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Part of The Circle: Vol. 58 No. 8 - November 4, 2004

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VOLUME 58, ISSUE 8
FOUNDED IN
1965
THURSDAY,NOVEMBER4,2004
You have to fight, for your right, to run this country
By
ALEXANDER 0.
PANAGIOTOPOULOS
. Assistant Sports Editor
The election is not officially
over.
Vice-presidential candidate
John Edwards, in a 2:30 a.m.
speech in Boston Wednesday
morning, pledged to keep fight-
ing until the last vote was
.
counted.
"We waited four years for this
victory," he sai~. "We can wait
one more night."
The issue of Ohio's 20 elec-
toral votes and the neck-and-
neck race between President
Bush and Senator Kerry made
declaring a definitive winner in
the election impossible on
Tuesday night.
Surprisingly, there weren't
any discrepancies in the state of
Florida.
The counting of
Florida's approximately 90,000
a~sentee ballots, which is
expected to continue until
Thursday, Nov. 4, should have
been an issue of major scrutiny:
However, Bush was estimated
to have a lead of about 300,000
votes in the state of Florida.
Bush, with 51 percent, won
the majority of the popular
vote, while Kerry won 48 per-
cent. It was estimated that a
record 120 million voters
showed up to the polls. The
day before the election, Reuters
polls showed that 10 states
were statistically tied in voter
support, while nationally the
candidates were tied at 49 per-
cent each.
Jon Stewart, host of the late-
night cable fake news program
"The Daily Show," said on his
special election-night show that
there were three possible out-
comes of the election: Kerry
wins, Bush wins, or civil war.
Mike Gaughran, an Adelphi
University sophomore and
loyal Democrat, was despon-
dent when reached early
Wednesday morning.
"I'd pe lying ifl said I wasn't
really disappointed," he said.
"I'm so furious at the Bush
administration for everything
that has gone on, but also
because -I've poured so much
time and energy into supporting
the Kerry campaign."
Keith Voss Jun, Republican
and Marist student, was not sur-
prised to go to bed Tuesday
night without really
.
knowing
who won for sure.
"l
expected it to be really
SEE ELECTION, PAGE 7
MCTV news, live for six hours of election- coverage
By
CASSI MATOS
Editor in Chief
A presidential election will
only happen once during your
college career.
MCTV, not missing their
opportunity to make history,
hosted an unprecedented six
hour
·
live event, bringing cover-
age of the 2004 presidential elec-
tion to the college.community.
As the final countdown began,
the newsroom fell silent as these
students realized the magnitude
and significance of their under-
taking.
·
Ralph Filardo III, execu-
tive producer of the show .and
director of news, MCTV, decid-
·
ed during the summer that this
project was something the club
should aim for.
·
"We knew about a month ago
that we were definitely going to
do this, and prepared for three
weeks straight," Filardo said.
The program, entitled 'Rock
the
Vote
2004,
America
Decides,' was hosted by six
anchors; Ralph Filardo, Amer
Nabil,
Louis
Ortiz,
Kate
Dayman, Christina Garibaldi and
Joanne Brakatselos.
'At times it brought tears
to my eyes to realize how
far the club has come.'
-Amer
Nabil
MCTV
Anchor
The 26 staff members on hand
throughout ·the night were in
charge of cameras, lighting,
teleprompter and graphics.
Even though the anchors' and
crew's preparation for the night
spanned three weeks, goiI!g live
meant dealing with news as it
happened and scripts were writ-
ten and rewritten throughout the
night as the poll results came in.
In addition to straight news
coyerage, ~porters were sent out
into the field to gather student
perspectives on the election for a
dorm challenge competition.
The sophomores were declared
the winners of this competition,
in which they were asked ques-
tions regarding this and prior
year's presidential elections.
Live in-studio guests were
interviewed, including Marist
Poll representatives Greg Morse
and Jon Sumler, and SGA repre-
sentatives Linda Crane, Rachel
Mills, Ken Juras and Brandan
Lee, who each represented a dif-
ferent political view and dis-
cussed their feelings on several
different topics including educa-
tion, health and taxation policies.
SEE MCTV, PAGE 7
EffiC
KIMMEL
THE
CIRCLE
MCTV Anchors Kate Oaymon, left, and Christina Garibaldi, right, report live in Lowell Thomas
Studio 210, prov
·
ldlng the latest updates on the electoral college polls.
New Paltz welcomes Ralph Nader on his campaign trail
By
ALEXANDER
o:
PANAGIOTOPOULOS
Assistant Sports Editor
The inevitable stench of some
700 people hung heavily in a
packed SUNY New Paltz lecture
hall on Sunday as Ralph Nader
hunched over a podium.
Nader was in New Paltz on one
of the last stops of his tour of all
50 states. The people were there
either to cheer for him, to
respectfully disagree with him,
THE CIRCLE
845-575-3000
ext.
2429
writethecircle@hotmail.com
3399 North Road
Poughkeepsie, NY 12601
or to plead with him to withdraw American people lose," Nader which affects millions of you.
in a state
·that is considered
ported Nader. As a village, 14%
from the presidential race. In a said.
"Corporations must College tuition should cost as
"safe"
for Democratic voters to of New Paltz voters suppo~
press confer-
become our ser-
much
as
high - - - - - - - - - - break
ranks Nader in the 2000
election.
ence, speech,
'Corporations must
vants, not our mas-
school: zero."
·
with Senator
Nader has not been covered as
'They just cover him as a
and Q.-and-A.
become
our
ser-
ters."
Students from
Kerr.y.
In an a legitimate candidate in the
session, Nader
Nader also called SUNY New Paltz,
spoiler ... The reporters
Oct. 28 Marist mass mediF.said Marist College·
vants, not our mas-
L<1,
mainly focused
ters.'
out to the students Vassar
College,
get bored with Bush and
C o 1 1 e g e media and politics professor
on the special
in the audience to Bard
College,
Kerry stories.'
Institute
for Bradley Freeman.
interests
and
advance
some Dutchess
County
Public Opinion
"They just
cover him as a spoil-
corpora ti on s
-
Ralph Nader
issues of their own.
Community College
-
Bradley Freeman
p<;>ll, 54% of er," Freeman said.
"The
Presidential candidate
f
that are influ- _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
"You haven't and Marist College
Pro essor, media,
registered vot-
reporters get bored with Bush
encing
both
even injected one were in the audi-
a
nd politics
ers
supported
and Kerry
stories.
It's like some-
Democrats and Republicans.
issue into this political commen-
ence.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ John
Kerry, one drinking Coke and Pepsi and
•'Whenever
corporations con-
tary," Nader said. "You haven't
Nader was in New
38% supported then having a wheat grass drink."
trol
the
government,
the injected the rising cost of tuition, Paltz to buoy support for himself George W. Bush, and 2% sup-
SEE NADER, PAGE
7
FEATURES: FIRST TIME VOTER EXCERCISES PRIN-
CIPLES OF DEMOCRACYOOK.COM
Assistant sports editor Alexander D. Panagiotopoulos gives
a first-hand account of his voting experience.
PAGE5
A
&
E: NOTHING CAN STOP POST-HARDCORE
BAND CONVERGE AS THEY SWING INTO THE
CHANCE
Converge gives an intense and "gut wrenching" perform-
ance at the Chance
PAGE 6
















































































THE
CIRCLE
THURSDAY, NOVEMBRER 4, 2004
www.maristclrcle.com
PAGE2
Student Activities and SGA rekindle College Bowl
By
ALISSA BREW
News Editor
Are you ready to rumble? The
College Bowl has come to
Marist
College and will take
place
on
Saturday Nov. 20, at 9
a.m. on
the third floor of the
Student Center.
"It's
a
fast-paced academic
tournament
similar
to Jeopardy,"
said
Michele Fischetti, assistant
director
of student activities.
Student Activities and the
Student Government Association
(SGA) are joining together
to
bring back
the competition to
Marist
College. Marist last ran
this
event two years ago.
Fischetti said that this competi-
tion is just for fun and to
pique
the interest of the students.
"We [Student Activities and
SGA]
are
trying to bring back the
spirit of the College Bowl to
campus,"
she
said.
Sophomore
Michael
McLaughlin, vice president of
academic affairs said that Marist
will gain from hosting .this com-
petition.
"It's an important program
because a. it puts us [Marist] on
the map and b. it's something
that is academically challeng-
ing," he said.
fhe teams for this competition
can be a mix of any four partici-
pants that include students, fac-
ulty or staff. Teams can pick up
forms at the Office of College
Activites, which are due back by
Wednesday, Nov.
13.
Senior Maria Negron who will
participate in the College Bowl
on the Sigma Sigma Sigma team,
said that she is happy to be a part
of the game.
"I've always liked the idea of
various groups coming together
for a fun event like this," she
said. "Not
to
mention I'd like to
show people that Greek
life
isn't
all fun and games. We are actu-
ally intelligent people . .
