The Circle, September 19, 1996.xml
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Part of The Circle: Vol. 49 No. 1 - September 19, 1996
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--~NEWS:,:
1996<:rvtarist'gra'.c{uate'i-ecieves·
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Traillspoitine·:eets·~{r~ve
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review
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PAGE 9
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•· .. ·· ~-~&c.e.,s7. . . .
The footballteam·Iosesto .
presUgiciu~
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.. ·.Duquesne·,'
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m§nt
IBiaccEE
· · The Student Newspii.per of Marist College
·
· September 19; 1996
MaristStllden.ts provide seCuritYro~ Olympics in Atlanta
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by
tEAH SHELTON
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upscale \V9od~arcf Academy in
\~6rk
stude~ts\vefe'assign~d
to '.
got
to
chec:k-.athlet~s· identific~-
· . .The studentsstayed in Atlailta
.
Staff.Writ~; ::
the.College Park section of At'.'
was·slighHy chaotic.<
... , \: . , tions, ..
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.. ·
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for differenrlerigths of tirne, de-
Senior Matt
miHc:y
commuted
lanfa.
..
.
•~herewere
;
more people tell'.'. · In
·
addition to working
10
tol
2
pending ·upon their confracts
22 hours to workthis sum,mer.
.
According to .Halicy, class-. ing tis_ what to
·
do than
·
peop·1e· . hours each day,:the students · with'Bcirg~Warrier. Some will get
He was one of35 criminaljus::
rooms were converted into sleep-
domg actual work;" she said.' "I
were.also able to attend some of internship credit for -their work.
tice majors from Mari st who · ing quarters. for the students.. ~xpected more order.;'. .
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the Olympic events,
For others, the.experience in it-
worked security:at the. Summer
Showers and two payphones.
Th~ n¢w0gu,ards were assigned
Tatum said thebombing at Cen-
self was e11ough. .
Olympics in Atlanta. .
-were.i9ca~ed in thepaHways: : .
to .... several different· ta.~.ks
tennia!Parkdid not keep the new
Students seeking
Credit
for their
According ·to John Dorerty,·
"It,wasn'.t thatba.d:
·The
air
throughout tneirstay in'A,tfanta.
guards.from doing their best.
work were required to keepjour..:
assistant professor
.
of· criminal· .· conditionin'g. was the best part,"
'fll.l.!
sttidents'jobs ~anged · from
"Our jobs seem small, but after
nals of their experiences and sub-
justice at Marist; · the students
Halicy said .. · ·
keeping dviHa11f otit of·lavv. en,
it happened,
J.
realized that we
mit a paper to professor Doherty.
were required to arrive in time for
. Thi! stu~e9.ts. were employed • force·ment gates·· to protecting. were really important and we re-
. The criminal justice department
opening ceremonies ori July 19.
by Borg~ :W~er, one of four se- . hotels to monitoring the open-
ally did make a difference," Tatum
and Professor Doherty win host
They were given a. choice of curity cci~J!ani~s prpte~ting the• . ing atjd closing ceremonies.
said.
a public forum this semester. Stu-
being paid
$55
per day orreceiv-
Olympkgames tlii~ sµmrnet
,.< · .
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Ret>ecca Tatum, a senior from
Wallace said she did not want
dents will be discussing their
.
ing
free
room and board. Doherty
Suirulne)Vall~ccfof ~pring Val-
Washington state, said she to !~ave after the bombing, .
. Olympic experiences, both good
. sai9 moslchosethe•latter, and
ley,
NY;
·a
.
~tt.identeinployed·by
worked at Centennial Park arid
'.'Ifeltmoreinclinedtobestricter and bad .
. most
of
them were housed in the
Borg-Warner in Adan.ta; said the .. the Aquatic Center, and she also
with my post," she ·said,
Conan O'Brien help~ rreShrrten
s6ttlt:
in
'Late Night' hostfilms bizctrre
·
seg111eiiisatMarist
· by
KRISTIN RICHARD
Editor-in~cizief ·.
·
.
.
backt.Thornpson , said:
, ·.· ..... ·· •. . · .. · .
. :A.cc9rding tQ Hailmleke, Miirist was . ·
d1osen primarily t,~:uise
of
its pi-ox-,
The day after'the freshmen moved in, they • iniity ,to N~w York City, where the show
were: bombarded with i)izarre gifts.:hand~ . is (ilmedTuesd.ay throi.igh.Friday.
delivered bya popular late night
TV talk
.
Fortunately; Hamme_ke silid the crew
show host.~....
.
.·
•
•·.· .. ·.··.·. · .••... ·· . .· ·· ..
.
··•· .. ·• c:ncountered no'majc,rj,robielllS with
, Co)lan O'B.rien,.host6C'LateN.ightwith;
_se~ting
'
up•t)je:s19is_,at)viicisiL
:
.. ,".·:• .. ·.
~t:
·
·,COnlUliQJj.iri~11;t
·
~~e.tO,Marist;ririjJibdr.~-,t~:~Pt~~~~Q(~,Qµfa'>~ef,ef.!!Y~J;g~¥--~+···
Dayj_9
.
'fiI
.
iri)i'~egmenfoflits.slfo\vtwllich·,
•
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NfarisLa,salI
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ttii~gs;}1p;,,aijU'
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· ... M.i~~ae,! ga~~elce~'.a:1?94. M~st gradu-. :A,.I,tho~gh <::>'B~e~ ~olllplainecfabqtit :
:
atealidproducfion.assistantOit'the show .. the:acousticsfo·LeoHall,
_
he saidthe
suggested
¥ansr as a
possible°iobanont~' ')eople:M¥aH.~twe{~.very ~cc~in.iiio-
,
film the skit 9fConiu1
"
and his sidekickAridy .. dating to Jhe
.
disniptioris
.
ass6ciated
helpHl!{fresifmen lllOVeinto the ·dorms.
•
·.•· with:fil~i!}g
ll
shoi on
a
college
cain"' .
.
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.. .''.".'fr_e h~lpi~~;the'111;sitt1e)p\vith;inap-
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.propnate gifts; a snake;:aqreat[>.ane; .cans..
·.·]'h~.
peopl!! here ~eem ..
y~ry
kind.
·
.
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2~~¥11: 'hlid_so~1~.·ugly,fiI~f.;T~~y·.vt
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a1Ib,~,~~.!1i~e;!O ~s a~dtolJr~·
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l"ie~
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:Cori~ri'Oi~}iifi (R}/pi~t~rec1:·11Jr~\~it11
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a1cfl:i~6~~~t:.
resident ·in
·
one
·o(the
·
skits ,said O'Brien ''Late Night," §ai,d thy trip ·to. Mari st
·
tic:m Assistant Michael Hemmeke (C), filmed a segmenfof 'Late Night' at IViarist:
was·e. v.
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·
m.·.··.Pteci.t ... o.
·P•.a.Y .....
'..a.
t n .
"ck.
o.·.n .. h.e· ..
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reminded
.
.
liim'?f.hiS()WllCOllegedays.
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. "Wh I
th . d .
I
ije}ler.ose_\Till.age>L.I .•.. s.aid. ·.·th~-. taping.of she :said;
.
~09giina~e,W~owas n()t pres~~tfor th
e
tap- ," • - · ·
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en W(?_fiUO
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h . h . . dd d
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•
.e·d"11e··d ·v··ers1·0· n o·.r. the ·Mar1"st "s.k1"ts·
mgoft.he"sh·•.o·w··.· .·.·.·•· ·. ·.·.·.
•
.·.• .. ·
· ··.·.·.··•··· beredhowgladiarn.tliatldonthave
t es,owa. e someexc1temenno onn•
·
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.-..
· · ·· · ·
t 1·
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,, h
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\
lifi. e,on th
.
... e sec. 9nd day of scho.
oi.: -, • .
.
last~
..
eig·
ht. minutes, which
..
·
mad.e.it tlie.1o
_
· .ng-
)'He :wa~ted, to put
a
snake
,rn
niy-- .
o ,.ve ma onn ~ymore, . e sat .
.
..
roommate's drawer and wait for her to come
·
· Karen PfanneIDiller, a freshman from ·
.
·
c''It was definitely fun a.ndp_retty c~azy,,, :est s~gmentever to air onO'Brien's show.
McCann
.
construction behind S~bedule
by BEN
~GO~
.
.. §taff
Wr.iter
·. Marist stµge.nts
·
ar..:
rived this
fall just as
renovations• to. the
James·
J .
.
·
McCann
Recreational Ceriter ·
ended and construc-
tion on the additio.n
began ... · ....
.
The project is atimit
one month behind
schedule, in part be:
cause
ail
old .. dump
discovered on the site
had to be· emptied.
Tom Daly, directorof
the· physical plant,
said the dump was a
20 foot deep ravine
filled with· garbage
imd appliances left
Circle
phcXo'Diallc
~
by the original Marist
Construction on the James
J.
McCann Recreation Center, which began
Brothers in the l 950's
last spring, is one month behind schedule. The new addition will include
and l 960's.
a new gym, a weight room, and additional locker space.
"Cable, pipe, and other
utility relocation set con-
structicm fu~ther behind,'; he.
said. ''The projec.t is now ex-
pected to be completed early next
semesterinJan,uary.''; .
Daly said .students will see a
lot :of action happening inthe
next few months
as
the new build-
. ing is raised.
· Numerous administrators and
faculty were relocated early this
summer· as reno:vations to· the
· · existing building began. ·.
Assistant Men's Basketball
Coach, Stephen Sauers; recently
moved· into· his new office after
spending most of the summer in
the McCann dance studio.
·
"All the construction is a bit of
an inconvenience," Sauers said,
~•but we have to be patient be-
ca9se it will benefit so many.,.
Ttm Murray, director of Marlst
Athletics, said he thinks the
20,000 square foot addition will
be a great asset to students.
"We envision it to
be
a real gath-
.
ering place for all students to
come down and work out in an
upbeat atmosphere," said
Murray:
The newl?uilding will contain ·
amuhipurpose gym, aweight
room, ancl locker space. Accord-
ing to Daly; these are necessary
additions.
. ..
"The.two current weightrooms
are a joke,'' he said. '1'eam sports
dominate thegym,. so the new
Please see
McCann,
page 8 ...
. ,P;t.·~·
.JO-.
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·-;:::.
We asked 502 freshmen:
Has
Marist met your
expectations so far?
Yes- 390 · No- 60
NotSure-52
The
Circle conducted an unscien-
tific poll on Sept. 9-15. Five hun-
dred two freshmen were asked this
week's question .
See related story, page 4.
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ByGWENACKERMAN
..
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Associated-Press._:ltYriier
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JERUSALEM (AP)
:
-'syria
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has
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toward Israeli-
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controlled tenitory, i,n
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what
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nister l,3enjaniiD'Netanyahu
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,
said today
is
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attemP-t to
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sur~
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Israel into resu~ing peace
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a key to ls~l.s d~fe
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Joel Tyi:ter;
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for
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themiddle
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Ruggenoalso
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sa1d that
.
the
_
day that
-
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_
J!tl:l~e?
,
.
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~ew Y()rk
·
state Sen
,
at~;
.
orga-
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I>ei:cerifof~ew York and
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The tu1tmn ~s
.
go1~g up
.to~
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m~ncan_ II1~1a_1orn,
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th,rhe
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didates
;
hoping
·
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bring
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the
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thepeopleofthe
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op~9nstpe~ceJal~s
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HudsonValleycloser,
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Hudson
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afford it,
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no!r~ume~
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·
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.
'Nancy
Cozea~; a carididaie
·
·
He
•
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state s<::hools are los-
. .
Ruggeno said, that
to prate.ct
·
N!!~yahu SP9k~s!Ila~pa~1d
·
·
fortheNewY,orkStateAssem:.
inginbr~rnoneybecausepeople
·
the Hudson ,Y~II~y, y.oung
Bill" m
_
an confii;mcii)?da)'.
.
tJ;i~t
.:
bly, said it
•
is tip to
'
Americans
in the S~n
·
ate now use the money
.
people
.
µeed
to ~et
.myqlyed
.
.
·.·
~sr~~I ~a~
.
rec~1y~
,
a
,.
~~ssa~~
·
to ch~ge
;
'
:
\".
.
: .
for
'.
~ih~r
pUrp<?Se~.
.
>
. ·
.
'
.''Qur future
JS
;
at stak~,''
.:
he
•
frg~
j
~Yn
.
a
_
~~t~c1S
/
!1wr
.
s~t1s,~
.
·
(:!:
f
''Arneric
.
a needs to get back
·
_ ·
"We:'
i
~eed to make tuition
sau:J
;
·
.
.
.
.
. . .. ·
.
·
•
<
. :
.
·
factory; bulltw~ P~1?1-nly not
to work," she said.
.
ch~pe
f
~or conumiIJity coHeges
A.J:
the
.
r~lly, Rl!ggen.(} s,1d
;
th~ Jtjn~ of ~eat 1mphed by the
.
C~~ea,n also said th~t
,
the
ins
,
tead
·
gf
'
cutting money from
that 1t was t1me
_
f.orJi~nerat1pn
n~wspa
.
IJer
.
.
•
unions
.
need
.
to get more in-
the~~•
\
~
f
liaid.
.
l ; ~ : e ~dvantage
.
and get 1n
~
-
~
,
·
.
~
-
.-
t
..
·
'
.
.
:-\
.
..
'~
·
-
.
.-::
.·
.
· ...
.
·
..
. •
.-.
~
-
.
',
•
"
·_
-
-
_
.
Bosnians cast
votef
t
f
or
three~member p:residericy
.
~
-·
.
.
.
.
-:
;
..
-
Cr~i~
·
~t1ite
.'
he
~dcled.
estimaied overall
·
turnout ~t
60
·
.
.
• Elettioi(offidali announced
..
percent
io
70
percenLJhey called
.
the
·
firSt results from two of the
that a resp~ctable figure. espe-
SARAJEVO, B,0snia-
109
v
'
oting district~, both in
ciallyinacountrywherewarthat
·
Herzegovina (AP)
-c
Far fewer
.
Saraj~x9
;
'
~d
n.otiikely to be
rep:.
·
ended only
_
months ago
h'ad
left
By
SllECKO
LATAL
•'
.
"
.
' .
;
Associated Press
•
Writer
Muslims cast ballots in Serb-held resent.alive of the overall vote.
:
at least 250,000 ~ople
dead.
.
·
·
lands in the Bosniari
·
elections
In
those two
.
districts, Bosnian
:
A
.
s
organi#'i-s
talliaj
votes in
.
.
than previously
..
thought, U.N.'
·
President Alija Izetbegovic, the
B0s11ia's
.
peaceful if imperfect
officials said M~nciay, adding to
.
favorit~,
..
~dn 76 percent of the
elec
.
tions two of the region's
fears that Bosnia's ethnic divide vo~_fo(~e
.
Musli01 member of
·
·
main
·
power
·
brokers agreed to
. was irreversible.
the
.
thre.e-man presidency.
hold their first summit.
U.N.
spokesman Alexander
·
Fonrter"'Pnme Minister Haris
·
lzetbegovic and former
Ivanko said only 13,500 Muslims Silajdzic won about 20 percent.
archri val Serbian President
The Weekend
,
. .
,
.
'.
Weather
.
...
,
Today:
.
,
.
.
.
·
.
~indy with mixed sunshine
and clouds .
.
.
l:Iigh
·
mid 60's
to
65.
Lows
35
to
45 .
.
Friday:
.
.,.
Mostl/stinriy.
Highs il1
upper
60's
Saturday:
A mix of sun
and clouds. High
70.
&rii~
ff
~s
;·
;
voted Saturday in or near villages
The voting also was to choose
Slobodan Milosevic are to meet
they had been driven from dur-
a federal legislature and leaders
in Paris in three weeks, an indi-
ing the 3
.
in-year war. No more and
legislators
for the Muslim-
cator of how
far
the once-enemy
than 1,200 Serbs went into terri-
Croat and Serb halves of Bosnia.
leaders have come since the 1995
tory controlled by Muslims and International election officials
Dayton peace accord
.
·
Sunday:Mostly cloudy
with
a chance of a shower. High
in the
60's.
:
i~,r~
!l
\
i
iJ~
,
i
~
Source: Associated Press
Frie~ds and family remember
C
:
d¢~~~~~ti
:·.st~dent-,afjnemoria1 .. :
~11~~;:_:,~c,
tree.
planting
. · .
.
. , by Stephani~
_Mercurio··
·
~earting, _sci Ralph· Short he.lt,ed .
, . s:.News Editor
u_s find it,'' said Langevin". ·"We·
:·
:
stiia;K~;
-
111(>Uflled
the lossof ·e1a~~eg~!bi:en:U~:h.~could
.
a member.of the Marist commu-
· ·• Langevin said there was sym-
nity onSepk4.
. .· .
· ~lism: in the type of tree. they
: Di~aMorgan,amemberofthe picked.·
Sigma Sigma Sigma sorority.and
"In the spring, it will bloom
a
freshman at Marist, died May
purple flowers, which is our so-
7,}996
from,
meningococcal men-
rority color," said ~angevin.
.
ingi_~s_i· Morgan's sorority sisters
. µtngevin said the site for the
· held a memorial • mass and tree
tree· is perfect.
·
dedicatiC>~for.her:
.
"Everyone hangs out between
.
Mq~gan's sorority sisters, as
Lowell Thomas and Dyson, so
well as)er mother, read poems
everyone · can watch.· the 'tree
and sang songs a( the
tree
dedi-
grow," said Langevin. "Everyone
c~tion between-the Lowell Tho-
can look at the
tree
and remem-
mas
and
Dyson bujldings. Father
ber Diana."
.
Lµke gave the memorial mass in
Don~a. Nastasi, a jutiior.:.and
the5hapel o~ c~~pus:
.
.
member of Sigma Sigma Sigma,
Dawn·Langevin, a senior and. said that Morgan will always be
.
J?lember ofSigmiSigma Sigma,
remembered.
·
· ·
· said the sorority dealt with Ralph
"Diana ·was a wonderful per-
THE CIRCLE,
September -19, 1996
Short. and the physical plant to
son," said Nastasi.. "We will all
find their tree. .
,
._ .
remember Iler
and
keep her in our
"We wanted a tree that held
hearts:",
·
·
·
:
· ·
:
.
.
Photo cour1esy-or Tim Massie
The sisters from Sigma Sigma Sigma gather around a tree planted in memory of Diana Morgan,
.·; ~- ·:
.
,
a freshman who died of m,eningi!is lastspring.
.
·
Marist gradoat~.rec.eives'presUgious ability fitst award
as m<>stpeopl~.would think.
18 atthe Grartd Hyatt New York "their organization,'{said Targos.
by Tim Manson
Staff Writer
Targos' was' ihtroduced to
H,dtel at a $2_()() a plate luncheon.. ''This. award really' lets me know
J.O.B. throughJhe Sp~ial Ser-
.
Others receiving the award will .that I have educated people
A
1995
Marist College gradu- · vices office at-Marist. They.set .. be}ea.11Dri.scoll, the top rankeg
·
abo~t disabi,lities in· the way 'I
ate, RobertTargo's, has been cho-
ui{intet_VJewsforJn,r1(~ith s~ch .. '-:Vh~i<:hairracera11d sev_en time
should,. and it gives me confi-
seri
by Juiit'bne Break' (J.O.B.),
a
corripahie§. ·. as"_: N:B Cf: F.OX, · . _l3osfoif Marathon. wiriner, · and , dence to educate more people in
nori-profit employment service
McGraw-Hilliand Nickelodeon. }oseph E. Spinnato, the Pr~si:.
the future."
.
.
for people with disabilities, to .
In Augµst
1995, .
Targos took..~ ... d~ntof the !1<>tel Association of .,. ··But even as the bewilderment
receive an'award known as the ;job afJ'.lli~kelodeon o!i. ~•.(ree:. - Ne;w York <:::ity, Irie.· Previous
ofs~ccess overcomes him,
Ability First Awards.
lance basis as ~n Online Com~ . winners indude 'Chris Burke,' . '.fargos stillrefersto Maristas the
He h~'also·~n working end- :·,munic1:1,t9r.'.On Aug1:1.s~J;J?~§.; .:·:~9stJmown:for .. ~i,i;,roli~£9rky : t?esttime in his
life
anc,t.the rea-
_ lessly to'promote·disability edu- : heV!asgiyenaf~ll:-t.~fn:~po~i!io~_:/:~f1
1YAh~.6.!!<;:; ...
~.i~0
.;_~~-,;;~?'.
,
:.,~-- ..... , ...
1.,"•··•·.
,.
,, _
)</ .....
son he is where he is.
. "Without Marist and without
the people at Marist, I wouldn't
have been able to achieve this,"
said Targos. "My life wouldn't
have turned out the way it did if
it wasn't for Marist. I'm very
proud to be a Marist College
graduate."
-·~-· ·,ti:-,.
i,:, .. -;.,,
,1,,,,·.:v ·t-,'
,-.c. ,;: .
:
•However ~!far!!OS''lS
not the .
series
·
"Li(e.:
.
.
.
.
. ,.
.
..... "· ·•· •
··+.9~.,-~<?~::,f
1
~~~·~-~~~"':';-~~,.·i~~9.Y·.•~J~-:'
~! •,
;
.:.~~ ...
-.a.· ....
.!'\?•7?V''!.\-'!;;9__.\,n_·~ ...
~;1-;_.-,►..-
£~,~~,, .. _~:.
xtti,;9~,J:.i_~~ :'.,;:·~ ..
nJo_~t,-:~~/~l::
~~~2
~~-)"~
_-;t~"!t;:._
r~t_t:}_~.:.·.-~
~
.... -·· .. --- .. - .. '
.
>.
'
.. ,.-• -
,'
•
.
•
~
•
,
, - , •
-:-ae~ts,-chtldren
aria
facu.lt"y'.ali~e. ;onlyManst stude_ntto worK Wltn
Goes v.n.
.
.
:1:, ,:::•
·~1,,o.!1::;·:t1 ;!.:;!;7;;:;-,;,~"~,._'.rl•;
:
s,11.i:E ,' .
~r'.::,::;;,::",:...,..,..-,:";.;,'.:..:
CC•'.<"'••·
'
•·""?'',,:rcf:'·i ,-:· •
.:;·,~~ ' ' . : -·
that
peopiiiare'p~pfo whhth~r
;J.O.B:.
1ccording to Desmo~q . . ~~thO~~h
·- . . ·
, ·
,".
·
·
disabled· or not;
·
'·' · -·
..
Murray;
assistant,director <>fficld .. e .v.~:r,y;n n'e
• '· · .:
·
··"Robert was more interested;i'n ; experience, .¥arist has deyel-
who kn()WS
:a~~~~ng -~~!JleOnetomee~ the per- ' o~e~. a V<!r)'.' good r~fatiop~h'.ip . Targos ili,inkt
"son; ndf'the disability," said . w1thJ:O:R In-fact, m the sulll-
he_,deserves
James Ryan, program coordina- · mer of 1995, three out.of the
this -award
tor ·and. counselor .. Ryan knew
?in~
studen~ thatl;~-B. placed
.
. more . , than.
and worked with Targos all of
m
mternsh1p positions were a n y o n e ,
his fouiYears at Marist.
"If
a dis- ' M~sf;students_. .
l!i
tlu~ SUIIlllll!r . Targos him-
: . a9ility 'w:as one· one-hundredth
of 1996, f?~r out of twelve were
se]!seeins sur-
~f
a
pers.6-1f
s
makeup, _Robertfelt
fro~ Manst::' ~II. these st~dents -pnsed and
. · it should be treated as such."
·
·
got mtemsh1ps with f.:o_rtune
500
o
..
:y.
e r -
'.:.,,= ·
Tiµ-gos
worked on _
qisability
companies. indudi11g
_
:Merrill=:, ·, ·.-"{fl5';J~ed,
. educath:ii{'with ·students at Lynch,Coopers & Lyt>rand, and ,• .. ,.
:
: I was
. Marist;
biit'if
wasn't the average
Cushman'& Wakefield~
. :-
blo:wn away
shuatio'n ;\vhere. one person
··r
thi?k that _says something
that
th'ey
·
. ~toad ·ir?"f"ront' of'the room and
for Mar1st,": said Murr~~-
"It
thought . my .
···talked.-- Instead/Tai-gos orga- ·. givef go~ n~e _rec9~1tton to
accomphsh-
, ni~d .. things'lik,e;Jeopardy and
Manst; and:atthe-same.!Jme h:!5
men ts : and
· Family Fe1:1d to'show that talk- · added to the _success of_J._O.B.
w~at
l was
fog. ab~_µt'disabjlities didn't
. Robert wdLbe rece1vmg the
?Oing
was
have to be
as
serious and sullen
award onWednesday, September
important to
JOIN!!!
"Making Strides Against Breast Cancer"
3 mile walk at Woodbury Commons Shopping Outlet
to suppon brt,aSt canc~r research ·
October 20, 1996
We're looking for people to become
part
of the Marist team walking to help suppon breast
cancer research. Jfyou are interested in walking or would like to sponsor !he walkers please
contact Joan Nies at the MIPO office or Rose at the American Cancer Soctety-452-2635.
There will be free coupons given to members of the team, so more walkers mean more
shopping!!!
.
.
All donations to the team are greatly appreciated.
.
.
Help Take A Step Forward For Cancer Research
FOR INH)RMATICN ABOUi
,:.:..r,;::;£r.
I
-
.
I
.
.
\.,.
-·
i
·y•
our.
rolk;,-no•
olf= ••
..J;J,...;.,.
