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Part of The Circle: Vol. 57 No. 7 - October 23, 2003

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V0WME 57, ISSUE 7
FEATURES: SHOES ARE A
FASHION STAPLE
Check out our new fashion
column. This week's topic:
shoes and their influence
on our outfits.
PAGE3
FEATURES: MEETING MARIST
Read about Steve Van
Denburgh, Marist
Bookstore Assistant
Manager.
PAGE3
ARTS: 'MATT
& BEN;'
DAMON AND AFFLECK
THAT IS
A hilarious Off-Broadway
play about their lives before
stardom.
PAGES
SPORT~ ONLINE:
FOOTBALL: •EXPLORERS MAP
OUT FOXES"
Read this exclusive article,
only at MaristCircle.com
ONLINE: ALUMNI WEEKEND
SLIDESH0W
Check out our website to
view pictures from Alumni
Weekend activities.
TH
E
CIR
C
LE
845-575-3000 ext. 2429
www.MaristCircle.com
3399 North Road
Poughkeepsie, NY 12601
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2003
Polighkeepsie planning board gives
OK
Marist gets housing approval to expand on
Fulton Street
By
ROB
McGUINNESS
Managing Editor
POUGHKEEPSIE - Town plan-
ners indicated some degree of
satisfaction with Marist's expan-
sion plans Oct
.'
16, granting final
site plan approval for the col-
lege's Fulton Street housing
development.
With
a
4-2
vote,
the
Poughkeepsie Town Planning
Board approved the site plan for
the eight building, 250-bed com-
plex at 54-58 Fulton St.
The final review was initially
deferred at the board's Sept. 4
meeting in light of blasting and
drainage technicalities
.
Comments
from the board indicated that
many of the technical issues have
since been resolved
.
Marist President Dennis J.
Murray explained that the col-
lege has attempted to address
concerns set forth at earlier board
meetings, with an emphasis on
pedestrian safety, a focus of the
meeting last week.
"We've taken all the reasonable
steps to show the board our con-
cern with the pedestrian safety in
that area," Murray said. "We've
tried to identify the major things
that you've addressed and the
ways we can respond to them."
Enforcement
will
continue
College officials presented the
board with an updated plan
detailing pedestrian safety and
college expansion plans.
According to the plan, pedestri-
an education and enforcement
activities (by both town police
and campus security) will con-
tinue, subject
to periodic
review
by the planning board
.
Murray explained that students
have taken note of the enforce-
ment campaign.
"Between the education and
enforcement, Marist students got
the message about obeying the
rules," Murray said. "We
think
the vast majority of students
know the laws."
Marist representatives also dis-
cussed feedback from the New
York State Department of
Transportation. On Sept. 29 and
30, as well as Oct. 2, 6 and 7,
NYSDOT employees conducted
traffic counts at the three campus
entrances and the Donnelly
crosswalk.
Marist Vice President Roy
Merolli said the results of the
It's all about the money
Changes to the new $20
bill, recently iss
.
ued,
include the addition of
subtle background colors
of green, peach and blue,
two new American eagle
"symbols of freedom,"
and an updated portrait
of
Prestdent
Andrew
Jackson.
On the back is an
updated vignette of the
White House surrounded
by floating gold 20's. The
new
bill is intended to
foil
counterfeiters from
reproducing the currency.
New $50 and $100 bills
are also planned, and $5
and $10 bills are being
considered.
KRT
U.S. introduces more colorful
$20 bill to foil counterfeiters
.
By
SUMANA
CHATTERJEE
Knight Ridder Newspapers
WASHINGTON
-
Andrew Jackson is get-
ting a major makeover
.
On a new $20 bill intended to foil counter-
feiters
,
the seventh president's image will be
larger and freed of the traditional oval; more
of Jackson's cape will show. No longer a hum-
ble greenback, the new $20 bill is colored pas-
tel blue, peach and green with copper high-
lights. Circulation began this
fall.
note is tilted. A series of faint and random yel-
low "20's" on the note's back are intended to
make copying it harder.
The last time U.S
.
currency had a colored
background was in 1905, when the $20 gold
certificate had a golden tint and a red seal.
A faint image of Jackson, known as a water-
mark, appears on the front and back of the
new $20 note and a plastic thread is embedded
vertically in its cotton-linen paper.
A small flag and the words "USA TWEN-
TY" are visible on both sides of the note. It
Treasury secretary John _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
Snow
,
whose signature is on
'The soundness
of a nation's
the new $20s, said that vie
-
currency is essentlal to the
tims of counterfeit money
soundness of the nation's
includes microscopic print-
ing to the left of Jackson's
image, which authorities
hope will be hard to dupli-
cate.
lost $44 million last year.
He said the new colors will
economy.'
lead people to pay more
Marsha Reidhill, the
-Alan Greenspan
Federal Reserve Bank's
attention to their mon
e
y and
Federal reserve
boaro
chairman
assistant director for cash
,
to spot a fake more easily
.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - said there are other "confi-
Federal Reserve Board Chairman Alan dential" security elements that will not be
Greenspan, attended [the unveiling in May].
publicized but are known to law enforcement.
"The soundne
s
s of a nation's curr
e
ncy is
The idea is to enable authorities to id
e
ntify
ess
e
ntial to the soundness of the nation's econ-
fakes quickly while making the challenge
omy," he said.
Each year the Federal Reserve's regional
banks auth
e
nticat
e
more than 35 billion notes
that pass through them.
The new d
e
sign includes a pastel blue eagle
against a light green background that fades to
peach
.
The "20" in the bottom right comer of
the bill shifts from copper to gr
e
en 'wh
e
n th
e
tougher for counterfeiters
.
New $50 and $100 bills are planned, and $5
and $10 bills are under discussion. There are
no plans to change the $1 bill, which is not
considered worth counterfeiting
.
The new bills cost about one cent each
,
according to the Bureau of
E
ngraving and
Printing
.
DOT survey are expected in
November.
A letter from NYSDOT region-
al director Robert Dennison
accompanied plans submitted to
the board.
In the letter, Dennison wrote
that the DOT found Marist's
pedestrian safety plan "accept-
able" and recommends a corridor
study by the Poughkeepsie-
Dutchess County Transportation
Council (PDCTC).
Some planners
,
including
·
tI.enry Schmitz
,
expressed con-
tinued concern about the Marist
corridor of Route 9
.
"Donnelly is still open, we
don't have a shuttle, and I'm not
too happy," Schmitz said.
Murray said if the DOT recom-
mends closing the Donnelly
crosswalk, Marist will comply
with the recommendation
.
Master
plan on horizon
Planner Marvin Bennett raised
the issue of a pedestrian overpass
in the context of a comprehen-
sive master plan.
College officials remain con-
vinced that the overpass would
go unused if it were constructed,
especially if at-grade crossing is
still permitted.
"Overpasses are legitimate
things to be investigated,"
Marray said. "But if you don't
prevent crossing at the street
level, that will be a waste of
money. That's a $3 million to $4
million project, perhaps more."
Marist agreed to develop a
master plan for property on the
SEE FULTON
STREET,
PAGE
7
Foy Townhouses
dedicated to former
Mari st President
·
By
TARA MORRILL
Assistant
Managing Editor
The Old Townhouses are now
known as the Foy Townhouses
following a dedication to former
Marist College President, Dr.
Linus Richard Foy, on Oct. 11.
Dr. Foy served as president of
Marist College from 1958 to
1979
.
When he entered office in
1958 he was 28 years old and the
youngest college president in the
United States.
"When I began my work as
president
,
it [Marist College]
was an unaccredited college
with a couple buildings
.
We
really had to convince teachers
to teach here," Foy said.
According to Foy, his first and
foremost achievement was hir-
ing a knowledgeable and dedi-
cated faculty and staff. There
were several requirements he
kept
in mind when hiring his
young staff, including flexibility.
Jt was important for teachers and
students to wear many hats at
one time and believe that aca-
demics were the first priority
.
"I didn't want Marist to be
known as a basketball or
drink-
ing school
,
many of which even-
tually happened. Instead
,
I want-
ed academics to serve as the
school
'
s foundat
i
on
,
" Foy said.
He said his approach of
"
hi
ring
the right people and getting out
of the way" helped build the
school up to
w1lat
it
ii.
.tQd.a.y.