.
we
actually have to maintain mini-
mum GPA's to participate and it
will be nice to demonstrate that
on campus a little more."
Two teams will go, head-to-
head and be asked randomly
selected questions that
are
pro-
vided by the Association of
College Unions
International
(ACUI) an organization that has
helped the College Bowl run its
program since 1976.
Fischetti said that the bank of
questions that the ACUI provid-
ed is enormous.
"It's everything and anything
you could ever think of," she
said.
However, Fischetti said that the
questions should not intimidate
any team that wants to partici-
pate.
"It doesn't matter if it's tough,"
she said. "This is going to be
pure fun."
Negron said that some teams
will compete to win and others
are looking to have a good time.
"Everyone's going to want to
win, but I think everyone's going
to have a really good time as
well," she said.
Student Activities is looking
for volunteers to help run the
event, as well as anyone who
wants to be a part of the audi-
ence. Fischetti said that students,
as well
as
some faculty members
have already expressed
interest
in the event.
"there's a lot of interest," she
said. "I'm hoping to get 10
teams."
Junior Matthew Hittenmark,
vice president of club affairs said
that the College Bowl should
gain the imterest of clubs
because the event is a part of a
club challenge.
If
a club won the
College Bowl it would receive
ten points towards the coveted
Club of the Year award.
The (::ollege Bowl is one of the
12 possible club challenges.All
together, the club challenges
comprise 1 /3 of the requirements
that are needed to win Club of
the Year.
Hittenmark said that is not the
only
award
a team could receive.
"They [the winning partici-
pants] get an overall self-aware-
ness of their own intellectual
ability."
The College Bowl in conjW?-c-
tion with ACUI has aided the
contest between colleges since
,
1976, when the campus pro-
grams were first initiated. The
ACUI provides volunteers for
campus, regional, and national
contests. Over
500
schools have
participated in these competi-
tions, and Marist is
looking
to
join the list. There are
64 teams
that compete annually in the
National
Championship
Tournament.
Fischetti said that she
hopes
this competition will result in a
~tudent only competition in the
spring.
"The goal is to have a spring
tournament
with just students,"
said Fischetti.
The winning team will then
compete in
regional
.
competi-
tions against colleges from
Buffalo
to
Albany.
McLaughlin said that the
College Bowl will probably be a
heated event.
"We go to Marist, obviously
there will be competition."
IICl■III
l■■•EN•
Frida~ Nov.5,2004
SPC Comedy Club Presents:
Dan Levy
9 PM
Cabaret
Friday, Nov. 5, to
Sunday, Nov. 7 2004
MCCTA Presents:
The Pajama Game
Friday
8 PM
Saturday
2
PM
and
8
PM
Sunday
2
PM
Nelly
Galetti Theater
Wednesday,Nov.10,2004
American
Duos:
Clubs host festival for Liberty Partnership Program
Violin and Plano
8PM
PAR
Marist's Liberty Partnership
Program (LPP) held its sixth
annual Harvest Festival last
Wednesday, Oct. 27.
The event took place in the
Cabaret with the help of 20
Marist clubs. Students offered a
wide-variety-of games and activ-
ities for 57 LPP children from
four schools in Kingston and
Poughkeepsie. This was LPP's
largest event ever held on cam-
pus since it had the highest atten-
dance.
The Psychology Club
Spring Break 2005
Challenge
.
. :.
find a better
price!
Lowest prices, free meals,
free drinks
Hottest Parties!
November 6th deadline!
Hiring reps-earn free
trips and cash!
WWW
.sunsplashtours.com
1-800-426-7710
served as the main sponsor by
offsetting the cost of refresh-
ments and providing an activity
table.
LPP
students could choose to
visit any activity table sponsored
by the clubs. Activities included
pumpkin painting, T-shirt deco-
rating, making ethnic bracelets,
decorating Halloween bags,
throwing
"pies"
in
the faces of
Marist students, playing Wiffie
ball, making
candy
apples, deco-
rating cupcakes, and participat-
Spring Break 2005
Travel with STS
America's
#1
Student
Tour
Operator to Jamaica,
Cancun,
Acapulco, Bahamas and
Florida.
Now hiring on-campus
reps.
Call
for
group
discounts.
Information/Reservations
1-800-648-4849 or
www.ststravel.com.
ing in a recycle relay race.
Participating clubs included
Teachers of Tomorrow, Kappa
Lambda Psi, Circle K, Sigma
Gamma Rho, Campus Ministry,
Psychology Club, Black Student
Union, ARCO,
·
Kappa Kappa
Gamma, Phi Kappa Sigma,
Alpha Sigma Tau, Tau Befa
Sigma, Dance
Club,
Social Work
Association,
Students
Encouraging
Environmental
Dedication, Marist Ski Team,
MCTV and Sigma Gamma Rho.
SPRING BREAK
Largest selection of
Destinations, Including Cruises!
FREE Drinks.I. VIP Club Parties
&
FKEE trips.
Epicurean Tours
1-800-231-4-FUN
Book
Early
and Save up to
$100.
www.BREAKNOW.com
t
THE CIRCLE
Cessl
G.
Matos
Edftor
in Chief
Courtney
J.
Kretz
Managing Editor
Alissa Brew
carollne
Ross
News Editor
Opinion Editor
Jessica Bagar
PaulSeach
A
&
E Editor
Sports Editor
Sara Stevens
Mark Perugini
Features
itor
Assistant Sports Editor
Dan Ray
Alex
Panaglotopoulos
Campus Editor
Assistant Sports Editor
Joe Guardino
G.
Modele Clarke
Distribution Manager
Faculty
Advisor
Copy
Desk:
Derek Dellinger, Kristin Billera
Kate
Giglio
Copy Editor
Louis
P.
Ortiz
tn
Assistant
Editor
Kristen Alldredge
Health
Editor
Eric
s.
Kimmet
Chief Photographer
Alec Troxell
Advertising
Manager
The Circle
is the
weekly
student
newspaper of
Marist College. Letters to
the
editors, announcements, and
story
ideas are always welcome, bu
we
cannot
publish unsigned
letters.
Opinions expressed in articles are not necessarily
those
of
the
editorial
board.
The Circle staff can be reached at 575~3000 x2429 or letters to the editor can
be sent
to
writethecircle@hotmail.com
LPP is funded through the New
York
State
Education
Department. Marist has spon-
sored the program since 1990.
Marist students serve as tutors,
mentors, interns and volunteers
to help serve at-risk students in
Pough\ce~psie and Kingston in
~des
5
through 12. The goal of
'the program is to provide a broad
range of services aimed at moti-
vating
students to graduate from
high school and enter college or
the workforce. Principals, teach-
ers and
.
parents refer students to
the program.
LPP provides after-school ses-
sions, tutoring, counseling, col-
lege tours, mentoring, cultural
enrichment, and field trips
through partnerships with the
schools and community entities.
Each year, over 225 students are
enrolled
in
LPP
in seven schools
in
Kings~on and Poughkeepsie,
and at least 200 Marist students
serve as tutors, mentors,- interns
or volunteers.
THE CIRCLE
If you would like to place a
classified ad in The Circle,
please
emall
wrltetheclrcle@hotmail.com
Students, faculty
and
campus
groups receive a
10%
discount!
Friday, Nov.
12,
2004
Broadway
Trip:
"Movin' Out"
4PM
Bus leaves from Midrise
Friday,
Nov.
12,
2004
SPC
Broadway
Trip
4PM
Bus leaves from Midrise
Saturday, Nov.
20, 2004
College
Bowl
9AM to4 PM
Student Center
Wednesday, Nov.
14
to
Sunda~Nov.28,2004
Thanksgiving
Break
Wednesda~Dec.1,2004
Music
Department
Small
Ensembles
8PM
PAR
Visit www.MaristCircle.com
·
each week to
take our opinion poll!
Nov. 16
-
Open Mic Night at 9:00pm in the able for the junior
class
trip to Montreal. If inter-
Cabaret
ested
please
contact
Kellie
Cunningham
at
Nov.
18
-
Blood Drive from llarn-5pm in the
Student
Center.
Please
sign
up.
Giving
blood is a
great
way to help the community.
Nov. 18
-
SPC Western Night
starting
at
8:00pm
in the
Cabaret.
Nov. 20
-
College
Bowl - academic jeopardy
tournament from 9am-4pm in the Student
Center.
All are
welcome
to play,
students
play in teams
of
four
Dec. 6-9
-
Class
rings will be
sold
by
Exemplar
:
Recognition in the Rotunda
of
the
Student
Center. There
will be
an
assortment
of styles
to
choose
from, so please stop by. The ring
is
a great symbol of school
pride and
it is some
-
thing you will
always
have
to
remember
your
years
at Marist.
Class of 2006
-
There
are still a few spots avail
X5826.
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THE CIRCLE
-
Let the voices of the Marist
community be heard.
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2004
www.maristclrcle.com
PAGE3
Facebook
frenzy,
fun for all or just procrastination
Here an idea:
let's
sit in
our
rooms
and
look
at
1befacebook.com
instead
of:
actually
going
O\lt
and
making
friend
Great!
