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Part of The Circle: Vol. 49 No. 7 - November 14, 1996

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'
~NEWS--·. . ..
Te)eYision. comm'entate>r Tony
·Brown:.
speaks atV~
abo~t empowerment
·
.· .·
. The~;iiid~hY~ca1J:~boralcohoI·'.~~-PAG~·S
'Ransom': Ron
Howard's
newest
thriller
-SPORTS~
Men's· ~w"iniming wins
i00th
meet
..
.
. .
. . . . . ·-PAGE4·:.
·. presents-a
bl~~
·
World
view ·• .
·~PAGE 12
:
_against Central Connecticut
.
-PAGE20
Volume 49.'
Number~_ .
.
.
The
S_tudent
Newspaper
of ~imstCollege
Students·tra\i~lin time·
via
virtual reality system .
-
-
.
'
.
'
.
'
.
.
.
byBEN:AGOF.S
McMullen..
dent employees actively in-
: .· -· · · Staff
Writer
-
·
· · ·
·McMullen said the ·final ·goal
volved with Killion'.s project.
Students
\1/ilf
be
~nt
io_
hell if
·
is to use· technofogy to enhance
Michael McDowell;' a student.
one t.farist:faculty member
has
-the teaching environment and ,consultant,' is working cl9sely
his
'"·ay, ·
<·

·
. .
· .-
'
make· stud~nts active·learners. -· · with 'Killion.: _He is translating
~teve Killion, assistantprofes-
Killion said he has always had. Killian's ideas into technical jar- .
sor of Engli_sh, said he hopes to
an ititere.st in instructional tech-
gon that is use<fto program the
have; stud~·nts
in
his Medieval· nology(and has high expecta-
VR environments,
. , .
. .. .
Literature
class
learning in a_ vir-
tions:for the project
.
McDowell said he litipes
the
tual reality
(VR)
environrilen,t
.
.. "I can't imagine the ·possibili-
proj~t win give students more
where right answers are re:. - des,
0
said Killion.
n1
want stu;. . ofa feelforwhat it was like to be
warded and wrong answers send ·. dents to believe that iµedieval
lit-
alive during the seventh century.
students
to
a virtual hell.
:
. ·
erature is riot
boririg
and that the · _ Aroop Pandya, academic
Killilln is working with theAca- .
dark
ages weren't dark!'
.
computing's intranet webmaster
demicComputingdepartmenton
:_currently, Killion is theonly - has been learning visual C+t-, a-
a project called "Life of a Saint."
faculty member working on ere- · programming language used to
"I'm
trying to
find
ways to sub-
ating VR environments ·for his · create objects in virtual reality.
merge people · into the.· seventh stud_ents; but McMullen said she · Pandya is currently working on
century with some enthusiasm,"
hopes pr9jects witl,l otherdepart-
a virtual castle, which Killion may ..
Killion :.aid.
ments .will soon follow.
use next fall for his medieval
lit-
. According to. Barbara
McMullen said thefuhireofVR erature course.
-
·
·
.
.
l'lloto
C0Ur1-CIY
oC
Kalberinc
JOWlly
. Bob pole speaks atthe Republics~ national reception on ·
election
night.
Marlsi stude11ts were
among
those selected to
Mc Mu I lcn, acting. director of · at Marist really depends on stu:.
. According to McMullen,· the
acadcmii: computing, her depart-
-dent. response.
. ·
· ·
comp!}ter, including
VR.
gear,
· work security
at
the reception. · ·
ment recently bought a computer
"If
we build all this and the stu-
monitor, and pre-installed soft-
from
Antares
Vutual
Reality Sys-
dents don't learn any bet_terthan - · ware, cost about-$9,000 ..
terns that
wiH·
be
deypted
to
de- . St~ve
[Kµ!,iqnJg~tting
in front of
McMullen said acadentlc
com-
.
veloping and exploring
virtuiµ:
·
t4e
class aridjustlecturing,:ilien
puting ,bought'the· cci:mputer
enviromi1ents.
.
.. ·
• .· · · . · maybe .we don't want
to
do it that
abqut three weeks ago, only
as
a
. "In
pasfyem:s: we've
investi-
way,"said·McMullen .. ··
.
starter machine.
gaied how we could best enter
. According to McMullen, labor
"I'd like to build on what we
slowlyinto tlus whole.
VR
arena, . hosts
for
building the VR envi- · · have, use this
as
a basis and en::.:
so.we can have Virtual'reality for ... _·_ ·roriments is the biggest c_oncem.
hance itas we-have moiefunds,"
our;facufr
;/anci
;'stqdents;''.::shld
,l
She'said
·ih~t·
sl!~
:h~
ti,y~: sti'i:-·' 's_ajd'Jffc?viuilen;:
. . .....
·
...
Marist ~tudents provide
security·
at
Republican
nati0natrece~ti?lJ.·.•
,,
.
.
·
.. , .
.
:
.. ~yt;f
J;f
:t
>-=tf
J;;~:;~::
_ , )~<?Rubli_can candidat~ :.~ob· . netw<>r~,.iJlc:l,uding l'IBC, ABC,
·• · Dole may have lost the.election;
·
_
CBS, F'O~ CNN, and MTV,
had
. 'but
·
ihat was' nof ei;iou·gh to. Hvewires for the event. . .
dampen the spirits. of· 11 :Marist
·
_
More than 2,500 people packed
· _students:whg attended his recep-
the ball roo,m a! the Renaissance
tion;
·
✓-

Hotel, Ijlaking_1t the second larg-
. Eric Rosenkranz,
an
American · ~t media event in RepubHcan
. University student who is
erri-
history. .
..
ployed by the Republican Na- . Leigh;Mozeliak,_ajunio:politi-
tional. Coinmittee (RNC); invited
c.aL~c1e11ce lllaJor, said she
·
Mari.st
students to attend the
Re: .
greeted• people at· the door· and
_ pi1blican party's reception ·on .
W~S
,su_rpds:d by the Secret
Nov.
5
at the Renaissance Hotel
S~rv1ce stactics.
_ . _
.
·• _ . _ • .
_ .. . .
.
·.
_
.
.
.
.
. .
.
Circle Pbolo'Dialle
Kokxl
Stude;t_ts wait for food In the Marlst cafeteria. There have been recent complaints that the
variety and quality
9Uoo~
has d~lined. · · .
·
·
·
· ·
·
·
· ·
-
-
·
·
Cafeteria
.vartety1acking despite Sode~o's
efforts
by
M1caw:Gocrr .. _
.
"Alot·oftimes, it's cold. Some- . HealsosaidJherewetetoofew
.
·
·Managing
Editor" . _
times they'
run
out
.
of
.food
2!1d ·
itenis
to
choose from in
·
the caf-
. do~'t
getiep~aceI11e11ts_for
.
a-.~~teria::·;_ ·_
Student~ co11tiri~e-to c~~plain . weekoC:whatever, .. hesajd ..
<· . '
:"It's
a
lot of options, but the -
about the ;variety of cafeteria . Bill~olo,aconunimications
·
optionsarethesameall the time,''
food, despite Sodexho's claµns ·· major, said there
are
some
good ·
he said.-:
that th"y · are atte.ntive to stu-
aspects about the food in the
·· -Sean St. Ciair, a sophomore
dents' needs.
cafeteria. '
. _ .
communications major, said there
· Freshman
Dave.Amabello, a
~'There's always food available,
is
even less.variety on
the
week-
psychrilogy/special education . and we never have to wait," he . end.:
.
major.
i.aid
he is disappointed in
said.
. .
•111ere's · enough variety·
dur-
the quality of the food at Marist
Lack
of
variety is
a
complaint ing the weekdays, hut during the
"I
though it would
be a
lot_bet-
that many students say they weekends. there's hardly any-
ter for th~ money we're paying," have about food offered in the thing,'' he said.
.
.
he
said.
"It's messing with
cafeteria.
_
Jennifer Murray,
a
sophomore
everyhody's digestive system;''
According to Verderame, the· psychology/special education
Joseph Verderame, a sopho- · variety was better last year
be- ·
major, said she only eats certain
more
inronnation systems
major,
cause students had options, things in the cafeteria.
said he thinks the
service has
such
as
the stir
fry
area,
which-·
·
gotten worse since last year.
has not been featured
as
much
Please see
SODEXHO,
page
"There's no variety," he said.
this year .
..
.
....
,_.
,.
,.
____
···-·
-·~--
-
--
·-······
--
---~···-·--·-·-·
·in Washington D.C. · . .
. '1he SecretService, tried to
The Republican National Com- · stay as inconspicuous as pos-
mittee (RNC)works to help re-
sibl~,"saidM~zeliak._"Theywei:e
cruit, advise,-_and. el~t· Republi-
talking
to
us
pee they were O!d1-
can candidates for local and state
nary people.
elections.
·
·
- _ Although there were defeats for
Junior Jane· Rosiek said stu-
the Republican party, Rosiek said
dents volunteered to work with . the support was still the~e.
security and
:
the secret se~ce
''The crowd was chanting
at
the reception.
·
~
Youpole,"' said Rosiek.
"Security was intense,'' said · Iri theend,1t was:n9t about be-
. Rosie~. "My job was:
to
check
Please see REPUBU~AN. _
cr~entials and make sure all thtf
·
page 3 ...
How would you rate the food 'in the cafeteria -in -
terms of
taste
and variety?
·
Poor-101
Good-19 .
Fair-95
.The Circle conducted an unscientific poll on Nov.I- Nov. 9. 1\vo hun-
dred eigliteen students were asked
this
week's question.


























































































'
'
'
'
2.
'~ November 14;·1996
'.:·Nat··
JyJ

···
,
Limiteda.id·readl~S-Ziiite:a.sconfliCfddh~iiti~s.·
by. TONY
'.SMITII
Hutii\.erugees,'as v.ell~ nearly 150,CXX) . Nichol~ Burns/howe~er, denied that
Associated Press Writer
; .' ·. ·
Burundian.Huttd:eftiget!s :and°an un- · the Clinton aclriurustratfon
was
block- .
.
·
.
:.
:
' · known
iuimberoflocal
Zairians.·
ing the intervention·force'.
.
. .
.
GOMA:, Zaire (AP) -.Small amounts
of.·:· .-.
Toe last foreign aid workers fled east-
. ..You have to consider the question
emergency food and medicine. trickled . ·
erri
Zaire more than' a· week ago;
.
before you senci°troops
fot
Bums told
.
. into this eastern Zairian town Monday · . Fortwontghtsrunning,mortarsfired reporters tod~y. ''Th~United States
' . after a long delay at the Zaire-Rwanda bor-. ·'either by
Zairian
troops
or
th~ir
illmed -·
beli~ve~
there_ wm be
~
need ~or
!
hu-
der.
-.
Rwandan Hutu allies have fallen on ·man1tartanforcetogomto_Zaire. ,
Tutsi rebel leader Laurent K~bila ·agr~d · residential neighborho6ds in Goma. . : . Af~can fo~eiin ministe~ ·w~re meet- .
over the weeke.nd to allow aid agencies
Seven· miles northwest of Goma,
mg m · Addis Ababa, Eth1op1a, today .
into Zaire's eastern cities, where fighting
Rwandan Hutu 'milftia are helfoved to
on the same issue.·
.
LOS
.c:aused
g
/per
galloq
·<fheave···
ing taxes,
in the past month sent more than a million· control the main road leading past va- ·
. · refugeesfleeing into inhospitable forests
cant and tr~hed
V:N.
refugee camps
and mou11tai_11~ without food or water:
toward the interior of Zaire.
Several.African countries including .
Ethiopia,
Mali,
Senegal, Chad and
Congo have offered troops for an ~d- ·
protection mission, but· the African
thirds of
Luridber
··wide.
·,Indu ·
. dealers
oil
to
foi;t
Pric,·sv
somcEasfC
weather
ooqst.
Coast,·w~ere
p
some
price
dro
The surveyfo
pumps,
whictf
was 123.47cen
.· for
mid-oracle''
e
.
At full-servi
was 159.95
grade andJ
Guateina
peace acco
VlNAD.
has reached
a .
movement
t
fighting;
Pre
day.
'"
Arzu
told:t
Ainctfoin
p
cord with
fonnany··
·
··
lives.
Thetw
Jullyinte
'the go-.·em
28-ovrrare
the
kid11app'
nent husines
To lure the
leaders <iffe ·'
. cease-fire. •·
kidnapping
TORO
Co.
of Can
· ccimrac1
tha
tracting
out
Th~ Can
93.7-per~n
,,cept
Ilic·
th '
\week;The
flier with
~orp.
'Tlt~ag.
tcction
agains
. suppliers;.
f
p/ •
the
next
th¢ey
It
also
provid
··each );rar of
th
increa\e
tha(J)' .·
· of
IO p~rce~t b
· Tfi,, \'Oting
fo
was
held Sat ., ·
cities;
Dengue fever
and
inl<!cted
mo
l11do1i.•sia, and'an9t1
disease
hasdaimed
delta.
;.
j,·:;;
Shimer
Hary3I! _ .
office, was
quoted
by.<
Monday
ac; sayiilg~~.i~f,
< .· .. •.··•••.• .,_
.
/ / .•
check
dengue
fovef
hl½!
p@'~tii;m,%· ...... ·.· .
.
.. ,
The Vietnamese·JI~th-¥m~;
saj~
<~
11\;
addi1i.-m to the
34·~.rnor:e•ti~p~.OQO
~pley
inVi,·mamhaveconttact(l(.f~en"'·•
,, ,
.......
i~
..
-
The ministry also:
said)ri~
9
ho ~ie4i
were children. ·••··•.,"•,)'.:;:;; •...•.
/fit!f>'.'fN#·•
;•::.r.
... .
···•·'•··i••'i/
Symptoms
ofdengu~
fevef;
}V},lich
i.scam~
,
b~
mo~:(1t1i!i).!S, 'incluqe hi~hJevet_:
and
nQS~ bl~. In
,
.
sewre
cases, patients
Sllffer.h~ir!oq:liaging of
i~~
·•
tcrnal rngans. ·.·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·· ··
·
·
• ·
.
.
Samantha Bolton, spokes~oman ·for.
Bolton said her agency· had reached
Doctors Witho1:1t _Bqrders, one of
12
the central Zairian city of Kisangani,
groups that managed to deliver supplies
330 miles northwest of Goma, where
. _ for
distribution to the city's hospital, said
some 60,000 Rwandan ·Hutu refugees
the delay, is . making the situation more
were reported to have fled.
·
critical.
< . . . . - . · . . .
There were reports that retreating_
· _ ·
.
Itwas_not clear whether any aid would
Zairian army troops were looting and
reach the 80,000 residents of Goma, who
sho~tfog up. the city;
· · -. ·
have not had access to fresh food for
10
Atthe United Nations today, Zaire
days.
.
.
.
.
agreed to allow a multinationaLforce.
Bolton said the aid delivered would re-
to enter the co~ritry to protett aid de~
main in Goma becauseit was impossible
liveries and called on it to order•
to get food and water to the hundreds of Rwanda and Bunindi to withdraw
_thousands of Rwand~n Hutu_ ~efugees
troops from eastern Z~re'. · · .·
.
scattered further west w1thoutm1htary pro-
In
a letter. to the Security Council;
tection. _ . . . . . . .
.
.
.
Zaire demanded thatfood be delivered
Her agency, the Red Cross and Red Cres- • to focal -Zairians and refugees, .
cent S_ocieties and several.other aid agen-
·
, · · ·
cies were also trying to get emergency
Toe U.N. Security Council asked in-
food into Bukavu, a rebel-held Zairian
terested member states Saturday to be-
town
60
miles south of Gama:
gin preparations .for -an international
Fighting since September between
force to move into eastern Zaire but
Zairian troops.and ethnic Tutsis they are
stopped short of authorizing the de-
trying to drive out of the country has up-
ployment.
rooted. more tl\an
1.
l
million Rwandan
U.S. State Department spokesman
Mother of Tiananamen Squ~e protestor
fights
for appeal .in_ subversion
~~s~
· • ..,- _
·
,by-
JoBN LEICESTER•
Associated.Press Wriier.

Pro;ec_lito~i}it®.;WMlg's
w.Jtiii~si.
and
·riieetings
he held during
his
27
months:bffreedom.as pro_ofhe
W~ .
plotting. to. subvert thl! g9vernment.
:
. nations have no transport or logistical
. capacity .
The Rwandan Hutu 'refugees fled to
Zaire in 1994 to·escape retribution for
their government's organized slaugh..:·
ternf alleast
soo;ooo
people, most-of
th~m minority Tutsis.
..
. .
.They were joined by former members
of the Rwandan Hutu army and militia.:
men,'who have used
-
the U,N. camps
as
bases to attack Rwanda, now under ·
a Tutsi governnient.
Some·· African leaders· say the· root
· cause of the current crisis was the fail-
ure of the aid agencies to separate the
Hutu soldiers from the refugees when
they first anived.
In the Rwandan capital of Kigali, a
European Union delegation metMo._n-
day with Rwandan and U.N. officials
t~ discuss the refugee crisis.
BEIJING
(AP)
-,The motherof Wang
Dan; a Chinese dissident sentenced to 11
years in prison for subversion, filed writ-
ten arguments Monday for his appeal
but
Numerous countries: including
the . ·
United States, condemned the verciict.
WangLingyun said o~ c~~s 'fro~~e
Beijing Municipal Higher' People's
Court said the appe~ wo~ld
be
he.ard
openly .and that Wang would attend
and
be aHowed to sp~ak-,.,She:does _
not think·ihe appealwUi succeed: ..
said she fears it will fail. ·
.
WangLingyun said they were sticking
to the defense used during Wang'.s se-
cretive four-hour trial thathe·-was inno-
cent of the charge
of
tryirig to overthrow
the government·
·
In a telephone interview; Llngyun said
the trial was not properly conducted.
• "We think they lacked-facts and a legal
· basis," she said. '.'The .facts they pre-
sented were insufficienno establish the
charge of trying to subvert the govern.:
ment.They did hotestablistiacrime." ·
Wang's sentencing oh Oct. ~O silenced
one of the fast active members'oHwo gen-
erations of Chinese· democracy and hu-
man rights campaigners;
Jailed for
3
1/2 years after leading pro-
_democracy proJests inTiananmenSquare
-in 1989, Wang continued campaigning for
democracy until 1>91ice detained him again
in May 1995, ·
Wang,
27,
was a history major
at
Beijing University. befor~Je ,ro~e to
· prorriinence·as a leaderof the.1_989-prp- · · ·
-test.s. _ ·~:,.~ .~ ·~· :-·-~·-- :-'·~-•-~-~.
-
-- .;- ----,::...,.--.~~· _
Hec'now shares a·cell\vith six
pr .
seven othedmriates in a~eijing:police
· deteritioi{centei:,:hi~:.ijioili'¢f~aig: · :._,_
: She s.µ4
nir·son
has,coniplained of .
stomach aches;iconsfani·cotigh
and
prostate. gland problem~ usually suf.,
Jeied by much older rnent . . .. · .·
"I'm worried his healtli won't hold
out another ,10 years/' she~aid. "He's
.a man in his 20s who has- been locked
in a room for
J7
nionthi;°and couldn't
move abou_t; Of course, it's affected
his health/',.-.
·The Weekend Weather
,f·one·11Da
:~ois
of
Man
_
.... " ·
)f
~
.. ·
...
··•