~ ~
assortment of
literature
and
cultural
critici,,,n ·
of
the
Hispanic heritage. Join us in
this .
month-long celebration of the
history
and
cul~ · ·
of the Spanish speaking
peoples
of the Americas ..
MARIST
COLLEGE
BOOKSTORE
BTW .... While you' re here, ask us ...
"What's up with the fox?"
I
.
.
;
.
'11996 NACSOORP
J
J
~""a1:1ri.~.::Wh.lte\le·cttire
:
tnakt~s )AIDS
:
re
'
al
·
'.r or·•--.Marisl
;
__
sttid'~hts -.
.
·-
? _ •••
,.y-'.: .
.
: .. :.:,··::/--
_}> ·:·
.
·,/:\<·./:)··
}>
·
:·
\
·_
:·}'. - _:· :
.
. ;
_
.. , ·
·
·,. ·· ..
< . . _
_ · .. ,.
):;:,.\Y
:1.r . · .:/- ._ : · ": ·\)•'\
?''.· \:_
·
:
;? .
by
FMILYKUCIIARCZ\'K .. : ·•
/ri?,~-~·co~~inatedc:l~t~n,g'rac::. : . •
-
A~
'
a p~nt,. \Vbite
_
off~red her . k!dS/
~e.~~
~boµ~_thif
~as.:
•.
Staff
Wriier : ., , ':
·..
tor. :~hat; h~ too~: f(?r ~1s, hem9~
_own ~dyu;e .. :, •' _ ... · .
> : ·. .
.
_
sr,•~ th•-~~ c~l.ed
:AW~?.
and_,~~o/
. •
.
. ._ _
· ·
ph1ba.
·
He:was·onlyg1ven three: .
. ''Lo_ve yourself, hav~ sexwhen ·
W(?
Just wa,nted t<? ~oll~w
_
up gn 1t
:
·
:
'.
, '
, . - '
- t9
six months toHve, but instead . -
you want
_fo,
not because s9me- . and
be
li~e. 'you guys are·~tillliv-
Mariststudents were
·
faced - livecffor five ·and
i
half ye_ars: :
one else·wants you to. Don't let
ing with :this: This ·stiH_ hap-
with the re~lity ~fAIDS, as -
White talked about all the pain
people pu_tpress_ure ori you
}O
pen'S:'"
: '. .. __
.
_ ( _/·
:
<
Jeanne Wh1te-Gmder. tal_ked
she felt because of the way
.posomethmgyou'renotsoqu1te -
Many,st~de~ts ~~ye
_
k_~?-':Vn,
about her son's ordeal with the
people treated her son. _Three of
su~e you w~t t<:> do," she said .. _ someone ~1th t~e -~1seas.~;)n-
~isease. _Hundreds of; students
Ryan'stl!achersc:arm~to_visithhn
_Her message ~as-simple; be - chiding:freshman
~rip
Pender,
hstene.~ '.1n stunned stlencc:(Lls, . when he was sick/ blJ.~upon dis;:,,,_.
carefuL , . . ... · _
·
_
:.> : .
.
··-who ·J9st . two _fr1en,.cis_ ai!d~ a _
White'told the s,tory of her.son,
covering hehad
Ams;:
decided'.·'.-' . -
. -
Students; including CHfden >~ousifr_to AIDS: '. She .. said,she .
Ryan:
.
_ ,_,' · .· _ .·
· .. ··
thai it was a good dme tp_leave'. :-: ,
Kennedy, took White's message ·nopes '.for 111_or.e involvem~~tdn
"My life changed o:v~rn:ight
·
?Ryan was forcedCto.'ftg~t. in ·
1. ;_
·
to heart.
·
.·
.':
_
fight!ng the dise~I!, s,aying that
because
<>f
this <Jisease. _lhad_-to
-f¢
0
oµrt i~ ord~r- to ,attend. s~h_ooi. _ _
:"She had
a
very powerful mes-
-the maj<J.rio/ of peopfo
_
might for-
deal wiih something: I .wouldn't
He:,'was harassed by towns;.;/ _· ·•
. sage. ~he's, making a difference . -get about it unless re11Unded.
ever want to deal wi_th," .Wllite · ,,people, and pari~hioriers.
irt
the .. ·-
everyday in the lives of others,"
"There are tho~~ w,ho take it ·
said.
>:
<- ,
>
,
.,., ..
j;< ,
lo£al,- churc
_
h·v;ould,
nof
even,_ '.
Kerinedy said.
.
..
·
to heart ~ortherestoftheirlives,'
Since.her.son's death in, 1990;" :shake hands with him·oi{Eastet· -
He
·said he hopes
fo
see more
but we just need more'people to_.
'Yhite said it h~ been her mis-. ·_ Sunday.
. · : ·, _
,
·
, . -·.
_
~.. , :·
prograins like .mis on~:
_
_ .
.
do
that.;' Pen.de(saicl.> :· · :; _ ,
__
s10n to speak to people, .both · · B_ecause ?f the harassment; the ·
· Student Progr~mming C~uncH
_ Wh1testressed. thanhought _- . ·
young and old, aboutp.~QS. _
She . V{hites nio.Y,ed. t~ a_riothef'to~n.' .. .-: :
>
_
.. _ _
.
_. • .
President Sean \\'hite hopes
t9
as well, ~elliilg students to get in-
·
said she is not
a
professiqnal
.
Ryan said _he wanted.lo die in
°if .
•choice now
_
,whether ypu get
~ave more
-
{\.ID,S-related _· pro-
·volved before it ~s
too
fate::·
speaker, but.is a lovingrilother:'
.
'':~appierplac~; ,
·
.
.
.
_·- .
AIDS. People didn't used to grams as.well becau~ehesaidhe
~•Is
it g<>.ing to h~ve_totouch
who lost her son. Shejust
White blames the negative re-. / liave choices,,,she
·
said. .
_ · .fe_els·it is· a v~ry,importailt issue
you personally before yoti get
wa~.ted to make a difference in ,, action< to a lack of understand- ' - White:stressed the importance
for students to .corifnjnt. : ·.
involved with AIDS?, "she said.
the, fight against AIDS.
ing of the disease. People did
·
of parents talking with theirchil-
.SPC PubHcity. Officei: Tracy · .
She _said one _ofthe lTlostim-
. Ryan White was diagnosed
not know much about AIDS at
.
dren about AIDS. She said par-
Paurowski sajd one
.of
the rea- . portarit things young ve,ople'can
with AIDS in
1984
at age
I 3.
that time and did not want
to:
ents
are
afraid to talk about AIDS
sons for having White come to
do is to get involved in fighting
"When he got sick,
l
reallyfolt
"I
am
just a mom trying to get ,with i~eir children, but they µiµst
Marisranct,
iec!~
w:.is theyknew .AIDS and the prejudices that
that the world had come to an
you young people to wake up.
because
71
percent of people·- it would besm:nethingthatwould _surround the disease.· ·
end," she said.
about this disease,
to
make this
who liave AIDS are between the
touch everybody's.he~.
__ I~,xan_~~~!!"'.1~.t~-
,!~:
disease
dis:_~~-r:~_l:~nd that you have a
ages of20 and
40.
"Right around when we were
Freshmen adjust
to
a
new lifestyle at Marist
~
ACCOtJNTING OPEN
HO:-CJSE
.
'
byCHARLOITEPARfRIDGE
Staff
Writer
-The Cente:r for Career.
Services
Willbe spOI)SOring
. "ln:tlt.iSl>Uildl~g, $tud~nts.-
.
.
tl.i~
annu~l.-i~~co~p.ting QpenJlolise . .
:
..
-
-. . . ·-
-.,; _._.: ·'.•,:,-.-::•:,,.,,
•
..
x
.,.,
.
_·'r'.·
.
,
:.
~a'\'.~il>~~~,~~r-y~pi:qa,c;tiy~~,:-;
1.(; •;
.
,
,.. ...
·
:
·
·
.
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people everywhere to distract
mty an_d get to know· each
Time_.
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you, using e-mail for the first
time,
other."
.
•
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. ·
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tons
-
ofreadingevery
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nightand:
·
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•
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11 Th.
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25
swipingyc:mrI.D:fogetiritothe
~-MaryBethDohrinwend, ·_
oca ion:.
owe . ' omas .... ;
place you calihome arejust some
:
Sheahan Hall
ine~tor. .
.
.
things· every Marist• freshman
go.es·. through.
_
-
.
_
thatthe social life at M_ar:ist makes
.. Now itisthe dass·of-2000's
weekends more enjoyable::•
turn
tti
begin adjusting"to a new
Katie Tower, also .a
Leo
resi-
life
atMarist
den(saidshe appreciates all the
Freshman Cassandra Giarusso
people· on ht!r.floor. · ._ -·
.
~aid .she really likes the attno~'
•~
lgot
here
a
couple
·
of_da:ys
sphere ·
at
Marist and the atti-
early for band, and therewas·Jike
tudes of the students and fac-
one other person on the floor. I
ulty;; _
was lonely, but nowl'in having
a
O'
:M:_arist has
ll
really nice cam-
great time," Tower said. •
ptis and the people here are
Some freshmen said they fom1d
friendly," Giarrusso said.
some things about being a fresh.:
· · Craig Adelhardote said he en-
man more difficult than others.
joys the people on · his -floor· in
Katie Kasper said adjusting to
Sheahan:
the course work was. the· most
"Everyone gets along. There
difficult aspect of settling in. .
is a real sense of community,'' he
"I'm still getting used to all the
said.
·
reading
I
have to do, but other
--
_
Sheahan Mentor Mary Beth
.
than th~t, it is all pretty great,"._ -
Dohrenwend said she under-
Kasper
said. ·
stands the freshmen's first im- ·
Leo
Resid,entAssistant Kelly
pressions ofMarist because, like
M. Quinn said -she sympatheti-
them, this
is
also her first year,
cally tries to help her residents
She said she agrees
thefreshman
adjust to Marist because she re-
have
bonded,
especiaUy in· her .. members herfreshman
year
building, and she said that
clearly. It
was
only
a year ago. ·
Sheahan
has
as
whole become a
"Many
of my_ residents are
respectful community in itself.
very overwhelmed
·
with the
"In
this building, students have
workload because it is a lot more
been. very proactive. They are
than .what they had their senior
taking _the
initiative to develop a year of high school. Some are
community and get to know each
homesick, but
I
tell them to take
other," Dohrenwend said.
the first
two weeks
·to get settled
Leslie Damato
said she agrees
and· if
they need·
to,
talk to the
that
living
in a donn really bonds . mentor," Quinn said.
. ·
the students together.
Matt McKendry is one
fresh~
"I know almost everyone in
man who .said he adjusted
Sheahan, and we have really qtii~kly to the new lifestyle at'
bonded," she said.
Marist.
.
Leo
residents also praised the
"Beingafreshmanisn'tashard. '.
camaraderie they share. Room--
as I
thought . Marist is exactly
mates Mike Nazaltowitz and
how I expected
it,"
McKendry. · ·
Harry
Iavorne said they agree
; f.anelist~ from thefoU9wingorgaipzations willberep~
·
__
·
_
resented at the
.
Open House::
Ernest& Young;Intelnal .
Reyenue Service; .Sedore, O'Sullivan, Letterio
&
Barschi; Texaco; and H&"J?. Block.
·
-
- -
.· .. q11~of the·pi;ysenters
_
··is.Arthur~Brown,a1995. Marist··•
·
·
College Alumni who,,receivedthehigfiest.score,onthe _
-
Certified Public. Accountant exam,in
·
New· ·York·:•State ·
in:J
995.
Also', Brown served_as an intern in the
Ac-'
coµ11ting Department of-IBM when he
.
was ·an. Adult
Education student at Marist. .
.
.
The
_
Open House is geare(! for accounting.and firi~nce •
maJ9r_s who are interestecl in a career in accounting.
F9r
.more information,_contact Desmond Murray, assis-
tant director of field experience, at 575-3543
-SPRING
BREAK
97'
•..
,
-•
Largest selection of Ski~ Spring Break Destinations, including Cruises!
·
Travel free, earn Cash, & Year Round Discounts.
Epicurean Tours
1-800-231-4-FUN
THE
.
CIRCLE,
.
September·
i
9~
·
~
1996
Brother
!~ank
l(elly brhtgs ~ew outIOOkto campus MiriiStr;:
,
Divisi o
D
St.
pf
~Piif
es
by l\jICHELLEGRIFFI.S
.
.
C
Kelln~as also the vocation di-
/
..
He
said that he
.
w'ants students .
.
.
.
.
' ,
.
;
.
.
•
.:
1
SiaffWfit~r
. '·
: .
rector for the Brothers.
.
'to know'tha:t'Carnpus Ministry is
to rock Marist
.;,',·-~.:.
.
.
:
<<
.
.
.
He worked with college age stu-
non-denominational; and that
''
'
·•
··< .
..
~.,,
~;
L_:
.
_
.. '
:,
'
.,:
_
,
·
,
.
,,
.
_
:
,
·.
,·
r~~I~~~
~!~h\-elat~~msiµps,
·
dents to ~elp'_therit dis~ei:n if God
they want to be there for every
T
T
_
p-and-
.
c
·
o
·
m
'·
i•n
'
g
po1n ...
.
o
·
c
·
.
k
ban
·
d
~
.
_
.
roommate conflicts the stress of was calling them to rehg1ous
life,
faith, to h~lp)n every way they
l.J,
r , ,
.
'
S!Ud):'JOg (or a
'
to~gh exam, these;
:
'mariied
-
li
_
fe, o_r single
life, '
can.
.
.
are issues that can make any
.
col-
.
At Manst htgh schools in Chi-
.
"While here
·
as students be at-
will per/
orm in Cabaret
.
lege studenLfeel trapped
·
and
.
cago, and Lawrence, Massachu-
temive to the core
<l
who you
·
alone .
.
.
They riced someone to setts, Kelly worked
·
with high
are, as a spiritual person, work
turn to'.:At Marist College, that
·
~chool seniors_. He dealt with the
on developing your spirit as well
.
someoqe is Brother Frank Kelly.
ts~ue ?f se~kt?g good relation-
as your
.mind
and body," Kelly
•
Kelly is the new directocof ships m their hves.
said.
·
Campus Ministry, and is a gradu-
. While at Marist, Kelly would
Though not many people know
ate of Marist, class of
'73.
He re-
li~e
to make students more con-
Kelly well yet, there
are
a
few who
ceived a
RA
jn history.
scmus _o~ ~~pus ~inistry and
have had the
.
chance to meet him .
. ·
••~ feeUike I am coming home,
th:
a~t1~1t1es 1t prov1d~s.
One such person is Deborah
to a place that is close to my
I m~1!e people to give Ca~-
DiCaprio, assistant dean of stu-
heart," Kelly said.
pus M1?1stry a
shot,
to get
m-
dent affairs.
·
He s~d that
as
a student he met
volved 1~ one of the activities,"
·she
knew him by his reputation,
arid
.
came t~ know the Brothers.
Kelly said.
and his Marist volunteer pro-
DI
N
In
1981;
he took his final vows
He would also like to expand
gram. She also knew of his expc-
and became a Marist Brother.
the retreat program, and get more
rience with talking to young
=-•t•
when Kelly was in college,
students involved. He w~uld like
people.
d11ring the late sixties, early sev-
to expand the commumty out-
"I knew that being director of
enties, he said that it was a time
reach program as well
.
.
that kind of program m
·
ade him
s
t
in \,1/hich the culture emphasized
comfortable outreaching to stu-
doing f1Jr_others.
Kelly said that he considers
dents," DiCaprio said
:
"I
made the choice to live my
himself
a
person who under-
DiCaprio added tha(with his
Jifo fo.r
,
Goci, to Jive life in the ser-
stands young adults, male and
·
prior Campus Ministry
·
experi-
. vice
·
of pther people, and
I
love
female, and is open to their opin-
·
ence, and his close ties to this
•
·t
"K 11
·
·ct
ions and ideas.
·
He is interested
institution, it was easy to see that
1,
.
e ysa1 .
·
Kelly has worked
·
for the past
in getting to know people.
·
·
Kelly would be a good choice for
eight years with college and high
He has started Campus Minis-
the position.
·
school age students. And he has
try outreach in the cafeteria.
"He was just the kind of per-
worked \\'ith Marist for the past
Monday·is cafeteria day, which
son we need," DiCaprio said.
by
Jacque
Simpson
that there was no real mystery as
five years-:
meansthatCampusMinistrywill
Besides DiCaprio, there is an-
Feature Editor
to how the band chose their
"I created and directed a post
be
available to students for any
other person who already knows
name. 'There's a Division Street
11
.
1
·
t
.
.
.
,,
infonnation.
Kelly well. That person is Brother
in almost every town, and we
co ege
_y
o un
ee_r
year program,
.
''It.
is
·
a key w
_
ay of meet1·og
M
_
icha
_
el Williams, assistant direc-
Kelly said
.
The
program
invites
.
There's no real mystery to what
liked the way it
sounded."
But,
collegeseniors togiveayearof peopleinarelaxedatmosphere,"
torofCampusMinistry.
happens when you place four
that
shouldn't
lead
'
their listen-
service to the needy and ne-
Kelly added.
·
Williams has known Kelly for
·
musically inclined individuals
ers to believe that there's any
1
1
d
·
-
1
hr
h
h
Kelly said that he hopes to fig-
quite sometime, but this is the
together. They're going to make
division in this group. They're a
g ec
e
pnman
Y
t oug
teac -
·
·
'
t
·
·
t
ct
·
1
·
·
d
fi1rst
·
t·1me they
·
have ever
·
worked
ing and social work.
'
.
ure
'
OU
,ways·
O eve op
·.
an
some noise. A once small band
very tight knit group of vary dif-
"I ,
b
"
I
draw in North End resi~ents to
together.
.·· . .
.
•
,
out of Boston, Division Street
fcrent people. But, each of their
ts een a very success,u
Campus Ministry .
. ·.
''He
is
packed
with energy, and
is beginning to soar; and they're
differences mesh together to
program," Kelly said.
·
he
_
jump~ into
on the
:
rise t
_
o s~ardom.
.
.
•
•
.
.
.
giv~
.
a
vet"Y
reminiscent sou~d
.
, . . . . ; . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - , - . - ,
·
.
Jf:ung~
._..
WJ,!hgut
.
/.-
Division :Street's masic:
_
caii be
_
'
All
of;lhc
songs which are found
hesitation to
,
describe
.
in
(WO
old
fash
.
ioned
.
.
on
..
Standing
on Ceremon'y,
are
Oswego
Abroad!
S
tudying in another country has nc~c~ been easier. SUN'i'. Oswego offers pro-
·
grams in a wide range of countries, in Just about cv~ry maJor. There arc also a
.
number
.
of internships available at a host of sites
m England
.
The best
.
.
.
·
pan
about
stt1dying abroad is that in many cases, the semester costs arc the
.
.
.
same as a semester in
.
Oswego.
Why study
abroad?
.
..
T··
o
gain valuable language
_
skills, learn abou~
.
the world, get
.
a hcad-sta_rt on
~
·
··
career, or just check out the
.
scene in world city; wh
_
~tever:
your reasons, Just go.
'suNY
Oswego offers ~ernester and/or ac~
,
d~mic year p~ograms in:
,
,
_
'
Australia
England
China
France·
•
··
•
.
·
Germany
.
.
Hungary
.
Italy
'
Japan
.
.
New Zealand
.•
PuenoRico
·
.
Spain
-
,
And summer or winter session pr9grams
in:
'. England/Scocland/Wales
France
.; Ireland
' Italy
Mexico
Pueno Rico
SpaJr1
for more information, visit the
Office
of International Edur.ation. or
fill
out and
return
the
form
_
below.
.
__ -----------------------------------------------
-------------
-
---------------------
•·
Program(s) of interest:
Term _;__Semester _ _ _
Academic Year. - - - Summer/Wintersession
Name: _ _:_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
, , _ . - - - - - - - - - - -
Address:
P h o n e : - - - - - - - - - -
Year. _ __;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
Return form to:
Officeo f International Education
102 Rich Hall
Oswego,
NY 13126
intled@oswego.edu
housing
'
96
achie_ve what
words Rock
'n' Roll, but the
originals, wrillcn
by two members
he sees as
band'smusicisfarfromoldfash-
of the band, Jeffrey Scott
goals of the
ioned.
In
their debut CD, Stand-
Bluestein, and Isaac Hasson.
program," Wil-
ingon Ceremony, Division Street
They've opened for Bruce
Iiams added.
have mixed the sounds of pop,
Hornsby and the Range, and an-
Kelly is origi-
with that of funky rock and roll.
other Boston native, Letters for
nally
·
from
They are by no means altema-
Cleo. Division Street has also
Scranton, PA.
tive, and they do not want to be
been critically acclaimed by the
He received a
labeled
as
such.
Boston Phoenix, calling their
Masters de-
According to the Band's man-
songs "radio
-ready.'
gree in Pastoral
ager David Oriol a
,
"Division
Division Street has a tight
Ministry with a
Street is about straight forward
rhythm section, with a funky
concentration
Rock
N'
Roll. We're definitely
bassist, lead by guitarist Isaac
in
Campus
not about the alternative
Hasson
.
Ministry from
sound."
The group has been together
Loyola Univer-
The band chose to tour the col-
both
as
musicians, and friends
,
sity in <::;,hicago,
lege circuit because they love the
and uniquely through their grow
-
and a Masters
way college kids react, they're
ing they have managed to remain
degree
'
in Spiri-
full ofenergy
.
They're also just
friends, each being the driving
tuiility from
learning the ropes and they don't
force of the other.
They take
The
:.
Catholic
want to miss any of the growing
each of their music seriously, but
The
;
ological
steps that a band has to go
·
at the same time they love mak-
Union in Chi-
through before reaching the top.
ing music.
cago.
-
.
"
·
We
.
want to experience the
According to bass guitarist,
Kelly is meet-
growing pains, and go through
Thom Scheller,
'The
bottom line
ing so many
the blood and guts of a tour."
is we want to do this for a very
new
<
:
.
people.
Division Street has been mak-
longtime.
Bi.it he
'
said he
ing music together for four years.
And, it would be foolish of us
does not mind
Prior to the release of Standing
not to take it seriously, in every
at all.
·
on Ceremony, the band of four
detail,
to make it happen."
.
"I'm loving
released a six song cassette,
Division Street will be visiting
every minute
which did well locally. They were
at least
20
colleges this fall.
of being here."
able to begin to build a some fol-
They'
II
be stopping at Mari st
Kelly said.
lowers around the Boston area,
Friday, September 20. The show
Organize
a small
Group
&
Traver Free
.
*Cancun *6ahamas
*Jamaica *South Padre
*Pamtma City Beach *Daytona
can
for Free Info Packet I
1-800~426-7710
www.sunsofashtours.com
and
that's
is at 8:30 in the Cabaret. Please
when they de-
come out and support Division
cided to record
Street, who will
be
selling copies
their first CD.
of Standing on Ceremony, after
Oriola said
the show
I
.
6
. Stephanie
M~rcurio~
New;Editor
Amie Lemire.
A&E Ediror•
Jac·que
Sitilpson,
Feature Editor
· Christian Bladt,
Opinion Editor
Jason Duffy.
Business ·Manager · .
G. Modele Clarke,
Faculty Advisor
The Circle is published every Thursday. Any mail may be addressed to The
Circle. Maris! College, 290 North Road. Poughkeepsie, NY 12601.
Editorials
I'
Silence·
ts
also
speech"
~African. proverb
Letters to the Editor
Volunteering is ]ts own reward
F.clitor:
When I returned to school this year, I heard what seemed to be an overwhelming
. On the morning of.September
9,
!was posting flyers for my tattooshop around
number of students talking about volunteer jobs they had over the summer.
campus,_ After: posting the last one, I heard somebody tear the flyer from the wall. I
I really give these students credit for taking the time out of their schedules to unself- confronted the faculty member about why he removed
my
flyer. He.infonned me that
ishly help others. -
·
_
_
· _
__
flyers had to be approved before being posted. I told him that my flyer was ap-
It takes a very special type ·or person totake ·the time to dojobs that are often not proved, stamped, and only posted on th~ appropriate bulletin boards. Did he everi
very glamorous atbest, especially when the jobs are not providing the workers with look at the flyer before removing i_t? '.'No, I just assumed ... ,"was his response.
_
any money.
_
Now why would he assume that my flyer would not conform to therules?. Well, in
In many cases, these are not the people who will be making millions of dollars over all fairness, my hair is rather long and the numerous tattoos on my arms were visible
the course of their lives, but I think these students have discovered something more due to my Harley Davidson tank top. _
·
. .
·
·
·
valuable than money and material objects.
. After all, maybe this "type" of person couldn't possible have graduated from _
They have found happiness through compassion and satisfaction through service. Bentley Co Hege with a BS in economics/finance with honors and an Associates
I believe that in itself is more to be proud about than an accumulation of fortunes and degree in accounting \\:'ith high honors,.- He coul~ never have been aidnternational
possessions.
·
finance analyst for a Fortune I 00 company. He couldn't hav_e done gtaduate• work at
So many people, especially those who have never volunteered, simply do not under- Marist College. Could he??? Prejµdice rearsjts ugly head everywhere in our society.
stand the ·tremendous sense-of accomplishment that is so intimately conne_cted to Judging people by their religion, ethnic background, or the color of (or colors on)
helping others. ·
.
their skin is obviously narrow-minded. . - .
·
··
·
·
Fortunately,· I believe Marist is blessed with a student_ body that is gene~ally con:..