Tbefacebook.com
added
Mari t only a
few
days ago
to
the
t
ns1 c
network
of
schools
and
smce then,
1l
ha::.
taken
Marist by stonn. I
can
·1
go
any ..
where without hcarin, about
Facebook.
For
tffose
of you
have been livmg under a rock
th
past few day . the Facebook
1s
basically an onli.11 network
that
1.:
nncc1
i;oll
•1,;
students
to Me too.
r,e
wasted
o
much
other college student , whether
the~ attend
the same
school
or
different
cbools.
At
tirst
J
blatant!) refil ed
'to
make an
account.
But, I
have
t<>
dmit, I ca ed.
y
friend~
w~
con tantly talking
ab
ut
11
and
m
Or®t
~o
be
able to
tell
people
how tupid
it
i ,
I
felt like
I had
to
hav~ an in
1d
r \
1c~.
The
problem
I
that n
i
addicting
for
no reason.
It
was
fun
at fir
t,
~ing able
to
ccrdly
look
at
the
profiles of p pie in one of
y
ur
classe but you ne er
talked
m~
''Ooh,
thi
r on hke mu 1cl
time' ~
7
re
like
soul
mate
I
WeMUSTbefriends." 1,ntsure
you can
ee what
rm
getting
at
Th
profile·
are
really general,
con
1
tmg
of
basic
contact
infor-
mation
and then
expanding
utto
"personal
mfo" which re
lly
doesn't let you
know
anything
about
the person
except
that
they
intend
to
vote for Bush
and
that
they
like
hanging
out.
Tb.e
Facebook phenomenon
11
crazy be ause
you
are
constant ..
ly
bombarded with requests
to
add
someone
as their friend
someone
y
u ·, e ne er talked to.
And
then you
think,
"Do
I have
a stalker?"
And
then
you realize
that
you are
full
of yourself.~
that
people
just
want
ar
have
as
many
fnends on
their
h
t
to
look
as
popular
as possible.
And
~e-
is
no
way you
could reject
a ~
to
he
someone'
ftiend
-1bat
would.
be
11
ttavesty.
Also.
the genmsl
obsession
with
the
Facebook:
is
getting
a
httle
riciicwous.
A few of
my
friends have
actually
left
a
table
full of peopl at lunch, declar-
ing,
"I have to go check
my
Facebook!"
Apparently they
don't
see
the
irony
in th1 : the
Facd,ook
is a network so you
can
make
friend
.
So
here )
ou
are, ocializing with a group
<>f
friends,
and you·re going leave,
so
you can
go to
your
room,
alon
,
and.
chcc your
:facebook.
Wow.
I have a
friend
who goes
to
the
College of
the
Holy
ro
·s
in
Worcester,
M
.
She said that
thefacebook.com
Wa$
a
big
deal
at her chool for a'bQut a. week,
and th n
sl1 totally
forgot
she
even
had
an
llCC()Unt
with it.
That'
what
I
think
is going to
happt.'11. Like l said befo , it's
fun to look
at
other people' pro-
tile:,
but
once everyone
has
s•
ten
their accounts, they
are
llOl
.
going to
be
changing
their
pro-
files that much
and everyone
will get bored with
Che
F
book as
we know
at.
ln
the mean time. I'll
still
be
checking
my
Facebook
account.
rm
expecting
•to
get a
bunch-,;
hara
·mg
com.m.ents
about
·
1 trashed
th~
facebook,
yet
I
have
an:
account
~
.
n}thmg
I
bettet'than
hun-
dreds of requests l
get
from
my
roommate
to
JOm
her
field hock
ey
group. Bring
11
on.1
Newly
released
information causes October disruption
By
IGOR VOL.SKY
Staff Writer
Friday's release of a new
· Osama bin Laden tape has been
branded
as
the
"October
Surprise" of the
2004
presiden-
tial election. And, while I con-
cede that the tape is a distur-
bance
-
there is absolutely
nothing surprising about it. If
aiiytliirig,
ilie tipe
is
yei
another
reminder of President Bush's
utter failures and misjudgments.
The mistake the tape illumi-
nates
is
two-fold:
(1)
Army Gen.
Tommy Franks' (the war's oper-
ational commander) failure to
commit U.S. ground troops
to
hunt down bin Laden and (2)
President Bush's order to shift
focus from the hunt for bin
Laden to the pursuit of Saddam
Hussein. Incidentally, both errs
have been well-documented -
in 1,ooks and newspaper coliliiili.s
-
and if they fail to bring down
the president, John Kerry will
only have himself to blame.
By Nov.
14, 2001,
victory
seemed
imminent
in
Afghanistan. American forces
had pushed out the Taliban, and
Kabul, the country's capital, had
fallen to the Northern Alliance.
The war was like no other -
U.S.
soldiers were mainly
employed as observers and
liaisons while Information Age
teclinolog1es bombarded the
Afghan landscape.
Yet on Nov. 17, an officer in
Graduate School is
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Pakistan's
Inter-Services become notorious in the battle of
Intelligence
told
TIME Tora Bora."
As
Colonel Thomas
Magazine that bin Laden was later proclaimed, "We chose
to
last seen
leaving
the eastern city fight using the Afghans who
of Jalalabad, headed for Tora were fighting to regain their own
Bora. Around the same time, the country.
Our
aims of eliminating
Christian
Science
Monitor Al Qaeda were similar."
.
reported that "the US intensified
Yet, while both Ali and
its airstrikes on Tqra Bora
.
. .
Ghamsharik were proud leaders
[ and] ... as was the pattern else-
in the anti-Taliban cause, their
where in Afghanistan, the US "aim of eliminating al Qaeda"
oegan en.listing
local warlords.
would soon be called into ques-
Two -
Hazret Ali and Haji tion. In fact, some of the Afghan
Zaman Ghamsharik
-
would fighters, including Ali himself,
complete~
,
.. _ ..
__
-
Ritt.,
»hnsen
were proud al Qaeda "contrac-
tors". Still, Afghan warlords had
estimated that 1,500 to 1,600 of
the best fighters in bin Laden's
network, including bin Laden
p.imself, were hiding in the
mountains and underground
caves of Tora Bora and for the
most part, they were determined
to capture them
.
Meanwhile, in Washington,
D.C., the ad.ministration had seits
sights
elsewhere.
As
Bob
SEE OCTOBER,
PAGE
4
ure
I'
Skin
"",,,..,,...
pioneer
• No
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Give
yourtelt
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,
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with
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Introducing the Identity" phone
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See
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PAGE 4 •
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2004 •
THE CIRCLE
www.marlstclrcle.com
From Page
Three
Bin Laden video
reminds public
of Bush's
misjudgments
Igor Vo/sky addresses Bush
s
shortcomings and Kerry
s
inability to proclaim them
·
Woodward writes in "Plan of "pull out the Iraq planning and
Attack," on Nov. 21, President
Bush
.
"clamped his arm on his
secretary of defense, Donald H.
Rumsfeld" and asked him,
"What kind of a war pfan do you
have for Iraq? How do you feel
about the war plan for Iraq?"
With that question, Bush ordered
Rumsfeld to "get Tommy Franks
looking at what it would take to
protect America by removing
Saddam Hussein."
Until then, Franks was busy
commanding
U.S.
Special
let's see where we are."
Meanwhile, back in
Afghanistan,
The
Daily
Telegraph reported that while
Franks and Rumsfeld were plan-
ning Iraq, Osama bin Laden,
with a warm glass of green tea in
his hand, "squatting in the dark
cave . . . delivered a diatribe on
holy war to his elite al Qaeda
fighters... [Yet]... even as he
spoke he planned to abandon
them."
And, somewhere between Nov.
between 5,000 and 50,000
Pakistani rupees for mules and
Afghan guides, which moved
stealthily along the base of the
White Mountains, over a major
highway, and into the remote
tribal areas of Pakistan."
Responding to this exodus,
(which by then had turned into a
mad rush), Pir Baksh Bardiwal,
the intelligence chief for eastern
Afghanistan, questioned the
American decision to hold back
U.S. troops from the Army's 10th
Mountain Division. Bardiwal
Forces in Tora Bora, and - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - argued that the failure to
commit U.S. ground troops
resulted in
a porous
Afghan-Pakistani border
and allowed thousands of
fighters, including bin
Laden, to escape.
upon
receiving
Rumsfeld's request' for an
Iraq estimate, he was
incredulous. Woodward
reports: "They were in the
midst
of one
war,
Afghanistan, and how
And, somewhere between Nov. 28 and
Nov. 30,
'according
to detailed inter-
views with Arabs and Afghans in east-
ern Afghanistan afterward-the world's
most wanted man.'
they wanted detailed
planning for another, Iraq?
'Goddamn,' Franks said, 'what
the f-k are they talking
about?'"
Apparently, one war was not
enough. Because, as Franks was
drawing up war plans for Iraq,
the president had begun building
public support for an Iraqi inva-
sion.
On
Nov. 25, in an interview
with Newsweek, Bush declared
"Saddam is evil" and that "he's
got weapons of mass destructioq.
And I think he needs to open up
his country to let us inspect."