Since the ceremony was held
during Alumni Weekend
,
many
of those who worked with Foy
during his tenure in office
,
and
his former students
,
attended the
event.
Dr. James Callahan '62, one of
Foy's former math students, and
Anthony
V.
Carnpilii '62, forme
r
CFO
I
v
ice president for busi-
ness affairs and F-0y's long-time
friend, reflect
e
d on Foy
'
s presi-
'
dency
.
Current Presiden
t
Dennis
Murray also positively com-
mented on Foy
'
s accqmplish-
ments.
Campilii said that during Foy
's
22 years as Marist
'
s presiden
t,
many drastic changes and
advancements took pl
a
ce. Foy
was key in the ongoing negotia-
tion with Federal Housing to
secure the funds for Sheahan
,
Leo, and Champagnat, the three
freshmen donn buildings
.
These
first steps were necessary in
order to
turn
Marist into a resi-
dential colleg
e
.
In addition
,
Foy secured over
$5.7 m
ill
ion for construction of
the student center and bookstore
.
He also established the first
evening division, adult educa-
tion prograins and gradua
t
e pro-
grams. Under his p
r
esidency
,
23
new majors came into exi
s
ten
ce.
Although Foy spent much of
his time wo
r
k
i
ng to
e
xpa~d
Marist,
SEE FOY DEDICATION, PAGE 2
MARISJ'CIRCLE.COM
WEEKLY POLL
40
Last week's question:
3
5
30
"
I
d
e
ally,
how long
s
hou
ld
Mid
Se
m
este
r Br
e
ak last
?"
2
5
39
%
of r
e
spondents said th
e
2
0
break should last fiv
e
days.
15
This week's question:
10
5
"
Wh
a
t d
o y
ou th
i
n
k
of
th
e
n
ew
$
20
bill
s?"
0









































THE CIRCLE
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23,
2003
maristcircle.com
To get local weather forecasts, movie
listings, and an updated calendar of
events, check
maristcircle.com
Call ext.
2429
or visit
maristcircle.com to
submit events for the campus calendar.
PAGE2
Security
Briefs:
The tap's flowing again
Gumball
tlJ,rowers, sign tacklers, security CRV bumpers contribute to past weeks events
Compiled By DAN
ROY
Campus Editor
Alcohol related
incidents this
week
Gartland
-
I
Upper West Cedar
-
I
C:hampagnat
-
I
Leo- I
Alcohol related
incidents
by dorm total
Gartland
-
9
C:hampagnat
-
8
Leo-4
Upper West Cedar
-
4
Sheahan
-
2
Old
Townhouses -
I
\larian
-
I
10/2 -
Welcome back everyone!
Our
first incident is brought to
you by the letter P and the
mun-
her 14. At 4 p.m. in the Mccann
parking lot, a 2002 Camaro was
found vandalized.
The driver
side door ~as keyed, and town
police were notified.
Don't
worry though. I have a GS-27;
you can borrow it if you want.
10/3 -
Our first alcohol confisoa-
tion in
about
a"''WtOttfu
·hftppened
in <:;hampagnat at
12:
10 a.tn.
Friday. Security took two 12-
ounce cans of Busch, half a bot-
tle of Bacardi Orange Rum and a
bottle of Stolichnaya raspberry
vodka from a student's room.
Thank you, Champagnat for
reminding everyone that
drink-
ing does indeed take place at
Marist College.
10/4
-
Fairview responded to a
fire alann at
11
:40 p.m. in Leo
Hall.
Apparently someone on
the fourth floor attempted the
challenging task of popping pop-
Greek
Comer
Kappa Lamela Psi would like
to congratulate their newest
members, Katie Loffredo,
Deb Manzi, and Jenn Hart
on accepting a bid to the
sorority.
Alpha Sigma Tau would like
to congratulate their newest
members, Stephanie Fields,
Kellie Cunningham, and
Kristen Francese on accept-
ing a bid to the sorority.
Alpha Sigma Tau wishes
these women and all other
women who are joining
campus sororities the best of
luck this semester.
Kappa Kappa Gamma would
like to acknowledge October
as Breast Cancer Awareness
month. Please pick up a rib-
bon and fact card on the bul-
letin boards around campus.
- Ashley Woerner
com in a microwave. Somebody 10/8 - Upper West Cedar S block who then took her to St. Francis.
10/11 -
I definitely have to
should have told this person that was home to the next fire alarm
applaud these next students for
you take the kernels
out
of the fiasco.
At 6:40 p.m. the fire
10/10 -
Come on, who picks on tying in an old childhood game
bag when you put it in the department arrived on the scene the little security CRVs?
An with drinking alcohol.
Three
microwave ... "No you don't, to find the remnants of chicken officer reported a hit and
run
at students were found by security
you idiot" ...
I
never claimed I on a stove. Students had put out 7:00 a.m. when an automobile hit hiding behind a construction
was a chef.
·
the flames with the fire extin-
security's vehicle damaging the vehicle in the McCann lot with
10/8 -
A student having difficul-
ty walking was noticed at 2:04
a.m. on the south side of Leo.
Security had this student wait at
Leo's entry desk for an hour
before allowing him to return to
his room. He had good company
at the desk however, joining
Duce Staley who was still in his
'timeout' for not being able to
spell
chrysanthemum
chrysanthemum.
10/8 -
A student took one of
Poughkeepsie's famous cabs
back to Marist at 3 a.m.
Wednesday. Fair enough, right?
However, upon arrival at Marist
the student told the driver he did
not have any money to pay him.
Obviously peeved, the cab driver
took
our
friend
to
the
Poughkeepsie town police.
A
very sad story, but I have two
questions here. One: where were
this poor boy's friends at this
point? They couldn't spot him?
Or even if he wasn't with his
friends, someone else in the cab
could have stepp
M
ed up and
helped him out.
I
mean the poor
kid will go to jail! Two: even if
this kid were alone in the cab,
which might have been the case
at 3 a.m. on a Wednesday,
Donnelly Hall is right there!
There is an ATM machine like
two feet away. Just take money
out, and pay the driver!
I
digress
Thank
you, Champagnat
for reminding everyone
that
drinking does indeed
take place at Marist.
guisher. Good for you guys, tak-
passenger side door, and quickly beer and vodka.
I
love hiding.
It
ing things into your own hands.
sped away. I mean, those things makes normal activities so much
If
I saw flames, I would have ran are barely bigger than a golf cart.
more daring and exciting.
I
out of the place with my anns up That person should be ashamed never thought of doing it while
in the air screaming like a little of herself for committing such an drinking though. Now, I never
girl. "Just like you did when act ... just ashamed.
will.
they canceled Buffy?" Yeah.
10/9 -
The fire alann sounded
next in Lowell Thomas.
At
11
:30 a.m. dust from construc-
tion work got into the system and
set off the alann. Yeah, and we
are supposed to believe that.
"Dust"
from
"construction
work?" I've heard more con-
vincing stories from my room-
mate explaining why
I
was
locked out of the room for 10
minutes.
I'll
believe that he was
practicing a cool new handshake
to surprise me with, but I won't
believe "dust from construction
work" caused that alann!
10/10 -
Security reported one of
the weirdest things I've ever
heard at l :55 a.m. Friday morn-
ing. A guard noticed a student
attempting to
tackle
the "Bump"
~gn
in front of Fontaine Hall.
Tackle the Bump sign?
I
know
those things are annoying, but
taking it out on the sign won't
solve anything. As a result of the
tackling however, the student
was presented with the Dick
Butkus Aw8;fd at the end of the
night.
10/10 -
Another cab incident
took place at 2:15 a.m. Friday
morning. A highly intoxicated
.
student was returned to Marist
via taxi, but was unable to vacate
the cab once here. Security came
and assisted her out of the cab,
and into Fairview's warm arms,
Cheeseburgers are hard
to
cook.
That's
why
I
usually
go to
Goodburger for mine.
They are
professlonals
there.
10/10 -
Upper West Cedar was
the location of the next alcohol
bust.
