
.
with every-
thing from synthesizers to voice
effects to tribal percussion.
Green Day retains its hallmark
sound, and "American Idiot" has
incredible
balance from start to
finish.
Armstrong's ear for a
catchy tune never fails, which is
why many of the songs on the
record
•
sound like they could
receive heavy radio play.
The only way to fully enjoy
Green Day's
new
album is from
beginning to end.
Otherwise,
you will miss out on not only the
strong political message, but on
some great music as well.
marlstclrcle.com
THE CIRCLE •
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2004 •
PAGE
8
TnF PIZZA AND SUB SHOP
Gates' favorite sports moments
600
Violet Avenue
Hyde Park, N.Y.
12538
golf
Dest
Games: Bills
\ .
Oilers
in
the
1992
FC
wild
card
game
and
Connec11cut
vs,
Duke
in
1999
'N"
final.
In
what
t
th
great 'sl
comeback
m
NFL
history, the Bills came back
from
3-
points in the
third quar-
i1,;r
to
beat
the Oilers
41-1
in
overtime.
11,
Bills
were
also
without
start in
quarterback
Jim
Kell,
and
led
by
b1.1 'k-up
Frank Reich.
for my
second
L
1
1cc.
if
you
are from
< rnic
ticut
and follow
l onn
basketball
copmu
ly,
tlu gam
ha
to
be
near
th top of
your
lt
1
B ·
t
M ,
1 •
Rudy;
although
Hoosiers
may
be
ju
t
as
rnsp1rn-
tional, the musical score and
..
Rudy."
chant give Rudy the
slight
edge,. Winning state
titles
i
m e, and
I understand
that
ba kdball
and Indiana coin-
cide.
btit
1t
n all~ does
not com-
pare
\\Ith being
camed
off
the
field
for
otr
Dame.
Best
Team: 1992
'
Dr rn
Team.
Put
together the be
t
athletes in their
sport
today on a
From Page One
team and fights and attempts
o
individual
•I
I)
win
be
ram-
pant
In
1992,
we
v.
lln ·
d
the
some of
the greatest basketball
pl.
y\;r
fall
time come
togcth•
er and dominate in their sport.
In all of
sport . then!
will never
be a better group
of
individual-
ly great athletes
put
together on
a team
for
an event.
Best
Play:
Cal beats Stanford
~•the
play.· If
a
pla
i
kno\\ n
to
ports
fans as
"the play."
it
has
to b the
best, With
cconds
to
play
and
do\\ n n ,
al
ran
back
the
kickoff for
the touch-
down
and the win. The reason
'1-'ih}
this game
and
pla) are
so
memorable: the
tanford
band
ran
out
onto
the
field
and
pot
n-
tiall>
cost Stanford from
rn k-
ling the Cal
pla1 r.
Moment:
1980
l A
vs. USSR
"Miracle
on
lee."
The game
and team could be at the
top o
there r
p
cti,
list
but since I
was
not
ali, e
I wilt
never
know
the
feelings
that
th,
game
brought
t
>
a
sp
rt!
r
n
in
the
United
tate
At
a
time
when
the USSR and
the
United
tat
were
in
middle
o
the cold
war.
the
game unlike most athletic
~, cnts
was more than just
that.
The game, possibly the
b1ggc
t
ups~t in all of sports
Ii
1.
tor),
did
something that
port 1ng
events
n
I
I)
do, bnng
an
entire
nation
together.
Without ESPN, sports
fan!j
includjng
my elf
may
have
never heard
or
seen
the.
c
moments
in
sports.
In
their
h\elll)-fi,e yea
ESPN ha
•a\e m1l110n of. ports
lovers a
pla
'C lo !L)IIO\\
their
favorite
team ,
and
athletes.
For
1110
l
sp9rts fan, ESPN
is
a
maJor
part
of their
liti .
In
tn)
amily
ESPN lrn
d
ly
.11Tc
t
d
our
l
1
vc
In
200 I ,
durmg
ESPN's
pan ion
in
Bristol
m)
grand-
p·
rent's
hou
I;!
was
th·
last
hou
e
on Birch
Street
thnt
ESPN
needed to purchase.
For
that purchase and !or all the
moments
in
ports that
ESPN
has
brought
me,
h \\
could
I not
recognize
th rn
ot
their
annn ersar,..,
ARIST
c145)
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Onions,
Green Peppers,
Olives,
llusbrooma,
when placing order>
Subs· Regs"
$r
75
Imported.Anahovlea,Bauaage,.llutball,
·
u •
~
Bam, Bacon, Brooooll,
81naab,
Pineapple
Salads
Dreeslngs:
Creamy Italian, RuHlan, B'renoh, Ranob, Caesar,
Blue
Cheese,
011
~
Vinegar, Honey
Mustard
Balsamic
Vinegar •$.90,
CrumblJ' Blue Cheese
••.79
SM
LG
Tossed
2.25 3.00
Antipasto
4.50
6.60
Tuna
3.95 4.96
Italian Chef
3.95 4.95
Crispy Chicken
3.50 4.50
Grilled
Chicken
3.95 4.95
Grilled Chicken Ceasar 3.95 4.95
Caesar
2.95 3.96
American Chef
3.95 4.95
Greek
4.95 6.95
Deserts
Cheese Cake
Cart"o~ Cake
Cannoli
Fried
Dough
2.25
2.25
1.96
2.50
Wraps
&
Platters
Se~er with
l"renoh Ft"les
"'
Sp11,1tstera
Chicl\:en
BLT
4.95
Chicken.
&
Sundried Tomato4.96
C'1,ioke:n Parm
4 96
Chicken Ranch
4.96
Chicken Caesar
i.86
Turkey
4,95
Lg
12"
$4,50
Appee\i'zTer~.75eaoh
Frenoh. Fries
2.00
Cheese Fries
2.50
Pizza Fries
2.50
Onion Rings
2.60
Mozz. Sticks (6)
4.00
Buffalo Wings
(
12)
4.50
(Hot,
Mild, BBQ
(24)
8.60
Hon
BBQ)
(60)
16.99
Chicken
Fingers
(6)
4.50
C:BBQ
or Hon
Mus~ard)
cJalapeno Poppetts (6)
Garlic Bread
Garllo Bread
w/
Cheese
Fish Fillets w/ Frenoh Fries
0kn. Fing.
w/
Frenoh Fries
Chiok&n
Quesadilla
Cheese
Quesad1lla
Steak Quesadilla
Shrimp Basket
(Cocktail Sauce)
Clam St.rips
w/
French Fries
(Tal'ter Sauce)
Spudsters
Potato Skin
(Bacon
&:
Sour Cr&am)
Potato Skin
(brooooll
&:
Sour
Cream
•4.60
l.60
2.00
6.60
6.60
6.95
4.96
5.95
5.60
6.60
3.60
4.95
4.96
Side Meatball or Sausage
2.00
SGA hosts candidate speech night
Turkey
BLT
4.98
Tuna
4.95
BBQ
Beef
4.95
Cheeseburger
Deluxe
5.95
Brocolli Popperm (6)
4.00
.Fried Mushrooms
4.00
Zuoohini
Sticks
4.00
senator,
while
semors
Mehren Hopfenspirger and
Erik
Vincelette
declared their
campaigns for secretary and
treasurer, and
John
Mullody
for the position of
senior vice
president.
"Everyone
present
the
same
goals and ideas,"
said fresh-
man Shannon
Kozibroda.
"It
seemed like
no
one
brought
anything different or
exciting
to the table."
M A R I S T
Grllled Chicken Deluxe
5.96
Garlic Knowt w/ Sauoe
(12)
2.50
Bread Stick
w/
Cheese
4.00
Cheese Steaks Hoagies
&!
Hot Oven Grinders
Mush.,
Pepperoni, Baoon,
Grn. Peppers,
Onions,
Xtra Cheeae, Hot Peppers,
Picltels +$.50 Xtra
Meat •• 1.50
Cheese Steak
Double Cheese Steak
REG
LG
4.50 5.00
5.50 8.50
Chicken Cheese Steak
4.50 5.00
Italian
(ham falaml capola. prov.)
4.50 5.00
Amer.
(Ham-R.beeMurk..•amer)
4.50 5.50
Ham & Cheese
4.00 4.50
Tuna
4.00 4.50
Cappicola
&
Provolone
4.00 4.50
Genoa Salami
&
Cheese
4.00 4.50
Fish
Fillet
4 00 4. SO
BBQ Rib
4.00 4.50
lt
Beet
&
Cheese
Turkey Breast
&;
Cheese
Meatball or Saus. Parm
Veal Parm
Chicken Parm
Eggplant
Pepperoni & Cheese
Gr.illed Chicken Sub
Pepper
&!
Egg
Sausage
&
Pepper
Parm
Vegetarian
(ho
or
cold)
Extra Cheese
REG
LG
4.50 5.50
4.50 5.50
Elections
will
take place
online
starting
Mon., Sept.
27 at
11
a.m.
and
will
close
at
7
p.m.
the
following
Wednesday.
Stud en t•Gove
rnme n
teAssoci
ati on
Sausage & Pepper
4.00 4.50
Chicken California
4.60 5.50
Hot Pepper or Pickle
4.00 4.50
5.00 5,50
4.50 5.50
4.00 4.50
4.00 '1.50
4.95 5.95
4.00 4.50
4.50 5.00
4.00 4.60
.50
.60
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.60
C.hannt-\
2-'f
Times
12:00 AM
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AM
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.
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PM
Sunda
Marist vs. Iona
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Dinners, Calzones, Strombolis,
&
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Sep 26- Oct 2, 2004
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www.marlstclrcle.i;:om
THE CIRCLE •
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2004 •
PAGE 9
Volleyball swept in opener by CCSU, Delaware
By
ANDY ALONGI
Staff Writer
The women's volleyball team
lost two heart-breaking games
against Central Connecticut State
University and the University of
Delaware on Friday, Sept. 17.
The tournament kicked off for
Marist as they took on the Blue
Devils, falling in three games,
30-23, 30-28, and 30-25.
Junior Chantelle Bowden led
the Blue Devils of CCSU with 14
kills and four assists.
Coach Sarah Watters said the
team came out flat and not ready
to play.
"Central Connecticut is a tough
team that is older and more expe-
rienced," she said. "We came out
flat and not ready to play. We
gave up too many points."
Seniors Jennifer Cote and
Shannon Verity added 12 kills
each.
Sophomore middle blocker
Sally Hanson led the team with
12 kills and two digs. Junior set-
ter M\lghan Cochrane and frosh
setter Lauren Nikides added 24
and 11
assists respectively,
acc<?unting for 3 5 of the Red
Foxes' 38 assists. Junior libero
Katie Lux led 'tl_ie defensive
effort with 10 digs.
Looking to bounce back from a
tough loss in their first match of
the day, Marist battled the
Delaware Blue Hens on Friday
,
evening.
However, the Blue Hens would
emerge victorious in three
games, 30-26, 30-20, and 30-22.
Senior Valerie Murphy stimu-
lated the Blue Hen offense with
15 kills while her stand-out
teammate, sophomore Claire
McCormack, contributed 10
kills.
In the losing effort, Marist
found bright spots in senior Amy
Gillespie, who had 12 kills and
two digs. Sophomore Stephanie
Miksch added eight kills.
Defensively, Lux scooped up
11 digs, Nikides and sophomore
Jamie Kenworthy added nine
digs each.
Gillespie and ·Hanson finished
both events totaling 19 kills
each, and Cochrane had
5
3
assists.
Defensively,
Jamie
Kenworthy had 16 digs and
Katie Lux led Marist with 21
digs.
Marist will play the University
of Hartford at noon and West
Virginia University at 6 p.m. on
Friday, Sept. 24 and will play
Columbia University at noon on
Saturday Sept. 25
as
the Red
Foxes
host
the
Marist
Invitational
in the McCann
Center.
Sophomore Jamie
Kenworthy viciously
hits
the ball, racking up one of her four kills against
the
Central
Connecticut State University Blue Devils.
Coach Sarah Watters said the
"We feel good about the win. This is a team that will
team is optimistic about the tour-. upcoming tournament," she said.
improve with match experience."
nament.
""These are games we hope to
'
'
Volleyball spikes Brown, Holy Cross in Marist Invitational
By
BRIAN HODGE
Staff
Writer
After dropping the first two
games of the weekend to Central
Connecticut State and Delaware
on Friday, head women's coach
Sarah Watters was looking for a
better all-around effort on
Saturday.
That's what she got - and more.
The Red Foxes rebounded to
sweep their matches on Saturday,
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please email
writethecircle@hotmail.com
Students, faculty and
campus groups receive a
10% discount!
finishing the weekend 2-2 and
taking a third place finish in the
tournament.
The day
began
by beating a
tough Brown University squad
3-1.
Watters said the match was a
good win.
"Probably the best we've
played all year," she said.
Senior Amy Gillespie (Lebo,
KS) led Marist with a game-high
14 kills. Also contributing were
Jamie Kenworthy (11 kills, IO
digs), Sally Hanson (11 kills, 8
digs) and Katie Lux (14 digs).
"We finally came together and
started to play like a team. They
don't play like
a
young team,"
coach Watters said. "They're
fun
to coach."
Marist was not done, however.
The Red Foxes then wept on to
beat Holy Cross in five games.
The Crusaders won the first
·
game of the match, 30-28, and
then Marist won games two and
three, both 30-26. Holy Cross
rallied back in the fourth, win-
ning it 30-27 and Marist took
home fame five 15-12. The team
notched 123 team digs defen-
sively.
Kenworthy again performed
well for Marist, finishing the
game with 23 kills and 25 digs,
while Hanson added a career-
high eight aces.
The star of the second game,
however, was Meghan Cochrane
(Placentia,
CA).
