The Circle, November 7, 1996.pdf
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 49 No. 6 - November 7, 1996
content
..........
- -------•·•
..
-
.
MIPQ-
pre4icti_OllS:
clo
_
se
to:- actual· :election·'results
by
Sn:PnANiE
MERCURIO
. &
TIM;MANSON
-During the.1994 gub_emato~·
rial elections inNewYork; MIEO
.
•.
_predicted
_
th~ distribution of' ·
vott;s alipostexact!y._
_
_- .. -_
- ·
The
~faristlnstituteJor Public
.
In.
the::final 'pqll, MWO: pr_e-
Opiriion iMIPO)maintaii1~ its
dieted Coumo would have 45;7
repii1:11ji)n ·by pr:ojecting
Bill
--p~rcent
·of
the v6tcrs•· backirig,
Clinton ,vould win the Tuesday
when in actuality, he had
45.1
- _ night presidential. election.
. percent
Mll'O predicted-that Clinton · :Midngoffsaidhewasco11fident
was fav~lrcd by
51
percent.while· this election's results would also ·
Dole was favored by
33.
percent.
be _close to the MIPO results.
Per91
was
backed by eightper-'
C<I _
think -Clinton looks very
· cent.
and
one percent preferred . strong; especially in New York,"
· other candidates.
·
he said.
-
.
.
. _
Cl
in inn actually _captured 49
Miringoff said pre-election poll-
percent of the vote, winning 31
ing gageswhere the electorate
states an,I 379 electoral votes,
is. -
Dok
100k
41_
percent of the
"The closer to election it be~
vote, wi1h 19 states
ana
159
elec-
comes, ~he less variation there
toraJ\ro1c,.whilethird-partycan-
is," he said. ''The polls giye a
Noven:iber 7.1996
didak' Ross Perot received
9
per-
snapshot of what they are mea-
,_
cent
of
1he
voie,
despite not win-
suring at a giv,en time. They pro~
_
_
PbocoaiunesyoCTI.DI Massie
ning any states.
_ .
. _ · _ 'vide
.
insight_and understanding
The Marist Institute for Public Opinion.(MIPO) predicted President Clinton
would capture 51
Politkal science professor.
Lee ·
to the elections."_
,
- . percent of the vote. In actuality, he won
49
percent. Pictured polling for
MIPO
from left
to
right
M. Miringpff~ director<>fthe in-
According _ ·tci
the
are John Sarare, Peter O'Keefe,
Lee
~lrlngoff, Barbara Carvalho, and
Mark
Gearan.
stitutc~ -.aid thatin the
20
years
Poughkeepsie Journal, the poll
MIPO -has been .polling, results - also revealed that .voters see
.
However, 52 percent feel Dole · ·would m~an that fewer tha.Q half such national teJe~ision and ra-
are gc!1<:i::1lly accu,rate. __ -__ -_- -•• _- __ , _ Clinton and.Dole on,opposite- _ can be trusted, while onl,:28 ~r-:-. . of the e_lig~ble.votersjruiy,~9!,e, ,: ',-:, gJo,'n~ogr~\as .ABC'.s World,
. "Jn_
l<'rm{
of
key,trenq~.
-
\'{~'"<; . ,;
en¢;:o_f.thcpoliti¢.atspectrum: ·
~ cent feel
they_ can
trust
Ciinton~ -- ·.
'){ccording
~
-~P9itco!l,d!,lc~e,d _,. Ne"".(~(?~gl'lt.
~>
Inside
Poli-
. never
h:~~'_t~·~@§:~t}t~.~t'=:.,L~,.of
those poU~dHSpereentleel
'
·-,;•MIPQ
als9predi¢t~cl:yoier~tul'n"''. ·.: by/ilie-yo.tecNe~s~~bcxic,e;
49
--ticst~d··~C'.s·_'f~ay -~n~New· ,• ..•..
·-
· .
. sul~~·:· h~7s~:9:
1
tSo-(ar, ~e have -•·:CHriiori is libcral;while63 pcrccnt
,
:-,;·out:.wm.
be
:1essthan,5
l,percerltf:.,_;percent:of,the,p9puliitjQri,~otecb- c:.·ffocKan1gJ}g
,
<>.tlJe!"8,,:<',-:::~ ·:
an
unhli-n'lish¢d·recoro." '''._
<"
feefDole is conservative.
_
. ·
-
-- : the Io~est since
t924:
This
.
-. :M,iPo·'poiish~vebee.n"'seen.o~>:
:,~7;-_;,,._':-'
:-:t{(/
:
_/
'
\/
Organizatioris-ru{t1-clubsta.tus difficriit'to· acbie\Te··
b); GVNA SLOMCINSKY
(PEOPLE) said drafting the by-
finding an advisor .
.
-
_s.'raffWrite_r_ ..
laws is along process.
. 'VJ'he advisor is
a
full-time fac-
. ,..
·
~•It
isvefytime consuming.
We
ulty member, but there have been
Stuiknt groups continue
to
have just started the process, but . exceptions. _W:e have had Resi-
striv~
l.
1
wards gaining.dub sta-
Ikriowkwill takesometime,"she· dentDirectors and members of
tus, dl.',pite what may,'seein to
said.
_ _
- - -
.
_ _. _ the ~yme Hous(as advisors,''.
be a hurcaucratic nightm~e. . .
Stallkamp said the time. it takes . Stallkamp said. '
. . . ·- . .
- Th~•
tin;t
step to becominga
to draft by:..laws varies between,
The group musthave
at
least
club
on
1.'ampusis meeting with. clubs.
· _ ·
·
· : ·
·
10
members
to
become
-a
club.
Bob Lynch,directorofactiviti~.
·
'
"S6me·peopfo have
a
grasp·on . Aner having-that,·the SGAexc.
Here,·i1~ws theStudentG(),.,em-c_
,
the
.
format,9'he said: ''S.ome -· ecutive board reviews the by:-
~ent:\s~oci~tionJSG.A) gllide:.~- pebplearen'twillingfo adjust to· laws.
_- _ _ -_
--
_
-_
.
_
..
lmes
tor
gettmg agroup~tart~. >tliemodelwehave;'' ·•
- -
:_: . The president Qfthe ~ll!lJ am;l a'
A
groui1
must then draft its club ,
··
::"After _d!afting the by.:laws. the
:
fe\i:'
'in:e!Db~rs:'do;~ pres~11tation
by-law~. . __
- .
group is then assig'nccftoone of for the SGA senate .
.
,.Later,, the
_Acc1,rd!ng to Todd Stal~kamp.
the.six dub couri~ils on campus.
s.enate votes ~ogran,t a'charter;
v1ce~pr~•~1dent ofcl~b affrurs. tile
· i'A~cording foBtallkamp; some
·
-_ The process seems long, but
by:..Im\·\arc profess1onally_done.
of the club councils are at their
some clubs receive fast club sta-
He mcl'NWi~ members of~e cap:_
i
. . . . . . : . -
_
. . .
ttis~
.
. .
. .
group
an,I
reviews each secuon . --~'All councils have caps; except
-•--·The Society for Professional
of th~
ln
-laws -.
_ - _. -
for'the honorary council.Some - Journalists (SPJ) rewrote its by-
"It':-.
.almost like a checklist,~•
are full, hke social service. but
laws three times. Other clubs
have
he
said.
-·•
.
.
. .
. .
others like co-curricular have . taken' more than six or seven
Ml!lbsa Ruot. sec~etary of slots· left," hesaid. ·
- tries· to get their by-laws ap-
Peopk Educating Other People
, Toe
club
is also responsible for ·proved.
in
a
l:li.irnin Environment
·
·
Thereisaclubrevieweveryse-
Do you feel
the variety
of courses offered
at
i\farist
is
providing you with a well-
rounded education?
Yes-269
No-116
Thi!
l
·ircle conducted
an
unscientific poll on
Oct:
28- Nov. 2.
Thre~ hundred
eighty-five students were asked this week's ques-
tion
Rt•,,,!
our education beat every Thursday (This issue, page
3)
mester where the SGA analyzes
each club to see what they have
· done.
Stallkamp said they check on
every ·club's progress·.
_
"We
look
at their paper work .
arid their discipline status.'.' he .
said.
"If
the
club
was
in
any.
trouble with the_ school, we re-
evaluate whether or not that club
should keep it's charter."
The SGA always has the op-
tion of revoking a club's charter
based on its record,
making room
for new groups searching for .
club status.
,:\
/'.'<
--
-
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:
·
1sraef
platlllillg
tO
·
cibUbie se'ttfor
poPlliatiOrt:@-W,eSt'Baiiic
by
JACK
KATZNELL
-
.
ac~ords with Israel; which were-in-
·
gically, Israeii
.
opposition legislator
Associated Press Wrriter
.
tend~ to pave the way f9r
·
self-rule . Haim Ramon said
~e
plan ''would build
JERUSALEM (AP) _ Already
-
:for
some 2
million
~alestinians. ~e an?ther
_
~osni_ai~ !srael ... ,;
,
. ·:
>
hobbled by violence and rancor,
-
Is-
United ~tates and many ot~er ~~re1~n
_-
-
~e. idea
~~
to
,
:
~parat~ ~~rs
-
~d
_
raeli-Palestinianpeace
effo~
suffe~
-
_
_
.
__
countnes
·
_
also op~ose ~dd1t1cmal
_
_
~alestim~s,
_
'.iJ
_
ot _m~r:;ase the Jew~~h
another blow Mcirtday as Israeli offi~
set~ement construcUon._
.
.
,
-
~set~le~? ~<>pulattonr
: .
Ramon
.
s
;
~1d,
__
cials detailed plans to
.
nearly double
_
Smee 1994, Israel h~
withdrawn from
'There
_
will
be
,
D?
c~ance
t<?
_
c
,
o!1~nue
.
the nutnber
_
of Jewish settlers in the
most of the Gaza
_
Stnp and about one-
the peace process \v,hil
,
e we are trymg
-
ur.
·
t
-
Bank
-
-
-
•
quarter of the West Bank, and has
to change the situation in the West
"es
.
-
f Bank."
Settlement czar Ariel Sharon tin-
.
promised to pull troops from most o
-
-
.
veiled the plan_cluring a weekend tour
rest of the West Bank withit\ a year.
On Monday, Palestinian villagers pro-
of the territory; and his spokesman!
''The statements by (Israeli) officials
tested construction at Kiryat Sefer that
Raanan Gissinfelaborated on Monday.
concerning settlements ¥e
,
a call to
is part of an earlier plan.
_
The
_
plan calls for bui~ding two new
-
war/' Palestinian
_
legislator Haidar
-
About 60 demonstrators, niany of
Cities in the WesfBank that will ac-'
.
Abdel Shafiwarried Monday
.
them elderly men, walked toward two
coinmodat~ 100,000 more Jewish set-
Gissin said Monday that the new plan
-
bulldozers clearing land about a mile from
-
calls for creating two cities and even-
their village,
Kharbata, but were blocked
tiers.
.
.
.
.
-
-
.
·:
The propos~l,
-
the most ambitious to
tually merging them; cme would
be
near
by two
_
dozen Israeli soldiers
.
date by Sharon, wholed a large settle-
the Kiryat Sefer settlement just inside
"This is our land. They prevented us
ment const.:ruction drive in the early
the West Bank, and the second would
from plowing it, they
·
want to build on it
-
1990s; has not been approvedby Prime
.
incorporate five
-
small
_
settlements and they want us to remain silent," said
Minister Benjamin Netanyalm, who in
deeper inside the area. Some 10,000-
73-year-old Ismail Abu Ayash.
principle backs settlement expansion.
11,000 homes could be built around
Also Monday, newspapers reported
The construction could moUi
_
fy
KiryatSefer,
ancl
an
_
other 12,000 around
-
that Netanyahu
bas
asked Syria and
Iran
the five smaller settlements, he said.
to rein in Islamic militants he says are
Netanyahu's settlerconstituency, who
- -
-
-
are livid over Israeli plans
'
to pull
ThecurrentJ~wishse
_
ttlerpopulation
.
plotting attacks iri
'
Israel. Ne_tanyahu
.
.
in the West Bank is
_
,
145,000.
,
sent
the niessage
'
via the United States
troops from the lastmajor Israeli-oc-
-
-
cupied West Barik_'city,
,
Hebron. They
Palestinian land expert. Kh~der and Gennany, the reports saiq.
complain that he has doneHttle to help
Shkirat said that if built, the settlements
'
Isr
_
aeli
_
security forces have
_
been Ori
could weaken prospects for a Pales-
high alert since last month, responding
them.
·.
.
-
Buftbe prime ininister ~ay be reluc-
'tinian state because
,
''there
will be
no .- to what Netanyahu adviser David Bar"'
tant to support a plan that could b~dly
territorial continuity between the Pal--
man said Monday were "extremely spe-
undermine
_
his
_
efforts tp salvage estiniari. dties in
·
the West Bank."
cific" warnings
-
by
_
the -group Islamic
While Sharon toid
.
settlers Sunday
Jihad. Police
.
set up checkpoints Mon-
peacemaking with
-
th~ Palestinians
.
· ·
-
-
.
that the area
was
.
im
.
pqrtant
-
not only
day at the outskirts of Tel Aviv.
Palestinians view settlement expan~
sion as a violation
:
of 1993 autonomy
--
as part of biblicallsrael
.
~tit also strate-
·
·
·
Milosevic
.
's coalit:ion heading
(or
.
yictory in Yugoslav elections
-
by MISHA SAyic
In_
the repu6iic ~
r:'
Mo~tenegro,
-
sitioil politician
;
nearly won ciutrightas
.
:-
i\s
.
so~iated Press Writer
.
Serbia's only remaining partnerin Yu-
mayorofBelgrade. He faces a runoff
·
,;
,,.
_
_ -
·
-
· · ·
--
-
,
-
-
·
·
'
.
,,,
-,goslavia;therulingfonner.Comrnunist-,,electionNov.17.
_
_
.
_
>
_
·
>
-_
,
'
.
BELGRADE;.
Y~g~sla~ia
(AP)
,/
parfr
.
alsq wasjleadI~gjhe
}
>pposftion
\
.
'
-
'Pl~
Oi~c@.
)~
yels~
:
api
:
~Clt
pucirutbut
.
Serbian President
Siobodan
Milosevic
~
for the_ fei:le~al
·
p~liafueftt's) 38,seats.
·
:
~ giye~¢
·
op,i>Qsjtion
·
'a' politicalfooQiold
,
and ])is wife,
·
whci
.
have· do!llinated
·
Milosevic did not run himself, but he
it has lacked since Milosevic rose
Yugosla~ poHµc~Jor
·
the past decade
neededforetainhismajoiify inthifog-
}
through
.
the Communist ranks to take
and helped {OID!!nt
_
war in the Balkans,
islature
'
fo
,
iris
'.
u.re
;
he ca~
;
lio!
_
d
:
on
to
;
'controi}>f ~erbiain 1987 .
.
_
. _
_
-
h~ve
_
won parlianientary
·
e1ecti6ils
.
0
-
•
power next year
;
when his second term
·
·
.
',
:
Tiie
·
opposition also said jnany vot-
-
However,
prelirriinary
results showed
asSerbian president expires
.
-
ers in the
_
central Serbian town of"ll!is, a
-
Monday
,
that ·the
.
united
.
de#iocratic
_
'The constitution bars him from a third
Milosevic stronghold, had switched al-
oppo~iti011 did
-
_
dent l\1Ho~evi~'~
-
hold ienn,~ut
-
he can~ el~ted
,
Yug()~lav. legiance
>
Nis~ntiylias seen unprec-
on Iosal
·
posts, _with
.
the capital;
,
presideilf
:;
by the
·
J~d~ra!_assembly.
·
ed~nted
·
\Vor,ker unrest over unpaid or
Belgrade, exp~ted, \o
_
getjts first non~
~
-
Once there, he can
·•
get'the legislature ·
·.
tiny
-
_
state wa.ges and pensions, 50 per-
Communist may
_
or sinc~\\Torld
\Varll. _
to chllllge the constitutiopto expand
cent unemployment and 100 percent
While~~
oppq~itio,n c,omplained of the powers of that now'.'symbolic post inflation.
·
.
___
·
. _
-
_
_
•
,
frau
_
d,
-
the tJ,S.
,
E~b
-
~~Y
in
:
Belgrade
_
His
.
coalition
~
·
!riay
"fiilLsho~ of th_e
:
.
,
_
_
Milo~evic profited fromBalkan incH-
-
said they "did not see widespread ir-
-
two~thirds
majority
·
needed
_
for
·
such
-
nation to
.
support thci ruling
•
leader and
:
reguJarities'
~
except for"shortcomings
changes
:
But Miloseyic
:
~pokesman
.
:
Amin
aggressive
attacks
011
the opposi-
of voters' Usts, questionable security
.
Ivica Dacie
W<lS
~p~~.
f~~ec
-
~ti11g
aJ!
. :
~on i
_
n his state-run
media
. _
·
:
:
•
·
procedures ... and i;estrictions
_
on op-
"absolutely absolute majority."
.. ,
,
:
,
. _
_
--
-
_
-
·
-
·
_
oppo~ition leaders complained of if.;.
·
-
-
position party representatives in elec-
·
On Sunday, Montenegrins alsq voted
regularities
·
that they said swung the
tion commissions.~•- .
_
_
_- _ _
.
for their 71 ~searparlfarnent wh~r~ the
-
;
ile,ct_ion
,-
"'
,
the same charges they lev-
.
___
With over half the ballots counted ruling fonner Co1'l,munists had a com~
·
(?led in the
_
1990
and I
992
elections.
from Sunday's election for the fortablelead. Ball9ts~sg
:
~er.fc~t:ror
_
·
'
Jvplosevic
·
and the authorities reject
Yugoslav parliament, the alliance unit
-
.
municipal districts throughout Serbia
--•
such charges.
_
ing Milosevic's ruling Socialists with
·
and the sniall~rJl.1o
_
*iene~
'.< ,
•
.
_
,
..
_
·
-
,·
';['Ile str~ngth <>.fthe Radicals reflected
his
wife :rdirjana Markovic's neo-Com-
·
In
tho_se
·
~9n~ests,
-
~~
-_
demo_cratic
·
_
th_e nationali~i:n Milosevic w
_
hipped
·
up
·
.
monists
.
had
-
48
percent of the vote.
-
coalition fared
better
than Milosevic's
·
·
iri
the-1980s to preserve power,
trigger-
.
The four-party
-
opposition coalition
Socialists arid
his
_
wife
?
s Maoost
'
party;
:
·
big
the
:
~ars in Croatia and Bosnia. He
Zajedno had
_
24
.
percent, the
_
extreme
apparently be_cause the two parties~
.
mad~ peace last year and_ ditched
nationalistRadicalPartyasurprisingly
separat~ly .
.
-..
.
,
_
. ,
,"
:
:
.
:.1
,
.
.
_
..
·
_
·
nationaJism, returning
to
his Commu-
strong 19 percent.
Zoran Djindjic,
a:
prominent oppo-
nist roots.
__
·
:
.
The
'
Weekend Weather
:-
Mil
_
·
dwitha
chan~of showers.
-
~
.
l:,ow
_
s around 40.
Highs
aroQnd 60. •
:
Fri
~
~~=
-
,'.
:
: . .
.
.
' ·
Turning colder
with
.
rain
likely. Lows 35
to
45. Highs
in
the
50s.
1
.
.
Saturday; Chance of snow showers.
~ e
~ effect snows possible west Lows
~
in
the 30s. Highs 40
to 45.
Sunday:
Chance of snow showers. Lows 25
to 35. Highs 35 to 45.
Source: Associated
Press
.
!
I
I
THE
CiR_CLE,November7,
1996 ·
3
· Profe~sor r~creates Russia for students
another level,'' said H~y. ~'He relates it
to your life and to his own."
Next semester, Norkeliunas is teach-
, Th~ cin:ums~~~ of war are not sometlli~g
ing ·a coursf erilitled, 'Dostoevsky' .
. ;fyi3rlst,
~tudents .nonnally have to deal with,
The course .focuses on the Russian
but.
for
9ne Marist professor; the ·tragedies
author's works: s·uch
as
Crime
and Pun- .
of.war consumed every day of his"childhooct
ishmem; Theldiot, The Possessed,
and
by
Kw
F'tYNN
Staff.Writer·
Casimir Norkeliunas, .associate professor ..
The BrothersKaramm:.ov;
of Gem1an and Russian, and a survivor of
According to• Norkeliunas,
World_-war.
II;
brings a sobering, yet realis-
Dostoevsky is a major psychological
tic, perspective to.his classroom.
.
novelist in Western Literature because
WhcnNorkeliunas came to America at the
he _
_
deals with many problems.
age of l ~- he had experienced more than most
"Postoevsky is a writer of great moral
people experience in a lifetime. -
stature and he examines morals, ethics
Lithuanian by birth, Norkeliunas said he . and values)hrough examples in our
was visibly a\vare of war at the age of three. · westemcivilization," said Norkeliunas.
At the age seven, he spent half a year ata "This is a
course I
think a lot of
juniors
forced lahorcamp.
·
and seniors would find valuable be-
"There are lots of incidents that wiJlnever.. cause he deals with problems ofmoral-
_beerascd frommymind,"saidNorkeliunas.
ity andvalue."
.
"The
h:irsh
circumstances of surviving World
Harty·said when he c811_1e to college,
War 11.
I
hring to my own children and to my
he did not expect a teacher like
studc111:;."
Norkeliimas.
While reaching at Marist, Norkeliunas com-·
"He cares a lot about us, and he sees
muted
ll l
New York University to obtain his
us all as extraordinary," Harty said, "The
doctora1c. He is fluent in six languages, in-:
classroom is set up as a circle, as if not
cludin!! Russian, Geiman, Lithuanian, Ukrai-
any one person should be further from
nian. and English,
learning than another."
·
He teaches what he loves; literature,
Jan- ·
In all of his classes, students prepare
guage. and history. He said the tries to di-
a luncheon or dinner where the menu is
rect hi-; life towards being useful, produc-
entirely Russian.
tive, and a ccmtributor by relating the hell he
Paul Diala, who is also in Classics of
saw in 1hc war to what he teaches.
. Western Literature, said Norkeliunas in-
''Wlwn
I
speak to
my
students, I speak
vited his class to his house and he
, with :unhority," said Norkeliunas. "Life is
cooked a meal for them,
serious. Education is a serious matter, not
"We got together to find out more
just a privilege. In America, we all have
about him and to get to know each
choices and options. People take for granted
other," said Diala. "He wanted to get us
that options will always
be
there."
to taste something from his home."
Fr~shman Jason Harty enrolled in
Since 1969,Norkeliunas has been tak-
Norkeliunas' Classics of Western Literature
ing students to the Soviet Union. He
course this semes1:er, and he said the class is
said this is a benefit to the students
different from any other he has taken.
because ithelps them realize how spe-
"Hc •i:lls us infonnation, but brings
it
to
cial America is.
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-
Cilek: Phoeo/Susan
Goulet
Eliot Clauss, president of the US-China Chamber of Commerce, spoke at the
symposium entitled, "Doing business with China" last Wednesday.
Symposium focuses on international business
by
TIM
MANSON
Staff
Writer
Eliot Clauss, president of the US- China
Chamber of Commerce, headed
a
panel
of.China experts in a symposium entitled
"Doing Business in China" last Wednes-
day.
Clauss, who is a partner in the interna-
tional finn of Peltz
&
Walker in New York
City, stressed the legal importance of
dealing with China in tenns of the impor-
tance of a good legal contract.
. "Try to get as detailed a contract
as
you can," said Clauss in his speech. "It's
not a matter of the American way or the
Chinese way, but a matter of international
business."
· Clauss said that in order to understand
Chinese business, Americans also have
·10
iinaerstand 'their culture.
_
. "The
legal
system in Chiria is a work
in
progre·ss," said Clauss. '"They have the
l:!asic components, but we haven't fig-
ured out how they all work there yet."
Other speakers included Peter Boland,
the Senior Vice President for Marine Mid-
land bank, who spoke about the
convertability of_ western. currency in
China and Robert Sun, the Chainnan of
Sun International Group, who talked
. about the importance of personal con-
nections in China.
The symposium, which was organized
to help businesses better deal with the Chi-
nese market,
was
offered in conjunction
with the Southern Dutchess Chamber of
Commerce and its Windows on Wuhan
trade initiative.
. According to Tony O'Brien, director of
Corporate and Professional Education and
organizer of the event, the Windows on
Wuhan Program was designed to help lo-
cal companies get started in <;hjnese busi-
ness.
·
"Its primary purpose is to promote and
facilitate trade and commerce between the
United States and China, but more spe-
cifically, between the Hudson Valley and
the Wuhan region of China," said O'Brien.
O'Brien also stressed the significance
of the question and answer period follow-
ing the speakers
as
being
as
important
as
the
speeches themselves.
"It was precisely what we wanted it to
be," said O'Brien.
"Really an exchange
not only between the audience and
the
panelists,
but also among the audience
so
the people with varying expertise either in
other countries or in China were helping
each other out."
'
O'Brien said he thought the program
was excellent overall, and it was one of
the best programs to come to Marist.
"I thought we had a number of heavy
hitters there, and a good range fo speak-
ers with high expertise and reputation,"
said O'Brien.
·
ATTENTION - SENIORS
Requests for nominations for
Who's Who Among
Students inAmericafJ Universfties and Colleges
have been sent to all faculty, staff and presidents
of clubs and organizations.
If you feel you should be nominated, please speak
:,.· to a faculty member, administrator or club
. ·president and request t_hat-!!:ey _n.o_minate you.
.All nominations must be returned by Friday,.8 November.
4
Racism
continues·to
:
be
pre~sing ~~sµe
ori
:
9atp.pus
.
.
.
.
..
•
.
,,
~
.
·.
_,
.
.'
..
'
.
·
.
.
'
hyMICHAll.Goor
.
one. He said
·
collcge shoulc.l be
.
Managing"Editor
an ppportunity
.otP
.
~X:pand
_
.
people's mind-sets;
.
A recent incident involving the
.
,
°College is supposed to be a
of racialremarks_has prompted
place where you learn new
·
discu!.~iuns of the extent of rac- · things, not reinforce old stereo-
ism at Marist.
.
types that are not true," Owens
Senior Chandler Owens, presF
.
sru~.
..
.
·
dent
of
the Black Student Union
·
_J\ncither pro~lem is promoting
.
(BSU). said racism is a problem
more diversity. Lewis said that
on cam·pus
·
because it receives
although there are African-
little ancnti~n.
-
.
-
.
·
•.
·_ .
American faculty and administra
-
_"Jt's a
big problem because
tors; they are part of affirmative
some 1~ople don't recognize and · action I?rograms.
think it·:)
a
problem, so it may be
·
.
"Most of the administrators of
uncon,
.
dous andthey don't
African-American descentare
know thl·y' re doing it," he said.
employees of federally spon-
•
Nadine Lewis, HEOP counse-
sored programs," she
.
said.
lor and tuition coordinator, also
·
·.
Lewis
·
said she is not com'-
said
radsm at Marist may be hid-
pletely satisfied
·
with Marist's
·
den.
·
policy toward racism.
·
"I th• know that it exists be-
·
"l don't see any clear-cut
cause th~re's a diverse popula-
policy this campus has taken re-
.
tion
or1
our campus," she
.
said.
garding the issue of racism," she
"To
S:J)
i1 exists is often difficult
said .
.
becau:'-t' it's subtle
·
and
camou-
Marist does have an official
flaged.""
.··
procedure for handling racial in-
.
Lewis :'-aid she has experienced
cidents, though. According to
racism hi:re.
Cox, the official procedure is that
"Then
.
' have been a fewinci-
first a complaint is made or an
dents wh~re students have rrtade
.
incident report is filled out, then
racist remarks under their breath
the office of safety and security
as I pas:-. them in the hallway,"
conducts an investigation and
she said
.
·
'
·
.
•·
.
makes a recommendation. Then
Gerard Cox, vice presid
6
rit ~d
-
:
:
the appropriate administrator de~
dean 11f~tudent affairs, said rac;.
tennines the sanctions
.
ism is
a
problem on c~pus, but
The punishments for racial in-
it is har<l to say how severe the
cidents depend on the severity
problem is.
:
·
·
of. the incident and the nature of
.. !e's ri problem if it is a problem
a
student's prior record. Cox said
for one 1~rson," he said.
"Is
it
each individual case is different
·
.
. _
all-pervasive?
·
r
don't
tltlrik
so.
and has to be handled separately
.
Does
i
l
constitute what the
"You really need the who, what,
courts
-i: ...
nu\d
cal\ a hostile envi;.
.
:
Where,
.
why and when
-
to know
ronmcn1·? l think not."
.
1
--·
.
"_
what
·
ihe
··
sa
ti
hibn wm
·
be,
~
' he
Co
.
\
~aid the student is pro-
said.
.
·
·
· ·
..
.
.
.
·
_
.
tected a~ainst discriminatioh by
.
·
As president of BSU, nwens
the gui
,
ll'lines in the Marist Col'-
·
·.
s,aid he has been
.
speaking with
lege
S11nll!nt
Handbook
/
lhe other ethnic clubs, such as
"111t:"
,-1udent is entitled
to
free-
El
-
Arco Iris Latino and the Ital-
·
dam
fr,
,in any fcinn of discrirni-
iaQ
"
American Society.
.
nation or harassment re~ulting
.
_
He said he has also been work-
from prejudice, racism, sexism or
irig
'
·
with student government,
anti-Semitism,"hesaid.
•·
· ·
induding Todd StaUkcinp, vice
Cox alst
I
said people whomake
president for club affairs, and
racist rl
'
marks show how unedu-
S~~derit Body Preside
_
nt Patrick
cated
•
1 hey lµ"e.
.
Mara, to organize a forum for all
·
.. When someone appears to be
the clubs on campus
·
to get to-
racist. 1h~y're publicizing their
gether and discuss issues, such
own ig11,1rance," he said.
.
.
as racism, with-administrators .
.
Gre~ ~loses, assistant profes-.__
Owens said although some stu-
sor of philosophy
·
and religious
.
dents may stay away because
bf
studic,-
.
who is the adviser to the
·
·
the name of the club, he encour-
Blad. S111dent Union, said he
;
ages students ofalFraces to
agreed that education was one
come out and attend BSU meet-
ofthe predominant factors in the
ings.
.
growth ,
if
racism. He said racism
·
"You don't have to be African-
on carnpus is only reflective of American to come to Black Stu-
things gning on in the l
_
arger
dent Union," he said
;
world
.
Owens said he would like it if
"I th
i
nk racism is a pervasive
students just came out to one
force
ul
.-\merican society," he
m~tingtoseeiftheyliketheclub.
said. ·
·
1 expect that the proble?m
When he hears students com-
of ra.:i,-m on
Marist campus
plain why there is not a club for
would he reflective of where
wliite students, Owens said be-
we're
;11
in America at this time."
cause whites make up the vast
According to Moses, one prob-
majority of the campus.
·
lem b
1
hc
issue of racism is not
"When we walk into
·
a
class
-
·
promi11.:ntly featured in the cur-
room, that's like a white students'
riculm11
union," he said.
·
"I ,
1flt:>n
ask my students in
Owens also said he thinks stu-
class till! following question:
dents tend to congregate around
Out of your past 16 years of people ofJhe same race~
·
schoolmii. how much
.
time has
"I think it's more comfortable
been lle\oted to a systematic
to hang out with people that are
study of racism?," he said. "And 'like you, but you have to make a
the an:-""cr is usually none at all,
conscious effort," he said.
so we have not yet begun to use
Freshman Derrick Johnson said
educatitm as a method for over-
.
he thinks students do
·
a goodjob
cominl! racism."
of interacting with each other on
Some people
think
there should
_
campus.
be
a couf!,,C on multiculrural srud-
"Being a small amount of
mi-
ies oft~rcJ
·
at Marist Owens is
nority people, I think the people
currc1111
y
working a proposal for
mix very well," he said.
~-f:
•··,
-
.
·,
.\
·
;~;
~;\
)
.
Xft}~\i
~
1
:)
tt
"'
·
.
...
.
,
.
.
,
...
.
·
Survey
.
s~ows women helped propel Clinton
to
victory
,
byCoNNIECAss
As~ociated Press writer
WASHINGTON
(AP)
-
A
strong
'
economy and support
from w<Jmen swept President
Clinton to a second term as
voters put aside the character
questions Bob Dole had
hoped would enrage them
.
·
Clinton benefited from an
even larger gender gaplhan in
1992, according to exit poll re~
. -
suits: Fifty-four percent of
women voted for him, while
men split their votes about
evenly between Dole and
Clinton.
Arnong women who
.
could
be called
c'
'soccer
-
.
inoms"
,~ ·
tne
-
·
'
'
.
.
--
. . .
.
·-
demographic buzz word of 1996
tions about their choice. Dole
for married,
j
uburban mothers -
voters were the most tom, with
Clinton did not show as strongly
.
56
percen~ expressing
·
reserva-
·
but still beatDole49-4l. Their
tions;
.
and Clinton's the least
husbands
.
preferred Dole by
·
a
with 50 percent.
•
wider maigill, 56-34.
·
'
'I'm not interested
in
sleaze/
"lvoiedforClintc:m.Ijustthink
-
said Hugh Smith,
·
a mine in-
he
.
speaks more to the working
.
Spector in Raccoon Creek, Ky.,
people than the Republicans do,"
.
who voted forClinton.
·
"l'm in-
said Kathy Nettler, a working
terested in what the president
mother from the suburbs of Spo-
of the United
.
States is going
kane, Wash.
.
to
_
doformeandmychildren."
Voters surveyed as they left the
.
Blacks, traditionally favor-
polls questioned Clinton'shon-
.
ittg De111ocrats, supported
esty,
_
but they .were uncertain
Cli11tcin overwhelmingly, ancl
about
.
each
.
of the
fop
presiden-
the
.
presidt!nt
.
received even
tial contenders, including
~
Ross
s
_
tronger s1Jpport from Hispan
:..
Perot
·
·
·
ics than he did in 1992, getting
·
.
_
A.tleasthalfofeachcandidaws
..
.
.
70 percent of their
..
\
•6ter
s'
said
'
they
'
hild
}
es~1\•a
~
.
.
v
.
otes:
•
~
'
'·<"
:
':'
:'-
?'
·
:,
,;
,
,,
..
,
-•
Praxis
projecf
liims
tci puil.~
i
empathefic
~
briclges
·
•
Ral?ul, assistant professor ofie-
.
ply
.
pu~;
.
heads,
.
hearts,
·.
and
Hgi9tis si:udies;
,
are thetwo
·
driv
<
hands
,!'
said;Luske.
.
.
·
.
by
MICHELLE BRAMICH
'
·
Staff Writer
.
.
.
ing forces b~hind this forum.
.
This public praxis forum will
·
:Sotti
work
·
together
·
to p
_
rorilote
-
infonn the students
-
and commu-
The sociology department
will
th~ pn1.xis by getting many slli-
.
.
nity members ~ow andwhy they
host a forum entitled,
!
'A Marist d~nts involved
in
the community
should become involved.
Praxis Project: A Forurri on. pr9jects.
.
_
.
.
.. ··
.
Some projects include Habitat
Projects for the Public Good" on
"The spirit of praxis is to be
.·
for Humanity, which builds hous-
Wednesday, Nov. Bat 5:00 p.m
alongside those experiencing
ing
:
ror low~income families, the
in thePerformingArtsRoom346.
hardship and pain, and together Beulah Baptist Church soup
The forum will be a discussion
move towards healing and hope,"
·
·
kitchen
:
which
·
serves meals on
on the spirit of praxis and the
said Peter.,Raoul.
.
..__
.
.
.
.
.
.
Saturdays, and the Ballad and
importance
it playsjn the com-
·
Accor.d!ng
·
tp
Luske' and Peter-
Bard ~oject, which stages plays
munity.
Raoul, working in soup kitchf!ns;
·-
..
•
an
.
.d
· _
wHtin
.
·
g
poe
·
tty
··· ·.
for children
A praxisis the creative combi-
da
t
h
1
h 1
·
· d
·
· · ·
·
na
_
tion of p
·
'
eop
·
le's p
.
erson
_
al life
.·
Y
car~ cen ers, ome ess s e -
.
m
.
owntown
.
Poughkeepsie.
.
·
·
ters,
-
prisons
·
or a
.
battered
T~o ~orilmunity members,
experiences; a critical reflection
wo
• h It ·
·
·
·
·
·
0o
·
·
·
a
·
fi
·
.
men. s
s
e er 1.s an expenence
.
·
.
_
·
_
n~ rown, ounder and keeper
on the nature of thcise
•
experi-
thatw~ll ?enefit the comµiunity
.
of Beulah Baptist Church soup
erices and action in the commu-
.
by bm}dtng a compassion for
.
•·
kitchen for 13 years, arid Linda
nity°for a positive social change.
humanity.
.
.
Sirilincms, directorof theComrilu'-
Faculty, students and commu-
"We are essentially building
.
.
nity
·
Day
'
care Center in
.
nity inembers will voice their
empathetic !>ridges in
•
order to
Poughkeepsie,
will
be honored
at
op~nions and share their experi-
start to bu,i~4
.
a ne"". world,''said
this
_
·
forum
-
for "surp
··
assing se
.
r-
~s e.
.
.
.
..
. .•
.
·
.
.. ···
vice to Mari st College and the
ences.
·.-
·
L k
·
Bruce Luske, assistant prof es-
'Knowledge; love,
•
and action
community."
·
sor of sociology, and Mar Peter-
is what it i
_
s all about; or more sun.:
·
.
Saint
Francis provides tesQurses through on-line site
.
·
~
--
~
-
-
.
' , ,
.
.
.
.
by
,
BEN AGOES
·
Staff Writer
Saint Francis Hospital
-
now of-
.
fers its resources to the world, a
·
·
tremendous leap for the Catha.lie
hospital founded in 1913 by a
·
small group·ofFranciscan sisters.
Saint Francis posted its home
page on the World Wide Web on
Oct 14, declaring itself the "First
hospital in Dut
_
chess County
with a web site."