Security arrived at an
apartment to find 30 cans of
Miller Light, 30 cans of Bud
Light, 12 bottles of Mike's Hard
Lemonade, 12 bottles of Mikes
Hard Cra
,
nberry Lemonade, 9
bottles of Bud Light, and a par-
tially consumed bottle ofBacardi
Rum . . . Termites eat through
wood two times faster when lis-
tening to rock music; there are
119
grooves on the edge of a
quarter; Miller Light has a third
less carbs than Bud
Light.
Fascinating huh?
10/10 -
Gartland finally woke up
and got back into the swing of
things on Friday. At 10:40 p.m.
the RD confiscated 12 cans of
Coors Light, five bottles of Bud
Light, and a 40 ounce of Old
English from an E block apart-
ment. There were also about 7 5
"empties" found on the premises.
Well at least no one could drink
them if t)ley were empty. "They
were ~mpty because people did
drink
them. Why are you so stu-
pid?" It's a long story.
10/12 -
There was yet another
fire alann incident, this time over
in Talmadge.
An· overcooked
·
cheeseburger set i! off at 2:25
p.m. I can see that happening.
Cheeseburgers are hard to cook.
That's why I usually go to
Goodburger for mine. They are
professionals there.
10/16 -
A housekeeper reported
seeing guinballs thrown from a
Champagnat ninth floor window
around noon Thursday. Security
entered the room. He didn't find
any gumballs, but did find an
empty gumball machine. Hmm,
realizing this could not be the
right room, the security guard
apologized for the inconvenience
and continued his search for the
gumball throwers.
10/16 -
A black Honda with
damage to its windshield was
found in Upper Hoop lot at 7:05
p.m. A thrown rock was the
cause of the hann. Town police
took a report.
I
had a friend who
liked to throw rocks. He said
once, "Let's see how close I can
get to hitting this car." I didn't
see the problem with that, so he
began. On the third throw he
cracked the windshield. We can
all learn something from this.
Don't park your car where idiots
can throw rocks at it. P.S. That
was a true story. P.P.S. We were
17 ...
Commuter Corner
Commuter life on column
s
agenda
By
CARMEN ALU
SGA Commuter Senator
Calling all commuter students.
Do you often feel neglected
with campus concerns?
Do
you believe that your voice is
not getting heard simply
because you live off campus
and drive to school?
How would you like to have
your voice heard in my newly
created feature "Carmen's
Commuter Corner.''
For those of you who do not
know me, my name is Carmen
Alu, SGA Commuter Senator.
It has become apparent to me
that many commuter students
feel like they're on the outside
looking in.
I
hope to offer
those students a chance to
express their concerns or ideas
to make Marist College a better
place for all students and not
just those
who live on
campus.
We all have our own reasons
for living off campus. Whether
it be a money issue, a priority
point dilemma, or simply just a
more freedom, no reason is bet-
ter than the next.
I
personally
wanted to have my own room
where
I
can come and go as
I
please.
I'm interested to hear some of
the advantages and disadvan-
tages to moving off campus.
That would be a great source of
information for students debat-
ing their living arrangements
for next year.
It
is my goal to make the
commuter corner a weekly fea-
ture for years to come. With
your help, we can make this
happen. I look forward to hear-
ing from you. Simply' email
me
directly
at
UNCSwish@aol.com.
Thanks
for all you,:- help and support.
Keep you eyes open for
weekly commuter news.
Check
MaristCircle.com
throughout the week
for updated news from national news sources.
JEN HAGGERTY/
THE
CIRCLE
The Fcy Townhouses were officially dedicated
Oct
11. during Alumni Weekend.
Foy Dedication
he still served as president of the
local chapter's United Way.
Partially due to Foy's urges,
Marist opened its doors to
women
in
1969.
Campilii
recalled how the college was
ini-
tially unprepared for the change.
"On.the first day of classes that
included women, they discovered
they had overlooked a major con-
cern: there were no ladies' rest-
rooms," Campilii said.
According to Campilii, the ded-
ication is a credit to Foy's long-
standing tradition of excellence.
"He has always been a
fair,
com-
passionate man that tolerates
human error," said Campilii.
••• from page 1
Ginny Campilii agrees with her
husband about Foy's character.
"Today is a most befitting occa-
sion for a wonderful gentleman
who is of the highest morals and
ethics, leading everyone to the
right direction," said Mrs.
Campilii.
Callahan attributes Marist's
growth throughout the years to
Foy.
"In
this dedication, the college
is acknowledging his [Foy's] sin-
gular role in making Marist what
is known to be today," said
Callahan, currently a professor of
math at Smith College.
Roy's dorm alcohol
' incident fantasy beat
Coming back froin the All Star
break, the leader board is pretty
much the same as it has been for
the past month. Gartland is still
cnnging onto a one-point lead
over Champagnat. It will be a
slugfest between these two for
the remainder of the season.
Since the first half of the
semester is over, it is time to
play: Contender or Pretender.
Gartland- They are a contender.
By posting nine write ups, they
hate already secured at least a
second place finish.
Upper West Cedar- They are
fighting hard, but I have to say
Pretender. They just don't have a
realistic shot of taking down the
leaders. A solid third place fin-
ish would be admirable though.
Champagnat- Despite not being
up to snuff, they are still a
Contender. As long as they can
stay close with Gartland until the
last couple weeks of the semes-
ter, they have a good chance of
winning. Their sheer numbers
will propel them at that
puint.
Marion- Who? Pretender! Are
students still living in that dorm?
I
talked to some
Alumni
the other
weekend,
and they expressed to
me the great disappoint they have
for their old dorm. They said the
kids in there now show no respect
for the people who gave Marian
the reputation it
has
today.
Dan Roy's ''Alcohol Fantasy
Beat" is intended to be a par-
ody and not a representation
of The Circle's editorial
stance on drinking -
illegal
or otherwise -
nor is it
intended to be a statement
regarding the official Marist
College policy on alcohol
consumption.
Upcoming
campus events
Thursday, Oct. 23, 2003
Resume Marathon
9 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Career Services
Friday, Oct. 24, 2003
"Theory of Moves" lecture
3:30 p.m.
Lowell Thomas
Friday, Oct. 24, 2003
Comedian Kevin Bozeman
9
p.m.
Cabaret
Sunday, Oct. 26~ 2003
Cancer Benefit Concert
3p.m.
Chapel
Monday, Oct. 27, 2003
NBC Career Info. Session
1 p.m.
PAR






































































































THE
CIRCLE
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2003
marlstclrcle.com
eeting Marist
How
much will you spend?
Steve Van
Denburgh
Marist Bookstore Assistant Manager
By
FLORA LUI
A:
I've
been
here [for over] two
Staff Writer
weeks now. I'm impresse.d by my
Steve Van Denburgh is the newly
hired
assistant
manager at the
Marist College Bookstore. The
1988
graduate
earned
his
Bachelor's
Degree
at
the
University
of Albany.
Currently
he
is living
in Redhook, New York,
with his wife and four-and a-balf-
year..old son.
Q:
Where did
you
work before this
posi.tion?
A:
I've worke.d at the Bard
College
Bookstore for
1
J
year.s;
l
began
working
there afterr
graduating
from Albany.

Q: Why did you decide to obtain a
position at Marist?
A: I
consider this to be a transfer/
promotion, but it was mostly for a
new challenge and a new opportu-
nity.
Q: What is the difference between
the Marist and Bard bookstores?
A:
Mostly the size ( campus and
population) and the volume of
items available at the bookstore,
such as products, textbooks, and
clothing line. The textbook selec-
tions differ from Bard and here, but
we purchase from the same ven-
dors.
Q:
So
far, what do you like about
Marist?
staff members. They have been
quite helpful in aiding me to adjust
to this new environment. Those
who have stopped by and intro-
duced themselves have been
friendly and welcoming.
Q:
What are your duties as
Assistant Manager?
A: I
oversee the daily operations of
the store.
Currently, I
am working
in the clothing section, trying to
prepare for the holiday season. The
next item on the list
will
be organ-
izjng
for
.
next semester's inventory.
Q: What are your hobbies?
A: I enjoy golfing, landscaping,
and spending time with my son.
Q:
Since your arrival have there
been any changes in the store?