The junior setter
broke the career assists record
during the match and now is in
sole possession of the record
with 2,669. Cochrane began with
season 340 assists shy of Ellie
Schuerger's record of 2,620 and
bested the mark just minutes into
the first game against Holy
Cross. Cochrane finished with 56
assists on the day.
"We did some good things,"
said Coach Watters. "We're a lit-
tle more experienced versus
toug~ competition and it gave us
a better understanding of the per-
sonnel and the kind of offense
we want to
run."
The Red Foxes (7-4) hope for
another strong showing at home
this weekend, as they play host
to Hartford, West Virginia and
Columbia.
Women's soccer edged by Black Bears, drops hotne opener
ERIC KIMMEVTHE CIRCLE
Senior forward Courtney Moore battles Maine senior Emily Stevens fo5 offensive possession of the ball. Moore
has two goals and one
assist,
tied
for tenth
In
the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference
in
points scored.
By
ANTHONY OLIVERIO
Staff Writer
The Marist College women's
soccer team lost a close match at
home against the Maine Black
Bears, 2-1, Sunday afternoon.
The Red Foxes controlled play
in the first half, out-shooting the
Black Bears 5-3, and locked in
with some defensive pressure,
but could not hold off Maine's
second-half charge
.
The strong defensive effort in
the first half by the Red FQxes
could not keep Maine from scor-
ing as Marie-Andree Canuel net-
ted a
·
goal with
15:00
remaining
in the half.
The scoring resumed five min-
utes into the second half as
Marist
sophomore
Deidre
Murray
scored and was assisted
by Kristina Anderson and
Kristen Leonhard
.
Murray's goal
knotted the game at 1-1.
The final goal came at 62:36 in
the second half as Maine's Erin
Corey scored
on
a breakaway
sealing the victory for the Black
Bears. Maine righted the ship
offensively in the second half,
out-shooting the· Red Foxes
oy
a
7-2 margin.
Marist goalkeeper Danielle
Cibelli had five saves for the Red
Foxes who drop to 1-7 on the
-
season. Maine improves its
record to 5-2-1.
The Red Foxes hits the field
again Friday, Sept. 24 against
Delaware State at home.
Upcoming
Schedule
Friday,
Sept 24,
vs.
Delaware
St.
at home at
7
p.m.
Friday, Oct.
l,
vs.
Loyola
at home at
7
p~m.
Women's cross country gallops to first place finish at the Rider Invitational
By
GABE PERNA
Staff Writer
The Marist women's cross
country team dominated the
compet1t10n
at
the
Bronc
Invitational this p&St Saturday,
scoring 16 points on the day with
·
graduate
student
Diane
Matthews leading the way with a
first place finish.
Matthews, who was running in
her first cross country race as a
Red Fox, finished the 5000/m
course in 18:53.
Coach Phil Kelly said he
expected a great performance
from Matthews
.
"She was the best performer in
practice so this performance on
Saturday wasn't a big surprise to
me," he said.
However
,
Marist was far from
finished on the day once
Matthews crossed the finish line
as the five of the next nine
run-
ners to place were Red Foxes.
Finishing in second and third
place behind Matthews were
Marist frosh Caitlin Garrity
(19:03) and Sarah Domermuth
(19:29)
.
Junior
-
Alli Kline round-
ed out a top four Red Fox sweep,
as she ran a race of 19:30.
'We really ran outstand-
ingly considering the
weather conditions.'
-
Coach Phil
Kelly
"Both did very well, both are
very good runners out of high
school, and along with Heidi
Richards they have been consis-
tently solid performers so far,"
Kelly said.
The Red Foxes saw strong per-
formances from frosh Richards
(19:57)
and junior Denise
Tumulty (20:25), who finished
sixth and tenth respectively.
"We really ran outstandingly
considering the weather condi-
tions," said Tumulty. "We domi-
nated the whole field, and it
helped
the freshmen gain confi-
dence, and gave us momentum
for the rest of the season."
The team will compete in the
Paul Short Invitational hosted by
Lehigh University on Saturday,
Sept 25. The meet will feature to
upwards of 39 teams, including
several top tiered teams and will
be a much tougher contest for the
Red Foxes.
"If
we finish in the top half of
the field, say thirteenth or four-
teenth place, that'll
.
be a good fin-
ish," said Kelly.
From
green
rookies
to
seasoned
champions:
ESPN is
as notable as the athletes and
events
it
has
covered
1v
father
till
remember
When
thi.: land
across !he street
wast
pty.
there
were
no build,.
mgs
or
enor-
mous
atcllite
dishes.
Even
when
11,
first
sign
was
pl.n:
din
the
ground,
Etttertainment
and
Spon
Programming
Ni,;t\\
or .
my
family
thought
little
of
it
So much has changed for ESPN
·m .. ·e
1979
including e
p.tn!>.1 11
at
their
main
c,unpu
in
nri.
tol
.
Conn,
More
1mpor1anrl.
ESPN
has
ri:\ ulutiomzed
the
way
rn
which
we.
re ci\e
sports.
an
athlete
and
sports.
f:
t
I
hav1:
regarded. ESPN as
my
church
for
the
past 14 yea .
How
could J
i,ot
mention
ESPN's 25th
annhersat"). for
all
that
ESPN
has
given
to us sports
fans?
In
celebration of their
annin:r
·ar)
ESPN
and an
i.:xp
11
panel
looked
back at the
past
2 -
years
in sports.
The
panel
elect d
tht best
and
\\ orst in
the world of . port.
. ince
1979
We all Ila
c
our
own fa\ont ·
p .
moments
over
th
years.
if you
want the
expert panel' go to espn.com,
but here are
m111c.
Biggest
Blunder:
Leon Lett,
in
su , rl
O\
XXVII.
After
picking
up
a
fumble
and
taking
11
do\\
n
i
·I .
Lett
was a
yard
. rr\
from
oring
a
Dallas
touchdown.
nlortuna
dy,
for
Dallas,
Don Bcbht, ran
in
and
knocked. the ball away frem th;.;
dancing
Lett
That
was the
nl)
highlight
tnr
the
8111 •
the
Co\ ho).
wouta
go
onto \\
in
the
game
52-1
1 .
Outrageous Character:
Mike
T.
on.
He
has
gi en the
sports world
some
,
1
f
the
most
.entertaining
sound
bites ever,
mcludmg
my
favorite when
lte
told
Lennox
Le,,.
1.
that
he want~
ed
to
eat his children.
Not ,
I\
hasT. n said
some
of the
most
nutm , iu
things;
he
has
doni.:
th
·m, qu.md1.:rllle'
hundreds
>of
million
of
dollars, biting
off a
part
Evande:r
H;olyfield's
•ar
an
l,
ttoomg
his
face
Best Athlete:
Michael
J
rdan
Although
Gr lLky
and
nn.
10ng
are
great, there rcal-
lj
1s
no
contest in
this att:go~--
Tig
r Woods
is
not
even
a po
:si-
h ht~
for
a
few
reasons.
For one
his
,
play
ovet the
past
fo,
y ~
has
declined
and
t \ ).
h ·
pl. ) .
SEE GATES, PAGE 8
TrlE
CIRCLE
Upcoming Events:
Football: Saturday, Sept.
25 -
against Iona, home at 7 p.m .
.
Women's Soccer: Fridc:tY, Sept.
24 -
against Delaware State, home at 7 p.m.
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2004
www.maristcircle.com
PAGE 10
Great Danes hunt down Red Foxes
By
MARK PERUGINI
Assistant Sports Editor
After notching an impressive
4-
·
2
win
against the Fordham Rams
on Sept.
15,
the Red Foxes hoped
to attain their second win of the
season against the University of
Albany.
Unfortunately, Great Danes'
sophomore Yan Gbolo would
prevent that from happening.
The Great Danes' speedy Gbolo
knocked in both goals as Albany
edged Marist 2-1 on a windy
Sept.
19
afternoon.
With 17:20 left in the second
half and the score notched at
1-1,
Gbolo slipped by senior goal-
keeper Mike Valenti, who tried to
clear the ball away from the
pesky Great Dane forward.
Gbolo maneuvered past one
Marist defender and tipped in the
game-winning goal
.
into the mid-
dle of the net, giving the Great
Danes a 2-1 lead.
Red Foxes coach Bobby
Herodes said the team is very tal-
ented despite its disappointing
record.
"Our kids played great," he
said. "We are an outstanding
team with a 1-3 record. Things
just have not gone our way. [The
record] is very disturbing and
brings a level beyond frustra-
tion."
,
,
lu
The Red Foxes' intelligent ball-
movement and their continuous
offensive pressure on the Great
Danes' defenders kept the game
close throughout the first half.
However, Albany was the first
team to create some offensive
noise.
and tapped in his third goal of the
blocked all five shots attempted sive unit from being flat and it games. Detelj and sophomore
season.
by the Red Foxes in the second will create
a
well-balanced Anthony Graci both lead the
The Great Danes' defenders half.
offensive and defensive team."
team with three goals on the sea-
The Red Foxes' defenders
attempted to clear the ball out of
their zone, but the ball was mis-
guided to an open Yan Gbolo.
Gbolo streaked past the Marist
defenders and pounded the ball
into the back of the net on a
break-away goal, giving the
Great Danes a 1-0 lead.
Herodes said the team must
limit opponent's scoring opportu-
nities.
"Finishing has been a problem,
no doubt," he said. "Our main
problem is allowing one or more
goals per game. We cannot be a
successful Division I program
with that type of dilemma."
ERIC KIMMEl/THE
CIRCLE
Red Fox sophomore Keith
Detelj temporarily ended the
Great banes' celebration when
he juked past Albany's middle
defender and spanked the ball
past the sprawling Great Dane
goalkeeper into the lower right
comer of the net, tying the game
at 1-1. The first half ended 1-1.
Junior
defensive specialist Justin Byrnes aggressively guards Great Danes' forward Jonathan Stroud In the
Red Foxes 2-1 loss
against Albany. The loss dropped Marlst
to
1-3
overall.
The second half remained a
defensive battle until Gbolo hur-
ried past the Red Foxes' defense
'
inhibited all of the Red Foxes'
scoring opportunities throughout
the second half. Great Danes'
goalkeeper
Bouna Coundol
I
"The best way from losing the
lead or the game is to stagger the
defenders," Herodes said. "That
strategy will prevent our defen-
204
HOOKER AVENUE POUGHKEEPSIE,
N.Y.
(845) 471 - 7766
Hours
",rues., Wed.
9am - Sp
f
Operation;
?Uaf~-inJ
ecia
i
e in
Thurs.
&
Fri
.
9am -
8prn
ormaf even
Detelj led the Red Foxes with
five shots on goal and scored his
third go11l of the season, scoring
his second goal in consecutive
Student
Discount
College I.D .
•
Wl
son.
Marist junior Ben Castor and
senior Matt Flaherty had three
shots on goal each, while juniors
Bruno Machado and Peter Rea
each had two shots on goal.
Great Danes' Gbolo and frosh
Eric Zekiroski each contributed a
team-high four shots on goal.
Valenti had three saves on the
year, extending his season total
to nine. Most impressively,
Coundol has allowed orily two
goals on the season and has
achieved four shutouts on the
season.
The Red Foxes outshot their
adversaries 20-13 and attained
more corner kicks 5-4
.
The Red Foxes (1-3) will storm
the field Wednesday, Sept. 29,
when they oppose Army at home
at
7
p.m.
Herodes said the Red Foxes
will not underestimate the talent
and execution of the Army Black
Knights
.
"Army is a very dangerous and
young team," he said. "They are
a well-organized and well-bal-
anced team. Their size and phys-
icality will make this a challeng-
ing contest."
FOUNDED IN 1965
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2004
SGA class Candidates present political platforms
By
CHRISTINE ROCHELLE
Circle Contributor
Stephanie Markey both insisted Palmer, Omar Diaz, Colleen
that past leadership roles, their Sprague and Joe Ryan are com-
reliability and their organization-
peting to be elected class presi-
On Tuesday, Sept. 21, Student al skills clearly reflected their dent. Class unity was a common
Government Association (SGA) potential to succeed.
theme, as the candidates spoke
hosted a speech night in the
"I'm very neurotic with my about getting paper towels or
Nelly Goletti Theater, allowing organization," Sullivan joked. "I hand driers in the dorm bath-
the candidates running for class put post-it notes everywhere."
rooms.
office to introduce themselves
- - - - - - - - - - - - -
"I
will make sure hand driers
and their campaign for positions.
'I
am running because
I
are
installed in every dorm bath-
Student body president Linda
think that
I
can make a dlf-
room," Volsky said.
Crane started the night by
ference.'
He also promised to extend the
explaining that each candidate
_
Sean Palmer
cafeteria's grill hours.
would have a chance to give a
Candidate for freshman
All candidates mentioned that
short speech followed by a
Q-
class president
they could not make any promis-
and-A session with current SGA
es to their fellow classmates but
members and students.
insisted that their qualifications
"Regardless of the outcome of
Campaigning for the role of for the position should not go
the election next week,
I
encour-
freshman vice president, Katie unnoticed.
• age all of you to get involved and DeSena, Nicole Brooks-Donolli
"I am running because
I
think
get your voice heard," said Crane and Dan Scott gave similar that
I
can make a difference,"
, a junior, said as she addressed speeches that harped on their Palmer said.
the candidates.
desire of class unity.
Other students who spoke
The freshmen candidates spoke
"I
feel that
our
class can be one included
freshman
April
first, starting with those who of the best Marist has ever seen," Hewston and sophomore Brett
were running for the position of said
Brooks-Donolli.
Giarrusso for resident ,senator,
secretary. Sara Sullivan and
Freshmen Igor Volsky, Sean sophomore MaryEllen Conway
Presldentlel candidates
from left
to
right
Oma
Diaz,
Igor
Volsky,
Colleen Spregue. Joseph
Ryan, an
Palmer.
for student body secretary and
sophomore Amanda Nethaway
for student body treasurer.