That following day, according
to Woodward's Plan of Attack,
Rumsfeld flew to see General
Franks at CENTCOM headquar-
ters in Tampa wher~ he told him,
28 and Nov. 30, "according to
detailed interviews with Arabs
and
Afghans
in
eastern
Afghanistan
afterward-the
world's most wanted man"
walked out
with four of his loyal-
ists in the direction of Pakistan.
According to the Monitor,
instead of capturing the al Qaeda
fighters, the Afghan warlords
-
enlisted by the U.S. to attack
Tora Bora-were cutting deals
with them and helping them
escape. Even Commander Ali,
the so-called American ally was
overheard by the Monitor strik-
ing a deal for the safe passage of
three al Qaeda members.
As several interrogations later
reviled, "al Qaeda fighters paid
But back in Tampa, Fla.,
Franks
didn't
hear
Bardiwal's criticism. He was dis-
tracted with Iraq. On Dec. 1,
Rumsfeld sent Franks a top
secret planning order to come up
with an estimate to build the base
of a new Iraq war plan. Bob
Woodward writes that tradition-
ally "the Pentagon was supposed
to give Franks 30 days to come
up with his estimate" but Franks
"was to report in person three
days later."
Therefore
it
was not until
Dec.
5
that a 10-day American offen-
sive of Tora Bora was launched.
On Dec. 16, Afghan warlords
announced
that
they
had
advanced into the last of the
caves. By that time, the only al
Qaeda fighters left inside ''were
the stupid ones, the foolish and
the weak." Bin Laden had long
escaped.
Tommy Franks, as it turned out,
·
had misjudged the interests of
the Afghan warlords and let pass
the best chance to capture al
Qaeda's top leader. (Apparently,
Franks also recognized his mis-
take for he changed his approach
in all subsequent battles, using
Americans, not Afghans as first-
line combat units.)
A senior official with direct
responsibilities in counterterror-
President Bush, true to form,
denied ever making it.)
Apparently, President Bush's
attention span is that of a six-
year-old child. After two months
of hunting for bin Laden, he lost
interest and shifted his focus
onto Hussein. The shift had seri-
ous consequences.
USA Today recently reported
that "in 2002, troops from the 5th
Special Forces Groups who spe-
cialize in the Middie East were
pulled out of the hunt for Osama
bin Laden in Afghanistan to pre-
Tampa. Franks was
"looking
troubled."
"Senator, we are not engaged in
a war in Afghanistan," Franks
said.
'\Excuse me?" Graham asked.
"Military and intelligence per-
sonnel are being redeployed to
prepare for an action in Iraq," he
continued.
Thus, just four months in, the
hunt for Osama bin Laden-the
man President Bush had so des-
perately
wanted
"dead or
alive"-had been abandoned.
ism is quoted in the - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Washington Post as saying
'We
[messed]
up
by
not getting into Tora
And as former terrorism
czar Richard Glarke put it
on "Meet the Press,"
"during
those two years
when forces were divert-
ed to Iraq ... at Qaeda has
metamorphosized into a
hydra-headed organiza-
tion with cells that are
that "We [messed] up by
Bora sooner and letting the Afghans do
not gettix!g µito Tora Bora
all the work. Clearly a decision
point
sooner and letting the
Afghans do all the work.
came when we
started
bombing Tora
Clearly a decision point
Bora.'
came when we started
bombing Tora Bora and we
- A senior counterterrorism official
decided just to bomb,
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
operating autonomously,
because that's when he escaped pare for their next assignment: like the cells that operated in
...
We didn't put U.S. forces on Iraq. Their replacements were Madrid recently."
the ground, despite all the brave troops with expertise in Spanish
For that reason, President
talk and that is what we have had cultures."
Bush's mishandling of the War
to
~hange
since then."
In his book
"Intelligence
on Terrorism has made America
And, while civilian and military Matters," former Florida senator less secure and his diversion to
officials recognize that the fail-
and chairman of the Senate Iraq only radicalized the funda-
ure to commit U.S. ground Intelligence Committee Bob mentalists. And if
John Kerry is
troops was
~
grave error, Graham revealed that Tommy unable to clearly articulate these
President Bush does not. In fact, Franks told him on Feb. 19, failures, then he does not deserve
he no
,
longer believes that Osama 2002, that just four months after to be president.
bin Laden is even worth going the invasion of Afghanistan,
after. On March 13, 2002 the many important resources (like
president said that "And, again, I the Predator drone aircraft cru-
don 't know where he is. I-I'll
repeat what I said. I truly am not
that concerned about him.''
(Confronted with this statement
at the third presidential debate,
cial to the search for Osama bin
Laden) were being shifted to pre-
pare for war in Iraq.
Graham recalls this conversa-
tion at MacDill Air Force Base in
Igor Vo/sky
is
the host of
Political-Thought,
a
public
affairs program airing every
Friday from 4pm-6pm on
WMAR
Marist Radio l 630AM or at
www.maristradio.com.
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THE CIRCLE
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2004
www.maristcircle.com
PAGES
First-time voter exercises principles of democracy
By
ALEXANDER D.
PANAGIOTOPOULOS
Assistant Sports Editor
One of the few
pure
things
left
in politics
is
voting.
Despite the
allegations of registration fraud
and
voter intimidation,
and the
possibility of another hanging
chad
.
debacle,
one
thing
that
is
incredibly satisfying is getting
into a voting booth and putting in
your two cents.
Nov. 2 also symbolized the end
of the massive advertising
blitz
that was inflicted
on
us.
Hundreds of millions of dollars
were spent by the political
machines to sell us "their" guy.
It
felt more like choosing
between Viagara and Levitra (if
you have an election that lasts
more
than four hours, please
seek medical attention). And for
us
at Marist
College, Nov. 2 was
the first time we were
old
enough to vote in a presidential
election. We are
iiow all grown
up and have the power of adults.
I
decided
I'd try to vote right
after my 9:30 a.m. class. I
had
my election card in my car; it
said I had to go
to
SFB Morse
Young Child Magnet School,
on
Mansion St.
I
knew from look-
ing online that Mansion Street is
a left
off
~f Washington Street. I
couldn't find it. It helps that half
the streets on Washington St. are
unmarked, save for graffiti.
I
found my way to Market Street,
rolled down my window and
asked
a
young man wearing a
do-rag where the elementary
school was.
"I have to vote there," I
explained.
He
pointed up the street past
Mad Hatter's; past Alex's
Restaurant, and where the mas-
sive
post
office
and
Poughkeepsie
Journal buildings
stand.
"Make a right there," he said.
I
gave him a big nod of grati-
the
hallway.
I stepped forward
(no line!) and gave my election
card to the guy at the desk.
"Alexander Panagoplis?" he
asked.
Yup; that's me.
A woman asked me if I
needed
tude, and my
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
help.
I
respectfully
declined,
stepped into
the
booth,
and couldn't
get the cur-
tains closed.
Camry
lurched
forward, like
John
Kerry
running
to
catch a foot-
ball.
I parked at
the school and
My finger shot forward and hit
the switch with a satisfying
click. A red "X" was exposed
on the switch, symbolizing the
finality of my choice.
walked up the front steps, weav-
ing around a kindergarten class
getting into a yellow school bus.
Two tables with volunteer work-
ers and two ancient voting
machines were arranged before
me in the
lobby.
I could smell
pastries from a
PTA
bake sale in
"Pull
.
the
lever to close the curtains, and
then pull down the switches to
make the selections. Then push
the lever back," she said.
Seeing my Poughkeepsie
Pioneers shirt that my dad got
me (he works for the district),
she
isked,
"Hey! Did you play
football with my son?"
"No, I'm not from
Poughkeepsie,"
I
replied.
"I
gotta vote now, though
.
"
The curtains closed around me
and
I
was left in solitude with
'!llY
choices. My finger was coiled
centimeters away from the first
labeled
switch as I made sure it
was who
I
wanted to choose. My
finger shot forward and hit the
switch with a satisfying click. A
red "X" was exposed on the
switch, symbolizing the finality
of my choice.
I proceeded with the rest of the
ballot, ending with a referendum
question on the library budget. I
pushed the lever back just as the
woman had told me, and the
switches returned to their origi-
nal positions. I prayed some-
where in the machine the requi-
site holes were punched into the
ballot the way I intended.
The curtains parted and I
walked through.
I
felt like such
an adult, perhaps as George W.
Bush felt when he set the record
for most executions of any gov-
ernor in United States histocy.
Here I was, continuing a cen-
turies-old tradition of exercising
the right to vote. Like Franklin
Delano Roosevelt once said,
I
was now one of the
,
ultimate
rulers of democracy. People our
age will rule democr~cy for the
next 60 years.
"Hey buddy!"
My dad came running up
behind me. He was doing some
work in Morse Elementary
School Tuesday morning. I told
him I'd voted.
Jie bought me a cookie at the
PTA bake sale.
Students take break from technology and take step toward creativity
By CHRISTINE CATARINO
Staff
Writer
This is a public service
announcement. Halloween has
come and gone. Despite Marist's
not-so-secret Jesuit association,
it is definitely this college's
most
celebrated holiday. Christmas is
just no match for the silly cos-
tumes and drunken stupor.