A:
We did rearrange the reading
area and about one third of the
front of the store.
I
don't see any
major changes
.
Chris (former
bookstore manager) and his staff
have been doing a wonderful job.
We are considering adding more
clothing for women for
2004.
Q:
Any advice or comments for the
student body?
A: I
would love to he,ar what the
students
think
about the booksti>re.
Feel free to comment and suggest
ideas either in person or via email,
Steve. VanDenburgh@marist
.
edu
a,
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BAMBINO/
-··································,
Features Editor
Sara Stevens
PAGE3
The
Daily
Grind
Reality Bites
The other night, I
was watching TV
and
I came
up
with
an idea for a great
new show. We take a
male and a female
prison
convict, and
we follow
both
of ..__ ........
=___.
them everywhere. We tape their real
life experiences
from
the
cafeteria
brawls to finding
out
the
truth
about
the
shower rumors.
Think
it's the
next hit?
What is
our
fascination with reali-
ty
TV?
Why
do
we
all
get a kick out
of seeing the trials
and
tribulations
of
our peers on the small screen? It's
not
like
the netwrnks don't give
enough of our daily
doses of reality
~
Television
is
being
dominated
by
this
new genre, and
if
this
trend
contin~
the
days
of the sitcom and
dramas
are numbered.
There
are so
many reality shows
that you can't keep
track ''Real
World,"
''Road
Rules,"
"Survivor,"
"Big Brother," ''Temptation Island,"
"Joe Millionaire," "Blind Date,"
"American Idol"
mid
''Fear Factor"
are
just
a few of the many shows fill-
ing up
the primetime
spots.
America
is
addicted
to voyeurism, and it
is
amazing
just how many of these
shows
are
out there. And they're
only g ~
sl~~
The
question
is,
are these shows a
short-live.cl trend,
or
is
this
the new
age of television? Have we evolved,
or have we
regressed?
I
am
addict-
e.d
to
many
of.these
shGWli,
such as
"'The Osbownes,"
but
I am
appalled
by
many of the Fox networlc shows,
such as ''Manie.cl by America" But
who
am
I to judge?
If
much of
America didn't tune
in,
these shows
wouldn't exist, so
I guess somebody
has
to be watching
them
The
producers
of these shows
are
like
used
car salesmen:
They
know
they're
selling
crap,
but
they
sell
it so
well.
I watch a lot of
the
crap,
and
because I've
seen
a few episodes, I
can't look away and miss what hap-
pens
next week.
The
reality era
is
being
so
saturated, I
think
it's
only
a
matter
of time before these shows
die out and quality shows like
''Friends,"
"ER" and
'West
Wmg"
will
once
again
rule our television
sets.
Maybe then we
can
get back
19
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By
KRISTIN GALLAGHER
Staff
Writer
·
Every girl must agree that the right
pair of shoes have the power to
transform any regular outfit from
acceptable to astonishing!
Shoes have always
been
a major
necessity of the fashion world, and
the ever popular phrase ''history
repeats itself' always proves true
when it comes to women's
footwear. Platforms, MafY.ianes,
stilettos, tall boots, ankle boots ...
What
is in?
For months, women have been
torn over the extremely imperative
battle of
"pointy"
versus "clunky."
Clunky shoes or platforms hit the
streets years ago and managed to
,
maintain their trendiness for quite
some time. Teenagers and young
women use the clunky boots to
dress
up
a casual jeans and tee-shirt
outfit, so it is appropriate for a
night out with the girls.
However, more recently, pointy
shoes made their brilliant debut,
and are going over huge with many
)(RF
Equestrian-style
boots
are
in for the
fall such as this model from DKNY.
of the top designers. The pointy
look tends to be most prominent in
the worlq:,lace, among sophisticat-
ed, classy business women.
Whether the sharp point and
shockingly thin heel are flaunted in
pumps or boots, pointy shoes have
establishe.d class,
funk,
and sheer
style in
contemporary
fashion! So
for those of you who have been
reluctant
~
buy your first pair of
outrageously pointy shoes ... there
is no better time
than
the present to
SEE SHOES, PAGE 7






































































Student in search
of research topic
Don't panic - Intrepid is on the case
By
VERNE NEWTON
& CHARYL POLLARD
Circle Contributors
The other day on TV you heard an
author describe the profowid impact
of a horrendous fire at a New York
City shirt factory in 1911. You want
to read the
book,
but you
are
also
eager to read actual
accounts
of the
fire.
You go to the Library's home page,
slide your mouse over "Research"
and click on ''Databases A-Z." You
scroll
down and select The New
York Times (Backfile). You
get
a
search box, actually several boxes.
Don't be intimidated; you only need
to use one box
to
complete your
mission. It
will
search every issue
of the New York Times going back
to
1857 (before Abraham
Lincoln
was President!)
.
In
fact, select
''Basic Search"
at
the
top
if you
want to simplify your screen.
Fortunately you wrote
down on a
piece
of
paper
the name of the
fac-
toiy
that
burned -
the Triangle
Shirtwaist Fire -
and
that
is
what
you enter in the box. This produces
271
articles beginning with the
first
grim
story:
"141 men and girls die
in
waist
fuctory
fire; trapped high
up
in Washington Place bl.l,ilding;
street
strewn
with bodies; piles of dead
inside."
You click on the
story
and a three-
page article with picnu-es appears
on your screen. You print it out. But
you also want to see exactly how
the article appeared in
that
SWlday's
paper. You click on "Page
Map"
and get the entire front page of the
Sunday, March 26, 1911 New York
Times. The
fire
story is a four-col-
umn headline and the stories in the
other
three
columns also concern
the fire.
At the
top
of
the screen, you
notice there
is
something
called "Page
View''
with a
box and a drop
down menu. You
realize that by clicking on
"2" you
can go
to
page two of
that
edition (a
story about society Blue-bloods rid-
ing their horses in Central Parle) and
so
on,
reading every page of the 90-
page
paper
including the advertise-
ments.
On
page
27
you learn about
"Champagne Prices Rising in
London" and
that
the latest Paris
fashion
is
"Harem gowns."
The print
is
very small and often
faded,
so
to
actually read any of
these articles, you need
to
do a
search and retrieve
that
specific arti-
cle. But you have the subject and
the
date.
Now you understand what
some of these other search boxes
are for.
Then you have another inspira-
tion. You heard the name of a great
athlete mentioned recently named
"Babe Zaharias." You wondered
about her, so you
'
do a search, get
277
articles and then arrange them
"most recent
first." You discover
that Babe
was
an All-American
Basketball player and a gold medal
winner in several Olympic events;
truly one of the greatest athletes
ever.
You read
that
Golf's Greatest
Moment may have been when Babe
won the 1954 Women's United
States Open only months
after
undergoing surgery for the cancer
that
killed her two
years
later
at
the
age of 42.
You now have subjects for
hYQ
research
papers
.
*No Appointments
Necessary
*Open
7
Days
a Week
10-1:3
"A man is currently being held by police,
causing onlookers to feel 'warm and fuzzy.'"
Giggles
& Bits
PAUL
"(:ON~Tlll-ATIONSl
ON
8EijAt.f
Of
Ttff'
GRA0'-'4Te
PROGRAN,
IT
!5 OUR
PU:AScmf-"
f/lS/
1'14 IN/
"".TO INFORl-1 YOO
Tff~T YOU'VE SEEN Al>l>EI>
10
OUR
WAITING
UST."
IIIHlfT'il
SO
WH~T'S
THAT
HfAN'i/
e>CPL-A/N
IT MEANS YO<J'Rf GOOb
o
ENO<.IGH
TO GeT
IN,
&UT
Tl1ERE ISN'T '4N'/ ROOH
::i
FOR YOO ~GHT NOW.
THE CIRCLE •
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2003 •
PAGE 4
Crossword
ACROSS
1
Frodo's band?