Senior Garret Bergen spoke for
the position of commuter
SEE SGA, PAGE 8
Community voices concern over off-campus partying
By
ALEX PANAGIOTOPOULOS
Circle Contributor
Ear-splitting noise, garbage Lit-
tering the hallways, inebriated
neighbors urinating everywhere,
and the putrid stench of stale
beer: all reasons some students
choose to move to a different
dorm or off-campus.
Off-campus Marist students in
Poughkeepsie have their new
neighbors wishing there was
some other locale to which
they
could move to as well. In a city
hall meeting Sept.
13,
local offi-
cials revealed that they have
been inundated with complaints
from residents about student par-
ties on their streets. A task force
was proposed to
try
and "!lip this
in the bud/' city hall Ghairman
Frank
Mora
told
the
Poughkeepsie Journal. Increased
pressure is being put on land-
lords to have stricter rules and to
register
their houS"es with the
police as having college students.
The result? Last weekend, College is going to be more
complaints were down, a party hands-on in dealing with its off-
on Delafield
- - - - - - - - - - - - -
campus stu-
Street
was
'Rrst
weekend, boom, these
dents.
squashed, and
parties are popping up all over,
"In years
noise
viola-
past,
they
tioti
tickets
and the complaints are coming
weren't real-
were issued.
up a
lot
faster than usual.'
ly involved,"
Council-
Lawrence
man
John
-John C.
Tkazlk
said.
Lawrence, D-
Councilman
"They're
2
Ward (which
doing some
includes Delafield, Market, and things differently, because things
Cannon streets), said that Marist have gotten out of hand. The
Goven1or's helicopter
lands
on North Field
ERIC
KIMMEL/
THE Cl RCLE
Governor George E. Pa1akl uses North F'teld as a landmg pad
for
the
state
heficopter
prior to
attending a meeting
In
the
town
of
Poughkeepsie where
he
was scheduled
to
sign
a
piece
of leglstatlon.
The governor, who
Is
a
good
friend of
the Marist College,
used
the
secluded field
fOf'
security reasons.
college is being more proactive."
The college started the
Dutchess Campus Community
Coalition after receiving a New
York State grant to "form a team
addressing high risk beh;iviors of
college students living on their
own... It provides a meeting
place for local agericies and
organizations along with stu-
dents from Marist, The Culinary
Institute, Dutchess Community
College and Vassar to set goals
and discuss about off-campus
life.
Other members include
Poughkeepsie and Hyde
Park
police, Dutchess County Tavern
Owners, St. Francis Hospital and
the Dutchess County Council on
Alcoholism
&
Chemical
Dependency.
The Coalition meets once a
month, with their next meeting at
3 :30 p.m. Sept. 29
in
the PAR.
Steve Sansola, in his role as asso-
ciate dean for student affairs,
SEE
CAMPUS,
PAGE 8
A hairy situation
BY MELISSA DAVIS
Circle Contributor
Going to Marist's fashion
department at midnight and find-
ing an anti-fur sign posted on the
glass doors is not an everyday
occurrence. However, this is
what was found last Wednesday,
Sept.
15.
Signs reading, "Do you
have a
conscience?" were
accompanied by pictures of a
Richard Kramer.
The use of fur has been a heavy
debate in the fashion world.
Posters proclaiming, "The most
stylish way to beat the weather
this season ... think mink!" from
1972
in Vogue, hung in the fash-
ion department which may be
what provoked the protest
posters. "They put up these signs
in a guerilla manner, before we
[the fashion department] could
skinned ani-
- - - - - - - - - - - - -
respond, to tell
the world that
mat
were
'They
put up these signs in a
posted along
guerllla manner, before we
the hallway
[the
fashion department]
and on the
we
were
wrong,"
Osgood said.
glass display
could ~espond, to tell the world
PETA
(People for the
E t h i c a l
cases
Donnelly.
in
that we were wrong.'
Director of
the fashion
program
- Heather
Osgood
Treatment of
Director, fashion
program
Animals) has
- - - - - - - - - - - - -
had a number
Heather Osgood
said
that
although certain flyers on display
in department might seem to
advocate the use of fur
in
fash-
ion, that is not the case.
"Those signs were part of a
class where the goal was to learn
Photoshop and graphic layout,"
she said.
"It
saddens me that they
think we advocate
fur
use."
Students made the signs as proj-
ects in Principles of Apparel
Design, taught during the spring
semester of 2004 by Professor
of confrontations with former
Vogue editor Anna Wintour a
strong fur advocate. One of cur-
rent Vogue editor Sally Singer's
picks for the top
fall
fashion is a
"mushroom-hued mink," accord-
ing to Style.com, the online
home to Vogue and W maga-
zines.
PETA is known for its use of
guerilla protesting. During the
2000 New York City Fashion
Week,
PETA protesters threw
SEE
FUR,
PAGE 3
THE CIRCLE
845-575-3000
ext.
2429
writethecircle@hotmail.com
OPINION: THE INFAMOUS "'F".WORD
HEALTH: HUDSON IS SOURCE OF MARISrs
WATER SUPPLY
3399 North Road
Poughkeepsie, NY 12601
Not that "f" word; Catarino is talking about freshman as
an acronym for a fatal disease.
PAGE5
Classify the Hudson River as safe to drink and swim in? It
doesn't matter; the
Hudson
is Marist's main water supply.
PAGE 7
THE
CIRCLE
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER
2004
www.maristclrcle.com
The "Security Briefs" and the "Alcohol Fantasy
Beat" are intendet/. to be a parody and not a repre-
sentation of The Circles editoridl stance on drink-
ing - illegal or otherwise - nor is it intended to be
a statement regarding the official Marist College
policy on alcohol consumption
.
PAGE2
Securitv Briel$:
,
Flashback to the
This week i
n 1999
•
•
•
Compiled
by SCOTT NEVILLE
Former Campus Editor
Everyone is throwing back their product to yester
year styles. Starter, Reebok, Nike, JC Penny, I mean
I dare you to find a top merchandiser that's not. We
have hats and jerseys with color patterns that
haven't seen the light of day since before Rony
Seikaly could even palm a basketball. I mean I got
my Denver Nuggets rainbow jersey on right now.
So I was thinking, if all these cool companies are
doing this, why can't the Security Briefs? There is
nothing wrong with a little retro action every now
and then. Good movie by the way. So, I thought
this was the perfect idea after the secµrity office
stood me up for the interview this week. So without
any further ado, here are the security briefs of this
week in 1999.
-Dan Roy
9/14 -
An "Upper" Townhouse resident called security
officers for her collapsed roommate at 2:30 p.m. The
female student had regained consciousness before an
ambulance arrived, but she was transported to St. Francis
Hospital as a precaution anyway.
9115
=
A Marist worker loosened a tooth with hi§
wrench when it slipped off a damaged boiler he was
repairing in Gartland E block at 8 a.m. He reported the
incident at 3 p.m. and refused medical attention. The
wrench suffQl'ed no injuries.
city of Poughkeepsie's water treatment workers filled
tanker trucks with rising waste wl'l.ile a mechanic
repaired a damage pump and restored order to a poten-
tially messy situation.
·
9/17 -A missing dining hall cart may have been abduct-
ed from the stock room. The cart has been missing since
Friday and was reported to security officers Thursday,
Sept. 23 at 7: 5 5 a.m.
9/18 -
An estimated $800 in clothes, books, and Gap
products was reported stolen from
a
nonresident's locked
vehicle in Beck Place parking lot over the weekend
.
The
car had been parked at 8 p.m. and the larceny discovered
the following day at 8:30 p.m. The vehicle's owner
deducted the culprit used a coat hanger, found next to the
car, to gain access to the car through a partially opened
window. Officers at the Poughkeepsie Police Department
were notified and took a report of th
,
e larceny.
9/18 -
Security officers confiscated numerous empty
beer cans from Benoit House at 2 a.m. while escorting a
female visitor from campus after she accidentally provid-
ed identification with different names - one fake, one
real
-
to the RA and RD, respectively.
9/19
-
Security officers stopped a Champagnat resident
tramping to West Cedar from the K.
&
D Deli at 10:20
p.m. The student was observed lugging two 12-packs of
beer and promptly turned over a falsified ID when ques-
tioned.
9119
-
An aldohot confiscation on the first 'floor
of
Leo
cooking a hamburger. Though this resident pyrotechnic
used an extinguisher and saved the day, the extinguish-
er's powder set off the alarm anyway. The next alarm
came five hours later, when excess grease in an oven trig-
gered the alarm.
9/21 - A mechan
i
c pulling cable while working on the
chapel was smacked in the eye with a portion of the coil
at 3 p.m
.
, but
'
toughed it out refusing attention.
9/22
-
The alarms were silent on Tuesday, but on
Wednesday at 7:45 p.m. another cooking mishap sent
Fairview back to their home away from home
.
While
investigating the scene, Marist security
.
officers confis-
cated a construction barrel adorned with a functional
blinking light. They took the barrel to the grounds keep-
ers, who returned it to the DOT. Thutsday and Friday
each had a breakfast related fiasco, one from smoking
.
toast and one from burning bacon.
9/23 - A 1999 Chevrolet Cavalier collided with a pass-
ing Chevrolet Suburban when pulling out of
a
parking
space in the Midrise parking lot at 5 p.m. There was
minor damage to both vehicles, but no injuries were
reported .
.
9/23 -
A laptop computer valued at $2
,
500 was report-
ed §to}en from the ShEahan Hall lounge
Thur§day, at
10:40 p.m. A Sheahan resident left the lounge at 10 p.m.,
leaving her $2
,
500 computer alone to fend for itself for
40 minutes
.
Town of Poughkeepsie police officers were
notified
;
but their investigation has turned up nothing
.
,
...
,_
11■11
1••
Friday, Sept 24, 2004
Comedy Club
DC Benny
·
9PM
Cabaret
Saturday, Sept. 25, 2004
Outdoor Movie
"The Stepford Wives"
9PM
Champagnat Green
Tuesda~Sept.28,2004
Solazo
9 PM
Nelly Goletti Theater
Wednesday, Sept. 29, 2004
Elisabeth Romano,
Bassoon and Friends
8 PM
PAR
•
Saturday, Oct 2, 2004
Band, Singers and
Women's Choir Concert
2PM
Mccann Center
Sunday, Oct 3, 2004
Carl Rosen
12
PM
Campus Green
.
.
9/15-9/17
-
Gartland Commons' F block has taken the Hall yielded 15 cans of beer at 1 :55 a.m., narrowly beat-
lead on Fairview Fire Department
'
s frequent caller list,
ing out a 14-can round up in Gartland F block on Friday,
setting off two alarms this week, Sept. 15 and 17 respec-
Sept. 17 at 11 p.m.
Back
to
2004 •..
Total alcohol-related incidents:
1.
Gartland - 5
2. Leo- 3
Tuesday, Oct. 5, 2004
Sex
Signals
9
PM
Nelly Goletti Theater
.
.
tively, including one burning French toast and one smok-
ing cigarettes. Gartland E block did have one mishap: a
student ignited a piastic container while cooking on the
·
range top. Townhouses' A block also kept Fairview bust
on Thursday, ~ept. 16, turning on a burner under a plas-
tic tray and setting off the alarm.
9/20-Coming in at a
'
dismal second place with one fire
alarm, residents of the F block overheated a frying pan
Monday at 7 p.m. Upon entering their common area, fire
fighters observed a large number of street signs mounted
around the room. Student Affairs was notified
.
9/16
-
Tropical Storm Floyd toyed with Marist College
,
9/20
-
Gartland E block has kept Fairview Fire
tearing down limbs from trees, clogging overworked Department busy this week, evacuating the block five
,
water drains, and pushing sewage levels dangerously times. The first evacuation came on Monday, Sept. 20 at
close to eruption. Luckily, Marist's physical plant and the
12:20 p.m. when a resident started a grease fire while
3. Champagnat - 2
4. Old Townhouses • 1
5. Gregory - 1
Wednesday, Oct. 6, 2004
·
Pocket Opera
6 .
.
Upper West Cedar - 1
7.
Midrise - 1
8PM
PAR
V
i
s
it www.MaristCircle.com each week to take our opinion poll!
THE
CIRCLE
Cassi
G. Matos
Editor in Chief
Courtney
J.
Kretz
Managing Editor
Allssa Brew
News Editor
Jessica Bagar
A
&
E Editor
Sara
Stevens
Features Editor
Dan
Roy
Campus Editor
carollne Ross
Opinion Editor
PaulSeach
Sports Editor
Mark Perugini
Assistant Sports Editor
Eric S. Kimmel
Photography Editor
Kate Glgllo
Copy Editor
Louis
P.
Ortiz Ill
Assistant Editor
Kristen Alldredge
Health Editor
Alec
Troxell
Advertising Manager
Joe
Guardino
Distribution Manager
G. Modele Clarke
Faculty Advisor
The Circle
is the weekly student newspaper of Marist College. Letters t() the
editors, announcements, and story ideas are always welcome, but we
'
cannot
publish
unsigned letters. Opinions expressed in articles are not necessarily
those
of
the editorial board.
The Circle
staff can be reached at 575
:
3000 x2429 or letters to the editor can
be sent to
wrltethecircle@hotmai
l
.com
Sept. 23 -
"Get Carded"
-
SGA
will
be dis-
tributing information to students about sexual
assault on college campuses.
Sept. 23
-
Starting at 9:30 p.m. in the PAR,
SGA will be hosting a social
,
"Meet the
Candidate," giving the students an opportunity to
meet with the candidates faee-to-face
.
Sept. 24
-
Don't forget to register to vote! Last
day to pick up information at the SGA office,
located in the Student Center across from
College Activities
.
Sept. 25
-
SGA is sponsoring "Rock the Vote
/
Battle of the Bands." The event will take place
on the Champagnat green from 1-3 p.m. Any
bands interested in participating
,
please contact
Alyssa.Oxford
@
marist.edu.