I realize the realtiy is ·that prejtidic1fwill ·nve on~ butshould it live in our instit~tion~
cerned with helping those in need.
_
-
of higher learning? Are they not the last bastions in our society where people can
In fac~ the number of students involved in community service organizations on and learn, experiment, and be free to explore an creative thqughts,
arts,
and lifestyles?
I
off campus was one of the main factors that influ~nced me in choosing to attend 'Nould like to invite any students or faculty members to visit my shop, obs_erve our
Marist in the first place.
·
·
sterilization procedures, our service, and the advice we give young people.consider-
Last year, two students questioned me about why I volunteer to serve the homeless, ing. a tattoo.
·
.
.
.
·
. - . - ·.
arguing that it is their own fault they have no money and they should just get a job a
I am a responsible person, father, youth ~occer sponsor, homeowner, regist~red
McDonald's.
-
-
v?ter, and lruna respectable busines_s., Please do notlet stereotypes lead you to
My answer to them is that · I don't really think I'm in any position to judge anyone. insulting someone you know notping about. · Investigate first; and let your judgment
else's mistakes.
_
_
be an inform<Xl one and not just an assumption.,
·
_
· .
·
In fact, I don't believe anyone who is imperfect has the right tojudge'ahother:
TomNorbortijNewViewTattoo
: .•..... ,
.
Wear~alth~m.tn,,andbecauseofthat,w~allmakemistakes.·
:,
;/ ;:_-~•- _: •
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_-.,,::
. ".: _
·· .. ,
-
.. , ; . :,:.,,, .. -
.
J~-~
:
.
': This is some~ing'l think is an too ofteriforgotten' in our society, tjut
itfs)6mJtliiiig
_=.·._i_·.,·.·.
:.T
.
.
hi
- : __
s·.~;.
i_;_
;;_a.·~-.·
.Jct.
:_1._1.-.#..
i·~-,j~.:_f.·_·
1_.1y1b_11-_·_.J.~.;_4:"._'o'_'_i_' [.b.1_u;.-.-r;1i.1_",'e;;.w
·
_fr_.·1;.ls•hi .. ~-,r,s,~1·s
·
te
,
'rs",-.'an?_
.. l r:.d;
1
-_,-·.b,;ro1_11c.tli·.•1_··efrrs':n.{,. rt.;rhr
... ( ·o\ru,!goh·
?.'o''
iµ;·.t)l<th•.r
.
e•.,,.··_,
that
many
volunte:ers
realize. ,; .
_ ,. ·. ,·
_., _
-
.
. . ; .
11.,,·--;•. __ ·
•:•<
1
-'
_
They have respect for human life, not only certain individ~ai •s, liv"es. :_,
! '.-
: · ·-
·
·
· • ·
world;c=~ Saturday,: Sept.
.14; _
will begin the ooservance of Rosh Hashanah, a t\\'.o-day
•- . Once more people gain this- respect, we can begin to work out our ·problems: and holiday thatIQarks both the beginning of their new year (5757) and the beginning of
prejudices with one another. .
. .
·
.
, .· · .· : -
the
10
days of repentance; }'his
to
day period ends with the observance of.Yorn '
Until then, we'lljust have to rely on the service of a few goodvoltinteers .. :
Kippi.Ir, the day of atonement:
_ . .
, -
-
_ . ._
--
- .
Kristin
Richard, Editor-in-chief
·
Happy New. Year and. God's_ blessings upori you these holidays!
THE TRUE 'STUDENT. CENTER'
We
.
have a beautiful campus at ,Marist College in.an idyllic spot right nextto the
Hudson River. It has several buildings rich in tradition_ and history. Each has its own
story.
-
.
-
. ,
.·
· . .·
.
..
·
Y~t, this c_ampus is not
as
centralized
ash
could be. GartlaQd Commons isseparated
from _the McCann center by almost a mile. The freshmen, especially, are isolated at the
south end of campus, away from the "academic hub." People IQUSt go to one building
to check their mail, another to
take
care of financial aid business, anothertoattend
class, and another to sleep.. _
.
. .
.
·..
--
•. ·
.
.:..
.
- The layout of our campus, like many others, is symbolic of American society'. s trend -
toward speciaHzation. We have different classroom
-
buildings for different subjects
_and our residence halls. 'Becaµse we puteveryihing irito different compartments,:we
sometimes fail to see its interconnectedness. However, all parts of our educational·
experience ~t Marist are inter-relat¢. _ . .
.
·
-
- . _ -
.
If we were starting from scratch, and had unlimited space and resources,
the
physical
design of the ''perfect" campus would be something like this: . the "student center," or
its equiv;ilent, would be in_ the center of a giant circle . .All buildings would be equidis-
tant from all other buildings along the perimeter of the circle.
·
- .
·
The construction of the Student C~~ter and the rotunda
_
in
J994
gave our cainpus a
true heart. It became the focal point.
_
It was supposed to be a place where students
and faculty could interact. There needs to be more of this interaction between stu-
dents and teachers outside of the classroom. ·
·
· ·
Back in the early days of the college, the second floor of Donnelly housed students ..
Today, because of our fascination with specialization, we'.ve separated our dorms from
our classrooms-forcing our students to draw a line between-the two .. We take little
jaunts to and from our classes and to the library and the computer lab.
·
_
· Since the entire educational experience at Marist is inter-related, there is no reason
why we shouldn't sleep in the same place as we_ study. Such an arrangement might
foster a new kind of academic climate where a student might leave his room to go
downstairs to a classroom where he had a class the hour before to ask a teacher for
help with
ari
assignment or engage in a discussion. There
has
to be a continuous flow
. in the educational process and not a series of little jaunts in which one goes from point
A to point B to point C.
.
Since we cannot change the physical layout of our campus buildings, we should at
least adopt a "centralized" mentality. Faculty, staff and students alike should con-
verge at the "student center" to share ideas and knowledge and enrich each other's
understanding of the world.
Michael Goot,ManagingEditor
Campus
Ministry
·
Sofar, dormli-ving is not~If
itis cracked
upto be
I do not find that dorm living is
all
that it is cracked up to .be. The luxuries ~f on-
campus living, the ease of being a hop, skip and a jump from anything and ev¥rything'
on campus with all of the luxµries .of home. Except air conditioriing,:windo~s with
screeris
_
arid an occasional drop
of.
:soap and piece' of paper towel in
tlle
bathfoom:
When I firstvisited Marist, I was under the impressiofrthatthe bathrooms would be
cleaned ~very day. Unfortunately, since we have no(had soap or paper tqwels: hi
about a week, I was wrimg. _
.
_
. . . _ _
.-. _ .· _ •.· -._ _ __
<
·.·. _ . · .
Another annoy~ce is not somuch that there is no air conditioning, bur.the
fact
that
there are no·_ screens on. tve windo\Vs; .The campus, h~ some very
.
ifl!ere_sii11g · little'
creatures _flying through_the.air who love ~o fly i_n my window and eat me alive! •-
·
. Dorm living is ge!ting t<>
be
qui.te.difficult.ln
Jn}'
donn,.Qtere
¥~
only si~qvash~rs and
dryers to accontinodate the morti than 300 residents: That is orie
of
the biggest coin-i
plaints I have heard.
_
.
. .
..
_
.
.
-
One questionlhave heard is:How do roommates get chosen? , . _.
·Most freshman know that we had_to fill out that long, boring and iriv:olyed question-
naire and take
all
of those computability tests to see who fits the best withwhom. But
why'are the maJority of the freshmen complainingabout their roommates?: . .__ ···•'
I think, in the future, the incoming freshman's staff should take into consideration
some of the little things that would make our· $20,000 a
year
stay here a little more·
pleasant.
' ·
· ._
Janine Szai
is
one of The Circle's columnists on freshman
issues,
·ir~~;>
.. ···J~§~f~
,_.f
pp· -
'.jn•
campus\ ........ " ......
•Flllilf
kl~f
li~~,.~!~G~~·
-The Cirqle
tesefye~
tti~
~glii'
tg
e4it
let-; ,
·
ters
·
for
spacial
reaso~s
Qr
titliej-wise.
,
T
;.. . ,
.. : ' • , • ' .
•
'c
THE CmcLE ·
OPINION.-
S~ptember 19, 1996
7
Mod~r3.tel)'Hoptfful .
·
The
October Surprise
, . , ,
-~~-~j~~t~i~~,11~~f~~
~l
.
ecJio.n(•,. ~n.t~d pt1blic:,relatipns., specialists'
.. · Bob·:l)ole has statei that he
open in. case· scientific research
. ~av~ ~hallge.~J~e
Y15J.r
pr~sJdeJJ- · fiave il?w found,~.way to. ritake
does 11ot wan.t Refortjt Party Can-
ever does find milk to be as ad-
sues .
hal ,J1~IJef1:1!.s .. c_a~paign:)A)pe
the Umted States one large dis- . di~ate ~oss Perot to partake in. dictive as cigarettes.
past, poo~,YiSJb,1!1tyforceda~an-
trict to which the Presidentmust, . the forthcoming presidential de-
Another problem facing Dole
_
d!~at~ t9 re~rheaxily ~n the·~pu-
d1rec:uy 'answer.
The
result has
1
bates:·ms i:eascmis that he does
is that Clinton does not need a
.. ~~.l?i:1!
effi~1ency, Md mtegnty e>f
been ·a drastic weakening of po-•
not consider Perot·. to be "a vi~
surprise of any kind to be re-
·h1s party.~ Too.,iy, ~iU ~li11ton and
Iitical, parties and
.
the rise of the
·
able candidate/' Perhaps Bob
elected. The conventional wis-
Bu\, the anti-Dole fever sweep-
ing the nation has made people
realize
that not only is Clinton not
that bad, he is the best choice
for president. He is far more presi-
dential than the Mr. Wilson from
Kansas who tells voters to go
back into their caves.
Bob-pole have a host of video
Moderates.
· Dole is not familiar with
a
little
dom earlier in this election sea-
, cam~ras, legions
9f
reporters, .
PoIHical extremists like. Pat
something calle.d irony. · If non-
son was that all the President had
~d
at_.leastone television in ev-
Buchanan and Jesse Jackson
will
viable presidential candidates
to do was not .screw up and he
ery ~,ouseh~ld to coun~er theef-
continue totluive along with the
were barred
'
from _'the debates,. \Vould ease right back into the
fects of their. party alhance. No
Moderates. Never before have
Bob Dole would be ruriong them, "White House.
wonder_Republicans and Demo-
_strong political parties threat...
They say that politics make
Subsequent events have
c~ats ahke have endeavoredto
ened them, and weak· parties
strange bedfeHows. They say
proven that even if Clinton does
discover a new ground,
.
a new
don't seem to effect them either.
that a lot can happen over .. the
screw up, his standing in the
pers~ective, a new party for their
This isb~ause their
.
messages
next seven weeks. Sometimes,
I
polls is unaffected. Clinton's sig-
nom1nee to run for. .
tend to hit the less informed citi-
get th~ feeling that this is the
nature on the Welfare Refonn
Bill
.
It
is not the Ross Perot faction· zen harder.
same "they" who said that. and the dismissal of his chief
Unlike
16
years ago, it is the
Republicans who are banking on
an October Surprise. What the
Dole campaign does not realize,
however, is that the only Octo-
ber surprise that would save their
~ampaign is if we found out that
it had been Colin Powell inside
of a-Bob Dole costume all along .
. that
I
refer te>. P~rot's new politi-
· A strong government and· a
America was ready for Crystal
political advisor, Dick Morris, for
.ca_l · party centers. around the
leader of nations must thrive on
Pepsi.
solicitation· of a prostitute were
faults.of present ctay politics.
the competition of opposing
The reason whypeoplearehesi-
both potentially damaging is-
S~ch a movement !s fascist in na-
viewpoints, and . the combining
.
tant to reserve the grand ballroom
Christian Bladt
is
Opinion
editor for The Circle
. ture, and a negative answer to
of ideas through. compromise. · at the Chuck E. Cheese is that
th~ most pressing needs such
as
That- can't happen when both
everyone from analysts to pun-
the eco~omy and welfare.
parties continually move closer
dits, and even that lowly crea-
.
I
refer to the great experiment
to the middle of the road and
ture called the political columnist,
caliedTheModeraies. TheMod- · their candidates move ~ven
are leaving room open for what
· crates fall in' the middle, some-
closerto the middle by denounc-
is known in political circles as
where between Republican and
ing most:of those things their
"The October Surprise".
Democrat, and
are
the most popu-
party stands' for.
The October Surprise refers to
lar political party in America to-
There was a time when Demo-
October 1980, when President
day.
fu fact, the Moderates are
crat meant big government and
Carter negotiated for the release
. so popular this election year that
Republican meant big business.
of the hostages in Iran. For Carter,
they could·not decide whether
We have·no such choices this .who had been trailing Ronald
to nominate· Bob.Dole or Bill
election. Today, party nominees
Reagan in the polls, this seemed
· Clinton. The answer to their di-
must bow to th~ passionate
to be quite a nice surprise on the
lemma was to nominate both, and
sways of public opinion, and little
eve.of the election. Of course, the
allow them to run against each
that meant Democrat or Republi-
real surprise turned out to be on
another for the nation's highest
can holds weight any more.
Carter.
·
poHtical office.
Is
it time for a-new national
With a secret team, including
Opinion Editor Christian Bladt interviews 'Late Night'
host Conan O'Brien.
·
When Conan O'Brien was on the Marist campus this past Labor
Day, he was kind enough to spend a few moments talking with
· The Circle's Opinion Editor, Christian Bladt.
;
What happened to the Repub-
party to break into the scene?
former head of the CIA, George
Ii
can . and Democratic parties?
Could we see the· manifestation _ Bush, who just so happened to ·
They have finally succumbed to · of weakened parties in the
form
be Reagan's running mate, the
the thrashings by intense media ' of an alliance like the fictitious
Reagan camp had quietly nego-
coverage. Never before in our
Moderates? Probably not in the
tiated for
a
postponement in the
history has the president been
near future, but perhaps whatwe
release.
9f
the hostages .until
so direcHy answerable to the
have seeri occur: in the recent
January
20, 198 L
As
ari
amazing
pe9~l~-~p~e~gll~~gµethi~is_ .p~tforesh~dow~alutµr~wh<?re, -~~iynt~~~~~g~~:l~il~~e:·, ..
'.,:·!,· __ ,_
,.
~
, ... , ... ,,
1 · - ,
abeneficial developfue!it in
'moo-
·new, rtatiorial parties' will, seize
CB:
So,
I
was
wondering what made you decide to come. here to
e111 Arneiic:an politics,
Bht
ho,W
·coni,ro(Perhaps we
are
hi
a tran-
··- Of course; the Dole camp does
Marist? Was it not up to you, or what?
c~.n
i
.Presi_dent
make ,\Vi~e · sitioh tlmeforAmericail politics:' · nolitave such an advantage. For
Conan:
Basically, I am completely disconnected from the work-
choices wlien .the right decision · In tiie future, history classes
will · one thing; the Dole campaign is
ings of my show. I'm like Howard Hughes towards the end of his
will bring dowri approval ratings?
be taught ab0ut the decisions ·not organized enough to sue-
rfi
The
structure of our govern-
oufgeneration rriade that led.to
cessfullypull off any
ki
nd of back
~;;· Oh, kept alive by rich people?
menttak
.. esfo.r
.. granted thatCo. n.-
theformationofnewparty11·nes.
room negotiations with anyone.
C
V'nnt.
-
.
A
"bl
onan:
.1=.u,I'mkeptinadarkroom.l'mattendedtobymormons.
gre
. · ss members w.
ill.
be a.·.•·direc.t
·
·
poss1
e
exception is the to~
1
b
. d ·
·
store my urine in a jar. So,
I
have no idea what the hell's going on.
extensioifoftheirconstituericies-.
Bill Mekrut
is
one of The
acco
m
ustry. I say "possible
.
.
They just put me in a van and I showed up here at Marist College.
Inc.reased technolo. gy·. a.· nd ... tal-.
exception" to leave the door
Wh
.
.
.
.
ich seems very nice, by the way.
CB:
That's kinda how they got me here, actually.
~.:• ..
~=W.•.~·y··•TI·••.rl:
.•
the
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i;911J.!it?Jiageopposi(e this -
tfie'v~ry-1asi-yeaiof ...
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I'll
leave yo~ with.
•~µi~pointyeryJWP9~ft9mei'.'W!~g·el.~(}· ....
; < ·
•.
·.•.~ll.~J<i[gC>t!~n:':· .. ,tbii;;thoti~~t.·•.V/e·.·I~rn•.·lll()['
liy~·of
many/p~?ple
on
.~his,· .....
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SQOri'
iif}er,'gt11d~11titj11:>: ;
\)/'•t')ll)9~tlif~in
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1}i~y.yiµg~f
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ho\tl-
t<>i
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-J-Q9J:%1t1s the•~~~ .that re11ll':f
~,hi_s;or-h~r expenen~i11
a
.on~~~tual!ythmk foro~lv~·.:
rrtat~r deep
within our
heartsi
ajt1(;11\Vi~ergl~?'\'X.2
•
\
·
\· .··
W~iitc1y11eye~reali~it,l>ut~y•· ··.)s~ues ..
thatwe
will got() the•·.
, - We
have
not•
as
a'c;ollege re-
.
·.· di~ll~S.if% q~b~µ11~ an~l
hllSh_- ···•·.
~11clsofthe.~h for just so th~
aUy
faced. many. iSS\lCS that,~.
ing
out
()llf
O\Vri
pers()oal
SC>lu-
.
.
·
ourvoice can be heard
that
will
that· uncommon to
m<>sf'cani- . ·
...
lions to ~ e iss1Jes·a111ong our .· .. eventually help us change
this·
pµses
·
.
peers:
we.~ave begun to develop
world.
·
in the U.S .. Issues of cultural di:.
who
we
essentially
are~
Conan:
I hear that's how they recruit, actually. They put.a sack
over your head, and the next thing you know, you're taking soci-
ology.
·
(;B:
It's kinda weird like that. Does this remind you of your early
days at Harvard? Or is it totally different?
Conan:
It's the same in that every college, in the hallways has
cheesy acoustical tile on the ceiling. That's just the same in every
institution of learning. So, that brings me back. Yeah, it's pretty
much the same. The people here seem very kind; they're nice to
us. They've tolerated our shenanigans. Do people still say she-
nanigans?
CB:
Uh,just me actually.
Conan:
Okay, that's good. Because I was told that it's a Gen X
term, and I'm using it a lot.
CB:
Yeah, it's a good thing that you said it
to me and not anybody
else.
Conan:
Okay, so, it's good you don't have a recording device, or
we'd be screwed. Are you having a good time here, so far?
CB:
Oh, yeah. Actually, I am. This is my third year here.
Conan:
What's your major?
CB:
Radio/tv/film.
Conan:
Okay. Alright, and you have a radio, a tv set, and a VCR?
CB:
Yeah, I've got some tapes. Mostly pornos and stuff.
Conan:
You have pornos, really?
CB: A
couple, yeah.
If
you want to come over, we can watch them
later.
Conan:
No, that's alright. Get your hand off my butt.
CB:
Sorry, sir.
Conan:
Did we get enough here? Smell my hand before we go.
Isn't that nice?
CB:
Yeah, that's nice. What is it?
Conan:
One of the girls had Noxcma hand cream and
I
put it on.
It's a nice scent.
CB:
Yeah. It kinda smells like pine.
Conan:
That's what I'm going for ... and this girl's taking our pic-
ture. She's from "The Daily Blab" .. .
CB:
Okay, thank you very much.
,;
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over-
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:-
~~~
;
f P!111?
:
the~ H!l~ersw~r~
f-
~.92~
.
w
.
1ll\
i.,:
~~
'
~~h~
,
fl!~):
\
~~
,
'
·,
·:
,
f
;:,
f~Rf
,
l)~n~1,s
,
Murp1y sa.1d the
'
l~tures
,
w~elmmg amount. ?f freshmen
:_
1~to her office
_
thj~J>~t~pnng ·
•
<~;ir
~!~~~:
,' /)/',".'
,'.
,
;·'.,
;r
;.,
.c:
).~ffi~
\
~!W
;:
lJ~
?~
~H~
<
t · ~' ~di
empha~1
.
ze the µi~meof eth-
~is year.
. .
.. ,
.
µoder the p~textJllat
'
hi(.,•::: n]r·
:
~~lC>_le,1"~~91J)?~m
.
n,~.~t
;:
P.~
.
~ef
;,
.
~.P.},~
{
J:\i/,
/i\t:,
_
•··;
fos
and
..
soc1ety. ·
_
··. _. ·
_
.
'J'here were
825
freshm,~n ~d
·
daughter was c<>Iajng
~0~µ§1
.•.
: •~
}9
:-
~tallli~p
'.
t
Pf~~~
·
tt1l!'.
W?/·
~!r~
}
~
;
pf~~Y,
'
¥
,
B~t~~~L1P
'The~
_
wiU be a·delegati<>n from
·
·
l
-
25
·
transfer· students, said
:y:; ~~
11
t~;~!WJ
f
J;4:f?!r!;Ji~t':\ffiWllf
i~
~~\;[Wil11t¾ili!
i ·
~!i:t;~~:=::flm.::;~
~=;~; ;.-;:,~
1
fnd°fu:
puters. When
.
s~e
-
-
~~covere<J
·· ..
·>:
S~
_
s,pJ_ll
als?
-
~at~
m~
l:
f
P!!.~~~
?;
J
91~tr~
r~~!~
,
IJ~i~g~H!~W
:
formation technology,"
.
said t~an .4,72~ freshm~n apphca-
•-.
~s1;:~:~lioris,
..
?~;
:;
~~
,
e
(
hf
~
(
'
','.'
~~~t)fv~3;ci~~:i~1:~l~
J'.!t
f~~~i
,
ll?~t?~~~(!J,l!i~
;
-
-
~:~
,
~~
-
t~~~
-
~e·vr:~~l~
·
t~~~~~sie
.·
s~d
_
_
the
·
pro~lem
·
.
of
·
·
Several
_
fli~rs
~ti~se.9~entlt
' -
~?n~
·:
at
.
~~!>t;
•
S~~h
:
!¥t
,
f7~
!~t9:
,b{\
~7}¼l\~~
-,.
Yf1m
'.
~rJ~
.
rdetn1
,
.
<; -
college in
_
the
!asty~~-"
.
·
overp?pulat!on_ of ~anst stu-
appe~r~d on ca.it1p_llS
,
J
_
n l~gt
.
lions
0~
~all?~~
a~t
-
1~{rr
.
~f}.~
}
..
:
:.,
~r9,~rp~9t:
,
i
·,
J
,t
., _
_
_
yI:
l
_
.
~t.h~r
7
vents
,
mcl~de t~e
de~ts ts Manst_ 1~elf.
..
_
_
quantities. S)'l~r~~tllesal~- , thedomut?,rt~s,
i/
.
i>
<:
.
•,•·,\
,
:·>:
~~!f'?~
;
s~
,
t~~
,
':':'.~~
:
H~J~lr8[.
¥ansr~~•1
.
~~te f?rP
.
ubhf,Opm-
_
W,e
ar,~
a~1cum of ~ur,?wn
man was not authonzedto dis-
•-
.. Sai:isqlll
..
~~c
,
94rllg~fHff;::fJU1}:-,.•·<,~91l1~
~
qf
..
~
,
~sJ
.
~?11.eg~,J.)~~T
.
1on
·
helpmg Manst students ob~
·
success, said Massie.
_
We
tribute fliers.
..
.•'
.·
.
.. ·.
.
·
.
.
pus bti~iile~~s
l9
pJci.~:ta~id'Wt
;::
~~f~
::
r~g;u:fi.I'-18
:
P9-s.tlri
()~JU:·
senre· WNBC's
'
election cover-
.
have many students that want
10
.
. "He's certainlj-ptjrs~nf-
.
··
•··_.
the
,
C::frfii
.
J
~
:.
r~~9ij
\
M~~r~1~:,;-·;':
·:
e,rf
~~
t-t
?,
;]ftAt
i;f>:.\r.,,
.. :'.,';i:;:ti
age
~r
exit
J?Oll
~~alysis,'and ,th_e
.•
comehere,. which is one of t~e
:
t10ned
by
th~
·
c9ll~g
.
~
,of
the
·
;
·>
q~l\f-.S.:
r
l;l;t~~4
.;
1f
.
~~
~
:
~~
,
fa~3:t
:>,f>,:
J
.
~~Y.~f.l?
~;,
~~if~i~
,
~
-•.
~~
-
\~~
;
1
possible c9_nstruct1on of theD1g1-
reasons the I3o~d of Trustees 1s
computer store," sh~ saiq.
: .·
.
'
~Q
-
~<t,~A
✓
~w~~pt~
i
p
~g~iji~
;:
!~
.
f
?/;,
~g
,
9
{
;
~~:~
,
R~rnu
'.
•.
,:
tal
Libr:azy m
_
the sumn,ierof 1998.
C?llstantly l
_
ook1n,g
.
to ~urchase
.
Sylersai
_
d infonu3:tid~
'
~er:-:
/,
apv~ng
Jn~J
.
~ygt
,.
~
-
:a
·
.
N
,
.:
1,\
.
t~
:
kfp~~
j).
n~
,
~~-
{ ·,
·:
~~
:
c
:
urrent
'
bundi~g
-
which
.