Thanks to such websites as web-
shots.com, we can relive the
visual ecstasy of Halloween until
people decide the moment has
passed and its time to retire their
pictur-es from the scrutinizing
public eye. (This is a sad day
indeed.) My personal favorite
costumes this year included
Hugh Hefner clones, Double
Dare contestants, and the hardly
elusive head-to-toe penis cos-
tume. It's a classic.
Advmd
I won't get into any d~tails but
girls certainly do rlay out the
well-understood
"Halloween
feel insulted, let me confess that
to construct my costume a whole
lot of tissues and one
borrowed
Scantily Clad''
- - - - - - - - - - -
D-cup bra were
rule well. I'm
The Halloween costumes
integral to my
character. A rule
this year were better than
is a rule after all.
sure Mean Girls
helped get this
point
across;
there were no
ever.
Actually, the
scary-witch Lindsay Lohan-like
costumes on Mad Hatter's stage
anyway. Now before any ladies
costumes
this
year were better than ever, which
almost makes you think that
Santa's little helpers, dodge ball
players, and even the firefighters
resisted logging onto theface-
book.com for the entirety of
Saturday night so as to be sure
their costumes looked spectacu-
lar. Seemingly, its obsessive pop-
ularity and attraction has come
and gone even quicker than our
extended and beloved Halloween
holiday. (How many thendsh1p
confirmations do you need to
make you feel better about your-
self anyway?) For prying your-
selves away from instant mes-
senger and the even less formal
facebook.com long enough to
enjoy Halloween this year you
deserve commendations.
So, congratulations on some
great costumes everyone and
thanks for finally abandoning
your computers .
.
. at least tem-
porarily
.























































































THE
CIRCLE
''
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2004
www.marlstclrcle.com
Right now, there's no dif-
ference between you down
there and us up here...
, ,
- Jon Foreman,
Lead singer,
Switchfoot
PAGE6
Nothing can stop band
Converge
as they
swing into
The Chance
By
J.
TARA SMITH
Staff Writer
On Oct. 28, post-hardcore band
Converge stopped l:>y
The
Chance in Poughkeepsie as they
approached the end of their five-
w~ "You Fail Me" Tour 2K4
leitving behind an unforgettable
~rf
ormance, as well as a special
p~e~nt for the clean-up crew.
e
ppening bands
included
B~~een the Buried and Me and
C~y~-In as well as two local
billlds.
The first two sets were largely
fqriettable and the crowd could
bi' found more outside the con-
cJrt hall than in it. That scene
changed when Between the
Buried
.
and Me came out swing-
ing, literally.
Lead vocalist
Tommy Rogers made an impres-
si~ physical and vocal perform-
artce as did the other members,
including the newly added Dusty
Waring on guitar.
Fast and heavy drums, guitar
riffs, bass lines and Rogers'
screaming voice weaved seam-
lessly in and out with slower,
more melodic parts, featuring
guitarist and backup singer Paul
Waggoner's
soft
vocals.
Waggoner's guitar talent was
admirable as he sustained a mun-
ber of solos throughout the set.
Favorites
"Aesthetic"
and
"Mordecai" were among the fea-
tured songs.
Cave-In also gave a stellar per-
formance, although the tempo
was slower than one would
expect from a post-hardcore
band.
Regardless, the crowd
managed to get the pit going
in
sporadic mini-moshes
.
The
gravely-voiced
screams
of
bassist Caleb Scofield were
interwoven with the harmonious
vocals of lead guitarist Stephen
Bodsky as they tore up their
respective instruments.
lead singer Jacob Bannon appre-
ciates the corded microphone. In
his hands the microphone
becomes a deranged audio yo-yo
as he whips it around the stage,
leaping from one corner to the
other.
Converge was definitely the
most intense band of the show,
giving themselves and the audi-
ence no chance to slow down,
relax and recover from the heart-
pounding
beats
and
There was no time
for a breath
Newton was
insane with his
bass.
It
seems
impossible
that he can get
hyper-quick
guitar riffs.
There
was
no time for a
of air, no slow melodies, no
clear lyrics.
breath of air, no slow melodies,
no clear lyrics, just Jacob
Bannon screaming at the top of
his lungs as he threw himself
around the stage between the
equally enthusiastic guitarists
Nate Newton and Kurt Ballou.
As the guitarists raced around
their respective corners of the
stage, they thrashed about while
still managing to hold on to their
instruments and pull some sound
from them.
any chords out of his guitar as he
swings it around, upside down
and over the heads of the crowd
pressed up hard against the base
of the stage.
Drummer Ben Koller, looking
like a long-haired Cheech on
speed, flailed his arms and legs
with calculating and lightning
speed to create the pounding
beats driving the music.
The band performed a number
of cr~wd favorites. From their
Unlike most performers today, new CD "You Fail Me" they
played the title song as well as
"Black Cloud."
With each song the pit got more
and more wild. What began with
the average circle of moshers
pushing and shoving and swing-
ing their arms increased with
intensity until they were climb-
ing and jumping on top of one
another in an attempt
to
get clos-
er to the lead singer kneeling at
the edge of the stage to sing
along in his microphone the
words of "Concubine."
Young men in black T-shirts
and hoodies jum~d off railings
and body surfed their way on to
the stage during the last song,
"The Saddest Day." Ten or so of
these men accosted the lead
~inger, pushing
him
around as he
tried good humouredly to push
them off the stage, managing to
shove into him and the bassist,
upsetting the bassist's micro-
phone stand. They left the stage
soon enough, no damage done.
The most hardcore moment of
the night was when singer
Bannon vomited in front of
Koller's drum set after finishing
"Concubine".
Moments later
Bannon was up and ready to fin-
ish the set with three songs left.
As
Bannon was doubled over
heaving,
Newton
c
,
racked,
"That's what Ruby Tuesday's
does to you."

As
they concluded the last
song, saying their farewells to
the hundreds of screaming and
applauding
fans,
Bannon
thanked The Chance for hosting
the tour and offered to do his part
by cleaning up his vomit by
throwing a towel on the mess and
pushing it around with his foot.
The crowd cheered for him all
the louder.
Thus ended one of the best
shows in hardcore to have visited
the city of Poughkeepsie
.
MCCTA's musical 'Pajama
Game'
rouses
excitement
on campus
By
ALEXANDRIA BRIM
Staff Writer
CJ.'
'.-:
Marist College Council on
Tlu,atre Arts (MCCTA)
is
pl~d to announce that its fall
muical, "Pajama Game," will be
presented on Nov. 5, 6, and 7.
The Friday and Saturday per-
fqiinances will be held at 8:00
p~. and the Sunday perform.-
nee will start at 2:00 p.m. All
p~rformances Will be in the Nelly
q<>letti theater, located in Marist
Qollege's Student Center.
Written by George Abbott and
Richard Bissell with music by
Richard Adler and Jerry Ross,
"Pajama Game" tells the story of
the women of the Sleep-Tite
Pajama Factory and their strug-
gle for a seven-and-a-half-cent
pay raise. While the conflict
between the factory's manage-
ment and its workers boils,
sparks fly between superinten-
dent Sid Sorokin and ;union
leader Babe Williams. ~s the
workers go on strike, can Babe
attain the pay raise and keep her
man?
Marist seniors Lesley
Henderson, Amanda Nietzel and
Brian Apfel are very excited
about "Pajama Game." They are
looking forward to entertaining
their fell ow Mari st students in
such a high-spirited musical.
"Musical theater has been one
of our favorite activities in
MCCTA. We couldn't think of a
better way to end our musical
career here at Marist
than
with
'The Pajama GaJtte, "' they said.
Director Christine O'Grady
believes that the message of the
musical is especially important
now during the nation's critical
election.
"I
guess what I a9JIUre most
about this play
_
is its central
theme of all the people banding
together to fight for something
they believe in. It speaks to me as
being relevant now with the
upcoming election and every-
thing attached to it," O'Grady
said. "Besides, it has
fun
danc-
ing and spirited music with a
great story-line--what else could
anyone ask for?"
Tickets for the "Pajama Game"
can be purchased by Marist stu-
dents for only five dollars.
General admission tickets are
$10. They can be purchased
online
by
v1S1tmg
www.mccta.com/boxoffice.
Directed by Christine O'Grady,
MCCTA's "Pajama Game"
will
be
presented Nov. 5, 6, and 7.
In
the
Nelli
Goletti
Theater.
Students
can puchase tickets
to
this
splrted
musical
for only five dollars at
www.mccta.com/boxofflce.
Switchf oot is
·
''More
Than Fi~e'' as
sold-out tour
conquers New
York City
~
DORY LARRABEE
Staff Writer'
"It's the best feeling when
e~eryone sings along
.
Right
now, there's no difference
b'etween you down there and us
up here, because we're all
sjnging the same songs," Jon
Fmeman,
lead
signer
of
~l,Chfoot, said during a concert
op
Oct. 29 in New York City.