Sept. 26
-
Campaigning for all candidates ends
at midnight.
Sept. 27-29
-
Elections begin at 11 a.m. on the
Marist homepage
,
www.marist.ed
u,
and end at 7
p.m. Votes will be tabulated and results will be
posted outside the SGA office at 9 p.m. on
Sept. 29
.
Sept. 26 -
Campaigning for all candidates ends
at midnight.
Oct. 3· -
The junior class is sponsoring a show-
ing of the movie
"
King Arthur'' from 1 :00-
3
:
00pm on the green in Upp~r West Cedar.
A
M A R I ST
S tudenteGovernmen t•Associ at
i
on
THE
CIRCLE
' '
A
person who goes by the rules
should not be penalized by
having nowhere to park
because someone else does not
feel like following the rules.
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER, 23 2004
www.maristcircle.com
''
- John Gildard
Director, safety&:
security
PAGE3
Inside Out gives gay community a voice
By ALISSA BREW
News Editor
months for a total of six times a
year.
Sacks said.
Myers, who writes the column
Inside Out
is
the
Hudson River Walk
the
Talk, said that
she can-
problems
same-sex
couples
might face when planning to
have a baby.
The
Paltz and Kingston, and primari-
ly the publication serves the
Hudson Valley.
------------
"There's
nothing
else
that serves this
community up
here,"
said
Myers.
·
Another feature oflnside Out is
the campus view column written
by calendar editor and contribut-
ing writer Nicole Sacks. Sacks
writes about news that affects
students
on
local campuses.
Sacks also said that the maga-
zine wants form communication
between all the different groups
in the community.
Valley's first gay lesbian bi-sex-
ual
trans-gender
(GLBT) maga-
zine and has
gained enormous
popularity after publishing its
premiere
issue
in
March of
2004.
JoAnn
Myers, assistant profes-
sor of
political science
and direc-
tor of
women's studiesat
Marist
College, said
the
publication
has
been
embraced
universally
despite having
a limited target
audience.
"It
was meant
for the lesbi~
-
gay
- transgender
- queer - com-
munity,
but
it is read by every-
one,"
said Myers.
The magazine is
a
free
publica
-
tion that
comes out
every two
not
distribute enough magazines
around
campus.
"I
put
copies around
and
they
disappear," she
said.
Myers said
that Marist has
shown
its
increasing openmind-
edness by txtending
health ben-
efits
to
same-sex couples.
"Marist is
becoming more
open
in
its own little
way," Myers
said.
Inside
Out
includes articles
on
pet care, politics, business, and
community news as well
as
book
and music reviews.
In his article
published
in the
March/ April 2004 issue James
Tissot wrote about some of the
May/June issue
includes
Jay
Blotcher's
account of his
marriage with
Brook Garrett.
They were one
of the 35 cou-
ples
married
by
New
Paltz's
mayor, Jason
West.
'It was meant for the lesbian
- gay - transgender - queer -
community, but it is read by
everyone.'
Inside Out
also profiles
-
-JoAnn
Myers
community
Assistant professor, polltlcal
members that
science/
Director,
have
con-
women's studies
tributed to the
GLBT
com-
Myers said people subscribe to
Inside Out from phwes as far
away
as
California,
New
Mexico; Florida and Arizona.
But the magazines offices, how-
ever, are based locally in New
munity.
Assistant professor of
history
at
Marist College John G White
was one of the first people pro-
filed in Inside Out's March/April
2004
fSUe.
Her column in the March/April
2004 issue dealt with the anxiety
a student faces when deciding
whether or not to be openly gay.
The article included quotes
from local college students from
Marist and SUNY New Paltz.
Her
column
in
the
September/October 2004 issue
provided scholarship informa-
tion for GLBT students.
Sacks wants to write articles
that
inform
and enlighten stu-
dents about the GLBT communi-
ty.
"I hope I can play a small part,"
"The main goal of the maga-
zine is to merge these groups,"
Sacks said.
Currently Inside Out has a
Webpage; however, Saoks said
that its goal is to produce a
Website that community mem-
bers can visit to access informa-
tion about events in the Hudson
River Valley.
She also said that Inside Out is
not averse to change.
i"We're
pretty open to new
ideas," she said.
Parking permits may not permit parking
MARISTCIRCLE.COM
WEEKLY
.
POLL
By
CASSI MATOS
Editor
in Chief
Ne,\
parking sl1 k rs
will
make
n
en ier
for
c uri1y
_gµa.rds
to
ident1
fy
parking ,
10la-
·ors
St;u1wg Sept. l
S
ticketiny has
begun for all illegally parked
and unregistered cars. For the
first
two weeks of school,
stu-
dents were granted a grace~.:;
od
and instead of ftS'l:leivin.g
tick~·
~ts,
courte
notic~
were
i
ucd.
o , s
nt. \
111
b
. tm-tl:,, enforcing the mlc
.
While some students
t.naY
be
upset with the crackdown,.
ot~
ers mclud111g
Kate
fanzella.
senior,
resident
of
f
o
To,..,nho c ..
said
he
\\ill
not
mind s ctng people getting
tick.;
eted.
·• I
think parking
1~
an issue
that
they
[Marist]
need to
address
prell) soon," Manzella
said.
A1:1:on.ling
to John ( Jldard.
head
l'f
security, campus park-
From ·Page One
iri&
includes ppro 1mat1.:ly
900
resident
parking pots. Pennits
fot all
of the
e I
01
were
issued
rior to
ihe
beginning of 1hc
chool
y~
II th ·
who
did
not receive campus parkmg
were issued
parking
stickers for
Beck Place. A final number of
how: many permits were issued
to non-commuter students for
this lot
is
not yt,1; available. In
additjoµ,
acford,iqg
to
the
num-
bers available through security,
neady 1300 commuter students
received parkwg p
rr 1its.
Brian 81.:i.;k resident ofLowcr
New
To\\ nhouse .
i.
unhappy
with the
!Wfl.Y,
p rking p nnit
v.
n:
,1
igned
this
year.
Although
Lm11er
C\\
h:a&
it$
own
parking
lot.
and
is
nght
near Rn r.tcw
lm;
Beck was
as 1gned
a
parking pa for B ck
Pine
''\\
hy
should 1 h \.c
to park
across the street
from
my donn
when
underclassmen
are able
to
park
right behind
it)"
Beck said.
''They
should not be given
the
pm
deg
to
park
in
R1\'CI'\
1cv.
br.:for· I am,"
The
parking
sticker
has
under-
g<>,ne a
few
.
ignific<lnt change,
. m1:1.:
last
year,
including a
reducti<>n in
·12c,
a chang in the
t}
pe
of sticker material bemg
used, and
the layout
and grapics
have also
been
modified.
According
to Oildard, this
} ·c1r·
parking tic
et,
which
now
g~~
plact!d
on
the outside
oJ
the
rear
driver's
side
windQW
has
tnany
added advantages.
"J
ru;t
car one of
the issue&
we
had
was that students were
being ticketed
at
mght bcl'.'au. e
the
pet®t could not b
seen
through
tinted
wmu \
s,"
Gildard atd.
"\i
e a}_s() got com-
plain1<1
about
th.¢ ,11c. so
We
"an1cu
to
mab
1t
more ucsth
t-
ically plea. mg. '
He
added that
th
nc . thinner
sticker is made out a
tnaterla.J
designed
to
hd offth1.:
car"
in-
dow
with a razorblade,
but
as
11
is rem \ d
it
will
separate
into
piec1:s
to
prevent sticker theft.
In
addition, ecurity
i
11
be
implementing
a
new
parking
manage,rnent
sy
tern,
u ing
handheld
scanners
to
read the
barcodes
on
the
tic
.
N'h
n
the barcode ts
c,1nn
tl.
th
per-
son whom the
sticker
i
regis-
tered to will come up, in
addi~
tion to the
make
and
model
of
the car
1
and die license plate
number
If
the license plate
number
I
punched
in,
security
will
be
able to tell
whether or
not
that car
1.
rc
0
1
stt:rl!d
and has-
been
issued a parking tick r.
h tickets
will
then
be
i~sued
through :this
new
machine.
While students
v.b
br ak the
tulea
may
be unhappy with
this
ne,\ ly
improved
sy rem,
G1ldard
sai.dit
Will
benefit
tho
\ ho
do
fotfow
th1- rules.
'';A,
p • on ,, ho goe,
by
the
rule
hould not
be
pen
lizcd.~y
having
!10\\
here to
park
bccaus
someone cl e docs nol feel like
ollowm
the
rule , · (rildard
·aid.
Are you satisfied with your assigned parking
lot at Marist?
35
30
■
v-. rm
parked
close to
where
I
live
25
Dlwfeh I
was
close,
but
I
can
deal
20
Cl
Nol My lot
is
a
mile away
16
□ I
Just
park
wherever
I
10
want
■
I
don't have a
6
car
0
Marist working with Poughkeepsie to curb off campus partying
works with the coalition.
"The coalition is something
we're working with the commu-
nity on," Sansola said. "A lot of
students aren't aware
·
ofthe rules
and regulations."
Several local officials
Parker,
·said
that the parties real-
ly took the community by sur-
prise.
First weekend, boom, these
parties are popping up all over,
and the complaints are coming
said that
'an
inordinate
'We all want the Marlst teams to
number of student par-
ties in Poughkeepsie
spurred the proposal of
the
task
force.
Councilman John C.
lose, because when they win, all
hell breaks loose.'
Tkazik, R-3rd Ward,
who has about 45 student-rented
houses in his district's streets of
Fairview, washington, Clark,
Garden, Taylor, Orchard and
-
Rose Graziano
Community
representative
up a lot faster than usual," he
said. "Things seem to be happen-
ing a lot sooner than expected."
Lawrence said he has not seen
this many parties
,
in his district in
a long time.
"It's been a good four or five
years since we've had a problem
with parties," Lawrence said.
"Minivan taxis are pulling up for
these parties; that usually is a bad
sign."
Rose Graziano, a community
representative for the 2nd Ward
on Taylor Avenue, said that
sometimes there is a
connection
between Marist sports success
and the intensity of the student
shindigs.
"We all want the Marist teams
to lose, because when they win,
all hell breaks loose."
Measures are being taken to
provide Marist students with bet-
ter ties to their community. A
effort, sending out packets of
information to off-campus stu-
dents that provide information
community block party - - - - - - - - - - - - -
for off-campus students
has been scheduled
from 3 to 5 p.m. Sept.
26
at
Fairview
Community Park (cor-
ner of West Cedar and
'Minivan taxis are pulling up for
these parties; that usually is a
bad sign.'
-
John Lawrence
Councilman
-------------
Fairview
streets).
Students will have the chance to
meet other students, other resi-
dents and local politicians.
There will be music and free
food and beverages.
The Marist Office of Student
Affairs has also been making an
about open container laws, noise
violations, and other community
rules and regulations. It has also
distributed pamphlets in the
cafeteria titled "Off Campus
Guide for On Campus Students".
"Studen
ts
with friends on cam
-
pus visiting them off-campus are
an issue in the cormnunity," said
Sansola. "There are issues with
them being loud while they wait
in the street for cabs
...
when
they park their cars they don't
leave any room on the street, and
leave at 3 or 4 a.m., et cetera."
Lawrence referenced the
"Marist
students
have 0-4
drinks" flyers in deploring the
underage drinking issue.
"It's claiming that 14 percent of
Marist students abstain from
alcohol completely,
·
"Lawrence
said. "I don't think even 14 per-
cent of them are even of· legal
age."
Fashion department posters cause controversy over animal rights
pies at designers who used
fur
in
their designs.
PETA head ReaLann Smith
said that designers who continue
to
support
the
fur
industry are
looked down upon by others
inside the
industry.
"You can't beat the messenger
for the way the message is deliv-
ered,"
RaeLann Smith said, in
a
New York Times Magazine mals fashion
victims,
h~ might as
interview. "We do what we need well be walking around with a
to. Any
tofu-cream-pie
designer
The people who put these signs
target on him,
w h o
'
s
up obviously feel that the Marist
quite frankly."
continu-
fashion department is advocat-
The people
ing
to
who put these
support
ing the use of animal products.
signs
up obvi-
an indus-
ously feel that
try
that
profits from making ani-
the Marist fashion department
is
advocating the use of animal testers have gone to
College
Kannengeiser
said
students
products in
Activities to
should
be able to voice their
the fashion
'We should be able to voice both
get
their opinions without
getting
prior
w
O
r 1 d
'
sides of the same debate.
I
am
poSters
out permission.
though
it
and
their
"[The
Fashion Department]
seems that
glad these posters
·
are up.'
o p i n i on didn't have to
get
their posters
the depart-
'""Kerri
Kannengeiser
heard?
approved.
We should be able to
ments stance
Senior
Senior psy-
voice
both
.
sides
of the same
depends on
chology
/
debate
.
I am
glad
these posters
whom you ask. Should the pro-
special education student Kerri are up."
THE CIRCLE
-
Let the
voices
of the Marist
community be heard.
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2004
www.maristcircle.com
PAGE4
That's
it
•••
I'm going on a hunger strike
I
1t
just m1:,
or - - -..
does
any<>ne
~·
feel
like
mey.
have
to
take
om
a loan
henc
r
they
want to
go
to
the
Cabaret
for a
late-
night
nae
?
Am
1
the
n
I
one
who feels
like
blowmg
the rape whistle
their
mom makes them
carry
wh n-
ever
they g t to th cht.-ck-out
!me? I'm sorry.
but
foe dollars
tor a
salad
i
unacceptable
\ hat,
are
rhc.> mocking
u
?
I
reah1.c
that
a
Mari
t
College
tudents, we arc
fortunate
to
get
all
of the
food
options
that
we
do,
bccau
e a
lot ot tudent
who auend other 1.:ollcge
ar1:n't
as
lucky.