·
more~omesandrenovatingthem
vices is involved
'
in 'this type
·_
.
face~
:
,
,
,,,
_
_
•,>••···"
'
"
i.-
•
,y;·>'
,,;
x
Betros;satd
•
he-1
•-
. .
,
houses all of our information and
on their own to make them more
:'!:::
0
:~i~if
~it
f,
~i
~!
~Jt¾;f
lilltilt
ltil•J~!llf!~lilf
j
.
::~~~~~:,:a~i~ri:
1
,e;::s ::
~~~~
1
~!;~:!J'fi".";._
.
eqmpment IS
'.
~5-?~~
,
,~
.
ijlr;
.
:
~}m
{f;
P,a.~r
ciJath
>
r
X~
J
J
J
ijMR~
-
-
5?s~
h
~
t
Wll?t
,
!OCOlT~Ct/'
_
sat~Mu~ay.
!'J
·
..
tra,1
-
plu~bmg system was
;
re-
Manst.
,
··
•
<"
'
'
<:.7.';/;
'
<
;'>
:,
:'.;
.:
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:,
;,,~!~t,
,.
,
..
!
1
;
#
.
~
;
··
'
·
be~1eyem,~tw~enwedothi~11ew
placed
_
m
_
~hampagnat, a new
"[WhenJth~y'.f~~PP~X~'?t
}'
m~t~gw
)ti
budd1ng;1t
·
w1n be an entire step
.
central-heating system w~ ~e-
us; wekn?Wlt!~Y.'1-l~iIBPPtj~
)/c''.;§,an~81
,.·
;
~ff
upJorMarisfin te~s:ofhowwe placed in t~e old Townhouses,
machines," she
•
sajd..
\\;'/
fij?f
;
1;";>
,;;
·
~
:
~>'
<
,,
r
i
~?,~
t,}
?
1;;,..
.
.
,t
.
,,;,,
s-•
image
.
ourselves and how
_
\Ve're
th
.
e completion of the south en-
According to
Si~Y~
Safi~gliy
/:;
~:r~~
¥t~J~g~~~
;
)
-
~
,t
.-,,
:r ;
·i)r
l:iroc
.
pe
'
rceived
by
,
t~e
~
lugh~r
educfa-
trance
.
?f
camp_us and
.
the pur-
assistant dean fo
(~H
,
Y
iA~
/
i~¢
J:·,
:
ti1:
W:°Y
M~~~Wt
1
9~~J.
~mt
,
.
.
,
_
tion society/_'
' .
_
.
_
·
:
.
· ·
·
_
chase
:
of Talmadge
_
Court t
_
o
correct procedtire'Jor
·
9ff~c
_
arn
-''
'H
fl~~IP:79
'i
9.Q~f.C
L
1n
_;:.
!lH~
-
\
·
t
s•,;y:
.
,,
,,-.;c"
'
'
"°'
~
;~
W'
.
Tim Massie; chief college rela-
house 36 students .
.
.
.
:_.
·
.
pus ~usinesses_
"'.~9
~i~tti~p
ri
i}i:
~~s~l
f~~
~
::
i:
Yrf
:
,
~~
;
\\F
.
···'
-
i
a
::
;1\
p~
,
i_
~~l
;1,
;
,
,
tj~ns 6ffip~r; said
ow
·
new libr~y
.
M1:1rray said he ~lieves Marist
vert1se at Manst
IS
to come
'
to
?'
appi:?,V~
}J;
foi:
p<>~mll8
~
>
·
.
.
«
r
f:.
11~
-
~
i
,S,l~
will Manst
a
state of the
art
fact!-
IS
looked upon With envy.
'
the c
_
ollege
·
activj!i~
{
'
~tnsf
:;
:c'''
§aiJ~?!.
{~a!
,
d
-·
h
f
:
~
11f9
,
/,
,,,
,;,.:,·•>;;}l
~Ji.tW
,_,»,.,,,,,,',
;;-
ity that
~illne_v7rb~outb(dat~
• -
"Many
colle_ges
;
subst~ntially
first.
·
_ _ _
·
·_ :
·
-·•
,
r~gu,at~q[I~
.
~r,
,
r~lll()
.
Ym.!I
•
l!~~
.
P"
;{\'-¼
Jf
..
·
,,
because everything
will
be ac-
·
olde
_
r than Manstare envmus of
·
"'.l'h~y
go
'
thr9u~h,9llrpJpci/'
·
.
m.?ri~l!d
:
:
~ig~r
.
::r:,:
•
i
j;{<
S;(j'(
iit;'
IB~f
:
;
tf;j
-
S
R
.,w
~
::,
c~ssi~le di
_
~itall)\making_it p~s-
ou_i- academicstanding," Murray
he s~td. "We
;
g_iv~t.h~!Jl/fSef
;
./>!
~,l~
:
!~?~~
J:1.
,
!J\7
.
PllI!ga~~~
·.·
~1b\~
.
:
f?r.,~~
:
Mat1~t-coII1m?mty
-
said.
location;
It's
.
con~c,\led
t
We
,
al~:
~eJ~W~
~n~
.
l?~~}'
\
\µ~J,ll)J ., __ .
·
..
·. .
.•·
to
,
recewe et:idless mfofmahon.
:· -
'-'IQt\<!vi\.\n\n~m'.\n\~tTOS
or
\he
:.,:J,e/!iaj~
J'/:
;:,i~".,;:;);1:lW:t
;:}:;Jj,;-;
\,':i?/
~- ·
-·
..
..
:!
.
%is
.
is
the
latest manifestation
,,
, -
,.
-
·
.
·
.
,-
:/
;
•:.
'
.
:F.
:•
·
,
'
: ..
:
'
·
.,
.
.
·
ofour;longtennrelationshipw1th
THE.
.
CIRCU:
wiiI now feature a
·
.
Classified Ad Section
It's A
Gr~at
New
Way
To
Advertise!
Anyone
·
wishing to advertise should send the information
via campus mail addressed to
THE CIRCL.£
·
Each business card-sized ad will cost $3.00;
Please enclose check payable to The Circle
-
with advertisement
TUTORS
_.
NEEDED!!!
Tutors are needed for after school programs in the
City
of Poughkeepsie and Kingston School Districts.
Tu-
tors will work
:'-Vlth
~tudents i_n grades five
·
to twelve.
Hours are 2:30pm to 5:00pm Monday to
Thursday.
Reliable
transportation
and a valid NYS
driver's
liscense
required. Mi.lSt
l:ia:ve
completed at least
.
one year of
col-
lege with
a
2.5
index and
··
a
3.0
in subject area to be
tutored.
Salary
is
·.
$5 .00-$8.00/hr.
depending on experience.
Please
send
application or
resume with the names of
three references to:
Robert Wright, Director,
Liberty Partnership Pro-
gram
248-250
Main Mall
Poughkeepsie, New York
12601.
.
.
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY/AfflRMATIVE ACTION EMPLOYER
•·
s~
:'
PreEJi4en~
--
~~
~
~p<»n
_
ds
··
to·_
•
,c_~pus
••·
employnt~ijt
,
.
.
I
~~~e
been approached by a
,
n~~~er
of
sttidents regarding work
-
s
_
tu,dy a11d C~J.)US. e~plO)'lll~
-
nt
:
_
-
The~e
-
_
ai:e_ severa! ~tude~tsapply1~g
·
forw<Jrk5tudy positions,
.
but unf<>rt-unately, not everyone i
.
s
gett1~~
~
aJob. This 1s an issue th
_
c1t
_
spouJ~ no! only concern the people who approached
·
111e;
bu(all
119,7 s
_
tudents who are eligiblefor this aid.
:.
,
. -
·
•
· .
- .
•
.·
•.
. .
,
,
..
·
_··
·
< :
:
.
Wha~
_
is
'
the d}ffe~enc
_
e b<!tw¢cn *ork studfa~dcampus ~mployinent?'Workstudy is award~jp
s!u
_
dent.
~
fi!lanc1a1 31d packages,
\1/
_
h,d~
campus emJ,>l~yment 1s open to all students r.egardl<'!Ss
1Jf
their
aid p~c;~aies. Seventy-~ ye percent 9f th~ cµrrent fund~nglor work study comes frqm a feqeralgovern.:
tpe!lt grant and the remaining
25%
i~ paid l:>y
.-
Mru:isc
·•
,;
~
:
_
,
.
·
:
·
._
.
_
:.
, ; .
-
. ·
·
Jhe
_
fedenll gra~t, is based'on formulas
from
over 25years ago.
This
means Marist is paying substan-
t1al!Y. ~Qr~ than 1t
,s
25%
share· of the grantforwork study; The only way Marist
can receive more
fiindin~
.
is
to
en~ure th~t
5%
of
_
the)obs are_comiminity-serv!ce rel~ied. The federal government
de~~es commumty service as
,
those Jobs that improve the quahty of
hfe
oflocal residents.
If
Marist
paid ~?re students t~ do communi~y service jobs, then there would
be
more jobs on campus
and the
gqvern
_
ment would give the college more money.
_· _
.
_
_
_
.
.
·
.
_
·
·
._
•.
At t!J
.
eFaculty Convocation, Pr<:>f~sor Richard Lt:wis had afl inter~ting concept for creating
.
more
campus employment. Profes~r Lewis ~ugg~sted usmg st~dents as
aids
10
facuhy while r~ching:
If
every faculty 'Q}ember had
_
a ~tudent aid, tl11s ~ould provide a num~r of students with at least a few
hours ~f work each week. His idea would.createmore jobs for students and would increase
'
the amount
of scholarly research J,>roduced by
.
our professors:
·
. ·
U
.
·
,
~fypµ ar
7
still
_
looking for a work study pm,it!O~, Carol M~Jquee~, Assistant Director Qf Finan~ial
Aid,_1s
av~tlab}e to help you. Just stop by the financial
aid
office and she will
be
able
to
point you in
the nght dtrect~on.
If you cannot fin~ an on-campus position, you may want to look off campus. Nancy
Moody, Coordmator of J~b Location and Development, may
be
able to find you part time, off campus
employr_nent: Contact her_m Donnelly 226, the Offic~ ofCareer_ Development, to make an appointment.
'f!te, solution for solvmg work
_study
problems 1s not a simple one, especially considering that
Manst s enrollment has grown while federal work study moneys have remained the same.
7
·
What do you think? Stop by the SGA office or can me at x2206.
I
look forward to hearing from you.
Pat
Mara,
Student
Body
President
l
l
i
i
THECiRCLE
September 19,
1996
9
News
and Reviews
~"
~;:
-·.
Trai~ns11onin1
a:·be111sh
roller
coaster
ride
into
the dark side 01111e
'.'.:,'.:
\:;-:,·:,:
:-•"····
·
:.''
-·•-:'·'
'
•-·
-:
:_,:-
'
_,
..
:..
.
' ,
_.
.
.
.
'
''
'
.
.
.
_-:~s~i6.fecI,up}~,a ~qualid ·
hovel, watched oyer by a
leather-clad. cleal~r, aptly
•·•·'-'Choose
youriJuture. Choose .~arrie~. Mot~er\ S~pedor,.
_life;
... bufy.,hy;w_ouldlwanttodo.
:~~y
philosophiesand·ra~.
a thing'like that?". And so the
·
tionalize -their addiction.
essential Zg·uestion. of. Mark
'.'Take ihe"best brgasm you .
Rentonis
life is uttered as he . ever had, nmltiply it. by a
. .
·~i
~'.t~:J
·A&E Editor
}ligh~tails
tt
down.an Edinburgh .thotis~d/and you;re ~still
·street;doggedly.purs_ued by men · riowh~re'. close," Renton.
in uniform.
i
Renton:, as he is
states,.
. .
,
....
. known, .has not chosen
life;
.While this hand-to:.
rather he cheerfully .acknowl-
mouth existence is fine for.
edges his ','sincere and truthful
some; Renton tries to kick
.junk
l;labit.•~ The movie which I
Ute habit. In'one scene, he
. speak
<?fiS
''Trainspotting'.'; a tale. ·, ticks off all the ingredients
of drtigs a_nd sin. and good dean _ . needed for a heroin with-
fun in Sc_otland's underworld. .
drawal, from cold mush- -
Ewan McGregoris the· best
.
rooni soup to vanilla ice
thing to come out of Scotland · cream. However, in a final
since the kilt, brilliantly portray-
panic, he breaks down and buys
ing Renton
.as
a tortured young
opium suppositories, and nearly
soul who would gladly choose
losesJherri. This segues into
Hfe; ifonly it weren't so woefully
"the worst toilet
in
Scotland"
boring. , Renton '·.s so-called
scene. While the scene alter-
friends are a motley bunch con-
nates between outright gross-
sisting of Sick Boy,a suave plati-
?~ss and underwater,mys~icism,
num blonde with a stunning
1t sho.ws., the desperallon of
- knowledge
of
Bond films; Spud, . R:nt_?n an~ hp~ tight heroin's
a
wiry goof;Tommy, the Adonis
gnp ts on him.
,
_.
.
character, who will- come to ac-
The_ addic.ts share needles,
knowledg~ his Own Achilles
steal/mm the ~at!onal Health
heel; and Begbie,
a:
scary, violent
Serv1~e~. and dn~t
1~
and out of
man who frightens everyone in
consciousness, pausmg only to
the group. .
cook up another batch. Finally,
he needs a place
ting o_n that couch watching
to hide out be-
mind-numbing, spirit-crushing
.cause
he's
game shows, stuffing junk food
wanted in con-
into your mouth:. Choose your
nectfon with rob-
future. Choose
life." As he
be·ry . charges.
walks aw.ay, somehow, it is clear
Then Sick Boy
that this is ~enton's wake-up
follows, with
call, and fr.om here on out, he is
scars in his eyes
definitely choosing life with a
in the hopes of vengeance.
becoming a Lon-
The casual display of drugs,
don
pimp.
usage and addiction add to the
Renton is both
deadening feel of the movie. Life
. frustrated and
comes and goes. and who really
disgusted; he's
cares'! Just shoot up some more
tried so hard to
and get over it. There's no cry-
·leave. Edinburgh
ing or hysteria when Alison's
and all its' misery
baby dies, or when Tommy
behind, yet he
chokes to death in a puddle of
can't seem to
his own vomit; Renton doesn't
in her crib. As.she wails in the
fully break away.
battle loyalty or morality when
background, the boys are
But he returns home, for
he steals the bag of money.
shocke<i into a numbed.~tage of Tommy's funeral. The "normal"
There is no epiphany where he
clarity. But the gravity of this situ-
one of the group has fallen down,
realizes what a deplorable human
ation is too much for their frag-
succumbed to junk. After his
being he is; he knows that chis
ile, heroin-soaked minds to take,
girlfriend leaves him, Tommy
money is his last chance to ·
and Renton's only solution_ is to
turns to heroin to numb his pain.
change, and if he doesn't jump
"cook up." _
Not long after, he, becomes a
now, he'll never get another one.
The five frienqs spend their .
~
jolt of r~lit~ comes into their
days ~hooting up, coming down,
lives when Al_1s0,n, a re~ular at
and -stealing stuff to get more
Mother Su pen or s, reahzes ~er
junk-and endless cycle. , much-ne~~ected baby has died
. Rentondec1destotryachange - bonafide addict.
This is the
ThetrioofDannyBoyle,Andrew
of scenery, and moves to Lon-
moralistic message of the film-
MacDonald, and John Hodge,
don where he takes ajo,b renting
the tragedy of Tommy's life and
who brought us the delightfully
flats for a real estate agency.
lri .
death. That he should be the one
twisted •~Shallow Grave", have
these scenes, his c,haracter .who dfos is unfair; he is the scored another hummer:--
progresses to a level of normal . quintessential victim. But this
""Trainspotting"" is a
human productivity......,.he has a
just contributes to the realism of hardcore flick.
It
has been com-
decent job, is dressed in suits,
the film.
pared
to "Pulp Fiction", but it has
and has a place of his own., Most
While in Edinburgh, Sick Boy
a harder edge. Where "Pulp" had
importantly, he's away from
reveals that he has opportunity
black humorto offsetthc graphic
Edinburgh, away fro!ll his _loser
to score a major deal; all the four
violence (i.e. Butch's selection
or
friends, away
of them have to do is move the
weapons, while Marsell us is in
,-------'---~--'----'----'---..;.;....,....;.._;...;..--..__;,;-'-'---'--~--'-----'-----'-----, fromthedrugs.
drugs
to London, and they.can
the .bascmcni, with .Zed),
Unfortu- · each,nakcIA,000. Thedealgocs -
""Ti-ainspoiting>'"
has
no su·ch
nately;,
·
. his
·off
successfully, and the boys
balancing act.. The garishness
fonrier lifestyle
celebrate in a London hotel. Dur-
and horror is laid out on the table
still has a hold
ing the night, Renton steals the
with no apology, no explanation.
on him, trying
bag of money and slips oul the
This is highly unsettling, but also
to pull_ him
door. As he walks away, toward
strangely exhilarating. Fora gen-
· Map .. otJt your
game-plan at.the
~lf
il
n1·sT
G;'
D.
nu~:fl'W.
F'·ion·u:·
(Mr
lfll)N.~l .·
rlVUI' i.tl.l.ll ~--
.Jl\.
1
~_: /.'
. back down.
a brand new beginning, he reit-
eration who grew up on happy-
First, Begbie· erates his initial ranting. "Choose
ending movies, this is what
comes to visit;
life.
Choose a job. Choose sit-
you've been waiting for.
CMJ festival: a showcase of young talent
~-
CINDY
MATA
Staff Writer
· Once a year,
CMLhblds a
four day music
marathon in
Manhattan
that showcases
about 500 up-
an d-c om in g
new bands in
various night-
ch1bs through-
out )he city.
bands that play the festival to
gain exposure to the public and
the music industry.
complished musician speakers.
This year's speakers included
Les Claypool of Primus, Patti
Smith and Prince.- These panels
are extremely helpful
for stu-
dents because it gives them the
opportunity to speak to differ-
ent types of people in all aspects
of the music industry.
· CMJ also showcases movies
and presents advanced screen-
ing of independent films. This
year's screenings were "Feeling
Minnesota", starring Keanu
· Reeves, Cameron Diaz, Dan
·Wednesday, September-25,·
-
1996.
The m:ajority
of the perform-
-~. ·"5:00
~
7:00
p.m.
Cabaret -;Shldent Center
ers involved in
The participating venues for
CMJ range from small clubs
such as CBGB's to larger places
such
as
the Roseland. Each of
these places have specific nights
that showcase either indepen-
dent of major label bands and
sometimes the label will special
guests to perform. The festival
not only has bands perform but
also holds question-and-answer
panels during the day with key-
note speakers. These panels are
specifically targeted for college
students who have an interest in
pursuing a career in the music
industry. At these panels, stu-
dents can ask experts on how to
make it in the music business.
There are also panels with ac-
Akroyd and Courtney Love, and
"Hype," a movie chronicling the
decade-long rise of the Seattle
music scene.
11-----.-~-·'_·; __
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· _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
,
CMJ are either
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unsigned or
So, if you're a student with an
interest in music and have an
extra
$200
to spare, the CMJ fes-
tival is a great investment. Not
.representatives
*
·G"~.finformati6n regarding _programs, financial aid and
entrance'
requirements
'' . ' . '
*
Explore your options f_!Jrlhe future
-,..
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,
....
·
..
Sponsored
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the Center for Career Services
226 Donnelly Hall - Ext. 3547/3543
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<:'T~ ~iRCLE, Septen1ber 19, 1996
f_;yid.~ ,,,
r!iilit"
:}{1':'
'
.
sale~ _associates
full '~
part
time
Ca!vin Klein, ·1nc .. a leqder
in fashion design for women's
and men's sportswear, coll~cfion and accessories, seeks
customer service professionals for its company store in
WOODBURY CO/WI.AON.
Previous retail experience, strong soles ability
and en:iphasis 9n customer service, necessary
· for consideration.
We offer a compifitive salary, o · comprehensive benefits
package and advanc.emenl opportunities. For imme:iiote
consideration, plEfose· apply in person Mondoy-Fri::by,
1
Oam-5pm al: Calyin Klein, Woodbury Cornm~r.
Rt 32 26,27W, Central Volley,
NY.
Calvin
Klei'n'
equal opporruniiy employer
A.;pben~menQil
.Of.:m ..
~ic·
.. •·· .. ,.·.
•
o;··~.·-:
".3
·
\ ... '.
1
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,, ... :o:'•.·::•?:l>y:RoB HOEY .. :·:,
.
..
Ii'SJUSt agreats'oulfurtovesong·.
. ; .. __ -_}:•?StaJfWrjt~r _
.. -. _·._
~atj>utsy?ti)nt~.~at._f~l~~;
/;;ThePh~iiijinenon·Soundtrack
1srtmoc1~ ..
;l. ~~u~.l,Y\~Pll:1:1.1~ten .. to
!-',._ ..
sim
__ p_
·
1.y· __
·.a:
·_-t ..
·._•·
·
_·•··f. _·_·_·•. ··
·_·rr·
· · ·
· ·
·Aaron Nev
__
1 _
l_le· but_
\J_ •.-..,_
e_ ·· hste.ned
..
.·-. grea nµxo songs om
... ; .. , ... • ,,_., .. . ._ ..
·tlle _sot1Lde~lin~.
with.
love and · ·-to th1s,o~~ nu~~rous
ti~es
and I
.
·
th~ poYler:of l<>v~; -If you are . }!aven_,~·gott_e11 tl~~
_
o(Jf• . __
.
· _
d_own, ;th~se s~ngs ~.Ul-lift. your
~so
Q~
.thi~,
album.~ Jewel 1oes
spirits, It's an album that reaches
her version of "Have•
_1:1
Little
_tow~ds'.you'· arid h','llps ·you ·see Faitll inMe.'·'. Grea(:song,. She
the bright~r side
of
the p_\ct~~·
aqds
life
!o the lyric~-'5 s~e•c~es
Th_e albu,m starts_· off,stroiig ?ut foyfruth _and t"!st:,;You .rru,ght
wi~.
,the
pjf ~in.gle ','Ch~ge· the get_ sic~, of' hea_~ng_ ~he ov~r:-
W9r\d" by EricClapton~ 'Listen
playe~ ._ Who· W1H_' Save Y.our
to this song a.nd yoti
wi°ll
imine~ ~.oul'_' ·on.
t~~
radio/ but this one
-
diat~ly
!,e
~napping yo~rJingets . !s here
1?
stay.· _Jewel's version
and singirig along .. .It's a fabu-
is ~ost 1mpress1ve, an_d very in-
lous songlhat gets you thinking spmng. _Ilo~eit ·
J~--
··:
~d mak~ you feel great
.
.
AndJilSt as you thought you
. The backup vocals ·at the cho-
rriight_hav.e·h,eard the-best ~~mg
rus really _keep this.s()ng moving oftlle album; Peter:Gabriel's "I
. a_ncl __ th_o~e._,n,ic~; _
gl~esy ·guitar Ha~e the To~~h"_
~O~l:5
on.· 1'his · ·
nffs give 1qhat oh so special · song wakes you up and·gets you
Claptqh sound.
· '•
'. . ·
·going. You can~t
go
wrong with .
The nexfscmg on ifie.albJm is PeterGabriet _ . :' · , · ·
<
<
BryanFeny's,''Dance WithLife".
The rest of the album inciudes
It'sasong~lxli.ltl~vinglife. There Taj Mahal,
~ai-viii
Gaye; The
are some
gie~t key c~ang~s.to-
Iguanas,: Do~othy · ¥~ore, JJ
wards t~e ~ncUh~t )nake the Cale, and Thomas Newman.
sqng and it's theme
'a11
'the more They all perfonn good songs, hut
· eff~ti:ve· anq_ quite'.,
.
. .
.·.
atthis point
_
in the alb~ni the
en-
impr~sive:. . · .. ) .. ; . . _ .. _ e'rgy level has hit a pfjteau. · ·_ .
. 'fhe, n_ext.son:g)s Aiiro'n
ff
yo~ hear
C]~pt011'~
song'pn
N:ev1Ue:s '.'Gr~y Lov~•,:· Aaron's the radio and think that is
ptob-
disti~~tiye y9ic;egiv~sthisjong · ably the '?nl(good so_ng· on the
the s_oul .that
it
~eeds,to·
make
it a . album; th1n.k again. Eyery song
~e~tJoye SIJ;ng: _
Itii19t'q.uittfa :
.
,on this album is g<>9d_and at l_east
sl9w, love_ ballad
that
p·uts you
halfofthem_are great··And each
to sleep~ nor is (ta fast loveJqng song tells -you _to sit· ~ack;· rel~,.
that gets your ol~od"flowing'.
and enjoy life. I highly recom-.
·
·
mend
it;·..
·
:r;
·
BoW St~q~]~ot,Mii
g~~~t~~~
.· · ·
hfl~sielnaldo .·
__vorced;·a-i:npth~{ofim;elbv~n
:
. . .. si~ff
Writ~~ '
-year boy-and'aiic
ID~~tm~nf
~na~ ' .
.• ·
'.-
.; .• -·.· : 1 - • -~
_·._.:
.
.
< ·:,::
.'lyst'Sheownsher·satfi:iifuld~co·
.
·
··.:·"Ill
H<;>w,,stella Ootb.e'rJ3~ove . : __
home __
.and:ha_·
s.
:ariothe_ ~-._: __
o_·
n_-..
e.;
o_· n_.; .
Baclt: M"cMiOari'goes into'a'n~w ·
:tJ{k'e
,'.fah'oeJ
i
She, dri vei,:i1er
~dif.~ti9ifirthefWntinf
'$he uses
BMW fast
and
createsftinctional
the streanf ,of· consciousness
.