5
Instrument for a
Marx
9 List entries
14
Locality
15
Cleve
l
and's lake
16 Pitcher Ryan
17
Nabisco cracker
18
Chip in a chip
19 March King
20
Basically
23
Machine part
24
Military
installation
25
Removes
fasteners
27
Antigone
'
s uncle
30 Chopped into
small pieces
32
Actor Chaney
33
Giving guns
36
Carson
predecessor
39
Aleutian island
41
Pound piece
42
Italian volcano
43
Hone
44
Constant
46
&
so on
47
Talked wi
l
dly
49
Singer Gorme
51
Camelot king
53
_Hari
55
Mauna
56 Sight
62
Out of kilter
64 Chevron rival
65 Welles role
66 Ms. Zellweger
67
Somewhat
,
in
music
68
Black, poetically
69 1956 Charlton
Heston role
70
Smack
71
Exxon, once
DOWN
1
Not common
2 Part of an eye
3 Jersey cagers
4
Backyard
,
belvedere
5
Warms up
6 Golfer with an
army
7 Hayworth or
Moreno
1
2
3
4
14
1
7
20
55
62
66
69
~
2009T-
- I I
SenrleeS,
Inc
.
Allrlilhll--
.
8
Banana wrap
9
Harmonized
10
Excessively
11
Clarified
12
Stoneworker
13
Obstacles
21
Granny
22
Made a
f
orward
thrust
26
Le Pew of
cartoons
27
Hammer part
28
Type of
IRA
29
Amuses
30 Sought ores
31 Early Peruv
i
an
34
Speakers
'
platforms
35
Remote button
37
Con
38
Speed event
40 Salt Lake state
45 Himalayan
myth
48
"
General
Hosp
i
tal
"
extras
50 New Englander
51 Warning signal
Solutions
S
r-1 3 J.
I
52
Jul
i
et's beau
53
Central city of
Islam
54 Cu~ently in
progress
57 Kindergarten
breaks
1ffl/08
58
Get bigger
59 Pats gently
60
Seth
'
s son
61 'The B
i
ggest
Litt
l
e City
I
n the
World
"
63 Observe
Giggles
&
Bits Is made possible by KRT.
BY BILLY O'KEEFE
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THE
CIRCLE
-
Let the voices of the Marist
community be heard.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2003
maristclrcle.com
PAGES
1 · · . r : - · y - r - ~ r ' \
( We had one of our flying saucers
crash land
on this planet. We
t
hear that they have stored it in a
place called Poughkeepsie or in
another place they call AREA 51.
~
(
~
,,.,,.----
~
no
0
&"
~
-
- -
,
.If.
The
_
time we waste with
IM
By
CArnlN MOSCATELLO
The
Daily
Free Press
Boston University
Before entering college, most
students
buy come sort of com-
puter.
If
you are like me, mom
and dad bought you a computer
as
a graduation
present
upon
completing
senior
year
of high
school. My parents
beamed
proudly as they envisioned me
typing original thesis papers,
researching important topics
on
the
Internet and
developing
P~rPQjnt present.a,tions, Of
cbifiW, tlies'e
activWU occur
only occasionally. The real rea-
son I use my computer is to talk
to my friends, check my email
and
listen to music.
AOL
Instant
Messenger has
become
a staple for college stu-
dents everywhere. My best
friend from home goes to school
in Virginia, and I can
honestly
say that I haven't spoken to her
once
over the phone since arriv-
ing in Boston. Instead, we talk
(for free) over
AIM,
typing away
our
funny stories from the week-
end or gripes about an upcoming
exam. It completely escapes us
that we are
not
actually speak-
ing, and that typing conversation
is about as personal as those
generic
holf
day cards that
the
dentist sends out every year just
before
Christmas.
With AOL
Instant
Messenger
comes the infamous "away mes
-
sage." The away message is
somewhat of an art form
amongst America's undergrads.
Song lyrics, movie quotes and
excerpts from humorous conver-
sations
with other
Instant
Message
users are pretty stan-
dard. Of course, there are special
circumstances.
.
There is the
drunk
away message, in which
letter
s
are scrambled together to
form what resemble words. It's 2
a.m.,
but
you completely under-
stand that "dowmnton fort he
nioghat,
calk ceoll" means that
your
buddy
is somewhere near
Newbury, and that even if you do
call, he will be too obliterated to
answer the phone. See? Now that
was easy.

My sister graduated from col-
lege last May, and has since
landed
herself what my parents
call
a
"real job." However, she is
still online every day, Instant
I'm
starting to wonder if
she's like that employee In
the movie
16
0fflce Space"
who has been fired but
doesn't know it yet.
ously usable peer-to-peer net-
works has happened to appear
mysteriously on your computer,
you have a collection of songs at
your
disposal.
With the use of
Internet downloading, CD burn-
Messaging away. Apparently

d MP3' h
th
fr,nn ·
.
In
.
-
.

pig, an
S
as Come
e
w(lr~~
lll
a
,w.W
9.ffa:e
1_nv.olye"s
"
I
-
1
i ,
'"Th'
I 1.
t has
li_
J
'
·
·
-
-;,
ay
f
sr,•
e
P.
av
1s
many
~
oing:tittks Ito
ftlm1y
wel)·si't~ti
fui
1 ~-~--~
ltf~ISI
· - ·
·
to all ~f your friends who are
.
nm,
c~ be use~
0 ~
many
stuck in a cubicle somewhere in
different occasions. Lets discuss.
Manhattan. I'm starting to won-
There is the "love playlist,"
der if she's like that employee in
most often reserved for couples
the movie "Office Space" who
or those soon to be couples. The
has been fired but doesn't know
love playlist is soft and sappy.
it yet.
Somebody li¼.e Dave Matthews
Have your parents ever tried to
or John Mayer is
involved.
Hell,
talk
to
you
on
Instant
you might even be
_ab
le
to work
Messenger? My mom is an abus-
some Coldplay in there.
er of the smiley-face icons. She's
The love playlist is usually fol-
nuts about the smiley with sun-
lowed by some sort of "break-
glasses. Parents like to email as
up" playlist. Now, this one
well. My dad is always sending
varies. For guys, you might have
emails of fatherly wisdom. I will
a little Snoop, "Bitch, please."
call him and ask for a few dollars
for rent money, and the next
thing I know, I'm getting the
"When I was your age I worked
two jobs AND went to
school"
lectur
e.
The focture in email
form is quite a sight to behold.
There are exclamation marks all
over the place and sometimes
even a famous quote or two. My
grandma is starting to email as
well. Pretty soon everyone's
going to be in on the action.
It doesn't
end
with AIM
Of course, nobody at Boston
University has illegally down-
loaded
music
...
ever. But if
Kazaa
or any of the other previ-
For girls, the music
quality
isn't
great, but there are enough angry
chicks out there that have us
covered. Just pull up Christina
Aguilera's "Fighter" and call it a
day.
There are several other
playlists, of course. The "bo<;>ty-
call" playlist is in a league all of
its own. It's 3 a.m. and the phone
rings: "Wanna ... ummm ... hang
out?" Your
roommate
is out, the
coast is clear, and the night is
yours. Don't wanna meet your
daddy, just want you in my
caddy. The moment is here, and
the next thing you know, you're
dimming the lights to "I love it
when you call me big poppa."
THE
CIRCLE
Some people might indulge in
a "study playlist," "pre-game
playlist" or "workout playlist."
All of these are viable options,
but are interchangeable with
each
other and thus, don't get
their own individual write-ups.
Jennifer
C.
Haggerty
·
Editor io Chief
Cassi
Matos
News Editor
Stacey
L
Caswell
Copy Editor
Karla Kleln
Advertising Manager
Tara Morrin
Assistant Managing Editor
The
Circle
Is published
weekly
on
Thursdays
during
the
school year.
Press
run
Is 2,000 copies distributed
throughout
the
Marist
campus.
To request advertising
Information
Rob McGulnness
Managing
Editor
Courtney Kretz
News Editor
Joe Guardino
Distribution Manager
Maura SWeeney
Advertising Manager
G. Modele Clarke
Faculty
Advisor
or
to
reach
the
editOrial
board,
call
(845)-675-3000
ext.
2429.
Opinions
expressed
in
articles
do
not
necessarily
represent
those
of
the
editorial
board.
Of
course,
it is
completelx
pos
-
sible to combine your playlist
with your AIM
away
message.
Just throw on
-a
few
songs, type
out the lyrics, and sit back as
your friends try to figure out
who
exactly sings
"that" song.