And
in
all
honest).
I
have
no business
going to
the
Cabaret
·at
au.
I'm
on the
Platinum
Dining Plan,
which
allows
me to enter
the
cafeteria
as
many times a
I want.
I
can
ha\oe
three breakfast , fi-.c
lunches.
rn
o dmners. '"hate\ er.
And that' all fine
and
dandy
Monday through Fmlay Bu oh
man
,
-hen
.
atur<la>
arid
und.1)
come ·iround,
forg
t
11.
The Marist (
ollege cafeteria is
run
on
the
"'cekends
hkc the)
want
us
to
go
home H
c\ L'r
I
live
six
hours
m,
.ly
so
for
me,
that's not an
opt
,on.
Those of us
, ho.
u1y
for the weekends
have
to put up "'tth
the considerably
le s
delectable dining
t:ho1ce
and limited cafeteria hour
.
Op n
11 ;00-1.30
pm.
and
4:30-
6:00 p.m.'.
Is
thataJokc? Well,
Cm not laughing.
I'm pr
·lt)
un: th,
every
in-
gt student
on
mpu::· loc-,n
't
lci.:p m until 11
:00
, .m.
on
Saturdays
nnJ
unda
We
want
breakfa
t.
And
I
d
I
o
like
10 ,
dd.
on
a person 1 note,
and
rm
sure
rm
not
ah:
111.: 111
hi,, I'd really
like the
rainbow
prink
k
10
be out more
often;
So,
until the.Cabaret's
pr
Le·
are
low~red, the dining
hall' hours
on the
weekends are extended,
and
thee
rainbow sprinkles
are
pllt
out more
tr1:quently, I'm
going
on ah
n 1.:r tn e.
rll
.
let
y,,u
J..1
o\\
h \
It
goes,
Student groups deserve more funding, more attention
By
GREGORY PARIS
Circle Contributor
Marist College
claims
it is
committed to excellence in edu-
cation, the pursuit
of
higher
human values, and
the
principle
of service. To continue
meeting
these goals, Marist should focus
on how it
can
improve student
life.
The McCann Center, a relative-
ly new complex, has terrible
hours. It often closes early and
students are even told to finish so
employees may leave early.
Students should not have to
change their workout schedule
because
the
employees
at
McCann are too
lazy
to
close at
the posted
time.
McCann should also be open
all
night on
Fridays and
looks like rqad kill.
College Activities and the SPC
are the most efficient, student-
conscious organizatioJ}s
on
cam-
Saturdays,
instead of closing
at 7 p.rn. Those
in charge of its
operations might
be
surprised at
how
many
stu-
dents
show up.
'If Marist is serious about keeping stu-
dents safe, then why does it allow vans to
to take underage students to venues in
which the college knows there will be
heavy alcohol consumption?'
Speaking of
hours,
the Cabaret's should be
extended to 2 a.m. on Fridays
and Saturdays. Students are left
with few eating options on week-
end nights. Campus Deli ~nd
Palace Diner serve food that
pus. Every year, their members
bring quality performers and
speakers to campus.
Instead of buying for security
another golf cart (allowing offi-
cers to avoid walking) the col-
The president should check his numbers
By
IGOR VOLSKY
Circle Contributor
As the 2004
presidential
cam-
paign moves into its final stages,
President Bush has moved from
framing Massachusetts senator
John Kerry as a wook and indeci-
sive flip-flopper to defining the
major issues. Last week, he
spoke about health care.
On Sept. 9, President
Bush
said
that "in order to make sure health
care is available and affordable,
we've got to do something a\1out
the frivolous
lawsuits
that are
running good doctors out of
practice ... we must protect small
business owners and workers
from the explosion of frivolous
lawsuits that threaten jobs across
America."
But scratch below the surface
of this rousing rhetoric and you
will find that it is not the small
business owners Bush seeks to
protect,
•
but rather the corporate
interests that have funneled mil-
lions of dollars into his re-elec-
tion campaign. In this election
cycle,
President Bush has
received over $4.4 million from
insurance
companies,
and
between
2000 and 2002, more
than
100 companies
have
employed 475 different lobbyists
to push for tort
reform,
convinc-
·
ing Congress to pass a measure
requmng
sanctions
against
lawyers
who file frivolous law-
suits.
Ever since John Kerry selected
fri ala ttorney-turned-N orth
Carolina senator
John Edwards
as his running mate, the Bush
campaign has condemned trial
lawyers
with more vitriol than
with which they have damned
Osama
bin Laden. The former is
ridiculed while the latter has
been forgotten.
The president's charge that trial
lawyers are driving up
healthcare
costs with frivolous
lawsuits
just
doesn't hold up. Data compiled
by the Department of Justice's
Bureau of Justice Statistics
showed that from 1992 to 2001,
the number of civil trials has
actually decreased by 4 7 percent.
In 2001, overall damage awards
shrank from the 1992 high of
$65,000
to
just $37,000.
According to an article in the Los
Angeles Times, "these cases
included automobile accidents,
medical malpractice and
tprod
-
uct-liability claims."
Meanwhile, a study from the
nonpartisan congressional budg-
et office has concluded that
"malpractice costs account for
less than 2 percent of healthcare
spending" and even a sharp drop
in premiums would reduce the
nation's healthcare bill only by
less than half of one percent.
.
But facts have no effect on the
president. Let's just hope they
still compel the American peo-
ple.
Making
!E
1
aces
New ownership! New hours! New prices!
,I
Special rates for Marist students
Sun,
Mon,
Tues
Men's Haircut:~ $10
Facials:
~
$20
Eyebrow thread:
)it(
$6
Women's Haircut:
~
$15
&
up
Facial Waxing: Up to
50%
Discount
Coloring: 20% Off
Across
the
street
from
MARIST
next
to
Campus Deli
845-452-7170
Walk
-i
ns
always
welcome!
Open 7 days
a
week
9:30
am
- 7:30 pm
lege should increase the funding
of College Activities and SPC so
they may be able to provide stu-
dents with options other than
drinking alcohol
on
the week-
ends.
It
is difficult to write about
improving Marist without men-
tioning safety and security.
If
Marist College is. serious about
keeping its students safe, then
why does it allow vans to pull up
in front of Donnelly and take
underage students to venues in
which the college knows there
will be heavy alcohol consump-
tion?
.
Vans transporting students to
bars and frat parties should only
be allowed on areas of the cam-
pus where upperclassmen live.
The college could also keep
unwanted visitors from entering
the campus and
terrorizing
stu-
dents by blocking two of the
three vehicle entrances to the
college
between
11 p.m. and 5
a.m.
on
weekends.
It
is .about
time those CRV's are put to good
use.
This editorial serves to begin a
discussion within the Marist
community. Those who agree
with any of these suggestions
should contact the Student
Goven)inent Association.
If
SGA is the voice of the stu-
dent body, then it should stop
making excuses for why its
members won't pursue policy
changes and start standing up
to
a stagnant administration.
An institution may improve
itself only through constructive
criticism. Happy students will
take pride in their school and
advocate the college. This is why
student
life
should be a funda-
mental issue to the administra-
tion. By making its students a
priority, Marist College will con-
tinue to fulfill the virtues of its
mission statement.
Interested in studying abroad??
U.S.
STUDENT PROGRAM
JONATHAN AKELEY,
THE FULBRIGHT
U.S.
PROGRAM MANAGER FOR
EAST
AsIA AND THE
'
PACIFIC AR.EA, WILL CONDUCT AN INFORMATIONAL
SESSION ON:
FULBRIGHT
GRANTS
Asia Fulbright
U.
S. Student Program
Freeman-Asia Undergraduate Awards
for
Study
in Asia
ALL STUDENTS INTERESTED IN EITHER
UNDERGRADUATE STUDY
IN AsIA OR POST-MARIST
STUDY ABROAD ARE
STRONGLYENCOVRAGED
TOATTEND.
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2004
2~3PM
LOWELL THOMAS #125
.
THE
CIRCLE
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2004
www.maristcircle.com
PAGES
:
Teachers,
.
plea
se raise yo
ur expectations
By
BRIAN GOODRIC
H
·
Circle Contributor
Speaking on behalf of the stu-
dent body, I would like to call
upon all the various teachers
across the Marist College cam-
pus to help us all achieve more
than we ever have before in our
classes this semester. Whether
you'~e been teaching here at
Marist for 20 years or are just
starting your career, please help
us work harder. Don't be afraid
to test our limits-we welcome
an academic chllenge.
Not
only will we gain the important
skills that we will need to enter
the job market when our college
years are over, but we will gain
an immeasurable sense of pride
in our fellow students, our
teachers, and our school as a
whole.
Now I understand that this
appeal may come as a surprise to
both teachers and students alike,
but entertain this request and
place some faith in the leaders of
tomorrow for just a moment.
The student body here at
Marist is filled with bright, ener-
getic students who have great
academic potential.
Although
we come from different parts of
the country and even different
parts of the world, we are all the
same in the sense that we have
the capacity to accomplish great
things when we are prodded to
do so. While a laudable portion
of the Marist student body is
currently striving to do the best
they can (with the help of some
very devoted teachers), popular
opinion across campus surmises
'
that the majority of students take
a far more relaxed approach
·
to
their studies.
Teachers ,can do an immeasur-
able service for the student body
by helping students achieve
more in their
harder.
Tougher classes can
result in changes not only in the
classroom but also across cam-
pus in the non-academic realm.
If students are pushed to work
harder and think more about
their
class-
classes.
Raise
The student body is filled
es-there will
the
level
of
with bright, energetic stu-
no doubt be
expectation, and
less time for
students
will
dents with great academic
the juvenile
accordingly raise
potentia
I
.
tom f o o 1 e r
.
y
the level of their - - - - - - - , . - - - - - - - that seems to
academic effort and scholastic
interaction. Tougher classes will
yield higher results for students
than just the ability to answer
questions correctly on Jeopardy
( although this may be viewed as
an important skill in the eyes of
some). Classes themselves will
become livelier as students who
are asked to aim higher
try
occur on a regular basis here on
campus
.
I am by no means saying that
students should devote every
single remaining hour of the
semester to their studies. Yes,
occasional ''partying" is indeed
an important part of the college
experience
.
This may come as a
surprise, but the student body
•
will come to cherish its "down-
time" even more if further atten-
tion is devoted to classes result-
ing from teachers raising their
expectations.
Weekend talks
about "that good-looking person
in your morning class" will sud-
denly be transformed info dis-
cussions about "the conflicting
interpretations of contemporary
applications of Adam Smith's
The Wealth of Nations"
(well
that may be a stretch-but at
least give it a chance).
In closing, I have an appeal for
the students. Your teachers can
only push you so far. No matter
how high teachers raise theii:
levels of expectations this
~emester, there will still be holes
that even the best the teachers
cannot
fill.
However, we do not
attend college in order to have
our teachers alone lead our aca-
demic pursuits (that's what high
school was for). The burden is
on us-the students-to do bet-
ter. While it may be hard to
admit right now we will thank
ourselves down the road for hav-
ing made a stronger academic
effort while pursuing our under-
graduate degrees. Four years is
a very short time--dQD 't wait
until they've passed by and only
then regret that you did not
make the best effort possible
during your college years.
Unwittingly, what we do now
will indeed affect the course of
our futures.
If
both students and
teachers do their part to increase
the level of academia here at
Matist, the limits of our future
achievements are endless.
The best music al
ways co
mes in a twelve-pack
By
RA
C
HA
EL CRONIN
Circle Contributor
Three years ago, John
Santiago was concentrating on
his trumpet playing, not his
guitar skills,
Mike
Lowe would
have told you that singing in
front of people just wasn't his
thing, and Will Van Carpels
had never even touched a bass
guitar. But with 13 years of
experience on drums, Kevin
Cronin saw these unlikely can-
didates as perfect material for
an awesome rock band. Today,
this close group of friends is
known as the band
Nine
Pints
Later, and they have everyone
at Marist talking.
Nine Pints Later had its first
professional gig last Friday at
Toucan's Bar & Grill, laying
the foundation of a great fan
following for the Battle of the
Bands to be held this Saturday
,
Sept.
25.
Although their reper-
The infamous
'
f'
word
By
C
HR
ISTI
NE
CA
T
A
RINO
time, you'll begin to notice in
_ Circle Contributor
at least one of these newly-lib-
erated teens a recognizable
'
Every year, we bid farewell
sense of naivete and even eeri-
,
to a class of decorated multi-
ly familiar patterns of behav-
'
taskers. We say goodbye to a ior.
If
you look hard enough,
:
class of established, diploma you will find the kid who
1
possessing students and, more resembles you when you were
:
sentimentaliy, to a class of a freshman. It's hard not to
:
beer pong record holders, laugh at the wide-eyed group,
:
drinking buddies
,
and friends.
so happy to finally be free of
I
, Somehow though, the overall curfew and house
'
rules. But
!
personality of Marist has a
it's
even
harder
not
to
'
way of remaining the same. It acknowledge the striking simi-
•
seems as though each graduat-
larities between members of
•
ing class is reincarnated in this group and your younger
'
younger, more optimistic, and self.
,
altogether less liver-damaged
The word 'freshman', other-
:
form every fall. These ama.z-
wise known as the
"f'
word,
.
ing near-clones are usually can be thrown around with a
referred to as freshmen.
widely varying and impressive
Here's a scary concept, but a range of negative connota-
:
fairly exact scientific study: go tions.
(Walk into the girl's
out to any frequented Marist bathroom at Hatters at 2 a.m.
'
bar and observe the freshmen.
and you might understand
After any decent period of what I mean. Listening to the
comments of the belligerent,
you would think 'freshman'
was an acronym for a fatal dis-
ease.) The truth of the matter,
however, is that by the end of
your senior. year you hold
nothing but envy for every sin-
gle awkward orientation tour
member
timidly
walking
through t~e library.