The
.
site's simple design, domi-
nated by a baby blue and pink
.
background, was intentional said
Victoria Odescalchi, director ·or
corporate communications for
Saint Francis Hospital.
Internet surfers are invited to
.
''When
·
home pages have too
.
read about the hospital's plastic
many
.
'bells
.
and
·
·
whistles'
.·
the
surgery, radiology, orthopedics,
average computer user may get
and meritll health di;parl:J:nents,
a little frustrated waiti~g ... ,'' she
among
'
others.
.
,
. .
.
·
said
:
"Weminimizepict~ and
.
·
:
:
A
sleep lab link details differ-
maximize infonnatiori in order to
·
·
ent sleep disorders
~
problems as-
provide access for everyone."
·
·
sociated with sleep depravation,
The home page was developed
and how to schedule appoint-
by theinternet
·
access company,
ments.
Comlynx, and is still under con~
· Dutchess Health 2000, a U>m-
struction. Currently there is orily
munity coalition fonned in 1994
a small list oflinks to nearby hos-
to address local health concerns,
pitals and no list of staff physi-
is also profiled.
cians ..
There are useful
:.
and romplete
hypertext links tci some valuable
infonnation, however.
The site can
be
accessed
at
http://www.saint-francis-
hospital.com
·
l
Halloween
is. notjtist
.
J
or
.
~ttle kids
~in.-iyni<;Jfe
·
hJ
A~IANDA BRADLEY
.
theirpareritswere lcd
~
~n
''
hg~ided
:
Staff Writer
tou(Jpr9ughout the residence
.·
.
halls, The
to
·
u.- bega~
near
..
the
~ .
.
to\Vnhouses
·
and
-
ended in
.
ThcsiuJents at Marist
.
did not
Sheahan Hall where
'
students had
.
misslhl'l·hancetocelebrateHal-
set
'
up
a:
haunt~d house
,
in the
lo~e~~ rhis year. On
.
Campus
basement louhge.
.
.
.
act1v
1
11cs
sponsored by various
At the conclusion of the trick
du?~·
11
f~~red numerous oppor-
or treat tour, a·reception\vas held
tuntltt'~ lnr students to partici-
·
in the Cabaret.
pate in
I
he festivities of Hallow-
·
.
The number of student ~oiun-
een.
.
teers was high, and the outcome
.
On Tuesday, Oct. 29, the class
of thisyear'sevent was said to
of 200Ci hl'ld
a
Halloween social
have been more successful than
in the C1baret. The cost was $2,
last year's by Sheahan RSC Presi-
for a night of dancing and so-
dent, Robert Bammann.
ciali;,i ng. and WMCR provided a
To some students, the night w;is
·
DJ. Pina and ~oda were served,
not as suc~essful as anticipated.
and pri?l'S were awarded for the
"We got excited and decorated
best ~·o,;iumes.
.
•for the children, but we were dis-
The Halloween social was the
appointed when only a few chil-
first th:11 can be recalled to have
dren came,'.' said Leo Hall resi-
taken pla~·e according to fresh-
dent Susan La Verda.
man ,,i,'.c president Jennifer
·
Sodexho food services offered
Fenis. The lack of student sup-
numerous prizes for students
port n:s11lted in a disappointing
who participated in their cos-
eveninp. hut it will notdiscour-
tume contest during dinner on
{ABOVE) Freshmen
age thl· , ,fftcers from organizing
Halloween. Six students
.
were
other "i..·ial events for the class.
awarded prizes for their cos-
11ll'
r,~sident student council
tumes. ~anneh Kalyoussef,
organi:i:d a campus wide, dorm
Aimee Drayer, and Raven Alcf
Kate Tamas and Liz
Carrubba hang out in
to dorm. 1rick or treating for the
were given corn poppers,
thei'r
Halloween cos-
children of the Poughkeepsie
Stephen Klos won a jacket, and
area. This event was open to a1l
Jessica Bachman was presented
tumes~
·
studenh on campus. The sue-
v.rith a T-shirt.
cess of 1hc project demonstrated
The Cabaret sponsored a Hal-
that
i11:my
took the opportunity
loween raffle, and prizes were
to iml·i·:1.:-t with children in the
given away to five
·
students. A
area.
can of popcorn was awarded to
~ud.:rs of ~andy were solq to
Kevin Boyer, and Stephanie Bent
res1dcn1, dunng the weekfor a
and Jeanette Deskiewicz won
(RIGHT)
i
~ollar
r,
,r the
trick
orire;i~ers_.
c
.
an·dx buckets. Emily
,
Cruz and
G.
·
·
Carolyn
!
ApptJ
1
:>:ima1ely200bags~fcandy
::-
Ian
.
Ruiita
..
were presented
·
with
_onz~lez
;
:..helps
_
out in
were p11r,·hased by students.
·
·
leather accessories.
her cat woman
outfit
at
the
Sheahan
Hall
.
'
Children
.
·
rrom
.
the
.
.
.
Whatever "tickles your fancy,"
PougM.,•,)psie area
were
incited
Marist students were
.
offered
on cmr.p11S for a trick or treating
..
numerous activities to participate
experi,'nce. The children and
in on Halloween.
Haunted
House.
November?, 1996
Career Quest: Career Tests
Jonathan Karl, author and journalist for the Cable News
Network (CNN), delivered a speech entitled, "Leave it to
Be&vis:
Election '96 and Generation X" yesterday in the
·
Cabaret.
by
AMIE LEMIRE
A &E editor
_The other day, I was talking to-
an old friend of mine who just
picked up a Communication ma-
jor just last semester. This friend
is a senior and, miraculously.will
complete his Communication re-
quirements by the summer of
1997. I asked my friend, "What
.
made you decide to change your
major, especially so late in your
college career?"
The answer: "I woke up and
realized that I was stuck in a field
that I didn't wantto be in any-
more. Instead of coming to this
conclusion 10 years into a job that
I hate, I decided that I can change
my major, even this late in the
game, and work on a career that
I'm truly interested in."
·
The point of the story is that it
wasn't too late for my friend.
However, he could have come to
this decision a lot earlier
if
only
he'd taken advantage of the Ca-
reer Services' "Career Tests."
(Oh, you knew that the Career
Service Office would be in this
articJe somewhere!)
But seriously, there are two on-
line career tests at the Office,
designed specifically to help stu-
dents figure out what they are
interested in., The Strong Inter-
-
est Inventory Test helps to iden-
tify general areas of interest and
activities and occupations that
you might be interested in.
There are six types of occupa-
tional themes-Realistic, Inves-
tigative, Conventional, Artistic,
Enterprising, and Social. While
some people may fall into more
than one category, everyone fits
into at least one.
I took this test, and
it
mapped
out my personality and interests
pretty accurately. While it
pointed out that I fell under the
Artistic category-which I al-
ready knew-it pointed out that
my second strongest category
was Social, an aspect which I
never really considered myself as
before
.
Very interesting.
The Meyers-Briggs
Type
Indi-
cator is a test that helps to figure
out what type of person you are.
The test has four different scales
to determine your personality,
based on certain qualities. This
test is more of a personality indi-
cator than an occupation test, but
in detennining your personality,
you can better decide what kind
of career you would fit into.
s
For example, if you are an Ex-
traverted individual who prefers
spontaneity over logic and fact,
then a cubicle/ desk job would
not be suited for you. On the
other hand, if you are an Intro-
verted person, who would rather
work with facts and figures, you
wouldn't be right in a social
worker's job, dealing with people
everyday. Do you get the point
here?
Th~se tests can be gold mines
for some people, particularly
thQse who are having trouble
deciding on a career or major.
-
While the results of the tests
shouldn't surprise you, (mean-
ing, you should have some kind
of inkling towards what kind of
personality you have) they
might open up your eyes to an
interest or career you never pre-
viously saw yourself in. Besides,
it's kind of neat to see what per-
sonality quirks you have, what
makes you different from every-
body else.
So, come down and
try
these
tests out. It's good to have some
direction in life, and the Strong
and Meyers-Briggs can help you
get on the right track. So, get
going!
6·
Milton Berle: The world remembers
a pi°one~r (As if we had: a choice)
. by
Flwml
Moo~-
AP relevision
w1:fter
nients," Downs •said. "Milton·
Berle was my donor.''.
.. ·
.
Then- veteran comic
Joey'
.
NEW YORK (AP) - Milton
Adams weighed in.
.
. ·
BerlefacesaroomfuUofpeople
"There's only··one Milton
in tuxes and gowns. He thanks
Berlet he·declare_d. "I -found·
them for
coming and for bestow- _ that out· by looking in the tele-,
ing on him this, his zillionth
phone directory.'' .
. ..
.
honor;
·
But dust from ancient jokes
Then he recalls that he was·
like
that had no time to settle.
in this very Manhattan banquet · There was too much to unearth
room a
year ago.
from Bede's long career.
"But not to entertain," he
He played
an
infant in silent
says, teeth bared in his rabbity
films
and modeled as the Buster
grin. "It was for a seminar. A · BrownShoeskid;Heheadlined
seminar on premature· ejacula-
in nightclubs, made
a
few
films
tion. I
and had several radio series.
ieftearly._"
B ut the real reason Jor this
At age 88, Milton Berle just Emmy gala, the real reason for
won't quit
In
his astringent, ·Berle's unshakeable status as a
blaring voice, he goes on to re-
legend· and a pioneer, came
coum an exchange between
down to a pivotal phase of his
"two guys
hamsmanship that began long
over 90." one of whom is re-
ago,
when Harry Truman was.
cently remarried. No, the man
president, but which barely
admits, his bride is hardly a
lasted
into
Dwight
looker, she can't cook and she's
Eisenhower's second term.
none too great in the bedroom.
These days, "Mad About
"So why did you
marry
her?"
You'' and "Something So Right''
"Because she drives at
occupyNBC's8-to-9-p.m. Tues-
night!"
·
day slot, just as lots of shows
With some 20 minutes of have lighted there in seasons
such gags and shtick did Berle
past.
return
But no one has outright
the(avor,astheNewYorkchap-
owned that TV hour, or any
teroft.he National Academy of other, like Berle, who on Sept.
TelevisionArtsandSciencesre-
21, 1948, became host of the
cently gave
"Mr.
Television" its
'7exaco Star Theater.'' And an
first Lifetime Achievement
instant sensation.
Award.
Berle brought with him the
Attendees, each of whom
boisterous, anything-for-a-
had paid several hundred dol-
laugh tradition his vaudeville
Jars
lo pay homage, heard Berle
years had taught him. Then, he
lionized by New York Mayor
delivered it to the public en
R~dy
Giuliani, former "Golden
masse, as if by magic, on their
Gu\
0
Rea Arthur, even-older-
.
television screens. Maybe
than-Berle funnyman Henny .,.vaudeville was dead, but
Youngman and who-knew..:he-
''vaudeo" was born.
was-li.mny ·
Hugh
Downs, who
Successful?
Early
on, about
made
.
three-quarters of all TVs were
special mention of Berle's gen-
tuned to Uncle Miltie on Tues-.
ero~it
y. .
.
.
day nights. By comparison; last
Earlier this year, I had sur-. week's top-rated series, "E.R.,"
gery for double-knee replace.;
won about 16 percent.
;f6e~~"
::u3~:,,11df
>f
ta\)l,•;-poq
f;(·:In
ah
lpepp,·r.
"Y,,itht
ill
~{\;Usi1ig
j:,IO\\ _-.; Ill
tare,:,>i,k
:;{•Remn
>:_.~lil·
•
:po\\
,·r
<hi
spo1111sal
'on
h1d1
fi
<tenlc; aft
-Chel·'-i1'-0
4._-:·:--
.
.
:mar~!aiine
, after ,•c<TS
•
.
.-
..
:,
.
THE CIRCLE,
November 7, 1996 ·
RA-Profile
of
the.week: Patrick
Mara
-~-.'
,
: .. . ,b.)'.:'JOSIEjNALDO ·
. . Staff
Writer . . ..
•
·
.
· '. Semi
'mightsay
tha~
P~tri*
Mara has a full schedule this y~. :
Last
year; Mara became a resi-
- .dent assistant for Sheahan Halt ..
· ·,This
semester, Marais
taking
six~i- ..
teen· credits. He has a double
. major in. Environmental Science
and Political Science. This year
he is not only an RA for the North
End, but he also presides over
the Marist's Student Govern-
ment ·Association. Mara has a
little pocket organizer that he ·
keeps at hand and is lost with-
out it.
· ···
. With planning . and foresight,
Mara landed
an
intern last sum-
mer instead of trying to fit it in
with his studies
this
year.: He in.,.
terned in Washington D.C. for
the United States Senate Com-
. mittee on· the Environment. and
Public. Work .. He worked.under .
the chairman of the committee,
Senator John HChafee. Of the
experience, Mara said it was very
· rewarding and was happy "to
give something back to lily coun-
try."
Mara is adept at handling dif-
Patrick Mara, student body president, Is also a resident
assistant on the North End.
ferent concerns simultaneously.
freshman· with a n~w environ-
use as soon· as possible. Mara
He has never found himself in a
ment and a new system. Upper-
plans a program· with Brother
situation in which he would have
classman don't rely on their
RA's -·
Michael called
Chirstmas
Stories.
to chose one activity in impor-
the same way. They have estab-
This event will allow students
to
tance than another. But, he says
lished themselves on campus and . share their favorite ancetedotes
that if there ever ·was an emer-
have different concerns and wor-
about the winter holidays. ·
Mara
gency problem with his area, that
ries.
is
busy
·creating new programs
particular emergency would take
Mara has offered several pro-_. that will take place during tbe
the priority.
grams to his residents. One was
course of the
year;
· When asked why he wanted to
a social program, which was in
Matthew Dombrowski,
secre-
be a resident assistant, Mara
conjunction with the class of tary of the class of 1997 and
says, "I wanted to have a posi-
1997. It:wasabarbequeheldout-
Mara's ·roommate was asked
tive impact on the incomingstu:-
side the old townhouses ..
J\n-
what
it
was
like
to.live with.an
dents.''
.
6therprogramM3faheldwasan
RA.
Dombrowskirepliedhuinor-
Mara finds that there are
dif- .
informational program concern:.
ously, ~•m ~ure
thatliying
.w.i~-
ferences· between
bhing. an •RA,·
ing internships 'iit.
Washington..
an
RAJs
~e
l:lut
living
with
Pat -
in a freshman_ dorm and being an
Having such isolated resi-
Marais trying.'' Dombrowski
RA
in an·upperclassman dorm.
dences,
RA's
tindit difficult
to
revealed_that
Mara
was
messy.
"Both areas are challenging in
find a location in which
to
have .
He'
also
added, "Pat
is
just at-
theif own ways;" he said. RA's
programming. Mara hopes
that
tending to
his
duties:•· And so
have to deal with orientating
a townhouse lounge will open for
he
is.
The John
p,
Anderson
Annual
Playwrttlrig
~ontest
.
.
·-
_Invites All·-Unaergraciuates·
To Take. Part in this One.::Act
· Play Competition.
Guidelines ·andAppHcations (¥.<3
Available in Rotunda Office
389 .
All Studenf Playwrights
AreAsk(3d
To Obtain and Read
_
the
·
Guidelines
Before Writing.
'Mu~!imo
.
·
spon!b.
C~kf
~~)ijp~~g{>~~ } ,,
..
"
.,
·
'
"' .
mar:!:uine~·
AddT
.
.. pea
·
·arsle
'
;
·
Jnteas ,
·nckymus'
D~adline for Applications is the End
of
the
Fall
Semester.
:;'.'." WO
. .. .
;.•w
·
.. · . ·•·:
p
t~~i#x~:f,P?,<l, . '"·'
Den\,·rS
.
,
. '
'
; .
.
·as_aboV(?,eXceptonii .. ,· ,• . •
.
.
'
.. · .· .·
.
.
.
2
t:1I
,1,·-.poons:
·
Jp
~~
s~~let
9~9k
l/3
'
cup
<Ji~
~ny:cooked
h~; 1/4
cup
pieces,</
.· drai
I h ·,
I;
and 2
tablespoo,nsfiI1ely 9hoppecl
gr¢en
pepper
i!l
'margariri~. '. The1fadd
egg'.:
mb.11111.:.
Doriotusenii
.
w
·
·
e
-
directforis/
-
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·
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}<
Selected Submissions
Will
Be Used
To
Illustrate the Developmental
Process
of New
Plays
in the
Spring Theatre Workshop.
THE CIRCLE,
November
7, 1996
7
Kevin Powell comes
to
Marist
-
.
fr6n1:'.r.rhe
ReafWorld':_
.
•
.
~
hop music :is seen
~s
a\~daland
.
·
.
p<;>litical
critique within th~
black
·
·
·
community:- Po~ell said ongi
~
·
0~ l}alJoween night,
Mrui~t
nally rapfocused oifproblem~
iii
_
·
Ccillcg'-' found
itself
thrown into
the community
.
.-
·
>
'
:.,
·
.
:-
·
·
'
hy
(:.HRISLALINE
-
>
SraffWrite~
·
·
.
-
the RcaiWorld.
.
-
"
Theearlyrapofthe
1980'.swas
Ke
_
vin Powell, a free~lance
more socially conscious, it
writer and.poe~ who was one of t~nded to explore the deep rooted
.
origin:11 castmembers ofMfV's
·
problems that the black commu-
_
program· "The Real World "
nity faced,"
he
said .
.
spoke
10
over 100 students abo~t
Powell said it seems that the
_
the stah!
of
black youth in rela-
current rappers
of
the 1990's
tion tn l1ip-hop culture last have their own special interests
Thursday.
in mind and the essential goal of
The
event,
-
sponsored by the
bringing
-
an
·
oppressed commu~
Black Smdent lJnion;proved to
nit)' together through lyrics has
be a b
i
gger success than had
been
-
lost.
.
.
. .
.
_
...
.
_
been
amid
paced.
.
.
"There seems
·
to
be
a divide
Chandler Owens, president of and cqnquer mtntality about hip-
RS
.
U .
.
S,!id he was pleased with
hop
·
today," he
said.
the ev~nt's high turnout.
. -
Today the types of music that
.
"I
\\US·
happy to see such a
.
falls under the rap category has
large and diverse crowd attend,"
grown considerably. Among the
sa
_
id Owens; "Some skeptics
different varieties are gangsta
though1 that a lecture held on
rap, east coast rap and w
·
est
Halloween night ·would turn
coast
rap.
many students away but the
Owens said he agreed that the
numhcrs proved them wrong
"
.
lyri
c
s and themes of
rap
music
Powdl. probably most widely
have gotten more violent.
known
:1s a
cast member for the
·
"Knives have turned into guns
.
.
original
M1V
Real World, said he
.
and the music has escalated," he
has tri~d recently to avoid that
said.
label.
Rap has turned into
a form
of
'The Real World was a good
power as well as identification
experience but it was an experi-
although today it seems thatrap
ence, i1·s not
my
life,".he said.
has lost its originality, yveryone
Mari st students were given a
.
now is a copy cat looking out
for
uni
_
quc 1)pportunity to see the
themse\ves.
Real Kc\
·
in Powell.
.
According to Powel( there are
Po\\'cll. whose career has only
some groups such as Tribe
grown since his stint on The Real
Called Quest and The Wu-Tang
World
.
has
currently been writ-
Clan who are trying to change
.
ing forVihe magazine and Roll-
the nature of their music.
,
ing
~tune.
His work about race
,
.
"They are branching off and
relation,: inner
city·
youth,
.
sex,
-
treati
_
ng
i~
!ik~ a
'
~usil}~Ss,
.
tl<;J
,
t
,
,
musr
d
\·ihlcnce,-drug:s-arid
,
'
poJi:::
·
•
'
l
concern~d
,
with p
_
ne
~
hit
~
on-
tics has heen extensively pub-
. "
ders," he .
·
.
_ ··
lished. Powell has also started
··
Matthew Pool, a student who
.
.
his
O
\\'lr
muitimedia company
•
attended
the
l
e
cture
,
said he was
.·
which hllpes to
·
explo
r
e music
·
.
impressed by Powell .
.
-
:.
• .
productilln and publishing op-
·
"Hike the wayhe drew com~
portunitics.
· ·
parisons between hip-hop cul-
During the evening,
_
students
ture and the African-American
were gi \'Cn insight into how hip-
.
community," she said
.
HELP WANTED
. Men/Women earn
.
$480
-
weekly
_
assembling
circuit boards/electromc components
'
a( home.
Experience ·unnecessaiy,
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.
.
Immediate
_
·
openings your local area.
f1
~
,...._,__
Call
1-520-680-7891 EXT_l...-(:::tt.A.J
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___ , organize a small
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*Cancun *Bahamas
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.
ma City Bea
·
ch
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J
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Norninatio
.
ns sought for 1997 Who's Who
The Office of Student Affairs
·
has mailed ballots to faculty, staff
,
and presidents/
chairpersons of student clubs, organizations and classes requesting nominations of
students scheduled to graduate in January, May and August of
1997
.
Both undergradu
-
ate and graduate students are eligible for nomination to Who's Who Among Students in
American Universities
-
~
-
Coll~ges.
The criteria to be used
_
in selecting nominees are: Academic record; participation
and_-Jeadership in academic and extracurricular activities; service to the community and/
or to the college; potential for future achievement.
A committee of faculty; staff and students will review an names submitted and
will
recommend those most representative of our student body.
Having earned the overwhelming respect of colleges and universities, Who's Who
continues to be used each year by employers nationwide to assist them in their acquisition
of new employees. A student's listing helps to set
him
or her apart from other graduates
competing for the same positions
.
Students who would like to be considered for nomination may contact faculty or staff
members who know them well and ask to
be
included on their ballots
.
Students should
also ask the leaders of clubs or organizations in which they have held active membership
to nominate them as well.
8 November is the deadline for the submission of names of January, May, or August
1997
graduates for consideration as Marist College nominees for Who's Who Among
Graduates Of American
,
Universities
&
Colleges
(1997).
The names of undergraduate and graduate students may be suggested by full-time
faculty or an administrator and/or
by
a president/chairperson of any student club, organi-
zation or publication. Potential graduates may check with the Office of the Vice Presi-
dent for Student Affairs (Rotunda
389
or
X 3515)
_
any time prior to
8
November to see
if
his/her name has been submitted.
l.
8
. THE CIRCLE ·
ED
ITO
RIAL
November 7, 1996
THE
CIRCLE
C
The Studeot Newspaper of Marist College,
Kristin
Richard,
Edit~r-in-Chief
Michael Goot, Managing Editor
Stephanie Mercurio, News_Edi1or
Amie Lemire,
A&E
Edi1or
.
.
;
.
.
Chris Smith; Spons Editor .
J11cque
Simpson, Feature Editor
Christian Bladt, Opillio11 Editor
Jason· Dull'y,
Busi11ess·Ma11ager
G.
Modele Clarke,
Faculty Advisor
11,,.
Circle
is published every Thursday. Any
mail
may
be addressed to
The
Circle,
Marist College, 290 North Road, Poughkeepsie, NY 12601. (914)575-2687
Editorial
Course variety is theWaytog9 ...
·. · .. ·
·:.•.·
a t -
·
.(ke·
·
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.. ··.~-.···•;.····
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•.··
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.
·.
· •
·
• '
.
· · ;
"You
find
-in _life exactly what .
:
you put into·'it''
·
-~atµ
'U"ateto
Efflelt4(J#
Letter to the Editor
Never forge
your
adviser's signa.ttu:e ·
Over 1he course of my past six and a half semesters at Marist, I have learned ~everal,
things through classroom experiences, but it was not until recently that I realized if . Editor: .
was possible to incorporate much of this information together.
Jj:an
remember
conversing with my friends in high school and questioning why certain coufseswere_
manda1ory. Why would I ever need to know the dates of World War II or what the
components of a nucleus are? But, now I know that somewhere along the·line, every
ounce of infonnation
gets pieced together and is equally necessary.
I am realizing that it is a good idea to leave· room for electives by senior year. This
has exposed me to a variety of new issues and areas of study. I am
talcing
courses
now that are not directly part of my ·field of study, some because they fit in·wi$ my
honors program, and others just because the topics interest me.
:y believe this is
important for-several reasons.
.
:
Once.again;'the time of year has.come when everyone should have regi~~ for spring
~ourses .
.
I just wanted to.take a moment
to
address.an important issue in the registration
process. This. is about yourAcademic Adviser. ·Academic advisers are assigned to
us
to help us through otir years at Marist. Not only is there advice needed about what
courses we should take, but·their signature is also required for registration •. This is a
crucial part of the registration process.
..
.."
•
~.
The purpose of our adviser's signature is to ensurethat we are ·on ·the right path. They
keep· us following the ·required courses needed to graduate .. This signature is some-
. thi~g we all must take the tii:ne to get.
As
smalias the signature may be, the forging of
a signature could have detnmental effects on your career as.a student. This act can
result in immediate dismissal from the college, the·Joss of classes, probation, or even
community serv!ce:
.
First of all, talcing a wide v~ety of courses has provided me \Vith different ways of
viewing my major by incorporating knowledge from several different areas: This· has
also cnahled me to take courses with different p~ofessors and students than I was ·
previously familiar with. I have noticed that as different people integrate their own
experiences and perspectives in the analysis of a problem or issue, the class emerges
with new insight into each topic.
No~ as _little as that signature appears, is it really wroth it to have a friend sign a
· For example, my honors course this semester is Env,ironmentallssues. This
is
a registration form? In case you are one of those people who
think
they don't really
course that I would not have had to take if it were not required for
rny
honors degree. . check over the forms, I would like to inform you that they are all looked over by members
Previously. through my social work minor, I had seen primarily how I could integrate: of the faculty VERY carefully! Any signature that looks ques_tionable will involved
the social sciences with myjournalism major .. Now, I have a much broader spectrum of further investigation. ·
knowl~dge and a whole new range of topics that I could address through journalism.
.
I believe _students of all majors could also benefit from. talcing a variety of courses. I hope you all took the time to meet with your advisers to get their advice and signature.
Somewhere along the line, in whatever field a person chooses to pursue, he/she will · For future reference, the faculty here at Marist do care and are looking out for our best
inevhab\yencounterissuesrelatedtoeconomics,math;·socialproblemsandpolicies. jnterest. lJse tiies~ people.to your .~dvantage, they don want to help. Don't get
the enviroiunent, computers;.po}1tics, etc.
Why
not begin preparing for that)).OW?.::of,
r~~r~e,~~
,~-.a. b~ .~i~u~tio~ ~!l_at ~.ould .~av~. b~~- ~~ly avoided.. .
. ,
.
.
:•'.F.:
course, people also acquire a
·
realm ofinforination th[ough workexperienc'e", but tiav~
ing a base of preliminary knowledge could only help people find and holdjobs after
J.
J>almatier, senior
gradu:uion. .
.
..
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.
.
.
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':·
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.
. ·,
.All'
'\"I·T
11 .
'T'fi..
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My_advice to anyone debating signing.up fora course withoutknowing.~hatto:
rt. •.
S
vv e
S ._·
1
. ......
.
.
a.
t . ·
· ..
.
.... ·
·
rt .. ·
S
vv,e· ·. ·.·.
S
expecl is to
try
some of everything. You may be surprised at what some of the courses
outside of your major are able to offer you.
· ·
Kristin Richard,Editor-in-chief
There's
no
pl3:ce.like<hofue?
Mid-semester break was the first time fv.rerilhome sinceTcrurieto Marist .. I was
ecstatic ahout the idea of getting
all
thosehome cooked meals; t~ng
a
shower in my
own bathroom, and seeing everyone at home. But, all of those wonderful things were
not as wonderful as I thought they would have been.
. ._.· . _. · .
·
I quickly got sick and tired ofeating so muchfood .. Sinc~ I am not used to eating
food in such quantity or with su.ch taste, it was a change to actually eat REAL food.
Maybe my stomach shrunk, or maybe iny appetite 1s not
as
big as it used to be.
Everyone knows that talcing a shower without flip-flops.and a shower caddy is
wonderful. This aspect of honie definitely lived up to my expectations: It v,,as so nice
to have water with d~~n,t pressure and a stc::ady temper~ture. At first, the water
pressure was shockingly strong,.but after five minutes I got used to it and
.
J
knew I
was home. Having the bathroom e11tirely to myself was incredible.-There·were not
people brushing their teeth or washing their dirty dishes next to me.I was definitely
in heaven!
·.
.
·
· ·
·
·
When I went home, I thought I would be overjoyed lo see my family and friends
again, However, it was wierd to actually have parents watching over me. !did riot get
used to this apsect, and I do not know ifl will be ableto when I go home again.
.
Some ofmy friends happened to be home the same weekend that Twas. Jwas
excited wheii I found this out However, our schedules did notconnect, and I did not
get to spend as much timewith everyone as I would have hoped to. Those that I did
see seemed as though they had ~hanged, and it was not necessarily for the best. This
definitely did not live up to my expectations of going home.
Going home was not all I thought it was going to be. I really dci not know the reason
for this. Maybe
it
is because things do not always tum out the way you hope they
will. Maybe it is because the more things change, the more they stay the same. That
might have been the case. I do know that the next time I go home, I will not have such
high expectations. Thatway, everything may turn out better.
Kristiua Brito
is
one o/The Circle's commentators on
. IF H.G. Wells were to se.t the dial for his brilliant little time travel device
to
"October
1996'' and .arrive anywhere nei.Marist ·coUege, he may have v~ryweu·.assume4 his
inyenti6n_ a greatfolly and· tum,ed to barre~ ~ak,iiig <?tsome otll.~r pro_spe~oiis enterprise.
This could haye especi~ly.. beeri the c~e had he. yenture4 intc> th~ freshmen dopns.
Mr. Wells wouldnothave ~ven i_magined that he ~as-_truly on a college campus in
1996.He IDost likely would .have assumed $.at. he was in a makeshift Civil War era
hospital located within the corridors of the· freshmen
dorms.
Never would he consider
this a college. Granted that one ~es his hard,
knocks from
an.irate professor or two; but
the casualty rate amongst_ freshmen probably that of Antietam or BuU Run, not an
institute of higher learning. Of course,
Mr._ Wei.ls ·might have
had
a little difficulty swip-
ing his card, but this is. an merely a rough analogy. (Critical analysis of
this
essay would
showcas15°ll)y incredible lackqf credibility. Credibilityis not a criterion for a humor
piece.}
· ... ··.. .
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·
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.•
Tbere are a. coupleof minor details contrary to a
typkal
rnvn Vt'ar
Era
scene. Few
people-are ·garnished with. medals of recognition.
A
few
.are
ackno\_Vledged
with
a
care
package, tile high~st ranking with brownies. Even fewer. sport those nifty waxed mus-
taches. However, there are numerous
.
students hobbling on c:rutches, with b~daged
arms and faces, and several have fallen
ill.
There ~s .one ajlrnent that
has
plagued many
freshmen throughout the.first month of school. This, my friends, is the fam9us '.'fresh-
man nose." ·
· ··
·
·
•.
· ·
·
·
Perhaps Mr. Welis h~ he~d of'the bubonic plague ari~ smallpox. Many
a
soldier
has
lost hi~
life
to garig(en~,and faH~ri_ill
{!'.Oin
scurvy ..
Norie of these diseases
has
affected
a population like the.freshmai:fnose.: ,
·
• . .-;·
:· •
.
:
·
·..
·
·.• ...
You may have noticed the symptOIIlS coinmonly·associated \Vi.th freshrnari
rfose.
on
students-in M'arist's halls. The most obvi~us is the red, slightly inflamed nose. Many of
those afflicted have low self~teem and a fear of opening glass doors. ···
The most common cause of the•freshman nose is the attempting to open a door in the
opposite direction of which it was designed to open. The student jerks the door toward
him. The door gives slightly, but springs back in the opposi~ direction. Due to the
unfortunate law of inertia, the student is thrown toward the door, nose first
, The p!iysical pain and appearance is by no means·as
bad-as
the anguish and utter
humiliation caused by this episode. This frequently occurs at the Donnelly Computer
Lab. After a student's first attempt to open the dQ()r toward him, he finds himself
· trapped like a rat. This attracts the attention of the entire lab. Then, once the paralysis
of fear lifts, the victim is able
to
push himself out the door. Only after several days does
the victim muster up the courage to re-enter the lab. He spends his evenings over
at
Lowell Thomas, a bit of a hike from the freshmen dorms.
There is a solution to this epidemic ravaging the student body. Perhaps it is a little
more liberal than most of us would like to be, but under these grave conditions, you
must agree that drastic measures need to be taken. Just~ our society has become more
tolerant of people with different sexual preferences, the same should go for doors.
Marist College should install and tolerate doors that "swing both ways."
Mr.
Wells may
be taken· aback, but maybe he would see that this is the
1990s and his time machine was,
or is, a success, even
if
it is purely fictional •
(A
lot like this
essay,
eh?)
Tara Quinn is The Circle's humor columnist.
,THECIRCLE
-OPINION
November?, 1996
9
Bridgeto a-se~ondterrn:inoffice
'
' . ' ..
.
:The.American people
:
elected
-
-Biil Clinton "with high hopes, ,and braves hearts" in
l
~92,
hoping to bring about changes in the_ way we lead our lives. _
_
:\ Based on this past Tuesday, it would appear that he has -been successful in what he
~~~oo~w~
·
·
>
While.Bob J:?ole's defeat was about as stunning as a Super Bowl loss by the Buffalo
Bills, it did prove that America is be,tteroff than it was four years ago. That is why Dole
_
did
not pose this question much. Sure, he quipped that the president is better off than
he wa.~ four yearsago, but so is Dole, and so are a lot of us.
·
Bill Clinton has done a lot of good for this country, despite several missteps and blunders along the
way. The
first
iwo years of the Clinton presidency were filled with reports (by the "liberal media," no
less) portraying Clinton as unable
to maJ-c a simple decision affecting
the composition of his cabinet,
much less Orie affecting the coun-
try.
'
-
The I g94 midterm elections, and
the reactionary revolution . it
· brought ahou
4
acted as
a
wake-up
call to
tlic
Clinton Administration.
In the two years since, we have
gone from
a
pitiful plea demanding
relev:mce to a resounding rein-
forcement of his position as leader
of the greatest nation on earth.
Among Dole's last-ditch attempts
-at seizi,ig the reigns of this country
- were an onslaught of character at-
tacks and numerous reminders of
Clinton's "liberal agenda." Ironi-
cally, among the things that did not
-
influence voters minds were
an
on-
'
slaughi ,)f character issues and nu-
merous reminders of a "liberal
agenda:·
Ordinarily, I am not one to beat a
dead horse, but, when that dead
horse is Bob Dole, I do not mind
going hack to the carcass for an
' extra
Cl
,uple of whacks with my billy
club. Fcirthat reason, I must note
that Amcrfcans
are
just comfortable
with Clinton, ringmaster of the cir-
cus in Washington.
The road to economic ruin
Bill Clinton has secured his second term as presi-
dent, and he will spend the remainder of his term
try~ng to secure a place in history as the president
who refonned welfare and healthcare. America
hopes he succeeds, but
in
a way, this Clinton vic-
tory may be an American defeat. As social prob-
·· 1ems continue to fester in our nation, the government will continue
to feed them by funding the catalyst to failure; government spon-
sored social programs. Big business can step aside and make way
for liberal spending and out of control government intervention.
The United States gained prosperity
through massive industrial explosion.
With the firm grapple hold of government
regulation, no runount of private indus-
try can create jobs and strengthen the
economy. So, instead of businesses com-
peting for expanding industries to create
more jobs and lowering the national defi-
cit while doing it, the American people
will continue to wallow in a cycle of de-
pendency imitating a socialist regime.
America must wean itself off the sti-
fling programs of Franklin D. Roosevelt.
FDR helped Americans out of the nation's
worst depression ever, but more than 50
years later we should realize that the New
Deal did not thrust America into the years
of economic prosperity that ensued. In
I 938,
two years into FDR's second term,
America's economy had not pennanently
recovered. Businesses that had been
temporarily helped by the new social pro-
grams now took the New Deal legislation
to the Supreme Court, and FDR had to
defend his programs with an all-out te-
nacity. The Supreme Court struck down
many programs, and then Congress de-
nied passage of an FDR suggested-bill
that gave the president authority to raise
the number of Supreme Court Justices.
The Court Packing plan had been con-
ceived to help FDR win Supreme Court
cases that threatened his social reform
He just has that reassuring tone
programs. - The experiment in massive
and dci11canor that lets you know µiat, somehow, everything is going to be all right. I think that what qad
government intervention began to fail. But, with the outbreak of
to
be
one of the most heartwarming things that lhave seen on the evening news in
a
long-time (at least World War
II,
the United States private sector exploded into action,
since J\lcNeil and.
Lehrer
vowed their undying 'devotion to· one another)· happened ~- few weeks ago · - and supplied the allied forces with \lard ware
00
fight with;
while Clinton was out "pressing the flesh."
.
.
, ·
·
·
Today we have moved away from war time economics.
But the fact
A young woman asked him how he could have possibly vetoed the ban on so~caUed "partial birth"
remains that whether the private industries thrive off war or consum-
aborti,1ns: She had tears streaming down her face, and was shaking her head as she spoke. Her body
ers, th,e.gov_emment should have a smail role. The sad fact of the
language greatly reversed, itself-as Clinton explained that _he only vetoed the ban because it lacked· an
matter is that bleeding hearts cannot make a nation into
a
world wide
excepti(111 forwhellthe life of the mother is at stake. He continued that he only clid so after speaking with
competitor. We have a responsibility to our children to hand them a
women ·ror whom the procedure had saved their lives. The woman gave the president a big hug, and was
prosperous world leader that caters to competition in a free market.
smiling.· She later told her mother that "it's okay to vote for Clinton."
·
True freedom begins with the ability to sell one's own labor, to com-
Jf
a similar situation arose where a hypothetical President Dole
(I
cannotadequately express how
pete against one another, and to have the right to catapult oneself
chilliiig it is
to see
those two words side by side) were approached by a young woman upset that the ban · into the high income tax brackets. · With the government's helping
did nolprotect the life of
the
mother:-He would have either ignored her and headed for someone who ·had
hand in the way, freedom is lost and no one can claim success.
given
·1he
campaign
a
nice
wad
of
some soft money, or reiterated his infamous remark from his
I 988
·
Ending programs; like welfare, and not reforming institutions, like
crunpaign: ''Go back
to
your ca_ve;'! _··. .