This is assuming
that
your
friends have nothing better to do
than
read your away
message
and analyze its
co
nt
ent.
Hey
man, we've all been there.
That's no flying saucer!
That's DONNELLY HAW
~fvJS
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1
RIAA needs to realize free is good
By
ALLEN EGHRARI
Dally Illinois
University of Illinois
We
love
.-
our free music. There
is no question about it.
If
you have any doubts,
I
sug-
gest you turn on your radio. How
.
much did it cost to push that but-
ton? That's right, free.
Obviously
it's
not evil; we're
not thieves for listening to the
radio because music companies
have learned to capitalize on the
technology, offering songs to the
consumer for free while getting
revenues through advertising.
Yet as consumers, we're asked
to feel guilty for getting music
online for free.
As
you probably already'know,
the
Recording
Industry
Association of America has been
suing thousands of people
around the world who share
music on their computers online.
They state that in the last few
years, peer-to-peer networks
like
Kazaa
and Napster have been
responsible for a dramatic
decrease in CD sales
.
If
you
ask me, the RIAA is sim-
ply taking the
easy
way out and
making a big mistake
--
a mis-
take based on corporate greed
and not on the
general
interest of
themselves or
consumers,
We
shouldn't have to feel
gu
ilty
just
for
list
ening
to free music.
First, let's remember that with
recorded
-
music also
comes
live
LETIER POLICY
performance. Even though the
value of recorded music has
plummeted to
zero,
I'm willing
to bet the demand for live per-
formances has
increased
over the
last
few years.
For bands
·
that are independent
or not really well-known, the
Internet can be an
excellent
medium to get name recognition.
If consumers who normally
wouldn't buy these bands' CDs
end up downloading their music
for free and then going to watch
them live, the bands are actually
making a lot more money than
before.
In
the end, we have to face
the
fact that this is the
Internet we're talking
about. Everything is free.
Just
as
record companies let the
consumer get free music through
the radio and get money through
other means (advertising rev-
enues
from the radio
station)
,
they could give the consumer
free music through the Internet
and simply raise the price of all
live performances.
Second, let's not forget that
peer-to-peer software users have
caused
a dramatic increase in the
economic
performance of the
technology
sector.
Passing free music
and
videos
around the world at an
enormous
rate has caused a dramatic
increase in the demand for hard
drives, flash memory and all
sorts of storage. I highly doubt
people would need 200GB
hard
drives to store Microsoft Word
files. According to In-Stat/MDR,
a technology research firm; con-
sumer
electronics
with built-in
hard drives will double this year
to 16.7 million units.
Thanks
to peer-to-peer net-
works, manufacturers have been
racing to make better and faster
video cards that can handle con-
sumer
demand.
Broadband
Internet isn't just a luxury any-
more
--
it's now becoming quite
widespread. And mp3 players
like Apple's iPod are selling
through the roof.
If
it weren't for the consumers
who share
free
music, none of
this technology would have
advanced nearly at the rate it has.
While the
RIAA
wants to sue
you,
there are millions of people
who would like to thank
you.
You're
giving
these people jobs,
and we're all
getting
better tech-
nology.
In the
end,
we have to face the
fact that this is the Internet we're
talking about.
Everything
is free.
We're able to
communicate
with
people
across
the world without
paying for phone bills. We're
able
to buy things without tax.
It's a revolutionary idea the
world
is
just beginnin
g
to
adjust
to
.
Resistance is futile.
The Circle
welcomes letters
from
Marist
students, faculty, staff and
the
public. Letters should
not
exceed 350
words. Letters
may be edited for
length
and style. Submissions must
include
the
person's full
name
and status (student, faculty, alumni).
Letters
can be dropped off at
the
Circle office on a
diskette
or submitted through the "Letter Submission" link on
MaristClrcle
.co
m





















































THE
CIRCLE
UPCOMING EVENT
Mary
Fahl --
LIVE!
Tonight
8p.m.
Nelly Goletti Theatre
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2003
marlstcircle.com
PAGES
'Matt & Ben' an entertaining Off-Broadway gem
By
JENNIFER C. HAGGERTY
Editor in Chief
&
ROB
McGUINNESS
Managing Editor
To perfonn and produce "Matt and
Ben,"
co-stars Brenda Withers, 25,
and
Mindy Kaling,
24,
had
to
step
into the shoes
.
of the movie
stars
themselves.
Literally.
'
The two ~outh alumnae
co-
wrote
the
one-act play imagining
what the lives of Matt Damon
(played by Withers) and Ben
Affleck (played by Kaling) were like
before
"Good
Will
Hwiting" won
an
Oscar
for Best Screenplay in
1998.
flattery,"
says
Ben.),
the screenplay
for
"Good
Wtll
Hunting;" falls from
the
sky-
literally from
the
apartment
ceiling, startling the
aspiring
screen-
writers.
The two
find
their names
already
printed
on the cover, and it
seems as
if
God
Himself
wanted
the two to
write the play. Flipping through the
text,
Matt says simply,
''Ben
did not
write
this." The debate over whether
or not to take credit for the
screen-
play weighs heavily on the charac-
ters'
longtime friendship and contin-
ually
raises
questions of conscience
throughout the play.
The
pair
reaches the conclusion
that
the play is actually a curse to
punish them for something
bad
they
did in the
past.
''We're whites, we're
males,
we were in 'School Ties' -
damn,"
Ben
adds.
WHERETO GO
VENUE:
P.S. 122
150 First Ave.
(at E. Ninth
Street), East Village.
SHOWTIMES:
Monday-Thursday: 8
p.m.
Friday:
7
p.m.
&
10
p.m;
Saturday:
7
p,m.,
10
p.m ••
and midnight
TICKET PRICE:
Monday-Thursday;
$25
Friday-Saturday:
$30
Student ID Rate:
$18
(Must
show ID; at box
onice
only.)
Beginning at 2
p.m;,
a
block of tickets are
available at the
Box Office
for same day performance.
The 55-minute play begins in
Ben's apartment in the mid-l
990s,
which
is
decked out with Boston
sports paraphernalia,
a movie
poster
from ''School Ties" (which the two
have
already
perfonned in),
as
well
as
a
framed
studio headshot of Ben.
At the outset, the duo
is
attempting
to lift the text of 'Toe
Catcher
in the
Rye," to adapt a screenplay to make
money in Hollywood.
A flashback
transports
the audi-
ence back to Matt's senior year at the
Cambridge Rindge and
Latin
School
to show when
Ben
and Matt met,
from
the
first
day they began acting
together in class to the school talent
show.
ROBERT ZASH / PRESS PHOTO USED WITH PERMISSION
Brenda Withers as Matt
(at
door) and Mindy Kaling as Ben perform in an extended run of 'Matt
& Ben.'
CALL:
212-352-3101 or
866-811-4111
At the talent show,
Matt,
out to
win
a girl's
heart,
perfonns ''Bridge Over
Troubled Water,"
with
Ben
on the
tambourine. Ben
steals
the show and
makes a joke of Matt's perfonnance,
speaking
and
altering the lyrics to
gems songwriter Paul Simon likely
never considered, such
as
''I will
lay
you
down,
Jenny
Warren!"
keeps the audience laughing
.
The while licking frosting off a cupcake, play.
two women
are
not actually
Matt
and
Ben.
The best
part
is,
their char-
acters
are
convincing, and likely
more interesting and entertaining
than
Affleck and Damon them-
selves.
The hilarious one-liners begin early
in the play and quickly define the
Matt and
Ben
characters.
difference
between
the two charac-
cmly
to throw it down
because
she
"Let
me guess, you're my number
ters
is
very
clear. Ben's character
is
says she'll get
fat
(This
happens
one
fan,
you
read
my book
when
unintelligent, obnoxious and thick-
more
than
once.)
"Do
you
think
I'd you were
I~
and
it
changed your
headed,
while Matt is the serious,
be
where
I
am today
if
I
wasn't
Brad life,"
Withers says
as Salinger,
draw-
work--driven overachiever.
Pitt's girlfriend?" she says, wide-
ing
a
hearty lal.Jgh
fiom
the audience.
The two
actresres
perfonn dual eyed.