The concert, which took place
io Hammerstein Ballroom, fea-
f¥red The Honorary Title, The
Rormat, and the headlining
Switchfoot. The show started at
7.~30 p.m. with The Honorary
'
Title.
The Brooklyn natives were "so,
so, so happy to be back in New
York," lead singer Jarrod Gorbet
said. Considered to be a mixture
of Dashboard Confessional and
Jeff Buckley, The Honorary Title
has been praised for their lyrics
and style.
During their set, they played
"Bridge and Tunnel" off their
debut album "Anything Else but
the Truth," -released in June
2004.
played songs off their 2003 debut
album
"Interventions
and
Lullabies."
Highlights
also
included "Wait, Wait, Wait" and
the upbeat pop hit "Tie the
Rope."
The band had incredible energy
throughout their set, jumping on
and off of speakers and bouncing
around in bare feet while \am-
bourin~s and clapping added to
the room's energy.
The stage
was crowded with the six-mem-
ber East Coast band who had
When Switchfoot came on • perhaps there greatest achieve-
stage, the crowd went crazy, ment was releasing "Dare You to
indicating that the majority of Move" on the soundtrack for the
concertgoers had come to see the 2002
film
"A
Walk
to
headlining band. The five-mem-
Remember."
ber band from San Diego, Calif.
The band performed favorites
started
off the
set with from their newest album, includ-
"Ammunition" from their 2003
album "Beautiful Letdown."
The band's sound resembles an
early Third Eye Blind, with long
guitar riffs and catchy lyrics.
Switchfoot is not new to the
music scene. Their 2003 album
ing an acoustic "Twenty-four,"
and "This is Your Life." They
also debuted two new songs,
including one inspired by Johnny
Cash titled "Happy is a Yuppie
Word."
stands for Debt, AIDS, Trade for
Africa
.
However, Switchfoot
does not preach messages of reli-
gion or promote going to church.
They simplY. share positive and
inspiring lyrics.
Switchfoot ended with "Meant
to Live," the band
'
s first single
and most popular song. After a
prolonged ovation, Switchfoot
came back on stage for an
encore, playing the appropriate
"Gone."
Following the opener was The previously toured with popular is their fourth; their first was
Format, a more popular yet still groups Something Corporate and released in 1997. The band has
heavily underrated band. They Yellowcard.
won many
_
awards since then, but
As a Christian band, on their
tour of mostly sold-out shows,
they have been spreading the
word about www.data.org, which
The crowd filed out onto 34th
Street carrying T-shirts, CD~s,
and the memory of an incredibly
energetic, talent-filled concert.
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._....marlstclrcle.com
THE CIRCLE •
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER
4.
2004 •
PAGE 7
From Page One
Nader visits New Paltz amid support and opposition
Receiving
an
even bigger
standing
ovation
than Nader was
New Paltz mayor Jason West.
The 27-year-old West won the
New Paltz mayoral race running
under the Green Party in 2003
and
gained national attention by
performing "illegal" gay mar-
riages in the village of New
Paltz. West is believed to have
won
because SUNY New Paltz
students flooded the polls in sup-
port
of
him.
West focused on the hypocrisy
of
the
Democratic
party, who
have fought to keep the
An amusing moment occurred
Nader/Cornejo ticket off of bal-
when Nader was talking about
lots but ignored a gaffe by Bush the federal budget.
and the Republican party, who
"Half of the entire federaloper,-
missed a Sept. 1 ballot filing
ating budget is devoted to the
deadline in Florida.
military, even though we have no
"For us, if you don't sign ~e major enemy left," said Nader.
right eolor paper, in the right
·
"What about Bush?" called a
place, on the exact right spot, young man in the audience.
you get thrown off the ballot,"
"No major 'foreign' enemy,"
said West.
"It
shows what the Nader said with a smirk.
priorities of the Democratic
Nader hinted that the New
party are."
Paltz community had even more
Nader made it onto the ballot in significant things to come.
35 states.
"The media have flocked
about his candidacy.
One man in a green jacket
screamed,
"If
[Bush]
gets
nit
we're all screwed ... better face
here," said Nader. "The media
"How many pot smokers do we
thinks something special is
going have?"
Nader asked.
"Should
on
here, that
- - - - - - - - - - - - - -
we send
something is
"The media thinks something spe-
t h e s
·
e
churning.
people
it."
Something
clal Is going on here, that some-
to jail?
Another man asked
during the
that
has
thing Is churning. Something that
Do we Q.-and-A. session if Nader
greater appli-
has greater appllcablllty.
s e n d would drop out of the race
iii'
c a b i
I
i t y .
n i c o -
swing states.
Think about
t i
n
e
"That is an arrogant request,"

-
Ralph Nader
addt
'
cts N d

d
it."
One popu-
lar
topic with
the crowd was Nader's stance
on
the use
of marijuana.
Presidential Candidate
a er rep te

to jail?"
Nader's speech was interrupted a
few times by protestors angry
Election outcome not yet clear, results may take several days
close like the 2000 election," Jun
said.
"I
wouldn't be surprised if
it takes a few days to find out
who wins."
Stephen
Krill, a Marist sopho-
more and Republican, was proud
of Bush's majority in the popular
vote.
"Yes, I thought he was a better
choice than
Kerry," Krill said. ''I
think most people saw that."
One of the other notable results will ban homosexual marriages.
of
the
Additionally,
day's vot-
'I
expected it to be really close like
t
h
e
ing was
the 2000 election.
I
wouldn't be
Republicans
that vot-
surprised If It takes a few days to
strengthened
ers in 10
find out who wins.'
their grip on
s t a t e s
the
Senate
across the
country
approved
constitutional amendments that
with victo-
-
Keith Voss Jun
ries in North
Student
Carolina,
South Carolina, and Georgia.
California
voted
to
spend
$3 bil-
lion on state-funded stem cell
research.
One controversial
ballot
issue
that may have
been
rendered
moot by Tuesday's results was
the option in Colorado to split
the state's electoral votes propor-
tionally by support for each can-
didate,
breaking
from the win-
ner-take-all standard. The meas-
ure
did
not pass, and the country
was spared from weeks of legal
sniping and outrage.
One problem for Senators
Kerry and Edwards throughout
their campaign was their difficul-
ty in sending a consistent mes-
sage. Kerry's nuanced positions
on
everything from Iraq to whom
his favorite daughter is contrast-
'
ed sharply in the eyes of voters
with the image that
·
President
Bush presented Thro~ghout his
campaign, Bush consistently
appeared strong and steadfast,
even in the face of changing
information.
Provisional and oversea absen-
tee ballots will not be complet~ly
counted until eleven days after
the election.
MCTV hosts unpresidented live,2004 election night coverage
Keith Strudler, Keith Kindred MCTY, thought this was a great
and Daniel Calandro participated experience for all those involved,
in a live 'fact or fiction' discus-
including herself.
sion moderated by anchor Nabil.
"As for Marist College, what
Live feeds of interviews with more could the students ask for
MIPO director Lee Miringoff than live
TV?" Daymon said.
·and
the chief editor of Florida "Hopefu11y we can do it more in
Today, Earnest Arico, provided a the future."
discussion about the controversy
Tim O'Leary, chief engineer,
behind the votes in Florida and MCTV, played a large role in
the effect the state might have on making this entire project possi-
this year's election
.
ble. Leary encouraged the club
Daymon, a senior member of to try out new equipment, includ-
ing earpieces for the anchors,
In
addition,
a
new
graphics sys-
which allowed them to get live tern was used, as well as
a
new
updates as they
switcher, which
were reporting. '
•••
-
what more could the
provided ttansi-
He
also
students ask for than live
tions from shot
designed
the
TV?'
to shot.
patriotic
set
When the
used during the
_
Kate Daymon
anchors
and
program.
MCTV Anchor
guests were not
The Media - - - - - - - - - - - on camera, live
Center helped get the studio CNN and WMAR feed was used
ready for the live feed and pro-
to fill air time.
vided tech support.
MCTV followed the election
rseults until
4
a.m.. At the end of
the night: the last thing the
anchors could announce was that
Ohio was projected as a win for
Bush, but that was still not offi-
cial.
While they hoped be able to
announce .the 44th President of
the United States live, although
Brakastelos is happy with the
coverage they did get.
"Even thou~h we didn't~et the
last minute votes, just the excit
-
ment of it happenign live was
enough," Brakastelos said.
Nabil is proud of how far the
club, which was named Club
of
the Year last year, has come since
·
he joined as a freshman.
"At times it brought tears to
my
eyes to realize how far the club
-
has come," Nabil said.
"It
used
to be that MCTV news could
barely get a weekly program,
now here we are doing live cov.;
erage."