:!:;tda;
.
~
3
;.;~ded
case'iq
t1ieB
0
~~~Jf
J;:
Townf:iouses.
An
intoxicated student in 'ured his back and was
taken to'S.t. ·Fronds.•
:r~xl~y:
- Sriow likely.Colet. Lows
in
the
teens. High~
25
to
35.'
Friday:
·- Mostly
sunny
and
continued
cold>
Lows in the teens. Highs
25
to
35.
Saturday:
Mostly sunny
and
warmer. Lows
15
to
25.
Highs
35
to
45.
Sunday:
Increasing clouds. Lows
i~
the 20s.
Highs
in
the 40s.
Source: Associated Press
































































































































.
,:
J;;~
.
C~cLE,
November-14,
-
1996'
3
.
,
Visiti~g
professor
brings
globaf
e?{.peti.ence
to riew
:
lfttetactive
,
Multimedia course
. :·
bt:'AMiE
LEMIRE
.
.
.
'
A&E
Editor
.
.
.
~n a fcirefgn~li'~y "tllink
~~ic?,
called
the East-WesLCenter in
·
Hon.olillti,
where
he
.
researched comfuunicatioris
.
anci'coniputers
'
in Asia and the Pacific.-
,
·
.
..
·
·.

.
.
-"1(
_was mor{of
a
:
"talk tank,,, says ·
·
,
Jii~fcj~\
-
~e~face inth~-~o~~~ication
.
P
.
ennings,
.
.
"becaus~ i(br~ught
-
stu-
departm~11t
_
at1vl
_
arist College.
. .,
..
.
dents, scholars, and government offi-

,
A~t~9~y .Penni rigs is a visiting assistant
.
cials together
to
discuss economic, cul-
pm~e~s()r,
;
~ho i~ currently teaching Comm.
. .
niral;~nd PQiitical issues.''
.
.
.
.
292-:-lntemet andtheWorld Wide Web. He
Quite
the
world traveler, Penn1ngs also
wiU also he teaching Interactive Multimedia
.
spent four years teaching in New
during ,vintedniersession.
·.
.
·
Zealand, where he was a web master for
~ehn,i
_
ngs is
a
Goshen native, where one of
·
the communica.tion studies department
Marist)exten~iori centers is located. How-
·
at Victoria lJniversity.
eve
·
r; he livcdfo Hawaii for 16 yl¾U'S.
.
He j,?~ingly said he usually spends his Janu-
Ata web master; he designed web
arys surfing in Hawaii, but
.
this year he will
pages· and
.
used the internetto
'
link up
be ~urling the net instead.
students afadistance with voice, video,
Thef~lcus of Pennings' Ipteractive Multi-
.
.
and high resolution graphics .
.
media course is to teach students to use the
Web
to
l.e.im
.
about multimedia.
.
.
During
,
his stay in New. Zealand,
.
-
~'.To
me, the Web is under-hyped,"
Pennings also designed the first mas-
Pennings says,
'
-
'In
the course, we will be
ters program in communication in New
working with advanced HTML code and
Zealand universities
.
images.
as
well as designing graphics.
It
will
draw on
a
new area, called information de-
sign."
.
Pennings taught at the University of Ha-
waii,,
bile
working on his Ph.D, He
also wrote
a
book:
Computerizatio.n and Development
-
in
So111hcnst Asia, and he spent eight years
·
·
After
.
ali these impressive global ex-
periences, Pennings returned home be-
cause his family lives in the area, and
.
he also wanted to contribute some cif
his
:
experiences and expertise to his na-
tive area.
Introducing...
.
Pholo ~ Y
orTim
Massie
Jonathan Karl, author and journalist for CNN, spoke about the importance of
the youth vote in his speech entitled, "Leave it to Beavis: Election '96 Genera-
tion X" last Wednesday in the Cabaret.
CNN
correspondent stresses
i01portance of youth vote
by
KRISTIN RICHARD
Editor-in-chief
their futures.
Karl said he is optimistic, however, about
the potential his generation has. He said
Jonathan Karl, author and journalist for
he does not believe in the myth that "Gen-
the Cable News Network (CNN), ad-
erationX"iscomprosedprimarilyofigno-
dressed the importance of the youth vote
rant and apathetic individuals.
in his speech entitled, "Leave it to Beavis:
"The defining characteristic of 'Genera-
Election
'96
and Generation X" last
tion X' is its commitment to community
Wednesday in the Cabaret.
involvement. We look at how we can make
The 28-year-old Vassar graduate, who
things better in our own backyards," he
joined CNN this past January as a spe-
said .
.
cial correspondent covering issues of
Karl
said the challenge his generation
·
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CB
We have poles, bindings,
and
,nuch, ,nuch morel
concern to young Americans; stated that
faces, however, is trans\ating idealism into
young
.
people must disprove the myth
.
_
political action.
·
.
·.
.
that they
;
are
an
,
apathetic and
\az.y
gen-
.-
,

.
·
"We
'
need
to
\hink aboutthe \ong term
eratiorC
.
.
•i·
:
·
··
··
·
and about our future," he said.
.
"head in
The New York Time~ that we
·
One of the most'i.mportant ways Karl
areconsideredagenerationofagingBart
.
suggested for the young people to have
·
Simpsons, possibly armed and danger-
their opinions heard
·
is through voting.
ous," he said.
"Voting rates among the young are pa-
Karl said the baby boom generation is
thetic or worse," he said. "We need not
spending government money that young
only to rock the vote, but to rock the
people will need in the future because
ststem
as
well."
the government thinks the young gen-
According to Karl, the current voting
eration does not care.
·
.
system in the United States is not geared
"What
I
think has happened is that the
to providing the young with easy access
political system has declared war on our
to placing their votes.
future," he said.
"The voting process is so complicated
Karl compared the damage that was
that it is used against young people, and
done at Woodstock to the damage that
it is a major barrier to voting," he said.
is being done by the baby boom genera-
However, Karl said the members of this
tion in government today.
generation should make a concerted ef-
"At Woodstock, the baby boomers had
fort to voice their opinions through the
fun and left a mess for us to clean up," he
voting process
.
said. "It's the same with government
If
they do, he said "Generation
X"
might
spending. If we don't do anything now,
not have to deal with losing money and
there will be nothing left to do but clean
benefits in the long run because govern-
.
up afterwards."
ment would have to Jisten to them and help
One of the possible reasons Karl said
their generation.
his generation is being ignored is that
Although citizens often blame individu-
only a smaJI percentage of eligible voters
als or political parties for spending gov-
under
.
the age of
30
actually vote,
ernment funds in a way that is not sus-
whereas the percentage of senior citizens
tainable in the long run,
Karl
said it is the
who vote is considerably higher.
entire system that needs to listen more to
He said gove111ment is more likely to be
the young.
responsive to the needs of those who
"It isn't liberal or conservative to want
seem concerned about the direction of
to screw the riext generation," he said.
.
.
Students
'
Work at Republican reception
.
.. continued from page I.
ing Republican or Democrat, but about
the people.''
,
Katherine Jowdy, a registered Republi-
can, said she was euphoric at the recep-
tion
.
"It
was like a big pep rally for being a
republican," said Jowdy. "We were up-
set because he didn't win, but happy be-
cause we got the Senate."
Many republican elite attended the re-
ception. Students had opportunities to
see celebrities, such as Oliver North,
Lamar Alexander, and Haley Barbour, the
chairman of the RNC.
Tim Geary, a political science major, said
he considers himself a hard core Republi-
can.
"I am always talking about politics, and
I am psyched to be a Republican," said
Geary.
'There was a bunch of college kids
in the room for Dole, and I was like,
'OK
I'm not alone."'
Jowdy said Republicans were down to
earth
with this campaign, citing the turn-
out of the younger generation
.
"Young people don't look to tradition,
they look to today," said Jowdy. "Repub-
licans are trying to change
.
That's what
young people want, change."
,
.
,[








































































i '.
I
'
I
I
I
4
.
··
.-
.
.
Sodexho uses surveys to track opinio~s on food and service
··,·
~
.
.
;
•:
... cc,nti1111edfrompage 1
_.
doesn't look that healthy," she
aregradu
.
ate~oftheCulinaryln-
said.-'
.
.
·
·
stitute ofArrieiica
.
·
Also; the pro-
.
"I cat the same thing every
A.mabello
-
_
said although some
·
duction
i
maiiager has'
,
his
·:
san-

·
day,"
she
said. "I eat a bagel,
·
an
.
nutritious food is provided, he
safe certific:'ate;
.
which
·
stateshe
English muffin, and salad/'
-
does not usually eat it.
.
ha~
:
beeri
i
through
·
:
a
cour~idn
_
According to Bob Jepson, di:.
.
"I
don't find myself ~ting nu-
food handling
·
procedures.
·;
_ .
rcctorofopcrationsforSodexho,
·
.
tritious mealst
-
he said.
~•Most
.
Jepsonsilidifthe~afeteriirims
._
·
the m:1jor food provider for
ofmy friends, don't. They'll
be
·
·
out of.a
:
certafo itell'i, it)nay be .
_
Sodexho is Sisco. He said the
eating a
·
bagel and soda because
.
·
becauscfseivers were giving out
·
menu i" determined by the stu-
·
that's the only thing they can
more quantities than they should
dent surveys. The dinner menu
eat."
have. Also
;
he said another prob-
·
rotates
on a
four-week cycle, ex-
Jepson said Sodexho tries to
lem islate deliveries.
:
._
.
ccpt for
the deli, grill and salad
address concerns students have
''The produc~ was ordered and
bar.
.
about nutrition.
.
did not come in on time and that
.
Jepson also said that once the
"We also
-
have,
,
every other
.
does h~ppen more lhan people
menu is determined;
·
quality
.
·
week, a reside!lt nutritionist to
.
realize,"he
'
said.
·
..
guidc:lincs are set up
:
·
.
• ·
_ .
.
answer any conce~s that stu-
·
Students have other problems
"Tlwy're are very stringent
dents have;" he said
.
.
·
with the cafeteria besides the
.
buying guides, so the quality
Sophomore Latonya Francis
food.
·
· .
·
. .
..
·
level is continuously main-
saidshethinksthequal
.
ityofthe
.
Raniolo
.
saidonethinghedis-
tai ned.'" he said.
cafeteria food has improved this
likes about the cafeteria is the lim-
Jepson cited an example of two
year.
ited hours.
-
·
·
types
1,f
beans, Grade
A
and
"We're having chicken and
"Sometimes when I'm hungry,
Gracie B. Sodexho uses Grade B
things like that more for dinner
it's not open," he said.
·
because Grade A have a thicker
and we're having more variety in
Anothefproblem is the lack of
skin, whkh will not hold up un-
soups;" she said.
·
options with board plans.
dcr their cooking. Jepson said
Francis also said the vegetar-
Verderame said the college
cost dol~S not play much of ,i'role
ian options provided are not suf-
·
should have more board plans.
in choosing products
.
ficient.
"A
lot of people don't get to
.
"II
·s
a
,
case of matching the
"ldon't
eat red meat
,
" she said.
use a lot, so
it's
kind of a waste
proliur1
we
need for the menu
·
"Idon'teatatthevegetarianbar,
ofmoney,"he
'
said
.
situation. and there's almost no
but I would like it if we had pasta
He said he also thinks students
cost
di
!Terence between the two,
every day
as
an alternative to the
should be
·
allowed to swipe their
so
_
i1
·s
nc,1
?
case of saving pen-
vegetarian bar."
card for a guest's meals:
nies," l,e said.
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
Jepson said Sodexho is cur-
Cannon said
-
she does not
He ~:,id
Grade A meat
,
fish and
rently planning io reorganize to
·
thin
_
k the cafeteria responds to
poultry products are aiways
vegetarian bar.
student concerns about the
used.
·
"Iil
January, when we start up
food.
·
Trevor Sparing, a business
again, there will be a whole new
.
.
'They have the same things
major
,
s:iid he thinks the cafote-
area dedicated to the Vegan and
every day," she said.
"I
don't
ria provides sufficient variety.
stir fry," he said. 'The equipment
think they really I
_
isten to the stu-
''Thcrc
's always such a choice
is on order right now."
. ·
dents' response on what we like
every day." he said
.
.
.
Amabello said he is also con-
and we don't like."
Ovc:r:ill. Sparing
ifaid
he thinks
cemed with the quality of food.
Sodexho conducts large sur-
the
fond
is okay.
He said the hamburgers are not
veys, once each se111l!ster. They
'.',\
,
can
get pretty
..
good; but cpoked
.
~nough and
_
\h?,t
.
some.-c
.
.•
alsohav~
_
~onu.n~l}t car~~which
somct i mi:s it gets pretty
·
monoto-
·
·
times tlie chicken is too rare
::
·
>
students
·
can fill out; )epson said
1
·
nous:·
he
said
.
"I
think
H's
\lerderamealsosaidlheburgers
'
students have
·
been more vocal
above average."
are not cooke9 properly.
_
with their comments this year.
Sparing also said some of the
''The
.
burgers are like hockey
.
''The students are becoming
food i-, not very nutritious.
pucks," he said.
·
better and better at responding,"
''Tht:re's
the desert area and a
.
Berceron said she is also con-
he said.
.
·
lot of fried foods that are pretty
.
cemed about the quality of food.
He said Sodexho tries to ad-
fatteni
n
!!
.'0
he said.
''The
salad is sometimes
dress
student
concerns
:
.
Frr,l;man Melissa Cannon, a
·
brown, and
the
soda machines
"I
think, for ihe most part, most
psych, ,lngy/special
_
education
don't put out real soda,and the
of their concerns have been dealt
major
:
.ilso said she does not juice machines are broken all the
with," he
said
:
think
lh,:
food is very nutritious.
·
time," she said.
"Ah
,inf
it seems greasy and
_
it
·
According to Jepson, all
.
cooks
Tony
_
Brown
.
speaks on freedom and self-worth
.
hy LEAH
SHELTON
.
Staff Writer
·
'\1/~ahl, equals power. Power
equal, freedom.
_
Tele\ ision commentator Tony
Brown
11rg.cd peopie to help the
poor
in
order to help
_
the nation
at the 1rk·nnial gathering of
Afri-
can American Alurnni of Vassar
College
._·,n
Nov, 9.
.
·
.
Brcn,·n spoke about l~dership
fo
.
economic empowerment of
B_Jack

. \m~ric~. and
.
h~ empha:-
.
·
sizecl fr~·cliom and self-worth.
.
"Jf
);Oil
\\'ant to have froo4oni,
you m1ht have.what it takes to
·
be
frtl
::~
Brown said.

·
Ac
Lor,
ling to Bro\~~. in order
.
to
.
tic
free, one
.
must

have
.

wcahh
:
There are
three
kinds of
wealth: money;socia} capital, or
the go1)ll will of-
a
c
·
ommUnity,
·
and
hun1:in capital, which is
mea-
sured l,y fonnal education and
work ahility.
"Jf you want wealth in the black
community and in
.
the economy,
you must create social capital
and
c1
,mmunity," Brown said.
Brown said to do this, it is nec-
essary
10
start. from the bottom
up.
"If
blacks stopped screaming
and yelling that blacks are at the
bottom line, stopped waiting for
affirmative action to get them
somewhere, they could become
successful," he said.
·
·
·
Brown discussed self-esteem
and how it relates to wealth.
·
''Youdon'~getself-esteemfrom
being rich,
.
you get it from hav-
ing confidence. Confidence
comes
from having high self-es-
.
·
teem," he said.
Racism was also a topic of
Brown's lecture. He said it is
necessary for people to be them-
selves and not worry about what
others think or do.
.
''Whites don't care about us
either way; They don't care
about blacks.
_
They could car~ if
·
we took over the country.
They're just worried about
feed-
ing their families," Brown
saicl.
Brown said he believes if the
entire nation could love one an-
other and help the poor, the coun-
try
would flourish, both in black
and white communities.
·
.
"You're not going to
.
_
make
sense out of race .
.
·
It doesri't
make sense. There's only one
race; the human
-
race;" he said~
-
·
'We didn't all cciine over on the
same ship, but we're an in the
same boat."
·
·
In addition to
.
hosting
Tony
Brown~ Journal,
a national tele-
vision show, Brown has a news
radio talk show in New York City.
He is the
·
author of
·
Black
.
Lies,
White Lies,
and he is the advisor
·
.
to the Harvard Foundation for
In-
tercultural and Race Relations.
.
Brown was named Educator of
the Year in 1995, Communicator
of the Year in 1994, and
.
was
.
founding clean of Howard
University's School of Commu-
nication.
·
He
·
is
.
also founder
-
of. The
·
Cyberspace Club Online, a na.,.
tional
.
online computer service,
w~ich he started in April.
·
In addition, Brown recently
launched a ~ix-mc:inth program to
train black' and Hispanic youths
in
·
"Cutting edge technology in
Cyberspace." One hundred and
fifty thousand young people will
gain computer knowledge
as
a
result of Brown's program.






















. •
TmfCm.cur · · --·
So~Jiler,Lectur~ Series focuses ~n literary .mystery
_
.
Circle photo/Julie Marshan
Dr.
Donald
Foster, picuted above, spok~ at the fourth a·nnual
George Sommer Lecture on Litera-
ture
last '3/ednesday in the ~erfor!"in~ Arts Room. Foster,
a
professor at Vassar College, has
attracted international atten~1on with his efforts to authenticate a recently-discovered poem as
a work of Shakespeare. Hts lecture, ei:ititled, "Shakespeare's Who Done It: The Case of 'A
Funeral Elegy,"' dealt
with
the process oholving this litera!"Y mystery.
· The
Sommer Lecture series was established. to honor Dr. George Sommer, a medievalist and
Shakespearean, who retired from Marist in 1991 after nearly 40 years of teaching in the English
department.
·
SPJ earns status of
· ehartered
organizatio11
i
'
·Jc'(:!)y''l\fic11it'LECGIUFFIS'
'
, .. , - :,
honots
~l~b;·and_g~~-rn~~be~hip•
-~-
.
,,,
1"
'":};r~ffWrit/i-
c:c<·:,': .,.
up;t'Galgon·said: · .:.:' .. _ :.
-
, -
·
·
Buccola echoed Galagon's sen-
• -Irishnportantto be recognized;
timerits. .. .
- .
_ ·· Thc),)cal chapter of the Soci-
"rdlike to see .membership'
ety •
of
Professiorial'Jcihrnalists
grow, and be seen not as a news-
(SPJ) ril Marist received its char-
paper club/' Bucco la said.
ter in Octnber: · .
Randy Hayman; assistant pro-
Michad Goot, ajunior journal-: fessor ofjotimalism and adviser
ism n,:ijor
and the president of to SPJ, said he 'Nould like to see
SPJ;
sai,l he,is glad they firially
SPJ solidify the chapter.
·
-
have their charter.
"The chapter needs to ·become
"It
v,ras
a stumbHng block. The
automated, self--nmning, get-into
charter puts an object
in
motion,
the habit of communicating on a
and \\;ilhthis momerituinwecan
regular basis, and follow,'up on
contirihe;" Gooi said.
tasks on a regular basis,"
Angela Galgon, a junior joui---
Hayman said.
nalisn1 111ajor who is editor of thi!
Hayman said he would like for
alumni newsletter thatSPJ pro-
SPJ to attend regional and na-
dtices: echoed Goot when she
tional SPJ conferences .and -to
said it · is an . significant· acconf-
travel
to
Washington D.C. and
:plishili<'nt that SPl received
its
New York City to visit media or-
.charter:
ganizations there ..
''Thc·d1arter makes us look pro-
Kolod said the club is just start-
fessional,'' Galgon added.
ing, but there is much to be done.
Mid1\.:llc Buccola, a·sophomore
"I
would like ~o see SPJ have
journal ism major and vice presi-
more activities, be known on the
dent of SPJ, said it.is quite a re-
national level, be represented at
li~f that 1hcy have their charter.
conventions, arid to have those
"We couldn't really get mov-
journalism majors who,are not
ingi N6,1.i \Ve can do all the things
members get. involved;'' Kolod
.we sct\~ut to do," Buccola said.
said.
Dianl~ Kolod, a junior journal--
Amanda Bradley, a freshman
ism major and secretary of SPJ,
journalism major and editor of
said !\h,: is very excited the club
Dutchess County O!)-lipe Maga-
has rc.·dved its charter,
zine for SPJ, said SPJ is impor--
"Wc wC1rk~ really hard to at-
tant for journalism majors.·
tain
61ir
charter status, " Kolod
"SPJ gives you a further in
said . ., ·
depth look atjournalism outside
Mary- Kate Einucane, a junior
the classroom," Bradl!!Y sajd ...
jourrialr-.m major who is ireasurer
Ellen Kalaus, a senior journal-
of SPJ:
.
s:1id
having the charter is
ism major and co-chairperson of
a posith·c recognition.
publicity for SPJ, said. SPJ is a
"It
sli,ws
real progress for such
great
way to keepinformed.
a short' tiine," Finucane said.
"I appreciate the.factthatjour-
Now
1ha1
SPJhas received their · nalism majors have an.outlet for
charter.
lhc
members are planning
themselves regarding issues in
· for the future;
their field," Kalaus said. "It gives
Galgon said she woul~
!ike
to
them more knowledge of what's
see SPJ get more recogmtton.
available to them."-
"l'u·
likc to see it become an
"-, · November
14/1996
.
s
~ealth beat: _Long-terrri
.costs of alcohol
by
JACQUE SIMPSON
Feature editor
hibited, alcohol acts in the same
way depressants do.
Even small amounts of alcohol
Having a few drinks with some. . affect the brain.
friends can be fun· atthe time, but
It
irritates the lining of the
the
body
is paying a higher cost
esophagus and the stomach. It
than the $3.00 spent on that beer · can cause gastritis, an inflamma-
or mixed drink.
tion of the stomach that can lead
Alcohol is a chemical that acts
to gastrointestinal bleeding.
like a drug in the body. It effects
These effects of the moderate
the brain and the nervous sys-
amount alcohol are reversible if
tern, the.stomach and the diges-
you stop drinking alcohol.
tive system, the liver, as well as
A heavy drinker has a greater
causing many other complica-
risk for damaging the body. Ef--
tions.
fects that may result from heavy
The seriousness of its effects
drinking are the tearing of the
depends on how much, and how
stomach lining, ulceration, and
often you drink alcohol. .
severe bleeding.
According to information re-
Chronic use of excessive
leased from Tylenol, alcohol can
amounts of alcohol can lead to
have many effects on the body
serious complications in the liver,
and the mind. AJcohol can have
the organ where alcohol is pro-
maj or effects on a person,
cessed.
whether young or old.
Cirrhosis and alcholiv hepati-
Alcohol has very different ef-
tis are the two most serious con-
fects on different people. It can
sequences in the liver. Chronic
even affect the same person dif--
excess alcohol consumption is
ferently at different times.
the single leading cause of illness
Four factors determine the cf-
and death from liver disease in
fects of alcohol: how much you
the United States.
drink, how much you weigh, how
Aside fro m'·alchol 's effects on
much food you have eaten, and
the body,it also can have dete--
finally, your drinking habits.
riorating effects on the mind.
Alcohol is a central nervous
Though individuals act differ-
system depressant. Even though
ently to alcohol, caution should
at low blood levels an individual
will feel stimulated and less in--
Please see
DRINKING,
page
6.
J,-•
·
,
j,.,






































































































































































































6
.
· ·
THECJRCLE;

Nov~mberl4, 1996
Profile:
.:
Sorith
.
.
End
RA
·
.
Melissa
Ruol
.
.
. .
.
.
·.
.
.
,
.
.
.
,
· '
.
by
CIIARLOTIE
P
ilTIUDGE
Staff Writer
LaiidikPiastics
·
t~ipay
,
$48
;
,ooo
·
for
'
reportingfai].iire
~
.
.
:
by
W ~
KAT~.
new
·
fact~ry in
.
the, Syr~cuse
·
·
·. ·
subutb ofSolvayin_ Sep~ml>er
Junior Melissa Ruot
·
does not
.
:,
.
.
::
-
~W~ter
.
.
. ·
1994andliliajathu'd~p#tr.ad
:'.
.
live
1n
the townhouses. She does
.
SYRACUSE;N.Y.(AP)
.;;
Jrian
:
miliisitator
-"
to
:
help

haiidle, its
·
.

·
not
Jive
in Gartland, either. She
'
unpreced~nted
:
·
ruling
/
~
,
C~- . wor~r•s compeii.s~?~
·.
d~~es
·
isstill livinginLeoHall .
.
·
cago~bas¢d
·
plastics manufac-
:
because
.
it wa.s u n f ~
,
w_1th
.
Ruot is the
fourth
floor Resi-
turer was
.
ordered Tuesday
to
.
New York's
laws,
Manes
sajd.
dent Assistant of Leo.
pay
a
$48,000
fme for violating
·· ·
:
/
The
·
comp§f
_
accus,&.f
)tate
.
She said she became an
RA
be-
a
state
law on reporting work-
·
officials
9f
:sel~µye enforce-:-
cause of her positive experience
ers;
injuries
.;
.

·
..
.
.

ment,,,
·
contending· that
;
up
to
with her RA freshmen year.
Linda Russel, aspokeswoman
.
twofthirds of conipanies
_
doing
"I
wanted to be able to help
for
LandisJ?lastics, said the
business
-
in NewYork
·
are late
freshman. My RA was important
·
company \YPUld aggressively
_
filirig
their
injury reports.
'. .

·
.
.
s
to me
as
a
freshman,"
Ruot said.
·
pursue an
appeal,
first to the full
·
·
,
Finkelstein declined
·
te>
re-
" Also, it
will
look good on my
Workers• Compensation Board,
spond, saying
¢e
judgpient
resume and help me
deal
with
di
-
then in
a
·
civil court, if
neces-
spoke
for
.i
tself. •
.,.::
.
L
>
(
:
:
:
.
-
verse people,"
sary.
.
.
.
.
.
·
Russell said
wh,eil we
figi1red
Thcjuniorcriminaljustice
.
ma-
"We believe
.
this fine
to
be
the company did]ts own inter-
:
jor said living in
Leo
as
an upper
grossly
unfair
and inappropri-
nal
audiL "V{e didn'Ury
t9
hide
classman
is not bad..
ate,"
she said.
.
.
.
anything
or
bury
~t.
We ac~
.
"I
do miss living with my
·
The company has
30
days
to
cepted responsibility."
friends more
than
I
expected, but
. .
c1rcie p11oto1Dlane Kolod
.
appeal.
I
tis the first
time
a
com-
Russell said Landis
was
fined
freshman dorms always have
Melissa
Ruot,
pictured above, Is an RA
In Le~ Hall.
.
pany
in New York has been
bec
.
ause the case had been
po-
people all around. There is con-
finedfornotfili.nginjuryreports
liticized by
·
the United Steel-
-
stant noise and activity," she
I
think
that helps. We are mostly
s~rpositive. .
.
·
.
.
on time, said Mark Finkelstein,
workers of America, which is
said.
a
new staff," Ruot said.
Uove the girl~ on
f!lY
~oor. I
the board's lawyer. Although
a
trying
to
unionize workers at
·

So far this year,
Leo
has not
Timemanagementisaproblem
ha~eagoodrelationsbi~witbmy
workers' compensation' board
the SolvilyplanL
. . .
.
lived
up
to its reputation for fire
.
for many students, but Ruot has
•·
residenl:'· ~ey come
~
to
tell
has been in
·
existence for
82
She said no
.
workers were
de-
drills.
·
an especially tough time
~
Along
me s~pid things all the time. My
years,
it has had the power to
nied treatment

or
.
benefits
be-
,
"I
told my residents
I
don't
withhertime-consumingRAdu-
door
15
always
0
P~?•
~d ~ey
impose fines only since
1990,he
cause
Qf the reporting failure~
want
to wake up in the middle of ties, she is the secretary of
come an~
hang out, Ruot said.
added.
.
and
there
was
no
evidence of
the night with one, so don't
pull
Marist Singers, secretary of
Ruot said she _understands that
.
Landis
admitted
to
Supervis-
any employees having QUt-:-
them," she said:
People Educating Other People ~hmen year
18
tough, b~t she
ing
.
Workers'
·
Compensation
standitigmedicalbills;
·
The New Britain, Conn
.
native
in a Learning Environment tries
to
stress to her residents
LawJudgeRobertGaleataspe-
Toewlionclaims
thatLandis'
said the Leo staff
has
a strong
(PEOPLE).andamemberofthe
that
she survived it and found
cialhearinginSeptemberthatit
plantisunsafeandthatthecom.-
bond this year that may contrib-
women's rugby team.
her
way, so they can
100•
_
failed
to
report at
least
21
inju-
pariy has baiassedwor~ who
ute to the lack of discipline prob-
However, she said she keeps
"l'v~ gone through ,what they
ries
to the
state Workers' Com-
complained. The factory
_
em-
·
fems in
lhe
dorm.
her priorities straight and remem-
are going thr~ugh.
1
ve found
pensation Board within the re-
ploys 180 people.
Landis'
·
·
"InRA
training;
we learn to try
bers why she
is
at MarisL
·
where I am gomg, so
I
can help
quiredlO
days .
.
·
.
.
·
operations are <:urrently being
to establish a community. The
..
I
am a
student
first,"
she said.
them
·
see that they
·
can get
Landis'
lawyer Joseph Manes investigated
.
by
a
.
half--0ozen
Leo staff has
a
strong bond, and
She said her residents help her
through it," Ruot said,
blamed the failure on --misun-
state
and
federal agencies.
·
drinkin
.
·
.c
Z
ry,
1
}
derstanding, confusion and a
.
.
In
August,
Landis
reported
Underage
.
.
·
g cause
1.0r
.
.
·
ero ,.1.0 erance
·
aw
lackofguidancet
.
.
morethan60casesofjob-re-
.
·
·
..
·
N
··1· ·
d · ·
.
· · ·
th
·
·
. Onlyseveri percent of alLli-
Landisciperatesfourplantsin
.
'
hltcdinjunes;somedatingback
-~:~ominu_edfromP";ge
5'.

;
.
..
•.
ov ..• an
.
ll 1~
ano
;
~
·
maJor
.
·
:
censed
drivers are
:
between
,
the
Illin9isaridlndiana.Itopeneda
to
1994.
.
.
.
betakl!n m~e~of
.
0
~r_a,,w.i&
...
·
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stepm t11e state
·
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ou
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an automobile under the
·
mflu-
tecLthe health ana
.
safety of
g
-,c,
,
-
•tr
'
'I.5'
.. ,
,
.
·
t
ence
.
·
young persons .
.
l11dividuals un-
percent accounts or
percen
The drink that helps an indi-
dertheageof2l;whoareca!Jght of.fl?e al~ohol related traffic fa-
vidual unwind also affects mo-
driving after drinking, even a
talities.
·
.
·
..
,
·
.
.·•
tor at;,ility,judgment, and the
}?.CC-
small
amount of alcohol
will
lose
Af!>'
amount of alcohol _w~ af

.
·
ceptions you need for safe driv-
their driver's license for a
mini-
fect~udgelllen~andcoo_~ation.
·
..
mum

of
·
six months,
and
possi-
It
.
~