What
ensues is
quick banter with
"And
as usual,
please spell any
words you
think
I
may have
prob-
lems with," Ben says
as
Matt
thumbs a well worn copy of
"Catcher'' and prepares
to
read
dia-
logue.
While
''adapting"
the texf
("Adaptation is the highest form of
With
subliminal
and obvious digs
aimed
:
~
at
~ k
1
("Yeah, I
like Latin women''),
"Matt
&
Ben"
roles, with
Ka1ing
reappearing
·
as
Withers doubles
as
a convincing witty
lines
such
as
,
"I
don't like
Gwyneth
Paltrow
,
hinting that she
is
J.D.
Salinger
(''Do
you have any mice,
I
don't
like
men,
and
I
don't
having an
affair
with
Ben
while
Brad
pudding?"), who refuses to give
up
like John Steinbeck, and
I advise
Pitt
is
off
filming
''Seven Years
in
the
rights to
his
book.when
Ben
asks
y.ou
to
stay
away ftomall
three."
Tibet." She converses with
Matt
for permission to adapt the screen-
The
audience quickly forgets
that
''Matt
and
Ben" has already
won
Best Overall
Production at the 2002
New York International Fringe
Festival
,
and is currently on
an
extended
nm
at
P
.
S
.
122 at 150 First
Ave., at Ninth Street in New Yorlc
.
Album
Review
'Want One' a breath of fresh air
By
TIM
BRUDEREK
Staff Writer
Rufus Wainwright
"Want One"
Dreamworks Records
Released Sept. 23, 2003
If you haven't yet heard Rufus Wainwright,
then you are seriously missing out.
Wainwright's music is a breath of fresh air
in the stagnant world of pop music. He is not
simply a singer-songwriter; he is an author.
His music is an autobiography fused into a
heterogeneous mixture of rock, classical,
broadway, and baroque styles.
Wainwright is hard to define. He is a folk
singer with style; a poet who strays from the
common dullness of folk music and writes
beautifully written lyrics with a certain trashy
sophistication.
"Want One" is Wainwright's latest offering.
This is the singer's third album, following his
1998
self-titled debut and 2001 release
.. Poses." "Want One" strays from its prede-
cessors in style but not substance, and show-
cases Wainwright's most powerful lyrics to
·
date. His first album was an innocent search
for love and fame, in his second he found it,
and on his third he is suffering the conse-
quences.
The album kicks off with "Oh What a
World," a track reminiscent of a movie score
with its heavy orchestration. In this song,
Wainwright realizes that nothing in the world
is perfect, and he is content with that. His
voice vibrates through your ears and scrapes
the bottom of your heart, staying there until
the last note of the album.
Next up is "I Don't Know What
It
Is," the.
"single" of the album. Wainwright has no clue
where he is headed, but he is not worried
about it. He sings, "So I knock at the door /
Take a step that is new / Never been here
before." He compares his
life
to a train "chug-
ging along," which sets the tone for the
remainder of the album. This song introduces
you to Wainwright's unusual but perfectly
timed phrasing and the way his words seem to
flow seamlessly into one another.
The songs on "Want One" pop in and out of
styles quickly and never get stuck inside a
certain genre. He goes from the achingly per-
sonal piano ballad "Pretty Things" to the
show stopping Broadway-influenced
"14
th
Street" in three tracks, his voice soaring
above banjqs, electric guitars, and harps along
the way.
"Go or Go Ahead," one of the standout
tracks with arguably the best lyrics on the
album, c~ntains some stunning vocals which
deliver the lines: "No where's now here
smelling of junipers / Fell of the hay bales,
I'm over the rainbows
I
But oh Medusa kiss
me and crucify / This unholy notion of the
mythic power of love."
With "Harvester of Hearts," Wainwright
swings into jc1zz, complete with a smoky
piano and a smooth sax solo. This track also
showcases his tremendous vocal range, which
is evident in "Natasha."
In the song "Want," the title track of this
project, Wainwright begs for a simple life out-
side of the public eye and the shadows of his
famous parents, Loudon Wainwright III and
Kate McGarrigle, who he refers to in the lyric,
"I don't want to be John Lennon or Leonard
Cohen/I just want to be my dad/ With a slight
sprinkling of. my mother."
This
is
Wainwright's pure and human emotion
exposed for those lucky enough to hear
.
The album closes with the beautiful "Dinner
At Eight," a piano ballad that cuts through
your soul as Wainwright is still searching for
love, not knowing when he will find it. This
song leaves you hanging for "Want Two," the
sequel to this album, which is set for release
sometime next year.
Legal Services for the Campus Community
KOS
.
SO
VER
LAW
OFFICES,
LLP
(845) 255-4655
E-Mail: info@kossoverlaw.com
Andrew Kossover, Esq. • Victoria Kossover, Esq. • Lawrence Trank, Esq.
For the past twelve years, our law office has served as Legal Counsel to the
Student Government Association at S.U.N.Y. New Paltz.
We are experienced
responsive, and understanding in dealing with college students and the legal
issues confronting them in today's society. As a 1990 graduate of Marlst College
and current resident of Hyde Park, attorney Larry Trank is
particularly
interested in serving and working with the Marist community.
Kossover Law Offices, LLP provides a variety of legal services throughout the
Hudson Valley. Legal services offered include: representatfon in all criminal
matters (misdemeanors and felonies); vehicle and traffic violations (including
DWAI/DWI charges); accident and personal injury claims; and landlord/tenant
disputes.
If you find yourself in need of legal representation and would like to speak with
an attorney who will aggressively represent your interests, contact our office for
a free consultation.
CRIMINAL MATTERS • TRAFFIC TICKETS • ACCIDENT CLAIMS

























































































THE CIRCLE •
THURSDAY, OC'IOBER 23, 2003 •
PAGE 7
From Page One
Fulton Street plan
Yankees: Has
the team
finally bonded?
... from
Page
8
You knew there were going to
be
nine tough outs."
gets OK from town
east side of Route 9. Until the
plan is complete and has been
reviewed by the planning board,
the college will not propose
·
any
additional developments on the
east side of Route 9.
"What we're committing to is
a more comprehensive planning
process," Murray said. "We
understand the whole Route
9
corridor is an issue, but we
beJieve it is going to take a com-
prehensive effort."
Residents were again permitted
to voice comments and concerns
prior to the board's decision.
Poughkeepsie
resident
Tim
O'Connor said the jaywalking
problem has not been solved.
"The jaywalking continues on
a daily basis," O'Connor said.
"It's a bigger problem than the
numbers are representing."
Resident Pat Myers expressed
a similar opinion.
"It's a nightmare over there,
and I commend Marist for trying
to work through tbis," Myers
said. "At 3: 15 p.m. today, I
observed 20 individuals
crossing
Route 9 diagonally. We have to
come up with a better, more per-
manent solution."
Residents also noted traffic
congestion in the area, a problem
Murray assured them would be
somewhat alleviated by the new
townhouse development.
"We believe that getting these
250 students on campus is actu-
ally going to reduce the vehicu-
lar traffic in the area," Murray
said.
Architectural detail approved
In addition to approving the
final site plan, planners also
-unanimously
approved the archi-
tectural detail for the Fulton
Street
development,
which
includes two and three story
buildings patterned after the
existing West Cedar townhouses.
"It's better than anything we
lived in when we were in col-
lege," Schmitz said.
Planner Richard Davison con-
curred.
"I think it'-s quite nice,"
Davison said.
Yankees elevating themselves in
the amazing comeback against the
Red Sox, contributions big and
small on the way to Grune One of
the World Series on Saturday night.
"It felt the most like a ballclub as
it did all year long," Giambi said.
"Because of the revolving door
around here trying to fuid the
pieces, the way it happened makes
a difference. Everybody had a part
in that one some way or another."
There had been a clear disconnect
within these Yankees, a
gulf
grow-
ing deeper and deeper with every
·
struggle in these playoffs. There
were the old Yankees and the new
Yankees, the past champions
-
Derek Jeter, Mariano Rivera, and
Bernie Williams- and the uniniti-
ated -
Giambi, Mike Mussina,
and Aaron Boone.