I
Channel 29 MCTV
Marina', -Piz.z.tria
264 North Road, Poughkeepsie
845-486-5000
Marist
College
Television
(MCTV)
Fall
Schedule
-
Week Seven
r
Week Of Oct 31st -
November
6th, 2004
10:
OPM
11:
PM
RETR
FOOTBALL
De~~
5
RETRO
FOOTBALL
D
ct
5
RETRO
FOOT8All
s
.
tmRO
~
Oetl:S
RETRO
FOOTBALL
D
c
5
RETRO
FOOT8ALL
DetkS
RE'fRO
FOOTBALL
Dec
5
Opa::11 Lata: Thuts . .,
l'ti
. .,
&
Sat.
till 4:30 am
Vot
Pi
u
WlUlV
T
C:ol
200.4,
--
·
~
~
wit.b
Dellvedes
()ne
PiZZil
a week
fl)I"
one year.
Yes! You
tead
if
cottectly,
The
FIRST
WEEK
OF
NOVEMBER,
200'1;
a winnet will
be
selected
and
announced.
No
putchase
necessaty.
.
Thete
is
no
limit
to
thll
amouht o(
l!hftillS
submitfl!d, Pizzas
must
be picked
up
and can
he caf
led
in
anytime Matiha's
is
open,
SWIIPSTAKIS 11'TllY
,oa ■
Name
Address
-------
Home Phone#
Work
----------------~-------
Work Phone#
--
----~
E-mail
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_____________
........,..
__
Birthday



























































PAGE 8 •
THURSDAY
,
NOVEMBER 4, 2004 •
THE CIRCLE
www.marlstclrcle.com
Football
gives streaking Duquesne a scare in defensive struggle
By
PAUL SEACH
Sports Editor
Bradley Rowe, completing a 13-
play 58-yard drive.
For Duquesne, two intercep-
tions and a fumble slowed the
After stalling on a crucial series
because of field positioning, the
Red Foxes were forced
·
to punt
the ball from their own two-yard
quarter.
Kiraly finished the day 3-10
good for 17 yards. Loebig com-
pleted 14 of 29 attempts for one
touchdown and one interception.
Whitlow rushed for 41 yards off
of 16 carries
.
Duquesne's seven points were
its lowest total since 1997.
The la'st time Marist College
defeated Duquesne in regular
season play
,
the team went on to
win
the Metro Atlantic Athletic
Conference championship
.
The
year was 1994
.
Ten years later,
Marist, who was undefeated in
MAAC play entering the game,
looked to repeat history.
Kiraly
,
starting in place of sen-
ior James Luft who was unavail-
able because of surgery to
remove a benign tumor behind
his left eye, was making his sec-
ond career start.
The scoreboard reflected that.
Duquesne fought off Marist in
a defensive battle to win its
eleventh consecutive home game
and 32nd straight MAAC win 7-
3 on Rooney Field in Pittsburgh,
Pa.
offensive
attack.
The second
half was much
of the same
with
neither
The first half was highlight-
ed by a 29-yard field goal by
Bradley Rowe, completing a
13-play 58-yard drive.
line. The Dukes
took over from
the Marist 32-
yard line and
quickly scored
on three plays
.
With 1:12 left in the game and
the Dukes taking over
on
the
Marist one-yard line, Loebig did
the classy thing and took a knee
twice to drain the clock, avoid
any last minute miracles and not
run
up the SC(?re.
The Red Foxes (3-5 overall, 3-
1 MAAC) play Holy Cross in the
final game of the season on
Sa~day in Worcester, Mass, and
will finish second place in the
MAAC behind
Duquesne
·
who is
undefeated and will face LaSalle
on Saturday
.
They would have to win it with
backup senior quarterback Brian
Kiraly
.
The first half was highlighted
by a 29-yard field goal by
team
taking
complete control of the game.
In the fourth quarter, the Dukes
missed a 22-yard field goal and
Marist held on to a slim 3-0 lead.
Bruce Hocker
had three receptions but his
biggest was the 11-yard pass
from Neil Loebig that put
Duquesne ahead 7-3 in the fourth
Obozua Ehikioya rushed 18
times for 63 yards, while fresh-
man
running
back Steven
Men's cross
country grabs third out of tenth place at MAAC championships
l3y CHRIS TORRES
Staff Writer
Foxes were hoping to capture
one of their own as they traveled
to Walt Disney World's Wide
World of Sports complex for the
Metro
Atlantic
·
Athletic
Conference
championships.
Unfortunately
,
they were unable
to win it all, but it was a success-
ful trip nonetheless as they
placed third out of 10 other junior Justin Harris finished 20th 27:26.94).
highly in nearly every competi-
tion. They were just coming off
an impressive showing in the
Albany Invite by placing seventh
out of 29 teams. The Red Foxes
hope to continue their successful
season at the NCAA Northeast
Regional
on Saturday
,
Nov.
13.
MAAC schools.
in 26:31.51.
One-hundred
and ten runners
The Marist men
'
s cross country
team and the Boston Red Sox
both went to Di
s
ney World in the
past week.
While the Red S!)X had just
won a championship
,
the Red
From Page Nine
Senior captain Geoff Decker
continued his stellar season as
his time of 25:47.8 earned him
an 11th place finish to lead the
Red Foxes. He was followed by
junior Steve Hicks who was 19th
with a time of 26:19.19, while
Swimmer Falco
sets record in first leg
of 100-yd
backstrok~ by
.
. 05 seconds
the top three slots in both the
I -
meter and 3-meter events. Junior
Meghan Duffy placed first in
each event. The co-capta
i
n and
ECAC qualifier h~lped lead the
way for fre
s
hman Melissa
Mangona and
s
ophomore Anna
Sanner
.
Mangona finished sec-
ond in the 1
-
meter and third in
'the
3
-meter
,
basically
s
witching
spots with Sanner who was sec-
ond in the 3-meter and third in
too
1-m~t~[
Coach Larry Van Wagner said
that the divin
g
core is the team's
strongest suit.
"We are going to depend heav-
ily on our divers,"
he,
said. "The
diving core is going to be
tremendous in our dual meets
and championships
.
"
Next up for Marist is their
home opener on Saturday
,
Nov.
6 versus conference opponent
Rider University
.
The Red Foxes
will be breaking in the Mccann
Center Natatorium for the year.
Van Wagner said that this meet
will be a big test and a bench
mark for the rest of their season.
"Saturday will tell it all," he
said
.
"This is going to be a true
indication of how the season
will go."
On
another note,
th~
9oaching
staff and team would like to send
along their prayers and wishes to
one of the team's tri-captains,
senior Sarah McKinney. The
Schaumburg, Illinois native had
surgery on her back this past
week
,
and is expected to return
to the
team
in about
a
month.
ri,,t
the,e wa, cool clothe, then tht
hip ca, and Pac-man, bul ...
whal aboul
TV?
men
RETRO
WEEK
alch
u,
on Chann~l 19
REIT
■EEK
Other scorers for Marist were
junior Sean Prinz, who finished
23rd in 26:47.12, sophomore
Mike Schaab, who placed 24th
in 26:47.44, freshman Brandon
Cartica (26th in 27:07
.
65) and
sophomore Bryan Quinn (33rd in
competed in the race, which
Iona's
Richard
Kiplagat won in
24: 19.39. The Gaels swept the
first eight places to win the con-
ference title.
Mari~t continued its impressive
year in which they have placed
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www.marlstclrcle.com
THE CIRCLE

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2004 •
PAGE
9
Women's X-country performs some Florida magic
By
GABE
PERNA
Staff Writer
To say head coach Phil
Kelly
and the women's cross country
team were cocky going into the
Metro
Atlantic
Athletic
Conference Championship this
past Saturday at Walt Disney
World's Sports Complex in Lake
Buena Vista, Fla. would be
slightly incorrect.
However, they had to like their
chances with their main compe-
tition, Iona, missing one of their
top runners due to injury and
returning champion Loyola not
having as much as depth as they
did.
''Let's
put it this way, we were
sort of confident," said Kelly.
The results? A Marist victory
as they scored 40 points and fin-
ished four runners in the top ten.
Leading the waY, for the Red
Foxes was graduate student
Diane Matthews, who finished
third overall with a time of
21 :30.69.
Marist's big surge came
between the second-and-third
mile
mark,
said
Kelly,
"Approaching the second mile it
was still a three team race
between Marist, Iona, and
Loyola, then once the third mile
hit, Marist
barring
a miracle had
it won," he said.
Matthews, the team's best run-
ner, got exactly what she was
looking for in a top-three finish.
However she was slightly opti-
mistic in her aspiring time as she
hoped to run for under 18 min-
utes.
This was partially because she
didn't know was the actual dis-
tance of the race, as she thought
it was five kilometers instead of
six.
Finishing second
behind
Matthews for Marist and fifth
overall in a somewhat shocker
was sophomore Allison Kline
who ran for 22:02.75. Kline,
who
normally
~nishes
fourth
for
Marist, ran her best race of the
year and her best in college.
Six seconds
behind
her was
freshman

Sarah Domermuth
,with a time of22:08.76 who fin-
ished sixth overall and third for
Marist.
Rounding out Marist's top ten
was freshman Caitlin Garrity
who battled through a foot
injury
to finish eighth ovei:all
with a time of 22:23.67.