also reduce an _1~v1d~s
ingRecently New York State blylonger.
·
.
.
.
·
.
.
8!'ilitytomakesafedrl:vmgdeci-
passcd
the "Zero Tolerance,''
law
Young people's driving ability
510
~~-
drl
·,
.
th
b
·

·
to
in order to reduce teen drinµlg
is
more likely
~
.
l>e
iinpaired by .
~
.
a
-.
ver,
~
.
.
~t
,
war .
and driving.
.
. '
small amounts of alcohol
than ,
a,v
_
oid
.
tlle dang~rs <?f-
,
impaire,h
The
·
1aw
became effective on
that of older drlvei;s.
·

driv~~ is
:
not~
-
~
if people.
·
are om to drive
~
.
.
.
. ·
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'
.
~

.
.
;
.
.
.
.

sponsored
by Campus
M
i
n
.
i
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.
and Pub
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ic Praxis
·•.
·.
·
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.
BrotherFrankKelly
.
...
.
·
·
.
.
Ptofessor
Mar
Peter
:
Raoul
·

.
,
.
~Ve
~
eed se
ri
6us, cledi~atE!d students to be a part o~ our Global
.
·
·
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Outrea
c
h
~
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Those whowish
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WHERE: .MEXICO
cnv
'
WHEN:
SPRING
.
BREAK
·
(March 8
~
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GOALS:
.
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.
·.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
h
I
.
d
·
• To
be
ofservke t<ithe pe>or at a Marist community
sc oo outs1 e
·
ot
~te
;
ii:6
<;:ity
:
.
·
·
.
·
• To
enrich
our
own cultural vision
.
.
.
• To come to a deeper understandm,g of spirituality and reflection
~VE Will
NEiD
TO RAISE APPROXIMATELY $825 PER PERSON
·
·
.
. (includes all expenses)
!f,:ou ;re inter~st~din joining us. please pick up an application at any of the
foilowing pl<!ces
:
.<
De:tdline • Sovcmbcr 22. 1996)
·
·
·
·
· ;
_
Campus Ministry Office· Byrne House
Prof
.
Mar
Peter-Raoul
-
Fontaine 218
Dr
.
Bruce Luske • Dyson 377













































































l
THE
C1R~LE, November
14, 1996
fr9fesso
_
r recognized for

J)erSonifying
Marist spirit
by
E~DLY KUCHARCZYK
·
·
· .
_
Staff Writer
like to focus on is digital media.
He said the new area
.
of digital
media is exciting for him because
it is almost like a new Renais-
.
tv!arbt Professor Richard
sance in art. He said this new
Lewis. chair of the department of Renaissance has opened more
·
.
art and art history, received the
opportunities to artists .
.
Distinguished Teaching Award
"There's a real need in the busi-
on Sept. 6 in the Nelly Goletti
ness community for creative
·
Theatre.
people who can handle computer
The award is decided by fac-
software, and so it is the first time
ulty members and is based on ex-
in a very long time young artists
.
_
·
cellencc in teaching, scholarly in-
are going to be able to move out
terests, and service to the Marist
into the real world and get good
·
-
community. It is awarded to the
payingjobs in things that they're
·
.
professor who best personifies
interested in," he said.
the spirit of Marist.
Lewis has also been involved
Lewis, who received his
in the development of a digital
master's of fine arts degree in
library at Marist.
.
..
He has been
·
painting from the University of on the steering committee for
.
Michigan and bachelor's of fine
four years.
arts in visual arts from the State
He said the whole idea behind
University of New York at Pur-
the project is that students will
chase. has been a professor at
have access to electronic reserve
Marist for 12 years. He said he
rooms on-line, no matter where
·
·
feels honored
.
to be chosen for
they are, and they will
-
contain
this award, but he said he does
material related to the class the
not feel he deserves it.
student is taking.
"It feels like a lifetime achieve-
He said this will allow students
·
·
ment award and I'm riot even
to have all the materials they
halfway through my teaching
need, like a kindergarten class-
career yet so I don't really feel
room.
·
·
entirely deserving, but I comfort
"In kindergarten you're ·in a
myself with the idea that maybe
class that you're surrounded by
·
by the time I'm finished teaching
.
everything that you need, and it
then I'll really deserve it," he
seems as you go higher in the
said.
·
grades, they start taking more
One of the reasons Lewis re-
and more out of the classroom
ceived the award was for his
.
until you reach
college
and you
teaching. Lewis, who teaches
have a totally
_
i
_
mp_overished
Fundamentals of
Art
and
Desjgn,
room," he said .
.
Digital Painting and Animation,
''The-idea of the electronic re-
.
:
_
.
and Introduction to Digital Me-
serve room is that in <!Very class- ·
'-\
?
.
i
_
~;:.said he hopes to
.
foster fo
-
his
:
r9_om
wil!

be
.
p!accs
·
_
;with
,
plugs;
''
students a pennanent love
of
art.
·
arid
•you'
]l
come
'
in with your
"I
_hope
they have a life:lqng
laptop
·
computer a,nd plug it in
·
love of art and they see how
art
and suddenly that world of the
:
coimcctswith all the other things
:
·
k,inderg!lrtner comes pouring
·_·
they arc studying," he said.
back
in," he said
.
"You'll
be
com-
.
Lewis said he enjoys teaching
pletely surrounded with materi-
.
art because it is fun and he is able
als that will be relevant to your
.
.
to get to know the students on a
class."
··
more. prr.sonal basis unlike in a
Lewis said the project has been
lecture
c
I ass. He said that teach-
exciting for him.
;'
ing art does have its challenges,
Another activity Lewis is in-
·
.
·
though.
volved with is book writing. He
·
·
"It has its challenges because
co-wrote an art appreciation text-
.
-
student~ Jre very sensitive about
book published in 1994,
The
the ,v0rkthey're doing and you
Power of Art. He is currently
.
.
.
have to encourage them to do the
working on
a
book about com-
best they can,'' he said.
puter animation.
·
Sophomore business market-
Although he has had many
.
ing m~ajor and art minor Nadine
achievements, Lewis said the
Simon said she enjoys her Fun-
most gratifying is when students
·
.
damental
Art
and Design class
come back and tell him he has
.
with professor Lewis.
made a difference in their lives.
"I bi?.li.!ve that Professor Lewis
"The most gratifying thing is
shows that he really likes
art
and
when you hear from students
it sccms he wants his students
who graduated and they tell you,
to understand and get involved
you had a really big impact on
with it and appreciate it," she
them, particularly when you had
said.
no idea this was going on," he
An area Lewis said he would
said.
"It
makes it all worth it."
organize a
small
Group&
Travel free
*Cancun *Bahamas
~ l i e : ~
*Jamaica *South Padre
*Panama
City
Beach *Daytona
call
for Free Info Packet
J
1-800-426-7710
www.sunspfashtours.com
HELP
WANTED
Men/Women earn $480 weekly assembling
circuit boards/electronic components
at home.
Experience unnecessary,
will
train. Immediate
·
openings your local area.
(l
·
~
,__._
Call 1-520-680-7891 E X T _ ~
_ _
_
:\17:'
(~~-
. \
~ .
-

:-~~. Marist
Hunger Week
Starts Nov. 18
th
for all Students, Staff, Faculty
& Administration
Wednesday, November 20
th
• Hunger Run
(run, walk, rollerblade, bike, etc.)
In front ofChampagnat
@ 12:00 noon
Entry: $2.00
Open to everyone
• Oxfam Fast
Open to all on the meal plan, give up your
dinner in the cafe tonight and we'll receive$
• Hunger Banquet
for the hungry.
Open to all members of the Campus Sign up November 18-19.
Community-except for those on the meal plan.
6:30pm in the Cabaret.
Students $'3.00. All others $4.00
Sign up November. 18-19
**Hunger week is sponsored
by
Campus Ministry X2275**
1
I
I
j
I,•
























































































































8
THE CIRCLE,
November 14; 1996
This Is Tlle
.
Right8easotl
To Join
Fleet~
.
'
"
.
.
'
.
~.
'
'
.
.
~-
.
Seasonal assignments that
pay
o.tfl Fleet
Financial
-
Group
is
tecruiting employe~
.
,or seasonal help
-
in the
Hudson Valley Region. Many positions are available for the 1997 Processing Season,
·
with ttjilning for these
positions scheduled to
begin
in the coming months .
.
If
you're motivated
to
work in a production-oriented
environment with a progressive industry leader, complete the coupon belo'!·
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• Competitive wages
• Both
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• Weekly payroll
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convenient location
• Food service on premises
·
.
(PLEASE PRINT)
Last
Name
First Name
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Address
City
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
State _ __,.. _ _
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Zip Code _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
Phone: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ (Day)
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ (Evening)
Best Time to Call:
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O
ffi
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Skills:
0 Bookkeeping/Accounting
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Data Entry
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Preparati~n
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AFleet
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equal
opportunity
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_
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:
__
Kingston~ NY 1240
l;tel: (914)'
·
336~3039
.
Simply complete
.
the
·
information l>elow,
9-1titout, and
1~ail
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it
to us
in
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Wewill.J:>e
in
t~uchwith
you to sched~e anappoin.ttrient
within
the
coming
months.
Months
Available:
Ojanuary-
·
·
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Q
February
Days Available:
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Other:
.
QMonday
QTuesday
Cl Wednesday
0 March
·
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ClApril
Q
Mon-Fri
.
□ Thursday
0
Friday
0
Saturday
Hours Av~fable:
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,
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□ May
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6:00am-2:30pm Q7:30am-4:00pm
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. 1,'HE CIRCLE,
November 14, 1996
SGANEWS
·.
·
sGA
SPOTLIGHT·
For some ·people, just talcing
Mara went to the freshmen resi-
notes in class is J:iard enough, but dent areas and introduced him- .
sophomore Erinn Hergenhan ·· self to the freshmen. As a fol-
.. also has to record the minutes
low'."up to this intrqduction tour .
from. the executive
board
meet-
Mara, plans to visit the freshmen.
ings for SGA and the senate
again to see if they have become
. meetings as part of her job as
morea\','.areofSGA.
. executive secretary.
In
addition to herjobas execu-.
Name:. Erinn Herg~nhan
. Year: Sophomore
Major: Marketing _with psychology minor
Hometown: Walden, NY
Favorite Band/Musician: Pink Floyd
Favorite Movie: "The Last Unicom"
Favorite Food: Pizza
. Role Model:
Mom
Hergenhan tOQk over as execu-
tive sec~etary:Hergenhan .. also
tive secretary last spring, when
works· at career services
fo
•>(_the Mara adn.:tl~stratio.n
.
began.:-: Donl}e}ly,.;_wa~. al)._. 9rienrat\9n. .... ·.
-~ltSince becomint
iiivolv~:
w,itp:~~,:J@~(Wi,_s:sµw'rti~f.)m~)~
a'mem---'
: SGA, Hergenhan said she
.has · ber
of the Gaelic society. When
·. :gained some valuable experience.· · she is not working.or in classes,
: " "It's a great waYto learn about
Hergenhan likes to hang out with
\·.:what goes on campus, [botll]
po-
.her suite mates ·and her friends·.
ditical and social issues," said
in Walden.
.
Hergenhan.
.
-Hergenhan decided on Marist .
Besides learning about the po-· . because of.the ·"gorgeous ·cam-
,'.litical-and social issues on cam-
'pus arid wonderful business pro:.
/pus, Hergenhan al~o enjoys the
gram." Inthe business program,
'friendly atmosphere of Marist.
Hergenhan likes her Manage-
;- ''There's lots of people willing
ment and Organizational Behav-
) to help many others that students
ior class taught by Dr. Brown.
·.: can take advantage of, but we
She also said that she enjoys her
'have to m~e the students more
Principles of Advertising class
aware of SGA," said Hergerihan, · with Marcia Christ.
.
Hergenhan said that· student
· After graduating college;
government president Pat Mara
Hergenhan hopes to get a job in
- has personally addressed the is-
NewYorkCitydoingdirectmar-
: sue ofSGA awareness.
keting. But,
for
now, she is rest-
·
1
In the beginning of the year,
ing her tired hand.
.WANTED!
· ...
.
One Resident Sena-
The
Giving Tree·
Project is underway.
The trees are already up
.
/
and filled with oppotunities
,
to help a family enjoy the· Holiday
season_. Please pick up an ornament
9
tor
and
One Com-
muter Senator
SGANEEDS
YOU!
Call X2206 for
more information
at any of the six trees located in Lowell
Thomas, Donnelly, the Campus Center, the·
Chapel, Dyson, or-the Cabaret. Show that
y9u
care and brighten
Somebody's
holiday season!

llllll?7?3F!
!
r:


























r:
l
f '
10
THE CIRCLE
EDITORIAL
.November 14, 1996
THE.
CIRCLE.·e
The Student Newspaper of Marist College
Kristin
Richard,
Editor-in-Chief
Michael Goot,
Managing Editor
Stephanie Mercurio,
News Editor
Amie Lemire, Ade£
Editor ·
. Chris Smith,
Sports Editor_
Jacque
Simpson,
Fe~tu,re Edito_r
Christian Bladt,
Opinion Editor
Jason
Duffy,
Business Manager
G. Modele· Clarke,
Faculty Advisor
11zeCircle
is
published every
Thursday.
Any mail
may
be
addressed
to 11ze
Circle,
Marist College; 290 North Road, Poughkeepsie, NY 12601.. (914)575-2687 ·
Editorial
''Ed~cation is what you have: left
· over after
you
have forgo~e~
everything
you
have le~ed''
- A ~
LL'ttcr
lo
the
l:ditor
Student finds Marist secu_rity ·to·
be··
Jess.
than
~elpfµl
Vote or quit complaining
Well, I cast my first ballot ·ever in
a
presidential election last week. . I· voted by
I would like to express my outrage with Marist College
S~urity:
.·.Two·weeks ago, on ..
absentee ballot, so it lacked the thrill of flipping the switch in a confidential booth on Sunday,
Oct
27; I received a call from my housemate who said
that
she. had .broken down
election day, but
I
felt a sense of patriotism nonetheless.
.
. on route nine, right before the entranc_e to Lowell Th9mas;. Without-~ _Sl!COnd thought,
It actually aggravated me that so many of my friends and classmates did not vote. a friend and I rushed out of the house to
try
and help her: ·When we amved at the
car, the
This
.was a bit of a shock for me, consid~ring I could not wait until I was old enough traffic was just starting to get heavy. It was around-4:00 p.m., and I could
see this was
to have
a
voice in determining Ute government of this co1.mtry. I remember wanting so not
a
good place to have a broken-down car.
·
·.
.

.
. -
. . . ·
badly to be able to vote in the 1992 elections, but
I
was not old enough.
·Fortunately, we had jumper
cables
!nth~
trunk,
but we
~ere ~ure ofh~w to 11se them.
I guess not many people today feel the way I do about the significance of turning 18 I quickly ran to security to_ ask
fo~
dir~tion~ .. After getting ~e i%o~ation fri>~them, .
and being able to vote.
I wonder how many of those who did not vote in the firSt one security officer.asked,
"Is
this for
that
red Jeep out there?' • lstmply replied yes,
election they
are
eligible for would miss going out for a drink on the~ 21st birthday. thinking to myself, they know yet they did not even come
to
ask
if
we
were okay of if we
N~~:~~~~~~
upsetting that less than half of the _eligible voters in the Uni~ Sta~es n~e~~~tinually trying to jump the car, we
realized
that it ;asclattgerous for us to do
did not tum out to vote on election day. Perhaps 1t was the fact that the presidential something like this if we were shaky about the order of the procedure: Again we w_ent to
race
did not seem as if it would be very close and many of the Senate races were security, this time to ask for help. I w~ completely appalled to hear their rt:5ponse. It
saturated with negative campaigns and mud-slinging. Still,
I
h~ve a feelingtha_t it m~y was something like, "That is not Marist property. Therefore, we cannot help .. • We askeq
have
been
even more than that.
I
think people may not see either of the presidential again, this.time on
a
personal level; not as a security
~fficet,
but
as
a human being._ Still,
candidates
as
having a profound impact on·our country, or should I say a profoundly the response was no.
I
do not feel that this was
a
valid excuse for them to deny us help.
different impact.
As
long as an idiot is not selected to lead the United States,
I
do not
I
have seen the Marist security cars off campus, whether it be
at
K&D,
Citgo, or even
thi~ many_ people believ~ it makes much of a difference an_ymore which party or just driving on the road. I heard a story of_the Mari~t security busting s~den~ at Citgo
which candidate
turns
up 10 office.
. . .
.
.
·
_
for
buying beer.
Is
that Marist property? Also, please remember the tragic accident last
I
believe at least part of the reason for this ts that campaign prollllses are rarely semester, in which a student almost lost her life at this same intersection. It is obvious
turned into reality once a candidate is elected. No one is going to
be
able to com- to me, and
I am sure to many others,
that
this intersection is not a safe place
to
be stuck.
pletely eliminate the deficit or cut truces drastically in four short years. It just cannot Were the members of the security department so busy thatnotone of them could come
happen without significantly affecting other institutions in the coun~. and
~
soon and help us? We are Marist students,_ nonetheless.
_
·
as money
needs
to be taken from one
area to
feed
another, there with defirutely be
I feel somewhat cheated because my parents pay a great expense for me to attend this
protests. and op~~ition.
.
.
.
. ·
· .
. .
coµege. They would expect the school and its faciliti~
to
~elp me i~ whatever_war th~y
Yet, by not vo1;lilg, Ame1:3-cans
are pu~g ~bsolutely no press~ on the govern- can.
I
feel.this
Wa$
a dangerous situation, and I.find 1t qmte upethical that lrn:S ~nd of
ment
to
do
anything
,ilillt
wµl
M.Ve ~. ~S~tive unpl:\Ct
on the -N:ne13f
.
an J?ro.Pl_e: 'f9e.
securify office
is
the
on~,th~t i;epres~l!~
our,
c,oll~g~..-I. C_atlDgt ,mcle~tanci ;Nlly,1t 1~ _m()re
gove~ment
will
be
less ~ely to feel obli_gatedto answer tothe-people lf.,the people·
importanffor
Mansi:'College'seciliiiy
to"'busf}tiidents rather than
ti:>
'help ~elll:' _.,: ..
are not even taking the time to leave their !10uses one day everyJour years to cast
-
·
· .
.· · . -
. --
their ballots.
.
·
..
·
· ··
,
·. •
Kristyn_Lauria,junior
In my opinion, people do not have the right to complain about h?w the country is
There was even a sceriho
it
The first breeze
run or how government spends money if they neglect to vote. It
IS_
now.too late. to
of warm
-air that hit my face sometime during.
change the results of this year's voter
tum-g~~
b~!l•J?ray P.e?Ple will soon come to
theidesofMarchcarriedtheenianationofpine
their senses and realize the importan_ce of participating 10 elections. Then maybe there
oila wood bat, the
dirt
around the bases; and
will be a better showing in four years. .
even._the
light
of the sun llittin.g_~
7
moist grass.
KristinRichard,Editor-in-<:hief
. .

. .
.
around the bleachers on a particular
.
damp
The rewards of Campus Ministry Community ~ervice
ness that~interhad~eft.'i:Illelleitik~b:il.~:f.Crs!!:~:~r:::~1!~~
It is often very difficult
to
d~ide which clubs and activities to join during freshman when he
was
a kid. and that same glo\!'e rests on my desk treated like a
great
treasure
year. At first, I was just as confu~ as the next ~:5on. But, I finallr 1Jlallaged to.m~e found at the bottom'of the
Sea;
It
reminds me of myfather, but at the same time, it remin,ds
some decisions. One of these dec1s10nswas to
JOlO
the Campus Mirustry Commurufy me ofa great love I _once had for something.
. ,
. . ..• . . ,
. . .

Service program. ·

.
. . .
.
· · . ··. ·
. . ·
I used to carry around a baseball like a kid .\Yould carry a lucky rabbit s_foo,t, letting my
There are two ways that one can.participate in ~s.pro~. One •~.by attendtng fingers endlessly run.over the stitches trying .to.~dthat perfect.gnp. to throw the
major events after receiving a newsletter. The othens by gomg to a particQlar location perfect curve ball. Baseb~l did.this for Ill_e, but it}s 11ot.the only spart that
Cclll
possess·
on a weekly basis. I
had
some extra time available during the w~k,_so I opted to get this same kind of magic. Any sport we played as kids turned us all 10to heroes at the age
thoroughly involved and volunteered to go every week. I was asstgned to help at Our of eight, and it is this feeling that a lot of us have lost. . .
· -
. . : .
Lady of Mount Carmel elementary schOQl. -
.
· .

By this point in our lives, participation in ? r g ~ school athle~cs have taken _a
Mount Carmel is a Catholic elementary school that ac~epts children from Pre-K backseat for many of us, .and the focus. has
primarily
been on, and nghtfully so, our
through eighth
grade.
For the past few wee~. I have been working with ftrSt ~ e education.
.
-
.
•.
students. I love it I spend about an hour and a half every Thursday afternoon liSlen-
There is absolutely nothing that should interfere with the perfo~ce of what ~e
ing- to the children read short, rhyming_ books. ':fhese books are only about· ~6 pllges do in the classroom on the college levet In the end.it will be our diploma in academtcs.
long and contain no words lo~ger than ~ee letters._
Thi~
~oes not sound like very that
will
get the majority.of us a place in this world, but the love of a sport we u~
to
be
much
but to a smaUchild who
tS
justlearrung how
to
read,
itis a lot They are so proud passionate _about never leaves us. If we lose the en~, or mo~ pro~ably the time to
and e~cited
to
show off their new skills. Exclamations of"Ican't believe this book
is
16 play. once we are in college, then a lot of us start feeyng lost with?ut 1t
.
· .
pages long! 1Jie last one was only 12!" ~enot unco~on. I! is ad~rable. . · .
Sports were such a bi; part of my life before
Mar!5L·
I had
_to
giyeup b~ball, track
. Sometimes, it is easy
to
forget
that
children are littl~ peop~e.
It
15
amus10g -~
be
and lacrosse for a couple of different reasons, the
nuµn
o~e bemg that playmg any sport
reminded that they are people when having conversations with them. It astoms~es on the college level consuin~
a
tremendous amount of time and talent These ~ere two
me how smart they
are. Some of the children spoke to me about their brothers and
areas
that I seemed limited
iJl: " . .
_. .
.. . _
_ .
.
c,.
·
sisters. Others showed me p i ~ of their friends and families. A little boy named . . I give so much credit
to
anygn~ playing any~ of athletics
here
at Marist On any
Matthew toid me that he and his father are fans of the New York Yankees. He then given day, at really any given hour, there is a
team
practicing on North Field.. TheY-_are
went on
to
explain- to- me why they were so fond of the team. A little girl_ named there early in the morning, and just before the sun
is
about to go down, I ~• ~ear ~e
Ashleigh asked me questions about my family and when: I_ went
to
sch~l.
;
practice whistles from Leonidoff field. lb~ athletes work
!ery
~
both
phs1~y and
Although I have only been involved with
the
Campus Mimstry Commumty Service mentally, on·the field
in
between their classes, ~hool m~gs. Jobs and life outside of
for a short time, it has already been one of the most rew~ng and wo~derful e~~- this campus. It is not easy being a s~den! an~ an athlete.
· . .
. -
·
ences for me at
Marist
College, I feel as id lam appreciated and as if I am givmg
The student-athlete inust balance the unportance of an education and the love of a
something of myself
to
this
community.
.
·
· sport
if
a student
is
on an athletic scholarship, then the importance
to
maintain ~gh
Heather
Baughman
is
one of
The
Circle's commentators on freshman issues
standards on both levels becomes all the more crucial..
·
Student-athletes have taken their love for sports
to
the next level. While I only can
look back and romanticize about all the tiniest details of
the
what
made
me a hero in only
my eyes when I was young, there~ a tremendous amount of men and women on this
campus that continue to play with the same passion and desires
that
most of us
had
for
playing a sport when we were small or in high school.
.
The student-athlete must give up certain aspects of life on campus! sleep bem~ one
of them, to be on a
team.
But that fact alone of being on a team and making some kind of
difference on and off the field,· in the eyes of the schooJ or-just proving som~n¥ to
yourself is the real trophy. When it comes down to it, all they want to do 1s Just .
something they love doing. To just play, that's
it



























. T1:mCIRcLE.
OPINION .
November 14, 1996
11
_
The reality.
of
Jhe leftist slant
of
the American media
.
~
the last moments of the debacle thatwill'c~me to be known as
.
Bob.Dole's bid for the presidency, he became publicly enraged at
the news media. He blamed the media for
his
lagging position in
. the.polls,-and he chastised
The Nev., York Times_
in particular for
The subject of responsibility in the media transcends party
boundaries. . Whether Republican, Democrat, or independent,
trust must exist at the foundation of
ciur
nation's infonnation
b
never running an anti-Bill Clinton story: ·
·
.
This c_an be chalked up to two things. One, Dole was living in an
·· _ . •··

. .: · •.·. · ._ . . alternate r~ty where his chances for becoming president were
high, and,
two;
it is a widely held belief that the news media has a liberal bias. .
· While thei:e certainly are instartces where Democrats get preferential treatment, on"
the whole; there is not a liberal bias in the media.
If
this·were the case, would we have
ever heard· of Whitewater? Paula Jones? For God's sake, would we have ever heard
about
Ted
Kennedy's problems with keeping his car on the road?
'.
.
· · . If
there
were
a
liberal bias in American media, then we could have never had a
president like Ronald Re~gan. Here was a truly packaged politician. Whenever he
mad_e
ari
appellrance,
·
source.
If we, as citizens, cannot trust that which we base our decisions
· on, we will not regulate our government through the election and
discipline processes provided for by the Constitution.
The power of suggestion ranks high on the scale of motivators. Our media people
cannotcontinue to taint news coverage with the intention of promoting a liberal
agenda.
·
Perception is arguably more effective than fact Regardless of the real truth,
people
will
act on what they think is the truth. This is where the media must step
forward and take control of the tempting situations they are presented with.
What would
you
do if you had the ability to encourage millions of people to think
as
you.do?
you got the feeling
that he had just come
outof th~ shrinkwrap.
Despite tlie fact heis .
largely responsible for ..
\.JILL .
ATTACI<
Y(JJR
0-IAR/+Crti?
Program managers and editors face
this question every day. If you strongly
supported Bill Clinton, would you not
broadcast the most U(lcomplimentary
photographs and sound clips of Bob
Dole on your television station? It is
nearly inhuman to suggest that you
. today's financial
woes, ..
people just liked him.
He gave.
off
that
warm
and friendly vibe that
the Republican Party
has
long since aban-
doned. Here was a guy
fO~
fOOD.
' who shattered the
·Americ
·
an dream for
millions of people. But,
boy, did he look good
on camera; A
truly
lib-
eral media would have
brutally assaulted this ·
man after the allega-
. tions of Iran-Contra.
Instead, he was al- ·
lowed to leave .with
dignity ·and grace.
n
I\
The way I see it, some politicians have a sort of home court advantage with certain
news organizations .. Would you expect to see an article favoring the Assault Weap-
ons Ban in
Soldier
of
Fortune
magazine? Of course not. Likewise, a story covered by
the
New York Post
is going to be different than the same story inThe
New York Times.
Aside the fact that the
Times
fact-checks and proofreads its articles; the powers that
be at each institution have a different way of looking at things.
Of course, reporters are supposed to be objective. This keeps Tom Brokaw from
sta,rung off the ev~ning newscast with''.B9b Dole is just too old,,. or
pan
Rather from
sayii:ig
,;;~n~
qli11toii
i;s
,.a. big,