,art-(i.e.,)!xpensive furniture)
:in
technique thls'time~ 'The'inain-
h_er,splll"etime:••.~-h~:keeps:her. ·
.Sh~racJer; _· ~teJia Payne
would•-
'pe~ont1Ftrainecon·c.iifoirid~her •
.
.
~lll~o~'.VJith_her"thoiigl}~'and·
-Land'C~ruiser,Hi
tht{gaftfge/The
-
.
•
•. ·feelings;)giforink
grafurn~
and >Cosbf_s'look likea welfare'fain-
punctuatton;. __ -_-_ .. •-. _ .. ,
:
.
-
; : ·• . ily.cc>mpared to 'tije'_life
'stelfa
_
.• ·J\f(etg~tting'lls&;{'to·the:·~tyle, Payne l~aqs. The only·_thing
:I
could se,e whyM:cMillanchose· missing in this picture'isza_man
. : tlus \V~y.9f}vti~~g.))telli?fcfufr-::; whq ~an ~ock her world. .': , .
.
,_' ,
,acfei is·revealertlfrough~her•._ .•:--\_Vhil_e. her son,_Qufncy· visits
. -.· tnonologuianothe'read~r'Linder.:i: -hi_sff~~h~1\qunn
·
gr11e(s-uili.rli~t
·
. -~_tands ,SteH~•~,f~ffngs~t'tei:-'::
t
-
\~telli!~~!g~s)o
thlc~
iv~i;~titiit-
. • •• An,d .what
a•~yofr
g9;"gffl !Yciiif.:·:·'.
,byhe~~lf.?I(is in Jamai_cawhefe
·aqt~(~telJ~Jsi:,$_~e'is'whafthe ' Stella: ·-•-)Deets. ' :',Winston
•
. moaernjvdma1ra'spfr~s)0Jt;,e. . Shakespeare,
·
a
'it
'year
old
v,,ho .
~tel_la. is 'forty.;.tv,,c{ye{l!S old; di- . just finished Ouniversi ty : and . is
.... ::. ;,,!
·•
<=·
1,:,.:·
.
Jookingtof,lea·chef'saP.::
»o.,te,'.~~" .
,,ffF_c.r~J.-
a.
0
los-s.:
.
prentice
ibtlle
resort that
SOWlCO"-r
l\f.ll_f
·
·
o.ncl. clco.r
~
'/0'1
cliecL
f
A,..
'fCl!I
9rit,"
i
°j.
.'~,i~ : . ·- : -.
.
·
nu.J
IOlnG
'"frorT
i'
Stella is staying a.t. ·.
- Despite.her.rationale
saying that
iqs'
nQt
pos-,
sible. it ·happens:. _
.. she
falls in love w1th
a.
boy
$f01\;Qt'fl4.
~y
T\.e.
Co11nae.li"!J .
U.l\fe.r
,o-\c.J..
't,y
A..lrc«-
~"«-fl-
pd.Skc.y
loc.a.t~t
i
1v
--ff,\'-
'm.cc.t("j ·
'1(o,;-..v
.
o.(:
o.rJ..
€.d'.
;tJ)j
.
: '/vor1n
e.
Po
f.,
1
(,ct,
,U5J ,
ftCClu.
tct.l\11,
if
-t•u
hll-'c.
4"'f
i~u-fions,.•r
if
1°"«"c.
11e+
Am,1.\.1, . ....
t
-tt.,,
.Ji-..
,.lo-r.
e1rnc.:
~uiclence,
Wt!r.<,iki'·
-for
u3"t
I.Alt~ks ,
~{t\"'
'"j .
S9--t. ~.
~~30 k &.t!~O.
£Nf"l(ELY
COi\/ FIOWI/
ftL
· half her age. Ste Ha finds
hers
.
el( in''an infernal
battle; · Hennind:insists
that· "thiflhing" is not
love but only-afling.A11-
other part·of her . simply
doesn't believe that this
young man· would want
her as a person.
Through her .thoughts,
we see that this woman
that seems like she has it
all together, still has her
own insecurities and
fears
that she must deal
.with. This book is differ-
ent
from
her·
past
books.
This
time:
it
isn't about
si~terhood, or•the strug-
gling black
family,
or
about
the
men.
who
treat
us bad.- This time· it's
about love
and
a woman
going for hers ..
I
J
.
I N S I
■
'.)E
=--·TttECIRcLE,
:
S~ptember.'19,,1996
SPO.RTS
11
~
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·
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A Closer Look At ...
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CHRISSMijil
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Jes'tle);';
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A~~~n-:iiaid.
,
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Spprts1J4,i(or
.
''There were·arew
·
\jad calls; but
.
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wf
h
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.
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Their
'goaf.or
:
•igoing all1he ptinhem away.'
"
,
·
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•
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.
·
·
·
.
\Vay''. io
.
tfl~-
:
ch~pionspip wa(.
_.
:
Alleri
/
atransfer'from Howard
.
slowed down
.
this past
Saturday'.:
U,~~•i~rsity;h~s beenthallenging
asthe
.
football
.
. team fost
:
10
_
Juriio()9:(aO'~h9des
,
Jor the
.
Duquesne,30, 17,
at
Rooney field
·
sfaf,t_ingj~l> at
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ail~ac~
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Pittsbu
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put'fo
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ci(
workJ>Ver the
.
Going into this
.'
gam¢,
'
tliere
.
were
summer
·
and
.
it paid off," Allen
manyque~tions still.unanswered.
said
:
-
<
·
,
,
·
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· ···
'
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·
·
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Whowiliget thestartiii"thequar'.'
.
'
On
-i
tiie
:
defeit'siJe side: bf; the
.
terback position'(WiU
-
the long
d~y,
_
'
M
~
~is{~l:!,sielbyjunior
trip
have
.:
l!,n
,
~ffect~
.
Could this
· _
d~fensiveJ~ne~an Darren Valdes,
·
game dictate the outcome
·
of the
who
__
;
h
_
~d
-
-
_
fw_o
:
'
0
_
1_1
(
of the
_·
Red
.
entire season?
.
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p
.
.
.
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oxes
::
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·
interceptions.
.:
1unfor' (]uarterback Jirti baiey,
~
Valdes also had
·
nfoe solo'tack-
,
who start~911
.
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Tram;i,glini
·
Valdes s·aid
'
that the Red Foxes
..
.
~rou,ghou~ the en~fre
'
gaine; said
,
dicfnc:>t'lack'efthrt but
'
rath~r sii:n-
thatmista~es by Marist were the
piy
rii
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mistikes
:
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. .
.
key Pf9b}elll
'.
.
·
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.
"We
.
came :out with a lot of
Favorite Movie: Braveheart
.
.
"(TheJ~m) pla.xed 'Nell ~~twe
heart,"
'
Valdes ~aid;
·
~we;vebeen
.
just c:,9
,
uIR,n
_
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,
ex_ecute in
,
tht:
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r~
inte11seinpracµcearicl hopffully
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·
ZC>n~. Daley Sllld
-".,_:
.
..
.
.•_.
·
things
will
work out
-
We stil1
avonte an :
.
.
. He
'
sl!,id
_
thattne rotating situa-
ha~e)l lolof footb~iIMt
t9
play.,>
,'
_-
·
--
,
·
t•?.~W?rk~dout \VelL
. .
.
·.
Th
_
e
::
r.l;!~OiOR ~t~acKthat Jhe
.
:
Favorite Food: Ravioli .
'
It d1di:i
,
tcause that much of
.
a Dukes' used ·againsLMarist is
problem,~· he said. '.'It's tough
.
to
.
·.
whiC'
'
macle ~
-
tlle
''
•
tl'ifference.
•
Favorite Athlete:
·
Fran Tarkenton
·
·
chris
D'
Ai,.torjo
Team: Football
Position: WR/K
Height
5'
11 ;,
.
Weight:
185
Hometown: Danbury,
Ct.
.
Major:
Marketing
getacc~~t.?m~ to, but I'~ sure jopht?
.
ij•<?[<r
;
~~~J~i
:
V
~ck
_:
f~>r
-
.
.
.
.
,
.
everytli1ng
,
w10W<.>{~OU~
.
.
-
·
·
.
,
Duq~esne,AndreHatcher
·
had
-·
.
·
F
_
;
_t
A
'
·.•
,
•
:
r
:
'
:
M
·
.
,:
.
·
•
o
· .
•
.
•
.
..
·
1
···
.
·
'
. ·
.·
...
Daleyy.,~7c;of"'l5onih~day
1970
~i
·
ofthe
:
Duk~s;
242
fusfi~
.
'
·,
avon e
_
•
specto
·
aq~~:
'
_
pp
_
ortumty
_
tp pay two sp6rts-f'ootball/
-
!0r
78
yards whi~e Tramaglini fin-
. ing _
·
yards. · He
.
g~ve
'
the Mari~t
.
·:
:,:::'
-
-·
1shed 5-of-:17 with
108
yards:
rushing defense, which was
·
:
.
Baseball
:
:
:
R~~~t~!id
,
~~~tal ~ombi~~
:::
~~ed
;
l9t
,
h
_
th~
'
natio~
.
l~st
i
Year,
·.
·" ·
··
·
·
·
Wttli some phys1cal
-
nustakes IS
,
'
some trouole
;'~ '
'
.
·
·
.
,
-
..
·.
.
.
/
Sports
.
Highlight:' Game winning
score
against Mqnmotith
in
'
9
:
5
'
.
.
·
""'.hat
_
fOSt
_
Matjstttie gain~.
.
Vald
_
es
_
s~ct, thlltJle
.
~oughtthis
'
;
.
,
.
. ,
. . .
.
.
.
,
,:
.
'
..
.
.
,. .
. •
''We ju
_
~thaye
to
bou1.1ce bac~ ... W¥ hnly_'paj:(p(Marist!s prob
,;
·:
/
.
&
·--
rnrr·
-·
i
s.
SW
"
0
t:t
,
£;E?P
~
-
:
f.'oxes()1,1
_
.
,Satu~y; Elefimshed
:-~
-
tenttal ''Valdes said;
.
'There'is
t:
-
:;
\,\·
<
:,
oc--:
·.
<
:'J,"
-·
,~
·
.
:
,
·
.
.
_
_
.
.
·
··
-
·
.-
- -
._
..
.
-- -
,
·
•
--
..
.
.
•
.
.
.
'
·.
~e'.g~
{
vi@lllyaro~ru.sru
.
ni· ;
~
Mfin1
:
t~ly ~oom for
'
ilJ}proVe-:
'
-'.-?
:'
l:l<>.':Vey.¢r
;
_1:1er~e$ e~p~~t~~fa
:
.
the.team around:
Cary
Smith
.
arid
Wednesday;
:b~(dic
'
fraveling
(0
· ,
,
,
m22
·
cames arid had
•
25)
1
ards in ·''
:
meni.'.'
.
. :
:
·
.
:
.
.
.
·
'
~~~.I}
~~()\V!~g
,
f~qm
_
h1s
,
players
•,
-Kevin
llardy
are two of the play-
.
Fairlield
_
and Siena next week.
·
·
: .' .
~
at~~mpts
,
#'~ixi~g
<
;
He
~
sc9.r~
~arist takes
,
~~
'
Iona
:
College
..
:
i~ t!t~if;IJ9me
,
~e'f?~f.:}\Y,~g~y~ _ers that make up the core of this
; .
•
•.
.
,
..
.
.
.
.
' .
'
.
·
<>he of M¥.~!
~
,
~twg
·
10~~
-
~19W?S
.
:
on
S~turday
atl ..
eoiiicioff Field
.
·
·
Mou,r.i;~
~-
~
k
Mazy
s
_:
t°?
111
~(:h
r~~
:
team, 1:1
,
erodes
.
expects
,
a
:
g
_
r~!J.t
..
,
,
.
:
As
,
ttt<!
Red Foxes head into the
of
th~
,
dat~~
:
a:f
y~d
:
nin;
·\
,
·
atl :~
p.m.
.
.
.
.
.
_
.
•
..
s~7 Herlldes said
,
1'h1~ t ~ deal from t?.em, and he d~scnbc~
_
me~J
~
(
!he
schedule in this. their
H~~
'
~oa9~{!~m
_
P~~Y;~atd he
·
Jona Wa§ pick~ to finish sixth
d1dn_ t go o~
.
t~e field :XPe<;tmg
~he duo as strong, to~gh guy~ . .'
finalxear:_1samembcroftheNEC,
was ~tt~tiefi :"''
_
tlvA
.
ll~n's perfor-
in
:
this
·
year's. coac
_
hes
._
poll and
to w•.~· It was JU
.
st hopmg notto
·
·
Also\most of the new. recruits .
_
·
·
He,_fodcs 1s ho~cful that
he
can
.IB~C;e.
•
/.
'
'.}_
\\_
,·,t-'Y
:
.
_
.
.
_-.
·
bad
-
_
aJ~6record last year.·
_ ·.
lose'.
.
··
.
. .
..
.
:
. .
~or
1
,
996
know how to win_,
:
h~v:
',
~!l
_
fluence the future of Marist
-.
'Tlll
'!
eal!y
pleased
:
with how
-
,
.
.
Daley
_
_
s
_
aic.l th~ Red Foxes
will
·
.
In
:
thefirst.few
,
,
\\leeks
;
of prac-
mgcpmefrom successful JUntor.
,
soccer .
. ··
;
{Alietl)'play'eo;!' Parady said
c
,
'take rio gaines
:
easy
:
.
··
..
.·
.
·.
U~~.
,
the
.
new c
_
o;ich has
·_
focused
college and high school pro-
·
· ·
:~i{~5.
f
#}
_
iy only his
_
fi
_
rst game
'
''Tn:eir(Ip~a) quarterback from
orr
,
cI:ianging that attitude .
.
,
grams
:
·
Th_e team already lost its
·
•
!.0}11,i:~
·
y.~;
s_o I can't ~otnplai11
·
last yearfsnot reiumi
11
g.
•
it
de-
··
_.
y
,
Vie haye tooyefcJ~e. !J}e
.
los-
m.ost
_
ascla1med newcomer, how-
~~t~
h~o/,
.:
~<?
did.
He
did every-.- pends on the ~ew
·
quarterback as
;,1
,
11g synd.~om~ , _· IIerodes evei:, wh
_
en Robert ~yholrn s~f-
_·
,•il~)Jt!
'
c_o~ld.'.'
:'
·
.
·
.
·
• .·.
·•
·-··
.
:->.
.
to
ho\1/
_
&oaj~eY.
·
~~ll
~."
:
Daley
·
s
_
trefsed.
-
Los'.ng bec9Il)es
_
:a
.
.
~ered
.
l!
season-en~mg I:c
_
ncc
-
m-
.,
·
·111en-sa1d he was
_
d1sappomted
. ·
said
.
_
_
_
;
__
u\Ve
;
mllstjusf gq out and
..
,
,
habit
,
?ll~
I
_
can t really .~hange
.
·
Jl!t'X
only one gru.ne mto his fresh-
with the loss
:
·
::
.
.
_
.
play to the bestofourability."
•
that.
_
Its up _to the t~am.
.
_
=
,
man season.
·
''We definitely.could have beat
· ·
.
-
· ·
·
--
· ·'
·
· ·
·
·
•
:
,
_:
The
coach is countmg on a f~w
With
_:
a
I -
·
I
overall record,
··
;:-
.
.
.
ofhis veteran leaders to help tum.
Mari st hosted Niagara on
..
·
•.
WQmen's
·
crosSCOuni±y
,
hOpes tofinistrOntop
ofNEC
•
•
C
•
•
.
•
_.
•
by
PHiLiIP
WHITE
.
..
:
·
staffWrtter
O.
.
As
·
the women's cross country
team starts ;their 1996' season,
optimism
1
seems to
·
be
the word
around theteam's locker room.
·
c
In
his seventh season as head
coach, Phil ¥,elly said the team
should
'
finish in the top three
-
spots in
;
their meets and at least
second
fa
the North East Con-
ference
:;
.
.
;
•
" Mourit
St. Mary's
will be our
•
toughest competitor. They al-
ways have been," Kelly said.
.
·
Mount
•
St. Mary's is Marist's
most competitive opponent. The
Red Foxes challenged them last
year, but
-
finished a close second.
The Red Foxes finished first at
the
Hartford Invitational this past
Friday.
•
:fhey had taken nine out
of the top
,
-12 finishing places,
and Kathleen Woodson, a se-
nior, finished first by 30 seconds
from the second place runner,
·
·
son, the· Red Foxef Jpughest
" Kathleen is our best runner,
meet looks to be the National
the team captain ahd leads _the
Catholic Cross Country C::hampi-
team," senior
.
Mary McQullian
onship, held at Notre Dame, this
said.
Friday. Kelly expects this meet
The upper classmen have
tobeadifficultmeetifProvidence
helped the Red Foxes maintain
College and Georgetown Uriiver-
their winning record
,'
including
sity are there.
·
Jen
.
Delosso
,
Karen Mangan,
With a combination of experi-
MarY McQullian, Kerriann enced veteran runners and a
Redmond, and Ali.son Murray.
strong underclassmen nucleus,
Kelly, however, puts much of this Red Fox team is coming to-
his time and experience
in
his
gether.
freshman and sophomore run-
" Even though this is my se-
ners.
_
These runners are
.
Karen
nior year, not just seniors, but
Dg~,ilhue, Debbie Flannigan, Jen
everyone seems to be working
Glover, Merideth Halstead, Beth
·
together," Murray said.
Johnson, Leah Koerner, Terra
Despitethisbeingthewomen's
Quinn and
·
Krlstyn Russo.
last season in the NEC, Kelly said
"Even though bur senior class
he believes his team excels in this
is strong, our
·
freshmen and
.
sport more than most of the
sophomo~ will provide our core
teams in the conference.
strength fornow· and for the next
"
.
We're better than two thirds
coup!~ ofj~oijs
,
" Coach Kelly
of the teams in the conference,
said
.
·
·
.
·
·
--
and we should finish second, if
Looking into the rest of the sea-
not first," Kelly said.
Next season, the Red Foxes will
be in the Metro Atlantic Athletic
Conference (MAAC)'. Marist
would have been in that confer
-
ence earlier, but due to their con-
tract with the NEC, Marist must
stay in it for this season
.
Aside from the meet at Notre
Dame, the Red Foxes have two
other important meets
:
the con-
ference and regional meets.
Kelly said the Red Foxes must
win those two meets in order to
beat Mt. St. Mary's.
The final meet that holds a tre-
mendous amount of significance
for the Red Foxes is the Bowdoin
Invitational, held October I 2.
"Toe
Bowdoin is so important
because it is being held here at
Marist, and we have to win it
because it's on our ground,"
Coach Kelly said.
"I
·
left Iona because there was
.
more to offer here," Herodes
stated. "There were more oppor -
tunities with the kids here, and
I
c
_
ould see
SOffi<!
positive things
going on with the future of this
program."
olley----
.
..continued from page 12
n kills with an average of 2.26 .
In
addition to being named
ortheast Conference Player of
e
Week, Vir leads this year's
earn
in
kills
and has Ute fewest
rrors of the starters.
Fellow sophomore Schuerger
as
regained her position as the
eader in assists for the team.
Last
year, she averaged 7 .76
rgame.
Marist's upcoming schedule
ncludes games
at
Seton Hall on
uesday at 7:00 p;m., and the
'.
rexel Tournament on Friday
.
d Saturday.
.
Their next home game is Tues-,
ay, September
24
against St.
eter's at 7:00 p.m.
,
,
Si~1
:
6,:rim
·
W~:
,
:
•.
.
.
W
O
MEN'S
SOCCER
GOALIE
:
BETH
ZACK
.
..
-·
-
..
...
...
JJ~~
:
oF.
.
~
·
wm:
.
'This
·
team didn'rgo on thefield
~q)RDED
43
.
SAVES
IN
nm
HRST
3
.
.
-
'.
.
.
·
.
,,
,
T~
CIRCLE
·
.
•
SPORT
s
.-
·
.
~.p.~nitied9, i996 .
.
expecting to win
._
It was just
•
·
hoping not
.
to
lost(
· ·
.
.
·
•
_
.
.
·
-
'
:
.
: :
~
'.
&,If
Herod~;
.
_
.
.
12
.
.
Men's
;
soccer
-
coacli
_
_
,,_
:,.
.
·
:
·.:
:·
.~
-
--
.
'.
·
.>::-'.;/
-·:,
,,
..
,..
..
......
:··· -_._·•
..
'
\-:--·
·
.:, .
..
·
't
w9
,
~¢i?
f
§bt;~i
'
t6~fu·
·
triesto·break
-
out ofsc(}rfng
:
s1uni.p
~y
·
~:~IriMcBRri>E
.
·
-
.
.
.,
-
.
~
'.
tti~ytia
ii
;
l
~
i
~~ils~dre
:
:'>
.
St~Jf
W;ite~
.
Even
thot1gh the Red Foxes
~·
-.
The·Me~ Atl~nti~
-
Athleti~
_;
.
Conference wiilbe the rieW home
of lhewomen'.s soccer'
.
te
·
ruri
.
at
.
the start- of
,
the 199.7,J~9
,
8
;
sea-
son.
·
So how do
.
the
·
Red Foxes
·
wish to Ieav~ the NortheaslCon-
ference?
.·
.
.
. .
.
.
•.
. .
...
•
;
Senior cap.lain
.
Stacey
S
.
eb.astian said that they have a
goal.
.
.
·
.
'.iY,,e
~ant to leave our mark,"
Sebastian said.
·
·
.
· .
Second year head coach Maria
Piechocki is back at the helm af-
.
ter a
6:11
·
inaugu
r
atseasonjn
which the Red Foxes finished
third in the
NEc
:
Also back this
·
year are team
captains se_nior m
'
idfielder/de-
fender Stacey
:
Sebastian
,
junior
goalkeeper Elizabeth Zack, and
·.
junior defend
.
er Janet Oliver,
·
.
Piech~ki would Hke to again
reach the. NEC tournament as
.
iiavebeen
~
1r
{
a
.
slightscoring
.
sluirip
/
they have
·
already shown
-
~
.
sfgns that
:
they:~an
:
score;·
·
And
.
.
•
whili
f
~he
'
.:
offense
•
· is
•
looking to
·
(?riCtf
:
again
regai!) their
.
scoqng
· touch, the defense has been play-
ing solidly, ledby
_
Zack:
.·
·
·
Injustthefirstweek of the sea
-
.
.
son
·
; Zack
Jias
ali-e~dy- picked up
thefirstNECPlayerofthe Week
award .
.-
The junior has allowed
.
a
mere two goals in
"
the first three
games of the s_eason,
a
percent.:
.
age thatequals oulto a micro-
scopic o'.67.
·
She.recorded 43
.
saves
.
in those first three games
.
·
.·
The team can:ie up on iliewrong
side of a
l~O ga1T1e
<
against
Niagara this past
-
weekend. The
Purple Eagles scored early in the
. _
first half
;
and that would be the
only goafof the game.
.
.
part of the team's season goals.
·
.
.. .
·
•
··
·· ·.
.
. .
:
..
·..
.
.·
·.
,
.
Circle photo/Katie Robinson
Sebastian s
.
aid she ag
i"
eeswith
..
Freshman Sarah McDermott
.
makes a
rr1o
_
ve
on a Niagara defender Saturday at Leonidoff field
Zack registered
13
more save
1
s
in
.
the losing effort.
~~~~~:;~c:ut sai~~~~:~6te:~
goal.
.
·
_
.
. ,
,
.. ·
.
.
·
. ·-
.
great,'
'.
-
S~b
.
asti~
'
said.
·
-
: ,-
.
proveon if theywanf to havea
Monmouthwouldbeagreatway
,
Defensively
,
this
.
alignment has
.
The Red Foxes cuirentlyhave
solid farewell season
:
.
From here, the Red Foxes head
off on
a:
road trip that begins at
Boston University on Sept.
17
.
··
to leave the NEC.
.
worked in t
_
he~e
_
_
e~ly l?tages
.
oc
·
~
16
fre
.
shmenand soph~mor~ on
The team has been in a slight
:
'.'
(Our) biggest goal is to win
the season,
as
tpe
·
Red Fox de-
the tearil;'Yhile there
are
only five
scoring droughdn the la
s
t two
..
They will then open their NEC
the NEC," Sebastian said
.
"To fense has play
(?
d' solid in the juniors arid seniors, burOliver games, as they displayed in the
schedule with a road trip at Rob-
beat Mcmmouth would
.
b
~
in-
.
eyes of both the heact
•
coach arid
.
sees
i
his
i
s being
a
'.'
po
'
sitive
:
first two games of the
·
season.
·
ert Moms on Sept. 20
.
credible.';
.
.
. .
. .
'.
.
:
.
S~bas~ian
,
•
.
.
.
.
.
.
"(T~ere!
.
s)'you
.
th and en~~usi-
.
The Red F9.xes opened up their
.
.
.
.
.
.. ·
.
'.J'h_e team ri1Lbf~!ignedi11a
'
4-
. ~><\l~~g~tr,e
r;
·:
t~_~fxe
,
played .
.
as~, and,!t'II_be thei:e inth·eyears
••
.
·
. ·
se~on with a
·
).:t victory over
·
.•.
st~rancis (Pa) will ~
·
the
.
si~ht
4;-2_set, which llleans
,
there
will
.-
·.
~oh,dly,
.
P~~ch~ykt ~aid
:'
.
'
'°' _
·
.•.