In
the minds of
the Yankees largely responsible for
the four championships since I 996,
they wondered the truth about
these high-priced players brought
to
bridge one championship era to
a preswned next.
As much as they had stumbled in
the most major of spots on the way
to
Game Seven of the ALCS,
Giambi,, Mussina, and Boone left
immense imprints on the 6-5 victo-
ry
over the Sox, transforming
themselves in the eyes of team-
mates. For so long; Jeter would be
brutally honest about
his belief that
his new
teammates hadn't done it
in the biggest spots, hadn't proven
themselves as those before them.
The longer this postseason had
gone, the longer Giambi and
Boone slumped, Mussina lost
important starts, it seemed clear: If
the Yankees were going anywhere
this October,
it
would remain on
Shoes dictate
w~rdrobe ...
from Page 3
accept, embrace and indulge in the
latest footwear frenzy!
Maryjanes are making a big
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appeal and have returned to the
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Tall boots, or ''hooker 1,oots" for
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"Steven,"
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Shoes are and
will
always be the
accessory that holds our ensembles
together: They can make or break
·an
outfit. This seas
·
on, pick your
style
carefully,
choose your colors
accordingly, and most of
all, do not
be afraid to make a statement!
Visit
MaristCircle.com
for up-to-date news,
local weather, movie listings and more!
the backs
of
.
old
Yankees.
And
then, everything changed in Gatne
Seven. Mussina
pitched
out of
a
first
and third, no-out jam in
the
fourth inning to,
as
Giambi
said,
''keep the
game
from getting out
of
hand right there." Giambi
hit
two
home
runs
off
Pedro
Martinez.
And
Boone?
Well,
Boone made
history in the 11th
inning.
"Everybody
had
a hand
in
it,"
Giambi said.
'That's
what
made
those
Yankees teams
in the
past
-
with
(Paul)
O'Neill,
Tino
(Martinez),
and Luis Sojo. It was-
n't just one
guy that made
those
teams.
That's what
made
them so
tough to beat. You knew they were
going to make
a difference some
way or another
by moving
a
guy
over, hitting a sacrifice
fly.
That's
what
made them so tough
to
beat.
ad
And the Yankees knew they
could count on each other. Rivera
was remembering his old team-
mate, Orlando Hernandez, for his
penchant of delivering clutch per-
formances in telltale
starts. For
all
his struggles in the regular
season
·
-
all his
tantrums
and
injuries
-
El Duque had a way of making
everyone forget cotne the postsea-
son "You don't find that quality in
every player," Rivera said ''You
either
have it or not. Special play-
ers like that have it. Not ever play-
er
has
that."
Before Game Seven of the
American League Championship
Series, you wondered how many
players
on these Yankees
had
it.
Now, you wonder a little less.
~Ian feldman~ M.f).§ •• C.tiT.
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opposite !Fairview 'Business Par{
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&
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$12.95
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College
2LARGE
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12 JUMBO

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CURLY FRIES

24JUMBO
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FOUNTAIN
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(60)
Large pizza
FOUNTAIN SODA,
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Pick up
$6.49
SODA
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$10.99
$6.50
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$19.99
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Delivered $7.35
$19.99
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THE CIRCLE
GAME OF THE WEEK
MARIST
V. FAIRFIEID
Leonidoff Field
Sunday, Oct.
26, 2003,
1
p.m.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2003
marlstclrcle.com
University of Miami strikes back,
sues Big East over contract breach
By
SUSAN MILLER DEGNAN
Knight Ridder Newspapers
said. "It was a revised and amend-
ed out-clause that was very clear
and unequivocal: 'You give your
notice by June 30 and you pay
CORAL GABLES, Fla. (KRT) -
your money within a year
-
$1
The impending divorce just got
million -
and you're free to go.
uglier.
"In the past 25 years, 39 other
After months of being called
schools have changed confer-
conspirators in "a deliberate
ences, and there has never been a
scheme ...
·
to destroy the Big
lawsuit. It's nothing extraordi-
East," the University of Miami
nary."
struck back Monday in Miami-
~~Ecr,~
UM athletic director Paul Dee
Dade County Circuit Court.
<>mG-
said Monday in a written statement, "We
CJ
~ ; , ' ""'
The University of Miami filed suit against
.,..,
took this action very reluctantly, because we
the Big East Conference, University of
think litigation in this matter is neither pro-
Connecticut, Pittsburgh, Rutgers and West
,s.
<,
s
K
,
«.,
fl.I
ductive nor desirable.
Virginia, alleging breach of contract and a .__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
' - - - - - - - - - - ' "However, the barrage of lawsuits emanat-
conspiracy to defraud on the part of the con-
diately review trial·judge
·
Samuel Sferrazza's ing out of Big East member schools, have
ference and individual schools.
recent order
denying
UM's
·
motion to
dismiss
forced us to take steps to protect our rights
Miami also sued the University of for lack of personal jurisdiction.
and
reputation."
Connecticut for defamation.
UM was sued in
June
by the four schools,
Most recently, the four Big East schools
"Enough
of all these lawyer-concocted but not by the Big East Conference, for,
filed a second
lawsuit
last Tuesday over the
claims and all the defamation and name-call-
according to the original lawsuit, conspiring ACC expansion, adding
Boston
College, its
ing and daily press releases and press confer-
in a scheme to destroy
the league
by choos-
/
athletic director and four ACC officers to the
ences," Miami attorney Eric Isicoff told The 'ing to
defect
to the Atlantic Coast list of
defendants
.
Herald by telephone. "What we want to do is Conference.
The Big East acknowledged Monday's law-
bring the real issue to the court here and have
Miami claims in
Monday
's
lawsuit that in !!uit, but spokesman Rob Carolla said there
the court declare,
'Hey,
there was a contract.
1999 it expressed to
Big
East commissioner would be no public comment.
You have the absolute right to leave the Big Mike Tranghese
that
it
had
16
concerns
with
Connecticut Attorney Gene,ral Richard
East conference and you've done nothing the Big East -
including scheduling, mar-
Blumenthal,
the most vocally aggressive
wrong.'"
keting, TV rights and the
ability
of members plaintiff
on
behalf of his side's lawsuits, told
"That's the bottom line."
to leave the conference. It claims those con-
The Associated Press that UM's lawsuits are
Isicoff, co-counsel Roberto Martinez and cems were not addressed and that it signed unfounded and show Miami is acting out of
Aaron Podhurst filed the
lawsuit
on behalf of an amended Big East Constitution in 2001
"fear and anger."
UM.
under false pretenses that the issues would be
''Any
harm claimed by the University of
Isicoff said Miami
is "looking
for substan-
resolved.
i
I
MilPni
plainly is self-inflicted or nonexistent,
tial damages against the Big East and the
Either way, Isicoff said UM legally abided and pales in comparison to the damage it has
other schools
...
and we would estimate those by the amended constitution by
giving
its done to its Big East partners," Blumenthal
damages are going to range into the millions notice to leave the Big East by this past June said.
of dollars."
30 and by
paying
its $1 million exit fee.
The
defendants
have 20 days
to
respond to
Miami also filed an appeal Monday with
"There was no commitment
to
stay in the the complaint.
the Supreme Court of Connecticut to imme-
conference for any
period
of time," Isicoff
PAGES
Frustration
KRT PHOTOGRAPH BY
KATlfY
KMONICEK
/
NEWSDAY
Derek Jeter, seen here during the seventh game of the ALCS.
Have these Yankees
finally come together?
By
A. WOJNAROWSKI
The Record
(Bergen
County,
N.J.)
NEW YORK (KRT) -
The
impetuous owner of the
Yankees is forever pushing
his people to make changes,
forever shipping players into
the clubhouse and out of it,
inspiring a sense that the
man dressing in the locker
beside yours is a perfect
stranger. Ultimately, these
Yankees had nothing that had
bonded them as a team, a
feeling that even with 10 I
regular-season
victories,
they
were still missing a transcen-
dental moment to consider
themselves a cohesive and
hardened team.
After Aaron Boone crossed
the plate in the 11th
inning
Oct. 16, this thought crossed
the mind of Jason Giambi.
These had been the old
SEE YANKEES, PAGE 7
Monila
Oimtier
27
2003
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