fat
:h.ic~.!' ~oti!=~·
the
balan1;e •there_.':. ,a .joke
about
a
shortcoming of each of the candidates.:Thatis a little something called equal time.
· The concept of givfog equal time is excellent, as it_ does things like keep Newt .
Gingrich's face off of the coverof every issue of
The Wash_ington Times.
What it does
. is
a:
lot like.Bob Costas having to pretend to be genuinely pleased to see the US being
out-perfonned at theQlympics.
·
·
So, sure,
The Atlanta Journal and Constitution
will run a front page story about Bob
Dole's possible cabinet appointments, despite· the
'
fact that, at any point during the
race, I was .more likely to need to set aside space for my Nobel Prize in Quantum
- Physics than Bob Dole was to need a cabinet, the story was news, and therefore it got'
told.
.
-
.. But, there is
~
point where that has to stop. I was surprised to learn that there is
something called journalistic ethics. What I would find unethical is anyone, whether
they have
a
press pass or not, who would sell out their beliefs just for their job.·
Yoti·are not supposed to. let your·opinions influence your collection of facts, but
how objectively can you
look
at something such as the ethical problems of a president's
administration? Your opinions have to influence your thought processes somewhere.
. Of course,
this
is probably why lam the Opinion editor of
The Circle,
and not a
reporter ..
Christian Bladt
is
aju'morcommunieations major from.Greenwood l.Ake, NY
and
the opinion editor for
The
Circle. In
his
spare dm~,
~e enjoys
lobbying
Congress
to
repeal the laws of
time
and space.
- ~cf '-
,.,,,.
.
......
I
would not.
During the recent election, we saw
countless examples of the liberally bi-
ased
media influencing a nation of vot-
ers. The two debates come
to
mind.
Cameras zeroed in on Clinton's round,
beaming, sarcastic face as Dole an-
swered questions.
But when Clinton spoke, the cameras
were sure to catch old man Dole sip-
ping from
his
water glass or ignoring
him
altogether, focusing instead on a
smiling member of the audience.
Irresponsibility is a favorite topic of
mine, in case you have not caught any
of my earlier articles.
.
I think the liberally biased media is a
perfect example of the irresponsible baby boomers bestowing the careless and
forgiving generation X with a world where little matters except the outside appear-
ance and the present moment.
The Constitution guarantees freedom of the press. I think the time has come to
define the terminology. Hard Copy is not news. The plethora of half hour tabloid
magazine shows that litter the airwaves between
4:00
p.m. and
8:00
p.m. do not offer
valuable information. Entertainment and news used to respect the clear boundary
that separates. the two.
., - ,Today;
an
a\l
out,war for,ratings has left
that
line blurred and gray to such an
indiscernible· degree that no regulation committee could
begin to make heads or
tales otit of
either.
No democracy can thrive without freedom of the press,
but
no
government can· be for and by the people if the people· base decisions on the
concoctions of our talented· "news" writers and creative behind-the-scenes pho-
tographers.
The same problem that tarnishes the communication
industry
has taken its toll on
· the election process. Gone are the days when party bosses could get together and
male~ educated decisions on who should represent their party in elections. Also,
gone are the days when the president was the leader of his party.
Instead, the elections .are brought so close to the people that party affiliation
means almost nothing and individual "soundbites and photographs" means every-
thing. Platforms do not exist, and the race for president is not one political ideal
versus another, but two individuals pitted against each other like prize fighters.
.Truly responsible media coverage may be impossible to attain
i~
the age of candi-
date centered elections and ratings races.
But the demise of the MTV generation will be the realization that everything
flashed before your eyes in a thirty second clip is not gospel truth, and our children
will be left to handle the consequences.
Bill Mekrut
is
a sophomore English
major,
minoring in political. science,
from
Uncoln, RI. He is
also The
Circle's
polltic_al
columnist.
-- !@if. /
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,v.
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,
"•
-12
THE CIRCLE
November 14, 1996
.
Taki~g a Gloser Look
at .·
.
'f>foner
<llld
amovie'
an(l
go9d frieilds make-fOf
a.
in6IIlorabfe
;
iugllt
.
.
.
'
:
-
.
.
hy
Amie Lemire
A&EEditor
.
·
unsavory choices ("Where's the
Hi McDbnough,
'
repeatoffender
And, as Hi and
Ed
figure, the
porno section7!''.)
W(?
finally de.,
who falls for his woman in.'uni-
new parents must have
_
thefr

·
.
cided on two choices: .. Moron
form~Ed, played by Holly
hands full with so many babies,
·
.
Last Thursday; 1 came home Movies" and
.
"Raising Arizona."
Hunter:
·
.
· ·

··
:
so much so that they wouldn't
from working at the Career Expo
The first movie, "Moron Mov-
. Everi
·
though . the
.
two won
even notice if one turned up miss-
completely exhausted.
ies", judging from the box cover
Academy Awards for other roles,
ing.

..
My friends apparently felt
·
the
seemed really funny;· however,
tliey definitely deserve honor-
John Goodman has a support-
same as I did, as we all
,
Ian-
once we got ilhome and put it in
able mention for their parts in
ing role as a friend of Hi'sl!who
guishct.l around the 'furniture
the VCR, we realized that it
.
"Raising Arizona."
gone broke out o' thajoint." His
· ·
wasn't funny at all
·
The mov1·e ce
··
nt
·
ers
·
~
.
ound
·
Hi
bu
·
mor is urtderstated,
-
for once,
staring blankly at the television
·
·
for half an hour before realizing
In fact, it ~as m~re pai!J!Ul to sit
and Ed, a young couple who
_
try
and
if
works perfec·tly here.
. it wasn"t on
.
.
_
through this !11ov1e than 1t w~ to
in vain to have a baby, but are
.
The movie-is simple, and sim-
Somcthirig had to be done, or
.
· haye _my_ wisdom teeth pulled
unsuccessful.
ply lovely.
else our clothes would soon fuse
.
back m high sch_ool.
Hi is an ex-con who is trying to
The plotis light, but the humor
with the naugahyde of the livirig
The ':"hole ~ov1e had a $10 bud-
go straight
.
after many visits'to
rocks the
.
house.
·
roomcouch.
get~1twasJ~stbad.
theArizonaStatePrison.
Watch for Hi's hilarious
So I gathered my du
_
ckJings to-
· Picture this: clos~:-UP after
Ed is a cop who, against her
Huggies scene; you will laugh
get her fc
J
r a night of
fun
and
~lost:,.up
~~a
very ugly 1:11an, film-
better judgement, fallsfor Hi,
with
for about 10 minutes straight, so
frivolity
..
. the age-old cfowd
mg m his
·
?ouse,
.
with food,
his askew smile and his loud,
.
don't forget to breathe.
pleaser kno
_
wn as 'Dinner and a
.
sh?es, bowhng
·
balls, even zoo
.
Hawaiian shirts.
The whole genius of "Rai~ing
Movie.'
ammals as prol?s.
.
,
She can tell tliere's nothing go-
Arizona" is it's dumb-as-dirt ap
-
Fivc- ~f us piled into my tiny
Trust y~ur fnen~ Alllle, don t
ing on upstairs in Hi's
·
attic, but
peal.
·
Hatchback and sped down to
ever ren~
1t.
A~d 1f you should
that's okay with her.
.
The Coen
·
brothers don't go for
Priccchopper (bless them for
_
~ver see 1t at a video store,
_
thro~
They try to go the legal route _ high detail here; raiher they let
keeping late hours!) where
we
•~
t~ the ground and stomp on 1t
and adopt a child, but with Hi's
the scenes
,
and the· actors take
stocked up on chicken tortilJa
·
.
till tt ?reaics.
..
track record, it's a bit out of the
over
.
h.
. .,~ .
.
..
:
•.
. So, mstead, we made our faJita
question.
The Arizona
.
backdrop is
'
vi-
e ips, ... ba and faJtta kits.
feast and
put
.
in
.
'
'
Raising Ari
After exhausting
'
numerous
.··
br
.
ant,
·
making ever

y
·
.
·
thin
·
g
·
about
·
After making complete fools
,,
·
-

out of ourselves at
.
the super,.
zo~a.
.
.
.
options, they decide to steal one
the
movie tliat much larger~than-
markct. we decided that we
. I ve seen thi~ movie before, but
'from the Arizona family.
life. The colon;, the dialogue,
needed to embarrass ourselves
It was a long tim~ ago
,
and I was
See, the Arizona is a wealthy
even the sceneSare
as
bigger,
in
front
of even more
so hap~y to red1sco_ver al~ the
couple
..
who just added quintu-
brighter, as possible.
Pou
0111 _

u·ves
great things about this movie.
plets to the family.
·
It reminds me a.lot of 'Edward
0
,eeps1e na
.
0 .
ed b h
c
B
h
·
th
·
·
The pc.:rfec
.
t place to do this?
-
irect
y t e oen rot ers,
.
.
It also doesn't help that
.
e new
•.
Scissorhands.' Remember the
who brought us the recent ge
D
.
a
.
d
.
dy
.
_
isaii "arrog
·
ants
.
limbitc
.
h"
to
.
.
wn in
_
.
the
·
movie,
'
ho
_~
·
w e
.
v.ery-
Blockhustcr!!
·
.
"F
.
" N" h
'
l
·
c
·
:-
Af
· .
fl
ll
·
mus
argo ,
IC
o as
·
age \vho can't even remember what
.
thing was
.
eerily color
-
coordi-
ter unsuccess u
Y
trymg to
shines as the lovable dim-witted
~sch
.
il
_
dren's nam
.
e
.
.
s ar
_
e
.
··
··
n
.
at
.
ed? Like you
_
;d
_
J·ust fallen
.
into
steer my guy friends away from
·
'
·
-
Pastel~Jand?
,
.
·
.
'
1
·
got sort of the
.
same
.
feeling
h~re, only it's not as in!.your
-
face
obvious.
.
. .
.
.
.
.
.So; basically,just relax and en-
joy the fun--,don't look
.
too
.
hard
for meaning
;
Iknow that
~
s
a
hard
concept to g~p. butreally, it's
.
a lot offun.
. ·
.
_
,
There's not much thought re-
quired for this movie; but if you
don't read too
·
much into it, I
guarantee it
will
·
tjckle youjust
right, as well.
.
.
·
.
·.
As we rolled around the floor,
laughing hys~rically in our fajita~
induced
mirth,
it made nie realize
how much fun a simple night at
·
home with friends could be.
.
After six months, we will be
long gone from here and I, for
one, wanqo make
·
every
_
single
minute count. You get what I
.
-
meari, right? To remember these
.
kinds of things.
·
The perfect recipe for a
'
great
·
evening: get together with your
·
favorite friends.
·
Make dinner
together, preferably
.
something
grandiose and very messy. Rent
.
·
an awesome movie, and jus
t
sit
around,
'
stuffing your faces,
laughing your heads off .
.
.
And at least onc;e, through_O\!!
the
.
night, stop and look around,
and
:
think to yourseif, these are
·
the days
:
:
·
IwP
.
·
Yi~~pqf,1M
.
qn
i
BPn
;
/-lgw.qr4's
JigW
Jhrilf
er,
Raiisoni
·


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.
,
.
.
-
. '
,
'
. .
~
·
He said...
Wahlberg ( one
time
New I(jd on
.
reach it~ conclusion
.
.
.
'
_his own airline, penthouse ll.[)art::
'
that
are being
'
piaye
'
d .
.
Aft~
i
be-
the Block) give good perfor-
While this ending would have
ment, beautiful car and gorgeous
ing sent on two unsuccessful
by
Brian
Hill
Staff Writer
:
·
·
m~ces as members of Shaker's
.
been extremely frustrating
for
the
.
wife, ~te, played by Rene Ruso,
jo\J!1}eys to retrieve his son, Toni
gang
.
.
.. .
.
.
,
ttudi~nce, it would
.
have
:
shown
·
and
'
sori
?
- Sean
i
.pl
_
aJed
_:c
by,
turns the ransom into a reward,
The parallel between Sh*er
-
.
:,'-
Howar~ to be a
very
daring
di:-

Brawley
:
Nolte
/
Tom
.:
Mullen
while ~gging for his son on live ·
R
:
,nsom is a taught thriller,
and Mullen is an interesting one,
rector.
.
seems to have
it
alL
·
.
-
.
.
.
television
,
.
. .. ·
· · ... ·.
.
·
-
;
.
filled ,... ith all of the techniques
but it isn't really explored iri the
·
. ·
.. ,
Instead, they'tack on afew more··
A,s
.
theJilm progresses, we re;.
.

,
As th~ audience
<
patiently
that made Ron Howard's last
·
film.
.
scenes so that Ransom can. have
~faeµiat his pert:~tper~o!}~
_
has
w
a_
its
for
th!! conclusion, the
film. Apollo
J3
so tense.
.
After snatching Sean from bis
i::i
a ttacljti911al ~oilywood ending
>
a
tla\V;
..
·
.
;i
'-'t·
<
.:
c.::
,,}'
'.
\,
'. •
third acLb
,
egins sending the
.
Here. 1 Ioward decided to deal
parents, the
·
kidnappers bring
·
·
·
Thi
f
1'othered me
,
but i
.
t didn't
·
By paying off the 'h~d
.
of tlJe
.
chiuacters on another adven ..
with
a wpic much more trou-
himtotheirhideout.
·
. .
·
:
.
ruinmyimpress
_
ic>nofthefilm
>
airplariemechanicsunioritosave
.
ture .
. -
,
. ·

.
.
·
.
hlinr than astronauts los
·
t in
Terrible things happen
.
to
.
him
~
·
·'.-
'The•higgest
,
guestion thatT hisairline,hes
e
nftlte~ngm~
Withoutspoilingtheendofthe
space:
there
.
I was surprised
.
at how ex-
·
·
have about Ransomisin refer-
tojaiL
·
_
•.
.
.
) ' •
.
_y,
·
·
movie, Howard added yet an-
-
Ransom focuses on a
,
family
plicitlyRon Howard shot the acts
en~e
:.
to
~
its subject mat~er
.
_
· ,
This
.
bribery
.
provoked
the
.
other
.
twist, tlia(sent us into a
distraught over the abduction
of child cruelty. .
.
.
.
.
·
Are we really interested in see-
·
suspenseful kidnapping
:
of his
.
ccmiplete a:'1/e, It was not what
of their only child
.
.
.
'
While they only makeup about'
.•
i~g :ffi\m that features such
ex-,
so~.
·
·Sean.
<
..
,:.-
:
,
:
.,::.
·
:
.
weexpected
L
:
.
..
;
,
'
tv1d
Gibson plays Tom
threeminutesoftheentiren)ovie,
.
.
plicit
.
scenesofachildbeingmis
.:
,
._
qarySinise,wl;10weallreme111-
·
The suspense
·
and action be-
·
Mu Hen. the president of En
-
they-are what stuck with me after
·
treated?
.
.
·
.
ber
'
as Lieutenant Dan from ''For-
.
hind "Ransom," kept me on the
deavr
;
r Airlines,
. •
.
.
I w~ked out of the theater
.
•.•
.
·.·
.
·.
.
After the film was over, lwon-
est Gump," plays a very decei,.,.:.
edge of my seat:
fk
stnrted
the airline back
in
·
..
As Mullen's wife; Rene
:
Russo
·.
-
.
·
dered iHwould have been better
ing role
:

. ··
.
/ ·••
..
••···
- I watched tlie whole
.
movie be
.:.
the
'70"s
and
·
as the movie
turnsirianexcellentperfoiniance~
o_ffmissingthisone,notbecause
·
In the beginilingofthemovie,
.
hfrid somewhat covered eyes!
starts. Endeavor hasjust com..

demonstrating all of the conc_~m
.
it was
_
n't engagil)g, but because
-
S
.
inise appears to be
a
loyalNew
Gibson and Ruso played
·
out-
pleted tl)eirfirstcorruriercial.
·
.and doubt that a person ip her
.
.
itwasultimatelyverydepressing. YorkP9liceman,l?uthistruechar.,
standing roles~ htisband and
.
Living with his family in
a,
position would feel.
.
acter comes alive
.
when he com~
wife. Thefremotions were real
Manh.,ttan penthouse, Mullen
.
When the kidnappers send the
The
Bottbm
Line:
.
plicatC!S the investigatjon.
and sincere, just as it woul9 be
fec.'lsimmunetoproblemsofthe
Mullens anonymous
·
e.:.maH re~
Ransomis
.
worthabout
·
$5.25-
As the Mullens, along with
inreality;
.
world below him.
.
questing a ransom for their son,
~ee it
.
if you're looking for ari in~
Delroy 4irido and the FBI, franti-
,
Uli Taylor shocked many of the
Early in rhe mm
;
weleamthat
she begs her husband to pay the
tense tliriller with a very bleak
·
c11lly investigate the kidnapping
;
·
·
yiewers with her harsh and bit-
there
·
:trc
.
rumors that Mullen
money.
.
world view.
,
.
Sean is being held in a rundown
·
ter treattnent of Sean.
.
has paiJ off union officials and
Agent Lonnie Hawkins (Delroy
~!!l!~!!l!!!l!!!!!!l!!!I!!!!!!!!!~
ap~ent guarded by
,
Lili Tay-
.
Although Brawley Nolte was
se
_
t
_
up some schlep
~
a
.
ra,1
Lindo) is the FBI agerit in ~harge
Sh
.
"d
lor,
.
('
.
~
Mystic Pizza
'.
') Ljev
only portraying a character, it
guy.
of the case.
.
.
e Sal ...
·
Schreiber, Even Handler; and
was still
a
~cary thingfor him to

Hi-. tendency to buy his way
~e tells the Mullens that the
Donnie
.
Wahlberg,(Yes, the
go
.
through.
,
'
out
Clf
had situations is what
safest bet is to pay the money.
by
Jennifer Matarazzo
·
Donnie from New I(jds On The
Sinise did an awesome job, for
spurs
.
a
·
hunch of crimipals to
But being the loose cannon
·Staff Writer
Block!').
he a had a difficult role to play.
choo
:,
c him as their target.
.
that he is, Tom Mullen doesn't
After impatiently waiting, the
He added a sense of confusion
Gary · Sinise
(Forrest
go th,is route.
When a movie comes out fea-
Mullens receive a disturbing e-
and hate to the atmosphere.
Gump;.\pollo l3)playsJiminy
Instead, he turns the.tables on
turing Mel.Gibson, mostwomen
_
mail from the kidnappers.
Ron Howard's creativity
Shat::r. a cop who thinks that
the criminal, putting a price on
are eager to see it. As we all
They threatened to kill Sean if shine4 through with "Ransom."
when 1imes get tough, he can
his head.
know, lie has made an outstand-
theydidn'tpaythe$2millionran-
·lthadmanydifferentscen·esand
use hi:; position to get out of
Upsetting everyone, this leads
ing appearance in "Bra\'.eheart,"
som.
.
turning points, that
ii
did not
bad situations
.
Mullen into a dire~t confronta-
"Lethal Weapon,"
·
and "Forever
To the Mullens, $2million was
drag. It was true to life and re-
H~ masterminds the abduc-
lion with his tormentor.
.
Young," just to name a few. His
nothing, but
·
Ron Howard, the
ally made me think.
tion
,,f
Mullen's son, Sean
Ron Howard keeps us always
new movie, "Ransom,"isanother
·
director, adds confusion arid
·
"Ransom,
"
has been one the
(Bra\, l.:y Nolte), while a gang
·
wondering if Tom Mullen has
phenomenal performance on his
chaos to create a thrilling atmo-
most intriguing and action-
of th11~!S do the dirty work for
done the right thing.
part.
sphere
.
packed movies! have seen in a
him.
About ten minutes before the
Gibson portrays the billionaire
Now, one person is dead ev-
while. Itwilldefinitelyberemem-
Li 1; Taylor and Donnie movie actually ends,
it
seems to
tycoon, Tom Mullen
'.
Along with
eryone is tired of the little games
bered.









. O·NEJFRO.M TH£
VIDEO
VAULT:- .
. El:Afari~9hi is a
video pick from· a real-life/Clerk'
b)· Clifden Kennedy
Staff Writer
• I
1hi1ik ~hat customers'•IQs
drop in half when they enter any
estahfo,hment. .•.• .-
It drClps in half again ifth~
~s-
tab~ishml'nt they happen to en-
ter is a video store.
That'-; the only.explanation I
can think of tojustify some of
the questions I have had to an-
swer
rrom
behind the counter of
a
yid~o store:
.
.
.
"No.
'Evita' isn't coming out
• until D,·ccmberin themovie the-
aters."
"One-night rentals mean that
they·
re
due back after one
nighl."
.
"l b.:1 'Twister' is right in the
'T'sccti,m."
My favorite question
is
"Whal ·s new, good, and in?"
Nolhinu.
If it's n;w, and good, what are
the real odds that it's going to
he
in?,
Bur thankfully, it's not always
that
way.
Orn·,~ in a while, customers
may
:!;;!,;
opinion questions.
Usually it's the same.clique of
people wanting to know about
them,)\ il!s that are a little off the
beaten p:ilh,. or are just not well
kno\,
n. but
good.
I usually make sure that they
have -;,~en some of the better
movi,~--
in recent years.
. I
rcc1
1
1
nmend these movies, and
in this nrder: "The Shawshank
Rcdemn1 ion", ''The Usual Sus-
pects .. : ··Reservoir Dogs" and "El
l\fari:1cl1i··.
I(y1,11. haven'.t seen '.'The
Shaw~hank Redemption" stop
reading right ri9w and go. · . .
.
Rent
it; Go. Leave.
.
SEEIT:NOW . .
.. You'll
never believe who w·rote
.. the novella that it's based on;
'~The''lJsual Suspects" and
"Reservoir Dogs"·. have become
Gen. Xor
Y,
or whatever genera-
tion weare.
for work.
. A mistaken identity causes
him
to
trade his beloved guitar
for a gun, and seek revenge for
·
ihe woman he loved. . · .
.
· He
is now playing for his
life.
That's the premise for this
amaz-
ing film.
Action-packed, and marked
with stunning direction, this film
,--.,.----.;__ _ _
_.:, _ _ _ _ _ _
~is impressive.
What's even more
impressive is the film
considering the
ru-
mors surrounding it.
Rodriguez did not
have the money to do
this
film.
Why should you see· a
first-timefilm from a di-
rector that. is subtitled;
with no major actors?
To earn money, he
allegedly
tested
drugs at a local mental hospital.
They are favorites, but brilliant
movies in their own right.
"El Mariachi" is one to talk
about.
·
Why should you see a first-
time
film
from
a
director, that's
subtitled, with no major actors in
it?
.
It's the brilliant film debut from
Robert Rodriguez.
It's a favorite . I think so, and
so did the people at the Sundance
Film Festival in
1993.
It came away
as a
festival-fan-·
favorite.
"El Mariachi" is the fist film
from Robert Rodriguez.
. He has also done "From Dusk
'Till Dawn", "Four Rooms" (his
room was hysterical) and "Des-
perado" the big budget remake/
sequel to "El Mariachi".
·
All he wants is to be a
Mariachi.
· , But alas, his hopes are
squashed when he drifts into the -
wrong. town
in
Mexico looking
This
film
was made with just
$7,000-to $15,000.
The average movie runs around
$20-30
million.
Blockbusters go at
$7 5 million
and upward.
Rodriguez did not have any
equipment.
The entire film was shot with
borrowed equipment from
friends. Whatever was shot; went
to print. There were no second
takes.
That's impressive, if true. Sup-
posedly it is.
After Sundance Film Festival,
"El Mariachi" and its hype
gained recognition in the inde-
pendent film world.
Robert Rodriguez became a liv-
ing legend of sorts, almost mythi-
cal.
"El Mariachi" marks his film de-
but, alive with passion, music, ac-
tion, and style.
See what the hype is ali about.
13














.,
'•
.,
.
.....
.
14
THE CIRCLE,
November 14, 1996
Five Questions
Despite praise from critics, Austtalian
film
grim
and
d~k
· ··•
· .. · •
Perth household is ruled by his
ing influence ()fhis ~ather,\wh_om
with Gabriel Byri:i,e:
.
b! Matt Wolf_ .
stern Polish-born father, Peter
Mueller-Stahl memorably plays
Associated Press Wrtter
(~in Mueller-Stahl)- a ~olo-
as a needy man wanting constant
Big
Irish
Goofball
.
.
There's some dazzling
moviemaking in "Shine," but you
caust survivor for whom family
proof of a love he does not de-
is
more
important . • than
serve:
by
Patricia
Bibby
A uociated Press Writer
. With
his
chiseled jaw, furrowed
brow and penetrating stare,
Gabriel
n
yrne is the kind of actor
who inspires sighs or envy, de-
pending on your gender.
After starring in films like
"Miller's Crossing" and "The
Usual Suspects," Byrne earned
a three-word identifier that al-
most always precedes his name:
broo<lin!! Irish actor.
Byrne takes his natural inclina-
tions to the screen in the new film
"Mad
Dog
Time," an ensemble
piece ahnut wacky mobsters star-
ring Richard Dreyfuss, Jeff
Gohlhlum, Diane Lane and
Byrne ·sex-wife, Ellen Barkin.
The film is something of a
cartoonish sendup of film noir
with rhyming dialogue sounding
like it
was
penned by a deranged
Dr.
Seuss. Byrne is Ben London,
henl·hman to a mob boss who is
ahout tu he sprung from
a
men-
tal ward.
I. So what's the deal with you
once
I
li~i
ng
a bullfighter?
Byrne': I
took classes when I
lived in Spain.
l
neve{'. actually .
grad11:11ed but
I
did take them. It
was
a
lh'mingway-esque thing. I
was in Spain first of all because
ofHcn1i11gway and all that stuff.
I
had
a
mmantic idea about Spain
and for a year or two, it did live
up to
my
image ... ;
I
really loved
it but it was a Hemingway-esque
· fanta!'.)' \,md.
2. What's "Mad Dog Time"
mean?
Byrne:
You know what? I
haven't
a
clue what it means. It
was supposed to be called 'Trig-·
ger Harpy.' But then this movie
came
011·1
called 'Trigger Effect,'
and
tlwy
had to change the title.
And
'fl.lad
Dog Time,' I don't
knm\
what
it means.
I
think it's
like
time
when all dogs go mad.
... I
really haven't a clue.
3. Ifow was
it like working with
yourc\?
Byrne:Itwasnoproblemwhat-
have to sift through some
soever. (Director) Larry Bishop
crudely expressed emotions and
was telling me,
'If
you have any
false uplift to get anywhere near
ideas for casting, give me a call.'
it.
I
read Lhe script and
I
thought,
The Australian low-budget
'You know who would be good
movie has been a sleeper sue-
for this? Ellen Barkin.' He said,
cess on this year's festival
cir-
'Great idea,
I'll
go and talk to her.'
cuit, and the result leaves no
And she did it. We had a great
doubt that directing newcomer
time doing it.
It
was actually a
Scott Hicks is a talent to reckon
very, very good experience.
with .. As skillfully made as. the
4.
Your character lives the life
film about Australian musician
of crime and has no compunc-
David Helfgott is, '·'Shine" seems
tion about breaking the law.
a shade too eager to tug at the
What's the most daring crime
heart.
you've pulled off in real life?
While this is hardly the Rocky"
Byrne: When I was in London,
of piano prodigy sagas, the film
for a while! got connected with
often sacrifices credibility and
agroupofguyswhowere_receiv- · common sense to its.desire for
ing stolen property. We used to
emotional catharsis. (Think of it
makeabout$100a week for about
as ''Mr. Helfgott's Opus.")
two months. And I stopped. I just
"Shine" may leave viewers
.
with
got out. But
I
tell you, I found it
a lump in
their
throat, but that
incredibly addictive. I was about
same audience is right to ques-
19. I didn't really understand the
tion whether their tears have
implications of what
I
was doing,
been honestly earned.
but
I
knew for almost nothing,
Ifone accepts Hicks' and writer
for just making a signal to.a van, : Jan Sardi 's version of events,
i_couldpickup$250a week.Ifl'd
'.'Shine"
.
iells, the fraught,
been caught, I· would have been
heartrending story of Helfgott, a
sent to jail. It's so easy and yet
brilliant pianist undone in later
so exciting. And even though
life by a nervous disorder, and
you begin to realize the conse-
played during the course of the
quences of it, it's very difficult
film by three different actors.
to give up.
A child prodigy with a creative
5. With all the rhymes in the dia-. hotline to the Romantic piano
Iogue, did you ever trip over the ·. repertoire, David ends up in
words?
middle age in a mental home only
Byrne: Oh God,yeah.
I
find it
to be rescued from that environ-
difficult to learn lines anyway in
ment by a kindly astrologer,
the best of times. I forgot my lines
G i 11 _i a n
when l
was·
singing
':Vit\)Paul ·
(Ly
n
n
Anka, which was a majoremb_ai:
Redgrave),
Rachmaninoff. "No.one will love
If
Peter is so. adamant that his
you like me," he tells his young
son succeed, why, then·, does he
son, who becomes painfully
impede his son's international
aware of the price paid for that
progress? And what prompts
love.
David's return to Australia, a
Offered a scholarship to
country, one assumes, forever
London's Royal College of Mu-
associated in his mind with his
sic, David incurs his father's wrath
tyrannical father?
·
for splitting up the family. That · Furthermore, though it's nice to
doesn't stop Peter from shedding
know of the affection David has
a silent tear as he listens on Aus-
found in later life with. a woman
tralian radio to his son's trium-
15 years his senior, his screen
phant London performance of the
courtship of Gillian seems curi-
Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto
ously contrived. Hicks is far bet-
No.
3,
a fevered sequence in
ter when characterizing the ec-
\Yhich Hicks and cameraman
centricities 0f human behavior -
Geoffrey Simpson capture every
David's forgetfulness about
bead of the virtuoso's sweat.
such matters as wearing trousers,
("Shine," needless to say, comes
for example -than when catering
with its expected quota of stand-
to an audience's implicit desire
ing ovation scenes.)
for feel-good cinema ..
The David who frames the
What gaps exist in the narra-
story
is
a bespectacled, fast-talk-
tive are largely smoothed over by
ing figure of fortysomething,
an able cast. Geoffrey Rush as
whose stride is as hesitant as his
the adult David stands out as a
speech . is breathless.
man eager to gather the strength
By the end of the movie, he's
from life that he once got from
playing "Funiculi, Funicula" at
the piano.
his own wedding and grappling
Playing the adolescent version
with
an artistic gift that matured
of the same genius, Noah Taylor
before his emotions did. As the
reprises a lot of the gawky man-
adult David puts
it,
"I
never grew
nerisms he used in another Aus-
up;
I
grew down."
tralian slreper, "Flirting," though
It's an astonishing tale., to be
they remain endearing.
sure, and yet.for all the film's
heated emotions, "Shine" is cu-
. riously reticent on certaincrucial
questions.
Hicks never makes clear the ex-
tent to which David's disorder is
directly attributable to the crush-
Redgrave is a warm Gillian, if
not always a credible one, while
the legendary John Gielgud -
now
92 -
shines
as
a plummy-
voiced music teacher. urging
David to "tame the piano."
rassment.
I
think everyone in the
whom he
universe has sung, or at least at-
- manies.
tempted to_ sing, 'My Way.' And
As a
Iget the words wrong ·in that
c h i l
d ,
many times.
I
think mostly out of
David can
nerves because
I
was singing
play astun-
~ , '
MARIST
St«de«u
!
withhim.
n i n g
51/2:
How did you blow it?_
Ch.op in
Byrne: 'And now the time is
Polonaise
near,
I
face the final question, my _ one ...
friends