···· ·. _ to come,
;.
Ol
_
1ver said.
;
:
·
· ,
_
,,.
.
.
•
Stonybrnok. They followed this
•
..
of their last game of this road tnp,
.
be
tW,(>
st.tj~ers
{
f6u
t
~idfield~rs
';,:.:C.
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.
if-
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.
and fourdefende
·
rs wiii1
•
zackin
_
.
Defen~1yely
;
\
we are
_
cplaying .·
·
-
wh
_
arthe
'
team
.
:
~vilL'.have
/
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.:.
~
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e
astern.
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.
,
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,
then
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in·their owntourric1~~rit:_
:
.'rhe ·
.
--
·
·
·
·
Red
·
foxes
,
took
.
second
m
.
the
. iL:
Gpiriing of(
c1
~is
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l
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tQt1mainent,lqs1ng cmly
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rovidence
;
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·
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'
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;;.
.
teaI11i
f
looking forward
:
to what
.
.
ment
;·
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a
n
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f
J>arketwas
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-
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'
SeniorTarab
a
fuadtiw~iiiimect
•
·
·•
.
··
:
'
Iil fact;
.
with
·
ali'twelve letter
~
..
to
the
all
~
tohrnillneritteam.
'
..
winners
:
returning
>
h
~
a
·
d cbach . The players the Red Foxes \iiilf
·.
Emily Alquist said she
sees
the
be ki6king
.
19
.
lead th
...
e
.
·
.
.
1n
.
thisyear
Red fox~s comp
7
~ing
\
vith
:
·
·
--
·
·
·
N~rtheast Conference
'
powers
are S.
.
~ni,or c
'i
jp
_
fains Jennifer
RiderandSt
:
Francis{Pa)forcon~' Weinbrecht
':a
rid
'
Liz
>
Herzner.
·
foren~~
·
§uprem~
cy'.
· :_
i
~\ :
)
: .
Along
i
:Witi-
{
feilow seniors
; :
~'Being a
C
o
r
riear
;
.
the
lop of
Da
_
~aHU
..
and
:
M~ry
;
B.eth
-.
~ef
,
~nf~ri11~J
_
is
{
v~r
f
r~Iistic
.
Ho_rman
;
\:
a.rid
i,.
~qphomoi~s
goal for this team," the second
.
H~~~herVir and. Elli~ Schuerger,
y~~
6ead toa~hsaid
:
.
:
-
..
'.
·.
.
tµey
.
mak~up the
:'
11uc~eus
of
th~
.
_
.
Alquist, i
l'.
1994 graduate
'
of ~W:t::::ht,
.-
i~
iddle blocker
.
Mirinesqta,
·
Vfas
.
eitcoufaged by
·
fr
.
pm
La
_
-
..
J
.
01
.
·
1a.
..
c
..
:
.
al
.
i
.
fi
,
o
.
m
.· ..
ia.
.
·.
led
th_
e.
the good play of the
..
h~~
.
'1~
at
,
· ·
-
· ·
·
·
team in service aces
and
was see-
the end of the :1995 season, as
<>.n
.. d
.
in
..
b
.
..
loc
_
·
ki
.
n
.·
g
l
.
as
.
t
.
..
Year
.-
-
.
•
.
Tot's·
the Red Foxes won five of iheir
year she is_in the SaJlle po,sition,
lastl0and
.
threeofth~ii:lastfour
first in aces with eight, and sec-
to e11d
.
their season in a positive
ond in b
.
loc
.
.
king .
..
·
.
.
.
·
.
·
·
.
·
.
. ·.
.
•.
_
fashion. What she
·
liked
.
even
rnore, however, was ihe dedica-
..
:
Outside
hitter Herzner
was an
tion her team displayed in the off
-
.
all-around
good
.
player for the
season.
·
.
Red Foxes l
_
ast year, as she was
.. It
takes a while when a new
in Marist's top five in every ma-
coach comes in, like I
.
did last jor category
.
last season .
.
Again
year, form.et~
10
adjust Jo the
Herzner.is found near the top of
coac~'s style and philosophy,
every statistic, including being
but we
·
really worked
.
hard in the
first on the team in blocking per-
summer to get better acquainted
centage at · 755.
with each other," Alquist said.
Damarau, from Tucson,
Ari-
The hard work has already ac-
zona, Jed the team in digs last
count~ for two wins
in
Marist's
year with an average of2.76 digs
first four games this year, a feat
per game. Horman led the team
that took them sixteen games last
season. Included in their wins is
Please see
V.Ball
on
p. / / ...
N~\V
rnen'sso?cer coach
brings
new
life
by Srtw
w
ANCZYK
..
]3~fore
aajving in Poughkeepsie,
way>•
·
.
.
··
Staff Writer
.
Her¢es s~ntfour :years on the
The s~cc~s ca~e to
an
abrupt
.
_
.
.
coaching staff at Icinii",
:
and was
halt ~n Saturday, however, when
New blood has been injected
liained
the 1995 MA.AC Coach
a different Marist team showed
into
·
the Marist College Men's
of the
·
year after
:
guiding
.
the
up tohosiMou~t St. Mary's in
soccer program, but the team
Gaels to
the
Conference Cham-
the first NEC contest of the sea-
may not feelthe full effects of pionship game in onlyhis sec-
son.
·
A lackluster attitude and a
the transfusion for some time.
ond season as head coach.
.
handful of key off sides calls left
Anew head coach, some key
Ironically, Herodes' debut
as
theRedFoxesonthewrongside
recruits, and a new attitude are
Marist's head coach came
.
on
ofa3
-
0score.
·
all part of the 1996 campaign to
September 4, against his fonner
Mo~nt St. Mary's is always
begin a winning tradition as
team. Thanks to goals from Matt
''very good in the conference"
MaristmovesfromtheNortheast
Day, Dave Seipp, and Cary
according to assistant coach
Conference to the more competi-
Smith
__,
the Red Foxes escaped
·
Michael Kenney. Along with
live Metro Atlantic Athletic Con-
Iona with an encouraging 3- I
.
vie-
RQbert Monis, the Mount is ex.,.
ference.
•
tory.
-
pected to challenge for the NEC
Th~ Red
.
Foxes' new leader,
"T~at was a big one for us,"
title this fall.
head coach Bob
.
Herodes, is a
Herodes explained
.
'1'he guys
product of the MMC himself.
were nervous abouUona, and it
1
was
good
to get that out of the
Pease see M. Soccer on
p.J
I ...
49.1.1
49.1.2
49.1.3
49.1.4
49.1.5
49.1.6
49.1.7
49.1.8
49.1.9
49.1.10
49.1.11
49.1.12
.
'
~
>., ·,,. .,·,..-.,.;,.~, .. .,:
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..-.-
.-
•·•-n~.- ''"""'--~-- __ _
.
--~NEWS:,:
1996<:rvtarist'gra'.c{uate'i-ecieves·
~
Traillspoitine·:eets·~{r~ve
.
review
.
·~.
PAGE 9
·
·•
.
:
•· .. ·· ~-~&c.e.,s7. . . .
The footballteam·Iosesto .
presUgiciu~
:
·awc1rff ·.
.
·.·•A.-
ch-~i:~·:·••~·; /·,·,'.·-:.
.
.
·.~/:<:f··i\~:';f](:~Ai~~:':>
.. ·.Duquesne·,'
·
so~11> ·_
;k~ittf
,
·
m§nt
IBiaccEE
· · The Student Newspii.per of Marist College
·
· September 19; 1996
MaristStllden.ts provide seCuritYro~ Olympics in Atlanta
' ,
~
-
•
- - -
- ·
,
<
...
•
'
by
tEAH SHELTON
. .
upscale \V9od~arcf Academy in
\~6rk
stude~ts\vefe'assign~d
to '.
got
to
chec:k-.athlet~s· identific~-
· . .The studentsstayed in Atlailta
.
Staff.Writ~; ::
the.College Park section of At'.'
was·slighHy chaotic.<
... , \: . , tions, ..
·
.. ·
.
'
.
for differenrlerigths of tirne, de-
Senior Matt
miHc:y
commuted
lanfa.
..
.
•~herewere
;
more people tell'.'. · In
·
addition to working
10
tol
2
pending ·upon their confracts
22 hours to workthis sum,mer.
.
According to .Halicy, class-. ing tis_ what to
·
do than
·
peop·1e· . hours each day,:the students · with'Bcirg~Warrier. Some will get
He was one of35 criminaljus::
rooms were converted into sleep-
domg actual work;" she said.' "I
were.also able to attend some of internship credit for -their work.
tice majors from Mari st who · ing quarters. for the students.. ~xpected more order.;'. .
.
.
. .
the Olympic events,
For others, the.experience in it-
worked security:at the. Summer
Showers and two payphones.
Th~ n¢w0gu,ards were assigned
Tatum said thebombing at Cen-
self was e11ough. .
Olympics in Atlanta. .
-were.i9ca~ed in thepaHways: : .
to .... several different· ta.~.ks
tennia!Parkdid not keep the new
Students seeking
Credit
for their
According ·to John Dorerty,·
"It,wasn'.t thatba.d:
·The
air
throughout tneirstay in'A,tfanta.
guards.from doing their best.
work were required to keepjour..:
assistant professor
.
of· criminal· .· conditionin'g. was the best part,"
'fll.l.!
sttidents'jobs ~anged · from
"Our jobs seem small, but after
nals of their experiences and sub-
justice at Marist; · the students
Halicy said .. · ·
keeping dviHa11f otit of·lavv. en,
it happened,
J.
realized that we
mit a paper to professor Doherty.
were required to arrive in time for
. Thi! stu~e9.ts. were employed • force·ment gates·· to protecting. were really important and we re-
. The criminal justice department
opening ceremonies ori July 19.
by Borg~ :W~er, one of four se- . hotels to monitoring the open-
ally did make a difference," Tatum
and Professor Doherty win host
They were given a. choice of curity cci~J!ani~s prpte~ting the• . ing atjd closing ceremonies.
said.
a public forum this semester. Stu-
being paid
$55
per day orreceiv-
Olympkgames tlii~ sµmrnet
,.< · .
'
i
Ret>ecca Tatum, a senior from
Wallace said she did not want
dents will be discussing their
.
ing
free
room and board. Doherty
Suirulne)Vall~ccfof ~pring Val-
Washington state, said she to !~ave after the bombing, .
. Olympic experiences, both good
. sai9 moslchosethe•latter, and
ley,
NY;
·a
.
~tt.identeinployed·by
worked at Centennial Park arid
'.'Ifeltmoreinclinedtobestricter and bad .
. most
of
them were housed in the
Borg-Warner in Adan.ta; said the .. the Aquatic Center, and she also
with my post," she ·said,
Conan O'Brien help~ rreShrrten
s6ttlt:
in
'Late Night' hostfilms bizctrre
·
seg111eiiisatMarist
· by
KRISTIN RICHARD
Editor-in~cizief ·.
·
.
.
backt.Thornpson , said:
, ·.· ..... ·· •. . · .. · .
. :A.cc9rding tQ Hailmleke, Miirist was . ·
d1osen primarily t,~:uise
of
its pi-ox-,
The day after'the freshmen moved in, they • iniity ,to N~w York City, where the show
were: bombarded with i)izarre gifts.:hand~ . is (ilmedTuesd.ay throi.igh.Friday.
delivered bya popular late night
TV talk
.
Fortunately; Hamme_ke silid the crew
show host.~....
.
.·
•
•·.· .. ·.··.·. · .••... ·· . .· ·· ..
.
··•· .. ·• c:ncountered no'majc,rj,robielllS with
, Co)lan O'B.rien,.host6C'LateN.ightwith;
_se~ting
'
up•t)je:s19is_,at)viicisiL
:
.. ,".·:• .. ·.
~t:
·
·,COnlUliQJj.iri~11;t
·
~~e.tO,Marist;ririjJibdr.~-,t~:~Pt~~~~Q(~,Qµfa'>~ef,ef.!!Y~J;g~¥--~+···
Dayj_9
.
'fiI
.
iri)i'~egmenfoflits.slfo\vtwllich·,
•
. :
NfarisLa,salI
.·:~nd(
se(
ttii~gs;}1p;,,aijU'
·
•·· :
~rec(~ept;
,
6,\
.
c::·
·
:
,
,:::,'i,
;;:f,;/
,
·L'i ,..
'.ey~ry~
_
i~_g;wC!nts~p9@yt
·
h~'~aicl:
.
·, ·•
· ... M.i~~ae,! ga~~elce~'.a:1?94. M~st gradu-. :A,.I,tho~gh <::>'B~e~ ~olllplainecfabqtit :
:
atealidproducfion.assistantOit'the show .. the:acousticsfo·LeoHall,
_
he saidthe
suggested
¥ansr as a
possible°iobanont~' ')eople:M¥aH.~twe{~.very ~cc~in.iiio-
,
film the skit 9fConiu1
"
and his sidekickAridy .. dating to Jhe
.
disniptioris
.
ass6ciated
helpHl!{fresifmen lllOVeinto the ·dorms.
•
·.•· with:fil~i!}g
ll
shoi on
a
college
cain"' .
.
.
.. .''.".'fr_e h~lpi~~;the'111;sitt1e)p\vith;inap-
·
~pu~.- .. '• •
;
' .· ,.·..
.
•;:' .
.
·
.. \ :
'
\ .. ·:
.propnate gifts; a snake;:aqreat[>.ane; .cans..
·.·]'h~.
peopl!! here ~eem ..
y~ry
kind.
·
.
•
~··()r\v~ipp,e~
:.
2~~¥11: 'hlid_so~1~.·ugly,fiI~f.;T~~y·.vt
.
a1Ib,~,~~.!1i~e;!O ~s a~dtolJr~·
·
•. ,
cf, .
.
_
•· t~~;:~~~~;;t_Hoi~~;~~
l"ie~
~.iii '
~t~n°cif:f
:::t~i:~~t~l1
~
!f
!Jtttri .
:Cori~ri'Oi~}iifi (R}/pi~t~rec1:·11Jr~\~it11
~fs
:
;;d·e~iiiu~6dJ:~j-~~t~r{L)
a1cfl:i~6~~~t:.
resident ·in
·
one
·o(the
·
skits ,said O'Brien ''Late Night," §ai,d thy trip ·to. Mari st
·
tic:m Assistant Michael Hemmeke (C), filmed a segmenfof 'Late Night' at IViarist:
was·e. v.
'
e.n,.:i~
·
m.·.··.Pteci.t ... o.
·P•.a.Y .....
'..a.
t n .
"ck.
o.·.n .. h.e· ..
r ..
reminded
.
.
liim'?f.hiS()WllCOllegedays.
' ' . .
.
:•
;
:
:
:
. :
·. .
< ... '. :
.
~
:
.
:
.
' . .
.
.
.
'
. .
·,·
.··.·
.
.
.
.
-
. . . .,
.
'
. . . .
.
.
. .
. "Wh I
th . d .
I
ije}ler.ose_\Till.age>L.I .•.. s.aid. ·.·th~-. taping.of she :said;
.
~09giina~e,W~owas n()t pres~~tfor th
e
tap- ," • - · ·
'
en W(?_fiUO
~
. o~, r~mem~
h . h . . dd d
.
.
d ..
·
.. ·.•·· T. ·.he·.
•
.e·d"11e··d ·v··ers1·0· n o·.r. the ·Mar1"st "s.k1"ts·
mgoft.he"sh·•.o·w··.· .·.·.·•· ·. ·.·.·.
•
.·.• .. ·
· ··.·.·.··•··· beredhowgladiarn.tliatldonthave
t es,owa. e someexc1temenno onn•
·
·
· ·
·
·
.-..
· · ·· · ·
t 1·
·
d
·
· ·
,, h
·
·
·ct
\
lifi. e,on th
.
... e sec. 9nd day of scho.
oi.: -, • .
.
last~
..
eig·
ht. minutes, which
..
·
mad.e.it tlie.1o
_
· .ng-
)'He :wa~ted, to put
a
snake
,rn
niy-- .
o ,.ve ma onn ~ymore, . e sat .
.
..
roommate's drawer and wait for her to come
·
· Karen PfanneIDiller, a freshman from ·
.
·
c''It was definitely fun a.ndp_retty c~azy,,, :est s~gmentever to air onO'Brien's show.
McCann
.
construction behind S~bedule
by BEN
~GO~
.
.. §taff
Wr.iter
·. Marist stµge.nts
·
ar..:
rived this
fall just as
renovations• to. the
James·
J .
.
·
McCann
Recreational Ceriter ·
ended and construc-
tion on the additio.n
began ... · ....
.
The project is atimit
one month behind
schedule, in part be:
cause
ail
old .. dump
discovered on the site
had to be· emptied.
Tom Daly, directorof
the· physical plant,
said the dump was a
20 foot deep ravine
filled with· garbage
imd appliances left
Circle
phcXo'Diallc
~
by the original Marist
Construction on the James
J.
McCann Recreation Center, which began
Brothers in the l 950's
last spring, is one month behind schedule. The new addition will include
and l 960's.
a new gym, a weight room, and additional locker space.
"Cable, pipe, and other
utility relocation set con-
structicm fu~ther behind,'; he.
said. ''The projec.t is now ex-
pected to be completed early next
semesterinJan,uary.''; .
Daly said .students will see a
lot :of action happening inthe
next few months
as
the new build-
. ing is raised.
· Numerous administrators and
faculty were relocated early this
summer· as reno:vations to· the
· · existing building began. ·.
Assistant Men's Basketball
Coach, Stephen Sauers; recently
moved· into· his new office after
spending most of the summer in
the McCann dance studio.
·
"All the construction is a bit of
an inconvenience," Sauers said,
~•but we have to be patient be-
ca9se it will benefit so many.,.
Ttm Murray, director of Marlst
Athletics, said he thinks the
20,000 square foot addition will
be a great asset to students.
"We envision it to
be
a real gath-
.
ering place for all students to
come down and work out in an
upbeat atmosphere," said
Murray:
The newl?uilding will contain ·
amuhipurpose gym, aweight
room, ancl locker space. Accord-
ing to Daly; these are necessary
additions.
. ..
"The.two current weightrooms
are a joke,'' he said. '1'eam sports
dominate thegym,. so the new
Please see
McCann,
page 8 ...
. ,P;t.·~·
.JO-.
0
.
~
·-;:::.
We asked 502 freshmen:
Has
Marist met your
expectations so far?
Yes- 390 · No- 60
NotSure-52
The
Circle conducted an unscien-
tific poll on Sept. 9-15. Five hun-
dred two freshmen were asked this
week's question .
See related story, page 4.
\
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ByGWENACKERMAN
..
.
Associated-Press._:ltYriier
:
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.
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JERUSALEM (AP)
:
-'syria
.
has
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moved troops
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toward Israeli-
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controlled tenitory, i,n
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what
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•
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nister l,3enjaniiD'Netanyahu
.
·
.
,
,
,
said today
is
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attemP-t to
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sur~
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Israel into resu~ing peace
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Joel Tyi:ter;
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.
the
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day that
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J!tl:l~e?
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·
state Sen
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orga-
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.
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th,rhe
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·
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hoping
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:
bring
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thepeopleofthe
.
·
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HudsonValleycloser,
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Hudson
.
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.
afford it,
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.
'Nancy
Cozea~; a carididaie
·
·
He
•
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state s<::hools are los-
. .
Ruggeno said, that
to prate.ct
·
N!!~yahu SP9k~s!Ila~pa~1d
·
·
fortheNewY,orkStateAssem:.
inginbr~rnoneybecausepeople
·
the Hudson ,Y~II~y, y.oung
Bill" m
_
an confii;mcii)?da)'.
.
tJ;i~t
.:
bly, said it
•
is tip to
'
Americans
in the S~n
·
ate now use the money
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people
.
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to ~et
.myqlyed
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;
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.
.
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. . .. ·
.
·
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.
·
factory; bulltw~ P~1?1-nly not
to work," she said.
.
ch~pe
f
~or conumiIJity coHeges
A.J:
the
.
r~lly, Rl!ggen.(} s,1d
;
th~ Jtjn~ of ~eat 1mphed by the
.
C~~ea,n also said th~t
,
the
ins
,
tead
·
gf
'
cutting money from
that 1t was t1me
_
f.orJi~nerat1pn
n~wspa
.
IJer
.
.
•
unions
.
need
.
to get more in-
the~~•
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.
and get 1n
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Bosnians cast
votef
t
f
or
three~member p:residericy
.
~
-·
.
.
.
.
-:
;
..
-
Cr~i~
·
~t1ite
.'
he
~dcled.
estimaied overall
·
turnout ~t
60
·
.
.
• Elettioi(offidali announced
..
percent
io
70
percenLJhey called
.
the
·
firSt results from two of the
that a resp~ctable figure. espe-
SARAJEVO, B,0snia-
109
v
'
oting district~, both in
ciallyinacountrywherewarthat
·
Herzegovina (AP)
-c
Far fewer
.
Saraj~x9
;
'
~d
n.otiikely to be
rep:.
·
ended only
_
months ago
h'ad
left
By
SllECKO
LATAL
•'
.
"
.
' .
;
Associated Press
•
Writer
Muslims cast ballots in Serb-held resent.alive of the overall vote.
:
at least 250,000 ~ople
dead.
.
·
·
lands in the Bosniari
·
elections
In
those two
.
districts, Bosnian
:
A
.
s
organi#'i-s
talliaj
votes in
.
.
than previously
..
thought, U.N.'
·
President Alija Izetbegovic, the
B0s11ia's
.
peaceful if imperfect
officials said M~nciay, adding to
.
favorit~,
..
~dn 76 percent of the
elec
.
tions two of the region's
fears that Bosnia's ethnic divide vo~_fo(~e
.
Musli01 member of
·
·
main
·
power
·
brokers agreed to
. was irreversible.
the
.
thre.e-man presidency.
hold their first summit.
U.N.
spokesman Alexander
·
Fonrter"'Pnme Minister Haris
·
lzetbegovic and former
Ivanko said only 13,500 Muslims Silajdzic won about 20 percent.
archri val Serbian President
The Weekend
,
. .
,
.
'.
Weather
.
...
,
Today:
.
,
.
.
.
·
.
~indy with mixed sunshine
and clouds .
.
.
l:Iigh
·
mid 60's
to
65.
Lows
35
to
45 .
.
Friday:
.
.,.
Mostl/stinriy.
Highs il1
upper
60's
Saturday:
A mix of sun
and clouds. High
70.
&rii~
ff
~s
;·
;
voted Saturday in or near villages
The voting also was to choose
Slobodan Milosevic are to meet
they had been driven from dur-
a federal legislature and leaders
in Paris in three weeks, an indi-
ing the 3
.
in-year war. No more and
legislators
for the Muslim-
cator of how
far
the once-enemy
than 1,200 Serbs went into terri-
Croat and Serb halves of Bosnia.
leaders have come since the 1995
tory controlled by Muslims and International election officials
Dayton peace accord
.
·
Sunday:Mostly cloudy
with
a chance of a shower. High
in the
60's.
:
i~,r~
!l
\
i
iJ~
,
i
~
Source: Associated Press
Frie~ds and family remember
C
:
d¢~~~~~ti
:·.st~dent-,afjnemoria1 .. :
~11~~;:_:,~c,
tree.
planting
. · .
.
. , by Stephani~
_Mercurio··
·
~earting, _sci Ralph· Short he.lt,ed .
, . s:.News Editor
u_s find it,'' said Langevin". ·"We·
:·
:
stiia;K~;
-
111(>Uflled
the lossof ·e1a~~eg~!bi:en:U~:h.~could
.
a member.of the Marist commu-
· ·• Langevin said there was sym-
nity onSepk4.
. .· .
· ~lism: in the type of tree. they
: Di~aMorgan,amemberofthe picked.·
Sigma Sigma Sigma sorority.and
"In the spring, it will bloom
a
freshman at Marist, died May
purple flowers, which is our so-
7,}996
from,
meningococcal men-
rority color," said ~angevin.
.
ingi_~s_i· Morgan's sorority sisters
. µtngevin said the site for the
· held a memorial • mass and tree
tree· is perfect.
·
dedicatiC>~for.her:
.
"Everyone hangs out between
.
Mq~gan's sorority sisters, as
Lowell Thomas and Dyson, so
well as)er mother, read poems
everyone · can watch.· the 'tree
and sang songs a( the
tree
dedi-
grow," said Langevin. "Everyone
c~tion between-the Lowell Tho-
can look at the
tree
and remem-
mas
and
Dyson bujldings. Father
ber Diana."
.
Lµke gave the memorial mass in
Don~a. Nastasi, a jutiior.:.and
the5hapel o~ c~~pus:
.
.
member of Sigma Sigma Sigma,
Dawn·Langevin, a senior and. said that Morgan will always be
.
J?lember ofSigmiSigma Sigma,
remembered.
·
· ·
· said the sorority dealt with Ralph
"Diana ·was a wonderful per-
THE CIRCLE,
September -19, 1996
Short. and the physical plant to
son," said Nastasi.. "We will all
find their tree. .
,
._ .
remember Iler
and
keep her in our
"We wanted a tree that held
hearts:",
·
·
·
:
· ·
:
.
.
Photo cour1esy-or Tim Massie
The sisters from Sigma Sigma Sigma gather around a tree planted in memory of Diana Morgan,
.·; ~- ·:
.
,
a freshman who died of m,eningi!is lastspring.
.
·
Marist gradoat~.rec.eives'presUgious ability fitst award
as m<>stpeopl~.would think.