It
is at that
point that the
"f'
word
becomes a nostalgic
,
sentimen-
tal memory
.
When you return
old and wrinkled for alumni
weekend, at the ripe age of 23,
you will still be able to pick
out the younger version
t
of
yourself.
That
'
s because
Marist will never fail to repro-
.
duce our quasi-clones.
So, while the personal mean-
ing of the word "freshman"
will never stop evolving for us,
our perception of the personal
-
ity of Marist College, will ever
remain constant in our minds.
;
Angels follow Tony K
ushner
'
_
from Poughkeepsie
t
o
L.A.
By
M
ELISSA DA
VI
S
Circle Contributor
.
"And the winner is ... 'Angels
.
In America."' This phrase was
heard a total of 11 times at the
.
Fifty-Sixth
Annual
Emmy
'
Awards this year. Students at
Marist College had the honor
of hearing Tony Kushner, the
author of this ground-breaking
screen-play, last Thursday in
the Nelly Goletti Theatre, cour-
.
tesy
of
the
Student
:
Programming Council and the
Marist Honors Program.
Kushner, a Pulitzer Prize
winner, spoke on many issues
·
which ranged from the wars in
·
Iraq and Afghanistan, the pres-
ident, the education syste
_
m,
and even managed to throw in a
dream sequence.
Kushner
wowed the audience with his
up-front views and his remark-
able way with words. The
words "extreme" and "outra-
geous" barely do his narration
justice. He compared our cur-
rent president George W. Bush
to a devolving parasitic organ-
ism then proceeded to com-
ment, "I watched him address
the country with that ever-pres-
ent smirk, the one that takes the
place of intelligence." Kushner
spoke to an eager crowd that
devoured every word.
Kushner also made a point of
encouraging students to take
the power of knowledge into
their own hands to make posi-
tive changes in our world
.-
He
questioned our choice of chan-
nels for receiving information
,
saying
,
"Most of us get our
news from the comedy chan-
nel, and though I love Bill
Maher
,
maybe it is not the best
place." He went on to express
his belief that voting is a fun-
damental aspect of life in a
democratic society
,
and to urge
every student to take advantage
of this right and privilege.
Kushner left the audience
with an optimistic note: "The
arc of the universe is long but it
bends towards justice." Well
sai~, Mr
.
Kushner
.
toire is mainly made up of
upbeat cover-songs penned by
classic rock idols such as Pink
Floyd, Led Zeppelin and the
Red Hot Chili Peppers, the
band really shines through
their slower-paced
'
originals.
Their true musical talent is
most apparent in these tunes,
as is the inevitability of their
promising career in music.
Whether performing their own
material or their parents' vinyl
favorites, their energy and tal-
ent makes each song their own,
bringing any room in which
they play to life.
To witness this
musical
mar-
vel for yourself, join the crowd
on the campus green down the
hill from the James Cannavino
Library for the Battle of the
Bands this Saturday from l
p.m. to 3 p.m., or you can catch
them Friday, Oct. 1, at 11 p.m.
back at Toucan's
.
Be ready
for some serious
rock 'n' roll!
•••
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TI-IE
CIRCLE
' '
I've been swimming in it [the
Hudson River] for years, and
have never had any medical
problems.
, ,
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2004
www.maristcircle.com
- Steve Schwartz
Marist sailing instructor
PAGES
Hudson is
.
source of Marist's water supply
By
KRISTEN ALLDREDGE
Health Editor
Do you know where your water comes from? Many members of the
Marist community are unaware that their water comes from the
Hudson River and is purified by a plant on campus. Common knowl-
edge of the Hudson's polluted waters creates shocked and disturbed
reactions.
KRISTEN ALLDREDGE/
THE CIRCLE
The Hudson shore at the Marist Brothers' retreat center in Esopus.
Contamination from polychlorinated
biphenyls
(PCB's)
was
recognized in
1974,
primarily
at the
fault
of General Electric
Company. They
were dumping PCB
's into the river and ground
between
plants,
and when
the dam was removed the pollutants
washed downstream and collected in basins,
called hot
spots.
The
organization, Essential Information
founded
by
Ralph
Nader,
reports that
PCB's can damage the immune, reproductive,
nervous and
endocrine systems, and
can
impair children's
phys-
ical and
intellectual
development.
Research
by the International
Agency
For Research on
Cancer shows
that
PCB's cause cancer
in animals and are strongly linked to human cancer.
PCB's
won't
It is no surprise that newcomers to the Marist community raise
health concerns upon realizing Marist's water
source.
"I'm very surprised to hear that," freshman
Danielle Morrison
said. "I'm a little nervous, actually. Is it well purified?"
Hold
on
to your Britas. Although Marist's water supply
originates
in the
Hudson
River, it undergoes purification
through
the
Poughkeepsie Water Treatment Facility (PWTF)
located between
campus and the river.
Despite
its
location, many
students and staff
members are unaware of the connection
this
plant has with the river
and the water we drink.
"I never connected the water treatment center
on campus
with
fil-
tering
water from
the Hudson,"
said sophomore Alyssa
Hanley.
PWTF's
mission statement declares, "We consistently,
profes-
sionally and economically produce
a
high quality drinking water
that meets the
needs
of
our
customers." They install additional
chemical treatments to reduce lead from plumbing
fixtures and
chlorine to disinfect disease-causing organisms. A
detailed process
of water
purification
can
be
found at their website,
Pokwater.com
In
addition to the
purification process,
they monitor
PCB
content
of
the water and report to have found no
detectable
levels
in the water
t
KRISTEN ALLDREDGE/
THE
CIRCLE
Train crossing on the Hudson at Mills Mansion, north of Marlst
supply. Other techniqttes have also found only traces
of contaminants in the river sediment. The health
department of Duchess County agrees that the water
does not have a threatening level of PCB contamina-
tion.
Steve Schwartz, sailing instructor, told his class that
the section of the river by Marist is the cleanest part.
"I've been swimming in it for years and have never
had any medical problems," Schwartz said.
Currently,
Poughkeepsie
is recognized as the
national leader in water filtration.
Th.¢
only water
quality issues that arise are when the salt front from
the Atlantic
ocean pushes
up the
Hudson
during peri-
ods of drought. PWTF reports that the last time cus-
tomers were affected by this was in 2002. Their Web
site contains a link to the
Annual Drinking
Water
Quality Report for the city of Poughkeepsie.
naturally
disappear because they are persistent organic pollutants
The cleanest
part
of
the Hudson, along Marlst College. Poughkeepsie Water Treament Facility
So, who wants a glass of tap water? How about a
swim?
that cannot decompose.
in background.
IF YOU'VE GOT WHAT IT TAKES TO BE A LEADER IN
OUR COMPANY, THIS COULD BE YOUR NEW OF
.
FICEI!
• Summer training for
college men
and
women.
• Financial
assistance
o
r
college Is
available.
• No
training or classes
during the school
year.
1-800-342-2408
Leading
M
ari-nes is one of the greatest
challenges a person can choose to accept
.
To
stand in front of
the
smartest. toughest,
most
elite forces in the world, rank is
not
enough.
Before you can say, "Follow me," you
must
first
develop intellect. human understanding, and
character to the point where you can inspire
others to follow you
.
If you are ready for a
physical, mental, and leadership challenge then
this
program might be for you
.
Guaranteed pilot, flight officer and law
positions are
available!!!
'5
The Few. The Proud.
U.S .. Marine Officer Programs
Captain David A. Doucette
2021 Western Ave
Albany, NY
12203
OSOALB@1mcd.usmc.mil
• You don't learn
leaderstip, you Ii ve it.
• Push yourself to the
limit Then
take
it
even
further.
•This In not R.O. T.C.,
it
is the
primary
source of
all
Marine Officers.
www
.MARINEOFFICER.com
The U
.
S. Marine Corps offers programs for
undergraduates and graduates
that allow
you to get started now on mastering the art of
leadership
and earning a commission as a
Marlne
Officer. They're called
:
PLC and
ace
Find out if you have what it takes. Call or email
for
an
appointment.
Seats are still open so contact our
office in Albany for further
information NOW!t!
THE
CIRCLE
Upcoming Event:
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2004
www.marlstclrcle.com
"Rock the Vote" Battle of the Bands
Saturday,Sept.25
1 -
3
p ..
m.
Champagnat Green
PAGE7
'Typical college band' enjoys uncommon success
Stephen Kellogg is welcomed back to Marist, this time as headlining act
By
ALEXANDRIA BRIM
Staff Writer
Echoing throughout the
Student Center on Friday, Sept.
17 were the sounds of guitars
and drums mixed with enthusias-
tic laughter as curious freshmen
and
excited
upperclassmen
inside the Nelly Goletti Theater
were treated to a
remarkable
concert by returning act Stephen
Kellogg and the Sixers.
Stephen Kellogg and band-
mates Brian Factor, Keith
Karlson and Chris Soucy were
happy to return to Marist as the
main act, a significant jump from
when they were here as an open-
ing act a few years ago. "The
main event ... wow ... I'm excit-
ed," Kellogg .said about the con-
cert.
Relaxing in the Student
Center's green room before the
show, the Sixers look like the
average
.
college band, sitting
around strumming guitars and
playing around with each other
as the musicians on campus tend
to do. Except, oh yeah, they have
a record contract.
"We actually just finished
recording an album down in
New York City," Kellogg
said.
going on to expltrin. that he
is
enjoying all aspects of
life
in
midtown Manhattan, specifically
mentioning the food. "We've
been eating at some good restau-
rants---:-and when I say restau-
rants, I mean delis," Kellogg
said, smiling. He and the other
Sixers recounted some other
New York experiences, includ-
ing playing at the College of
Staten Island. "I like it here [at
Marist] better," he said.
Preceded by Marist guitar duo
F~ankie and Davy and country
singer Kristin Diablo, Stephen
Kellogg and the Sixers took the
stage, filling the room with the
playful atmosphere that had per-
meated from the green room ear-
lier. Playing
·
music off their lat-
est CD,
Bulletproof Heart, the
band members missed no oppor-
tunity to make fun of each other.
To the audience's pleasure, the
band playfully performed a med-
ley of popular music, including
Nelly's
"Hot
in Herre" and
Kelis'
"Milkshake."
During
"Milkshake,"
Stephen addressed
the audience,
saying
how he
always
wondered what the
"milkshake"
was.
An enthusias-
tic audience member soon sup-
plied the answer. "It's this!" she
cried, shimmying. Satisfied-
and
amused-Kellogg
continued
singing.
The
concert concluded
with
a
group rendition of Billy Joel's
"Piano
Man" as Kellogg,
along
with all of the evening's per-
formers,
returned
to the stage,
providing a remarkable ending to
an
exceptional
concert.
Returning act Stephen Kellogg and the Slxers entertained Marlst students on Friday, Sept. 17. The crowd present
in
the Nelly Golletl Theater was
enthusiastic and seemed to enjoy the band's energetic performance. Stephen Kellogg and the Slxers played music off of their latest CD,
Bulletproof
Heart, which the band just finished recording In New York City.
A rock opera that thrives in its turbulent political context
Green Days latest musical endeavor stimulates both sides of the brain
By
ROB CELLffil
Staff Writer
"I'm
not a part of a
redneck
agenda," Billie Joe Armstrong
sang with
conviction
while his
band Green Day performed on
The Late Show with David
Letterman two Mondays ago.
Not
far
from the band
stood
United States senator and presi-
dential hopeful John Kerry, who
had been a guest on the
show
·
earlier that evening. When the
band
finished
its
rousing
"American
Idiot"
-
the title track
and first single
from
their first
studio release in four years
-
Letterman
shook
their hands and
said, "Good
luck in
November,"
which brought a
smile
to
Armstrong's
face.
Clearly, David Letterman
knows what's
at
stake this
fall,
and by the lyrics on
"American
Idiot," it
is
obvious that
so
does
Green Day.
They
have
created
their best and most
socially
and
politically conscious album to
date. What
is even more
impres-
sive is that they've done it in the
form of a punk-rock opera.
That's
right,
a
punk-rock opera.
This is not just an album that
tells a
story
like
The
Who's
"Tommy" or Andrew
Lloyd
Weber and
Tim
Rice's
"Jesus
Christ Superstar." It is
an
album
that
expresses disgust with
the
current state of America
through
the
stories
of
three
fictional char-
acters:
Jesus
of Suburbia, St.
Jimmy,
and
Whatsemame
.
These
characters represent the
suburban youth of America (who
comprise the majority of Green
Day's audience), who
feel
disen-
franchised by the big machine
that American politics has
become.
Evidently,
this album is not
.
a
collection of songs about teen
angst. The first song,
"American
Idiot," sets the stage lyrically,
proclaiming Green Day's current
feelings
about
America o'i the
listener, for the
"redneck agen-
da" line
is
not the only one that
takes a
shot
at the Bush
Administration. This
is
't
he
only
song that does not
directly con-
tribute to
the stories being told
but instead serves
as an opening
statement,
allowing
lyricist
Armstrong
to explore
the
charac-
ters and the different
ways they
react to their
surroundings,
AMAZON.COM
Green Day's American Idiot, their latest full length studio album, expresses
·
the band's disgust with the cur
-
rent state
of
America. Targeted
toward
the suburban youth of America, this album (album art shown above)
follows the stories
of
three fictional characters, Jesus
of
Suburbia,
St. Jimmy and Whatsemame.
which
have been affected by
war,
television,
drugs
and
parents.
The sharp
sarcasm
and
can-
dor
expressed
in
genre-bending as it
·
becomes the-
atrical, sounding at times like the
"We will not let him go" section
of Queen's clas-
sic
"Bohemian
These characters repre-
sent the suburban youth
of America that feel dis-
the
songs'
lyrics
is
impressive.