I'll
stand alone without
minute and
exemption.' Stufflike that, which
hopscotch
is complete nonsense.
-home· the
next. His
. Th.is
is
a
.rem.ind.er
!
Winter Intersession Registration
continues at the School
of
Adult Education, Dyson 127
EXTRA INCOME FOR '96,
Catch up on credits,T .. Graduate on time!
One-third tuition ($350) is due at registration.
Earn $500 -
S
l
00Oweekly stuffing ·
envelopes.
For
details -
RUSH $1.00
with SASE to:
GROUP
6547 N Academy Blvd.Dept N
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Co.
80918
SPRING BREAK 97'
Largest selection of Ski & Spring Break Destinations, including Cruises!
I
ravei
Free, earn Cash, & -'i ear Round Discounts.
Epicurean Tours
1-800-231-4-FUN
Register by phone, mail or in person at Dyson Center
127.
Any student wishing to.have the one-third billed home
must stop by Adult Education with the biUing information
no later than Friday, November 15.
Twenty-eight courses will be offered
between January 2 and 14
in art, biology, communications, computer modules,
criminal justice, English; environmental.studies, foreign
culture, history, math, philosophy, psychology, and
religious studies.
Call 575-3800 for additional information.
Course schedules are available for pickup.








































·. WHERE
, In
the Student Center
.
.
. -THE CIRCLE,
November 14, 1996
5LOWOUT·
SALE
15
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ROSSIGNOL
DYNAS1AR
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·,
.
~'.t
·
·
f
.

I
,;
16
TJ-iE C!RCLE,'NQvemberl4~
-
1996
.
--,_;.;,,----------------~---,---,------===
•·.
PEOPLE
:
·
focu~rori
suicide
hy TIM MANSON
.
.
'
.
Staff Writer
Tlw
I\
hfrist pe~~ education
.
group: PEOPLE (People Educat-
ing Other People in a Learning
En\'ironment), presented a show
of skit-. ant.I
poetry
to show f~esh-
mcn 1hn1 suicide is not the an-
swer
111
any problem.
The :-.how,
which
.
consisted of
two
s~
iis.
some poetry readings
and
:ti'lh
i1ics with th~ audience,
stressnl
the
feelings people have
-
about ,:11idde and the effects of
suiddi: on family and friends af-
ter 11t,•:. are gone.
Ml'fi,.-.a
Ruot; PEOPLE's sec-
relary.
<,id
the group
was
inter-
ested in doing something
.
people
think ahout, but do not'talk
ahnut
:1-;
openly
as
they should ..
"W,·
r',·lt
it was a topic that's
not rcallr addressed," said Ruot.
"This
,,•ar
we've heard more
aho111 i1 so we decided to do a
show nn
ii."
Tlw
:~h,,w
began with a strong
poem
..
resigned to grab the
a11di1•11,/s attention, and it
was
fol
It
n• .:·;
I
by a short introduction.
The
rr,111p
then alternated be-
tween p,11?ms, skits and
.
interac-
tive :1c11dties.
Kdl:-
Nagy,astudentaudience
mcmh,:.
said the variety kept the
show
i••
,inu
well
.
"Th: ... did
different skits, ~nd
each
1\lh' hrought up a new sub-
ject. ,, hi,·h
made it very interest-
ing/"
,,;!i,
I
Nagy.
"I
felt like they
really
II
i,~t\
to relate to us
well."
Kath~
Gazzillo, a member of
PEOr·1
E.
said she felt that al-
,
•:
.,

:
:
.
:
.
.
·
·
·;
:.-
..
::
·
·
.. :~en(thlg~g_h
·
~~
-
~fun~
~nj
bl~ms, :
as th~_people
:
ill the audience? ;
"Ifitothin'g°els~. we want~ to.
let
.
them
.
know
.
that we
;
Yt'.ent
through everything they're gO-'
·
ing
·
through; and they'll
'
get
_
through it okay;just like
we
did;"
·
said Gazzillo:
.
.
Some of the problems dis-
cussed included bad grades, feel-
ing alone because of the loss of
a boyfriend
.
or
.
girlfriend, and
missing family
}ife
;
·
Ruot said she ~greed
_with
Gazzillo's comments.and she said
the times before suicide are as
important as the act itself.
"I
think suicide is obviously an
issue, but we also
:
wanted to
show that some
:
things that lead
to suicide are
·
issues that every-
one faces," said Ruot.
Ruotsaidthat
_
PEO
_
PLE often·
does skits like this one, and their
goal is mainly educational.
"We're a peer education group
on campus, and we
.
discuss
·
a
number of topics y;e feel are im-
portant among students," said
Ruot.
.
'Then we
_
try to
.
educate
the students on those topics
through
.
thingsHke this show."
. Last spring, PEOPLE organized·.
a program open to
.
the campus ..
where they discussed a number
of timely issues, including sexu-
ally transmitted diseases, alcohol
and abusive relationships.
. _
According to Ruot, PEOPLE_is
-
now plan11
_
ing a skit on rape with
Marist mentor Sue Luzinski. Ruot
said she hopes that working ~ith
other groups
will
help PEOPLE
become more visible.
Ruot also said the gro
_
up of~en
•.
'\hou~h
\he
,
sbow
-was
about
,
suP,
0
.
has
wot1tshops
,
within
the
group,<
cicfo:
ii
,\·as
also to shbw the stti-
to update themseives
on
current
.
dents
I
li:11 1he people in the group
issues and information.
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Poughkkepsie, NY 12601
.
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THE CmcLE,
November 14,
1996
S P O
R.
T S
17
T11e ..
Wiriter weather
is
'
f
,,-
.'hyre
:artd
:s6
are ·the
,sports
means greatbutis respectable due
to the circumstances. The men will
move into the MAAC next year and
be
facing even tougher competition.
The women's soccer team on- the
other hand. gathered a· fairly weak
record at 6-
13
overall. The women .
, Sp mis With Smitty·
surprisingly made it to the playoffs
but could not pull off any miracles.
• Th~ nwrcury has)inally startecl
The women will also make the tran-
. plummding
here in Poughkeepsie
sition to.the
MAAC
next year ..
which •wans the.fan sports season
The -winter season is. now upon
at ~1:iri~t
is
coming to a close.
us.
111l'r.'
h:ive been some big perfor-
The hockey team started compet-
malll'eS
this
fall
along with less than
ing a few weeks ago.· They are now
specta,·,1lar showings by some
3-3-1.
A
bit surprising for.a team
teams.
that went to.the final four of the na-
Th,· 1i1,·n 's cross. country team
tional tournament for club teams. It
acquir,·,l_a new runner this year
in
has been said that the teams are now
Ben 11.-ff.:-ron who has led the Red
gunning for the Red Foxes and
Foxes thr,1ugh the season with nu-
Marist was not quite ready. Well,
merou~ wins
in
various
meets.
The.
they better get ready. They certainly
best thin!!. ahout Ben is that he is a
have the talent to be successful.
sophom,,i'c.
The men's basketball team started
Th,· ,\·omen's, cross country
off their season last Friday night at
joined th,• inen by winning their
the Mccann Center w_ith an exhibi-
home m,·,·t -in the Bowdoin Invita-
tion win. .
tional. Th1th teams ventured out to
The .women's basketball team
South
H,•ml,
Indiana to the campus
started off their season on Saturday
ofNotr,· l):ime this year. This is an
night at McCann with an exhibition
accompli,hment for Marist in get-
loss.
_ting naii,
,nal
exposure.
·Both basketball teams looked a bit
Th,•
11
,1men 's volleyball team
shaky but I'm sure will improve as
mad,· ,,
1me
big strides this· year.
the season moves on..
.
IR'spit,;
:111
extended losing streak,
The big news, however, is that the
the
R,·:I
r-m:es
were able to chalk
men's swimming-and diving team
up;thr,gc'
comebackviciory over
captured the second win of the sea-
N_a\'}'
.If rhc
Marist Invitational.
son and 100th win of the program
;Th~y
:~r,•
,rill
detennined to cap-
over Central Connecticut State last
· ture th,· :-:EC tournament.
Wednesday night at McCann. They
A Closer Look At •..
Chris O'Connor
Team:
Swimming
Class: Junior
Hometown:
White Plains, NY
Major:
Communications-PR
Chris has been swimming competively for 14 years. As a distance, freestyle swimmer, Chris' most
memorable moment was winning the Conference Championship his freshman year. Chris was also
named Freshman Swimmer of the Year in the 1994-95 season.
Favorite TV Show: Lois and Clark
Favorite Band: Billy Joel
Favorite Food: · Chicken with
a
Twist
by Mom
Favorite Athlete: Mookie Wilson
The
,~-..,1h:1II
teamisexadlywhere
take on Rider Nov._16-at McCann
.
}L~f·,__rr{ltJc~e4!~ be i?,t'!e.~rf:: ......
~~~~~-S~_?~~~':1.: ..
t~:-~?st_~~-alle~11;~-~
.¥~Y.~r!!~~-~~ll,~~t.
~f¥arist:
The
size-
not too
big
'.
season . .-.,aches poll- thtrd place.
mg
and excinng meet ofllie year.-··
·
· · . ·
·
-:
·
With
a
r,·,-ordof6-3overall and5-2
Though these
are
only a few high-
in the ~1-\.-\C, the Red Foxes have
lightsofthewinterseason, they have
playt',I \,di
overall despite suffer-
beenexcitingandtherearemanymore
· ing
a
1:,.
12
triple overtime loss to
to look fozward to.
Tows,,n State. ·
So pick up a schedule at McCann
The
111,·11·.s
socceneam played un-
and support Marist athletics. There
der a 1ww coach this year an~ fared
Chris· Smith is the Circle's
preuy
,~di.' A 7-9
re<:ord is
~:y
no
SportsEdif?r
The
f,11!
·,ports·
to
a
d11· ,.
m make
ter,
wlii:
h
mean~'j,
Marist -..,
imrriersff'
for
an,
,11
,rr
excf~;J
The .. ,
,men's:-S- · .. ·
divin;:
t,:nn
lea~
1'
ising
-..1.,n
in
t, ..
jng
a
1c,.:-
sen§<?
the\\:,·
,
· Thcn .. 1
Foxsw1
renlh '
',·n
atail~if
fresh111a11 JenniferlN
ing
lh, ,
,·,ord
foi'the',
brca~, -.iri1ke'
:iijl:lfiPn~~;
Kenn.; Mora0
1
:b'riaJdn
rccor,
I
1;
,r·the.
1o66''riiet·
style
in
l[i~
teamsip~t,-
Senii ,r
I
ianieUeDi ···
qualir;.:;1 forthe13Q
onshi,,·.
!IICet
f<>r~fx
held
:1fi,•, ..
1he
. .
ships in 1-"ebruafy
Th,· -..,•ason
trcml·l•
·,,·di for
the' __ ..
•t•"':-c·
<<--<.-· .
they \,· .. ,,·atCentralC()n
J!~9Jfit,iip~yt( ,
~~~f.: .,
,~},'~p
0
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of th,·
!.·
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beingfreshmari.3:!)<t{·•thi~ .\\i.e~lc.
'Nill
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Un1vers1ty onS~
r\dd1,"--"1n said the ·opening·
tirday:;

•F
· ·:: · :_,,_, ·-,,,. :/tt>v~~k'.:G>~>.::
:,_,_:<:-_<:.:>::
Y.
· · .);:~:
Worst Aspect of Marist: Lack of housing
The National ~Scene
Well Boston College is making
the news again, but instead of
the
talk
being of exciting football,
it is of gambling and point shav-
ing.
We know their are many limita-
tions upon an athlete in an NCAA ;
program; not to mention pres-
sures. There are so many rules
as to what they can or cannot
do, when they can practice, if
they hold
a
job, how many hours
a
night they can sleep, you get
the idea.
True there
are
many little things
that a student-athlete cannot do
that would make the average per-
son say "Why not?". Some·of
the rules may
be
a little extreme,
but the infraction these kids com~
. mitted is blatant and extremely
wrong.
Even if a student does not
know some of the less kn.own
rules, they surely know that
gam-
bling is against NCAA rules, and
you will
be
suspended.
Thirteen players from the Bos-
ton College Eagles football team
were suspended for gambling
violations, two of whom bet
against B.C. I can see a kid
bet-
ting on the World Series with his
buddy or something, that is in-
evitable, but what these kids did
is different.
The wagers were much more
than
a friendly $10, and it
was
not with their buddy, but rather
with a guy named Butch, who
has friends who make a living
out of twisting people into pret-
zels. This is against NCAA
guidelines and should not be
tolerated.
The two kids who bet against
their own team should be carted
off to Singapore and caned over
every inch of their bodies. Imag-
ine betting against your own
team.
Not the team you root for
mind you, but the team you play
for.
The whole situation is prob-
ably just the start of something
much bigger, but lets hope not.
Oh yeah, one little sidebar that
might shed light on how and why
the whole incident happened-
one of the players involved is
Don King's grandson. I some-
how am riot surprised.
The Jets are a 1-9 team, but ifI
am a fan of the Jets, I am excited
about this team's future. They
have a
good young
core of
play-
ers who will mature into a good
team.
Their defense has shown signs
of excellence, and their offense,
although holes need to be filled
(get a real quarterback), will be
good with
a
few
good moves.
Keyshawn Johnson, Hugh
Douglas, Adrian Murrell, among
others are a good base to build
upon, so I think
this
pesky team
will contend in two years if the
right moves are made around
them.
Consider the last three games
the_Jets have played, two of
wliich I've seen in person at the
Meadowlands. Four weeks ago
they had a lead on the Bills with
under two minutes, only to lose
on
a
last second
Bills
score.
The following week they beat
the Cardinals, and on Sunday
they should have beaten the
Pa-
triots after being up 21-0, but lost,
again in the last seconds of the
game.
So consider that in the last three
games, the Jets were victorious
once,. and should have beaten
the Bills and the Pats, both 7-3,
leading the AFC East. Now you
can say what ifs all you like I sup-
pose, but moral victories for an
improving, rebuilding team can
go
a long
way.

















































































































1
a
THE CIRCLE,
November 14,1996

·
-


.
'
-

A
.

.
mis s
.
ed
·
p
ho tie
.
.
.
call,
a
·
TwO
i
'\VOIIleriNOininated for Basketball
J1allptfjajn~

·
·.
missed chance
for
,
b
.
aseball
,>
-
~-
:
~P.IUNG~LD,'Mas_s.:(AP)~
<
fessfonalcareer in E:urope
_
she,
. :
:
·
iast~~~!H-~1
:
oif~-~d~fi-
. ·
-'
·.·
· ··
. •· :>
.
Former UCLA and European
was named the French playe~ of. c1als
_,
annollnce.d the. nomm~tton
:
inDec~~bei-
,··
.
star
:
:
Denise Curry and AAU
the
_
decade after leading
ofsevenmale
'
players,t\le~En-
hy
RONALD BLUM·.
· :
·
standout'Joan Crawford were 'Versailles to the 1986
.
and 1987
glish, Dennis Johnson,
,
Gus
.
1993. TJ1atdeal remains in force
nominated Tuesday
for
election
.
natiorial ~hainp_ionships .
.
·
.
.
.
.
~oh~son,
.
:Bo)?by.:Jone·s, Sidney'
;\ f>
Sports Writ~r
NEW YORK (AP)- Chances for
a ba~~•h.ill labor deal withered
some more Tuesday when act-
ing con1missioner Bud Selig
failed
10
contact
_
union head
Donald
h:hr.
Fehr
said
the situation does not
look 1•, ;nu.
"A<.~ far as
I
can tell, the die has
been
c:i-r."
he said. ''They re-
jected
rh,'
deal. They handed us
an
ult1ma1um, which no one in the
right
lllind
would
take seriously."
·
.
Alkr their meeting Monday,
Seliu said he wanted to think
aho~, his position overnight,
and
F!'lir
told him to call before
midd;1\ Tuesday, when
.
he
plann,~J
10
leave the office for the
day. S.-lig didn't call until after
fohr
l,·li his office.
"\\.'t:

ve
been trading tele-
phone c:,lls," Selig said
.
n
·,,t•hall's
ruling executive
council held a conference call
Tues<hy night; but there were no
_new
d,·,·.:lnpments, according to
asour,e l':iiniliarwith
ihecali
who
spoke nn the condition he not
he id,·iiliiicd.
Fl'lir 111d management
:
itego-
tiator P
:
,11.Jy Levine set a Thurs-
day mi, !11ight EST deadline for a
deal.
.
\ fl,•r that, free agents can
start
.,if1,ing
with new teams and
.
the sp, ,n would be locked in to
anot\wr offseason under the
rn\es of lhc contract that expired
undeta fe~~liil ·co
,
~rt injlincti9n.
.
.
tolheBasketballHali of
Faine.
'
.
; .
Crawford, a 5~foot-1
l
c
_
eqter
, '
MoJicrJef,
.
J
_

:
,
Jo
\
\Y:ltite~
.
and
OnM;o!lday,
Selig
asked
Fehr
.
'
Curry
/
UCLA's aU
~
time
_
lead-
·
from Nashville,
Tenn
:;°
~as
named
~
,
Jamaal
Wilk~;
seve~ coa~hes,
lo make additional concessions,
:ing women's scorer, averaged
.
to 13 consecµtiv~
AAU All-
·
Pete
_
CarrikAlex I:Iannum,
·
Don
·
a
request
_
th~t'i,mmed1~teiy w
·
as
.
24.6
·
·
Americatearnsandwon.l0AAU
.
Haskins, Jirn Phelan, Jerry
turned dov.:n
by
the unio1:1.
_
Some
points and 10.lreboµnds a game
chanipioriships with Nashville
.
Tarkanian, Jotiri'Thompson and
o~ners are
.
~king
-
Selig
_
~~ call
during
.
her collegiate career. In
Business College in the late
. ·
Tex Winter;
..
and orie contributor,
for~othe~v~te,~
0
~C?veritsun:-
.
1978, her.freshman year, she
·
1950sand1960s ..
·
Lee
Williams;
clear 1fSehg 1
.
s w1lhng to d,o that. :
.
played On UCLA national cham-
.
She also boosted the United
The Honors Committee has
When they
.
m~t last ~ee,k, ow.n-:
.
pionship
·
.
teams in both basket-
States to gold medals in the 1959
·
no
limitori
the number of people
.
ers voted ag~nsf the agreement
,
;
ban
and.softball;in her senior
and.l963Pan American.Games
.
it can choose, but anominee
18-12 - leaving t?e pr?posal 11
year
\
vas
:
named the university's
and was a member ofJhe 1957
needs at leasf18 votes from the
votes short ~f ra!tfication.
. .
athlete
.
of the year.
.
.
U.S. team that defeated Russia
24-member committee
to
be in-
Mean~htle,
1
~
'
:appear~d
that
'
·
Curry, now an assistant
forthe gold medal in the World
ducted
;
Thursday s sunumt meeting on
coach
·
With San
·
Jose of the
Championships.
.
The results
·
of the
·
votes
will
umpires at Scotts~ale,
_
Ariz.,
American
.
.
Since the first women were
be announcec

.
in February and
:,vould be post~ned. The meet--
Basketball League, also won a
inducted in 1984, two coaches,
the new inductees will be en-
mg _ was scheduled last month
gold medal with the U.S.
onecontributorandeightwomen
shrined Sept 29.
dunng the controversy that fol-
w.omen'steamatthe19840lym-
players have been enshrined in
Io:,ved the Ro?e~o Alo?Iar-J~hn
·
pies. During an eight-year pro-
·
the Basketball Hall of Fame.
. Ht_rschbeck
·
mc1dent m which
Baltimore's second baseman
spit at the umpire
.
Alomar received a five
-
game
suspension to be served at the
Hentgen beats Pettitte for AL
Cy
Young
start of next season, and umpires
h d "
threatened to
S
·
trt"ke o
_
ver
.
what
bv
_
RONALD
BLUM
_
·
Hentgen said. ''To be honest, I
we ?- •
.
.
·
·
·
J
d
fi ·
·
1
d
·
lf
Yankees set-up man
-
Marian
_
o
they thought was too weak a
AP
.
c,
·
m. ·
e mite
Y
prepare myse to
.
.:,ports rrnter
come in second. I was a little
Rivera earned the other first-
penalty.
.
NEW)'ORK(AP)-PatHentgeri
sho~ked.
_
I think I'm over-
placevoieandfinishedthirdwith
As part of the settlement ne-
of theT9ronto Blue Jays became
whelmed right now."
18 points.
·
gotiated by Levine; Selig
'.
and.·
the first player
from
a Canadian
..
.
.
.
Pettitte, 21-8 with
a
3;g7 ERA,
"All the talk was that I would
umpires union
.
head Richie
team to win the Cy Young Award,
had been considered •the favor-
definitely win," Pettitte said.
·
Phillips agreed to a meeting to
edging Andy Pettitte of the New
ite. He drew
11
firsts, 16 seconds
"I'ni'like,
:
these people know
develop a code of conduct. The
York Yankees on Tuesday.
·
and one
.
third for 104 points in
something I don't. ... I was a little
players' association said it would
·
In matching the
·
second-clos~
·
balloting by the Baseball Writ-
surprised."
.
-
·
participate.
.
est vote in the history of the
ers Association of America.
The closest vote
'.
came in
Events surrounding the labor
American League Cy Young,
"When
the season ended and
1969, when Mike
·
cuellar and
talks
made it unlikely that Selig
.
Hentgen, 20-10 with a 3.22 ERA,
I
was
tal~ng
tq
my wife, I told
Denny McLain tied. In 1972,
and Fehr would
be
able to attend,
received 16 first-place votes, nine
her Patdeserved it," Pettitte said.
Gaylonl Perry beat Wilbur Wood
and a new date for the meeting
~econds and three thirds for
110
"He was t~t_ally dominating. I
64-SS.
was expected to be announced _ points.
.
·.
_didn't go
.
Out and dominate
Hentgen,·who
i
'turns
·
28
Wednesday.
. "Heel honored that my name's. games:
.
()f co.ur~~ •
.l
di<in'(ge
.
t
Wednesday, led the '!lajors in
next to thataward forever,,,
complete
·'.
gllllles' with· the
·
set:up
,: .
'

'
~
' ' " '
; .
"

-.
!
·, ,
,
.
: •

'
• •

··
,.
.

_:
'
,
,
'.'
.... ,
'
.
.
'•
~
~-::
.,;;·
._
' '
:
'
,'
'

Please see
Cy
Young
OT}p
,
19 ...
..
_
....
.
.
''
~
·:
-~.•:-,
.
Marist College Bookstore
-
.
Store Hours: Monday thur Friday 9Jlm to Spm/ Saturday 10am
to
4pm
Celebrate
The
Season
·
Sale
.
.
.
-
.
.
.
.
.
Just in ti~efortheholidays
$14.99 Marist Embroidered T-Shirt
Reg,22.50
$34.99 Pro Gear Hooded Sweatshirt
Reg. 58.98
$49.99 Gear Sideline Jacket
Reg
,
70.98
$34.99 Marist Applique Sweatshirt
Reg.46.50
$9.99 Marist Flannel Boxer Shorts
Reg.14.98
$5.99 Marist 24oz Coffee House Cup
Reg. 7.95
,.__.,
Barnes
&
Noble
.
IJ;l
.
Y,.,,
·
Cdlq,:~
lwgi/t
books
brCYU"j0<11:
_
oo
'Pit~
m,m~liction
I O ~
fiom
o:d:boc,b
IO
somc.e
a n d ~
')'1)1111
&rd
the
right
tide
.
i,r
CYCl
d,c
tll05(discriminatingrcach
~
Visit Your C:01\eee Store Toda,
MARIST
A:BROA.o
·
PROGRAM
,
:
INFORMATION
MEETING
LEO HALL- STONE LOUNGE
WEDNtSDAY,
NOVEMBER
20
.
A:00-
5:00 P.M.
.
.
-
,
:
Where
in
th~
.
~'!rid
will.Jou be nexty~(lr?
·,
.
.
"
.
'
.
.
,
.
Can't
attend? Visit or call the MAP Office: DN220, ext. 2331 for infonnatioo.






























































































































.
.
.
.
.
. . .
:
THE CtRCLE;
November 14, 1996
Footb~ll
·
beais:
·
Citn1sius·
9~6
t
:
·:
_
.
.
.
·
..
·
:{.
;;, .. , •
.
.
. ·
·
.
·
..
.
·
.
· .
. ·>: .. '
.
·.·
·

..
.
~
atl.Jeorutloffto
.
mo,,.e·to'.:6~3
.
.
.
:
~~t
. · · .
·
·
-:
.
::
.
:
.
~
: : .
..

.
.
;
,
,
:
\ . ·
· , ·
.
.
..
.

·
.
·
,
,.;
,
,
4•
.
...
.
:
·

:
.
- ·
- :
· ' . · :
··
·
·
~
·
·
. :
,;:-¥
by
CHRISfOPIIE,R:~.~TH
..
.
·
.
'
on
:
this~6reb'.~li~~L
/
Thrariffs
..
'
'
Sports
_
:'
£dif6r

:
.
_
.
.
scor~~H'Y~ field ~<?~ls i~Jh~Ji~C~

.
_
,
.
_
.
.
.
~>nd :quarter and
.
endecUhe half
With
·
:,
:
crac~~~(i~~.~~~o~ej~w,
.
.
~-
witli
..
ascore of
6
:
9.
\ :_.
:::
·
,
.
.
_
:
-.
· .
.
and a ri,iging
.
in
his
left ear
J.J.
·
.
·

·
-
With
.
13:25 rematmng m
.
~fte
.
.
Alleri;s condi~onaft~f tlie iame
third qu~e
_
r;
,
<:~ni~itis)Y~ ori its
on Saturd~y ~1,1pttried up the en-
·
own
_
1~-y~d·Itpe wh~
_
n quarte~-
..
tire
da);
for Marisrfootb_all.
.
.
.
.
-
back Paul Marvar was ~acked oy
The Red
.
.
Foxes defeated
·
.
·
Darren Valdesand hefumbled
_
the
.
Carij~iu~
9i
on Sat!,lrday at
foot?~l
?!l
~he, ei~h_t-y~d
_
line
>
_
Leonidolffield in one of the low-
Cams1us 1)m Spmgler
:
recov-
.
est scoring
.
games of the season.
ered the ball
.
in the en~zone
.
and
This victory
_
onSenior'.Day at
.
was tac~led bY, Harry
:
Tay!?r
·
to
Mari st ~issnred the
·
Red Foxes a
put .Manst on the board with
.
a
.
winning
season
forthe third con-
5.afety.
.
.
.
.
.
secutive year- a schoolrecord.
.
.
Wi
_
th4:W remaining in
,
the
third
.
Thr win
·
over
·
the Goiden Grif-
quarter, Mari.st. took over af the
fins
also
brought
·Marist
to
6-3
Canisius 39~yard_line. During
overall and 5-2 in the Metro At~
this drive, Marist put together
!antic .
-
\rhletic Conference.-·
five plays· for 39 yan;ls_ in· Clnly
Defensive coordinator Kevin
1 :26 to score the winning touch-
.
Katie Robinson/Circle Photo
Doheny said he
.
was extremely
_
down.
J.J.
Allen carried the ball
Wide receiver Jon Reed breaks a tackle by a Canisius defensive back-in the 9-6 victory.
proud
nr
defense.
·
all
_
five play_s and
,
scqred on a
time, the determination was un-
<
Bates and Archer Bridgeforth
ranked third in the country."
"Th,
.:
ouys on the defensive
'
one-yard _rush up the middle.
believable. They didn'tsay any-
sacked Marvar for eight more
.
line
wo/
that game," Doherty
.
Chris
D'
Autorio's. extra point
thing. You could just see it in
yards.
Though the Red Foxes will at-
said. •-They played great."
was
_
successful to bnng the score
their eyes. And then it seemed
"I knew I had to make a big
.
tempt to capture
a
school record
·
The d~•rensive line was led by
to 9-6 which would be the final
every play (Parady) called
play," Bridgeforth said.
"lfI
got
.
Saturday at Siena with a win for
sophomore Dwayne Bates, who
score:
·
worked. The holes were right
thejobdone,Iknewwecouldgo
the most wins in season at
rccord!.!,i' eight solo tackles with
Allen,
·
who finished with 69
·
there. They were big."
.
.
off the field with the win.'
seven, Parady was happy with
five
:
as~ists and 2.5 sacks on· the
-
yards on
13 carries with one
._
Canisius tried to answer b~ck
Head coach Jim Parady said he
the win over Canisius.
day.
.
touchdown, said· the ·offensive
with one final drive with 5:20 re-· was prepared for what Canisius
Th~
Marist defense held
line stepped up
th~
level ofpfay
maining in the game when they
.
threw at them.
"This game assured us thre~
winning seasons
in a
row," he
said.
"I
feel for good for the se-
niors. This is a tribute to them."
Canisi11~ 1o
·
only 167 yards total
in the second half.
·
.
madeittotheMarist28-yardline.
-offense and no touchdowns.
"Chris Plant boosted
.
The Red Fox defense held
·
strong
'
The R~'d
Foxe~ had trouble in
everybody's confidence and will
as
Bates sacked Marvar for
a
loss:
.
!he
lir~:1 half putting points up
to win," Allen said. "After half-
·
of eight. T
.
hen on third down,
..__
"We expected a defensive
battle
·
all year long" he said.
"Their defense is currently
Hockey
team loses to rival Rutgers
·at
Civic Center,
2-0;
drop
t(?
-
3-3-1
by M
.
.\RTY SINACOLA
Staff
·
Writer
pected 4isappointment rather
.
"It
(the Rutgers game) was
._
step.it up."
than the lcifty goals both fans and
.
probably the best we have played
So Marist is
3-3-1, and _are now
players al\ke had for this team.
all year long. We didn't play
bad,'
in a very precarious situation.
play."
The team's goal of making the
nationa\ tournament howe\ler, is
not out of reach.
..
.
.
The Ifed Fqx hock~y team con-
"'
Last Friday, Marist lost its sec-
· .
it was just that Rutgers was
able
Tomorrow's game versus another
tinucs
tu
have a tough go of itas
ond
:
straight·home
'
game by the
·
-
to capitalize on a couple of.our
rival-Rider could make or break
?flatc
.
1heir latest set~ack ~om..;
:
score of
2:-0. The
Joss dropped
mistakes."
their season. "This could turn
mg
·
.it the hands
·
of bitter nvals
the Red Foxes to .500 with a
Responding to the talk that this
around our season," Warzecha
"We still have a good shot for
Rntgrr_c;.
:
:,
.·. _
· :
.
·

..
.
·
·
recordof 3-~-L One has to go
.
teamisnotasgoodaslastyear's,
said.
"It
could be the turning
che nacionals," Warzecha said.
The
1.1~1
.
lime these two teams
back to now assistant coach Brad
,
Warzecha insists that is not true.
poinc either way. rwould say it is·
·
"We just have to focus on the
met_ w:is last year, when_Marist
.
:
Kamp's senior year
to
find when
·.
"We have the same team as last
a must win game, which could get
··
·upcoming games, especially
dec1 ma led the Scarlet Kmghts
5-
the Foxes last were .500.
year.
·
It is different this year be~
us
·
where w~_need to go."
Rutgers~ Siena and Wagner."
2
l)~
lhcir way to th~,Ree_Fox_es
.
.
''Tearns
;
_
are
5.0
tired up to play
.
cause everyone wants to beat us.
The key to the game COllld be
most ~uccessfut season.m his-
·
us;" sophomore Brian Warzecha
:
:
They come out shooting for us,
~
Marist's patented physical style
t?ry.
,1
~6~5 overall rc:x:ord! and a
said. "Rutgers· wanted to come
and it is hard to matc.h that some-
of play.
frnal four appearance m the
in here and prove something to
times."
Two of this season's three
losses to date, came to Rutgers
and Siena.
Ameri.:an
.
Colh;giate Hockey
_
us.''
--
.
.
.
"It gets very frustrating,"
Association national tourna:.:
>
Despite the loss, Warzecha is
Warzecha said. "We know our
m
_
ent.
.
·
.

noi disappointed with his team's
capabilities, and lately we have
·
The <.tory for this seasoricould
play.
.
·
been playing better,
.
but every-
be
qi1id:I);
turning into an un~x
-:
one here knows that we have to
.
.
.
·-
.··
.
thrc~ 111orc ti
'
mirii,1e-;_
; /
'
.
'Christie
,
Pi
.
.
itoppahk/ii
"What we should stick to is
our physical style of play, oudtlt-
:
·
Tomorrow's contest versus
ting that got us so far last year,":
Rider b~gins
:
at
9:15
·
at the
Warzecha said. "A lot of teams
Mccann Ice Arena
:
can't keep our
with
our physical
Cy
Young
-
Winrier
·
- - - - - -
...
continued from p.18
complete games (10) and innings
it thought the season if you
(265 2-3) and was second in ERA
asked me in the middle of the sea-
behind teammate Juan Guzman
·
-
.
son when by elbow was killing
(2.93). Hentgen pitched three
me,".he said.
shutouts, tying Hill and Kevin
Charles Nagy of Cleveland
BJown of Florida for the major
was fourth
.
with I 2 points, fol-
league lead.
lowed by Mike Mussina ofBalti-
After going 8-6 with a
:
3.86
more with five. Alex Fernandez
ERA before the All-Star break, he
and Roberto Hernandez of the
,
was
-
J 2-4 with a 2.58 ERA in the
White So?C were tied for sixth
·
·
Monrn,
·
,111h s
v.•hor.-;;,,s the
'
}i?
.
.
The
kmehigb'
'
F<>~cs
·
\
,:
1sthe
'
pl
Beth
J.:.,iJ.
\
·
;'.'
,
:.
s¢cond_half.

with one poirit along
,:
.
,
-•
~
-
. ''Things just snowballed for
with Ken Hill of Texas.

·
:
hie in the second half," Hentgen
Hentgen, who made $2.25 mil-
·"Bt>lh
had
'
So
saves.
.
Piech-,,..
show1·,I
wti§sij
·'
All-C. 1111-..:rencek

Tltl'
ptl)
"
ofZack
'
fo
·
. .
'
.
..
·
~~~·i.~,~~I:'l
¥ffe
1(~~i~i~
any
nM-~
lopsi
......
.
.
,
.
and)
w~
played sqme
'
J
e-
Zack
.
Pi,:chocki"sti
.-
~
orrnanc~
y
'
good teamst Bruno ~aid
.
of
her d,:li~nse piat~
S
iiH
n
mplimentsfo
h.ercoa~h
.
this past season
·
:
'
-
·
.
_
{.·
·