Although not finishing in the
top ten, junior
Denise
Tumulty's
18th place finish (23 :06.69)
clinched Marist's victory.
"Anything under 24 minutes in
a six-kilometer race is great,"
said Kelly.
Next up for the Red Foxes is
the
Van
Courtland
Championships, which is basi-
cally the Northeast Regional
Finals.
The top two teams and top four
finishers advance to the National
Championship.
Seventh straight whitewashing by men's soccer team
By ANDY ALONGI
Staff Writer
Defense was the story for
the
Red Foxes' men's soccer
team as they rolled past Metro
Atlantic Athletic Conference
(MAAC) foe the Manhattan
Jaspers,
3-0,
·
Friday, Oct. 29
on Leonindoff Field.
Freshman midfielder
Damien Caputo scored the
first goal of the game for
Marist, in the third minute
on
a chip shot over the head of
Jaspers
goalkeeper
Colin
Leaver.
Junior Bruno Machado
picked up one of his two
assists for the game. Marist
never
looked back, holding on
to win the game.
Also scoring goals for the
Foxes included junior Peter
Rea and sophomore Keith
Detelj.
This was Detelj's
MAAC-leading eighth goal of
the season.
Picking up the third assist
for the
Red
Foxes was fresh-
man Scott Grouten, with
his
first collegiate career point.
Defensively, the Foxes
picked
up
their
seventh
shutout in a row, and
are
yet to
give up a goal·in MAAC play.
It has been
696
minutes
since a goal was scored on the
Red Foxes defensive.
Senior goalkeeper
Mike
Valenti made
one
save, pre-
serving the shutout streak.
The win over the Jaspers
clinched the men's soccer
team a playoff berth in the
MAAC tournament. They will
now be playing for their seed.
The Red Foxes will conclude
the regular season when they
take a two-game road trip to
Loyola on Friday, Nov.,
5
and
Sunday, Nov. 7 at Rider.
Second-place finish in MAAC Championship for men's swimmers
By
ERIC ZEDALIS
Staff
Writer
place in six individual events,
and won one relay
'against
a
Fordham Rams team that fin-
The Marist men's swimming ished 5-7 and sixth m the
and diving team defeated host Atlantic-
IO
Conference last
Fordham 134-109 in its first year.
meet of the season on Oct. 28 at
Of the six individual first
Colonel Francis B. Messmore
Aquatics Center.
Marist, which placed second
in the 2004 Metro Atlantic
Athletic Conference (MAAC)
Championship, finished in first
places, four of them came in
freestyle races. Sophomore Nick
Chevalier was victorious in the
1000 in 9:56.21, senior co-cap-
tain Matt Castillo took the 200
in 1:42.89, freshman Greg
Jablonski won the 100 in 48.42
seconds and senior co-captain
Jeff Paul touched first in the 50
(22.21 seconds).
The Red Foxes had a clean
sweep of the first three finishers
in the 50 freestyle as sophomore
Patrick Collins touched second
and freshman
Mike
MacDonald
placed third.
Junior Joe Pilewski, a member
of the 2004 men's swimming
and diving all-academic team,
won the 200 butterfly in 1:57.18
and sophomore Dan Garaffa
took
the
200
backstroke
(1 :53.69).
Marist also picked up a win in
the
4>0-freestyle
relay as
MacDonald, freshman Ed Gurka
III,
Collins and Jablonski fin-
ished in 3:15.66.
Also, the 400-medley relay
squad of Garaffa, Castillo,
Pilewski and Paul placed second
in 3:31.86, just 1.l seconds
behind the winning Fordham
squad.
Head coach Lan-y J. Van
Wagner saw production from his
freshman class all across the
board
in this meet, including the
diving events.
Freshman Jesus Santos took
second
on
the I-meter platform
with a 223.88 score and Devon
O'Nalty was second on the 3-
meter platform (207 .22).
The Red Foxes take on
defending MAAC champion
Rider in their home opener
Saturday, Nov. 6. The meet
starts• at l p.m. at the McCann
Center Natatorium.
Rider, coming off its first-ever
MAAC crown last year, returns
14 letter winners and loses five.
The Broncs are currently 1-3,
and are coming off
a
131-112
loss against La Salle.
Women's swimming and diving lose meet 134-107 versus Fordham
By
DAVID HOCHMAN
Circle Contributor
The Marist women's
swimming
and diving team lost its first dual
meet of the season last Friday,
Oct. 29. The team traveled to the
I!rom. ~nd cornp~t~d with
Fordham
University,
just falling
short by a score of 134-107.
An extremely bright note on the
day was the record setting per-
f orrmmc~ of frnshman famie
Falco. Falco broke the
school
record for the 100-yard back-
stroke in the first leg of the 400-
medley relay. Her time of 59.89
seconds broke Jennifer Meyer's
2002 record by .05 seconds.
A couple other high points on
the swimming side of the pool
for the women included senior
Jennifer
Gelsomino's victory in
the 200 yard butterfly (1 :04.88)
and sophomore Lauren Malski's
win in the 200 yard breaststroke
( 1:09.69.)
The Red Foxes showed their
dominance in diving by taking
SEE SWIMMING, PAGE 8
























THE
CIRCLE
Countdown to the
2004-2005
season:
Men's
-
basketball -
15
days
.
Women's basketball - 16 days
THURSDAY, N0VEMBRER 4, 2004
Volleyball team drops
three sets to Fairlield
By
ANDY ALONGI
Staff Writer
The Marist Red Foxes
kills and Jaime Kenworthy,
eight
kills.
Kenworthy
increased her season total to
211 kills; second best of the
women's volleyball team suf-
Foxes.
fered a tough Metro Atlantic
Also, junior Meghan
Athletic Conference (MAAC) Cochrane had 29 assists to
loss at the hands of the Fairfield increase her season, tearn-lead-
Stags on Oct. 30 - - - - - - - - - ing total to
895.
in the McCann
Cochrane
had
29
Defensively, jun-
Center, making
assists Increasing her
ior Katie Lux had
their conference
IO digs, increas-
record 1-6.
·
season total to 895•
ing her season
The Foxes
total to 354.
made a strong effort, especially
in games two and three. But the
Stags proved to be too strong,
as the Foxes were defeated,
14-
30, 28-30, 24-30.
Leading the Foxes were soph-
omores Kirn McEathron, seven
The Red Foxes will go on the
road to play Wagner College in
a non-conference match on
Monday, Nov.
8
at
6
p.rn. and
will return home Friday, Nov.
12 to face MAAC opponent
Rider University at
7
p.rn.
www.marlstclrcle.com
Sophomore outside hitter Jaime Kenworthy serves to begin an offensive drive for the Red Foxes. The Foxes'
39 kills
could
not help them· capture their second division victory, as they lost
to
the
Stags
In
three games.
Women's soccer team loses 5-1 in final' game for three seniors
By
BRIAN
HODGE
Staff Writer
The Marist women's soccer
team began their season finale
by scoring a goal in the first
five minutes against confer-
ence foe St. Peter's.
That
would be the only goal the
team would score, however, as
the Red Foxes
fell 5-1
on
Oct.
31.
With the season corning to a
close,
head
coach
Sheri
Huckleberry used the game to
play some of her
younger players.
Freshman
M e l a n i e
O n d r e j i k
(Manalapan, NJ)
notched
the
opening goal, at
5:49, her second
of the weekend.
Sophomore Jenna McCrory
(N. Kingstown,
RI)
was credit-
ed with the assist.
Juni6r Jillian
Berry
(Acton,
MA) made her
first career start
in goal, while
freshman
Liz
H e r b e r
(Scottsdale, AZ)
also saw
time.
St. Peter's
answered back at 32:44 &nd
went on to score three goals in
only
10 minutes, taking a 3-1
advantage into the second half.
The quick-scoring Peahens
struck again, recording a goal
,
55:15 and another at 58:14.
These would be the last points
of the game.
Marist will graduate three
seniors,
including
star
Courtney Moore.
Moore finished the season
ninth in the conference in
204
HOOKER AVENUE POUGHKEEPSIE
N.Y.

'
(845) 471 - 7766
Hours
(;
f
Oper:acion:
Thurs.
&
Fri
9t1m • 8pm
r
fl
goals, sixth in assists, and tied
for fifth in game-winning
goals
.
The Red Foxes end the sea-
son with a record of
4-14-1, (2-
6-1) in the MAAC.
Final Season Stats
Record: Overall: 4-14-1
MAAC: 2-6-1
Goals: 32
Goals per game: 1.68
REDl(EN
St
nt
·
D.
"
Wl
l
PAGE
10
Red Foxes football falters
Defense solid In loss to Dukes
See
Football, Page
9
Team
splits
weekend
games, Page
9
Upcoming Schedule
Friday, Nov. 6
Men and Women's Crew
Demolition
at
Derby
New Haven, CT
Satttrday, Nov 6
Football
Marist@ Holy Cross
12:30
p.m.
Worcester, Mass.
Men's Tennis
Big Green Invitational
9:00a.m.
Hanover,
N.H.
Men and Women's
Swimming
Rider University
1:00
p.m.
Home