. . .
.. · . . . .
.
..
.
healthcare, are not options. These services enhance a thriving na-
When I saw Clinton giving his explanation, arid the result.I could only think one tlting: "God bless Bill
tion and constitute
a
necessary part of our democracy. But thinking
Clintcin,"This is certainly a unique sentiment, both to be appHed to 9linton, and for me to apply to any
globally, we need to lower_our deficit and promote the private sector.
personi But it was the only thing on my mind at the time. ·
The world continues to get smaller and the population continues to
So. ihankfully, we have another four years of Clinton trying to undo
.12
destructive yea_rs of _·swell. America will not lead with a ~ociety that lives on handouts.
Reaganorriics. And, ifl have my say, we will also have another eight years of Al Gore striving to do the
America is a nation govem~d for and by the people, and the private
same thing. Of course, by 2008, I hope to be highly successful and grossly wealthy, so of course
I
will
sector that is commanded by the people mu_st continue to be our
··want.Republicans who will keep my mqney from going to those '_'little people" I stepped on my climb to
backbone.
the top. · · .
. . .
. · ·
_- .
, ,
· : . ·
_' -
· ·
· · ·
_
·.
·.
_
· ..
Christia
ii
B'ladt
is
a
dashingly handsome junior communications major from Greenwood
lilkt!,
NY Bill Mekrut
is
a sophomore English major from Lincoln, RI. and
and the opinion editor
f~r The
Circle.
· Thf! Circle's political columnist.
~--------,---------~-------------------,
w::t:Jtt1t
r~;~;lf ·
...
,
.. ·.·
·
•···
·
..
_
:::,:ii:1!!~::!
.
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. -- onceived ideas.
\Jts'
'
'
been
told>abouf
d
a(
:can
go
9n
foi:7:
id
'
. .
·
will
'only
'ust
'
to
'
some
fac:
s
for
oth2
ey
t
in
.
.
. };peopletochange
_ e.
nal
beliefs. I
·
canriot
.·
·
t~ '
crumg¢
-
~ything. Qnly acµons
''
'
·uma1rearufference.
> .·
_
·.·.·
places
iti
J
will iiever.(orget the igno-·
tage , ...
as .
'ce
'
ofthat
day: I
wiU
never
you
were::
ere
sttipid)dds/~iJt)vheiiy .
"of\vhatitis·liketobean~
·
hood
h,ap
op and think
about
it;'most. still:
>
_th.~( race,or to ~tand and
see
-One\cn
O
ethe sainedanmmind sets
··:
'tliifWorld
'
as other people do;
anlri,h ifag ..
fu·
_
,
.
..
ut this.
.. .
. ..
.
>
beca~seJ
have been raised
in
a
across
the
d
'
.
.
.
. . d
'to'tliif
ground'.
·
'\\
We
have
gt'{)wn
in
aJot
of
ways
<;
different
~ackground. .
hydra
Ill~
were;pairited
in;<,
thou
awohisP9keri: fisrs
~
i
'
_sinc~ then, but thosei~eas h~ve
.
-
:
But, if people could just learn
same
Nl!en;'white'aniforarig~<
•:'to'
mesh
:W!ih-faces
'
a~d .
i
never left us; They chng to ~ur to understand each other, then
.
·
.Jam~lrish~Gerrnan,
'
butin
this '
,
Jhey were rolling' in a. psyche and leave us filled with
_ .
maybe we wilrnever have to
neighh,1rhood,:y~u:~ere
~11\
jellig~ntly
·
about .. :
:
'\>Joodyturmoil. '.
. ··
• : . . , .
unexplainedragethatsadlyover-
walkaway scared.
Irish.
. : .
.
· .
-.
·
..
.
,
.
imagin~tion with. an
insig9q11~t :
f:
<
,
I.just
st~
the~withfear,
flows•
into·
verbal·· and physic~l
\\,· played~stick
.
b
_
,
_
. went farj)eyond his
years ~fi:Jhe
only
·
·one'.notyelling_and
'
abuse.
.
. .
.
.
-~·-•
·...
· ..
-'.,";-
:":,_,,:(_
::···
...........
~i
_
f
•·
I
I
10
THE CIRCLE,
No~e~ber7, 1996
*
It's
-
ti
_
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(WIMELTED CHEESE & GRAVY)
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November 7, 1996
11
News and Revi'ews
L11lufu.an,
DiGaprio,
and banes
give
'Rorh~o &
Juliet'
a
'90s twist
. hy
An1ie
Lemire
A&EEditor
wide blue
eyes. ·(He
also Joo ks
For mn,t people, especially stu-
to be about
dents. the word 'Shakespeare'
1·5 0 l b s
conjur.·,
up:dreary
memories.
tops, soak-
Nirh1n1ares of hellish Enlgish
ing.
wet,
classc-; i",ime
to
mind ... ofstum~
with army
bling i,,·l·r Old English phrases,
boots on;)
plodding• through hundreds of
And
pages
(lf
text, and of course, that
t h o u
g
h ·
high~,p~l'd ride to Barnes
&
Juliet is a
Nobk
f.
w"Cliff's Notes.
far
c:ry
from
. Fo11una1elyfor us simpletons,
An g e
I
a
Baz l.uhrman ("Strictly Ball-
C h a
s
e ,
room ..
1
has taken the romantic
D a n e s
classi.- Romeo
&
Juljet, and put
plays her
a '90s •,pin to it.
part with all
Thl' 111:ijor characters are all
the fragile,
presc111 hut the story takes place
wide-eyed
in ml ..
i,·rn
times, with modem
innocence
them,•,
that won
Ver,;,,:, City is a metropolis,
her much-
with th, famous families---the
deserved
Monta_!;lll~S and the Capulets-
adoration
battlin1, c-:1t·h other not from ivy-
after "My
covcrnl ,·:istles; but rather from
So-Called
the Ct\tp,)rate headquarters of Life." She
their p,:nthouse suites atop their
breathes vulnerability and pains-
whose taut, muscular body and
tinted ,•l,1,;s high-rises.
taking tenderness into her roles;
dark chocolate skin contrasts
N,;hh•
swordfighting is re-
each character she's played~ sharply with Romeo's golden,
placed
h
silver snub-nosed re-
from 'Little Women's' Beth, to the
boyish looks. Luhrman, in the
volvcr·.. and
BMWs
and
secret angel in Soul Asylum's
director's chair, adds yet.another
Merc,·d,•, substitute for horses
"Just Like Anyone" video-
twist to the story; Mercutio is a
as ml·,111s of transportation
wears her tattered heart on her
flamboyant cross-dresser, com-
aroun,I f:,ir Verona.
sleeve. Not considered, by the
plete with bustiers and thigh-bi's.
Thl~ inirigue surrounding
industry standards, to be "con-
He flaunts_hls sexual ambiguity
'R1:mw,1
&Juliet' comes from the
ventionally pretty", coupled with
in the Capulet faces, making
ambi1i,•11,; idea ofa modem-day
her reed-thin frame, makes Danes
jokes at their expense. He's fabu-
tellinr ,
,f
1he story. but adhering
the perfect candidate to play this
lous to a T.
tot.hcl
.
il,!English.dialogue
. . . . . part.
Whilethe Montagues are
'
'
that.•.
and the casting of ... -HerJulietfs
awkward,
shy, and .. blond..:!faireo
--ano
fair, - the
·
·
Leon:,r,
I.,
DiCaprio
as
Romeo,
painfully lonely-locked in her
Capulets are dark and smolder-
and
("1;,1rl!
Danes as Juliet, of ivory tower, Juliet's closest com-
ing. John Leguizamo is Tybalt,
cours,·
panion is her nurse. ClaireDanes
the leader of the Capulet Boys,
a
Th~ . ,11-screen chemistry be-
digs deep in her soul for this role,
group of steamy Latin lovers who
.tween 11,Caprio and Danes is in-
and it pays off. Juliet is authen-
sport greased-back hair, leather
nocen,. dt•ctrifying, steamy, and
tic and her conviction is rever-
pants, and goatees.
very.
,,;r~
believable.
. berated throughout her scenes.
· The Capulet Boys stalk
Thl•~· m1ly embodied the star
There is still feuding between
through Verona in their flashy·
cros~
".i
1tlVers' passion--tenta-
theMontagues and the Capulets,
blue car, lowered to perfection ·
tive b,u1inge~ with a n~w,;.found
butthe addition of the "90s feel"
and complete with gleaming
hung,?r . • . ·•··. .. . . ..... ·. ·..
"gives·•the movie a bit of gangsta
chrQme rims, They're dark and
E,'.,~11
though DiCaprio is21~
•
· flavor. yery«Boyzin th.ein.Ljke
sexy, Hke Antonio Banderas in
he ea,ilclooked four or .five
RomeoMontague,theyarebfond
"Desperado."
year:- , ,nmger, with his sun-
haired and blue-eyed.
· · ·
And both gangs are packing
flee kl·•
1
blond hair falling into his
The only exception is Mercutio,
mad heat.
In
one scene, when
Romeo plays pool at a local hang-
out, he has to flash a ticket in
order to retrieve his gun-"No
ticket, No Gun" reads the sign
on the counter.
The movie is very fast-paced
at times, with lots of quick cuts,
and jump shots. Some parts
could double for an MTV Buzz
Clip. Luhnnan also speeds some
scenes up into fast motion,
mostly to emphasize action. It's
an
odd technique, arid can con-
fuse the-eye. -
. ··
-
. -
-
Also, the introduction of the
characters is similar to that of .
''Trainspotting" with a photo still
of the character, and bold type
declaring the character's name.
The establishing of setting
and
character was
very
"Tarantino-esque" .... slo-mo
shots of Tybalt's silver-heeled
boots crushing a cigarette, freeze
frame shots of the Montague
Boys, wreaking havoc through-
out· the streets.
While the rivalry between the
families is a major theme in the
movie, it is interlaced quite nicely
with the romance.
Romeo & Juliet is both a love
story and a tragedy, and to up-
set the balance between these
two elements would .ruin the
whole story. Luckily, Luhrman
handles this well.
Still another theme is threaded
into the movie-water.
It plays a big role. Romeo first
spies Juliet through a larger-
than-life fish
tank.
They sperid a
good deal of the movie wet.
Romeo slays Tybalt on
~
cold,
rainy night: Romeo swears his
undying love for Juliet as he
sinks below the surface of the
Capulet
swimming
pool.
Mercutio is slain on the shores
of the ocean.
One possible reason· for this
water theme is the idea of cleans-
ing. Underwater, Romeo and
Juliet are not rivals; their names
are meaningless and they are just
two people in love. Below the
surface of the water, everyone is
equal, ordinary.
There are numerous perks to
the movie, including a cameo by
Des'ree, and a gospel version of
"When Doves Cry", plus the vi-
sual pleasure of many Romeo
close-ups.
Yes ladies, Leonardo is deli-
cious both wet and dry. This
alone should get you running to
the theaters.
This movie may get slammed
for being too "trendy" or "MTV-
ish••;. but it does deserve credit
for going out on a limb. The very
idea of adding guns, drugs, ~nd
gender-bending to a Shakespeare
play is quite risky, even a bit lu-
dicrous.
However, Baz Luhrman and his
cast pull it off, giving the classic
story of star-cross'd lovers a
shiny new look set to a bass-
thumping pace.
A final warning though:
if
you
have to read "Romeo
&
Juliet"
.for English class, don't think this
will substitute-better stick to
those Cliff's Notes after all.
CD Reviews:_ Jertido~sqamage while V.O.D. makes you suffer
hy
Hil Neloms
Staff Writer
Th(" ""I.Jirty Rotten Scoundrel"
, Jem
1iw Damage is back with
his n,'\• :ind. anticipated album,
"Wrath
.,f
the Math".
Jen:-. lirst release;U'The Sun
Rise!-
i.,
1he East", introduced
this
R, ...•
~}yn native as a ines-
seng,•r .
,f
positive hip-hop ..
· Hl' •:;une out with intelligent
lyrics
r,:
11
,inded you of Public En-
emy,
P, .. ,,
Righteous Teachers,
etc.
·
•·\,·1ath of Math" is no dif-
feren1
Hl' . ,
mtinues educating the
mass,•-
;ind
getting rid of those
who
:11,·
,lilt to hurt the realm of
hip-h .. ,.
Thn1;,: h
15
slamming
tracks
he
takes ~. ,,, through the violence,
sexisu, ,!rugs, and greed that
have ·
,,:··m
to take over the in-
d us tr~
-Thi•., .. most noticeable on the
seconli ,;ngletocomeofftheal-
bum ··,.,
J'layin'
Ya
Self'.
TI1i• ,mg is directed at those
who are polluting the·messages
of hip-hop.
·
As Jeru points out, ''There is
so much Ying-Yang, it's ridicu-
lous."
This· statement remains clear
throughout all the songs on the
album.
·
On top of an that, the album is
produced by the G~ru and D.J.
Premier (who next to the GZA
from Wu-Tang, is one of the best
D.J.'s out there).
As you listen to the cuts, the
beats and the rhymes are strictly
on point.
They flow so well, you would
· think that Premier's and Jeru's
minds work
as
one. Which they
might, I don't know.
Jeru has come with "Wrath of
the Math" to save the world of
hip-hop in a state of emergency.
The only way for him to win is
for you to help fight the cause
and buy Jeru the Damaja's
"Wrath of the Math" or else
you'll
be
playin ya self!
Now from Brooklyn we jump
on the LIRR and over to Strong .
. Jsland to . check out local
hardcore heroes V.O.D.
Vision
of
Disorder has finally
come out with their first
full
length
after numerous
7
inches and
compilation· appearances.
V.O.D:
plays heavy aggressive
hardcore with some great musi-
. cianship.
·
The vocalist Tim, rips it up with
his .mixture·of screaming and
singing throughout the album.
A J,and with a lot of rage, their
lyrics are full of meanings.
Some messages hit you like
Tyson hit Seid.on while others
make you look deep within your-
self.
However in all the songs you
will never hear preaching. They
leave it up to you to interpret the
songs so that you will stay true
to yourself and use your mind
while you listen.,
"Drop The Oppressor (D.T.O.)"
is
by far the best song, (in my
opinion) as well as being the best
song on the album.
Other notable tracks are "Suf-
fer" and "Excess". At first lis-
ten,
a lot of
pegple
will
say· that the
album is over-
produced.
If
this hap-
pens to you,
keep listen-
ing.
V.O.D.
has
paid
their•
dues and it's
about time
that
·they
have-
a
chance·
to
show
off
some skills.
Besides,
what do you
expect when
you sign to
a
semi-major la-
bel like Road-
runner?
So, get Vi-
sion
of
Disorder's
self-titled de-
but.
_.,,.,_
I·
12
THE CIRCLE,
November 7, 1996
Lian1
Neeson represents the fighting
-I~is~
·in
_
the h,io-epic'M;i~;tia.el Collin5.'
.
'
'
·
.
·
,·
.
..
.
·
.
.
'
.
.
'
.
.
hy
Clffden Kennedy
&
Todd
Stallkamp
Staff Writers
Consid,•ring Gummy
Bears
had
been the only enjoyable thing at
theatl'rs lately, delightfully
shod.NI
I
humped into "Michael
Collins··11ow playing at the Gal-
leria
Whn lll':trd of Michael Collins,
and
wh\'
should you see this
movie"! -
·
·
Mar~("<l with brilliant acting,
stunnin\! direction, and a well~
told
:--h~ry.
"Michael
Collins"
provc?,l
1t1
be
a
wonderful sur-
prise.
·winner
of Ve
.
nice Film
Festi\'al"s Best Actor and Best
Picture. rhe only thing missing
in this
liim
was its lack of public-
ity.
"Wh:11
publicity?" you may
ask. E,al"liy the point.
Thi~ film opened in limited re-
lease.
and
received little to no
press.
B"ur.
ii
is a story worth telling,
and a 111in·ie worth seeing: With
an ahuntlance of Hollywood
pack[1geJ films on the way, this
may prnve to be an Oscar con-
tender.
·
Liam Neeson doesn't wear a
kilt or
:1
N:\7.i pin for this bio-epic,
but c.-r1ainly lives up to his
Schindlc:r personae.
·
Nct•,,)11
's bravado equals that
·
of the lri-,h hero Michael Collins.
01h:l:
;1gain,
Neeson delivers
·
ap0\w1
f11I
portrayal ofhistory's
forgolh:n heroes.
·
Fo11,,,,ing his performance of
. ,
~no~gb to bring him
:
,
this, his pet project.
-·
,
'>Opening and ~los-
.
ing with a bang, Jor-·
dan
·
sets the tone:
Brits
_
get out.
•
.
.,
;
raking.sqme lib~
erty
with history, Jor-
..
dan does
·
so to main-
.
fain
.
.
his tragic for~
mu1a:
·.
.
IJi
addition, Jordan
gathered most of
Hollywood's Irish to
round out the tale.
,
<
Complimenting
-,Neeson's
character,
Aidan
·
Quinn turns
out
a
'
surprisi
_
ngly
·
,
noteworthy perfor-
.
mance as Collins'
··
best friend, Bolan.
·
·
Alan Rickman,al-
.
ways competent,
acts
_
·
the King to
.
Neeson's
_
knight.
Oscar Schindler and Rob Roy,
With
a
gripping pace the plot
Stephen Rea does well to round
Neeson translates history onto
·
unfolded wilhout a moment of out the stellar cast.
·the
silver screen.
boredom.
.
.
Julia Roberts failed to do the
Not
to
be confused with Tom,
·
.
Perhaps the editor deserves
·
job she was cast for ...
Just stand
Michael isn't a summer drink;
more credit than director Neil Jor-
in front of the camera. dear, and
More a pint of Guinness Stout,
dan .
.
···
·
smile." Instead, she attempted
Coll\·
.
ns despera•ely, and violen
.
tly·
·
,
O~e lrish
'
ie
_
bel captures
.
lln-
t
t
sought the fre~om of the Irish
other, as
Jo
rdan wrote and di-
;~~g~tJuliaRoberts, (we try to),
people:
.
_
_
rected this bio-flik.
and see Liam.Neeson portray the
His life playing like a Greek trag-
Jordna· Slapped the world with
Irish rebel with a passion that
is
edy, he was far from perfcc
_
c.
independent filmmaking wi th
,
the deserving of notice.
_
Struggling to crawl from under
·
199:fOscar nominated "The Cry-
Come Oscar time, people may
the goose-stepping boots of the
ing Game:"
·
be talking about Neeson and this
English, CoHins formed a radical
.
Jordan also directed the some-
film again.
wing of a separatist group.
.
""'hat panned "Inierview wilh A
As for whether or not Collin's
Collins, a member of the IRA,
.
Vampire."
• ·
·.
was al'Hero or Terrorist," decide
succeeded partly, securing only
But" 'Intcrview's' box-office
for yourself.
26 of Ireland's 32 couties.
grosses were apparently high
1991 Chrysler_LeBaron Convertible
473-3780
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_
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·
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_.
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.
SPRING BREAK 97 '
Largest
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·
·
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•.-.:-::.
====================,1
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Earn $500 - $1 000 weekly stuffing _·
envelopes. For details - RUSH $1.00
with SASE
to:
GROUP
6547
.
N Academy Blvd.Dep~
_
N
Colorado Springs,
Co.
80918
Need
shirts
·
·
•
with
_
yc,ur
9rganizatio1,1>
dor,,:n,
team
or
.
club's
Jogo
~creen~printed
on
.
them?
COME SEE
:
_
US!
~O[b
.
.
A
°&j
·
S Illlltl,IF
Ju(C!TI't])]]3,)Y
12 Fowler Ave., Poughkeepsie
(One block down from Raymond Avenue on the eastbound
arterial)
454-2255
THE CIRCLE,
November
7,
1996
13
SGANEWS
·
SGA<SPOTLIGHT
Name: Jason Sprague
Year: Junior
Major: Computer Information Systems
Hometown: Falconer, NY
, Favorite Band/Musician: Sara McLaughlin
Cin:le photo/ Diane Kolod
Jaslm Sprague has earned the
policy a forefront of government;
proud
Li I
le
of Chief Justice of the . instead of making annual even ts
Student Government Assocfa.,
the focus . Jason feels -that his
tion.
job is to implement the policies
Jason went through the transi-
of Student Government; m~ng
tion
fr~)lll
holding the position of them better for the·sttidents. -
Parlfahll'ntarian to the position of
Looking ahead, Jason hopes to
Chief Ju:,tice. He serves as head
"have a
job
when
I
graduate and
of the judicial board. making sure
achieve a happy level of success,
all lcgi~btion passed _senate is
to support a wife and acquire a
constitutil)nal, fair and in the best
house with
a
white picket fence."
'interes1
of
the students. Accord-
Jason'.s favorite aspects of
ing to fason,
"If
someone feels
Marist are «having excellent
that there has been an injustice
teachers who have all acquired
don,e
to
1hem, they can file ap-
.
Ph.D's, and being able to, have a
pea)
with me to combat the ac-' · lot of suppo~ for Marist clubs
tion taken against them."
and other activities."
Jason has learned by working
When not serving as chiefjus-
- through SGA that government
tice, J¥on · serves as president
can
be
a
frustrating process be-'
of the Rugby Club, he is proud
cause
a1
times; peopl~don't seem
to say that this year the team has
to give
any
iriput.J~on:s~ys "
ma.de it to the,playqffs and fin-
how ran
-
yoµ govern· over. the_ ished
7-2
-in
Jhe league .. They
' studenl b~1dy without any ideas
have also gotten a girls t~am up
from ihc-siudents? Likewise, the
and rurinJnfana. they have ~lso
·govef111111!nt needs tO reach out
found a coach at long last.
to their .:onstituents,
fo
order to
laso11 e11ded saying, "
I
would
get thint?s accomplished."
·
Jike to thank-Collin S_ullivanand
'
Jason remembers his funniest , Bob Lynch, the director of clubs
morricnl in SGA saying, ·/ when
for all they dofot_the clubs.
I
feel
Scott Sullens insµlted my weight
they are under-appre9jated and
I--
at the
SCiA
dinner_!"
On a
seri-
would like to take rhis time torec-
ous not~~:; Jason says that his
ognize their excellent service to
short 1crm goals at Marist are to
the students."
try
and mf1ke .the judicial board .. a
strong
p;µ-t ·
of SGA, and make
Two ·organizations receive charters
.
Rec('nlly, the Marist College Student Government
.
has chartered
two new organizations under the Honorary Council. We were proud
to r~cognize the Society of Professional Journalism, and Phi Delta
Epsilon. a,medicaVpre-health fraternity. Each organization will surely
strengthl!n the academic programming, as well
as
provide new op-
portuni1 ks for members.
Regrl!llably, the charter of another organization was lost. Because
there
i~
,m appeal pending, I do not wish to comment. However, it is
never pkasant to see an organization disband.
We \\
ill
hopefully see the chartering of several other clubs this
semes1('r. In the coming weeks,
I
am
confident that the Marist Col-
- lege('omputer Society will return to the campus. In addition,
it
is
hopeful that BiGaLa will finally be recognized. However, the Social
Servkc Council is currently capped.
Man)
of
the clubs and organizations have already done
a fine
job
throu!!h programming and service. My hope is they keep up the fine
work .
. · Fin:illy. there is currently-a position under the Vice-president for
Club Affairs
executive board. Please contact me at x2699, if you are
interes1.:tl.
Sinccrl'I,.
Todd
F.
S1allkamp
.
.
Favorite Movie: Son-In-Law
Role Model: His father
.!~!Mf9rd.
:
from)the··· ..
••.stuclent·•··.· .. Life··· .... council
-.·-.:
-
,
,
... :
.:
.<·:.:·:.,.,:'·.-·~---::-:
,-
.::,·· ..
,
· -,. ,-·:_:, ::_--.:·· .. _·- .. ·:·
··::·>.-: .. -.. ,:
,-... •,··,,
· .. ··:
.. -
.
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· ·:
.
Jtl;JiqM~stf
61!¢i~= :
_
: ;:;
t ;·· .. ·
.... · . ./ .•·
i .. • ... · .· ........ •·
,> .. . ...
. ...•
.
·
-
. . . . ·. .. . lys'is
a_lett§fRoip
we )'ice Pr~sident
of
theStude11t LifeCouncil._ By my title, you might
,; J.!1.ffi~.
•·:·~\
.
~~gis
SS>,lll~'t'.~~t1m~rtant asa committee to you as.students .. The Student Life Coundl
-
;~~ ~IJ.lPi;ts~cl 9fJl'le m§.~clent S!pclent coun,cil presidentifr<>lll each·.residence hall, as well as an execu-
'
Jtt~}?P
·
.
0
1!fl~9in,g·,y!p~ pr~sicient fotfesidential affa~s.avice president for commuter affairs,
a
:.rre~~Uf
i
>ani:1
a
secr~RITT'·
'
\g;
'
\ {
i .·
<
\< .
,
i
-
:
\> .. ··• ·.· ..
..·· .· '
.
.
'i\~l9~~!1Y,;lh~~spp~sict~e~. ~1ng is.sues within their h.<lllsto theSLC, and in tum.I bring those issues
}ff.tff~§!~g~11tg9y1:rnil_l.~nt'.f;s~ociation Ex~cutive Board, v.rhich
I
sit on~·· We deal with a variety of
;}~.~.1!~~iff()ll:}.ffilS()Clal
e,yents;,ijkeHalloween candy salesand trick or treat pr9grams for local school-,
!;~.~~I~?:
~•'t'e,11;~
rn9re
~f~Cl~S issues'.such
.as
St!CUrity,:Hghting and the dining hall services.
. .
;;\;f?,%R!g~C!ta,c:t1y1,.t~
9~~
se01est~rJ~ .t~e Support Basket Program ... For those.of you ~nfamiliar with
.
:
Jw~
~Y~R.frl
11;p11~()ll,,
~.llt,.N
tl:tl!
1,egmnmg of e~p se131es~r. we mail out order forms to
all
parents
of
;
f~IJ;;~~(!
,
~tpq~rt~?s().mw?~ers
~nd
reside.nts alike .. The parents can then order~ Support Basket .or an
;,.R.~fr~¥;~tf9(!1:1$irJpl}
·
gt-~~~g~te,r:. 'Ild
b()thof
thes~.~tgindl½de, lois
of
triunchiesand goodies. We
c:,f!9;J
· · ·•
m1-:~trt!s~:r,~J~~ye.r dµn11g
final
~xa~s
1.
amlJbelievejthas been very successful in past
.... ·.
,
·.· .. •.~;i;1~
0
ifi~~\1if··~~:~n;f8bt1c#rils:.oi~~;studen.ts··at ·~arist ·college. If
§_l:(:;Jepresent~tivtt is;
~
list()fJ1ames anq phone numbers is included. If
tf
~1
frt!etqc:01,1tact any 011e ()f us> We cannot change Marist College
·
·
· ·
so
please talkto
Ji1j1Page
>
'
-:Mauie~ii
Sa~ch~tti
·
.•·
·
,·.
ili~:Bu·.
'"\::.'i·\·---:·--"::\, __ · .. ;
·:
_;
.
'.':-_::-,
Gia? . ·.·
v
' , • · • •
;,>
'
,
..
r_
.
Representatives:
:
:-
,
.
,
-::::·
•
._:
,
·
• •· President
.
·.
·
·-·--
-·.
-·::-:
'
.
____
.•._
..
·::•:
'.VP foiResidentiai Affairs x5747
·.
•
.
·
•·
'
VP
for Commt1ter Affairs
221-9742
.
_,·
:·.·::•-_;·
__
.
·. Pies of
U.Charrip
i.
\
.
.
.
.
14
•
IN"SI
■
• E
.
..
THE
.
C!RCLE,November7,
·
1996
.
.
.
.
Tough deCiSiolls
f()r
football
backfire ill
OT:
A Closer Look At ...
must remember'
.
that Chris
D' Autorio missed two field goals
prior to overtime .
.
.
.
·
At this point, the
.
game is al-
.
ready three hours long. Why
rush it? What's
a
few more min-
utes for a win.
Needless to say, D'Autorio's
attempt was blocked and the
This
p,t.,;t weekend the football
game was sent to a third frame.
team
",,1k
on Towson State at
A(ter Towson threw a 25-yard
.
Leonid11ff field in a
.
three
hQur
.
tot1~!1!1<:>~n
.
pass, Marist an-
and
3-t
minute, triple overtime swered back with
a foucnclowii
grudgl! match.
.
.
run by J.J. Alien.
The scnre ended up in favor
of
-This
·
was a crucial
·
moment
the Ti!?l!rs by one point at 33-32.
since Towson was now given
This v1l.'1ory for Towson was a
another penalty. The ball was
main rL'~ult of two crucial deci-
spotted Qn the 1.5 yard line.
sions hy head coach Jim Parady
Parady decided to
go
for the win
.
in the , ,, ertime periods.
and try for the two-point convcr-
B,,
f11rc
overtime was ever sion.
reach,'d. however, Marist made
To give the Red Foxes credit,
a
big 11Jistake which enabled
the team has a great deal of faith
.
Tows,,n S1ate to tie the game and
·
in
·
tJleir coach.
·
E
send thi~ contest into
OT.
Co-captain Chris
D'
Autorio
Favorite TV Show: R
Wilh 0:09
remaining on the
said he thought the coach made
clock. Towson 's Kevin Smith
the right call referring to the field
connc--k·i.l with Shawn Ward
for
goal attempt in the second over-
Favorite
Band: Indigo Girls
.
a
16-yard
TD pass.
time. '
Wd
I.
every team scores on
"Coach made the decision," h_e
touch,li1wn passes, but why was
said._"Ididnotquestion hisjudg-
·
Favorite Food:·
Eggplant Pannigian
Ward wide open in the left cor-
ment. He
.
did· what he thought
ner of
1ht!
endzone. 11lere was
was best for the team."
not one hlack, red, and white jer-
Parady said
.
he thought he did
Favorite Athlete: Mia
Hamm
.
.
sey in
:-i!,!ht.
·
.
.
·
·
--·
the right thing going forthe win.
Did Marist want to lose this
"If
I
had the chance to do it
.
.
game'! \Vith nine seconds left to
again, I would do the same
play. 1hL' opponent is on
.
thel6-
thing:••
·
·
yard Jin,-. and'you have a seven
I
do not understand this rea-
·
Favorite Aspect ofMarist: People
Worst,f\spect
of
Marist:
Living Situation
•·
-·
.
'
;
,
~
:
_:
',' '
'
.
'
-~'"'
·.
·
,..
· ..
';
'
'
.
,'
,
point
lead-
you cannot undeqmy
soning. People could say that in
cirC\\lll!-1\imces suffer
a
mental
the heat ofthe moment it seemed
breaki.!11wn.
.
like the right
thing
to do but·after
Well.
1l1t!ymade
a
mistake.
_
Tb.is
looking
back would realize differ-
theyare]ookedat in a new light·
.
Janet
Oli✓er
Team:
Soccer
Class:
Junior
HometowQ: Hazlet,
·
NJ
··
Major:
.
.
Communications-PR
,
·
can
he
11vcrlooked. Just go
.
into
ently.
·
They
are
still rcspected;however,
OT lll)W :md play solid, smart
.
If
Parady was afraid to move
s1ncemanypeopleclidnotexpect
.
·
·
·
_
b
_
·y·
•.
:
M
..
·
arty
·
··
.
.
.
sm·
'
·
a
·
.
c
".
0
'
··
1
.
a
·
.
·
.
.
,·
--
footh.all
. .
the ball on first and
10,
why in
·
them to even
be
in the game'.1be
.
Man,t went into
'
OT and
the world would he run the ball
.
·
th•·n
.
g
.
tl_t
.
at
:
is so tou
·_
g
·
h 1·s
.
·
th
· .. _
atth
.
ey
·.
·.
·
·
·
.
· ·
•·
·
·
·
·
·
:
·
.
-·
·
··
.
·
'
.
.
.
Well theNewYorkYankeesare
·•
and has trouble drawing
-
more
Pc
.
olaayccJ·1~1111_i.:..'.!l01·1oddnof,tomotakbaelthl
,
be
.
_
u
.
smt
, _
artthe_
.
totryto_conveit a l"".07po~ntpblayl
·
l.
were so close to
l:l
win. Howlong
.
.
th
..
·
~
.
ch
.
-
~P
·.:
_
io
_
'
.
,
n
.
'
s
..
b
.·
.
tth
.
·
.
·
.e
.·.
·
w
.··
·
,o
.
rld
.
-.
, th
.
.
a
.
t
.
:
.
ilian
..
20,000
.
.
·.
·
..
· .
.
·
.
fa
..
ns
.
to
.
one
o _
fthe
Mru-1stplaycd great 1001
a
·
·
are people
.'.
goi.ng to
:
keepwon-
1 k
th
--
est dl•d~ions.
.
and must be given credit to hang
dering wMt
;
wo
.
uld have hap-
)nuch
'
I
·
caiinot d¢riy;b~t
:
whatl
·
.
•
mo~t
·
famous bal par s
m
.
.
e
.
'
O.K
i;irst;Parady brings in
.
hi
.
's with a
.
team Hke Tows
.
on State. · P·.ened
.
ifdif
.
fe
.
,
r
.
ent
.
d
.
ec
.
.
i
.
s
.
ions were
\e~lly
.
\1/ould lil<.e
'to
say is
.
y.'ho
\Vbrld
t
·
.
,.
,
.
·
.
· .
·
.
·
.
cares? The Yankees were
a
once
.
-
\
How come
·
a11 the fanfare aUof
kicker"' attempta33-yardfield They
_
are basically
a
Patriot - made
'
·
· ·
·
·
·
·
.· .
.·
·
·
·
·
·
·
-·
·
·
·
·
·
· · ·
· · ·
· ·
asudden?It
is
be<:auseall New
goal nn third down to end the
League
.
schooL
.
>Th~
/
teani
.
shouldbeproud_of ~gNy frllllphise
.
thatjust
~ap~
.
game. Bui whenrowson takes a
Allen said
.
Maristfoughtwell
themselves. The coaching how-· p,ened to
.
~et lu~ky aoa wm a Yorkfanswanttobein thespot-
penah,
fortoo
many rn.en
·
on
·
the
·
but cannot help to look
.
down.
ever, needs
·
to evaluate th;ir de-
.
World ~enes.
.
.
-
·
liglifTheyrelish it,J3ack in the
field
anJ
-
t-.farist gets a f~t down
''This was definitely the tough.:. · cisions in this game.
·
Regardless,
Consi~~r:
~~t
the
,
l~t sixt~n days
:
of
Mantle;" and ch~pion-
and
ti\'-'
vards closer,
who
would
est loss of the season,'
.
' Allen
.
this was
.
great college football
-
fall ~l~~ics,
:
b~r9r~
:·
thi~ ye~
S,
ship
f
every
·
otber:year, it
·
was
sti!I
try
,:,ra field
·
s?~?
.
said.
.
.
.
.
.
.
:
.
and what it's aJI about.
_:
.•...
-_
h,3-:ye
_
,
~een
.
~~u.-t~
,
en d1f.ft;r~nt
easy
·
~
beii{the
spotlight~
Gr,1111, ·d. Towsop
was
putting
Iagree with him in that this
was
:
Chris Smith is the Circle's
,',
.
!ea~t btq:r
_
or~~d
,
a_s
c~amps.
.
cause
·
it was
always
tbere:
.
·
nine
m\."n
up on the line,
.
b
·
ut we
the to
.
ugh
·
e
·.
st lo
.
ss
.
.
.
.
IfM
.
.
arist won,
•
.
.
· Sports Editor
.
·
.
Am
.
1
. o~
-.
g
..
.
·
th
.
.
.
'
.
~~
,
.
.
.
s
.
..
~
.
..
.
ht~
..
.
!1
.
•
..
•
1
~ hfias
,·
bee
·
i.;.
.
•
~
..
·
.
.
~ut
h~rtft:~rne
_
the
·
1980's and
·
,.
·•
'
.
-
•
.
.
,
·
,
.
.
_-.
· •
.
•
•
·
·
· ·
·
sp 1ta.nevelle1g tap1~ orL1Uu1
·
theYarikeeteamsarepitifuLAU
Increase
lll
membership
.
helps.
he
1rrie"ri~~i(.and: NaUonal
·
otYoiis~allecffans jump off
··
.
.
:
·
·
·
·
.
·
.
·
.
.
eagu~s.
;
To take· tl.iat one step
the
bandwagon,
.and
don
•t
g~t
racquetball to be reco
;
g
·
nized
urtlier,if theRed Soxof1986 baclcon)mtilthefinishline
.
isin
··
_
·
·
·
·
·
.
..
· ...
.
·
.
·
wouid
.
have b,een able to close site; Either root for.your team
For 1h,1sc of you.who do not
ou~ s)(_iUJevels .
.
.
Whi}e this
.
in:-
ut thi Mets
_
that fateful Octa-
·
·
·
always, or'notatall.
..
··
·
know thal Marist,has a racquet-
crease in membership has made
.
r
night: every single
team
in
.
.
Be like a Jets
ran:
The typical
ball
ream.
·
1hey do exist
and
they
the practices more
·
cramped, the
e currerit
AL
East setup would Jets
fa11
lo_ves his ~
·
for \Vhat
.
are com,,<!titive. They compete
competition of the practices
has _
ave been Woi:ld Series Champi.;
.
it
is,
and
nothing more. You still
:
in the Laste
.
rn Collegiate
Rae-
risen dramatically.
ns sincd979
.:
.·
·
·
often get a fullhouse,
.
even
-
in
quethall Conferen~e (ECRC),
•
The ~CRC opened tournament''
:
:
What I a'nisaying in that all you
these recent lean years. But llOt
which may not
be
-
~
noticeable
play on October'_25~h at The··
.
ogantNewYorkYankeesfaris a Yankee
.
fan. He·.will go .with
as thl' ?\l:\AC or the
NEC,
but
_
Court
.