/;
.
,.T"~
IC~I~
fimshoo.
,Jh
. .
,:
B~~o
.
led
'
the teaniiri
_
goal~
;
a~~
',_
:
\
"
":
.. '
.
'
'
- : .·
'
.
.
,
\\Ith •
1
_m.irk
of~ 1~:
·
N~
.
.
...
,
\ ,
:
assis~
<>,
Pluff; was·:a· freshman
'
,
:
Fornext year,"she believes that
they
\\Ill
he movmgtothe~e~
0
,-.--
'Yho
'
COlltinued
t~
'
stiq-.v
'ini-
-
.
the team wiy
.
have to become
Atlan1ic 'Athl<!~i'7Sqpf~re
.
~~f
t
;:,~
prov~iii
,
~hf
~!
•·
~~lll9~$
:
::
.
:--:.c:
more~ffensive.
·

·•.
. :
said_. "There was just a point
lion, gets a $50,000 bonus for
where I knew I could go out and
winning the award.
pitch a good game."
.
He won his 20th game on the
S
final day of the season, leading
.
QCCef----•
Toronto over Baltimore
4-1
at
.
Sky Dome. He had a chance to win
·
his 20th against Baltimore on the
final weekend three years ago,
·
but Toronto lost to Rick Sutcliffe
84.
.
"I think when I look back at
'93 in Camden Yards, going for
my 20th win, I was a little ner-
... continued from page 20
with Iona.
whc~~
tlh
:
c~
-
~~J!
,
~
,
8f}7~T!
-
-
~t1:~
:Y/
)f.·;
Wt1~¢.~~
:
-=
c~e
:
·
Q~
_.
~trong late;
.
:
.
. ..
h<;,
a_sll'I' UP-
;
"r•<'.·
.
:,
\
,
/{.'..
\
'