The
lyrics
in
"Holiday" are
a
great example
of
this:
"Pulverize
the Eiffel
Towers
enfranchised by the big
machine that American
Rhapsody
."
Later, it transi-
tions to '50s-
sounding rock 'n'
roll,
complete
with a saxophone
line
and backup
"oohs"
and
1
Who
criticize
politics has become.
your government
/
Bang Bang
goes
the broken
glass
and
/
Kill
all of
those
that don.'t agree."
This is
Green Day's
version of
"God
Save the Queen." The Sex
•
Pistols would be
v~ry
proud.
The lyrics
aren't
even half
of
what makes this
album
so spe-
cial. The music behind them is
some of the
best that
Armstrong,
bassist Mike Dirnt, and
drum.mer
Tre Cool have
ever written.
It
is
ambitious
and pushes
the genre
of pop-punk to another
level.
Yes, there are times
when
Green
Day falls
back on
its traditional
three-chord, hook-laden formula
that has worked for
over
l
0
years, but the moments when
they stray from
that make
this
album extraordinary.
Two songs
-
"Jesus of
Suburbia"
and
"Homecom
ing"
-
are over
nine minutes long and
divided
into
five
parts.
Transitions between sections are
so smooth and expertly executed
that
you almost forget that you
are
listening
to Green Day.
"Homecoming"
is especially
"ahs." That sec-
tion
is
aptly titled
·
"Rock and
Roll
Girlfriend."
The
nine-minute epics are
not
the only
highlights
,
however.
On
"Boulevard of Broken Dreams"
and "Are We Waiting?" the band
eschews its pop-punk roots com-
pletely and opts for a more alter-
native sound. Pretty guitar lines
blend
wonderfully and build into
soaring choruses. L~ter on, the
band
experiments
.
with every-
thing from synthesizers to voice
effects to tribal percussion.
Green Day retains its hallmark
sound, and "American Idiot" has
incredible
balance from start to
finish.
Armstrong's ear for a
catchy tune never fails, which is
why many of the songs on the
record
•
sound like they could
receive heavy radio play.
The only way to fully enjoy
Green Day's
new
album is from
beginning to end.
Otherwise,
you will miss out on not only the
strong political message, but on
some great music as well.
marlstclrcle.com
THE CIRCLE •
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2004 •
PAGE
8
TnF PIZZA AND SUB SHOP
Gates' favorite sports moments
600
Violet Avenue
Hyde Park, N.Y.
12538
golf
Dest
Games: Bills
\ .
Oilers
in
the
1992
FC
wild
card
game
and
Connec11cut
vs,
Duke
in
1999
'N"
final.
In
what
t
th
great 'sl
comeback
m
NFL
history, the Bills came back
from
3-
points in the
third quar-
i1,;r
to
beat
the Oilers
41-1
in
overtime.
11,
Bills
were
also
without
start in
quarterback
Jim
Kell,
and
led
by
b1.1 'k-up
Frank Reich.
for my
second
L
1
1cc.
if
you
are from
< rnic
ticut
and follow
l onn
basketball
copmu
ly,
tlu gam
ha
to
be
near
th top of
your
lt
1
B ·
t
M ,
1 •
Rudy;
although
Hoosiers
may
be
ju
t
as
rnsp1rn-
tional, the musical score and
..
Rudy."
chant give Rudy the
slight
edge,. Winning state
titles
i
m e, and
I understand
that
ba kdball
and Indiana coin-
cide.
btit
1t
n all~ does
not com-
pare
\\Ith being
camed
off
the
field
for
otr
Dame.
Best
Team: 1992
'
Dr rn
Team.
Put
together the be
t
athletes in their
sport
today on a
From Page One
team and fights and attempts
o
individual
•I
I)
win
be
ram-
pant
In
1992,
we
v.
lln ·
d
the
some of
the greatest basketball
pl.
y\;r
fall
time come
togcth•
er and dominate in their sport.
In all of
sport . then!
will never
be a better group
of
individual-
ly great athletes
put
together on
a team
for
an event.
Best
Play:
Cal beats Stanford
~•the
play.· If
a
pla
i
kno\\ n
to
ports
fans as
"the play."
it
has
to b the
best, With
cconds
to
play
and
do\\ n n ,
al
ran
back
the
kickoff for
the touch-
down
and the win. The reason
'1-'ih}
this game
and
pla) are
so
memorable: the
tanford
band
ran
out
onto
the
field
and
pot
n-
tiall>
cost Stanford from
rn k-
ling the Cal
pla1 r.
Moment:
1980
l A
vs. USSR
"Miracle
on
lee."
The game
and team could be at the
top o
there r
p
cti,
list
but since I
was
not
ali, e
I wilt
never
know
the
feelings
that
th,
game
brought
t
>
a
sp
rt!
r
n
in
the
United
tate
At
a
time
when
the USSR and
the
United
tat
were
in
middle
o
the cold
war.
the
game unlike most athletic
~, cnts
was more than just
that.
The game, possibly the
b1ggc
t
ups~t in all of sports
Ii
1.
tor),
did
something that
port 1ng
events
n
I
I)
do, bnng
an
entire
nation
together.
Without ESPN, sports
fan!j
includjng
my elf
may
have
never heard
or
seen
the.
c
moments
in
sports.
In
their
h\elll)-fi,e yea
ESPN ha
•a\e m1l110n of. ports
lovers a
pla
'C lo !L)IIO\\
their
favorite
team ,
and
athletes.
For
1110
l
sp9rts fan, ESPN
is
a
maJor
part
of their
liti .
In
tn)
amily
ESPN lrn
d
ly
.11Tc
t
d
our
l
1
vc
In
200 I ,
durmg
ESPN's
pan ion
in
Bristol
m)
grand-
p·
rent's
hou
I;!
was
th·
last
hou
e
on Birch
Street
thnt
ESPN
needed to purchase.
For
that purchase and !or all the
moments
in
ports that
ESPN
has
brought
me,
h \\
could
I not
recognize
th rn
ot
their
annn ersar,..,
ARIST
c145)
454•6454
ONEY
EXPRESS
OELIVHY AVAILABLE
Accepted on delivery!
emus! mention
MARISP-'f. SpeC!~ls
Toppings:
Large
.
i
e
$
s.
9 9
+
tax
l•tra Cheese, Cheddar
Chee■e,
Pepperoni,
Onions,
Green Peppers,
Olives,
llusbrooma,
when placing order>
Subs· Regs"
$r
75
Imported.Anahovlea,Bauaage,.llutball,
·
u •
~
Bam, Bacon, Brooooll,
81naab,
Pineapple
Salads
Dreeslngs:
Creamy Italian, RuHlan, B'renoh, Ranob, Caesar,
Blue
Cheese,
011
~
Vinegar, Honey
Mustard
Balsamic
Vinegar •$.90,
CrumblJ' Blue Cheese
••.79
SM
LG
Tossed
2.25 3.00
Antipasto
4.50
6.60
Tuna
3.95 4.96
Italian Chef
3.95 4.95
Crispy Chicken
3.50 4.50
Grilled
Chicken
3.95 4.95
Grilled Chicken Ceasar 3.95 4.95
Caesar
2.95 3.96
American Chef
3.95 4.95
Greek
4.95 6.95
Deserts
Cheese Cake
Cart"o~ Cake
Cannoli
Fried
Dough
2.25
2.25
1.96
2.50
Wraps
&
Platters
Se~er with
l"renoh Ft"les
"'
Sp11,1tstera
Chicl\:en
BLT
4.95
Chicken.
&
Sundried Tomato4.96
C'1,ioke:n Parm
4 96
Chicken Ranch
4.96
Chicken Caesar
i.86
Turkey
4,95
Lg
12"
$4,50
Appee\i'zTer~.75eaoh
Frenoh. Fries
2.00
Cheese Fries
2.50
Pizza Fries
2.50
Onion Rings
2.60
Mozz. Sticks (6)
4.00
Buffalo Wings
(
12)
4.50
(Hot,
Mild, BBQ
(24)
8.60
Hon
BBQ)
(60)
16.99
Chicken
Fingers
(6)
4.50
C:BBQ
or Hon
Mus~ard)
cJalapeno Poppetts (6)
Garlic Bread
Garllo Bread
w/
Cheese
Fish Fillets w/ Frenoh Fries
0kn. Fing.
w/
Frenoh Fries
Chiok&n
Quesadilla
Cheese
Quesad1lla
Steak Quesadilla
Shrimp Basket
(Cocktail Sauce)
Clam St.rips
w/
French Fries
(Tal'ter Sauce)
Spudsters
Potato Skin
(Bacon
&:
Sour Cr&am)
Potato Skin
(brooooll
&:
Sour
Cream
•4.60
l.60
2.00
6.60
6.60
6.95
4.96
5.95
5.60
6.60
3.60
4.95
4.96
Side Meatball or Sausage
2.00
SGA hosts candidate speech night
Turkey
BLT
4.98
Tuna
4.95
BBQ
Beef
4.95
Cheeseburger
Deluxe
5.95
Brocolli Popperm (6)
4.00
.Fried Mushrooms
4.00
Zuoohini
Sticks
4.00
senator,
while
semors
Mehren Hopfenspirger and
Erik
Vincelette
declared their
campaigns for secretary and
treasurer, and
John
Mullody
for the position of
senior vice
president.
"Everyone
present
the
same
goals and ideas,"
said fresh-
man Shannon
Kozibroda.
"It
seemed like
no
one
brought
anything different or
exciting
to the table."
M A R I S T
Grllled Chicken Deluxe
5.96
Garlic Knowt w/ Sauoe
(12)
2.50
Bread Stick
w/
Cheese
4.00
Cheese Steaks Hoagies
&!
Hot Oven Grinders
Mush.,
Pepperoni, Baoon,
Grn. Peppers,
Onions,
Xtra Cheeae, Hot Peppers,
Picltels +$.50 Xtra
Meat •• 1.50
Cheese Steak
Double Cheese Steak
REG
LG
4.50 5.00
5.50 8.50
Chicken Cheese Steak
4.50 5.00
Italian
(ham falaml capola. prov.)
4.50 5.00
Amer.
(Ham-R.beeMurk..•amer)
4.50 5.50
Ham & Cheese
4.00 4.50
Tuna
4.00 4.50
Cappicola
&
Provolone
4.00 4.50
Genoa Salami
&
Cheese
4.00 4.50
Fish
Fillet
4 00 4. SO
BBQ Rib
4.00 4.50
lt
Beet
&
Cheese
Turkey Breast
&;
Cheese
Meatball or Saus. Parm
Veal Parm
Chicken Parm
Eggplant
Pepperoni & Cheese
Gr.illed Chicken Sub
Pepper
&!
Egg
Sausage
&
Pepper
Parm
Vegetarian
(ho
or
cold)
Extra Cheese
REG
LG
4.50 5.50
4.50 5.50
Elections
will
take place
online
starting
Mon., Sept.
27 at
11
a.m.
and
will
close
at
7
p.m.
the
following
Wednesday.
Stud en t•Gove
rnme n
teAssoci
ati on
Sausage & Pepper
4.00 4.50
Chicken California
4.60 5.50
Hot Pepper or Pickle
4.00 4.50
5.00 5,50
4.50 5.50
4.00 4.50
4.00 '1.50
4.95 5.95
4.00 4.50
4.50 5.00
4.00 4.60
.50
.60
.50
.60
C.hannt-\
2-'f
Times
12:00 AM
1:00 AM
2:00 AM
8:00 AM
9:00 AM
10:00AM
11:00
AM
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PM
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PM
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PM
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PM
.
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PM
Sunda
Marist vs. Iona
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Dinners, Calzones, Strombolis,
&
Gourmet Pizza Also Available
MA
Week Of
Sep 26- Oct 2, 2004
Marist College Television
(MCTV) Fall Schedule-
Week Three
Tuesda
Nevi&~
'2
~
Manst vs Iona
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www.marlstclrcle.i;:om
THE CIRCLE •
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2004 •
PAGE 9
Volleyball swept in opener by CCSU, Delaware
By
ANDY ALONGI
Staff Writer
The women's volleyball team
lost two heart-breaking games
against Central Connecticut State
University and the University of
Delaware on Friday, Sept. 17.
The tournament kicked off for
Marist as they took on the Blue
Devils, falling in three games,
30-23, 30-28, and 30-25.
Junior Chantelle Bowden led
the Blue Devils of CCSU with 14
kills and four assists.
Coach Sarah Watters said the
team came out flat and not ready
to play.
"Central Connecticut is a tough
team that is older and more expe-
rienced," she said. "We came out
flat and not ready to play. We
gave up too many points."
Seniors Jennifer Cote and
Shannon Verity added 12 kills
each.
Sophomore middle blocker
Sally Hanson led the team with
12 kills and two digs. Junior set-
ter M\lghan Cochrane and frosh
setter Lauren Nikides added 24
and 11
assists respectively,
acc<?unting for 3 5 of the Red
Foxes' 38 assists. Junior libero
Katie Lux led 'tl_ie defensive
effort with 10 digs.
Looking to bounce back from a
tough loss in their first match of
the day, Marist battled the
Delaware Blue Hens on Friday
,
evening.
However, the Blue Hens would
emerge victorious in three
games, 30-26, 30-20, and 30-22.
Senior Valerie Murphy stimu-
lated the Blue Hen offense with
15 kills while her stand-out
teammate, sophomore Claire
McCormack, contributed 10
kills.
In the losing effort, Marist
found bright spots in senior Amy
Gillespie, who had 12 kills and
two digs. Sophomore Stephanie
Miksch added eight kills.
Defensively, Lux scooped up
11 digs, Nikides and sophomore
Jamie Kenworthy added nine
digs each.
Gillespie and ·Hanson finished
both events totaling 19 kills
each, and Cochrane had
5
3
assists.