ClubinAlbany;NewYork . .
,
,,<
~
no more special than any of the weather;Jfthe. weather is
nonethd,•ss the competition is
·
Marist was in attendance and ·
e other teams to have won it bad
.
outside, he will not leave
·
just a~ intense.
·
_
/
'
: ·
· fared well. InJact, Marist got a·'
ustbecauseit isNew.:York, ev-
his house. If the
team,
is b~((he
·
The r,1l·,1uetball team; which.is
surprise turnout from freshmen
_
.
ryone is
·
supposed to. get down
.
will
notrooL How
~I_~
can
you
a co-ed dub sport,
.
finished last
.
· .
Vinny Co111misso'and Nick Kost,
....
·-:Mfh
'•
•/
'~
d
.
worship the
·almighty
Yan-
~xplain suddenly wanting
to
see
·
ye
.
arran
.
i_ed
.
, .·
.
_
who
.
9espite appearing in their
·
~gijgg!~
4
J!
1:
ees
but
'
guess what folks the
.
this team play. It too.k people
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
coast•tco a1z
,
. '
•
.
.
.
'
fifth i11
.
1hc
Eastern CoJleoiate
first
.
tournament, were able to
.
,.·
,
-
~:
"'
0·, ..
•
.,,
,
'"
-
mverse doesn t
.
·
revolve around
until the playoffs to realize that
·
~
·
-
·
·
· mustUv
·
r:
-
.
.
·
.
.
Racqw
..
,,
_
h.1ll
Co
.
nferen
.
·
ci_
.
·(EC·
RC).
_
·
stnng together some v1ctones for
,
.
;
,;;,,.,.-,..,~"
'
q
,
,,
our team and nobody else m
this was
.
a
special
.
team?
.
·
.
·
·
·
uve·showm
'
.
The Cl)nft!rerice includes such
·
.
the
0
RedF
1
°
1
xesth.
t f
.
th
·
Rd
'
i
M~lfi
~
ifil
,
he world probably gave too
Soyes,Yankeefans;yourteam
powerl1,1uses as PenJl State,
vera , e res o
e e
f~
')
ti-""
•
·
:
,i:,.'ji,,...
fii
,
uch thought about it the next
is once again champs. But
Army ..
111d
national charppion
Foxes, who were comprised of
·
~
'.
~
4 ...
9(f
.
P.,<?
,,.
,
ay.
guess what? It means nothing.
Nichoh College.
·
·
·
both men and women returnees
e
"
,
;'.
t-~H
+
Another thing I don't under-
Noboclycaresexceptforallyou
The r.CRC is regarded as one
from last year, played well despite
.
r
,;
~ill
l
tand is where did all these Yan-
egocentric fans. The Yanks got
hi •
· ed
1
Am
because
,
·
.
.
I
,
b
1
•.
of the
h
1p collegiate l~gues in
~ evtumg trux
.
.
r;tcsh
U
ts. ,
~ndg
bo~ttiiI~Ben.
,,
'
'.htbVercome
$
ee fans come from. Eve~here lucky by beating
3
better
team
the CCIU11try.
.
.
.
~,etd
~~
;n e
me~~~
_e
8fric1°iy
.t.
ii
f
M~u~i':
'
sC
!
Maryfs';
,
;
,;
walklsee~Yankeecap,Jacket,
intheSeries.Pure-luckgotyour
Ovcr.tlL the racquetball team
me u e e
ecse an
ns Pliis
~
We:
'
Wilfli~~~
i
iw<r\veeks
<
ffi
;
.~
}t
etc._They did not start to appear
team
by because allthe world
has sc,·n its membership in-
Renda, who are ranked l4thand
·
·
;
,
.· '•
.
,,_.
·
,.
,,'
,-
-~
0
.
,
,
,
,,
·»1:
unttl a couple of weeks ago
knows New York's arroga t
crea~ 1i111n J4membeis last year
15th in the ECRC, respectively.
~cl,ln~pAriri~fC?t ~r-
,
~I~I~~~e~
t~:
around the same time playoff~
fans sure dido •t. You ju:t
to
O\'cr
~5 members this
year.
ThenextECRCtouma?1cntis
mec~
,:
e
.
•
st11
,
-
.
-:
·.-
'
',
·
I:,~i
;
::._;\
tickctswcrcimpossibletobuy.
stcppedintothespotlightwhen
The n,~n·s side alone has ac-
scheduled to take place m Feb-
'
·
"";:;~;
Thisbringsmetomynextpoint convenient, and took unde-
quirc,I to.new players of vari-
ruary
at Penn State..
'"''"·"
'
··
•·
•
.
.
,
r:
-,::;,
'.
A
team is in first place all year,
served joy from this
team.
.
_
,,._
....
.
.
.
"
·
.
...
-
./
;
~
.
.
THE CIRCLE,
November 7, 1996
15
Rugby
ghlns
hope~
"
finish season
7~ 2
.
.
.
.
.
•
.
-
~
.
.
..
.
'
.
.
·
.
.
.
.
. .
...
.
-
.
.
.
•
h
v
GIANNA
Prim
;.
_
::
{Vassar
:
~s
':
'
t_~~
·
:
t}~e~poirit
\
tries,
a .
This year we were able to main-
.
·
,
, ·
.
·
.
·
.
.
·
·.
·
.·
.
",
·'three~pqint-pena_lty-ki
_
ck, and:a
·
tainamuchhighermembership
.
"
Women's soccer takes on the
Mount in first roun4 game
·
Sraff_Writer
·
·
.
.
·
.
•
jwo
~
poin
:
t,conversi<>n
:
:
'.':
·
.
--
,
,
·• ·
Junior Mark Conway said
·
Withl)lll a home field anawith
Nonetheless,Maris(s 7
~
2 regu-
M.ariuz was the key to the team's
little ha~·kirig from the
.
Marist
lat
.
~e
_
as.on/~cbr~ far-exceeded
success.
.
Collcg(• ~·o~munity,
_
the men's
,
any
:
Pr~se~.9.i:t
~
Yf?~i~tions.
•.
.
.
·
·
"Without him I don't think we
·
rugby squad defied the odds by
At
,
the be~!nnu~g 9f the season,
·
w'ould have gotten this far "
posting a stellar 7-2 season.
M.arist
~~
expected to finis_h at
·_
Conway said., "We
·
didn't ev~r
MariSt. under the direction of the bottoffi of its division; buf thiru.cwe'dgo to the playoffs, but
new
co:1l.·h
Karl
Mariuz,
qualified
.
since
.
hiring
.
Mariuz,
_
the
.
Red
he eliminated our indecisiveness
for th.! New York Metropolitan
Foxes
·
have been able to
.
bdrig
and helped us gel."
.
·
Rughy Division II single elimina-
together_ technique
_
and
_
natural
·
.
.
The future for Marist rugby
tion playoffs at Vassar Farms last
ability. The end result: a third
seems bright, considering the
Saturd.iy
.
_
,
pla~eJinish in the division
.
team is comprised mostly of un-
'
Third-seed Marist lost to
Mariuz,whohasplayednigby
'
derclassmen and just two se-'
fourth-scl
:
d Vassar, 32-20. First-
forl5 years, mosfof thern with
niors, Ralph .Sanguliano and
.
seed Ru1gers defeated second-
the Rockland Rugby club, has
Stefan Jerrentrup.
seed Hlll°StraandVassar to cap-
added a ne\V dimension to
.
the
"The team was
·
.
very, very
ture till' division title, Rutgers
men's squad '-Stability.
'
.
young," Sprague said. "Every-
and Va.,sar handed the Red Foxes · \Vithout having a llired coach,
.·
body but two are
·
under 20, for
their
rwo
regular season defeats.
the team was susceptibleJo intra-
rugby that is very young. It is
Ju11i,lr Jason Sprague, the
teamcontlictswhenn1embersof
very unusual for a team that
Rughy Club president, said
the squad assu~ed tbe coach-
young to go to a playoff.",
·
.
Mari st,, as its own worst enemy.
ing role
,
.
_
.
. . .
.
.
.
Sprague anticipates
_
holding
"Wl' ;.; ere the better team, but
"Coming from a t~m with no
-
techriical skills workshhps
_
t~rim-
we
Joq
on mental mistakes,"
. ·
coach
.
when I 'Nas
a
freshman,
prove his players' techniques.
Spragu~ said.
· one of the seniors decided who
The men will also maintain their
Mari,1 trailed 17-10 at the half.
would play andwhere," Sprague
training by entering in spring
The Red Foxes scored late in the
said. "It would get very political
tournaments.
·
game hut could not match
and guys would leave the team;
by
~AVID McBRIDE
Staff Writer
!en from their sails as Fairfield
scored in the early minutes of the
second half. Piechocki said she
With having already clinched
felt this goal set the tone for the
a berth in the Northeast Confer-
rest of the game ..
ence Tournament, the final two
"We could never re-establish
our rhythm," Piechocki .,.,;d.
regular season ganies would
,,...
serve as tune ups for the
The first goal was scored by
women's soccer team. The Red
Abby Allen, and would
be
the
Foxes were looking to
.
find a
firstofthreeFairfieldsecondhalf
rhythm that could take them into
goals, as Marist lost 3-0. The
their post season as they began
.
secpnd goal was scored by Kelli
this weekend by taking on
Hurley off of a corner kick, and
Lehigh.
Allan scored the final goal from
The Red Foxes would fall vie-
outside the box.
tim to an official being out of
With a record of 6-12, the Red
place as they dropped the con-
Foxes play No. 1
seed
Monmouth
test to Lehigh 1-0.
In
the second
Friday, the winner advancing to
half, the goalie for Lehigh
the finals held on Sunday. In
snatched the ball out of the goal
practice, the team has been work-
area after it had already crossed
ing _on trying to put some scar-
the goal line. However, the goal
-
ing back into their offense, and
was not counted as the official
their coach is looking for some-
was out of place and didn't see
one to step up and provide some
the ball cross the line.
scoring.
.
Still, the Red Foxes played well
.
'
_
'We've been working a lot on
throughout the contest as they
different types of drills on put-
. , moved the ball well and keptthe
ting the ball in the back of the
R
·
t
1
d
·
·
·
'
action on Lehigh's side for much
·
net," Piechocki said.
ecen p ay not goo enough for tournament
of the second half.
:
However, Piechocki believes
"We played well," head coach
that the key for her squad in the
b)
MARTY SINACOLA
Staff Writer
Maria Piechocki said of her team.
post season will be defense.
this year,
I
think itcan hurt us;
·
night at the Mccann Ice Arena
''We worked hard throughout the
"Defensively, we can't let them
because we never really had that
iri
Poughkeepsie. The Scarlet ·whole game."
ope
_
n up the door," Piechocki
happen to us last year," Accisano
Knights of Rutgers, who were
•
in
Piechocki made note of the con-
.
said.
·
·
said. ''That comparison with last
the same national tournament as
,
tinuing solid play of Beth Zack
Piechocki feels that Friday's
.
The Red Fox hockey team, it is
year hurts us sometimes, and we
Marist last season, bring tlieir act
.
the Red Fox goalie.
.
'
game
wm
be
a hard test for her
probably safe to say, needs a vie-
feel real letdown when we don't
into town. They will undoubtedly
.
"B h h d
team, but she knows that her
·
et
a a great game,"
•
tory tiunnrro'N night against ri-
play well."
.
.
.
.
•
try _to strut their stuff and hand
Piechocki said. She praised the
te3;?1 does have a chance.
val Rui)-!crs University.
Although the goal
of
Marist is
Marist a rare home loss. .
keepers punting and drop-kick-
_,
.
,Mo~m?uth h~ s~~e .~e~-
Thl' dtib's record stands at~-
to return to th~ national ~ouma-
"V:e've _been having good
ing as she cleared midfield many
nesses, Piechocki srud, Well
2-1. Anyone who follows th1s
ment, the:t~m 1s not looking that
practtc~s th•~ week. We've got
.
times
;
need a Ip<)% effort from every-
·.
team;
.
;m~l
-
.s~e~ them play
_
C>~
!1
_
!&.:
~ead:
,
.
.
·
.
,
thatintensity back that 'w~•
.
ve
·
"Qle team's final game of the
.
one on the field.''
regul
_
d~IMst~, knows that_they are
.
,
·
Rig~q1ow, our
:
f?-c1;1s isn ton
--
-
-
lac~ed
,
-
an~
-
ever-yo?e
~
s-positive
;
·
.
regular season
,
was
,
against a
One of the te~'s pre~eason
better
_,
1
_
h?n thaL ~u
,
t sttl!,
_
here
~
the
·
n~ltonals
;
Vie J~st have to
atti~ude
1s
_r;
coming back,"
·
-
strong Fairfield team last Mon-
.
goals was to make it to the tour-
they ar.: tooay with
a
reco~d
_
of
·
conc~ntr~~ean~ take1t~negame
Acc1s_ano sa~d.
.
day. This game would be a very
nament, and now, th~t they've
one ,gam~ over .500, sqmethmg
at a ume, Acc1sano said.
While Acc1sano concedes that
good game for the team to play
reached that, they d hke to fin-
they :m·dcfinitely not used to.
·
The latest disappointing loss
if Marist is involved in a shoot-
as Fairfield and Monmouth were
·
·
ish their final NEC season with a
"W~-)
_
1ave bas,~cal.ly th~ same
came
.
las~ rri~ay n~~ht at the
out,
th~:
will win "nine time~ out
of the same strength.
~~?fere~ce ~ictory.
.
~
asJast
year, _
:
said
.
S!!ntor Joe
?ands
ofb1tten
l
vals_~iena Ho!d-
of ten.
.
.
.
.
.
.
. : .
.
The Red Foxes showed that
..
_Making 1t_to the fin~s of the
.
Acc
.
1sa11\1·
,
refemng t!) the
:
fac
t
.
mg_ a
3
~
~
lead ent_enng ~e third
.
·
.
He also ad~ts that the defense
.
they came to play as they battled
..
tourntF~nt will
1?C
~osting on the
that MJnst:lost only two players
,.
. penod, Siena ?ame
_
s~ornun~ b~k
·
is;~ ke~ to th~s team.
;
·
.
Fairfield to a scoreless first half.
cake, Piechocki said
.
.
to gr4d11,1lmn from last year's
to ~and_ 11:anst
.
~ d1s~ppomtmg
.
Agamst Siena, we didn't play
"We were playing well,"
In th~ other ~st s~on game,
sqt,1ad.
,,
.
.
:
.
·
.. ,
.
.
.
.
-
·
.
.
.
·
, -~3 l!)~S.
, _
.
•
,
._
.
. .
.
.
good team defense, so hopefully . Piechocki said ofherteam 's first
Mt Samt ~ary swill play Cen-
. -
Af~er
-_
11~~ success
_
ofl~
.
t
year,
<
.
Acc1sano at
_
t?b~te~ the
_
defeat
we can pic!c it up against
half play
.
"Audrey (Tarrant) was
tral
Conn~ticut State
.
Piec~ocki
_
ey~ry,!nt•
,
1s won?e":ng ~hen the to,? la~k ofteamwor~.
_
.
.
_
·
Rutgers.
1
'
·
.
playing well in the midfield."
f~ls that tfh~r team can wm on
real
Rl~•I
F
~
}~es will kick m; Marist
I thmk we
~~d
}Ile~t~l break-
. .
Even tho:ugh the
-
team. is not
. Piechocki felt that
.
Tarrant
Fnday,
.
the momentum of that
.
wenta
,
I
_
I 1he w~y to the final !our
.
down~· thro~gho~t th~ w~ole
.
;_
p_laying
.
u~ to expec~tiops,
.
con- · along with Amanda Swiderek
·
g~e would do wonders for her
of tl~l
J
,
;,:
~men:a~
:
Co,.H~~•ate
_
g~
_
e, he sat~
'.
-
~e
.
we
.
r~
.
n~t·
:
ft~f.e_nce
,
1s no,t
.
_
lackm
_
g,
:
as
•
played well together, moving the
te~ on ~unday.
.
Hoc,k1;~ A~soc1a!JOn National
mentallyP,repar~d, a_11d_wed1dn t
Accisano demonstrate~.
:
;
ball nicely between themselves.
Bea~mg Monmouth
!s
the
Tour_-1:iment,_l.osmg
·
only fi~e
p~ay as_a t~~-:Y.le.d1dn'
_
t take
·."If w_e can come out:~lth·a The team did produce some ~ounta1~
·
v:e must cltmb,"
garnc~;_all
,
se'!5
_
0n . .\lre_a~y,
,
six
,
S1e~a h?~_tl~,
-
~~t
f~r
.
~o~~
-
,
rea-
goo~ attitude, put
th~
b~dgames
shots and services around the
:
P1echofki said., She went o~ to
gan1c,uHo
:
this
year,
Manst has
.
s
.
on
t
we dig n~t pl~t,
llli
intense
~hmd us: an~ play with inten-
goal box, and they felt good go-
_
~efer to Su?daY s game as a
"hill"
d:oppi;d
'
J~o
.
contests..
.
.
as we sho~l~ _have.
_
.
.
.
.
s1ty, I don
t
thin~
1
there js a team
.
·
ing into the second half. ·
·
.
m companson to the Monmouth
'lfwc;ircdownagoal ma game
· That ~mng~
.
~s (o tomorrow
· ·
that can beat us.
·
But in a matter of minutes, the
game.
·wind seemed to !}ave been sto-
·
..
.
-
:
women's
X-C--------------------
'.
.. ~()l;;;,,uedfro'!'page
16
point t, 1 his team which was that Woodson. She
·
finished with a
·· ·
(ECAC)Regionals at
.
Bo;ton.
•
feat Rider and St. Francis.
hewaml,'llMaristtodefeatallthe
seventh place
·
finish and a time
·
Therewillbeabout35to40teams
"We want to show Rider and
·
·
other t.:;inls in the NEC.
of 20:03.
·
The rest
-
of
,
the Marist
competing. The majority-of the
St. Francis that we can
beat
them
·
·
·
Thispla11wasside1rackedafter
team
·
finished in
.
the top 40.
·
teamswillcomefromtheNECand
sllld the seniors wanttomakethis
!he R,:tl 1
J
oxes had lost their pack
Sophomore Meredith Halstead
from the northeast region. There • one of their best meets," Mangan
m th.: fti-st three quarters of the
placed 17th, senior Mary Mc
are two races involved in the re-
·
said.
race. M.uist was ·then separated
·
Quillian finish~d
.
25th, sopho-
gional.
.
·
.
,
.
Kelly exemplifies the attitude of
and th!!)' ran by themselves; not
more Kristyn
,
Russo acquired
1'h:e first race is the NCA race,
an optimistic leader. Despite the
in a p:id, .
.
With
·
the pack
.
gone,
26th, senior Karen Mangan
which is for teams that finish in
Red Foxes performance at the
the R«-',I Foxes could not score p1aced 35th and junior Kerry
the top of their conference. It will
NEC Championship and the un-
enou,gh•p1.lints to
gain
-
a power-
Redmond ranked 38th.
include teams like Boston .Col-
· .
limited amount of injuries that
·
ful p<•:-.11i,)n or sizable lead over .
Another problem that affected
lege, Providence and
·
Mt. St.
·
Marist has suffered, Kelly and the
Rider mill St. Francis(Pa.). Also,
Marist was the times of the run-
Mary's. Many of these. teams'
rest of the team considered this
·
Mari:-1 h;ll.l not planned on Rider
ners. These
times
were so costly
programs are some of the best iri
previous season to
be
a satisfac-
and S1 Francis getting a quick
that it let other teams such as
the country.
..
.
.
tory. Kelly says this because of
lead
n11
1hcm.
-
Rider and St. Francis, that have
"Hopefully Mt. St. Mary's will
the two important victories that
·
"M1.
St
.
Mary•~ finished in the
equal ability as
·
Marist, to
.
sur-
get beaten," Donahue
.
said.
the Red Foxes attained, the
top
fi, ,·,
and we didn't count on
pass them.
.•.
Marist will engage in the sec-
Bowdoin
and
Wagner
Rider ,1rid St. Francis coming out
"At least aH of my girls were a
ond race which is the Universal
Invitationals. Also, Kelly is
that 4uick," senior Karen
minute behind
·
their normal
race. The Red Foxes will
be
rac-
pleased with the meet at Notre
Mangan ,;iid
times," Kelly said;
ing against the team's in the NEC
Dame.
Mai
-
;
·
~•
did manage to hold
In two weeks, the Red Foxes
and many others. Marist. wants
"All we can do is look forward
some ,
,r
J
lead under the leader-
go to run in the ~ t Coast Ath-
·
to use this race as a chance to
to the ECAC Regionals and not
ship
·
of senior Kathleen
letic
Conference
redeem their reputation and de-
dwell on the NEC meet," he said.
'
i
i
~
1
i
·
"-
.
,
f
)
r
f.
·
'-~
. ··'!=
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:::.1
-~---
-~
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..
..::
:
·.
.STATOtTBEWEEK:
.
··
.·
·,
.
\,,
.-
·
:;·
>··
·
<
,c
,•
·
:
··:
:j;·
•
",
·:
··'
OTE OF-THE
:
:
.
-
EEK:
.
Football
play~
fi~t
.
<>V~r:ti~e
-
.·
·
·
g~me
i
n
=
Marist
~istofy
·.
~
.
...
.
.
·
-"We
just
_
have)o conce111,:ate
·
·
-
and
-
take
ii
one ,g~e at
.
a
_
.
. .
,.
.
.
·
-
,,
.
16
again~t-Towson State.-
..:.
:
~--
..
,;: /,
:
·
:
.·
~
--
·
-~
/::
~
-
:
:
'>
~
-
::(_,
>:
;:.
..
.:
THE CIRCLE
--
S
PO Rr
·
s
--
·
·
-
J~vini~
-
eri199
•
~
:
.
time,
J~A~baiio
:.
.
:··
•
--:'" Hocke Team
P60f}?~fiefsgreed}';
·
•
ioses
•·
33-32 intrip.IeOTto'I'oWs<Jn
,
' '.
'
·
.
.
, \
.
':
·. '
' ' ·
. ,
'
-
ylitd
,
field goai-oniitsfand)O.
-
'
.
:
by
_
c
_;
_
_
-_
5
)
1
P
,
_
.
RI
.
o t
_
·
·~so
.
·
r
_,
E
·
~
_-
'{l
_
_
,_
·
1
~
1
,'.
0
:
_
5
_
..
r:
.
MI
_
·
:
_
·,·
..
.
.
i'
_
_
_
a
.
_
:
_
.
_
'
~
:·
.
. _
_
-
._,,
·
_
· :
_
:
.:
.
·
~
o•Auforio~s
ki¢k
was blcx.:k¢
"
'
.
-
b
/
a
sui-ge
j
,ver ~e
-
mJddle
.
and
·,
ih~
:
·
g~e
:
~as
to go
into
a
third
-
.
overum~periocl
,_ .
.
.
·
-
.
:
.
..
.
'
•
.,
·
.
-
.
Ai1tithc~
-
first.for
;
the
football
·
pfograri\
at MarisH~kplac~
e>n
·
, ·
Sa
_
turdaf Nov. 2,
.
arleonidoff
.
field:
··
The
Red
Foxes were defeated ·.
by T0'-1/;~n-State,
,
3~'..32 in
a
~pie
.
oyertiin(non4eague
,
game
.
•.
·
.
.
·
.
·
Whik
;
trying to nurse fhead-,
ache after a
3
hour and 34 minute
loss.ficadcoach Jim Pafac:lysaid
he was glad the ganie tpok plac:e
.
"It was a great game to be in-
.
volvcd with," Parady
·
said.
.
"It
was
_
ajfreat college football
game.
The
kids gave us every-
thing wi.:asked for,wejust didn't
come
out
on top.
-
The gaine was li~e riding on a
D'-Autorio' said he had no
.
doubt
:fo
the
decision rriad
,
e by
·
Parady;
·
''Coa.ch made
the:
decision to
·
' '
end the
'
'
game and
l
would
,
not
que~tion
•
_
his judgement,"
D'
Autorio
-
said. ''The kick felt
great
.
_
Even when
I
looked
_
up
I
was
·
confident
_
that irwas
good.
I guess they just came over top
throtigh
·
·
the middle."
.
_ .
Towson
State
then struck for a
25
:-
yard touchdown in the open-
ing play of the third overtfme
frame when Smith found an open
Maurice Sydnor in the left side
of the
.
end zone.
roller 1.·oaster according to
Towson State head coach Gordy
Comhs.
.
·
Wide
receiver
Chris
:
D'Autorio squeezes
past-two
To;,son defen<:fers
lni3~32
1
~v:rtf~el~;t
010
''This
type
of loss is devastat-
..
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
'
Marist then scored on their next
possession as J.J. Allen con-
verted on a one-yard rµsh. The
tigers
·
were
·
then assessed a 1.5
yards penalty on the extra point
ing to
any
team .
.
I know h9w
Withsecondsleftontheclock. pushedMaristahead26~19with
they(Marist) must feel
;
'
'.
Comt;,s
.
for the first half, Towson State's
...
2:02 leftinJhe third quarter.
·
.
said;
0
-'fhcrewere just too many
Oeorge Perdikakis's 36~yard field
·
·
.
Marist
-
managed
to
shut down
peaks
and
valleys in this game."
goal attempt was blocked byline-
_the Tigers
•
for
nearly
the entire
The lead changed hands five
.
backer Jerry Gerthwho recov-
fourth quarter until w~th 0:09 re-
times
as
lhe Red Foxes and Ti-
ered the ball and ran it back 70
maining in
_
regulation; Towson
gers hauled
it
out.
.
yards for a touchdown. The Red
State's Smith connected with
Marist
came out strong scbr
:-
Foxes then attempted to gain two
Shawn Ward.fora 16-yard touch-
ing
.
the lirstpointsi:>n their
.
first
morepointswithaconversionas
.
dowri pass. Perdikakis's extra
drive
only
1:59 irito the game.
J
.
J
.
Allen's rush was successful.
point was successful to .tie the
Junior quarterback
--
Jim Paley
.
This brought the score to 18-12,
score at26.
connc.:red
with
Jon Reed for a Marist, as
_
time
·
expired in the first
The game
.
was then continued
34-yar~ lOuchdown
p~~-
Chris
.
·
ha.If.
-
in
overtime. Under the new for-
D'
Aut,>rio
's
extra point attempt
With
H:
13 remaining
:
in the :mat implemented by the National
wassue.:essful to put the
:
Red
.
thirdquarter,TowsonStatequar-
Co_ll~giat~Atl,lleti~
-
A.ssop_i11!~on,
·
Foxes
,,n
the scoreb9ard, 7-0
.'
:
..
terbackKeviri Smith
:
finisheg
.
a each team is given
,
tpe chance to
. On
1he.
following kickoff,
.
.
-IO
play,47-ya.rq drive
in
3:47 with scor~from theoppopenis 25:-yard
Maris1 dccied to attempt
;:in
o
.
~'."
aone-yarc:I rush fora touchdown.
line .
.
Toere
.
~e
-
~9
,
~µte
,
restric-
side
kkk
which
·
was successful
·
ToePATbyPeridikakis wassuc,.
·
.
ti9ns
_
except
.
for
.
tti~
;
25
:
second
and ptil
·
lhe
_
Red
,
Foxes'ip excel-
•
Cessfut
This
brought the
:
score
'
playclock
;
'
;
·
,
·-::
:,,
'
•.<
·
.
,
;:
,
'
'
.
lent
tid,I
position
·
:
·
/
:
_
,.
·
: .
..
. ·-
.
to
:
19~18
··.
to push Tow~on
·
State
. :
1frihe
.
firstovertimeperipd, nei-
·
·
. Thi
s
kdtoa35
~
yard field.goal
.
ahead
one~ again.
:
.
,,
.
.
.
.
ther was ablcdo put
·
pgirits
on
by
o·Auiono
·
with
9
:
3f
remai11~
·
The
-
Red Foxes answered back
the
board
:
-
,
Marist's Mario
Wil-
,
ing inlhdirst quarter
.
·
.
with
-
a touchdown
.
on a
-
three"'
_
~on biocked
_
~
:
$3
;
yard µeld
g<>al
TheT1iiersanswered
.
back with
:
·
·
yard
.
fun
:
by
.
A,llen
.
,.,
-:C:he
0
Red
·
auempttok:eep
:
the
;
contest
_
alive.
' .
two
field
2:oals
.
and
·
a touchdown
Foxes attempted yet anoth~r two-
In the
-
~ecoiig
:
o~erttme period,
tobrin~ tlic.scoreto 12~1() inf~-
-
point conversion )Vith
•
a pasflo' Towson State was unable to
vor
pffows6n State
:
:
.
..
•
tight end
·
.
Bfian 'Ladd.
_
This score .with Perikakis's 27-yard
·
:
f
J
·
.
,~~
-
:
_
;_-.
l
i,,.,,
fora
:il~
Jersc,Ci
t~
~
.:~
;
.
--
..
Main~1
.
s
l
t\_~
-
--~
orc,ri,,
'
;:K.;.'-
-
•
-
fuiitUk
-
l'l'
p
!a)',
,mJ
.
.
t_li#
gam.:
_
coinehai.:
fj
tra_fr.11~
>R;
lB)'
111,_
p;,;>>:.
,
.
-: .
'·_·
~nod.,:.
Jowcd1ti,·
Peter<,_.,
~£/
t
~\\\~
.
ii;
j
~
t
ran
··
;
,u
tfme
,
··
lr~s
P
1~ni:d ..
I
<,(,'
"
.·
.
i1
Jieatl, oa
appoi111111c
·
folloMm!th
'"'
•mtl ~-
'
d
1
;;
;:
m:1u:1t
,W
henwud
going
to
:;ct
Price
11) ;,
ti1
.
lucky
.,r,.i
yourl'.,11~
-
n
topla
;
\;;
Thl·
l\lS
feCOrJ
I• I
6-9;
,., .,,,
field goal att~mpt being no good
.
try
for unsportsmanlike conduct.
Mari~t then moved the ball
to
the
The Red Foxes failed on a two-
16-yard line
~
·
·
point extra point attempt from the
On third down with one yard
1.5 yard line.
to go,
,
Parady decided to end the
.
Allen said that he felt this was
game
_
by bringing in
,
D'
Autorio
the toughest loss of the season.
to attempt a 33-yard field goal,
"The overtime format e]evates
Tl1e
Tigers
were penalized for too
the spirit of the
team."
Allen said.
manymen on the fielq. The ball
"I
like it but it's like walking on
was spotted on the 11-yard line
needles."
.
.
.
·
and Marist was given a first
"I
think it was greatthai we
down.
,
threa~ned them so much. Some
Parady stuck
,
to his d~ision to
people were saying that we
end th
_
e game and kept weren't even suppose to be in
I>'Auforio
"
in .to attempt the 28-
.
·
·
tlµs gam,e."
Men's
·
?(-Q.dis(lppoin.ted
with
-
foiirtl1place
:
arNECfinals
.
·
.·.
.
:
-
.
·.:-.
.
.
.
.
.
.
-
by
.
CHRIS
omoNNELL
·
Staff Writer
·
was one
of
his better,
if
not the
~st
,earn
he has ever roached.
'
The
_
Red Foxes were dea.lt an
Th~
men
'.
s cross countrytearri unfortunate blow when a relative
had
__ -
__
vis
_
_
i
_
on
__
s
•
of
cap
·
·
'
t
_
uring
·
·
the
_
of Peter Startz passed away,
.
whicli
made
him unable to attend
-
Northeast Conference Champi: the meet. This loss forMarist
ot1ships ~
_
a
;
Way to summarize
wa.s
.•
~ignificant considering
·
the
their season ofdontinating most
freshman has run extremely
of
their past meets:
·
•
.
·
_
-
:
·
_'
Unf~rtiinat~iy
;-
the Red I-oxes
str~ng
i11
-
his inaugural season
mishe4
in fo
,
urth place behind
for the Rt:<1 Fox~s.
.
_
•·
.•
.
omit-
St.
'.
Mar'y:s; Rider
,
and
.
.
.
~a
h~gh pon~t for
_
1?e ~•
onniouth
'
in
their finalseason J~nior
Mike
,
M~lfi
·
fimshed
,m
n
_
the NEC before.jumping into eighth place wh1c~ enabled
_him
·
e Metro Atlantic Athletic Con-
1?
grab
All League honors with a
ere11ce
:
-
;
·
.
;
''
'
'
timeof26:39.
'
'
.
lie.ad
~o~ch
·
Pete c;oUaizzo said
Melfi
·
sai
_
d his ~rso11a.l peif or-
e h~d high e"pectations for his
mance
.
at the
:
NEC felt excellent
ean
f
going into the NEC final.
and peculjar at the saine time.
/
~hvas
slightly disappointed in
/
~It
felt great to beata lot of run-
he outcome,
-
.
but for the most ners that
·
Lhave never beaten
art
l'm
'.
proµd of the guys,"
.
.
before,"Melfisaicf«Butjireally
11 •
· ·
"d
·
felt weird to pass and beat Ben
o aizzo sru .
.
.
· •
-
-
-
Afte
r:
all
;
Col)aizwcommented (Hefferon) because he has been
n
an
eariier _interview
,
that this
Please see
X-Counlry
on p.14 ..
;
:'
omen's
·
X-C
gets-
~
separated;
1nfshf ourth out of 10
at
NEC's
by
PHIL
WlllTE
.
Staff Writer
,
--
◊~
-
~ ch~liy, $tinny
'
Saturday,
the women's cross cou
_
ritfyteam
in the Northeast Conference
(NEC)
Championship'. The Red
oxes had a
,
disappointing out~
ng, ranking fourth out of the ten
s
that competed.
_ .
"We had a
·
very disappointing
eet,
we just didn't run as well
we expected,"
·
coach Philip
ellysaid.
Marist had a week off to prac-
Jice for this meet after their pre-
·
vious competition at Wagner
with
a
second place finish: With
this past victory Marist was very
confident irt themselves.
·
Then the
Red
Foxes
had
a
week
to practice for ihe
NEC
champi-
onship, which took place at
Mount Saint Mary's.
.
Kelly said
he hoped
his
~
would finish in second place due
to
the
talent and reputation
.
·
that
Mt.
St. Mary's program has.
However, he wanted Maristto
keep a close pace
with
Mt SL
Mary's. Kelly stressed one main
Please see
Women·x.c
onp.15 ...
49.6.1
49.6.2
49.6.3
49.6.4
49.6.5
49.6.6
49.6.7
49.6.8
49.6.9
49.6.10
49.6.11
49.6.12
49.6.13
49.6.14
49.6.15
49.6.16
- -------•·•
..
-
.
MIPQ-
pre4icti_OllS:
clo
_
se
to:- actual· :election·'results
by
Sn:PnANiE
MERCURIO
. &
TIM;MANSON
-During the.1994 gub_emato~·
rial elections inNewYork; MIEO
.
•.
_predicted
_
th~ distribution of' ·
vott;s alipostexact!y._
_
_- .. -_
- ·
The
~faristlnstituteJor Public
.
In.
the::final 'pqll, MWO: pr_e-
Opiriion iMIPO)maintaii1~ its
dieted Coumo would have 45;7
repii1:11ji)n ·by pr:ojecting
Bill
--p~rcent
·of
the v6tcrs•· backirig,
Clinton ,vould win the Tuesday
when in actuality, he had
45.1
- _ night presidential. election.
. percent
Mll'O predicted-that Clinton · :Midngoffsaidhewasco11fident
was fav~lrcd by
51
percent.while· this election's results would also ·
Dole was favored by
33.
percent.
be _close to the MIPO results.
Per91
was
backed by eightper-'
C<I _
think -Clinton looks very
· cent.
and
one percent preferred . strong; especially in New York,"
· other candidates.
·
he said.
-
.
.
. _
Cl
in inn actually _captured 49
Miringoff said pre-election poll-
percent of the vote, winning 31
ing gageswhere the electorate
states an,I 379 electoral votes,
is. -
Dok
100k
41_
percent of the
"The closer to election it be~
vote, wi1h 19 states
ana
159
elec-
comes, ~he less variation there
toraJ\ro1c,.whilethird-partycan-
is," he said. ''The polls giye a
Noven:iber 7.1996
didak' Ross Perot received
9
per-
snapshot of what they are mea-
,_
cent
of
1he
voie,
despite not win-
suring at a giv,en time. They pro~
_
_
PbocoaiunesyoCTI.DI Massie
ning any states.
_ .
. _ · _ 'vide
.
insight_and understanding
The Marist Institute for Public Opinion.(MIPO) predicted President Clinton
would capture 51
Politkal science professor.
Lee ·
to the elections."_
,
- . percent of the vote. In actuality, he won
49
percent. Pictured polling for
MIPO
from left
to
right
M. Miringpff~ director<>fthe in-
According _ ·tci
the
are John Sarare, Peter O'Keefe,
Lee
~lrlngoff, Barbara Carvalho, and
Mark
Gearan.
stitutc~ -.aid thatin the
20
years
Poughkeepsie Journal, the poll
MIPO -has been .polling, results - also revealed that .voters see
.
However, 52 percent feel Dole · ·would m~an that fewer tha.Q half such national teJe~ision and ra-
are gc!1<:i::1lly accu,rate. __ -__ -_- -•• _- __ , _ Clinton and.Dole on,opposite- _ can be trusted, while onl,:28 ~r-:-. . of the e_lig~ble.votersjruiy,~9!,e, ,: ',-:, gJo,'n~ogr~\as .ABC'.s World,
. "Jn_
l<'rm{
of
key,trenq~.
-
\'{~'"<; . ,;
en¢;:o_f.thcpoliti¢.atspectrum: ·
~ cent feel
they_ can
trust
Ciinton~ -- ·.
'){ccording
~
-~P9itco!l,d!,lc~e,d _,. Ne"".(~(?~gl'lt.
~>
Inside
Poli-
. never
h:~~'_t~·~@§:~t}t~.~t'=:.,L~,.of
those poU~dHSpereentleel
'
·-,;•MIPQ
als9predi¢t~cl:yoier~tul'n"''. ·.: by/ilie-yo.tecNe~s~~bcxic,e;
49
--ticst~d··~C'.s·_'f~ay -~n~New· ,• ..•..