,'':
~yeri!lgfr<>pariinjury:
-.
i
\,
\
..
·
.
. \.
'
~
Jus(~tirrt~~e~Jd;;
·
rr~;-
.
. n
hi
I
i.-,okmg
{q~~5f:>
p~v
j
i. ,/
''Bftl)ee~d of th(! season,
slle

.
·.
can playwithJhem,'' Bruno said
mg a· I, •
1
of players
.;
~~m~
_
ll:n,:
;
·_,'
was
'.
showing more
i
and getting
·
.
of being part of the MAAC next
oth~r y~ar under theu
.
tJel~
..
·.· •
better'.'
\
Piechockisaid
.
··
'
·
.
year.
·.
vous," Hentgen said.
Pettitte, 24, led the AL in vic-
tories and went 13-3 after
Yankees losses. He pitched for
many months despite soreness
New conference foes like
Loyola, Fairfield, and Iona will fill
1997's schedule, and new rival-
ries will develop as Marist makes
the transition to the MAAC.
Next year, though, the returning
Red Fox lettermen
will
have the
one thing that they lacked this
year- continuity within the pro-
gram.
"Into the MAAC we go,"
Herodes said. "We'll see what
the future holds."
. Piech,
.

:U
sai~ optimisticall.r,as
,
·
11i;
·:
R.~
.
Foxes g~e a~ai9st
.
··
•·•
in his throwing ann .
"I didn't even think I'd make



