18 atthe Grartd Hyatt New York "their organization,'{said Targos.
by Tim Manson
Staff Writer
Targos' was' ihtroduced to
H,dtel at a $2_()() a plate luncheon.. ''This. award really' lets me know
J.O.B. throughJhe Sp~ial Ser-
.
Others receiving the award will .that I have educated people
A
1995
Marist College gradu- · vices office at-Marist. They.set .. be}ea.11Dri.scoll, the top rankeg
·
abo~t disabi,lities in· the way 'I
ate, RobertTargo's, has been cho-
ui{intet_VJewsforJn,r1(~ith s~ch .. '-:Vh~i<:hairracera11d sev_en time
should,. and it gives me confi-
seri
by Juiit'bne Break' (J.O.B.),
a
corripahie§. ·. as"_: N:B Cf: F.OX, · . _l3osfoif Marathon. wiriner, · and , dence to educate more people in
nori-profit employment service
McGraw-Hilliand Nickelodeon. }oseph E. Spinnato, the Pr~si:.
the future."
.
.
for people with disabilities, to .
In Augµst
1995, .
Targos took..~ ... d~ntof the !1<>tel Association of .,. ··But even as the bewilderment
receive an'award known as the ;job afJ'.lli~kelodeon o!i. ~•.(ree:. - Ne;w York <:::ity, Irie.· Previous
ofs~ccess overcomes him,
Ability First Awards.
lance basis as ~n Online Com~ . winners indude 'Chris Burke,' . '.fargos stillrefersto Maristas the
He h~'also·~n working end- :·,munic1:1,t9r.'.On Aug1:1.s~J;J?~§.; .:·:~9stJmown:for .. ~i,i;,roli~£9rky : t?esttime in his
life
anc,t.the rea-
_ lessly to'promote·disability edu- : heV!asgiyenaf~ll:-t.~fn:~po~i!io~_:/:~f1
1YAh~.6.!!<;:; ...
~.i~0
.;_~~-,;;~?'.
,
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1.,"•··•·.
,.
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)</ .....
son he is where he is.
. "Without Marist and without
the people at Marist, I wouldn't
have been able to achieve this,"
said Targos. "My life wouldn't
have turned out the way it did if
it wasn't for Marist. I'm very
proud to be a Marist College
graduate."
-·~-· ·,ti:-,.
i,:, .. -;.,,
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:
•However ~!far!!OS''lS
not the .
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.
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aria
facu.lt"y'.ali~e. ;onlyManst stude_ntto worK Wltn
Goes v.n.
.
.
:1:, ,:::•
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:
s,11.i:E ,' .
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CC•'.<"'••·
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.:;·,~~ ' ' . : -·
that
peopiiiare'p~pfo whhth~r
;J.O.B:.
1ccording to Desmo~q . . ~~thO~~h
·- . . ·
, ·
,".
·
·
disabled· or not;
·
'·' · -·
..
Murray;
assistant,director <>fficld .. e .v.~:r,y;n n'e
• '· · .:
·
··"Robert was more interested;i'n ; experience, .¥arist has deyel-
who kn()WS
:a~~~~ng -~~!JleOnetomee~ the per- ' o~e~. a V<!r)'.' good r~fatiop~h'.ip . Targos ili,inkt
"son; ndf'the disability," said . w1thJ:O:R In-fact, m the sulll-
he_,deserves
James Ryan, program coordina- · mer of 1995, three out.of the
this -award
tor ·and. counselor .. Ryan knew
?in~
studen~ thatl;~-B. placed
.
. more . , than.
and worked with Targos all of
m
mternsh1p positions were a n y o n e ,
his fouiYears at Marist.
"If
a dis- ' M~sf;students_. .
l!i
tlu~ SUIIlllll!r . Targos him-
: . a9ility 'w:as one· one-hundredth
of 1996, f?~r out of twelve were
se]!seeins sur-
~f
a
pers.6-1f
s
makeup, _Robertfelt
fro~ Manst::' ~II. these st~dents -pnsed and
. · it should be treated as such."
·
·
got mtemsh1ps with f.:o_rtune
500
o
..
:y.
e r -
'.:.,,= ·
Tiµ-gos
worked on _
qisability
companies. indudi11g
_
:Merrill=:, ·, ·.-"{fl5';J~ed,
. educath:ii{'with ·students at Lynch,Coopers & Lyt>rand, and ,• .. ,.
:
: I was
. Marist;
biit'if
wasn't the average
Cushman'& Wakefield~
. :-
blo:wn away
shuatio'n ;\vhere. one person
··r
thi?k that _says something
that
th'ey
·
. ~toad ·ir?"f"ront' of'the room and
for Mar1st,": said Murr~~-
"It
thought . my .
···talked.-- Instead/Tai-gos orga- ·. givef go~ n~e _rec9~1tton to
accomphsh-
, ni~d .. things'lik,e;Jeopardy and
Manst; and:atthe-same.!Jme h:!5
men ts : and
· Family Fe1:1d to'show that talk- · added to the _success of_J._O.B.
w~at
l was
fog. ab~_µt'disabjlities didn't
. Robert wdLbe rece1vmg the
?Oing
was
have to be
as
serious and sullen
award onWednesday, September
important to
JOIN!!!
"Making Strides Against Breast Cancer"
3 mile walk at Woodbury Commons Shopping Outlet
to suppon brt,aSt canc~r research ·
October 20, 1996
We're looking for people to become
part
of the Marist team walking to help suppon breast
cancer research. Jfyou are interested in walking or would like to sponsor !he walkers please
contact Joan Nies at the MIPO office or Rose at the American Cancer Soctety-452-2635.
There will be free coupons given to members of the team, so more walkers mean more
shopping!!!
.
.
All donations to the team are greatly appreciated.
.
.
Help Take A Step Forward For Cancer Research
FOR INH)RMATICN ABOUi
,:.:..r,;::;£r.
I
-
.
I
.
.
\.,.
-·
i
·y•
our.
rolk;,-no•
olf= ••
..J;J,...;.,.
~ ~
assortment of
literature
and
cultural
critici,,,n ·
of
the
Hispanic heritage. Join us in
this .
month-long celebration of the
history
and
cul~ · ·
of the Spanish speaking
peoples
of the Americas ..
MARIST
COLLEGE
BOOKSTORE
BTW .... While you' re here, ask us ...
"What's up with the fox?"
I
.
.
;
.
'11996 NACSOORP
J
J
~""a1:1ri.~.::Wh.lte\le·cttire
:
tnakt~s )AIDS
:
re
'
al
·
'.r or·•--.Marisl
;
__
sttid'~hts -.
.
·-
? _ •••
,.y-'.: .
.
: .. :.:,··::/--
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.
. ;
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·,. ·· ..
< . . _
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):;:,.\Y
:1.r . · .:/- ._ : · ": ·\)•'\
?''.· \:_
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:
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by
FMILYKUCIIARCZ\'K .. : ·•
/ri?,~-~·co~~inatedc:l~t~n,g'rac::. : . •
-
A~
'
a p~nt,. \Vbite
_
off~red her . k!dS/
~e.~~
~boµ~_thif
~as.:
•.
Staff
Wriier : ., , ':
·..
tor. :~hat; h~ too~: f(?r ~1s, hem9~
_own ~dyu;e .. :, •' _ ... · .
> : ·. .
.
_
sr,•~ th•-~~ c~l.ed
:AW~?.
and_,~~o/
. •
.
. ._ _
· ·
ph1ba.
·
He:was·onlyg1ven three: .
. ''Lo_ve yourself, hav~ sexwhen ·
W(?
Just wa,nted t<? ~oll~w
_
up gn 1t
:
·
:
'.
, '
, . - '
- t9
six months toHve, but instead . -
you want
_fo,
not because s9me- . and
be
li~e. 'you guys are·~tillliv-
Mariststudents were
·
faced - livecffor five ·and
i
half ye_ars: :
one else·wants you to. Don't let
ing with :this: This ·stiH_ hap-
with the re~lity ~fAIDS, as -
White talked about all the pain
people pu_tpress_ure ori you
}O
pen'S:'"
: '. .. __
.
_ ( _/·
:
<
Jeanne Wh1te-Gmder. tal_ked
she felt because of the way
.posomethmgyou'renotsoqu1te -
Many,st~de~ts ~~ye
_
k_~?-':Vn,
about her son's ordeal with the
people treated her son. _Three of
su~e you w~t t<:> do," she said .. _ someone ~1th t~e -~1seas.~;)n-
~isease. _Hundreds of; students
Ryan'stl!achersc:arm~to_visithhn
_Her message ~as-simple; be - chiding:freshman
~rip
Pender,
hstene.~ '.1n stunned stlencc:(Lls, . when he was sick/ blJ.~upon dis;:,,,_.
carefuL , . . ... · _
·
_
:.> : .
.
··-who ·J9st . two _fr1en,.cis_ ai!d~ a _
White'told the s,tory of her.son,
covering hehad
Ams;:
decided'.·'.-' . -
. -
Students; including CHfden >~ousifr_to AIDS: '. She .. said,she .
Ryan:
.
_ ,_,' · .· _ .·
· .. ··
thai it was a good dme tp_leave'. :-: ,
Kennedy, took White's message ·nopes '.for 111_or.e involvem~~tdn
"My life changed o:v~rn:ight
·
?Ryan was forcedCto.'ftg~t. in ·
1. ;_
·
to heart.
·
.·
.':
_
fight!ng the dise~I!, s,aying that
because
<>f
this <Jisease. _lhad_-to
-f¢
0
oµrt i~ ord~r- to ,attend. s~h_ooi. _ _
:"She had
a
very powerful mes-
-the maj<J.rio/ of peopfo
_
might for-
deal wiih something: I .wouldn't
He:,'was harassed by towns;.;/ _· ·•
. sage. ~he's, making a difference . -get about it unless re11Unded.
ever want to deal wi_th," .Wllite · ,,people, and pari~hioriers.
irt
the .. ·-
everyday in the lives of others,"
"There are tho~~ w,ho take it ·
said.
>:
<- ,
>
,
.,., ..
j;< ,
lo£al,- churc
_
h·v;ould,
nof
even,_ '.
Kerinedy said.
.
..
·
to heart ~ortherestoftheirlives,'
Since.her.son's death in, 1990;" :shake hands with him·oi{Eastet· -
He
·said he hopes
fo
see more
but we just need more'people to_.
'Yhite said it h~ been her mis-. ·_ Sunday.
. · : ·, _
,
·
, . -·.
_
~.. , :·
prograins like .mis on~:
_
_ .
.
do
that.;' Pen.de(saicl.> :· · :; _ ,
__
s10n to speak to people, .both · · B_ecause ?f the harassment; the ·
· Student Progr~mming C~uncH
_ Wh1testressed. thanhought _- . ·
young and old, aboutp.~QS. _
She . V{hites nio.Y,ed. t~ a_riothef'to~n.' .. .-: :
>
_
.. _ _
.
_. • .
President Sean \\'hite hopes
t9
as well, ~elliilg students to get in-
·
said she is not
a
professiqnal
.
Ryan said _he wanted.lo die in
°if .
•choice now
_
,whether ypu get
~ave more
-
{\.ID,S-related _· pro-
·volved before it ~s
too
fate::·
speaker, but.is a lovingrilother:'
.
'':~appierplac~; ,
·
.
.
.
_·- .
AIDS. People didn't used to grams as.well becau~ehesaidhe
~•Is
it g<>.ing to h~ve_totouch
who lost her son. Shejust
White blames the negative re-. / liave choices,,,she
·
said. .
_ · .fe_els·it is· a v~ry,importailt issue
you personally before yoti get
wa~.ted to make a difference in ,, action< to a lack of understand- ' - White:stressed the importance
for students to .corifnjnt. : ·.
involved with AIDS?, "she said.
the, fight against AIDS.
ing of the disease. People did
·
of parents talking with theirchil-
.SPC PubHcity. Officei: Tracy · .
She _said one _ofthe lTlostim-
. Ryan White was diagnosed
not know much about AIDS at
.
dren about AIDS. She said par-
Paurowski sajd one
.of
the rea- . portarit things young ve,ople'can
with AIDS in
1984
at age
I 3.
that time and did not want
to:
ents
are
afraid to talk about AIDS
sons for having White come to
do is to get involved in fighting
"When he got sick,
l
reallyfolt
"I
am
just a mom trying to get ,with i~eir children, but they µiµst
Marisranct,
iec!~
w:.is theyknew .AIDS and the prejudices that
that the world had come to an
you young people to wake up.
because
71
percent of people·- it would besm:nethingthatwould _surround the disease.· ·
end," she said.
about this disease,
to
make this
who liave AIDS are between the
touch everybody's.he~.
__ I~,xan_~~~!!"'.1~.t~-
,!~:
disease
dis:_~~-r:~_l:~nd that you have a
ages of20 and
40.
"Right around when we were
Freshmen adjust
to
a
new lifestyle at Marist
~
ACCOtJNTING OPEN
HO:-CJSE
.
'
byCHARLOITEPARfRIDGE
Staff
Writer
-The Cente:r for Career.
Services
Willbe spOI)SOring
. "ln:tlt.iSl>Uildl~g, $tud~nts.-
.
.
tl.i~
annu~l.-i~~co~p.ting QpenJlolise . .
:
..
-
-. . . ·-
-.,; _._.: ·'.•,:,-.-::•:,,.,,
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~a'\'.~il>~~~,~~r-y~pi:qa,c;tiy~~,:-;
1.(; •;
.
,
,.. ...
·
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·
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.,
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,
.
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ind:~~;r;:b~a-~~;~t~i=
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~~~~~
~::~:i-:e~/;;,;g:~:====-
,.
·w11~iir
Thurs"clay;··sfptefubeli9
:
;~
:
ii>96-
people everywhere to distract
mty an_d get to know· each
Time_.
·6·0_
o,
_
·p·
.
m·
·
·
you, using e-mail for the first
time,
other."
.
•
· -.
. ·
·
tons
-
ofreadingevery
.
nightand:
·
·
· ·
, ·
· - '
•
.
·
·
L
·1• · ·
L
11 Th.
1 ·
25
swipingyc:mrI.D:fogetiritothe
~-MaryBethDohrinwend, ·_
oca ion:.
owe . ' omas .... ;
place you calihome arejust some
:
Sheahan Hall
ine~tor. .
.
.
things· every Marist• freshman
go.es·. through.
_
-
.
_
thatthe social life at M_ar:ist makes
.. Now itisthe dass·of-2000's
weekends more enjoyable::•
turn
tti
begin adjusting"to a new
Katie Tower, also .a
Leo
resi-
life
atMarist
den(saidshe appreciates all the
Freshman Cassandra Giarusso
people· on ht!r.floor. · ._ -·
.
~aid .she really likes the attno~'
•~
lgot
here
a
couple
·
of_da:ys
sphere ·
at
Marist and the atti-
early for band, and therewas·Jike
tudes of the students and fac-
one other person on the floor. I
ulty;; _
was lonely, but nowl'in having
a
O'
:M:_arist has
ll
really nice cam-
great time," Tower said. •
ptis and the people here are
Some freshmen said they fom1d
friendly," Giarrusso said.
some things about being a fresh.:
· · Craig Adelhardote said he en-
man more difficult than others.
joys the people on · his -floor· in
Katie Kasper said adjusting to
Sheahan:
the course work was. the· most
"Everyone gets along. There
difficult aspect of settling in. .
is a real sense of community,'' he
"I'm still getting used to all the
said.
·
reading
I
have to do, but other
--
_
Sheahan Mentor Mary Beth
.
than th~t, it is all pretty great,"._ -
Dohrenwend said she under-
Kasper
said. ·
stands the freshmen's first im- ·
Leo
Resid,entAssistant Kelly
pressions ofMarist because, like
M. Quinn said -she sympatheti-
them, this
is
also her first year,
cally tries to help her residents
She said she agrees
thefreshman
adjust to Marist because she re-
have
bonded,
especiaUy in· her .. members herfreshman
year
building, and she said that
clearly. It
was
only
a year ago. ·
Sheahan
has
as
whole become a
"Many
of my_ residents are
respectful community in itself.
very overwhelmed
·
with the
"In
this building, students have
workload because it is a lot more
been. very proactive. They are
than .what they had their senior
taking _the
initiative to develop a year of high school. Some are
community and get to know each
homesick, but
I
tell them to take
other," Dohrenwend said.
the first
two weeks
·to get settled
Leslie Damato
said she agrees
and· if
they need·
to,
talk to the
that
living
in a donn really bonds . mentor," Quinn said.
. ·
the students together.
Matt McKendry is one
fresh~
"I know almost everyone in
man who .said he adjusted
Sheahan, and we have really qtii~kly to the new lifestyle at'
bonded," she said.
Marist.
.
Leo
residents also praised the
"Beingafreshmanisn'tashard. '.
camaraderie they share. Room--
as I
thought . Marist is exactly
mates Mike Nazaltowitz and
how I expected
it,"
McKendry. · ·
Harry
Iavorne said they agree
; f.anelist~ from thefoU9wingorgaipzations willberep~
·
__
·
_
resented at the
.
Open House::
Ernest& Young;Intelnal .
Reyenue Service; .Sedore, O'Sullivan, Letterio
&
Barschi; Texaco; and H&"J?. Block.
·
-
- -
.· .. q11~of the·pi;ysenters
_
··is.Arthur~Brown,a1995. Marist··•
·
·
College Alumni who,,receivedthehigfiest.score,onthe _
-
Certified Public. Accountant exam,in
·
New· ·York·:•State ·
in:J
995.
Also', Brown served_as an intern in the
Ac-'
coµ11ting Department of-IBM when he
.
was ·an. Adult
Education student at Marist. .
.
.
The
_
Open House is geare(! for accounting.and firi~nce •
maJ9r_s who are interestecl in a career in accounting.
F9r
.more information,_contact Desmond Murray, assis-
tant director of field experience, at 575-3543
-SPRING
BREAK
97'
•..
,
-•
Largest selection of Ski~ Spring Break Destinations, including Cruises!
·
Travel free, earn Cash, & Year Round Discounts.
Epicurean Tours
1-800-231-4-FUN
THE
.
CIRCLE,
.
September·
i
9~
·
~
1996
Brother
!~ank
l(elly brhtgs ~ew outIOOkto campus MiriiStr;:
,
Divisi o
D
St.
pf
~Piif
es
by l\jICHELLEGRIFFI.S
.
.
C
Kelln~as also the vocation di-
/
..
He
said that he
.
w'ants students .
.
.
.
.
' ,
.
;
.
.
•
.:
1
SiaffWfit~r
. '·
: .
rector for the Brothers.
.
'to know'tha:t'Carnpus Ministry is
to rock Marist
.;,',·-~.:.
.
.
:
<<
.
.
.
He worked with college age stu-
non-denominational; and that
''
'
·•
··< .
..
~.,,
~;
L_:
.
_
.. '
:,
'
.,:
_
,
·
,
.
,,
.
_
:
,
·.
,·
r~~I~~~
~!~h\-elat~~msiµps,
·
dents to ~elp'_therit dis~ei:n if God
they want to be there for every
T
T
_
p-and-
.
c
·
o
·
m
'·
i•n
'
g
po1n ...
.
o
·
c
·
.
k
ban
·
d
~
.
_
.
roommate conflicts the stress of was calling them to rehg1ous
life,
faith, to h~lp)n every way they
l.J,
r , ,
.
'
S!Ud):'JOg (or a
'
to~gh exam, these;
:
'mariied
-
li
_
fe, o_r single
life, '
can.
.
.
are issues that can make any
.
col-
.
At Manst htgh schools in Chi-
.
"While here
·
as students be at-
will per/
orm in Cabaret
.
lege studenLfeel trapped
·
and
.
cago, and Lawrence, Massachu-
temive to the core
<l
who you
·
alone .
.
.
They riced someone to setts, Kelly worked
·
with high
are, as a spiritual person, work
turn to'.:At Marist College, that
·
~chool seniors_. He dealt with the
on developing your spirit as well
.
someoqe is Brother Frank Kelly.
ts~ue ?f se~kt?g good relation-
as your
.mind
and body," Kelly
•
Kelly is the new directocof ships m their hves.
said.
·
Campus Ministry, and is a gradu-
. While at Marist, Kelly would
Though not many people know
ate of Marist, class of
'73.
He re-
li~e
to make students more con-
Kelly well yet, there
are
a
few who
ceived a
RA
jn history.
scmus _o~ ~~pus ~inistry and
have had the
.
chance to meet him .
. ·
••~ feeUike I am coming home,
th:
a~t1~1t1es 1t prov1d~s.
One such person is Deborah
to a place that is close to my
I m~1!e people to give Ca~-
DiCaprio, assistant dean of stu-
heart," Kelly said.
pus M1?1stry a
shot,
to get
m-
dent affairs.
·
He s~d that
as
a student he met
volved 1~ one of the activities,"
·she
knew him by his reputation,
arid
.
came t~ know the Brothers.
Kelly said.
and his Marist volunteer pro-
DI
N
In
1981;
he took his final vows
He would also like to expand
gram. She also knew of his expc-
and became a Marist Brother.
the retreat program, and get more
rience with talking to young
=-•t•
when Kelly was in college,
students involved. He w~uld like
people.
d11ring the late sixties, early sev-
to expand the commumty out-
"I knew that being director of
enties, he said that it was a time
reach program as well
.
.
that kind of program m
·
ade him
s
t
in \,1/hich the culture emphasized
comfortable outreaching to stu-
doing f1Jr_others.
Kelly said that he considers
dents," DiCaprio said
:
"I
made the choice to live my
himself
a
person who under-
DiCaprio added tha(with his
Jifo fo.r
,
Goci, to Jive life in the ser-
stands young adults, male and
·
prior Campus Ministry
·
experi-
. vice
·
of pther people, and
I
love
female, and is open to their opin-
·
ence, and his close ties to this
•
·t
"K 11
·
·ct
ions and ideas.
·
He is interested
institution, it was easy to see that
1,
.
e ysa1 .
·
Kelly has worked
·
for the past
in getting to know people.
·
·
Kelly would be a good choice for
eight years with college and high
He has started Campus Minis-
the position.
·
school age students. And he has
try outreach in the cafeteria.
"He was just the kind of per-
worked \\'ith Marist for the past
Monday·is cafeteria day, which
son we need," DiCaprio said.
by
Jacque
Simpson
that there was no real mystery as
five years-:
meansthatCampusMinistrywill
Besides DiCaprio, there is an-
Feature Editor
to how the band chose their
"I created and directed a post
be
available to students for any
other person who already knows
name. 'There's a Division Street
11
.
1
·
t
.
.
.
,,
infonnation.
Kelly well. That person is Brother
in almost every town, and we
co ege
_y
o un
ee_r
year program,
.
''It.
is
·
a key w
_
ay of meet1·og
M
_
icha
_
el Williams, assistant direc-
Kelly said
.
The
program
invites
.
There's no real mystery to what
liked the way it
sounded."
But,
collegeseniors togiveayearof peopleinarelaxedatmosphere,"
torofCampusMinistry.
happens when you place four
that
shouldn't
lead
'
their listen-
service to the needy and ne-
Kelly added.
·
Williams has known Kelly for
·
musically inclined individuals
ers to believe that there's any
1
1
d
·
-
1
hr
h
h
Kelly said that he hopes to fig-
quite sometime, but this is the
together. They're going to make
division in this group. They're a
g ec
e
pnman
Y
t oug
teac -
·
·
'
t
·
·
t
ct
·
1
·
·
d
fi1rst
·
t·1me they
·
have ever
·
worked
ing and social work.
'
.
ure
'
OU
,ways·
O eve op
·.
an
some noise. A once small band
very tight knit group of vary dif-
"I ,
b
"
I
draw in North End resi~ents to
together.
.·· . .
.
•
,
out of Boston, Division Street
fcrent people. But, each of their
ts een a very success,u
Campus Ministry .
. ·.
''He
is
packed
with energy, and
is beginning to soar; and they're
differences mesh together to
program," Kelly said.
·
he
_
jump~ into
on the
:
rise t
_
o s~ardom.
.
.
•
•
.
.
.
giv~
.
a
vet"Y
reminiscent sou~d
.
, . . . . ; . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - , - . - ,
·
.
Jf:ung~
._..
WJ,!hgut
.
/.-
Division :Street's masic:
_
caii be
_
'
All
of;lhc
songs which are found
hesitation to
,
describe
.
in
(WO
old
fash
.
ioned
.
.
on
..
Standing
on Ceremon'y,
are
Oswego
Abroad!
S
tudying in another country has nc~c~ been easier. SUN'i'. Oswego offers pro-
·
grams in a wide range of countries, in Just about cv~ry maJor. There arc also a
.
number
.
of internships available at a host of sites
m England
.
The best
.
.
.
·
pan
about
stt1dying abroad is that in many cases, the semester costs arc the
.
.
.
same as a semester in
.
Oswego.
Why study
abroad?
.
..
T··
o
gain valuable language
_
skills, learn abou~
.
the world, get
.
a hcad-sta_rt on
~
·
··
career, or just check out the
.
scene in world city; wh
_
~tever:
your reasons, Just go.
'suNY
Oswego offers ~ernester and/or ac~
,
d~mic year p~ograms in:
,
,
_
'
Australia
England
China
France·
•
··
•
.
·
Germany
.
.
Hungary
.
Italy
'
Japan
.
.
New Zealand
.•
PuenoRico
·
.
Spain
-
,
And summer or winter session pr9grams
in:
'. England/Scocland/Wales
France
.; Ireland
' Italy
Mexico
Pueno Rico
SpaJr1
for more information, visit the
Office
of International Edur.ation. or
fill
out and
return
the
form
_
below.