·-
· .
. sul~~·:· h~7s~:9:
1
tSo-(ar, ~e have -•·:CHriiori is libcral;while63 pcrccnt
,
:-,;·out:.wm.
be
:1essthan,5
l,percerltf:.,_;percent:of,the,p9puliitjQri,~otecb- c:.·ffocKan1gJ}g
,
<>.tlJe!"8,,:<',-:::~ ·:
an
unhli-n'lish¢d·recoro." '''._
<"
feefDole is conservative.
_
. ·
-
-- : the Io~est since
t924:
This
.
-. :M,iPo·'poiish~vebee.n"'seen.o~>:
:,~7;-_;,,._':-'
:-:t{(/
:
_/
'
\/
Organizatioris-ru{t1-clubsta.tus difficriit'to· acbie\Te··
b); GVNA SLOMCINSKY
(PEOPLE) said drafting the by-
finding an advisor .
.
-
_s.'raffWrite_r_ ..
laws is along process.
. 'VJ'he advisor is
a
full-time fac-
. ,..
·
~•It
isvefytime consuming.
We
ulty member, but there have been
Stuiknt groups continue
to
have just started the process, but . exceptions. _W:e have had Resi-
striv~
l.
1
wards gaining.dub sta-
Ikriowkwill takesometime,"she· dentDirectors and members of
tus, dl.',pite what may,'seein to
said.
_ _
- - -
.
_ _. _ the ~yme Hous(as advisors,''.
be a hurcaucratic nightm~e. . .
Stallkamp said the time. it takes . Stallkamp said. '
. . . ·- . .
- Th~•
tin;t
step to becominga
to draft by:..laws varies between,
The group musthave
at
least
club
on
1.'ampusis meeting with. clubs.
· _ ·
·
· : ·
·
10
members
to
become
-a
club.
Bob Lynch,directorofactiviti~.
·
'
"S6me·peopfo have
a
grasp·on . Aner having-that,·the SGAexc.
Here,·i1~ws theStudentG(),.,em-c_
,
the
.
format,9'he said: ''S.ome -· ecutive board reviews the by:-
~ent:\s~oci~tionJSG.A) gllide:.~- pebplearen'twillingfo adjust to· laws.
_- _ _ -_
--
_
-_
.
_
..
lmes
tor
gettmg agroup~tart~. >tliemodelwehave;'' ·•
- -
:_: . The president Qfthe ~ll!lJ am;l a'
A
groui1
must then draft its club ,
··
::"After _d!afting the by.:laws. the
:
fe\i:'
'in:e!Db~rs:'do;~ pres~11tation
by-law~. . __
- .
group is then assig'nccftoone of for the SGA senate .
.
,.Later,, the
_Acc1,rd!ng to Todd Stal~kamp.
the.six dub couri~ils on campus.
s.enate votes ~ogran,t a'charter;
v1ce~pr~•~1dent ofcl~b affrurs. tile
· i'A~cording foBtallkamp; some
·
-_ The process seems long, but
by:..Im\·\arc profess1onally_done.
of the club councils are at their
some clubs receive fast club sta-
He mcl'NWi~ members of~e cap:_
i
. . . . . . : . -
_
. . .
ttis~
.
. .
. .
group
an,I
reviews each secuon . --~'All councils have caps; except
-•--·The Society for Professional
of th~
ln
-laws -.
_ - _. -
for'the honorary council.Some - Journalists (SPJ) rewrote its by-
"It':-.
.almost like a checklist,~•
are full, hke social service. but
laws three times. Other clubs
have
he
said.
-·•
.
.
. .
. .
others like co-curricular have . taken' more than six or seven
Ml!lbsa Ruot. sec~etary of slots· left," hesaid. ·
- tries· to get their by-laws ap-
Peopk Educating Other People
, Toe
club
is also responsible for ·proved.
in
a
l:li.irnin Environment
·
·
Thereisaclubrevieweveryse-
Do you feel
the variety
of courses offered
at
i\farist
is
providing you with a well-
rounded education?
Yes-269
No-116
Thi!
l
·ircle conducted
an
unscientific poll on
Oct:
28- Nov. 2.
Thre~ hundred
eighty-five students were asked this week's ques-
tion
Rt•,,,!
our education beat every Thursday (This issue, page
3)
mester where the SGA analyzes
each club to see what they have
· done.
Stallkamp said they check on
every ·club's progress·.
_
"We
look
at their paper work .
arid their discipline status.'.' he .
said.
"If
the
club
was
in
any.
trouble with the_ school, we re-
evaluate whether or not that club
should keep it's charter."
The SGA always has the op-
tion of revoking a club's charter
based on its record,
making room
for new groups searching for .
club status.
,:\
/'.'<
--
-
-~ti-F
;\:;:~r:-z\f :-
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said
°;
,_
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,,·p~
p~~j~
:
·
1sraef
platlllillg
tO
·
cibUbie se'ttfor
poPlliatiOrt:@-W,eSt'Baiiic
by
JACK
KATZNELL
-
.
ac~ords with Israel; which were-in-
·
gically, Israeii
.
opposition legislator
Associated Press Wrriter
.
tend~ to pave the way f9r
·
self-rule . Haim Ramon said
~e
plan ''would build
JERUSALEM (AP) _ Already
-
:for
some 2
million
~alestinians. ~e an?ther
_
~osni_ai~ !srael ... ,;
,
. ·:
>
hobbled by violence and rancor,
-
Is-
United ~tates and many ot~er ~~re1~n
_-
-
~e. idea
~~
to
,
:
~parat~ ~~rs
-
~d
_
raeli-Palestinianpeace
effo~
suffe~
-
_
_
.
__
countnes
·
_
also op~ose ~dd1t1cmal
_
_
~alestim~s,
_
'.iJ
_
ot _m~r:;ase the Jew~~h
another blow Mcirtday as Israeli offi~
set~ement construcUon._
.
.
,
-
~set~le~? ~<>pulattonr
: .
Ramon
.
s
;
~1d,
__
cials detailed plans to
.
nearly double
_
Smee 1994, Israel h~
withdrawn from
'There
_
will
be
,
D?
c~ance
t<?
_
c
,
o!1~nue
.
the nutnber
_
of Jewish settlers in the
most of the Gaza
_
Stnp and about one-
the peace process \v,hil
,
e we are trymg
-
ur.
·
t
-
Bank
-
-
-
•
quarter of the West Bank, and has
to change the situation in the West
"es
.
-
f Bank."
Settlement czar Ariel Sharon tin-
.
promised to pull troops from most o
-
-
.
veiled the plan_cluring a weekend tour
rest of the West Bank withit\ a year.
On Monday, Palestinian villagers pro-
of the territory; and his spokesman!
''The statements by (Israeli) officials
tested construction at Kiryat Sefer that
Raanan Gissinfelaborated on Monday.
concerning settlements ¥e
,
a call to
is part of an earlier plan.
_
The
_
plan calls for bui~ding two new
-
war/' Palestinian
_
legislator Haidar
-
About 60 demonstrators, niany of
Cities in the WesfBank that will ac-'
.
Abdel Shafiwarried Monday
.
them elderly men, walked toward two
coinmodat~ 100,000 more Jewish set-
Gissin said Monday that the new plan
-
bulldozers clearing land about a mile from
-
calls for creating two cities and even-
their village,
Kharbata, but were blocked
tiers.
.
.
.
.
-
-
.
·:
The propos~l,
-
the most ambitious to
tually merging them; cme would
be
near
by two
_
dozen Israeli soldiers
.
date by Sharon, wholed a large settle-
the Kiryat Sefer settlement just inside
"This is our land. They prevented us
ment const.:ruction drive in the early
the West Bank, and the second would
from plowing it, they
·
want to build on it
-
1990s; has not been approvedby Prime
.
incorporate five
-
small
_
settlements and they want us to remain silent," said
Minister Benjamin Netanyalm, who in
deeper inside the area. Some 10,000-
73-year-old Ismail Abu Ayash.
principle backs settlement expansion.
11,000 homes could be built around
Also Monday, newspapers reported
The construction could moUi
_
fy
KiryatSefer,
ancl
an
_
other 12,000 around
-
that Netanyahu
bas
asked Syria and
Iran
the five smaller settlements, he said.
to rein in Islamic militants he says are
Netanyahu's settlerconstituency, who
- -
-
-
are livid over Israeli plans
'
to pull
ThecurrentJ~wishse
_
ttlerpopulation
.
plotting attacks iri
'
Israel. Ne_tanyahu
.
.
in the West Bank is
_
,
145,000.
,
sent
the niessage
'
via the United States
troops from the lastmajor Israeli-oc-
-
-
cupied West Barik_'city,
,
Hebron. They
Palestinian land expert. Kh~der and Gennany, the reports saiq.
complain that he has doneHttle to help
Shkirat said that if built, the settlements
'
Isr
_
aeli
_
security forces have
_
been Ori
could weaken prospects for a Pales-
high alert since last month, responding
them.
·.
.
-
Buftbe prime ininister ~ay be reluc-
'tinian state because
,
''there
will be
no .- to what Netanyahu adviser David Bar"'
tant to support a plan that could b~dly
territorial continuity between the Pal--
man said Monday were "extremely spe-
undermine
_
his
_
efforts tp salvage estiniari. dties in
·
the West Bank."
cific" warnings
-
by
_
the -group Islamic
While Sharon toid
.
settlers Sunday
Jihad. Police
.
set up checkpoints Mon-
peacemaking with
-
th~ Palestinians
.
· ·
-
-
.
that the area
was
.
im
.
pqrtant
-
not only
day at the outskirts of Tel Aviv.
Palestinians view settlement expan~
sion as a violation
:
of 1993 autonomy
--
as part of biblicallsrael
.
~tit also strate-
·
·
·
Milosevic
.
's coalit:ion heading
(or
.
yictory in Yugoslav elections
-
by MISHA SAyic
In_
the repu6iic ~
r:'
Mo~tenegro,
-
sitioil politician
;
nearly won ciutrightas
.
:-
i\s
.
so~iated Press Writer
.
Serbia's only remaining partnerin Yu-
mayorofBelgrade. He faces a runoff
·
,;
,,.
_
_ -
·
-
· · ·
--
-
,
-
-
·
·
'
.
,,,
-,goslavia;therulingfonner.Comrnunist-,,electionNov.17.
_
_
.
_
>
_
·
>
-_
,
'
.
BELGRADE;.
Y~g~sla~ia
(AP)
,/
parfr
.
alsq wasjleadI~gjhe
}
>pposftion
\
.
'
-
'Pl~
Oi~c@.
)~
yels~
:
api
:
~Clt
pucirutbut
.
Serbian President
Siobodan
Milosevic
~
for the_ fei:le~al
·
p~liafueftt's) 38,seats.
·
:
~ giye~¢
·
op,i>Qsjtion
·
'a' politicalfooQiold
,
and ])is wife,
·
whci
.
have· do!llinated
·
Milosevic did not run himself, but he
it has lacked since Milosevic rose
Yugosla~ poHµc~Jor
·
the past decade
neededforetainhismajoiify inthifog-
}
through
.
the Communist ranks to take
and helped {OID!!nt
_
war in the Balkans,
islature
'
fo
,
iris
'.
u.re
;
he ca~
;
lio!
_
d
:
on
to
;
'controi}>f ~erbiain 1987 .
.
_
. _
_
-
h~ve
_
won parlianientary
·
e1ecti6ils
.
0
-
•
power next year
;
when his second term
·
·
.
',
:
Tiie
·
opposition also said jnany vot-
-
However,
prelirriinary
results showed
asSerbian president expires
.
-
ers in the
_
central Serbian town of"ll!is, a
-
Monday
,
that ·the
.
united
.
de#iocratic
_
'The constitution bars him from a third
Milosevic stronghold, had switched al-
oppo~iti011 did
-
_
dent l\1Ho~evi~'~
-
hold ienn,~ut
-
he can~ el~ted
,
Yug()~lav. legiance
>
Nis~ntiylias seen unprec-
on Iosal
·
posts, _with
.
the capital;
,
presideilf
:;
by the
·
J~d~ra!_assembly.
·
ed~nted
·
\Vor,ker unrest over unpaid or
Belgrade, exp~ted, \o
_
getjts first non~
~
-
Once there, he can
·•
get'the legislature ·
·.
tiny
-
_
state wa.ges and pensions, 50 per-
Communist may
_
or sinc~\\Torld
\Varll. _
to chllllge the constitutiopto expand
cent unemployment and 100 percent
While~~
oppq~itio,n c,omplained of the powers of that now'.'symbolic post inflation.
·
.
___
·
. _
-
_
_
•
,
frau
_
d,
-
the tJ,S.
,
E~b
-
~~Y
in
:
Belgrade
_
His
.
coalition
~
·
!riay
"fiilLsho~ of th_e
:
.
,
_
_
Milo~evic profited fromBalkan incH-
-
said they "did not see widespread ir-
-
two~thirds
majority
·
needed
_
for
·
such
-
nation to
.
support thci ruling
•
leader and
:
reguJarities'
~
except for"shortcomings
changes
:
But Miloseyic
:
~pokesman
.
:
Amin
aggressive
attacks
011
the opposi-
of voters' Usts, questionable security
.
Ivica Dacie
W<lS
~p~~.
f~~ec
-
~ti11g
aJ!
. :
~on i
_
n his state-run
media
. _
·
:
:
•
·
procedures ... and i;estrictions
_
on op-
"absolutely absolute majority."
.. ,
,
:
,
. _
_
--
-
_
-
·
-
·
_
oppo~ition leaders complained of if.;.
·
-
-
position party representatives in elec-
·
On Sunday, Montenegrins alsq voted
regularities
·
that they said swung the
tion commissions.~•- .
_
_
_- _ _
.
for their 71 ~searparlfarnent wh~r~ the
-
;
ile,ct_ion
,-
"'
,
the same charges they lev-
.
___
With over half the ballots counted ruling fonner Co1'l,munists had a com~
·
(?led in the
_
1990
and I
992
elections.
from Sunday's election for the fortablelead. Ball9ts~sg
:
~er.fc~t:ror
_
·
'
Jvplosevic
·
and the authorities reject
Yugoslav parliament, the alliance unit
-
.
municipal districts throughout Serbia
--•
such charges.
_
ing Milosevic's ruling Socialists with
·
and the sniall~rJl.1o
_
*iene~
'.< ,
•
.
_
,
..
_
·
-
,·
';['Ile str~ngth <>.fthe Radicals reflected
his
wife :rdirjana Markovic's neo-Com-
·
In
tho_se
·
~9n~ests,
-
~~
-_
demo_cratic
·
_
th_e nationali~i:n Milosevic w
_
hipped
·
up
·
.
monists
.
had
-
48
percent of the vote.
-
coalition fared
better
than Milosevic's
·
·
iri
the-1980s to preserve power,
trigger-
.
The four-party
-
opposition coalition
Socialists arid
his
_
wife
?
s Maoost
'
party;
:
·
big
the
:
~ars in Croatia and Bosnia. He
Zajedno had
_
24
.
percent, the
_
extreme
apparently be_cause the two parties~
.
mad~ peace last year and_ ditched
nationalistRadicalPartyasurprisingly
separat~ly .
.
-..
.
,
_
. ,
,"
:
:
.
:.1
,
.
.
_
..
·
_
·
nationaJism, returning
to
his Commu-
strong 19 percent.
Zoran Djindjic,
a:
prominent oppo-
nist roots.
__
·
:
.
The
'
Weekend Weather
:-
Mil
_
·
dwitha
chan~of showers.
-
~
.
l:,ow
_
s around 40.
Highs
aroQnd 60. •
:
Fri
~
~~=
-
,'.
:
: . .
.
.
' ·
Turning colder
with
.
rain
likely. Lows 35
to
45. Highs
in
the
50s.
1
.
.
Saturday; Chance of snow showers.
~ e
~ effect snows possible west Lows
~
in
the 30s. Highs 40
to 45.
Sunday:
Chance of snow showers. Lows 25
to 35. Highs 35 to 45.
Source: Associated
Press
.
!
I
I
THE
CiR_CLE,November7,
1996 ·
3
· Profe~sor r~creates Russia for students
another level,'' said H~y. ~'He relates it
to your life and to his own."
Next semester, Norkeliunas is teach-
, Th~ cin:ums~~~ of war are not sometlli~g
ing ·a coursf erilitled, 'Dostoevsky' .
. ;fyi3rlst,
~tudents .nonnally have to deal with,
The course .focuses on the Russian
but.
for
9ne Marist professor; the ·tragedies
author's works: s·uch
as
Crime
and Pun- .
of.war consumed every day of his"childhooct
ishmem; Theldiot, The Possessed,
and
by
Kw
F'tYNN
Staff.Writer·
Casimir Norkeliunas, .associate professor ..
The BrothersKaramm:.ov;
of Gem1an and Russian, and a survivor of
According to• Norkeliunas,
World_-war.
II;
brings a sobering, yet realis-
Dostoevsky is a major psychological
tic, perspective to.his classroom.
.
novelist in Western Literature because
WhcnNorkeliunas came to America at the
he _
_
deals with many problems.
age of l ~- he had experienced more than most
"Postoevsky is a writer of great moral
people experience in a lifetime. -
stature and he examines morals, ethics
Lithuanian by birth, Norkeliunas said he . and values)hrough examples in our
was visibly a\vare of war at the age of three. · westemcivilization," said Norkeliunas.
At the age seven, he spent half a year ata "This is a
course I
think a lot of
juniors
forced lahorcamp.
·
and seniors would find valuable be-
"There are lots of incidents that wiJlnever.. cause he deals with problems ofmoral-
_beerascd frommymind,"saidNorkeliunas.
ity andvalue."
.
"The
h:irsh
circumstances of surviving World
Harty·said when he c811_1e to college,
War 11.
I
hring to my own children and to my
he did not expect a teacher like
studc111:;."
Norkeliimas.
While reaching at Marist, Norkeliunas com-·
"He cares a lot about us, and he sees
muted
ll l
New York University to obtain his
us all as extraordinary," Harty said, "The
doctora1c. He is fluent in six languages, in-:
classroom is set up as a circle, as if not
cludin!! Russian, Geiman, Lithuanian, Ukrai-
any one person should be further from
nian. and English,
learning than another."
·
He teaches what he loves; literature,
Jan- ·
In all of his classes, students prepare
guage. and history. He said the tries to di-
a luncheon or dinner where the menu is
rect hi-; life towards being useful, produc-
entirely Russian.
tive, and a ccmtributor by relating the hell he
Paul Diala, who is also in Classics of
saw in 1hc war to what he teaches.
. Western Literature, said Norkeliunas in-
''Wlwn
I
speak to
my
students, I speak
vited his class to his house and he
, with :unhority," said Norkeliunas. "Life is
cooked a meal for them,
serious. Education is a serious matter, not
"We got together to find out more
just a privilege. In America, we all have
about him and to get to know each
choices and options. People take for granted
other," said Diala. "He wanted to get us
that options will always
be
there."
to taste something from his home."
Fr~shman Jason Harty enrolled in
Since 1969,Norkeliunas has been tak-
Norkeliunas' Classics of Western Literature
ing students to the Soviet Union. He
course this semes1:er, and he said the class is
said this is a benefit to the students
different from any other he has taken.
because ithelps them realize how spe-
"Hc •i:lls us infonnation, but brings
it
to
cial America is.
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Sending
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... Plus school supplies, _decals, and 111ore! ! !
STORE HOURS
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY:.
9 AM TO 5 PM
SATURDAY:
10 AM TO 4 PM
*MARIST MONEY*
VISA -
MASTERCARD - AMERICAN EXPRESS - DISCOVER
ACCEPTED HERE
-
Cilek: Phoeo/Susan
Goulet
Eliot Clauss, president of the US-China Chamber of Commerce, spoke at the
symposium entitled, "Doing business with China" last Wednesday.
Symposium focuses on international business
by
TIM
MANSON
Staff
Writer
Eliot Clauss, president of the US- China
Chamber of Commerce, headed
a
panel
of.China experts in a symposium entitled
"Doing Business in China" last Wednes-
day.
Clauss, who is a partner in the interna-
tional finn of Peltz
&
Walker in New York
City, stressed the legal importance of
dealing with China in tenns of the impor-
tance of a good legal contract.
. "Try to get as detailed a contract
as
you can," said Clauss in his speech. "It's
not a matter of the American way or the
Chinese way, but a matter of international
business."
· Clauss said that in order to understand
Chinese business, Americans also have
·10
iinaerstand 'their culture.
_
. "The
legal
system in Chiria is a work
in
progre·ss," said Clauss. '"They have the
l:!asic components, but we haven't fig-
ured out how they all work there yet."
Other speakers included Peter Boland,
the Senior Vice President for Marine Mid-
land bank, who spoke about the
convertability of_ western. currency in
China and Robert Sun, the Chainnan of
Sun International Group, who talked
. about the importance of personal con-
nections in China.
The symposium, which was organized
to help businesses better deal with the Chi-
nese market,
was
offered in conjunction
with the Southern Dutchess Chamber of
Commerce and its Windows on Wuhan
trade initiative.
. According to Tony O'Brien, director of
Corporate and Professional Education and
organizer of the event, the Windows on
Wuhan Program was designed to help lo-
cal companies get started in <;hjnese busi-
ness.
·
"Its primary purpose is to promote and
facilitate trade and commerce between the
United States and China, but more spe-
cifically, between the Hudson Valley and
the Wuhan region of China," said O'Brien.
O'Brien also stressed the significance
of the question and answer period follow-
ing the speakers
as
being
as
important
as
the
speeches themselves.
"It was precisely what we wanted it to
be," said O'Brien.
"Really an exchange
not only between the audience and
the
panelists,
but also among the audience
so
the people with varying expertise either in
other countries or in China were helping
each other out."
'
O'Brien said he thought the program
was excellent overall, and it was one of
the best programs to come to Marist.
"I thought we had a number of heavy
hitters there, and a good range fo speak-
ers with high expertise and reputation,"
said O'Brien.
·
ATTENTION - SENIORS
Requests for nominations for
Who's Who Among
Students inAmericafJ Universfties and Colleges
have been sent to all faculty, staff and presidents
of clubs and organizations.
If you feel you should be nominated, please speak
:,.· to a faculty member, administrator or club
. ·president and request t_hat-!!:ey _n.o_minate you.
.All nominations must be returned by Friday,.8 November.
4
Racism
continues·to
:
be
pre~sing ~~sµe
ori
:
9atp.pus
.
.
.
.
..
•
.
,,
~
.
·.
_,
.
.'
..
'
.
·
.
.
'
hyMICHAll.Goor
.
one. He said
·
collcge shoulc.l be
.
Managing"Editor
an ppportunity
.otP
.
~X:pand
_
.
people's mind-sets;
.
A recent incident involving the
.
,
°College is supposed to be a
of racialremarks_has prompted
place where you learn new
·
discu!.~iuns of the extent of rac- · things, not reinforce old stereo-
ism at Marist.
.
types that are not true," Owens
Senior Chandler Owens, presF
.
sru~.
..
.
·
dent
of
the Black Student Union
·
_J\ncither pro~lem is promoting
.
(BSU). said racism is a problem
more diversity. Lewis said that
on cam·pus
·
because it receives
although there are African-
little ancnti~n.
-
.
-
.
·
•.
·_ .
American faculty and administra
-
_"Jt's a
big problem because
tors; they are part of affirmative
some 1~ople don't recognize and · action I?rograms.
think it·:)
a
problem, so it may be
·
.
"Most of the administrators of
uncon,
.
dous andthey don't
African-American descentare
know thl·y' re doing it," he said.
employees of federally spon-
•
Nadine Lewis, HEOP counse-
sored programs," she
.
said.
lor and tuition coordinator, also
·
·.
Lewis
·
said she is not com'-
said
radsm at Marist may be hid-
pletely satisfied
·
with Marist's
·
den.
·
policy toward racism.
·
"I th• know that it exists be-
·
"l don't see any clear-cut
cause th~re's a diverse popula-
policy this campus has taken re-
.
tion
or1
our campus," she
.
said.
garding the issue of racism," she
"To
S:J)
i1 exists is often difficult
said .
.
becau:'-t' it's subtle
·
and
camou-
Marist does have an official
flaged.""
.··
procedure for handling racial in-
.
Lewis :'-aid she has experienced
cidents, though. According to
racism hi:re.
Cox, the official procedure is that
"Then
.
' have been a fewinci-
first a complaint is made or an
dents wh~re students have rrtade
.
incident report is filled out, then
racist remarks under their breath
the office of safety and security
as I pas:-. them in the hallway,"
conducts an investigation and
she said
.
·
'
·
.
•·
.
makes a recommendation. Then
Gerard Cox, vice presid
6
rit ~d
-
:
:
the appropriate administrator de~
dean 11f~tudent affairs, said rac;.
tennines the sanctions
.
ism is
a
problem on c~pus, but
The punishments for racial in-
it is har<l to say how severe the
cidents depend on the severity
problem is.
:
·
·
of. the incident and the nature of
.. !e's ri problem if it is a problem
a
student's prior record. Cox said
for one 1~rson," he said.
"Is
it
each individual case is different
·
.
. _
all-pervasive?
·
r
don't
tltlrik
so.
and has to be handled separately
.
Does
i
l
constitute what the
"You really need the who, what,
courts
-i: ...
nu\d
cal\ a hostile envi;.
.
:
Where,
.
why and when
-
to know
ronmcn1·? l think not."
.
1
--·
.
"_
what
·
ihe
··
sa
ti
hibn wm
·
be,
~
' he
Co
.
\
~aid the student is pro-
said.
.
·
·
· ·
..
.
.
.
·
_
.
tected a~ainst discriminatioh by
.
·
As president of BSU, nwens
the gui
,
ll'lines in the Marist Col'-
·
·.
s,aid he has been
.
speaking with
lege
S11nll!nt
Handbook
/
lhe other ethnic clubs, such as
"111t:"
,-1udent is entitled
to
free-
El
-
Arco Iris Latino and the Ital-
·
dam
fr,
,in any fcinn of discrirni-
iaQ
"
American Society.
.
nation or harassment re~ulting
.
_
He said he has also been work-
from prejudice, racism, sexism or
irig
'
·
with student government,
anti-Semitism,"hesaid.
•·
· ·
induding Todd StaUkcinp, vice
Cox alst
I
said people whomake
president for club affairs, and
racist rl
'
marks show how unedu-
S~~derit Body Preside
_
nt Patrick
cated
•
1 hey lµ"e.
.
Mara, to organize a forum for all
·
.. When someone appears to be
the clubs on campus
·
to get to-
racist. 1h~y're publicizing their
gether and discuss issues, such
own ig11,1rance," he said.
.
.
as racism, with-administrators .
.
Gre~ ~loses, assistant profes-.__
Owens said although some stu-
sor of philosophy
·
and religious
.
dents may stay away because
bf
studic,-
.
who is the adviser to the
·
·
the name of the club, he encour-
Blad. S111dent Union, said he
;
ages students ofalFraces to
agreed that education was one
come out and attend BSU meet-
ofthe predominant factors in the
ings.
.
growth ,
if
racism. He said racism
·
"You don't have to be African-
on carnpus is only reflective of American to come to Black Stu-
things gning on in the l
_
arger
dent Union," he said
;
world
.
Owens said he would like it if
"I th
i
nk racism is a pervasive
students just came out to one
force
ul
.-\merican society," he
m~tingtoseeiftheyliketheclub.
said. ·
·
1 expect that the proble?m
When he hears students com-
of ra.:i,-m on
Marist campus
plain why there is not a club for
would he reflective of where
wliite students, Owens said be-
we're
;11
in America at this time."
cause whites make up the vast
According to Moses, one prob-
majority of the campus.
·
lem b
1
hc
issue of racism is not
"When we walk into
·
a
class
-
·
promi11.:ntly featured in the cur-
room, that's like a white students'
riculm11
union," he said.
·
"I ,
1flt:>n
ask my students in
Owens also said he thinks stu-
class till! following question:
dents tend to congregate around
Out of your past 16 years of people ofJhe same race~
·
schoolmii. how much
.
time has
"I think it's more comfortable
been lle\oted to a systematic
to hang out with people that are
study of racism?," he said. "And 'like you, but you have to make a
the an:-""cr is usually none at all,
conscious effort," he said.
so we have not yet begun to use
Freshman Derrick Johnson said
educatitm as a method for over-
.
he thinks students do
·
a goodjob
cominl! racism."
of interacting with each other on
Some people
think
there should
_
campus.
be
a couf!,,C on multiculrural srud-
"Being a small amount of
mi-
ies oft~rcJ
·
at Marist Owens is
nority people, I think the people
currc1111
y
working a proposal for
mix very well," he said.
~-f:
•··,
-
.
·,
.\
·
;~;
~;\
)
.
Xft}~\i
~
1
:)
tt
"'
·
.
...
.
,
.
.
,
...
.
·
Survey
.
s~ows women helped propel Clinton
to
victory
,
byCoNNIECAss
As~ociated Press writer
WASHINGTON
(AP)
-
A
strong
'
economy and support
from w<Jmen swept President
Clinton to a second term as
voters put aside the character
questions Bob Dole had
hoped would enrage them
.
·
Clinton benefited from an
even larger gender gaplhan in
1992, according to exit poll re~
. -
suits: Fifty-four percent of
women voted for him, while
men split their votes about
evenly between Dole and
Clinton.
Arnong women who
.
could
be called
c'
'soccer
-
.
inoms"
,~ ·
tne
-
·
'
'
.
.
--
. . .
.
·-
demographic buzz word of 1996
tions about their choice. Dole
for married,
j
uburban mothers -
voters were the most tom, with
Clinton did not show as strongly
.
56
percen~ expressing
·
reserva-
·
but still beatDole49-4l. Their
tions;
.
and Clinton's the least
husbands
.
preferred Dole by
·
a
with 50 percent.
•
wider maigill, 56-34.
·
'
'I'm not interested
in
sleaze/
"lvoiedforClintc:m.Ijustthink
-
said Hugh Smith,
·
a mine in-
he
.
speaks more to the working
.
Spector in Raccoon Creek, Ky.,
people than the Republicans do,"
.
who voted forClinton.
·
"l'm in-
said Kathy Nettler, a working
terested in what the president
mother from the suburbs of Spo-
of the United
.
States is going
kane, Wash.
.
to
_
doformeandmychildren."
Voters surveyed as they left the
.
Blacks, traditionally favor-
polls questioned Clinton'shon-
.
ittg De111ocrats, supported
esty,
_
but they .were uncertain
Cli11tcin overwhelmingly, ancl
about
.
each
.
of the
fop
presiden-
the
.
presidt!nt
.
received even
tial contenders, including
~
Ross
s
_
tronger s1Jpport from Hispan
:..
Perot
·
·
·
ics than he did in 1992, getting
·
.
_
A.tleasthalfofeachcandidaws
..
.
.
70 percent of their
..
\
•6ter
s'
said
'
they
'
hild
}
es~1\•a
~
.
.
v
.
otes:
•
~
'
'·<"
:
':'
:'-
?'
·
:,
,;
,
,,
..
,
-•
Praxis
projecf
liims
tci puil.~
i
empathefic
~
briclges
·
•
Ral?ul, assistant professor ofie-
.
ply
.
pu~;
.
heads,
.
hearts,
·.
and
Hgi9tis si:udies;
,
are thetwo
·
driv
<
hands
,!'
said;Luske.
.
.
·
.
by
MICHELLE BRAMICH
'
·
Staff Writer
.
.
.
ing forces b~hind this forum.
.
This public praxis forum will
·
:Sotti
work
·
together
·
to p
_
rorilote
-
infonn the students
-
and commu-
The sociology department
will
th~ pn1.xis by getting many slli-
.
.
nity members ~ow andwhy they
host a forum entitled,
!
'A Marist d~nts involved
in
the community
should become involved.
Praxis Project: A Forurri on. pr9jects.
.
_
.
.
.. ··
.
Some projects include Habitat
Projects for the Public Good" on
"The spirit of praxis is to be
.·
for Humanity, which builds hous-
Wednesday, Nov. Bat 5:00 p.m
alongside those experiencing
ing
:
ror low~income families, the
in thePerformingArtsRoom346.
hardship and pain, and together Beulah Baptist Church soup
The forum will be a discussion
move towards healing and hope,"
·
·
kitchen
:
which
·
serves meals on
on the spirit of praxis and the
said Peter.,Raoul.
.
..__
.
.
.
.
.
.
Saturdays, and the Ballad and
importance
it playsjn the com-
·
Accor.d!ng
·
tp
Luske' and Peter-
Bard ~oject, which stages plays
munity.
Raoul, working in soup kitchf!ns;
·-
..
•
an
.
.d
· _
wHtin
.
·
g
poe
·
tty
··· ·.
for children
A praxisis the creative combi-
da
t
h
1
h 1
·
· d
·
· · ·
·
na
_
tion of p
·
'
eop
·
le's p
.
erson
_
al life
.·
Y
car~ cen ers, ome ess s e -
.
m
.
owntown
.
Poughkeepsie.
.
·
·
ters,
-
prisons
·
or a
.
battered
T~o ~orilmunity members,
experiences; a critical reflection
wo
• h It ·
·
·
·
·
·
0o
·
·
·
a
·
fi
·
.
men. s
s
e er 1.s an expenence
.
·
.
_
·
_
n~ rown, ounder and keeper
on the nature of thcise
•
experi-
thatw~ll ?enefit the comµiunity
.
of Beulah Baptist Church soup
erices and action in the commu-
.
by bm}dtng a compassion for
.
•·
kitchen for 13 years, arid Linda
nity°for a positive social change.
humanity.
.
.
Sirilincms, directorof theComrilu'-
Faculty, students and commu-
"We are essentially building
.
.
nity
·
Day
'
care Center in
.
nity inembers will voice their
empathetic !>ridges in
•
order to
Poughkeepsie,
will
be honored
at
op~nions and share their experi-
start to bu,i~4
.
a ne"". world,''said
this
_
·
forum
-
for "surp
··
assing se
.
r-
~s e.
.
.
.
..
. .•
.
·
.
.. ···
vice to Mari st College and the
ences.
·.-
·
L k
·
Bruce Luske, assistant prof es-
'Knowledge; love,
•
and action
community."
·
sor of sociology, and Mar Peter-
is what it i
_
s all about; or more sun.:
·
.
Saint
Francis provides tesQurses through on-line site
.
·
~
--
~
-
-
.
' , ,
.
.
.
.
by
,
BEN AGOES
·
Staff Writer
Saint Francis Hospital
-
now of-
.
fers its resources to the world, a
·
·
tremendous leap for the Catha.lie
hospital founded in 1913 by a
·
small group·ofFranciscan sisters.
Saint Francis posted its home
page on the World Wide Web on
Oct 14, declaring itself the "First
hospital in Dut
_
chess County
with a web site."
The
.
site's simple design, domi-
nated by a baby blue and pink
.
background, was intentional said
Victoria Odescalchi, director ·or
corporate communications for
Saint Francis Hospital.
Internet surfers are invited to
.
''When
·
home pages have too
.
read about the hospital's plastic
many
.
'bells
.
and
·
·
whistles'
.·
the
surgery, radiology, orthopedics,
average computer user may get
and meritll health di;parl:J:nents,
a little frustrated waiti~g ... ,'' she
among
'
others.
.
,
. .
.
·
said
:
"Weminimizepict~ and
.
·
:
:
A
sleep lab link details differ-
maximize infonnatiori in order to
·
·
ent sleep disorders
~
problems as-
provide access for everyone."
·
·
sociated with sleep depravation,
The home page was developed
and how to schedule appoint-
by theinternet
·
access company,
ments.
Comlynx, and is still under con~
· Dutchess Health 2000, a U>m-
struction. Currently there is orily
munity coalition fonned in 1994
a small list oflinks to nearby hos-
to address local health concerns,
pitals and no list of staff physi-
is also profiled.
cians ..
There are useful
:.
and romplete
hypertext links tci some valuable
infonnation, however.
The site can
be
accessed
at
http://www.saint-francis-
hospital.com
·
l
Halloween
is. notjtist
.
J
or
.
~ttle kids
~in.-iyni<;Jfe
·
hJ
A~IANDA BRADLEY
.
theirpareritswere lcd
~
~n
''
hg~ided
:
Staff Writer
tou(Jpr9ughout the residence
.·
.
halls, The
to
·
u.- bega~
near
..
the
~ .
.
to\Vnhouses
·
and
-
ended in
.
ThcsiuJents at Marist
.
did not
Sheahan Hall where
'
students had
.
misslhl'l·hancetocelebrateHal-
set
'
up
a:
haunt~d house
,
in the
lo~e~~ rhis year. On
.
Campus
basement louhge.
.
.
.
act1v
1
11cs
sponsored by various
At the conclusion of the trick
du?~·
11
f~~red numerous oppor-
or treat tour, a·reception\vas held
tuntltt'~ lnr students to partici-
·
in the Cabaret.
pate in
I
he festivities of Hallow-
·
.
The number of student ~oiun-
een.
.
teers was high, and the outcome
.
On Tuesday, Oct. 29, the class
of thisyear'sevent was said to
of 200Ci hl'ld
a
Halloween social
have been more successful than
in the C1baret. The cost was $2,
last year's by Sheahan RSC Presi-
for a night of dancing and so-
dent, Robert Bammann.
ciali;,i ng. and WMCR provided a
To some students, the night w;is
·
DJ. Pina and ~oda were served,
not as suc~essful as anticipated.
and pri?l'S were awarded for the
"We got excited and decorated
best ~·o,;iumes.
.