20;·
.. STAT
OF
THE WEEK:·
-M~n•s
~wirnn;ting.
and
Diving
.
-
. ' capture
1
O()th\\lin for program· .· .·. -·
. ;and ·,coa~h ''against ·.central· -'
·
: _Co(m~cticut State./
.:;
:-·. :. ·
· ..
Me.11
1
s so
;
cp~r
.·ends_. at
.7.-:-.Q-;
"·
.-•
.
••
· .. -·
. ',-.•
• ::_·
, ·.·:· -·
·:·--!":~:_
looks forwardto,next season
.
. .
.

.- ·4.
h)_:_
STEVEWANCZ~
· Staff
Wriier
_. impmvement. over the span of · ·
· the season.
·
"We came together as a team,
Th~
nwn's soccer team closed
despite having lots of new play-
its ~ason the way it began- with -ers and a new coach," ·Thomas _
an Cll{'iiUragiitg win over
a
team - said; . "This team Only had -one
from 1ir,1 yearMarist head coach
·
.year to make that adjustment, but
Boh
l-h:rndes' past.
we still have
a
good youngcore
On
Sl·pt. 4, the Red Foxes
thatwillretum. rd.say ~ngs
playc-1 I inspired soccer in defeat~ -are l()()king up fornext year!' ;
""·-
...
· OTE OF THE . EEK: .
"
... the determinatwn w_tis.unbeliev-
·:able.'
They
didn't say anythi!Jg ..
_. You couldjust~e-~_it
ini':J:'lI{:{ ·
-
.. · ·
-
, .:---·FootballTeain
ing an 1,ll1a team that Herodes .
Fleming also saw some good
has as•l'mhled in his two years
signs:
.. -
as thi' (;;,~)s' head coach. And
"Wewerethrownintoaimique "",:
·11 b' 11 ·. .
a·. . .
·..
·1h·· .
-
_.., .. , .
· On
N,I\ .-;, Marist earned a 4-2 . sitµation with all the new guys .
VO
e ...
Y ·
·
.·.··.·.···.-

..
a.·
.. ·
.. ·. .·Ce
.. ·.·· ... ·n...
.
··.·
'
.·. s.-.·.•··.··
.
s. e
....
c
... ·
..
a
.... son_.
:WI, ·
..
.
..
victory.
victon· \'Crsus
its
coach's alma· and a new coach,'' Fleming said:

_
mater.~Gnconta;. ; . .
.
"Considering th(! :S.itua.tion,
I -
by
Tllo~
RYAN .
Damarau was.glad to see.
Clarke's point streak c~ntinued
· The
R,\J
Foxes jumped out to
think we adopt<!d
well." -
.
.. . .
,
Staff Writer _
· ..
"It
was~
great for coach to do
into the third game when she -
an earh ,
O
lead, and held a c6m-
Halrway tllroughJhe schedule,
.
·
that.
J
·was so upset that'it
was
added three more points, two of
man~li;1g 4-1 advantage fate iri , the Red foxes s~umbled thr<>tigh.
. For Alyssa Clarke, ,.Tara · our
last
hori1t(game together I
which came on aces. Marist con- -
the
g~lllll'
hefore Herodes emp- . afive game losing sfreajc, but the. Damarall,Li?;IIeryner,
Mary
Beth
didn't'even play the firsCfive 'tinued
to
control the ·grune, and
tied
hi•:
hench, and-gave his re-
team's response to the= slu.mp
Horman, ·and
.
Jen Weinbrecht, · points,
,J
Was still crying,"
when Vir's kill made it 11-2,
serve~,,,meplayingtime. Fresh- . mayhav~leftmoreofanimpres-
Marist'sl5~12,15-0,15-9winover
Darnarausaid.
Alquist started to bring these-
man
Hiii
Day led the way for
sion than the losses themselves;
the:Lpng Js\,uid lJlliv~rsity
The five seniors staked Marist
niors backiri, much to the delight
the
Rnl
Foxes with lwo.g9als;
''We·could have packed it in
Blackbirds was notjust another
(10-18,4-3NEc)toa~5lead,two· - of the crowd, ·one by one until
Kevin . Hardy and Onbrino - after the losing str~," Fleming
.
:game: · It was their final Red Fox · points coming on H~rzner aces,
thesameUne-up that hadstarted
Maz1l"ll.i each'.scored once for ·stressed;-"Iristead,wewonfour
·
.v9lleyballgarneeverintheJaines
After
the<~lackbircls(7-18;:4-3 · the game was once again on the
Mari~
1
_
_
.
• _
_
of
oui-
last six games; a11dfinislled
0
'
J; ?dcCanrt ~ecreation Center.
.
. · NEC)ff·
moved
i3head
7-6,
Marist
floor, ·
.
-
_It
appeared. ·the seniors
_.-1
t"
was good to -get that on an ups\;\'i!}g: Ltbinkiftook
:Ari
emotjonal pre-match cer'."
ran ,o . four s~ght points and
would end their home career on
Oneon1.1 game,''. HeJ'Qdes said. · some real mental ·toughness and
_
·. emony
-
honored the five seniC>rs
didn't
trail
again in the firstganie.
the ·co~r~
,
together,. unfortu-
"lt's ni~· .. -to end the season on a
poise to.do that. lt'.was a= good •for- their. hard. w()rk, dedication
Sophomore 'Heather Vir led nately, fatigue and a
LIU
rally put
posi1i,·,· note."
.
·- way for the seniors to go out, and . -and-outstanding play. One J:>y
Marist
with
six kills and Horman
an end to the-idea and
Vrr
re-en-
Thc R.·,I Foxes finished with an
a good sign fornext fallas well;'.'
one, the public address an-
added'four. Ellie Schuerger
had
tered the game. Fittingly,
ovcrnlln'~ordof7~9,includinga
Fleming also gave good re-
nouncercaHedouttheseniorsby. 14 assists.
·
·
·
though,it.wasC<H:aptainHerzner
2-6
m~irk
within the Northeast· views to his new coach.
. listing their accomplishments
In
game two, "rally" was the .who capped off the night with a
Conf(·r.•nce. Marist's seven wins
"Co~h Herodds is a
great
re-
and what each one. brought to
key word for the Foxes. After kill, giving the seniors a high-
in 19% equaled the number of ~iter, and! think he'll do
good
the team. Damar;iu was not lis-
_
LIU took a 3-1_ lead, M.ari_st net- - note to go 9ut on.
victori,'-.. in
-
the previous two · things for
this
program,"
Fleming
tening. _
ted three straight pomts wi~h
For the match, the seniors com-
seac;on, combined.
· said. ''It could develop into one
"I completely zoned out when
He~ner s~rving; the last point
bined for 23 kills and six aces.
"If
ju~,
one of the losses could · of the best in New York State."
he started reading off the names
commg .on·an ~ce. Following a
Sch~ergerfinished the night with
have.gone our way, we'd have
In
1996,Maristbidafondadieu
and talking
.
about what we had
Blackbird pomt, Julee Cerda 31 assists, and
Vrr
totaled eight
fini~h~.1 :,t 8::-8, anq that wouid
to seven seniors, and to the en-
dorie,tt ·oarnarau said. "All I
_went back to serve. Five points
kills and three assists.·
ha\'C I ... •en a signific;mt accom-
tire Northeast Conference. Next
heard
was
·number seven,
Tara .
and two afes' later, Marist hada
Despite the highly emotional
plishllll'llC for this team,"
fall,theRedFoxeswilljumpinto
Damarau.'"
.
com1!1andmg 9-4 lead. Clarke
victory, Marist intends to keep
Hero.I, -...:xplained.•"Butwecan
anewleague,asHerodesretums
HeadcoachEmilyAlquist_even
contmu~d the.serving domi:-
it's.eyes focused on a goal they
still ta!.,· some positives out of to the Metro Atlantic Athletic
altered her lin~-up so that all five
nan~e with two _more aces and
have had since the beginning· of
this )'t!;ir.··
Conference, where he had his
senie>rs·coulu start together in
M~st sco~ed six unanswered
the season, winning the North-
Co-rap1~1ins Andy Fleming and
previous coachin_g experience
front of their home fans for the
pom~ to fin_ish th: ~rune. Marist
.
east Conference Tournament.
Josh
Tl111mas
saw some marked ·
Please see
Soccer, page 19...
final time, a line-up
change
tha,t
compiled six of
11
s 11 aces in
Clarke sees no problem in that
game two.
area.


49.7.1
49.7.2
49.7.3
49.7.4
49.7.5
49.7.6
49.7.7
49.7.8
49.7.9
49.7.10
49.7.11
49.7.12
49.7.13
49.7.14
49.7.15
49.7.16
49.7.17
49.7.18
49.7.19
49.7.20