Defensively,
Jamie
Kenworthy had 16 digs and
Katie Lux led Marist with 21
digs.
Marist will play the University
of Hartford at noon and West
Virginia University at 6 p.m. on
Friday, Sept. 24 and will play
Columbia University at noon on
Saturday Sept. 25
as
the Red
Foxes
host
the
Marist
Invitational
in the McCann
Center.
Sophomore Jamie
Kenworthy viciously
hits
the ball, racking up one of her four kills against
the
Central
Connecticut State University Blue Devils.
Coach Sarah Watters said the
"We feel good about the win. This is a team that will
team is optimistic about the tour-. upcoming tournament," she said.
improve with match experience."
nament.
""These are games we hope to
'
'
Volleyball spikes Brown, Holy Cross in Marist Invitational
By
BRIAN HODGE
Staff
Writer
After dropping the first two
games of the weekend to Central
Connecticut State and Delaware
on Friday, head women's coach
Sarah Watters was looking for a
better all-around effort on
Saturday.
That's what she got - and more.
The Red Foxes rebounded to
sweep their matches on Saturday,
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please email
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Students, faculty and
campus groups receive a
10% discount!
finishing the weekend 2-2 and
taking a third place finish in the
tournament.
The day
began
by beating a
tough Brown University squad
3-1.
Watters said the match was a
good win.
"Probably the best we've
played all year," she said.
Senior Amy Gillespie (Lebo,
KS) led Marist with a game-high
14 kills. Also contributing were
Jamie Kenworthy (11 kills, IO
digs), Sally Hanson (11 kills, 8
digs) and Katie Lux (14 digs).
"We finally came together and
started to play like a team. They
don't play like
a
young team,"
coach Watters said. "They're
fun
to coach."
Marist was not done, however.
The Red Foxes then wept on to
beat Holy Cross in five games.
The Crusaders won the first
·
game of the match, 30-28, and
then Marist won games two and
three, both 30-26. Holy Cross
rallied back in the fourth, win-
ning it 30-27 and Marist took
home fame five 15-12. The team
notched 123 team digs defen-
sively.
Kenworthy again performed
well for Marist, finishing the
game with 23 kills and 25 digs,
while Hanson added a career-
high eight aces.
The star of the second game,
however, was Meghan Cochrane
(Placentia,
CA).
The junior setter
broke the career assists record
during the match and now is in
sole possession of the record
with 2,669. Cochrane began with
season 340 assists shy of Ellie
Schuerger's record of 2,620 and
bested the mark just minutes into
the first game against Holy
Cross. Cochrane finished with 56
assists on the day.
"We did some good things,"
said Coach Watters. "We're a lit-
tle more experienced versus
toug~ competition and it gave us
a better understanding of the per-
sonnel and the kind of offense
we want to
run."
The Red Foxes (7-4) hope for
another strong showing at home
this weekend, as they play host
to Hartford, West Virginia and
Columbia.
Women's soccer edged by Black Bears, drops hotne opener
ERIC KIMMEVTHE CIRCLE
Senior forward Courtney Moore battles Maine senior Emily Stevens fo5 offensive possession of the ball. Moore
has two goals and one
assist,
tied
for tenth
In
the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference
in
points scored.
By
ANTHONY OLIVERIO
Staff Writer
The Marist College women's
soccer team lost a close match at
home against the Maine Black
Bears, 2-1, Sunday afternoon.
The Red Foxes controlled play
in the first half, out-shooting the
Black Bears 5-3, and locked in
with some defensive pressure,
but could not hold off Maine's
second-half charge
.
The strong defensive effort in
the first half by the Red FQxes
could not keep Maine from scor-
ing as Marie-Andree Canuel net-
ted a
·
goal with
15:00
remaining
in the half.
The scoring resumed five min-
utes into the second half as
Marist
sophomore
Deidre
Murray
scored and was assisted
by Kristina Anderson and
Kristen Leonhard
.
Murray's goal
knotted the game at 1-1.
The final goal came at 62:36 in
the second half as Maine's Erin
Corey scored
on
a breakaway
sealing the victory for the Black
Bears. Maine righted the ship
offensively in the second half,
out-shooting the· Red Foxes
oy
a
7-2 margin.
Marist goalkeeper Danielle
Cibelli had five saves for the Red
Foxes who drop to 1-7 on the
-
season. Maine improves its
record to 5-2-1.
The Red Foxes hits the field
again Friday, Sept. 24 against
Delaware State at home.
Upcoming
Schedule
Friday,
Sept 24,
vs.
Delaware
St.
at home at
7
p.m.
Friday, Oct.
l,
vs.
Loyola
at home at
7
p~m.
Women's cross country gallops to first place finish at the Rider Invitational
By
GABE PERNA
Staff Writer
The Marist women's cross
country team dominated the
compet1t10n
at
the
Bronc
Invitational this p&St Saturday,
scoring 16 points on the day with
·
graduate
student
Diane
Matthews leading the way with a
first place finish.
Matthews, who was running in
her first cross country race as a
Red Fox, finished the 5000/m
course in 18:53.
Coach Phil Kelly said he
expected a great performance
from Matthews
.
"She was the best performer in
practice so this performance on
Saturday wasn't a big surprise to
me," he said.
However
,
Marist was far from
finished on the day once
Matthews crossed the finish line
as the five of the next nine
run-
ners to place were Red Foxes.
Finishing in second and third
place behind Matthews were
Marist frosh Caitlin Garrity
(19:03) and Sarah Domermuth
(19:29)
.
Junior
-
Alli Kline round-
ed out a top four Red Fox sweep,
as she ran a race of 19:30.
'We really ran outstand-
ingly considering the
weather conditions.'
-
Coach Phil
Kelly
"Both did very well, both are
very good runners out of high
school, and along with Heidi
Richards they have been consis-
tently solid performers so far,"
Kelly said.
The Red Foxes saw strong per-
formances from frosh Richards
(19:57)
and junior Denise
Tumulty (20:25), who finished
sixth and tenth respectively.
"We really ran outstandingly
considering the weather condi-
tions," said Tumulty. "We domi-
nated the whole field, and it
helped
the freshmen gain confi-
dence, and gave us momentum
for the rest of the season."
The team will compete in the
Paul Short Invitational hosted by
Lehigh University on Saturday,
Sept 25. The meet will feature to
upwards of 39 teams, including
several top tiered teams and will
be a much tougher contest for the
Red Foxes.
"If
we finish in the top half of
the field, say thirteenth or four-
teenth place, that'll
.
be a good fin-
ish," said Kelly.
From
green
rookies
to
seasoned
champions:
ESPN is
as notable as the athletes and
events
it
has
covered
1v
father
till
remember
When
thi.: land
across !he street
wast
pty.
there
were
no build,.
mgs
or
enor-
mous
atcllite
dishes.
Even
when
11,
first
sign
was
pl.n:
din
the
ground,
Etttertainment
and
Spon
Programming
Ni,;t\\
or .
my
family
thought
little
of
it
So much has changed for ESPN
·m .. ·e
1979
including e
p.tn!>.1 11
at
their
main
c,unpu
in
nri.
tol
.
Conn,
More
1mpor1anrl.
ESPN
has
ri:\ ulutiomzed
the
way
rn
which
we.
re ci\e
sports.
an
athlete
and
sports.
f:
t
I
hav1:
regarded. ESPN as
my
church
for
the
past 14 yea .
How
could J
i,ot
mention
ESPN's 25th
annhersat"). for
all
that
ESPN
has
given
to us sports
fans?
In
celebration of their
annin:r
·ar)
ESPN
and an
i.:xp
11
panel
looked
back at the
past
2 -
years
in sports.
The
panel
elect d
tht best
and
\\ orst in
the world of . port.
. ince
1979
We all Ila
c
our
own fa\ont ·
p .
moments
over
th
years.
if you
want the
expert panel' go to espn.com,
but here are
m111c.
Biggest
Blunder:
Leon Lett,
in
su , rl
O\
XXVII.
After
picking
up
a
fumble
and
taking
11
do\\
n
i
·I .
Lett
was a
yard
. rr\
from
oring
a
Dallas
touchdown.
nlortuna
dy,
for
Dallas,
Don Bcbht, ran
in
and
knocked. the ball away frem th;.;
dancing
Lett
That
was the
nl)
highlight
tnr
the
8111 •
the
Co\ ho).
wouta
go
onto \\
in
the
game
52-1
1 .
Outrageous Character:
Mike
T.
on.
He
has
gi en the
sports world
some
,
1
f
the
most
.entertaining
sound
bites ever,
mcludmg
my
favorite when
lte
told
Lennox
Le,,.
1.
that
he want~
ed
to
eat his children.
Not ,
I\
hasT. n said
some
of the
most
nutm , iu
things;
he
has
doni.:
th
·m, qu.md1.:rllle'
hundreds
>of
million
of
dollars, biting
off a
part
Evande:r
H;olyfield's
•ar
an
l,
ttoomg
his
face
Best Athlete:
Michael
J
rdan
Although
Gr lLky
and
nn.
10ng
are
great, there rcal-
lj
1s
no
contest in
this att:go~--
Tig
r Woods
is
not
even
a po
:si-
h ht~
for
a
few
reasons.
For one
his
,
play
ovet the
past
fo,
y ~
has
declined
and
t \ ).
h ·
pl. ) .
SEE GATES, PAGE 8
TrlE
CIRCLE
Upcoming Events:
Football: Saturday, Sept.
25 -
against Iona, home at 7 p.m .
.
Women's Soccer: Fridc:tY, Sept.
24 -
against Delaware State, home at 7 p.m.
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2004
www.maristcircle.com
PAGE 10
Great Danes hunt down Red Foxes
By
MARK PERUGINI
Assistant Sports Editor
After notching an impressive
4-
·
2
win
against the Fordham Rams
on Sept.
15,
the Red Foxes hoped
to attain their second win of the
season against the University of
Albany.
Unfortunately, Great Danes'
sophomore Yan Gbolo would
prevent that from happening.
The Great Danes' speedy Gbolo
knocked in both goals as Albany
edged Marist 2-1 on a windy
Sept.
19
afternoon.
With 17:20 left in the second
half and the score notched at
1-1,
Gbolo slipped by senior goal-
keeper Mike Valenti, who tried to
clear the ball away from the
pesky Great Dane forward.
Gbolo maneuvered past one
Marist defender and tipped in the
game-winning goal
.
into the mid-
dle of the net, giving the Great
Danes a 2-1 lead.
Red Foxes coach Bobby
Herodes said the team is very tal-
ented despite its disappointing
record.
"Our kids played great," he
said. "We are an outstanding
team with a 1-3 record. Things
just have not gone our way. [The
record] is very disturbing and
brings a level beyond frustra-
tion."
,
,
lu
The Red Foxes' intelligent ball-
movement and their continuous
offensive pressure on the Great
Danes' defenders kept the game
close throughout the first half.
However, Albany was the first
team to create some offensive
noise.
and tapped in his third goal of the
blocked all five shots attempted sive unit from being flat and it games. Detelj and sophomore
season.
by the Red Foxes in the second will create
a
well-balanced Anthony Graci both lead the
The Great Danes' defenders half.
offensive and defensive team."
team with three goals on the sea-
The Red Foxes' defenders
attempted to clear the ball out of
their zone, but the ball was mis-
guided to an open Yan Gbolo.
Gbolo streaked past the Marist
defenders and pounded the ball
into the back of the net on a
break-away goal, giving the
Great Danes a 1-0 lead.
Herodes said the team must
limit opponent's scoring opportu-
nities.
"Finishing has been a problem,
no doubt," he said. "Our main
problem is allowing one or more
goals per game. We cannot be a
successful Division I program
with that type of dilemma."
ERIC KIMMEl/THE
CIRCLE
Red Fox sophomore Keith
Detelj temporarily ended the
Great banes' celebration when
he juked past Albany's middle
defender and spanked the ball
past the sprawling Great Dane
goalkeeper into the lower right
comer of the net, tying the game
at 1-1. The first half ended 1-1.
Junior
defensive specialist Justin Byrnes aggressively guards Great Danes' forward Jonathan Stroud In the
Red Foxes 2-1 loss
against Albany. The loss dropped Marlst
to
1-3
overall.
The second half remained a
defensive battle until Gbolo hur-
ried past the Red Foxes' defense
'
inhibited all of the Red Foxes'
scoring opportunities throughout
the second half. Great Danes'
goalkeeper
Bouna Coundol
I
"The best way from losing the
lead or the game is to stagger the
defenders," Herodes said. "That
strategy will prevent our defen-
204
HOOKER AVENUE POUGHKEEPSIE,
N.Y.
(845) 471 - 7766
Hours
",rues., Wed.
9am - Sp
f
Operation;
?Uaf~-inJ
ecia
i
e in
Thurs.
&
Fri
.
9am -
8prn
ormaf even
Detelj led the Red Foxes with
five shots on goal and scored his
third go11l of the season, scoring
his second goal in consecutive
Student
Discount
College I.D .
•
Wl
son.
Marist junior Ben Castor and
senior Matt Flaherty had three
shots on goal each, while juniors
Bruno Machado and Peter Rea
each had two shots on goal.
Great Danes' Gbolo and frosh
Eric Zekiroski each contributed a
team-high four shots on goal.
Valenti had three saves on the
year, extending his season total
to nine. Most impressively,
Coundol has allowed orily two
goals on the season and has
achieved four shutouts on the
season.
The Red Foxes outshot their
adversaries 20-13 and attained
more corner kicks 5-4
.
The Red Foxes (1-3) will storm
the field Wednesday, Sept. 29,
when they oppose Army at home
at
7
p.m.
Herodes said the Red Foxes
will not underestimate the talent
and execution of the Army Black
Knights
.
"Army is a very dangerous and
young team," he said. "They are
a well-organized and well-bal-
anced team. Their size and phys-
icality will make this a challeng-
ing contest."