•for the children, but we were dis-
The Halloween social was the
appointed when only a few chil-
first th:11 can be recalled to have
dren came,'.' said Leo Hall resi-
taken pla~·e according to fresh-
dent Susan La Verda.
man ,,i,'.c president Jennifer
·
Sodexho food services offered
Fenis. The lack of student sup-
numerous prizes for students
port n:s11lted in a disappointing
who participated in their cos-
eveninp. hut it will notdiscour-
tume contest during dinner on
{ABOVE) Freshmen
age thl· , ,fftcers from organizing
Halloween. Six students
.
were
other "i..·ial events for the class.
awarded prizes for their cos-
11ll'
r,~sident student council
tumes. ~anneh Kalyoussef,
organi:i:d a campus wide, dorm
Aimee Drayer, and Raven Alcf
Kate Tamas and Liz
Carrubba hang out in
to dorm. 1rick or treating for the
were given corn poppers,
thei'r
Halloween cos-
children of the Poughkeepsie
Stephen Klos won a jacket, and
area. This event was open to a1l
Jessica Bachman was presented
tumes~
·
studenh on campus. The sue-
v.rith a T-shirt.
cess of 1hc project demonstrated
The Cabaret sponsored a Hal-
that
i11:my
took the opportunity
loween raffle, and prizes were
to iml·i·:1.:-t with children in the
given away to five
·
students. A
area.
can of popcorn was awarded to
~ud.:rs of ~andy were solq to
Kevin Boyer, and Stephanie Bent
res1dcn1, dunng the weekfor a
and Jeanette Deskiewicz won
(RIGHT)
i
~ollar
r,
,r the
trick
orire;i~ers_.
c
.
an·dx buckets. Emily
,
Cruz and
G.
·
·
Carolyn
!
ApptJ
1
:>:ima1ely200bags~fcandy
::-
Ian
.
Ruiita
..
were presented
·
with
_onz~lez
;
:..helps
_
out in
were p11r,·hased by students.
·
·
leather accessories.
her cat woman
outfit
at
the
Sheahan
Hall
.
'
Children
.
·
rrom
.
the
.
.
.
Whatever "tickles your fancy,"
PougM.,•,)psie area
were
incited
Marist students were
.
offered
on cmr.p11S for a trick or treating
..
numerous activities to participate
experi,'nce. The children and
in on Halloween.
Haunted
House.
November?, 1996
Career Quest: Career Tests
Jonathan Karl, author and journalist for the Cable News
Network (CNN), delivered a speech entitled, "Leave it to
Be&vis:
Election '96 and Generation X" yesterday in the
·
Cabaret.
by
AMIE LEMIRE
A &E editor
_The other day, I was talking to-
an old friend of mine who just
picked up a Communication ma-
jor just last semester. This friend
is a senior and, miraculously.will
complete his Communication re-
quirements by the summer of
1997. I asked my friend, "What
.
made you decide to change your
major, especially so late in your
college career?"
The answer: "I woke up and
realized that I was stuck in a field
that I didn't wantto be in any-
more. Instead of coming to this
conclusion 10 years into a job that
I hate, I decided that I can change
my major, even this late in the
game, and work on a career that
I'm truly interested in."
·
The point of the story is that it
wasn't too late for my friend.
However, he could have come to
this decision a lot earlier
if
only
he'd taken advantage of the Ca-
reer Services' "Career Tests."
(Oh, you knew that the Career
Service Office would be in this
articJe somewhere!)
But seriously, there are two on-
line career tests at the Office,
designed specifically to help stu-
dents figure out what they are
interested in., The Strong Inter-
-
est Inventory Test helps to iden-
tify general areas of interest and
activities and occupations that
you might be interested in.
There are six types of occupa-
tional themes-Realistic, Inves-
tigative, Conventional, Artistic,
Enterprising, and Social. While
some people may fall into more
than one category, everyone fits
into at least one.
I took this test, and
it
mapped
out my personality and interests
pretty accurately. While it
pointed out that I fell under the
Artistic category-which I al-
ready knew-it pointed out that
my second strongest category
was Social, an aspect which I
never really considered myself as
before
.
Very interesting.
The Meyers-Briggs
Type
Indi-
cator is a test that helps to figure
out what type of person you are.
The test has four different scales
to determine your personality,
based on certain qualities. This
test is more of a personality indi-
cator than an occupation test, but
in detennining your personality,
you can better decide what kind
of career you would fit into.
s
For example, if you are an Ex-
traverted individual who prefers
spontaneity over logic and fact,
then a cubicle/ desk job would
not be suited for you. On the
other hand, if you are an Intro-
verted person, who would rather
work with facts and figures, you
wouldn't be right in a social
worker's job, dealing with people
everyday. Do you get the point
here?
Th~se tests can be gold mines
for some people, particularly
thQse who are having trouble
deciding on a career or major.
-
While the results of the tests
shouldn't surprise you, (mean-
ing, you should have some kind
of inkling towards what kind of
personality you have) they
might open up your eyes to an
interest or career you never pre-
viously saw yourself in. Besides,
it's kind of neat to see what per-
sonality quirks you have, what
makes you different from every-
body else.
So, come down and
try
these
tests out. It's good to have some
direction in life, and the Strong
and Meyers-Briggs can help you
get on the right track. So, get
going!
6·
Milton Berle: The world remembers
a pi°one~r (As if we had: a choice)
. by
Flwml
Moo~-
AP relevision
w1:fter
nients," Downs •said. "Milton·
Berle was my donor.''.
.. ·
.
Then- veteran comic
Joey'
.
NEW YORK (AP) - Milton
Adams weighed in.
.
. ·
BerlefacesaroomfuUofpeople
"There's only··one Milton
in tuxes and gowns. He thanks
Berlet he·declare_d. "I -found·
them for
coming and for bestow- _ that out· by looking in the tele-,
ing on him this, his zillionth
phone directory.'' .
. ..
.
honor;
·
But dust from ancient jokes
Then he recalls that he was·
like
that had no time to settle.
in this very Manhattan banquet · There was too much to unearth
room a
year ago.
from Bede's long career.
"But not to entertain," he
He played
an
infant in silent
says, teeth bared in his rabbity
films
and modeled as the Buster
grin. "It was for a seminar. A · BrownShoeskid;Heheadlined
seminar on premature· ejacula-
in nightclubs, made
a
few
films
tion. I
and had several radio series.
ieftearly._"
B ut the real reason Jor this
At age 88, Milton Berle just Emmy gala, the real reason for
won't quit
In
his astringent, ·Berle's unshakeable status as a
blaring voice, he goes on to re-
legend· and a pioneer, came
coum an exchange between
down to a pivotal phase of his
"two guys
hamsmanship that began long
over 90." one of whom is re-
ago,
when Harry Truman was.
cently remarried. No, the man
president, but which barely
admits, his bride is hardly a
lasted
into
Dwight
looker, she can't cook and she's
Eisenhower's second term.
none too great in the bedroom.
These days, "Mad About
"So why did you
marry
her?"
You'' and "Something So Right''
"Because she drives at
occupyNBC's8-to-9-p.m. Tues-
night!"
·
day slot, just as lots of shows
With some 20 minutes of have lighted there in seasons
such gags and shtick did Berle
past.
return
But no one has outright
the(avor,astheNewYorkchap-
owned that TV hour, or any
teroft.he National Academy of other, like Berle, who on Sept.
TelevisionArtsandSciencesre-
21, 1948, became host of the
cently gave
"Mr.
Television" its
'7exaco Star Theater.'' And an
first Lifetime Achievement
instant sensation.
Award.
Berle brought with him the
Attendees, each of whom
boisterous, anything-for-a-
had paid several hundred dol-
laugh tradition his vaudeville
Jars
lo pay homage, heard Berle
years had taught him. Then, he
lionized by New York Mayor
delivered it to the public en
R~dy
Giuliani, former "Golden
masse, as if by magic, on their
Gu\
0
Rea Arthur, even-older-
.
television screens. Maybe
than-Berle funnyman Henny .,.vaudeville was dead, but
Youngman and who-knew..:he-
''vaudeo" was born.
was-li.mny ·
Hugh
Downs, who
Successful?
Early
on, about
made
.
three-quarters of all TVs were
special mention of Berle's gen-
tuned to Uncle Miltie on Tues-.
ero~it
y. .
.
.
day nights. By comparison; last
Earlier this year, I had sur-. week's top-rated series, "E.R.,"
gery for double-knee replace.;
won about 16 percent.
;f6e~~"
::u3~:,,11df
>f
ta\)l,•;-poq
f;(·:In
ah
lpepp,·r.
"Y,,itht
ill
~{\;Usi1ig
j:,IO\\ _-.; Ill
tare,:,>i,k
:;{•Remn
>:_.~lil·
•
:po\\
,·r
<hi
spo1111sal
'on
h1d1
fi
<tenlc; aft
-Chel·'-i1'-0
4._-:·:--
.
.
:mar~!aiine
, after ,•c<TS
•
.
.-
..
:,
.
THE CIRCLE,
November 7, 1996 ·
RA-Profile
of
the.week: Patrick
Mara
-~-.'
,
: .. . ,b.)'.:'JOSIEjNALDO ·
. . Staff
Writer . . ..
•
·
.
· '. Semi
'mightsay
tha~
P~tri*
Mara has a full schedule this y~. :
Last
year; Mara became a resi-
- .dent assistant for Sheahan Halt ..
· ·,This
semester, Marais
taking
six~i- ..
teen· credits. He has a double
. major in. Environmental Science
and Political Science. This year
he is not only an RA for the North
End, but he also presides over
the Marist's Student Govern-
ment ·Association. Mara has a
little pocket organizer that he ·
keeps at hand and is lost with-
out it.
· ···
. With planning . and foresight,
Mara landed
an
intern last sum-
mer instead of trying to fit it in
with his studies
this
year.: He in.,.
terned in Washington D.C. for
the United States Senate Com-
. mittee on· the Environment. and
Public. Work .. He worked.under .
the chairman of the committee,
Senator John HChafee. Of the
experience, Mara said it was very
· rewarding and was happy "to
give something back to lily coun-
try."
Mara is adept at handling dif-
Patrick Mara, student body president, Is also a resident
assistant on the North End.
ferent concerns simultaneously.
freshman· with a n~w environ-
use as soon· as possible. Mara
He has never found himself in a
ment and a new system. Upper-
plans a program· with Brother
situation in which he would have
classman don't rely on their
RA's -·
Michael called
Chirstmas
Stories.
to chose one activity in impor-
the same way. They have estab-
This event will allow students
to
tance than another. But, he says
lished themselves on campus and . share their favorite ancetedotes
that if there ever ·was an emer-
have different concerns and wor-
about the winter holidays. ·
Mara
gency problem with his area, that
ries.
is
busy
·creating new programs
particular emergency would take
Mara has offered several pro-_. that will take place during tbe
the priority.
grams to his residents. One was
course of the
year;
· When asked why he wanted to
a social program, which was in
Matthew Dombrowski,
secre-
be a resident assistant, Mara
conjunction with the class of tary of the class of 1997 and
says, "I wanted to have a posi-
1997. It:wasabarbequeheldout-
Mara's ·roommate was asked
tive impact on the incomingstu:-
side the old townhouses ..
J\n-
what
it
was
like
to.live with.an
dents.''
.
6therprogramM3faheldwasan
RA.
Dombrowskirepliedhuinor-
Mara finds that there are
dif- .
informational program concern:.
ously, ~•m ~ure
thatliying
.w.i~-
ferences· between
bhing. an •RA,·
ing internships 'iit.
Washington..
an
RAJs
~e
l:lut
living
with
Pat -
in a freshman_ dorm and being an
Having such isolated resi-
Marais trying.'' Dombrowski
RA
in an·upperclassman dorm.
dences,
RA's
tindit difficult
to
revealed_that
Mara
was
messy.
"Both areas are challenging in
find a location in which
to
have .
He'
also
added, "Pat
is
just at-
theif own ways;" he said. RA's
programming. Mara hopes
that
tending to
his
duties:•· And so
have to deal with orientating
a townhouse lounge will open for
he
is.
The John
p,
Anderson
Annual
Playwrttlrig
~ontest
.
.
·-
_Invites All·-Unaergraciuates·
To Take. Part in this One.::Act
· Play Competition.
Guidelines ·andAppHcations (¥.<3
Available in Rotunda Office
389 .
All Studenf Playwrights
AreAsk(3d
To Obtain and Read
_
the
·
Guidelines
Before Writing.
'Mu~!imo
.
·
spon!b.
C~kf
~~)ijp~~g{>~~ } ,,
..
"
.,
·
'
"' .
mar:!:uine~·
AddT
.
.. pea
·
·arsle
'
;
·
Jnteas ,
·nckymus'
D~adline for Applications is the End
of
the
Fall
Semester.
:;'.'." WO
. .. .
;.•w
·
.. · . ·•·:
p
t~~i#x~:f,P?,<l, . '"·'
Den\,·rS
.
,
. '
'
; .
.
·as_aboV(?,eXceptonii .. ,· ,• . •
.
.
'
.. · .· .·
.
.
.
2
t:1I
,1,·-.poons:
·
Jp
~~
s~~let
9~9k
l/3
'
cup
<Ji~
~ny:cooked
h~; 1/4
cup
pieces,</
.· drai
I h ·,
I;
and 2
tablespoo,nsfiI1ely 9hoppecl
gr¢en
pepper
i!l
'margariri~. '. The1fadd
egg'.:
mb.11111.:.
Doriotusenii
.
w
·
·
e
-
directforis/
-
;
:
:;<,<,(
:
·
•·
.;'.
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,
.,
· •
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·
• ;
;
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/-::->:
•
'-·-
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\;.:
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: , .
,
.
"'
}<
Selected Submissions
Will
Be Used
To
Illustrate the Developmental
Process
of New
Plays
in the
Spring Theatre Workshop.
THE CIRCLE,
November
7, 1996
7
Kevin Powell comes
to
Marist
-
.
fr6n1:'.r.rhe
ReafWorld':_
.
•
.
~
hop music :is seen
~s
a\~daland
.
·
.
p<;>litical
critique within th~
black
·
·
·
community:- Po~ell said ongi
~
·
0~ l}alJoween night,
Mrui~t
nally rapfocused oifproblem~
iii
_
·
Ccillcg'-' found
itself
thrown into
the community
.
.-
·
>
'
:.,
·
.
:-
·
·
'
hy
(:.HRISLALINE
-
>
SraffWrite~
·
·
.
-
the RcaiWorld.
.
-
"
Theearlyrapofthe
1980'.swas
Ke
_
vin Powell, a free~lance
more socially conscious, it
writer and.poe~ who was one of t~nded to explore the deep rooted
.
origin:11 castmembers ofMfV's
·
problems that the black commu-
_
program· "The Real World "
nity faced,"
he
said .
.
spoke
10
over 100 students abo~t
Powell said it seems that the
_
the stah!
of
black youth in rela-
current rappers
of
the 1990's
tion tn l1ip-hop culture last have their own special interests
Thursday.
in mind and the essential goal of
The
event,
-
sponsored by the
bringing
-
an
·
oppressed commu~
Black Smdent lJnion;proved to
nit)' together through lyrics has
be a b
i
gger success than had
been
-
lost.
.
.
. .
.
_
...
.
_
been
amid
paced.
.
.
"There seems
·
to
be
a divide
Chandler Owens, president of and cqnquer mtntality about hip-
RS
.
U .
.
S,!id he was pleased with
hop
·
today," he
said.
the ev~nt's high turnout.
. -
Today the types of music that
.
"I
\\US·
happy to see such a
.
falls under the rap category has
large and diverse crowd attend,"
grown considerably. Among the
sa
_
id Owens; "Some skeptics
different varieties are gangsta
though1 that a lecture held on
rap, east coast rap and w
·
est
Halloween night ·would turn
coast
rap.
many students away but the
Owens said he agreed that the
numhcrs proved them wrong
"
.
lyri
c
s and themes of
rap
music
Powdl. probably most widely
have gotten more violent.
known
:1s a
cast member for the
·
"Knives have turned into guns
.
.
original
M1V
Real World, said he
.
and the music has escalated," he
has tri~d recently to avoid that
said.
label.
Rap has turned into
a form
of
'The Real World was a good
power as well as identification
experience but it was an experi-
although today it seems thatrap
ence, i1·s not
my
life,".he said.
has lost its originality, yveryone
Mari st students were given a
.
now is a copy cat looking out
for
uni
_
quc 1)pportunity to see the
themse\ves.
Real Kc\
·
in Powell.
.
According to Powel( there are
Po\\'cll. whose career has only
some groups such as Tribe
grown since his stint on The Real
Called Quest and The Wu-Tang
World
.
has
currently been writ-
Clan who are trying to change
.
ing forVihe magazine and Roll-
the nature of their music.
,
ing
~tune.
His work about race
,
.
"They are branching off and
relation,: inner
city·
youth,
.
sex,
-
treati
_
ng
i~
!ik~ a
'
~usil}~Ss,
.
tl<;J
,
t
,
,
musr
d
\·ihlcnce,-drug:s-arid
,
'
poJi:::
·
•
'
l
concern~d
,
with p
_
ne
~
hit
~
on-
tics has heen extensively pub-
. "
ders," he .
·
.
_ ··
lished. Powell has also started
··
Matthew Pool, a student who
.
.
his
O
\\'lr
muitimedia company
•
attended
the
l
e
cture
,
said he was
.·
which hllpes to
·
explo
r
e music
·
.
impressed by Powell .
.
-
:.
• .
productilln and publishing op-
·
"Hike the wayhe drew com~
portunitics.
· ·
parisons between hip-hop cul-
During the evening,
_
students
ture and the African-American
were gi \'Cn insight into how hip-
.
community," she said
.
HELP WANTED
. Men/Women earn
.
$480
-
weekly
_
assembling
circuit boards/electromc components
'
a( home.
Experience ·unnecessaiy,
will train .
.
.
Immediate
_
·
openings your local area.
f1
~
,...._,__
Call
1-520-680-7891 EXT_l...-(:::tt.A.J
_ _ _
_
I
·
I
,,r ,
.
·
___ , organize a small
.
Gro~p
&
Travel free
*Cancun *Bahamas
~""~ *Jamaica *South Padre
*Pana
.
ma City Bea
·
ch
*Daytona
can
for Free Info Packet
J
1-800-426-7710
www.sunsoiashtours .. com
The
New.York
Army
National Guard has openings
for qualified young men and women ages 17-34.
100%
Tuitiqn
to
all
state
colleges andunive:rsities
and an amount equal
to
SUNY's tuition at
private
colleges and universities. Be
of
service·~ your
community and country.
Your college education may be closer
than
you
think.
Call our career center:
l-800-3S6-0SS.l
Norninatio
.
ns sought for 1997 Who's Who
The Office of Student Affairs
·
has mailed ballots to faculty, staff
,
and presidents/
chairpersons of student clubs, organizations and classes requesting nominations of
students scheduled to graduate in January, May and August of
1997
.
Both undergradu
-
ate and graduate students are eligible for nomination to Who's Who Among Students in
American Universities
-
~
-
Coll~ges.
The criteria to be used
_
in selecting nominees are: Academic record; participation
and_-Jeadership in academic and extracurricular activities; service to the community and/
or to the college; potential for future achievement.
A committee of faculty; staff and students will review an names submitted and
will
recommend those most representative of our student body.
Having earned the overwhelming respect of colleges and universities, Who's Who
continues to be used each year by employers nationwide to assist them in their acquisition
of new employees. A student's listing helps to set
him
or her apart from other graduates
competing for the same positions
.
Students who would like to be considered for nomination may contact faculty or staff
members who know them well and ask to
be
included on their ballots
.
Students should
also ask the leaders of clubs or organizations in which they have held active membership
to nominate them as well.
8 November is the deadline for the submission of names of January, May, or August
1997
graduates for consideration as Marist College nominees for Who's Who Among
Graduates Of American
,
Universities
&
Colleges
(1997).
The names of undergraduate and graduate students may be suggested by full-time
faculty or an administrator and/or
by
a president/chairperson of any student club, organi-
zation or publication. Potential graduates may check with the Office of the Vice Presi-
dent for Student Affairs (Rotunda
389
or
X 3515)
_
any time prior to
8
November to see
if
his/her name has been submitted.
l.
8
. THE CIRCLE ·
ED
ITO
RIAL
November 7, 1996
THE
CIRCLE
C
The Studeot Newspaper of Marist College,
Kristin
Richard,
Edit~r-in-Chief
Michael Goot, Managing Editor
Stephanie Mercurio, News_Edi1or
Amie Lemire,
A&E
Edi1or
.
.
;
.
.
Chris Smith; Spons Editor .
J11cque
Simpson, Feature Editor
Christian Bladt, Opillio11 Editor
Jason· Dull'y,
Busi11ess·Ma11ager
G.
Modele Clarke,
Faculty Advisor
11,,.
Circle
is published every Thursday. Any
may
be addressed to
The
Circle,
Marist College, 290 North Road, Poughkeepsie, NY 12601. (914)575-2687
Editorial
Course variety is theWaytog9 ...
·. · .. ·
·:.•.·
a t -
·
.(ke·
·
·
.. ··.~-.···•;.····
.
.
.·
.
.
·.
.
.•
..
..
.. .
.
.
.
.,
.
.
.
.•
..
.
.
·,·
.
.'
..
•.··
·
..
· . .
.
·.
· •
·
• '
.
· · ;
"You
find
-in _life exactly what .
:
you put into·'it''
·
-~atµ
'U"ateto
Efflelt4(J#
Letter to the Editor
Never forge
your
adviser's signa.ttu:e ·
Over 1he course of my past six and a half semesters at Marist, I have learned ~everal,
things through classroom experiences, but it was not until recently that I realized if . Editor: .
was possible to incorporate much of this information together.
Jj:an
remember
conversing with my friends in high school and questioning why certain coufseswere_
manda1ory. Why would I ever need to know the dates of World War II or what the
components of a nucleus are? But, now I know that somewhere along the·line, every
ounce of infonnation
gets pieced together and is equally necessary.
I am realizing that it is a good idea to leave· room for electives by senior year. This
has exposed me to a variety of new issues and areas of study. I am
talcing
courses
now that are not directly part of my ·field of study, some because they fit in·wi$ my
honors program, and others just because the topics interest me.
:y believe this is
important for-several reasons.
.
:
Once.again;'the time of year has.come when everyone should have regi~~ for spring
~ourses .
.
I just wanted to.take a moment
to
address.an important issue in the registration
process. This. is about yourAcademic Adviser. ·Academic advisers are assigned to
us
to help us through otir years at Marist. Not only is there advice needed about what
courses we should take, but·their signature is also required for registration •. This is a
crucial part of the registration process.
..
.."
•
~.
The purpose of our adviser's signature is to ensurethat we are ·on ·the right path. They
keep· us following the ·required courses needed to graduate .. This signature is some-
. thi~g we all must take the tii:ne to get.
As
smalias the signature may be, the forging of
a signature could have detnmental effects on your career as.a student. This act can
result in immediate dismissal from the college, the·Joss of classes, probation, or even
community serv!ce:
.
First of all, talcing a wide v~ety of courses has provided me \Vith different ways of
viewing my major by incorporating knowledge from several different areas: This· has
also cnahled me to take courses with different p~ofessors and students than I was ·
previously familiar with. I have noticed that as different people integrate their own
experiences and perspectives in the analysis of a problem or issue, the class emerges
with new insight into each topic.
No~ as _little as that signature appears, is it really wroth it to have a friend sign a
· For example, my honors course this semester is Env,ironmentallssues. This
is
a registration form? In case you are one of those people who
think
they don't really
course that I would not have had to take if it were not required for
rny
honors degree. . check over the forms, I would like to inform you that they are all looked over by members
Previously. through my social work minor, I had seen primarily how I could integrate: of the faculty VERY carefully! Any signature that looks ques_tionable will involved
the social sciences with myjournalism major .. Now, I have a much broader spectrum of further investigation. ·
knowl~dge and a whole new range of topics that I could address through journalism.
.
I believe _students of all majors could also benefit from. talcing a variety of courses. I hope you all took the time to meet with your advisers to get their advice and signature.
Somewhere along the line, in whatever field a person chooses to pursue, he/she will · For future reference, the faculty here at Marist do care and are looking out for our best
inevhab\yencounterissuesrelatedtoeconomics,math;·socialproblemsandpolicies. jnterest. lJse tiies~ people.to your .~dvantage, they don want to help. Don't get
the enviroiunent, computers;.po}1tics, etc.
Why
not begin preparing for that)).OW?.::of,
r~~r~e,~~
,~-.a. b~ .~i~u~tio~ ~!l_at ~.ould .~av~. b~~- ~~ly avoided.. .
. ,
.
.
:•'.F.:
course, people also acquire a
·
realm ofinforination th[ough workexperienc'e", but tiav~
ing a base of preliminary knowledge could only help people find and holdjobs after
J.
J>almatier, senior
gradu:uion. .
.
..
. .
.
.
.
.
. .
':·
.
.
. ·,
.All'
'\"I·T
11 .
'T'fi..
E.
d.
'l:XT
1· 1···.
My_advice to anyone debating signing.up fora course withoutknowing.~hatto:
rt. •.
S
vv e
S ._·
1
. ......
.
.
a.
t . ·
· ..
.
.... ·
·
rt .. ·
S
vv,e· ·. ·.·.
S
expecl is to
try
some of everything. You may be surprised at what some of the courses
outside of your major are able to offer you.
· ·
Kristin Richard,Editor-in-chief
There's
no
pl3:ce.like<hofue?
Mid-semester break was the first time fv.rerilhome sinceTcrurieto Marist .. I was
ecstatic ahout the idea of getting
all
thosehome cooked meals; t~ng
a
shower in my
own bathroom, and seeing everyone at home. But, all of those wonderful things were
not as wonderful as I thought they would have been.
. ._.· . _. · .
·
I quickly got sick and tired ofeating so muchfood .. Sinc~ I am not used to eating
food in such quantity or with su.ch taste, it was a change to actually eat REAL food.
Maybe my stomach shrunk, or maybe iny appetite 1s not
as
big as it used to be.
Everyone knows that talcing a shower without flip-flops.and a shower caddy is
wonderful. This aspect of honie definitely lived up to my expectations: It v,,as so nice
to have water with d~~n,t pressure and a stc::ady temper~ture. At first, the water
pressure was shockingly strong,.but after five minutes I got used to it and
.
J
knew I
was home. Having the bathroom e11tirely to myself was incredible.-There·were not
people brushing their teeth or washing their dirty dishes next to me.I was definitely
in heaven!
·.
.
·
· ·
·
·
When I went home, I thought I would be overjoyed lo see my family and friends
again, However, it was wierd to actually have parents watching over me. !did riot get
used to this apsect, and I do not know ifl will be ableto when I go home again.
.
Some ofmy friends happened to be home the same weekend that Twas. Jwas
excited wheii I found this out However, our schedules did notconnect, and I did not
get to spend as much timewith everyone as I would have hoped to. Those that I did
see seemed as though they had ~hanged, and it was not necessarily for the best. This
definitely did not live up to my expectations of going home.
Going home was not all I thought it was going to be. I really dci not know the reason
for this. Maybe
it
is because things do not always tum out the way you hope they
will. Maybe it is because the more things change, the more they stay the same. That
might have been the case. I do know that the next time I go home, I will not have such
high expectations. Thatway, everything may turn out better.
Kristiua Brito
is
one o/The Circle's commentators on
. IF H.G. Wells were to se.t the dial for his brilliant little time travel device
to
"October
1996'' and .arrive anywhere nei.Marist ·coUege, he may have v~ryweu·.assume4 his
inyenti6n_ a greatfolly and· tum,ed to barre~ ~ak,iiig <?tsome otll.~r pro_spe~oiis enterprise.
This could haye especi~ly.. beeri the c~e had he. yenture4 intc> th~ freshmen dopns.
Mr. Wells wouldnothave ~ven i_magined that he ~as-_truly on a college campus in
1996.He IDost likely would .have assumed $.at. he was in a makeshift Civil War era
hospital located within the corridors of the· freshmen
dorms.
Never would he consider
this a college. Granted that one ~es his hard,
knocks from
an.irate professor or two; but
the casualty rate amongst_ freshmen probably that of Antietam or BuU Run, not an
institute of higher learning. Of course,
Mr._ Wei.ls ·might have
had
a little difficulty swip-
ing his card, but this is. an merely a rough analogy. (Critical analysis of
this
essay would
showcas15°ll)y incredible lackqf credibility. Credibilityis not a criterion for a humor
piece.}
· ... ··.. .
. . .
·
.
.
_
_
..
.
• • .
.
.
.. · ·
.•
Tbere are a. coupleof minor details contrary to a
typkal
rnvn Vt'ar
Era
scene. Few
people-are ·garnished with. medals of recognition.
A
few
.are
ackno\_Vledged
with
a
care
package, tile high~st ranking with brownies. Even fewer. sport those nifty waxed mus-
taches. However, there are numerous
.
students hobbling on c:rutches, with b~daged
arms and faces, and several have fallen
ill.
There ~s .one ajlrnent that
has
plagued many
freshmen throughout the.first month of school. This, my friends, is the fam9us '.'fresh-
man nose." ·
· ··
·
·
•.
· ·
·
·
Perhaps Mr. Welis h~ he~d of'the bubonic plague ari~ smallpox. Many
a
soldier
has
lost hi~
life
to garig(en~,and faH~ri_ill
{!'.Oin
scurvy ..
Norie of these diseases
has
affected
a population like the.freshmai:fnose.: ,
·
• . .-;·
:· •
.
:
·
·..
·
·.• ...
You may have noticed the symptOIIlS coinmonly·associated \Vi.th freshrnari
rfose.
on
students-in M'arist's halls. The most obvi~us is the red, slightly inflamed nose. Many of
those afflicted have low self~teem and a fear of opening glass doors. ···
The most common cause of the•freshman nose is the attempting to open a door in the
opposite direction of which it was designed to open. The student jerks the door toward
him. The door gives slightly, but springs back in the opposi~ direction. Due to the
unfortunate law of inertia, the student is thrown toward the door, nose first
, The p!iysical pain and appearance is by no means·as
bad-as
the anguish and utter
humiliation caused by this episode. This frequently occurs at the Donnelly Computer
Lab. After a student's first attempt to open the dQ()r toward him, he finds himself
· trapped like a rat. This attracts the attention of the entire lab. Then, once the paralysis
of fear lifts, the victim is able
to
push himself out the door. Only after several days does
the victim muster up the courage to re-enter the lab. He spends his evenings over
at
Lowell Thomas, a bit of a hike from the freshmen dorms.
There is a solution to this epidemic ravaging the student body. Perhaps it is a little
more liberal than most of us would like to be, but under these grave conditions, you
must agree that drastic measures need to be taken. Just~ our society has become more
tolerant of people with different sexual preferences, the same should go for doors.
Marist College should install and tolerate doors that "swing both ways."
Mr.
Wells may
be taken· aback, but maybe he would see that this is the
1990s and his time machine was,
or is, a success, even
if
it is purely fictional •
(A
lot like this
essay,
eh?)
Tara Quinn is The Circle's humor columnist.
,THECIRCLE
-OPINION
November?, 1996
9
Bridgeto a-se~ondterrn:inoffice
'
' . ' ..
.
:The.American people
:
elected
-
-Biil Clinton "with high hopes, ,and braves hearts" in
l
~92,
hoping to bring about changes in the_ way we lead our lives. _
_
:\ Based on this past Tuesday, it would appear that he has -been successful in what he
~~~oo~w~
·
·
>
While.Bob J:?ole's defeat was about as stunning as a Super Bowl loss by the Buffalo
Bills, it did prove that America is be,tteroff than it was four years ago. That is why Dole
_
did
not pose this question much. Sure, he quipped that the president is better off than
he wa.~ four yearsago, but so is Dole, and so are a lot of us.
·
Bill Clinton has done a lot of good for this country, despite several missteps and blunders along the
way. The
first
iwo years of the Clinton presidency were filled with reports (by the "liberal media," no
less) portraying Clinton as unable
to maJ-c a simple decision affecting
the composition of his cabinet,
much less Orie affecting the coun-
try.
'
-
The I g94 midterm elections, and
the reactionary revolution . it
· brought ahou
4
acted as
a
wake-up
call to
tlic
Clinton Administration.
In the two years since, we have
gone from
a
pitiful plea demanding
relev:mce to a resounding rein-
forcement of his position as leader
of the greatest nation on earth.
Among Dole's last-ditch attempts
-at seizi,ig the reigns of this country
- were an onslaught of character at-
tacks and numerous reminders of
Clinton's "liberal agenda." Ironi-
cally, among the things that did not
-
influence voters minds were
an
on-
'
slaughi ,)f character issues and nu-
merous reminders of a "liberal
agenda:·
Ordinarily, I am not one to beat a
dead horse, but, when that dead
horse is Bob Dole, I do not mind
going hack to the carcass for an
' extra
Cl
,uple of whacks with my billy
club. Fcirthat reason, I must note
that Amcrfcans
are
just comfortable
with Clinton, ringmaster of the cir-
cus in Washington.
The road to economic ruin
Bill Clinton has secured his second term as presi-
dent, and he will spend the remainder of his term
try~ng to secure a place in history as the president
who refonned welfare and healthcare. America
hopes he succeeds, but
in
a way, this Clinton vic-
tory may be an American defeat. As social prob-
·· 1ems continue to fester in our nation, the government will continue
to feed them by funding the catalyst to failure; government spon-
sored social programs. Big business can step aside and make way
for liberal spending and out of control government intervention.
The United States gained prosperity
through massive industrial explosion.
With the firm grapple hold of government
regulation, no runount of private indus-
try can create jobs and strengthen the
economy. So, instead of businesses com-
peting for expanding industries to create
more jobs and lowering the national defi-
cit while doing it, the American people
will continue to wallow in a cycle of de-
pendency imitating a socialist regime.
America must wean itself off the sti-
fling programs of Franklin D. Roosevelt.
FDR helped Americans out of the nation's
worst depression ever, but more than 50
years later we should realize that the New
Deal did not thrust America into the years
of economic prosperity that ensued. In
I 938,
two years into FDR's second term,
America's economy had not pennanently
recovered. Businesses that had been
temporarily helped by the new social pro-
grams now took the New Deal legislation
to the Supreme Court, and FDR had to
defend his programs with an all-out te-
nacity. The Supreme Court struck down
many programs, and then Congress de-
nied passage of an FDR suggested-bill
that gave the president authority to raise
the number of Supreme Court Justices.
The Court Packing plan had been con-
ceived to help FDR win Supreme Court
cases that threatened his social reform
He just has that reassuring tone
programs. - The experiment in massive
and dci11canor that lets you know µiat, somehow, everything is going to be all right. I think that what qad
government intervention began to fail. But, with the outbreak of
to
be
one of the most heartwarming things that lhave seen on the evening news in
a
long-time (at least World War
II,
the United States private sector exploded into action,
since J\lcNeil and.
Lehrer
vowed their undying 'devotion to· one another)· happened ~- few weeks ago · - and supplied the allied forces with \lard ware
00
fight with;
while Clinton was out "pressing the flesh."
.
.
, ·
·
·
Today we have moved away from war time economics.
But the fact
A young woman asked him how he could have possibly vetoed the ban on so~caUed "partial birth"
remains that whether the private industries thrive off war or consum-
aborti,1ns: She had tears streaming down her face, and was shaking her head as she spoke. Her body
ers, th,e.gov_emment should have a smail role. The sad fact of the
language greatly reversed, itself-as Clinton explained that _he only vetoed the ban because it lacked· an
matter is that bleeding hearts cannot make a nation into
a
world wide
excepti(111 forwhellthe life of the mother is at stake. He continued that he only clid so after speaking with
competitor. We have a responsibility to our children to hand them a
women ·ror whom the procedure had saved their lives. The woman gave the president a big hug, and was
prosperous world leader that caters to competition in a free market.
smiling.· She later told her mother that "it's okay to vote for Clinton."
·
True freedom begins with the ability to sell one's own labor, to com-
Jf
a similar situation arose where a hypothetical President Dole
(I
cannotadequately express how
pete against one another, and to have the right to catapult oneself
chilliiig it is
to see
those two words side by side) were approached by a young woman upset that the ban · into the high income tax brackets. · With the government's helping
did nolprotect the life of
the
mother:-He would have either ignored her and headed for someone who ·had
hand in the way, freedom is lost and no one can claim success.
given
·1he
campaign
a
nice
wad
of
some soft money, or reiterated his infamous remark from his
I 988
·
Ending programs; like welfare, and not reforming institutions, like
crunpaign: ''Go back
to
your ca_ve;'! _··. .
. . .
.. · . . . .
.
..
.
healthcare, are not options. These services enhance a thriving na-
When I saw Clinton giving his explanation, arid the result.I could only think one tlting: "God bless Bill
tion and constitute
a
necessary part of our democracy. But thinking
Clintcin,"This is certainly a unique sentiment, both to be appHed to 9linton, and for me to apply to any
globally, we need to lower_our deficit and promote the private sector.
personi But it was the only thing on my mind at the time. ·
The world continues to get smaller and the population continues to
So. ihankfully, we have another four years of Clinton trying to undo
.12
destructive yea_rs of _·swell. America will not lead with a ~ociety that lives on handouts.
Reaganorriics. And, ifl have my say, we will also have another eight years of Al Gore striving to do the
America is a nation govem~d for and by the people, and the private
same thing. Of course, by 2008, I hope to be highly successful and grossly wealthy, so of course
I
will
sector that is commanded by the people mu_st continue to be our
··want.Republicans who will keep my mqney from going to those '_'little people" I stepped on my climb to
backbone.
the top. · · .
. . .
. · ·
_- .
, ,
· : . ·
_' -
· ·
· · ·
_
·.
·.
_
· ..
Christia
ii
B'ladt
is
a
dashingly handsome junior communications major from Greenwood
lilkt!,
NY Bill Mekrut
is
a sophomore English major from Lincoln, RI. and
and the opinion editor
f~r The
Circle.
· Thf! Circle's political columnist.
~--------,---------~-------------------,
w::t:Jtt1t
r~;~;lf ·
...
,
.. ·.·
·
•···
·
..
_
:::,:ii:1!!~::!
.
. dTfi .
. -- onceived ideas.
\Jts'
'
'
been
told>abouf
d
a(
:can
go
9n
foi:7:
id
'
. .
·
will
'only
'ust
'
to
'
some
fac:
s
for
oth2
ey
t
in
.
.
. };peopletochange
_ e.
nal
beliefs. I
·
canriot
.·
·
t~ '
crumg¢
-
~ything. Qnly acµons
''
'
·uma1rearufference.
> .·
_
·.·.·
places
iti
J
will iiever.(orget the igno-·
tage , ...
as .
'ce
'
ofthat
day: I
wiU
never
you
were::
ere
sttipid)dds/~iJt)vheiiy .
"of\vhatitis·liketobean~
·
hood
h,ap
op and think
about
it;'most. still:
>
_th.~( race,or to ~tand and
see
-One\cn
O
ethe sainedanmmind sets
··:
'tliifWorld
'
as other people do;
anlri,h ifag ..
fu·
_
,
.
..
ut this.
.. .
. ..
.
>
beca~seJ
have been raised
in
a
across
the
d
'
.
.
.
. . d
'to'tliif
ground'.
·
'\\
We
have
gt'{)wn
in
aJot
of
ways
<;
different
~ackground. .
hydra
Ill~
were;pairited
in;<,
thou
awohisP9keri: fisrs
~
i
'
_sinc~ then, but thosei~eas h~ve
.
-
:
But, if people could just learn
same
Nl!en;'white'aniforarig~<
•:'to'
mesh
:W!ih-faces
'
a~d .
i
never left us; They chng to ~ur to understand each other, then
.
·
.Jam~lrish~Gerrnan,
'
butin
this '
,
Jhey were rolling' in a. psyche and leave us filled with
_ .
maybe we wilrnever have to
neighh,1rhood,:y~u:~ere
~11\
jellig~ntly
·
about .. :
:
'\>Joodyturmoil. '.
. ··
• : . . , .
unexplainedragethatsadlyover-
walkaway scared.
Irish.
. : .
.
· .
-.
·
..
.
,
.
imagin~tion with. an
insig9q11~t :
f:
<
,
I.just
st~
the~withfear,
flows•
into·
verbal·· and physic~l
\\,· played~stick
.
b
_
,
_
. went farj)eyond his
years ~fi:Jhe
only
·
·one'.notyelling_and
'
abuse.
.
. .
.
.
-~·-•
·...
· ..
-'.,";-
:":,_,,:(_
::···
...........
~i
_
f
•·
I
I
10
THE CIRCLE,
No~e~ber7, 1996
*
It's
-
ti
_
ineto regi_ster
_
for.
*
Winter Intersession
:
E-t
rn
....
ct::
<
==
January 2 - 14, 1997
·
*
'
.·
(including Sattlrdays,.January 4 and 11)
REGISTRATION:
Registration forMarist
·
College students ,vill be accepted ev~ry work
day
_
bet\veen no,v
and
December
20 at
the School
of Adult Education, Dyson Center 12~.
$
TUITION:
Cost for
a
three credit course is
$1
,
046. One third payment ($350) is due at
registration
;
the balance ($696) is due no
-
later
than December
20
.
All
Fall balances must
be
paid
in
full
in
order to regiser for a wint
e
r cours~.
·
Any
student wishing to have the one-,third
· ·
payment billed home must stop
by
Adult
Education with the information
by
·
November
-
IS. Once one.:.third deposit
is
received, you w
_
ill then be enroll.ed
in
the
9ourse you have selected providi
.
rig
it
is
~
still
_
_
·
·.
open.
*
'
HOUSING
SPECIAL RATE for current students.
If you currently reside on campus (Fall 1996
Semester) and are taking a Winter Intersession
course your cost will be
$70 for the two weeks
.
The regular
-
rate is
$
_
75. per week, $11 per day
.
See Housing staff,
Mid-Rise
387
~
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·
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·
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OISHES
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'
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Whole
Ml:eat
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Free
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ci'f:
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Draft
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Beer
·
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~
t
i
M~~:.=::se
of
... Any Day, AnyTinie
·
Proper l.D. Requireq
~
Free
.
~fi
_
mosa or
Bloody
•
·
Mary
,,
'
Any Meal Purchase
'
over $4.00
Sa11inlay Morning
&
Sunday Afternoon
(:--;:,m - 12pm)
-·
(12pm - 3pm)
~
Prope(I.D. Required
~
B
~
c
.
riu
s
c!
~
i;
t11
~
"
h
f
t~;
;
:
~i
;~
:
s~lt~dti!in~
-
-
s~u
~
~nt:
i
11u;
/:
;kc!
1>nl\'
ONE COURSE
-
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~
~
c!r.
.
.
*
Intl!rs~:;.-;ion
.
All
~bllr~S
tire
thrl!<!
~;l!\iits
lUU~
S
S
~thl!l"\\
i
~c!
~or ..
>J.
. -
.·
. .
.
.
.
.
,.
Classes me
_
¢fJ~nu
_
ary 2,
.
3,1, 6~
:
7
_
,
~
-
~,10,
11, 13 and 14 unless otherwise noted.
MORNINGS
'
~9:oo·a;m
-,12:35
p
·
.m.
.
.
..:ti;_
ART
110N~111
.
Basic Drawing
w
COMM 105L-111
Public Speaking
.
*
COMM 2301.:~111
The Art of the Film (9:40
'
a
.
m .
.
-1:15 p.m.)
.
CRJU
,
202i..-111
-
Criminology
-
..
.
:
·
ts1s
152~-111
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Excel (one credit) meets Jan
.
8, 9, 10. 11
.
13. 14
ENG
2:IOL-111
Ame
ri
can Literature
I
FCRU
223L
0
111
Ru·ssia Today (duall
i
sted)
·
•
HIST
218L.;.111
.
History and Culture of the Mid-HudsonValley
MATH
130L;.111
Introductory Statistics I (prerequisite)
PSYC
101L~111
_
Introductory Psychology
RUSS
223L-111
Russia Today (duai listed)
AFTERNOONS ;.
2:00
p.m . .,.
5:35
p.m.
'
ART
.
BIOL
.
101L-112
COMM 327L-112
COMM 392L-112
..
cs1s
-
>
1sdL~J12
·
ECON
.
1011
)
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ENG
327L'-112
MATH
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230L.:~112
PHIL
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300L-
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112
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d
61 L
~
1\ 2
·
Arts arid Values
·
:
Topics in Biology
·
· ·
•
Writing for Rad
i
6 and
TV
(dual listed) prerequisite
·
·
.
Interactive Multi
~
Media
.
.
.
.
introduction
to
Com
.
puters (one credit)
.
•
:
_ m
·
eets
'
January
.
2;
:
3
;
6,
8, 1
o.
13
Principles of Macroeconomics
-
Writing for Rad
i
o and
lV (
dual listed) prerequisite
Operational Models (prerequisite)
-
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,
.
,
.- . .
.
:,i.:ti.:
Introduction to Politic;s
.
,q::,c
PSYC 202L~112
.
.
Abqorm~IPsychology(prerequisite)
EVENINGS
~
_
6:00
p.m~
_
.,.
9:35
p~m.
.
·
Catandella
Ngoh
.
-
.
·
·
Khosravi
.
Lavin
·
Neely
Anderson
,
F.
.
No~~iunas
Casey
Timm
Boeckman
Norkeliunas
Marquardt
TBA
Cole
Pennings
Starzyk
Smyth
Cole
Rancourt
Zeppetello
Vavrina
Del Rosario
ART
·
.
·_•-
•
·
145N
~
234
·
·
~
-
Bas
i
c Photography
.·
.
*
McCormack
··
COMM
_.·
3:ZOi..
~
234
-
·
Televi~ion Production
McCarthy
COMM 393L~234
Sports
'
Journalism
.
·
Neupauer
CSIS
··
·
151L-234
-
Word Processing (one credit) meets Jan 2, 3
,
4,
6,
7
,
8 Donellan
ENSC
101 L-234
Introduction to Environmental Issues
Lynch
HIST
248L-234
· Medieval Europe
White
::~T
-
:~:~:~::
::~:: ~::~o~:d Values
*
:::;aoul ·
TRAVEL COURSE (Barbado~)
PSYC
2
·
15L
:-
235
Psychology of lnterpersona[ Commu~ic:ation
Scileppi
(Dec. 30 through January 13) permission of instruct9r required
.
_
*
Fee
:
$1040 -,- $1170
+
tuition
·
·
_:---
la~~
,1
ri'l
_
;
~s~o
_-
_
·
.
W;N_
-
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.
IF
YQU SHOW
lJS
YOUR
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STOP IN FOR
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A LATE NITE NOSH:
NACHOS
BUFFALO WINGS
THE FAMOUS "MAR/ST FRIES"
(WIMELTED CHEESE & GRAVY)
*
Reservation~ Accepted
*
-
November 7, 1996
11
News and Revi'ews
L11lufu.an,
DiGaprio,
and banes
give
'Rorh~o &
Juliet'
a
'90s twist
. hy
An1ie
Lemire
A&EEditor
wide blue
eyes. ·(He
also Joo ks
For mn,t people, especially stu-
to be about
dents. the word 'Shakespeare'
1·5 0 l b s
conjur.·,
up:dreary
memories.
tops, soak-
Nirh1n1ares of hellish Enlgish
ing.
wet,
classc-; i",ime
to
mind ... ofstum~
with army
bling i,,·l·r Old English phrases,
boots on;)
plodding• through hundreds of
And
pages
(lf
text, and of course, that
t h o u
g
h ·
high~,p~l'd ride to Barnes
&
Juliet is a
Nobk
f.
w"Cliff's Notes.
far
c:ry
from
. Fo11una1elyfor us simpletons,
An g e
I
a
Baz l.uhrman ("Strictly Ball-
C h a
s
e ,
room ..
1
has taken the romantic
D a n e s
classi.- Romeo
&
Juljet, and put
plays her
a '90s •,pin to it.
part with all
Thl' 111:ijor characters are all
the fragile,
presc111 hut the story takes place
wide-eyed
in ml ..
i,·rn
times, with modem
innocence
them,•,
that won
Ver,;,,:, City is a metropolis,
her much-
with th, famous families---the
deserved
Monta_!;lll~S and the Capulets-
adoration
battlin1, c-:1t·h other not from ivy-
after "My
covcrnl ,·:istles; but rather from
So-Called
the Ct\tp,)rate headquarters of Life." She
their p,:nthouse suites atop their
breathes vulnerability and pains-
whose taut, muscular body and
tinted ,•l,1,;s high-rises.
taking tenderness into her roles;
dark chocolate skin contrasts
N,;hh•
swordfighting is re-
each character she's played~ sharply with Romeo's golden,
placed
h
silver snub-nosed re-
from 'Little Women's' Beth, to the
boyish looks. Luhrman, in the
volvcr·.. and
BMWs
and
secret angel in Soul Asylum's
director's chair, adds yet.another
Merc,·d,•, substitute for horses
"Just Like Anyone" video-
twist to the story; Mercutio is a
as ml·,111s of transportation
wears her tattered heart on her
flamboyant cross-dresser, com-
aroun,I f:,ir Verona.
sleeve. Not considered, by the
plete with bustiers and thigh-bi's.
Thl~ inirigue surrounding
industry standards, to be "con-
He flaunts_hls sexual ambiguity
'R1:mw,1
&Juliet' comes from the
ventionally pretty", coupled with
in the Capulet faces, making
ambi1i,•11,; idea ofa modem-day
her reed-thin frame, makes Danes
jokes at their expense. He's fabu-
tellinr ,
,f
1he story. but adhering
the perfect candidate to play this
lous to a T.
tot.hcl
.
il,!English.dialogue
. . . . . part.
Whilethe Montagues are
'
'
that.•.
and the casting of ... -HerJulietfs
awkward,
shy, and .. blond..:!faireo
--ano
fair, - the
·
·
Leon:,r,
I.,
DiCaprio
as
Romeo,
painfully lonely-locked in her
Capulets are dark and smolder-
and
("1;,1rl!
Danes as Juliet, of ivory tower, Juliet's closest com-
ing. John Leguizamo is Tybalt,
cours,·
panion is her nurse. ClaireDanes
the leader of the Capulet Boys,
a
Th~ . ,11-screen chemistry be-
digs deep in her soul for this role,
group of steamy Latin lovers who
.tween 11,Caprio and Danes is in-
and it pays off. Juliet is authen-
sport greased-back hair, leather
nocen,. dt•ctrifying, steamy, and
tic and her conviction is rever-
pants, and goatees.
very.
,,;r~
believable.
. berated throughout her scenes.
· The Capulet Boys stalk
Thl•~· m1ly embodied the star
There is still feuding between
through Verona in their flashy·
cros~
".i
1tlVers' passion--tenta-
theMontagues and the Capulets,
blue car, lowered to perfection ·
tive b,u1inge~ with a n~w,;.found
butthe addition of the "90s feel"
and complete with gleaming
hung,?r . • . ·•··. .. . . ..... ·. ·..
"gives·•the movie a bit of gangsta
chrQme rims, They're dark and
E,'.,~11
though DiCaprio is21~
•
· flavor. yery«Boyzin th.ein.Ljke
sexy, Hke Antonio Banderas in
he ea,ilclooked four or .five
RomeoMontague,theyarebfond
"Desperado."
year:- , ,nmger, with his sun-
haired and blue-eyed.
· · ·
And both gangs are packing
flee kl·•
1
blond hair falling into his
The only exception is Mercutio,
mad heat.
In
one scene, when
Romeo plays pool at a local hang-
out, he has to flash a ticket in
order to retrieve his gun-"No
ticket, No Gun" reads the sign
on the counter.
The movie is very fast-paced
at times, with lots of quick cuts,
and jump shots. Some parts
could double for an MTV Buzz
Clip. Luhnnan also speeds some
scenes up into fast motion,
mostly to emphasize action. It's
an
odd technique, arid can con-
fuse the-eye. -
. ··
-
. -
-
Also, the introduction of the
characters is similar to that of .
''Trainspotting" with a photo still
of the character, and bold type
declaring the character's name.
The establishing of setting
and
character was
very
"Tarantino-esque" .... slo-mo
shots of Tybalt's silver-heeled
boots crushing a cigarette, freeze
frame shots of the Montague
Boys, wreaking havoc through-
out· the streets.
While the rivalry between the
families is a major theme in the
movie, it is interlaced quite nicely
with the romance.
Romeo & Juliet is both a love
story and a tragedy, and to up-
set the balance between these
two elements would .ruin the
whole story. Luckily, Luhrman
handles this well.
Still another theme is threaded
into the movie-water.
It plays a big role. Romeo first
spies Juliet through a larger-
than-life fish
tank.
They sperid a
good deal of the movie wet.
Romeo slays Tybalt on
~
cold,
rainy night: Romeo swears his
undying love for Juliet as he
sinks below the surface of the
Capulet
swimming
pool.
Mercutio is slain on the shores
of the ocean.
One possible reason· for this
water theme is the idea of cleans-
ing. Underwater, Romeo and
Juliet are not rivals; their names
are meaningless and they are just
two people in love. Below the
surface of the water, everyone is
equal, ordinary.
There are numerous perks to
the movie, including a cameo by
Des'ree, and a gospel version of
"When Doves Cry", plus the vi-
sual pleasure of many Romeo
close-ups.
Yes ladies, Leonardo is deli-
cious both wet and dry. This
alone should get you running to
the theaters.
This movie may get slammed
for being too "trendy" or "MTV-
ish••;. but it does deserve credit
for going out on a limb. The very
idea of adding guns, drugs, ~nd
gender-bending to a Shakespeare
play is quite risky, even a bit lu-
dicrous.
However, Baz Luhrman and his
cast pull it off, giving the classic
story of star-cross'd lovers a
shiny new look set to a bass-
thumping pace.
A final warning though:
if
you
have to read "Romeo
&
Juliet"
.for English class, don't think this
will substitute-better stick to
those Cliff's Notes after all.
CD Reviews:_ Jertido~sqamage while V.O.D. makes you suffer
hy
Hil Neloms
Staff Writer
Th(" ""I.Jirty Rotten Scoundrel"
, Jem
1iw Damage is back with
his n,'\• :ind. anticipated album,
"Wrath
.,f
the Math".
Jen:-. lirst release;U'The Sun
Rise!-
i.,
1he East", introduced
this
R, ...•
~}yn native as a ines-
seng,•r .
,f
positive hip-hop ..
· Hl' •:;une out with intelligent
lyrics
r,:
11
,inded you of Public En-
emy,
P, .. ,,
Righteous Teachers,
etc.
·
•·\,·1ath of Math" is no dif-
feren1
Hl' . ,
mtinues educating the
mass,•-
;ind
getting rid of those
who
:11,·
,lilt to hurt the realm of
hip-h .. ,.
Thn1;,: h
15
slamming
tracks
he
takes ~. ,,, through the violence,
sexisu, ,!rugs, and greed that
have ·
,,:··m
to take over the in-
d us tr~
-Thi•., .. most noticeable on the
seconli ,;ngletocomeofftheal-
bum ··,.,
J'layin'
Ya
Self'.
TI1i• ,mg is directed at those
who are polluting the·messages
of hip-hop.
·
As Jeru points out, ''There is
so much Ying-Yang, it's ridicu-
lous."
This· statement remains clear
throughout all the songs on the
album.
·
On top of an that, the album is
produced by the G~ru and D.J.
Premier (who next to the GZA
from Wu-Tang, is one of the best
D.J.'s out there).
As you listen to the cuts, the
beats and the rhymes are strictly
on point.
They flow so well, you would
· think that Premier's and Jeru's
minds work
as
one. Which they
might, I don't know.
Jeru has come with "Wrath of
the Math" to save the world of
hip-hop in a state of emergency.
The only way for him to win is
for you to help fight the cause
and buy Jeru the Damaja's
"Wrath of the Math" or else
you'll
be
playin ya self!
Now from Brooklyn we jump
on the LIRR and over to Strong .
. Jsland to . check out local
hardcore heroes V.O.D.
Vision
of
Disorder has finally
come out with their first
full
length
after numerous
7
inches and
compilation· appearances.
V.O.D:
plays heavy aggressive
hardcore with some great musi-
. cianship.
·
The vocalist Tim, rips it up with
his .mixture·of screaming and
singing throughout the album.
A J,and with a lot of rage, their
lyrics are full of meanings.
Some messages hit you like
Tyson hit Seid.on while others
make you look deep within your-
self.
However in all the songs you
will never hear preaching. They
leave it up to you to interpret the
songs so that you will stay true
to yourself and use your mind
while you listen.,
"Drop The Oppressor (D.T.O.)"
is
by far the best song, (in my
opinion) as well as being the best
song on the album.
Other notable tracks are "Suf-
fer" and "Excess". At first lis-
ten,
a lot of
pegple
will
say· that the
album is over-
produced.
If
this hap-
pens to you,
keep listen-
ing.
V.O.D.
has
paid
their•
dues and it's
about time
that
·they
have-
a
chance·
to
show
off
some skills.
Besides,
what do you
expect when
you sign to
a
semi-major la-
bel like Road-
runner?
So, get Vi-
sion
of
Disorder's
self-titled de-
but.
_.,,.,_
I·
12
THE CIRCLE,
November 7, 1996
Lian1
Neeson represents the fighting
-I~is~
·in
_
the h,io-epic'M;i~;tia.el Collin5.'
.
'
'
·
.
·
,·
.
..
.
·
.
.
'
.
.
'
.
.
hy
Clffden Kennedy
&
Todd
Stallkamp
Staff Writers
Consid,•ring Gummy
Bears
had
been the only enjoyable thing at
theatl'rs lately, delightfully
shod.NI
I
humped into "Michael
Collins··11ow playing at the Gal-
leria
Whn lll':trd of Michael Collins,
and
wh\'
should you see this
movie"! -
·
·
Mar~("<l with brilliant acting,
stunnin\! direction, and a well~
told
:--h~ry.
"Michael
Collins"
provc?,l
1t1
be
a
wonderful sur-
prise.
·winner
of Ve
.
nice Film
Festi\'al"s Best Actor and Best
Picture. rhe only thing missing
in this
liim
was its lack of public-
ity.
"Wh:11
publicity?" you may
ask. E,al"liy the point.
Thi~ film opened in limited re-
lease.
and
received little to no
press.
B"ur.
ii
is a story worth telling,
and a 111in·ie worth seeing: With
an ahuntlance of Hollywood
pack[1geJ films on the way, this
may prnve to be an Oscar con-
tender.
·
Liam Neeson doesn't wear a
kilt or
:1
N:\7.i pin for this bio-epic,
but c.-r1ainly lives up to his
Schindlc:r personae.
·
Nct•,,)11
's bravado equals that
·
of the lri-,h hero Michael Collins.
01h:l:
;1gain,
Neeson delivers
·
ap0\w1
f11I
portrayal ofhistory's
forgolh:n heroes.
·
Fo11,,,,ing his performance of
. ,
~no~gb to bring him
:
,
this, his pet project.
-·
,
'>Opening and ~los-
.
ing with a bang, Jor-·
dan
·
sets the tone:
Brits
_
get out.
•
.
.,
;
raking.sqme lib~
erty
with history, Jor-
..
dan does
·
so to main-
.
fain
.
.
his tragic for~
mu1a:
·.
.
IJi
addition, Jordan
gathered most of
Hollywood's Irish to
round out the tale.
,
<
Complimenting
-,Neeson's
character,
Aidan
·
Quinn turns
out
a
'
surprisi
_
ngly
·
,
noteworthy perfor-
.
mance as Collins'
··
best friend, Bolan.
·
·
Alan Rickman,al-
.
ways competent,
acts
_
·
the King to
.
Neeson's
_
knight.
Oscar Schindler and Rob Roy,
With
a
gripping pace the plot
Stephen Rea does well to round
Neeson translates history onto
·
unfolded wilhout a moment of out the stellar cast.
·the
silver screen.
boredom.
.
.
Julia Roberts failed to do the
Not
to
be confused with Tom,
·
.
Perhaps the editor deserves
·
job she was cast for ...
Just stand
Michael isn't a summer drink;
more credit than director Neil Jor-
in front of the camera. dear, and
More a pint of Guinness Stout,
dan .
.
···
·
smile." Instead, she attempted
Coll\·
.
ns despera•ely, and violen
.
tly·
·
,
O~e lrish
'
ie
_
bel captures
.
lln-
t
t
sought the fre~om of the Irish
other, as
Jo
rdan wrote and di-
;~~g~tJuliaRoberts, (we try to),
people:
.
_
_
rected this bio-flik.
and see Liam.Neeson portray the
His life playing like a Greek trag-
Jordna· Slapped the world with
Irish rebel with a passion that
is
edy, he was far from perfcc
_
c.
independent filmmaking wi th
,
the deserving of notice.
_
Struggling to crawl from under
·
199:fOscar nominated "The Cry-
Come Oscar time, people may
the goose-stepping boots of the
ing Game:"
·
be talking about Neeson and this
English, CoHins formed a radical
.
Jordan also directed the some-
film again.
wing of a separatist group.
.
""'hat panned "Inierview wilh A
As for whether or not Collin's
Collins, a member of the IRA,
.
Vampire."
• ·
·.
was al'Hero or Terrorist," decide
succeeded partly, securing only
But" 'Intcrview's' box-office
for yourself.
26 of Ireland's 32 couties.
grosses were apparently high
1991 Chrysler_LeBaron Convertible
473-3780
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Need
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•
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(One block down from Raymond Avenue on the eastbound
arterial)
454-2255
THE CIRCLE,
November
7,
1996
13
SGANEWS
·
SGA<SPOTLIGHT
Name: Jason Sprague
Year: Junior
Major: Computer Information Systems
Hometown: Falconer, NY
, Favorite Band/Musician: Sara McLaughlin
Cin:le photo/ Diane Kolod
Jaslm Sprague has earned the
policy a forefront of government;
proud
Li I
le
of Chief Justice of the . instead of making annual even ts
Student Government Assocfa.,
the focus . Jason feels -that his
tion.
job is to implement the policies
Jason went through the transi-
of Student Government; m~ng
tion
fr~)lll
holding the position of them better for the·sttidents. -
Parlfahll'ntarian to the position of
Looking ahead, Jason hopes to
Chief Ju:,tice. He serves as head
"have a
job
when
I
graduate and
of the judicial board. making sure
achieve a happy level of success,
all lcgi~btion passed _senate is
to support a wife and acquire a
constitutil)nal, fair and in the best
house with
a
white picket fence."
'interes1
of
the students. Accord-
Jason'.s favorite aspects of
ing to fason,
"If
someone feels
Marist are «having excellent
that there has been an injustice
teachers who have all acquired
don,e
to
1hem, they can file ap-
.
Ph.D's, and being able to, have a
pea)
with me to combat the ac-' · lot of suppo~ for Marist clubs
tion taken against them."
and other activities."
Jason has learned by working
When not serving as chiefjus-
- through SGA that government
tice, J¥on · serves as president
can
be
a
frustrating process be-'
of the Rugby Club, he is proud
cause
a1
times; peopl~don't seem
to say that this year the team has
to give
any
iriput.J~on:s~ys "
ma.de it to the,playqffs and fin-
how ran
-
yoµ govern· over. the_ ished
7-2
-in
Jhe league .. They
' studenl b~1dy without any ideas
have also gotten a girls t~am up
from ihc-siudents? Likewise, the
and rurinJnfana. they have ~lso
·govef111111!nt needs tO reach out
found a coach at long last.
to their .:onstituents,
fo
order to
laso11 e11ded saying, "
I
would
get thint?s accomplished."
·
Jike to thank-Collin S_ullivanand
'
Jason remembers his funniest , Bob Lynch, the director of clubs
morricnl in SGA saying, ·/ when
for all they dofot_the clubs.
I
feel
Scott Sullens insµlted my weight
they are under-appre9jated and
I--
at the
SCiA
dinner_!"
On a
seri-
would like to take rhis time torec-
ous not~~:; Jason says that his
ognize their excellent service to
short 1crm goals at Marist are to
the students."
try
and mf1ke .the judicial board .. a
strong
p;µ-t ·
of SGA, and make
Two ·organizations receive charters
.
Rec('nlly, the Marist College Student Government
.
has chartered
two new organizations under the Honorary Council. We were proud
to r~cognize the Society of Professional Journalism, and Phi Delta
Epsilon. a,medicaVpre-health fraternity. Each organization will surely
strengthl!n the academic programming, as well
as
provide new op-
portuni1 ks for members.
Regrl!llably, the charter of another organization was lost. Because
there
i~
,m appeal pending, I do not wish to comment. However, it is
never pkasant to see an organization disband.
We \\
ill
hopefully see the chartering of several other clubs this
semes1('r. In the coming weeks,
I
am
confident that the Marist Col-
- lege('omputer Society will return to the campus. In addition,
it
is
hopeful that BiGaLa will finally be recognized. However, the Social
Servkc Council is currently capped.
Man)
of
the clubs and organizations have already done
a fine
job
throu!!h programming and service. My hope is they keep up the fine
work .
. · Fin:illy. there is currently-a position under the Vice-president for
Club Affairs
executive board. Please contact me at x2699, if you are
interes1.:tl.
Sinccrl'I,.
Todd
F.
S1allkamp
.
.
Favorite Movie: Son-In-Law
Role Model: His father
.!~!Mf9rd.
:
from)the··· ..
••.stuclent·•··.· .. Life··· .... council
-.·-.:
-
,
,
... :
.:
.<·:.:·:.,.,:'·.-·~---::-:
,-
.::,·· ..
,
· -,. ,-·:_:, ::_--.:·· .. _·- .. ·:·
··::·>.-: .. -.. ,:
,-... •,··,,
· .. ··:
.. -
.
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· ·:
.
Jtl;JiqM~stf
61!¢i~= :
_
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t ;·· .. ·
.... · . ./ .•·
i .. • ... · .· ........ •·
,> .. . ...
. ...•
.
·
-
. . . . ·. .. . lys'is
a_lett§fRoip
we )'ice Pr~sident
of
theStude11t LifeCouncil._ By my title, you might
,; J.!1.ffi~.
•·:·~\
.
~~gis
SS>,lll~'t'.~~t1m~rtant asa committee to you as.students .. The Student Life Coundl
-
;~~ ~IJ.lPi;ts~cl 9fJl'le m§.~clent S!pclent coun,cil presidentifr<>lll each·.residence hall, as well as an execu-
'
Jtt~}?P
·
.
0
1!fl~9in,g·,y!p~ pr~sicient fotfesidential affa~s.avice president for commuter affairs,
a
:.rre~~Uf
i
>ani:1
a
secr~RITT'·
'
\g;
'
\ {
i .·
<
\< .
,
i
-
:
\> .. ··• ·.· ..
..·· .· '
.
.
'i\~l9~~!1Y,;lh~~spp~sict~e~. ~1ng is.sues within their h.<lllsto theSLC, and in tum.I bring those issues
}ff.tff~§!~g~11tg9y1:rnil_l.~nt'.f;s~ociation Ex~cutive Board, v.rhich
I
sit on~·· We deal with a variety of
;}~.~.1!~~iff()ll:}.ffilS()Clal
e,yents;,ijkeHalloween candy salesand trick or treat pr9grams for local school-,
!;~.~~I~?:
~•'t'e,11;~
rn9re
~f~Cl~S issues'.such
.as
St!CUrity,:Hghting and the dining hall services.
. .
;;\;f?,%R!g~C!ta,c:t1y1,.t~
9~~
se01est~rJ~ .t~e Support Basket Program ... For those.of you ~nfamiliar with
.
:
Jw~
~Y~R.frl
11;p11~()ll,,
~.llt,.N
tl:tl!
1,egmnmg of e~p se131es~r. we mail out order forms to
all
parents
of
;
f~IJ;;~~(!
,
~tpq~rt~?s().mw?~ers
~nd
reside.nts alike .. The parents can then order~ Support Basket .or an
;,.R.~fr~¥;~tf9(!1:1$irJpl}
·
gt-~~~g~te,r:. 'Ild
b()thof
thes~.~tgindl½de, lois
of
triunchiesand goodies. We
c:,f!9;J
· · ·•
m1-:~trt!s~:r,~J~~ye.r dµn11g
final
~xa~s
1.
amlJbelievejthas been very successful in past
.... ·.
,
·.· .. •.~;i;1~
0
ifi~~\1if··~~:~n;f8bt1c#rils:.oi~~;studen.ts··at ·~arist ·college. If
§_l:(:;Jepresent~tivtt is;
~
list()fJ1ames anq phone numbers is included. If
tf
~1
frt!etqc:01,1tact any 011e ()f us> We cannot change Marist College
·
·
· ·
so
please talkto
Ji1j1Page
>
'
-:Mauie~ii
Sa~ch~tti
·
.•·
·
,·.
ili~:Bu·.
'"\::.'i·\·---:·--"::\, __ · .. ;
·:
_;
.
'.':-_::-,
Gia? . ·.·
v
' , • · • •
;,>
'
,
..
r_
.
Representatives:
:
:-
,
.
,
-::::·
•
._:
,
·
• •· President
.
·.
·
·-·--
-·.
-·::-:
'
.
____
.•._
..
·::•:
'.VP foiResidentiai Affairs x5747
·.
•
.
·
•·
'
VP
for Commt1ter Affairs
221-9742
.
_,·
:·.·::•-_;·
__
.
·. Pies of
U.Charrip
i.
\
.
.
.
.
14
•
IN"SI
■
• E
.
..
THE
.
C!RCLE,November7,
·
1996
.
.
.
.
Tough deCiSiolls
f()r
football
backfire ill
OT:
A Closer Look At ...
must remember'
.
that Chris
D' Autorio missed two field goals
prior to overtime .
.
.
.
·
At this point, the
.
game is al-
.
ready three hours long. Why
rush it? What's
a
few more min-
utes for a win.
Needless to say, D'Autorio's
attempt was blocked and the
This
p,t.,;t weekend the football
game was sent to a third frame.
team
",,1k
on Towson State at
A(ter Towson threw a 25-yard
.
Leonid11ff field in a
.
three
hQur
.
tot1~!1!1<:>~n
.
pass, Marist an-
and
3-t
minute, triple overtime swered back with
a foucnclowii
grudgl! match.
.
.
run by J.J. Alien.
The scnre ended up in favor
of
-This
·
was a crucial
·
moment
the Ti!?l!rs by one point at 33-32.
since Towson was now given
This v1l.'1ory for Towson was a
another penalty. The ball was
main rL'~ult of two crucial deci-
spotted Qn the 1.5 yard line.
sions hy head coach Jim Parady
Parady decided to
go
for the win
.
in the , ,, ertime periods.
and try for the two-point convcr-
B,,
f11rc
overtime was ever sion.
reach,'d. however, Marist made
To give the Red Foxes credit,
a
big 11Jistake which enabled
the team has a great deal of faith
.
Tows,,n S1ate to tie the game and
·
in
·
tJleir coach.
·
E
send thi~ contest into
OT.
Co-captain Chris
D'
Autorio
Favorite TV Show: R
Wilh 0:09
remaining on the
said he thought the coach made
clock. Towson 's Kevin Smith
the right call referring to the field
connc--k·i.l with Shawn Ward
for
goal attempt in the second over-
Favorite
Band: Indigo Girls
.
a
16-yard
TD pass.
time. '
Wd
I.
every team scores on
"Coach made the decision," h_e
touch,li1wn passes, but why was
said._"Ididnotquestion hisjudg-
·
Favorite Food:·
Eggplant Pannigian
Ward wide open in the left cor-
ment. He
.
did· what he thought
ner of
1ht!
endzone. 11lere was
was best for the team."
not one hlack, red, and white jer-
Parady said
.
he thought he did
Favorite Athlete: Mia
Hamm
.
.
sey in
:-i!,!ht.
·
.
.
·
·
--·
the right thing going forthe win.
Did Marist want to lose this
"If
I
had the chance to do it
.
.
game'! \Vith nine seconds left to
again, I would do the same
play. 1hL' opponent is on
.
thel6-
thing:••
·
·
yard Jin,-. and'you have a seven
I
do not understand this rea-
·
Favorite Aspect ofMarist: People
Worst,f\spect
of
Marist:
Living Situation
•·
-·
.
'
;
,
~
:
_:
',' '
'
.
'
-~'"'
·.
·
,..
· ..
';
'
'
.
,'
,
point
lead-
you cannot undeqmy
soning. People could say that in
cirC\\lll!-1\imces suffer
a
mental
the heat ofthe moment it seemed
breaki.!11wn.
.
like the right
thing
to do but·after
Well.
1l1t!ymade
a
mistake.
_
Tb.is
looking
back would realize differ-
theyare]ookedat in a new light·
.
Janet
Oli✓er
Team:
Soccer
Class:
Junior
HometowQ: Hazlet,
·
NJ
··
Major:
.
.
Communications-PR
,
·
can
he
11vcrlooked. Just go
.
into
ently.
·
They
are
still rcspected;however,
OT lll)W :md play solid, smart
.
If
Parady was afraid to move
s1ncemanypeopleclidnotexpect
.
·
·
·
_
b
_
·y·
•.
:
M
..
·
arty
·
··
.
.
.
sm·
'
·
a
·
.
c
".
0
'
··
1
.
a
·
.
·
.
.
,·
--
footh.all
. .
the ball on first and
10,
why in
·
them to even
be
in the game'.1be
.
Man,t went into
'
OT and
the world would he run the ball
.
·
th•·n
.
g
.
tl_t
.
at
:
is so tou
·_
g
·
h 1·s
.
·
th
· .. _
atth
.
ey
·.
·.
·
·
·
.
· ·
•·
·
·
·
·
·
:
·
.
-·
·
··
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·
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.
.
.
Well theNewYorkYankeesare
·•
and has trouble drawing
-
more
Pc
.
olaayccJ·1~1111_i.:..'.!l01·1oddnof,tomotakbaelthl
,
be
.
_
u
.
smt
, _
artthe_
.
totryto_conveit a l"".07po~ntpblayl
·
l.
were so close to
l:l
win. Howlong
.
.
th
..
·
~
.
ch
.
-
~P
·.:
_
io
_
'
.
,
n
.
'
s
..
b
.·
.
tth
.
·
.
·
.e
.·.
·
w
.··
·
,o
.
rld
.
-.
, th
.
.
a
.
t
.
:
.
ilian
..
20,000
.
.
·.
·
..
· .
.
·
.
fa
..
ns
.
to
.
one
o _
fthe
Mru-1stplaycd great 1001
a
·
·
are people
.'.
goi.ng to
:
keepwon-
1 k
th
--
est dl•d~ions.
.
and must be given credit to hang
dering wMt
;
wo
.
uld have hap-
)nuch
'
I
·
caiinot d¢riy;b~t
:
whatl
·
.
•
mo~t
·
famous bal par s
m
.
.
e
.
'
O.K
i;irst;Parady brings in
.
hi
.
's with a
.
team Hke Tows
.
on State. · P·.ened
.
ifdif
.
fe
.
,
r
.
ent
.
d
.
ec
.
.
i
.
s
.
ions were
\e~lly
.
\1/ould lil<.e
'to
say is
.
y.'ho
\Vbrld
t
·
.
,.
,
.
·
.
· .
·
.
·
.
cares? The Yankees were
a
once
.
-
\
How come
·
a11 the fanfare aUof
kicker"' attempta33-yardfield They
_
are basically
a
Patriot - made
'
·
· ·
·
·
·
·
.· .
.·
·
·
·
·
·
·
-·
·
·
·
·
·
· · ·
· · ·
· ·
asudden?It
is
be<:auseall New
goal nn third down to end the
League
.
schooL
.
>Th~
/
teani
.
shouldbeproud_of ~gNy frllllphise
.
thatjust
~ap~
.
game. Bui whenrowson takes a
Allen said
.
Maristfoughtwell
themselves. The coaching how-· p,ened to
.
~et lu~ky aoa wm a Yorkfanswanttobein thespot-
penah,
fortoo
many rn.en
·
on
·
the
·
but cannot help to look
.
down.
ever, needs
·
to evaluate th;ir de-
.
World ~enes.
.
.
-
·
liglifTheyrelish it,J3ack in the
field
anJ
-
t-.farist gets a f~t down
''This was definitely the tough.:. · cisions in this game.
·
Regardless,
Consi~~r:
~~t
the
,
l~t sixt~n days
:
of
Mantle;" and ch~pion-
and
ti\'-'
vards closer,
who
would
est loss of the season,'
.
' Allen
.
this was
.
great college football
-
fall ~l~~ics,
:
b~r9r~
:·
thi~ ye~
S,
ship
f
every
·
otber:year, it
·
was
sti!I
try
,:,ra field
·
s?~?
.
said.
.
.
.
.
.
.
:
.
and what it's aJI about.
_:
.•...
-_
h,3-:ye
_
,
~een
.
~~u.-t~
,
en d1f.ft;r~nt
easy
·
~
beii{the
spotlight~
Gr,1111, ·d. Towsop
was
putting
Iagree with him in that this
was
:
Chris Smith is the Circle's
,',
.
!ea~t btq:r
_
or~~d
,
a_s
c~amps.
.
cause
·
it was
always
tbere:
.
·
nine
m\."n
up on the line,
.
b
·
ut we
the to
.
ugh
·
e
·.
st lo
.
ss
.
.
.
.
IfM
.
.
arist won,
•
.
.
· Sports Editor
.
·
.
Am
.
1
. o~
-.
g
..
.
·
th
.
.
.
'
.
~~
,
.
.
.
s
.
..
~
.
..
.
ht~
..
.
!1
.
•
..
•
1
~ hfias
,·
bee
·
i.;.
.
•
~
..
·
.
.
~ut
h~rtft:~rne
_
the
·
1980's and
·
,.
·•
'
.
-
•
.
.
,
·
,
.
.
_-.
· •
.
•
•
·
·
· ·
·
sp 1ta.nevelle1g tap1~ orL1Uu1
·
theYarikeeteamsarepitifuLAU
Increase
lll
membership
.
helps.
he
1rrie"ri~~i(.and: NaUonal
·
otYoiis~allecffans jump off
··
.
.
:
·
·
·
·
.
·
.
·
.
.
eagu~s.
;
To take· tl.iat one step
the
bandwagon,
.and
don
•t
g~t
racquetball to be reco
;
g
·
nized
urtlier,if theRed Soxof1986 baclcon)mtilthefinishline
.
isin
··
_
·
·
·
·
·
.
..
· ...
.
·
.
·
wouid
.
have b,een able to close site; Either root for.your team
For 1h,1sc of you.who do not
ou~ s)(_iUJevels .
.
.
Whi}e this
.
in:-
ut thi Mets
_
that fateful Octa-
·
·
·
always, or'notatall.
..
··
·
know thal Marist,has a racquet-
crease in membership has made
.
r
night: every single
team
in
.
.
Be like a Jets
ran:
The typical
ball
ream.
·
1hey do exist
and
they
the practices more
·
cramped, the
e currerit
AL
East setup would Jets
fa11
lo_ves his ~
·
for \Vhat
.
are com,,<!titive. They compete
competition of the practices
has _
ave been Woi:ld Series Champi.;
.
it
is,
and
nothing more. You still
:
in the Laste
.
rn Collegiate
Rae-
risen dramatically.
ns sincd979
.:
.·
·
·
often get a fullhouse,
.
even
-
in
quethall Conferen~e (ECRC),
•
The ~CRC opened tournament''
:
:
What I a'nisaying in that all you
these recent lean years. But llOt
which may not
be
-
~
noticeable
play on October'_25~h at The··
.
ogantNewYorkYankeesfaris a Yankee
.
fan. He·.will go .with
as thl' ?\l:\AC or the
NEC,
but
_
Court
.
ClubinAlbany;NewYork . .
,
,,<
~
no more special than any of the weather;Jfthe. weather is
nonethd,•ss the competition is
·
Marist was in attendance and ·
e other teams to have won it bad
.
outside, he will not leave
·
just a~ intense.
·
_
/
'
: ·
· fared well. InJact, Marist got a·'
ustbecauseit isNew.:York, ev-
his house. If the
team,
is b~((he
·
The r,1l·,1uetball team; which.is
surprise turnout from freshmen
_
.
ryone is
·
supposed to. get down
.
will
notrooL How
~I_~
can
you
a co-ed dub sport,
.
finished last
.
· .
Vinny Co111misso'and Nick Kost,
....
·-:Mfh
'•
•/
'~
d
.
worship the
·almighty
Yan-
~xplain suddenly wanting
to
see
·
ye
.
arran
.
i_ed
.
, .·
.
_
who
.
9espite appearing in their
·
~gijgg!~
4
J!
1:
ees
but
'
guess what folks the
.
this team play. It too.k people
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
coast•tco a1z
,
. '
•
.
.
.
'
fifth i11
.
1hc
Eastern CoJleoiate
first
.
tournament, were able to
.
,.·
,
-
~:
"'
0·, ..
•
.,,
,
'"
-
mverse doesn t
.
·
revolve around
until the playoffs to realize that
·
~
·
-
·
·
· mustUv
·
r:
-
.
.
·
.
.
Racqw
..
,,
_
h.1ll
Co
.
nferen
.
·
ci_
.
·(EC·
RC).
_
·
stnng together some v1ctones for
,
.
;
,;;,,.,.-,..,~"
'
q
,
,,
our team and nobody else m
this was
.
a
special
.
team?
.
·
.
·
·
·
uve·showm
'
.
The Cl)nft!rerice includes such
·
.
the
0
RedF
1
°
1
xesth.
t f
.
th
·
Rd
'
i
M~lfi
~
ifil
,
he world probably gave too
Soyes,Yankeefans;yourteam
powerl1,1uses as PenJl State,
vera , e res o
e e
f~
')
ti-""
•
·
:
,i:,.'ji,,...
fii
,
uch thought about it the next
is once again champs. But
Army ..
111d
national charppion
Foxes, who were comprised of
·
~
'.
~
4 ...
9(f
.
P.,<?
,,.
,
ay.
guess what? It means nothing.
Nichoh College.
·
·
·
both men and women returnees
e
"
,
;'.
t-~H
+
Another thing I don't under-
Noboclycaresexceptforallyou
The r.CRC is regarded as one
from last year, played well despite
.
r
,;
~ill
l
tand is where did all these Yan-
egocentric fans. The Yanks got
hi •
· ed
1
Am
because
,
·
.
.
I
,
b
1
•.
of the
h
1p collegiate l~gues in
~ evtumg trux
.
.
r;tcsh
U
ts. ,
~ndg
bo~ttiiI~Ben.
,,
'
'.htbVercome
$
ee fans come from. Eve~here lucky by beating
3
better
team
the CCIU11try.
.
.
.
~,etd
~~
;n e
me~~~
_e
8fric1°iy
.t.
ii
f
M~u~i':
'
sC
!
Maryfs';
,
;
,;
walklsee~Yankeecap,Jacket,
intheSeries.Pure-luckgotyour
Ovcr.tlL the racquetball team
me u e e
ecse an
ns Pliis
~
We:
'
Wilfli~~~
i
iw<r\veeks
<
ffi
;
.~
}t
etc._They did not start to appear
team
by because allthe world
has sc,·n its membership in-
Renda, who are ranked l4thand
·
·
;
,
.· '•
.
,,_.
·
,.
,,'
,-
-~
0
.
,
,
,
,,
·»1:
unttl a couple of weeks ago
knows New York's arroga t
crea~ 1i111n J4membeis last year
15th in the ECRC, respectively.
~cl,ln~pAriri~fC?t ~r-
,
~I~I~~~e~
t~:
around the same time playoff~
fans sure dido •t. You ju:t
to
O\'cr
~5 members this
year.
ThenextECRCtouma?1cntis
mec~
,:
e
.
•
st11
,
-
.
-:
·.-
'
',
·
I:,~i
;
::._;\
tickctswcrcimpossibletobuy.
stcppedintothespotlightwhen
The n,~n·s side alone has ac-
scheduled to take place m Feb-
'
·
"";:;~;
Thisbringsmetomynextpoint convenient, and took unde-
quirc,I to.new players of vari-
ruary
at Penn State..
'"''"·"
'
··
•·
•
.
.
,
r:
-,::;,
'.
A
team is in first place all year,
served joy from this
team.
.
_
,,._
....
.
.
.
"
·
.
...
-
./
;
~
.
.
THE CIRCLE,
November 7, 1996
15
Rugby
ghlns
hope~
"
finish season
7~ 2
.
.
.
.
.
•
.
-
~
.
.
..
.
'
.
.
·
.
.
.
.
. .
...
.
-
.
.
.
•
h
v
GIANNA
Prim
;.
_
::
{Vassar
:
~s
':
'
t_~~
·
:
t}~e~poirit
\
tries,
a .
This year we were able to main-
.
·
,
, ·
.
·
.
·
.
.
·
·.
·
.·
.
",
·'three~pqint-pena_lty-ki
_
ck, and:a
·
tainamuchhighermembership
.
"
Women's soccer takes on the
Mount in first roun4 game
·
Sraff_Writer
·
·
.
.
·
.
•
jwo
~
poin
:
t,conversi<>n
:
:
'.':
·
.
--
,
,
·• ·
Junior Mark Conway said
·
Withl)lll a home field anawith
Nonetheless,Maris(s 7
~
2 regu-
M.ariuz was the key to the team's
little ha~·kirig from the
.
Marist
lat
.
~e
_
as.on/~cbr~ far-exceeded
success.
.
Collcg(• ~·o~munity,
_
the men's
,
any
:
Pr~se~.9.i:t
~
Yf?~i~tions.
•.
.
.
·
·
"Without him I don't think we
·
rugby squad defied the odds by
At
,
the be~!nnu~g 9f the season,
·
w'ould have gotten this far "
posting a stellar 7-2 season.
M.arist
~~
expected to finis_h at
·_
Conway said., "We
·
didn't ev~r
MariSt. under the direction of the bottoffi of its division; buf thiru.cwe'dgo to the playoffs, but
new
co:1l.·h
Karl
Mariuz,
qualified
.
since
.
hiring
.
Mariuz,
_
the
.
Red
he eliminated our indecisiveness
for th.! New York Metropolitan
Foxes
·
have been able to
.
bdrig
and helped us gel."
.
·
Rughy Division II single elimina-
together_ technique
_
and
_
natural
·
.
.
The future for Marist rugby
tion playoffs at Vassar Farms last
ability. The end result: a third
seems bright, considering the
Saturd.iy
.
_
,
pla~eJinish in the division
.
team is comprised mostly of un-
'
Third-seed Marist lost to
Mariuz,whohasplayednigby
'
derclassmen and just two se-'
fourth-scl
:
d Vassar, 32-20. First-
forl5 years, mosfof thern with
niors, Ralph .Sanguliano and
.
seed Ru1gers defeated second-
the Rockland Rugby club, has
Stefan Jerrentrup.
seed Hlll°StraandVassar to cap-
added a ne\V dimension to
.
the
"The team was
·
.
very, very
ture till' division title, Rutgers
men's squad '-Stability.
'
.
young," Sprague said. "Every-
and Va.,sar handed the Red Foxes · \Vithout having a llired coach,
.·
body but two are
·
under 20, for
their
rwo
regular season defeats.
the team was susceptibleJo intra-
rugby that is very young. It is
Ju11i,lr Jason Sprague, the
teamcontlictswhenn1embersof
very unusual for a team that
Rughy Club president, said
the squad assu~ed tbe coach-
young to go to a playoff.",
·
.
Mari st,, as its own worst enemy.
ing role
,
.
_
.
. . .
.
.
.
Sprague anticipates
_
holding
"Wl' ;.; ere the better team, but
"Coming from a t~m with no
-
techriical skills workshhps
_
t~rim-
we
Joq
on mental mistakes,"
. ·
coach
.
when I 'Nas
a
freshman,
prove his players' techniques.
Spragu~ said.
· one of the seniors decided who
The men will also maintain their
Mari,1 trailed 17-10 at the half.
would play andwhere," Sprague
training by entering in spring
The Red Foxes scored late in the
said. "It would get very political
tournaments.
·
game hut could not match
and guys would leave the team;
by
~AVID McBRIDE
Staff Writer
!en from their sails as Fairfield
scored in the early minutes of the
second half. Piechocki said she
With having already clinched
felt this goal set the tone for the
a berth in the Northeast Confer-
rest of the game ..
ence Tournament, the final two
"We could never re-establish
our rhythm," Piechocki .,.,;d.
regular season ganies would
,,...
serve as tune ups for the
The first goal was scored by
women's soccer team. The Red
Abby Allen, and would
be
the
Foxes were looking to
.
find a
firstofthreeFairfieldsecondhalf
rhythm that could take them into
goals, as Marist lost 3-0. The
their post season as they began
.
secpnd goal was scored by Kelli
this weekend by taking on
Hurley off of a corner kick, and
Lehigh.
Allan scored the final goal from
The Red Foxes would fall vie-
outside the box.
tim to an official being out of
With a record of 6-12, the Red
place as they dropped the con-
Foxes play No. 1
seed
Monmouth
test to Lehigh 1-0.
In
the second
Friday, the winner advancing to
half, the goalie for Lehigh
the finals held on Sunday. In
snatched the ball out of the goal
practice, the team has been work-
area after it had already crossed
ing _on trying to put some scar-
the goal line. However, the goal
-
ing back into their offense, and
was not counted as the official
their coach is looking for some-
was out of place and didn't see
one to step up and provide some
the ball cross the line.
scoring.
.
Still, the Red Foxes played well
.
'
_
'We've been working a lot on
throughout the contest as they
different types of drills on put-
. , moved the ball well and keptthe
ting the ball in the back of the
R
·
t
1
d
·
·
·
'
action on Lehigh's side for much
·
net," Piechocki said.
ecen p ay not goo enough for tournament
of the second half.
:
However, Piechocki believes
"We played well," head coach
that the key for her squad in the
b)
MARTY SINACOLA
Staff Writer
Maria Piechocki said of her team.
post season will be defense.
this year,
I
think itcan hurt us;
·
night at the Mccann Ice Arena
''We worked hard throughout the
"Defensively, we can't let them
because we never really had that
iri
Poughkeepsie. The Scarlet ·whole game."
ope
_
n up the door," Piechocki
happen to us last year," Accisano
Knights of Rutgers, who were
•
in
Piechocki made note of the con-
.
said.
·
·
said. ''That comparison with last
the same national tournament as
,
tinuing solid play of Beth Zack
Piechocki feels that Friday's
.
The Red Fox hockey team, it is
year hurts us sometimes, and we
Marist last season, bring tlieir act
.
the Red Fox goalie.
.
'
game
wm
be
a hard test for her
probably safe to say, needs a vie-
feel real letdown when we don't
into town. They will undoubtedly
.
"B h h d
team, but she knows that her
·
et
a a great game,"
•
tory tiunnrro'N night against ri-
play well."
.
.
.
.
•
try _to strut their stuff and hand
Piechocki said. She praised the
te3;?1 does have a chance.
val Rui)-!crs University.
Although the goal
of
Marist is
Marist a rare home loss. .
keepers punting and drop-kick-
_,
.
,Mo~m?uth h~ s~~e .~e~-
Thl' dtib's record stands at~-
to return to th~ national ~ouma-
"V:e've _been having good
ing as she cleared midfield many
nesses, Piechocki srud, Well
2-1. Anyone who follows th1s
ment, the:t~m 1s not looking that
practtc~s th•~ week. We've got
.
times
;
need a Ip<)% effort from every-
·.
team;
.
;m~l
-
.s~e~ them play
_
C>~
!1
_
!&.:
~ead:
,
.
.
·
.
,
thatintensity back that 'w~•
.
ve
·
"Qle team's final game of the
.
one on the field.''
regul
_
d~IMst~, knows that_they are
.
,
·
Rig~q1ow, our
:
f?-c1;1s isn ton
--
-
-
lac~ed
,
-
an~
-
ever-yo?e
~
s-positive
;
·
.
regular season
,
was
,
against a
One of the te~'s pre~eason
better
_,
1
_
h?n thaL ~u
,
t sttl!,
_
here
~
the
·
n~ltonals
;
Vie J~st have to
atti~ude
1s
_r;
coming back,"
·
-
strong Fairfield team last Mon-
.
goals was to make it to the tour-
they ar.: tooay with
a
reco~d
_
of
·
conc~ntr~~ean~ take1t~negame
Acc1s_ano sa~d.
.
day. This game would be a very
nament, and now, th~t they've
one ,gam~ over .500, sqmethmg
at a ume, Acc1sano said.
While Acc1sano concedes that
good game for the team to play
reached that, they d hke to fin-
they :m·dcfinitely not used to.
·
The latest disappointing loss
if Marist is involved in a shoot-
as Fairfield and Monmouth were
·
·
ish their final NEC season with a
"W~-)
_
1ave bas,~cal.ly th~ same
came
.
las~ rri~ay n~~ht at the
out,
th~:
will win "nine time~ out
of the same strength.
~~?fere~ce ~ictory.
.
~
asJast
year, _
:
said
.
S!!ntor Joe
?ands
ofb1tten
l
vals_~iena Ho!d-
of ten.
.
.
.
.
.
.
. : .
.
The Red Foxes showed that
..
_Making 1t_to the fin~s of the
.
Acc
.
1sa11\1·
,
refemng t!) the
:
fac
t
.
mg_ a
3
~
~
lead ent_enng ~e third
.
·
.
He also ad~ts that the defense
.
they came to play as they battled
..
tourntF~nt will
1?C
~osting on the
that MJnst:lost only two players
,.
. penod, Siena ?ame
_
s~ornun~ b~k
·
is;~ ke~ to th~s team.
;
·
.
Fairfield to a scoreless first half.
cake, Piechocki said
.
.
to gr4d11,1lmn from last year's
to ~and_ 11:anst
.
~ d1s~ppomtmg
.
Agamst Siena, we didn't play
"We were playing well,"
In th~ other ~st s~on game,
sqt,1ad.
,,
.
.
:
.
·
.. ,
.
.
.
.
-
·
.
.
.
·
, -~3 l!)~S.
, _
.
•
,
._
.
. .
.
.
good team defense, so hopefully . Piechocki said ofherteam 's first
Mt Samt ~ary swill play Cen-
. -
Af~er
-_
11~~ success
_
ofl~
.
t
year,
<
.
Acc1sano at
_
t?b~te~ the
_
defeat
we can pic!c it up against
half play
.
"Audrey (Tarrant) was
tral
Conn~ticut State
.
Piec~ocki
_
ey~ry,!nt•
,
1s won?e":ng ~hen the to,? la~k ofteamwor~.
_
.
.
_
·
Rutgers.
1
'
·
.
playing well in the midfield."
f~ls that tfh~r team can wm on
real
Rl~•I
F
~
}~es will kick m; Marist
I thmk we
~~d
}Ile~t~l break-
. .
Even tho:ugh the
-
team. is not
. Piechocki felt that
.
Tarrant
Fnday,
.
the momentum of that
.
wenta
,
I
_
I 1he w~y to the final !our
.
down~· thro~gho~t th~ w~ole
.
;_
p_laying
.
u~ to expec~tiops,
.
con- · along with Amanda Swiderek
·
g~e would do wonders for her
of tl~l
J
,
;,:
~men:a~
:
Co,.H~~•ate
_
g~
_
e, he sat~
'.
-
~e
.
we
.
r~
.
n~t·
:
ft~f.e_nce
,
1s no,t
.
_
lackm
_
g,
:
as
•
played well together, moving the
te~ on ~unday.
.
Hoc,k1;~ A~soc1a!JOn National
mentallyP,repar~d, a_11d_wed1dn t
Accisano demonstrate~.
:
;
ball nicely between themselves.
Bea~mg Monmouth
!s
the
Tour_-1:iment,_l.osmg
·
only fi~e
p~ay as_a t~~-:Y.le.d1dn'
_
t take
·."If w_e can come out:~lth·a The team did produce some ~ounta1~
·
v:e must cltmb,"
garnc~;_all
,
se'!5
_
0n . .\lre_a~y,
,
six
,
S1e~a h?~_tl~,
-
~~t
f~r
.
~o~~
-
,
rea-
goo~ attitude, put
th~
b~dgames
shots and services around the
:
P1echofki said., She went o~ to
gan1c,uHo
:
this
year,
Manst has
.
s
.
on
t
we dig n~t pl~t,
llli
intense
~hmd us: an~ play with inten-
goal box, and they felt good go-
_
~efer to Su?daY s game as a
"hill"
d:oppi;d
'
J~o
.
contests..
.
.
as we sho~l~ _have.
_
.
.
.
.
s1ty, I don
t
thin~
1
there js a team
.
·
ing into the second half. ·
·
.
m companson to the Monmouth
'lfwc;ircdownagoal ma game
· That ~mng~
.
~s (o tomorrow
· ·
that can beat us.
·
But in a matter of minutes, the
game.
·wind seemed to !}ave been sto-
·
..
.
-
:
women's
X-C--------------------
'.
.. ~()l;;;,,uedfro'!'page
16
point t, 1 his team which was that Woodson. She
·
finished with a
·· ·
(ECAC)Regionals at
.
Bo;ton.
•
feat Rider and St. Francis.
hewaml,'llMaristtodefeatallthe
seventh place
·
finish and a time
·
Therewillbeabout35to40teams
"We want to show Rider and
·
·
other t.:;inls in the NEC.
of 20:03.
·
The rest
-
of
,
the Marist
competing. The majority-of the
St. Francis that we can
beat
them
·
·
·
Thispla11wasside1rackedafter
team
·
finished in
.
the top 40.
·
teamswillcomefromtheNECand
sllld the seniors wanttomakethis
!he R,:tl 1
J
oxes had lost their pack
Sophomore Meredith Halstead
from the northeast region. There • one of their best meets," Mangan
m th.: fti-st three quarters of the
placed 17th, senior Mary Mc
are two races involved in the re-
·
said.
race. M.uist was ·then separated
·
Quillian finish~d
.
25th, sopho-
gional.
.
·
.
,
.
Kelly exemplifies the attitude of
and th!!)' ran by themselves; not
more Kristyn
,
Russo acquired
1'h:e first race is the NCA race,
an optimistic leader. Despite the
in a p:id, .
.
With
·
the pack
.
gone,
26th, senior Karen Mangan
which is for teams that finish in
Red Foxes performance at the
the R«-',I Foxes could not score p1aced 35th and junior Kerry
the top of their conference. It will
NEC Championship and the un-
enou,gh•p1.lints to
gain
-
a power-
Redmond ranked 38th.
include teams like Boston .Col-
· .
limited amount of injuries that
·
ful p<•:-.11i,)n or sizable lead over .
Another problem that affected
lege, Providence and
·
Mt. St.
·
Marist has suffered, Kelly and the
Rider mill St. Francis(Pa.). Also,
Marist was the times of the run-
Mary's. Many of these. teams'
rest of the team considered this
·
Mari:-1 h;ll.l not planned on Rider
ners. These
times
were so costly
programs are some of the best iri
previous season to
be
a satisfac-
and S1 Francis getting a quick
that it let other teams such as
the country.
..
.
.
tory. Kelly says this because of
lead
n11
1hcm.
-
Rider and St. Francis, that have
"Hopefully Mt. St. Mary's will
the two important victories that
·
"M1.
St
.
Mary•~ finished in the
equal ability as
·
Marist, to
.
sur-
get beaten," Donahue
.
said.
the Red Foxes attained, the
top
fi, ,·,
and we didn't count on
pass them.
.•.
Marist will engage in the sec-
Bowdoin
and
Wagner
Rider ,1rid St. Francis coming out
"At least aH of my girls were a
ond race which is the Universal
Invitationals. Also, Kelly is
that 4uick," senior Karen
minute behind
·
their normal
race. The Red Foxes will
be
rac-
pleased with the meet at Notre
Mangan ,;iid
times," Kelly said;
ing against the team's in the NEC
Dame.
Mai
-
;
·
~•
did manage to hold
In two weeks, the Red Foxes
and many others. Marist. wants
"All we can do is look forward
some ,
,r
J
lead under the leader-
go to run in the ~ t Coast Ath-
·
to use this race as a chance to
to the ECAC Regionals and not
ship
·
of senior Kathleen
letic
Conference
redeem their reputation and de-
dwell on the NEC meet," he said.
'
i
i
~
1
i
·
"-
.
,
f
)
r
f.
·
'-~
. ··'!=
\
l
:::.1
-~---
-~
-
-..
~
---~
~-
:.:.-::
..
..::
:
·.
.STATOtTBEWEEK:
.
··
.·
·,
.
\,,
.-
·
:;·
>··
·
<
,c
,•
·
:
··:
:j;·
•
",
·:
··'
OTE OF-THE
:
:
.
-
EEK:
.
Football
play~
fi~t
.
<>V~r:ti~e
-
.·
·
·
g~me
i
n
=
Marist
~istofy
·.
~
.
...
.
.
·
-"We
just
_
have)o conce111,:ate
·
·
-
and
-
take
ii
one ,g~e at
.
a
_
.
. .
,.
.
.
·
-
,,
.
16
again~t-Towson State.-
..:.
:
~--
..
,;: /,
:
·
:
.·
~
--
·
-~
/::
~
-
:
:
'>
~
-
::(_,
>:
;:.
..
.:
THE CIRCLE
--
S
PO Rr
·
s
--
·
·
-
J~vini~
-
eri199
•
~
:
.
time,
J~A~baiio
:.
.
:··
•
--:'" Hocke Team
P60f}?~fiefsgreed}';
·
•
ioses
•·
33-32 intrip.IeOTto'I'oWs<Jn
,
' '.
'
·
.
.
, \
.
':
·. '
' ' ·
. ,
'
-
ylitd
,
field goai-oniitsfand)O.
-
'
.
:
by
_
c
_;
_
_
-_
5
)
1
P
,
_
.
RI
.
o t
_
·
·~so
.
·
r
_,
E
·
~
_-
'{l
_
_
,_
·
1
~
1
,'.
0
:
_
5
_
..
r:
.
MI
_
·
:
_
·,·
..
.
.
i'
_
_
_
a
.
_
:
_
.
_
'
~
:·
.
. _
_
-
._,,
·
_
· :
_
:
.:
.
·
~
o•Auforio~s
ki¢k
was blcx.:k¢
"
'
.
-
b
/
a
sui-ge
j
,ver ~e
-
mJddle
.
and
·,
ih~
:
·
g~e
:
~as
to go
into
a
third
-
.
overum~periocl
,_ .
.
.
·
-
.
:
.
..
.
'
•
.,
·
.
-
.
Ai1tithc~
-
first.for
;
the
football
·
pfograri\
at MarisH~kplac~
e>n
·
, ·
Sa
_
turdaf Nov. 2,
.
arleonidoff
.
field:
··
The
Red
Foxes were defeated ·.
by T0'-1/;~n-State,
,
3~'..32 in
a
~pie
.
oyertiin(non4eague
,
game
.
•.
·
.
.
·
.
·
Whik
;
trying to nurse fhead-,
ache after a
3
hour and 34 minute
loss.ficadcoach Jim Pafac:lysaid
he was glad the ganie tpok plac:e
.
"It was a great game to be in-
.
volvcd with," Parady
·
said.
.
"It
was
_
ajfreat college football
game.
The
kids gave us every-
thing wi.:asked for,wejust didn't
come
out
on top.
-
The gaine was li~e riding on a
D'-Autorio' said he had no
.
doubt
:fo
the
decision rriad
,
e by
·
Parady;
·
''Coa.ch made
the:
decision to
·
' '
end the
'
'
game and
l
would
,
not
que~tion
•
_
his judgement,"
D'
Autorio
-
said. ''The kick felt
great
.
_
Even when
I
looked
_
up
I
was
·
confident
_
that irwas
good.
I guess they just came over top
throtigh
·
·
the middle."
.
_ .
Towson
State
then struck for a
25
:-
yard touchdown in the open-
ing play of the third overtfme
frame when Smith found an open
Maurice Sydnor in the left side
of the
.
end zone.
roller 1.·oaster according to
Towson State head coach Gordy
Comhs.
.
·
Wide
receiver
Chris
:
D'Autorio squeezes
past-two
To;,son defen<:fers
lni3~32
1
~v:rtf~el~;t
010
''This
type
of loss is devastat-
..
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
'
Marist then scored on their next
possession as J.J. Allen con-
verted on a one-yard rµsh. The
tigers
·
were
·
then assessed a 1.5
yards penalty on the extra point
ing to
any
team .
.
I know h9w
Withsecondsleftontheclock. pushedMaristahead26~19with
they(Marist) must feel
;
'
'.
Comt;,s
.
for the first half, Towson State's
...
2:02 leftinJhe third quarter.
·
.
said;
0
-'fhcrewere just too many
Oeorge Perdikakis's 36~yard field
·
·
.
Marist
-
managed
to
shut down
peaks
and
valleys in this game."
goal attempt was blocked byline-
_the Tigers
•
for
nearly
the entire
The lead changed hands five
.
backer Jerry Gerthwho recov-
fourth quarter until w~th 0:09 re-
times
as
lhe Red Foxes and Ti-
ered the ball and ran it back 70
maining in
_
regulation; Towson
gers hauled
it
out.
.
yards for a touchdown. The Red
State's Smith connected with
Marist
came out strong scbr
:-
Foxes then attempted to gain two
Shawn Ward.fora 16-yard touch-
ing
.
the lirstpointsi:>n their
.
first
morepointswithaconversionas
.
dowri pass. Perdikakis's extra
drive
only
1:59 irito the game.
J
.
J
.
Allen's rush was successful.
point was successful to .tie the
Junior quarterback
--
Jim Paley
.
This brought the score to 18-12,
score at26.
connc.:red
with
Jon Reed for a Marist, as
_
time
·
expired in the first
The game
.
was then continued
34-yar~ lOuchdown
p~~-
Chris
.
·
ha.If.
-
in
overtime. Under the new for-
D'
Aut,>rio
's
extra point attempt
With
H:
13 remaining
:
in the :mat implemented by the National
wassue.:essful to put the
:
Red
.
thirdquarter,TowsonStatequar-
Co_ll~giat~Atl,lleti~
-
A.ssop_i11!~on,
·
Foxes
,,n
the scoreb9ard, 7-0
.'
:
..
terbackKeviri Smith
:
finisheg
.
a each team is given
,
tpe chance to
. On
1he.
following kickoff,
.
.
-IO
play,47-ya.rq drive
in
3:47 with scor~from theoppopenis 25:-yard
Maris1 dccied to attempt
;:in
o
.
~'."
aone-yarc:I rush fora touchdown.
line .
.
Toere
.
~e
-
~9
,
~µte
,
restric-
side
kkk
which
·
was successful
·
ToePATbyPeridikakis wassuc,.
·
.
ti9ns
_
except
.
for
.
tti~
;
25
:
second
and ptil
·
lhe
_
Red
,
Foxes'ip excel-
•
Cessfut
This
brought the
:
score
'
playclock
;
'
;
·
,
·-::
:,,
'
•.<
·
.
,
;:
,
'
'
.
lent
tid,I
position
·
:
·
/
:
_
,.
·
: .
..
. ·-
.
to
:
19~18
··.
to push Tow~on
·
State
. :
1frihe
.
firstovertimeperipd, nei-
·
·
. Thi
s
kdtoa35
~
yard field.goal
.
ahead
one~ again.
:
.
,,
.
.
.
.
ther was ablcdo put
·
pgirits
on
by
o·Auiono
·
with
9
:
3f
remai11~
·
The
-
Red Foxes answered back
the
board
:
-
,
Marist's Mario
Wil-
,
ing inlhdirst quarter
.
·
.
with
-
a touchdown
.
on a
-
three"'
_
~on biocked
_
~
:
$3
;
yard µeld
g<>al
TheT1iiersanswered
.
back with
:
·
·
yard
.
fun
:
by
.
A,llen
.
,.,
-:C:he
0
Red
·
auempttok:eep
:
the
;
contest
_
alive.
' .
two
field
2:oals
.
and
·
a touchdown
Foxes attempted yet anoth~r two-
In the
-
~ecoiig
:
o~erttme period,
tobrin~ tlic.scoreto 12~1() inf~-
-
point conversion )Vith
•
a pasflo' Towson State was unable to
vor
pffows6n State
:
:
.
..
•
tight end
·
.
Bfian 'Ladd.
_
This score .with Perikakis's 27-yard
·
:
f
J
·
.
,~~
-
:
_
;_-.
l
i,,.,,
fora
:il~
Jersc,Ci
t~
~
.:~
;
.
--
..
Main~1
.
s
l
t\_~
-
--~
orc,ri,,
'
;:K.;.'-
-
•
-
fuiitUk
-
l'l'
p
!a)',
,mJ
.
.
t_li#
gam.:
_
coinehai.:
fj
tra_fr.11~
>R;
lB)'
111,_
p;,;>>:.
,
.
-: .
'·_·
~nod.,:.
Jowcd1ti,·
Peter<,_.,
~£/
t
~\\\~
.
ii;
j
~
t
ran
··
;
,u
tfme
,
··
lr~s
P
1~ni:d ..
I
<,(,'
"
.·
.
i1
Jieatl, oa
appoi111111c
·
folloMm!th
'"'
•mtl ~-
'
d
1
;;
;:
m:1u:1t
,W
henwud
going
to
:;ct
Price
11) ;,
ti1
.
lucky
.,r,.i
yourl'.,11~
-
n
topla
;
\;;
Thl·
l\lS
feCOrJ
I• I
6-9;
,., .,,,
field goal att~mpt being no good
.
try
for unsportsmanlike conduct.
Mari~t then moved the ball
to
the
The Red Foxes failed on a two-
16-yard line
~
·
·
point extra point attempt from the
On third down with one yard
1.5 yard line.
to go,
,
Parady decided to end the
.
Allen said that he felt this was
game
_
by bringing in
,
D'
Autorio
the toughest loss of the season.
to attempt a 33-yard field goal,
"The overtime format e]evates
Tl1e
Tigers
were penalized for too
the spirit of the
team."
Allen said.
manymen on the fielq. The ball
"I
like it but it's like walking on
was spotted on the 11-yard line
needles."
.
.
.
·
and Marist was given a first
"I
think it was greatthai we
down.
,
threa~ned them so much. Some
Parady stuck
,
to his d~ision to
people were saying that we
end th
_
e game and kept weren't even suppose to be in
I>'Auforio
"
in .to attempt the 28-
.
·
·
tlµs gam,e."
Men's
·
?(-Q.dis(lppoin.ted
with
-
foiirtl1place
:
arNECfinals
.
·
.·.
.
:
-
.
·.:-.
.
.
.
.
.
.
-
by
.
CHRIS
omoNNELL
·
Staff Writer
·
was one
of
his better,
if
not the
~st
,earn
he has ever roached.
'
The
_
Red Foxes were dea.lt an
Th~
men
'.
s cross countrytearri unfortunate blow when a relative
had
__ -
__
vis
_
_
i
_
on
__
s
•
of
cap
·
·
'
t
_
uring
·
·
the
_
of Peter Startz passed away,
.
whicli
made
him unable to attend
-
Northeast Conference Champi: the meet. This loss forMarist
ot1ships ~
_
a
;
Way to summarize
wa.s
.•
~ignificant considering
·
the
their season ofdontinating most
freshman has run extremely
of
their past meets:
·
•
.
·
_
-
:
·
_'
Unf~rtiinat~iy
;-
the Red I-oxes
str~ng
i11
-
his inaugural season
mishe4
in fo
,
urth place behind
for the Rt:<1 Fox~s.
.
_
•·
.•
.
omit-
St.
'.
Mar'y:s; Rider
,
and
.
.
.
~a
h~gh pon~t for
_
1?e ~•
onniouth
'
in
their finalseason J~nior
Mike
,
M~lfi
·
fimshed
,m
n
_
the NEC before.jumping into eighth place wh1c~ enabled
_him
·
e Metro Atlantic Athletic Con-
1?
grab
All League honors with a
ere11ce
:
-
;
·
.
;
''
'
'
timeof26:39.
'
'
.
lie.ad
~o~ch
·
Pete c;oUaizzo said
Melfi
·
sai
_
d his ~rso11a.l peif or-
e h~d high e"pectations for his
mance
.
at the
:
NEC felt excellent
ean
f
going into the NEC final.
and peculjar at the saine time.
/
~hvas
slightly disappointed in
/
~It
felt great to beata lot of run-
he outcome,
-
.
but for the most ners that
·
Lhave never beaten
art
l'm
'.
proµd of the guys,"
.
.
before,"Melfisaicf«Butjireally
11 •
· ·
"d
·
felt weird to pass and beat Ben
o aizzo sru .
.
.
· •
-
-
-
Afte
r:
all
;
Col)aizwcommented (Hefferon) because he has been
n
an
eariier _interview
,
that this
Please see
X-Counlry
on p.14 ..
;
:'
omen's
·
X-C
gets-
~
separated;
1nfshf ourth out of 10
at
NEC's
by
PHIL
WlllTE
.
Staff Writer
,
--
◊~
-
~ ch~liy, $tinny
'
Saturday,
the women's cross cou
_
ritfyteam
in the Northeast Conference
(NEC)
Championship'. The Red
oxes had a
,
disappointing out~
ng, ranking fourth out of the ten
s
that competed.
_ .
"We had a
·
very disappointing
eet,
we just didn't run as well
we expected,"
·
coach Philip
ellysaid.
Marist had a week off to prac-
Jice for this meet after their pre-
·
vious competition at Wagner
with
a
second place finish: With
this past victory Marist was very
confident irt themselves.
·
Then the
Red
Foxes
had
a
week
to practice for ihe
NEC
champi-
onship, which took place at
Mount Saint Mary's.
.
Kelly said
he hoped
his
~
would finish in second place due
to
the
talent and reputation
.
·
that
Mt.
St. Mary's program has.
However, he wanted Maristto
keep a close pace
with
Mt SL
Mary's. Kelly stressed one main
Please see
Women·x.c
onp.15 ...
49.6.1
49.6.2
49.6.3
49.6.4
49.6.5
49.6.6
49.6.7
49.6.8
49.6.9
49.6.10
49.6.11
49.6.12
49.6.13
49.6.14
49.6.15
49.6.16