.
__ -----------------------------------------------
-------------
-
---------------------
•·
Program(s) of interest:
Term _;__Semester _ _ _
Academic Year. - - - Summer/Wintersession
Name: _ _:_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
, , _ . - - - - - - - - - - -
Address:
P h o n e : - - - - - - - - - -
Year. _ __;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
Return form to:
Officeo f International Education
102 Rich Hall
Oswego,
NY 13126
intled@oswego.edu
housing
'
96
achie_ve what
words Rock
'n' Roll, but the
originals, wrillcn
by two members
he sees as
band'smusicisfarfromoldfash-
of the band, Jeffrey Scott
goals of the
ioned.
In
their debut CD, Stand-
Bluestein, and Isaac Hasson.
program," Wil-
ingon Ceremony, Division Street
They've opened for Bruce
Iiams added.
have mixed the sounds of pop,
Hornsby and the Range, and an-
Kelly is origi-
with that of funky rock and roll.
other Boston native, Letters for
nally
·
from
They are by no means altema-
Cleo. Division Street has also
Scranton, PA.
tive, and they do not want to be
been critically acclaimed by the
He received a
labeled
as
such.
Boston Phoenix, calling their
Masters de-
According to the Band's man-
songs "radio
-ready.'
gree in Pastoral
ager David Oriol a
,
"Division
Division Street has a tight
Ministry with a
Street is about straight forward
rhythm section, with a funky
concentration
Rock
N'
Roll. We're definitely
bassist, lead by guitarist Isaac
in
Campus
not about the alternative
Hasson
.
Ministry from
sound."
The group has been together
Loyola Univer-
The band chose to tour the col-
both
as
musicians, and friends
,
sity in <::;,hicago,
lege circuit because they love the
and uniquely through their grow
-
and a Masters
way college kids react, they're
ing they have managed to remain
degree
'
in Spiri-
full ofenergy
.
They're also just
friends, each being the driving
tuiility from
learning the ropes and they don't
force of the other.
They take
The
:.
Catholic
want to miss any of the growing
each of their music seriously, but
The
;
ological
steps that a band has to go
·
at the same time they love mak-
Union in Chi-
through before reaching the top.
ing music.
cago.
-
.
"
·
We
.
want to experience the
According to bass guitarist,
Kelly is meet-
growing pains, and go through
Thom Scheller,
'The
bottom line
ing so many
the blood and guts of a tour."
is we want to do this for a very
new
<
:
.
people.
Division Street has been mak-
longtime.
Bi.it he
'
said he
ing music together for four years.
And, it would be foolish of us
does not mind
Prior to the release of Standing
not to take it seriously, in every
at all.
·
on Ceremony, the band of four
detail,
to make it happen."
.
"I'm loving
released a six song cassette,
Division Street will be visiting
every minute
which did well locally. They were
at least
20
colleges this fall.
of being here."
able to begin to build a some fol-
They'
II
be stopping at Mari st
Kelly said.
lowers around the Boston area,
Friday, September 20. The show
Organize
a small
Group
&
Traver Free
.
*Cancun *6ahamas
*Jamaica *South Padre
*Pamtma City Beach *Daytona
can
for Free Info Packet I
1-800~426-7710
www.sunsofashtours.com
and
that's
is at 8:30 in the Cabaret. Please
when they de-
come out and support Division
cided to record
Street, who will
be
selling copies
their first CD.
of Standing on Ceremony, after
Oriola said
the show
I
.
6
. Stephanie
M~rcurio~
New;Editor
Amie Lemire.
A&E Ediror•
Jac·que
Sitilpson,
Feature Editor
· Christian Bladt,
Opinion Editor
Jason Duffy.
Business ·Manager · .
G. Modele Clarke,
Faculty Advisor
The Circle is published every Thursday. Any mail may be addressed to The
Circle. Maris! College, 290 North Road. Poughkeepsie, NY 12601.
Editorials
I'
Silence·
ts
also
speech"
~African. proverb
Letters to the Editor
Volunteering is ]ts own reward
F.clitor:
When I returned to school this year, I heard what seemed to be an overwhelming
. On the morning of.September
9,
!was posting flyers for my tattooshop around
number of students talking about volunteer jobs they had over the summer.
campus,_ After: posting the last one, I heard somebody tear the flyer from the wall. I
I really give these students credit for taking the time out of their schedules to unself- confronted the faculty member about why he removed
my
flyer. He.infonned me that
ishly help others. -
·
_
_
· _
__
flyers had to be approved before being posted. I told him that my flyer was ap-
It takes a very special type ·or person totake ·the time to dojobs that are often not proved, stamped, and only posted on th~ appropriate bulletin boards. Did he everi
very glamorous atbest, especially when the jobs are not providing the workers with look at the flyer before removing i_t? '.'No, I just assumed ... ,"was his response.
_
any money.
_
Now why would he assume that my flyer would not conform to therules?. Well, in
In many cases, these are not the people who will be making millions of dollars over all fairness, my hair is rather long and the numerous tattoos on my arms were visible
the course of their lives, but I think these students have discovered something more due to my Harley Davidson tank top. _
·
. .
·
·
·
valuable than money and material objects.
. After all, maybe this "type" of person couldn't possible have graduated from _
They have found happiness through compassion and satisfaction through service. Bentley Co Hege with a BS in economics/finance with honors and an Associates
I believe that in itself is more to be proud about than an accumulation of fortunes and degree in accounting \\:'ith high honors,.- He coul~ never have been aidnternational
possessions.
·
finance analyst for a Fortune I 00 company. He couldn't hav_e done gtaduate• work at
So many people, especially those who have never volunteered, simply do not under- Marist College. Could he??? Prejµdice rearsjts ugly head everywhere in our society.
stand the ·tremendous sense-of accomplishment that is so intimately conne_cted to Judging people by their religion, ethnic background, or the color of (or colors on)
helping others. ·
.
their skin is obviously narrow-minded. . - .
·
··
·
·
Fortunately,· I believe Marist is blessed with a student_ body that is gene~ally con:..
I realize the realtiy is ·that prejtidic1fwill ·nve on~ butshould it live in our instit~tion~
cerned with helping those in need.
_
-
of higher learning? Are they not the last bastions in our society where people can
In fac~ the number of students involved in community service organizations on and learn, experiment, and be free to explore an creative thqughts,
arts,
and lifestyles?
I
off campus was one of the main factors that influ~nced me in choosing to attend 'Nould like to invite any students or faculty members to visit my shop, obs_erve our
Marist in the first place.
·
·
sterilization procedures, our service, and the advice we give young people.consider-
Last year, two students questioned me about why I volunteer to serve the homeless, ing. a tattoo.
·
.
.
.
·
. - . - ·.
arguing that it is their own fault they have no money and they should just get a job a
I am a responsible person, father, youth ~occer sponsor, homeowner, regist~red
McDonald's.
-
-
v?ter, and lruna respectable busines_s., Please do notlet stereotypes lead you to
My answer to them is that · I don't really think I'm in any position to judge anyone. insulting someone you know notping about. · Investigate first; and let your judgment
else's mistakes.
_
_
be an inform<Xl one and not just an assumption.,
·
_
· .
·
In fact, I don't believe anyone who is imperfect has the right tojudge'ahother:
TomNorbortijNewViewTattoo
: .•..... ,
.
Wear~alth~m.tn,,andbecauseofthat,w~allmakemistakes.·
:,
;/ ;:_-~•- _: •
~~~?;.;-//,',;\;
-:~<
_-.,,::
. ".: _
·· .. ,
-
.. , ; . :,:.,,, .. -
.
J~-~
:
.
': This is some~ing'l think is an too ofteriforgotten' in our society, tjut
itfs)6mJtliiiig
_=.·._i_·.,·.·.
:.T
.
.
hi
- : __
s·.~;.
i_;_
;;_a.·~-.·
.Jct.
:_1._1.-.#..
i·~-,j~.:_f.·_·
1_.1y1b_11-_·_.J.~.;_4:"._'o'_'_i_' [.b.1_u;.-.-r;1i.1_",'e;;.w
·
_fr_.·1;.ls•hi .. ~-,r,s,~1·s
·
te
,
'rs",-.'an?_
.. l r:.d;
1
-_,-·.b,;ro1_11c.tli·.•1_··efrrs':n.{,. rt.;rhr
... ( ·o\ru,!goh·
?.'o''
iµ;·.t)l<th•.r
.
e•.,,.··_,
that
many
volunte:ers
realize. ,; .
_ ,. ·. ,·
_., _
-
.
. . ; .
11.,,·--;•. __ ·
•:•<
1
-'
_
They have respect for human life, not only certain individ~ai •s, liv"es. :_,
! '.-
: · ·-
·
·
· • ·
world;c=~ Saturday,: Sept.
.14; _
will begin the ooservance of Rosh Hashanah, a t\\'.o-day
•- . Once more people gain this- respect, we can begin to work out our ·problems: and holiday thatIQarks both the beginning of their new year (5757) and the beginning of
prejudices with one another. .
. .
·
.
, .· · .· : -
the
10
days of repentance; }'his
to
day period ends with the observance of.Yorn '
Until then, we'lljust have to rely on the service of a few goodvoltinteers .. :
Kippi.Ir, the day of atonement:
_ . .
, -
-
_ . ._
--
- .
Kristin
Richard, Editor-in-chief
·
Happy New. Year and. God's_ blessings upori you these holidays!
THE TRUE 'STUDENT. CENTER'
We
.
have a beautiful campus at ,Marist College in.an idyllic spot right nextto the
Hudson River. It has several buildings rich in tradition_ and history. Each has its own
story.
-
.
-
. ,
.·
· . .·
.
..
·
Y~t, this c_ampus is not
as
centralized
ash
could be. GartlaQd Commons isseparated
from _the McCann center by almost a mile. The freshmen, especially, are isolated at the
south end of campus, away from the "academic hub." People IQUSt go to one building
to check their mail, another to
take
care of financial aid business, anothertoattend
class, and another to sleep.. _
.
. .
.
·..
--
•. ·
.
.:..
.
- The layout of our campus, like many others, is symbolic of American society'. s trend -
toward speciaHzation. We have different classroom
-
buildings for different subjects
_and our residence halls. 'Becaµse we puteveryihing irito different compartments,:we
sometimes fail to see its interconnectedness. However, all parts of our educational·
experience ~t Marist are inter-relat¢. _ . .
.
·
-
- . _ -
.
If we were starting from scratch, and had unlimited space and resources,
the
physical
design of the ''perfect" campus would be something like this: . the "student center," or
its equiv;ilent, would be in_ the center of a giant circle . .All buildings would be equidis-
tant from all other buildings along the perimeter of the circle.
·
- .
·
The construction of the Student C~~ter and the rotunda
_
in
J994
gave our cainpus a
true heart. It became the focal point.
_
It was supposed to be a place where students
and faculty could interact. There needs to be more of this interaction between stu-
dents and teachers outside of the classroom. ·
·
· ·
Back in the early days of the college, the second floor of Donnelly housed students ..
Today, because of our fascination with specialization, we'.ve separated our dorms from
our classrooms-forcing our students to draw a line between-the two .. We take little
jaunts to and from our classes and to the library and the computer lab.
·
_
· Since the entire educational experience at Marist is inter-related, there is no reason
why we shouldn't sleep in the same place as we_ study. Such an arrangement might
foster a new kind of academic climate where a student might leave his room to go
downstairs to a classroom where he had a class the hour before to ask a teacher for
help with
ari
assignment or engage in a discussion. There
has
to be a continuous flow
. in the educational process and not a series of little jaunts in which one goes from point
A to point B to point C.
.
Since we cannot change the physical layout of our campus buildings, we should at
least adopt a "centralized" mentality. Faculty, staff and students alike should con-
verge at the "student center" to share ideas and knowledge and enrich each other's
understanding of the world.
Michael Goot,ManagingEditor
Campus
Ministry
·
Sofar, dormli-ving is not~If
itis cracked
upto be
I do not find that dorm living is
all
that it is cracked up to .be. The luxuries ~f on-
campus living, the ease of being a hop, skip and a jump from anything and ev¥rything'
on campus with all of the luxµries .of home. Except air conditioriing,:windo~s with
screeris
_
arid an occasional drop
of.
:soap and piece' of paper towel in
tlle
bathfoom:
When I firstvisited Marist, I was under the impressiofrthatthe bathrooms would be
cleaned ~very day. Unfortunately, since we have no(had soap or paper tqwels: hi
about a week, I was wrimg. _
.
_
. . . _ _
.-. _ .· _ •.· -._ _ __
<
·.·. _ . · .
Another annoy~ce is not somuch that there is no air conditioning, bur.the
fact
that
there are no·_ screens on. tve windo\Vs; .The campus, h~ some very
.
ifl!ere_sii11g · little'
creatures _flying through_the.air who love ~o fly i_n my window and eat me alive! •-
·
. Dorm living is ge!ting t<>
be
qui.te.difficult.ln
Jn}'
donn,.Qtere
¥~
only si~qvash~rs and
dryers to accontinodate the morti than 300 residents: That is orie
of
the biggest coin-i
plaints I have heard.
_
.
. .
..
_
.
.
-
One questionlhave heard is:How do roommates get chosen? , . _.
·Most freshman know that we had_to fill out that long, boring and iriv:olyed question-
naire and take
all
of those computability tests to see who fits the best withwhom. But
why'are the maJority of the freshmen complainingabout their roommates?: . .__ ···•'
I think, in the future, the incoming freshman's staff should take into consideration
some of the little things that would make our· $20,000 a
year
stay here a little more·
pleasant.
' ·
· ._
Janine Szai
is
one of The Circle's columnists on freshman
issues,
·ir~~;>
.. ···J~§~f~
,_.f
pp· -
'.jn•
campus\ ........ " ......
•Flllilf
kl~f
li~~,.~!~G~~·
-The Cirqle
tesefye~
tti~
~glii'
tg
e4it
let-; ,
·
ters
·
for
spacial
reaso~s
Qr
titliej-wise.
,
T
;.. . ,
.. : ' • , • ' .
•
'c
THE CmcLE ·
OPINION.-
S~ptember 19, 1996
7
Mod~r3.tel)'Hoptfful .
·
The
October Surprise
, . , ,
-~~-~j~~t~i~~,11~~f~~
~l
.
ecJio.n(•,. ~n.t~d pt1blic:,relatipns., specialists'
.. · Bob·:l)ole has statei that he
open in. case· scientific research
. ~av~ ~hallge.~J~e
Y15J.r
pr~sJdeJJ- · fiave il?w found,~.way to. ritake
does 11ot wan.t Refortjt Party Can-
ever does find milk to be as ad-
sues .
hal ,J1~IJef1:1!.s .. c_a~paign:)A)pe
the Umted States one large dis- . di~ate ~oss Perot to partake in. dictive as cigarettes.
past, poo~,YiSJb,1!1tyforceda~an-
trict to which the Presidentmust, . the forthcoming presidential de-
Another problem facing Dole
_
d!~at~ t9 re~rheaxily ~n the·~pu-
d1rec:uy 'answer.
The
result has
1
bates:·ms i:eascmis that he does
is that Clinton does not need a
.. ~~.l?i:1!
effi~1ency, Md mtegnty e>f
been ·a drastic weakening of po-•
not consider Perot·. to be "a vi~
surprise of any kind to be re-
·h1s party.~ Too.,iy, ~iU ~li11ton and
Iitical, parties and
.
the rise of the
·
able candidate/' Perhaps Bob
elected. The conventional wis-
Bu\, the anti-Dole fever sweep-
ing the nation has made people
realize
that not only is Clinton not
that bad, he is the best choice
for president. He is far more presi-
dential than the Mr. Wilson from
Kansas who tells voters to go
back into their caves.
Bob-pole have a host of video
Moderates.
· Dole is not familiar with
a
little
dom earlier in this election sea-
, cam~ras, legions
9f
reporters, .
PoIHical extremists like. Pat
something calle.d irony. · If non-
son was that all the President had
~d
at_.leastone television in ev-
Buchanan and Jesse Jackson
will
viable presidential candidates
to do was not .screw up and he
ery ~,ouseh~ld to coun~er theef-
continue totluive along with the
were barred
'
from _'the debates,. \Vould ease right back into the
fects of their. party alhance. No
Moderates. Never before have
Bob Dole would be ruriong them, "White House.
wonder_Republicans and Demo-
_strong political parties threat...
They say that politics make
Subsequent events have
c~ats ahke have endeavoredto
ened them, and weak· parties
strange bedfeHows. They say
proven that even if Clinton does
discover a new ground,
.
a new
don't seem to effect them either.
that a lot can happen over .. the
screw up, his standing in the
pers~ective, a new party for their
This isb~ause their
.
messages
next seven weeks. Sometimes,
I
polls is unaffected. Clinton's sig-
nom1nee to run for. .
tend to hit the less informed citi-
get th~ feeling that this is the
nature on the Welfare Refonn
Bill
.
It
is not the Ross Perot faction· zen harder.
same "they" who said that. and the dismissal of his chief
Unlike
16
years ago, it is the
Republicans who are banking on
an October Surprise. What the
Dole campaign does not realize,
however, is that the only Octo-
ber surprise that would save their
~ampaign is if we found out that
it had been Colin Powell inside
of a-Bob Dole costume all along .
. that
I
refer te>. P~rot's new politi-
· A strong government and· a
America was ready for Crystal
political advisor, Dick Morris, for
.ca_l · party centers. around the
leader of nations must thrive on
Pepsi.
solicitation· of a prostitute were
faults.of present ctay politics.
the competition of opposing
The reason whypeoplearehesi-
both potentially damaging is-
S~ch a movement !s fascist in na-
viewpoints, and . the combining
.
tant to reserve the grand ballroom
Christian Bladt
is
Opinion
editor for The Circle
. ture, and a negative answer to
of ideas through. compromise. · at the Chuck E. Cheese is that
th~ most pressing needs such
as
That- can't happen when both
everyone from analysts to pun-
the eco~omy and welfare.
parties continually move closer
dits, and even that lowly crea-
.
I
refer to the great experiment
to the middle of the road and
ture called the political columnist,
caliedTheModeraies. TheMod- · their candidates move ~ven
are leaving room open for what
· crates fall in' the middle, some-
closerto the middle by denounc-
is known in political circles as
where between Republican and
ing most:of those things their
"The October Surprise".
Democrat, and
are
the most popu-
party stands' for.
The October Surprise refers to
lar political party in America to-
There was a time when Demo-
October 1980, when President
day.
fu fact, the Moderates are
crat meant big government and
Carter negotiated for the release
. so popular this election year that
Republican meant big business.
of the hostages in Iran. For Carter,
they could·not decide whether
We have·no such choices this .who had been trailing Ronald
to nominate· Bob.Dole or Bill
election. Today, party nominees
Reagan in the polls, this seemed
· Clinton. The answer to their di-
must bow to th~ passionate
to be quite a nice surprise on the
lemma was to nominate both, and
sways of public opinion, and little
eve.of the election. Of course, the
allow them to run against each
that meant Democrat or Republi-
real surprise turned out to be on
another for the nation's highest
can holds weight any more.
Carter.
·
poHtical office.
Is
it time for a-new national
With a secret team, including
Opinion Editor Christian Bladt interviews 'Late Night'
host Conan O'Brien.
·
When Conan O'Brien was on the Marist campus this past Labor
Day, he was kind enough to spend a few moments talking with
· The Circle's Opinion Editor, Christian Bladt.
;
What happened to the Repub-
party to break into the scene?
former head of the CIA, George
Ii
can . and Democratic parties?
Could we see the· manifestation _ Bush, who just so happened to ·
They have finally succumbed to · of weakened parties in the
form
be Reagan's running mate, the
the thrashings by intense media ' of an alliance like the fictitious
Reagan camp had quietly nego-
coverage. Never before in our
Moderates? Probably not in the
tiated for
a
postponement in the
history has the president been
near future, but perhaps whatwe
release.
9f
the hostages .until
so direcHy answerable to the
have seeri occur: in the recent
January
20, 198 L
As
ari
amazing
pe9~l~-~p~e~gll~~gµethi~is_ .p~tforesh~dow~alutµr~wh<?re, -~~iynt~~~~~g~~:l~il~~e:·, ..
'.,:·!,· __ ,_
,.
~
, ... , ... ,,
1 · - ,
abeneficial developfue!it in
'moo-
·new, rtatiorial parties' will, seize
CB:
So,
I
was
wondering what made you decide to come. here to
e111 Arneiic:an politics,
Bht
ho,W
·coni,ro(Perhaps we
are
hi
a tran-
··- Of course; the Dole camp does
Marist? Was it not up to you, or what?
c~.n
i
.Presi_dent
make ,\Vi~e · sitioh tlmeforAmericail politics:' · nolitave such an advantage. For
Conan:
Basically, I am completely disconnected from the work-
choices wlien .the right decision · In tiie future, history classes
will · one thing; the Dole campaign is
ings of my show. I'm like Howard Hughes towards the end of his
will bring dowri approval ratings?
be taught ab0ut the decisions ·not organized enough to sue-
rfi
The
structure of our govern-
oufgeneration rriade that led.to
cessfullypull off any
ki
nd of back
~;;· Oh, kept alive by rich people?
menttak
.. esfo.r
.. granted thatCo. n.-
theformationofnewparty11·nes.
room negotiations with anyone.
C
V'nnt.
-
.
A
"bl
onan:
.1=.u,I'mkeptinadarkroom.l'mattendedtobymormons.
gre
. · ss members w.
ill.
be a.·.•·direc.t
·
·
poss1
e
exception is the to~
1
b
. d ·
·
store my urine in a jar. So,
I
have no idea what the hell's going on.
extensioifoftheirconstituericies-.
Bill Mekrut
is
one of The
acco
m
ustry. I say "possible
.
.
They just put me in a van and I showed up here at Marist College.
Inc.reased technolo. gy·. a.· nd ... tal-.
exception" to leave the door
Wh
.
.
.
.
ich seems very nice, by the way.
CB:
That's kinda how they got me here, actually.
~.:• ..
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i;911J.!it?Jiageopposi(e this -
tfie'v~ry-1asi-yeaiof ...
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I'll
leave yo~ with.
•~µi~pointyeryJWP9~ft9mei'.'W!~g·el.~(}· ....
; < ·
•.
·.•.~ll.~J<i[gC>t!~n:':· .. ,tbii;;thoti~~t.·•.V/e·.·I~rn•.·lll()['
liy~·of
many/p~?ple
on
.~his,· .....
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iif}er,'gt11d~11titj11:>: ;
\)/'•t')ll)9~tlif~in
thislitde bubbl~'we
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1}i~y.yiµg~f
1l.s
ho\tl-
t<>i
~~t~~
-J-Q9J:%1t1s the•~~~ .that re11ll':f
~,hi_s;or-h~r expenen~i11
a
.on~~~tual!ythmk foro~lv~·.:
rrtat~r deep
within our
heartsi
ajt1(;11\Vi~ergl~?'\'X.2
•
\
·
\· .··
W~iitc1y11eye~reali~it,l>ut~y•· ··.)s~ues ..
thatwe
will got() the•·.
, - We
have
not•
as
a'c;ollege re-
.
·.· di~ll~S.if% q~b~µ11~ an~l
hllSh_- ···•·.
~11clsofthe.~h for just so th~
aUy
faced. many. iSS\lCS that,~.
ing
out
()llf
O\Vri
pers()oal
SC>lu-
.
.
·
ourvoice can be heard
that
will
that· uncommon to
m<>sf'cani- . ·
...
lions to ~ e iss1Jes·a111ong our .· .. eventually help us change
this·
pµses
·
.
peers:
we.~ave begun to develop
world.
·
in the U.S .. Issues of cultural di:.
who
we
essentially
are~
Conan:
I hear that's how they recruit, actually. They put.a sack
over your head, and the next thing you know, you're taking soci-
ology.
·
(;B:
It's kinda weird like that. Does this remind you of your early
days at Harvard? Or is it totally different?
Conan:
It's the same in that every college, in the hallways has
cheesy acoustical tile on the ceiling. That's just the same in every
institution of learning. So, that brings me back. Yeah, it's pretty
much the same. The people here seem very kind; they're nice to
us. They've tolerated our shenanigans. Do people still say she-
nanigans?
CB:
Uh,just me actually.
Conan:
Okay, that's good. Because I was told that it's a Gen X
term, and I'm using it a lot.
CB:
Yeah, it's a good thing that you said it
to me and not anybody
else.
Conan:
Okay, so, it's good you don't have a recording device, or
we'd be screwed. Are you having a good time here, so far?
CB:
Oh, yeah. Actually, I am. This is my third year here.
Conan:
What's your major?
CB:
Radio/tv/film.
Conan:
Okay. Alright, and you have a radio, a tv set, and a VCR?
CB:
Yeah, I've got some tapes. Mostly pornos and stuff.
Conan:
You have pornos, really?
CB: A
couple, yeah.
If
you want to come over, we can watch them
later.
Conan:
No, that's alright. Get your hand off my butt.
CB:
Sorry, sir.
Conan:
Did we get enough here? Smell my hand before we go.
Isn't that nice?
CB:
Yeah, that's nice. What is it?
Conan:
One of the girls had Noxcma hand cream and
I
put it on.
It's a nice scent.
CB:
Yeah. It kinda smells like pine.
Conan:
That's what I'm going for ... and this girl's taking our pic-
ture. She's from "The Daily Blab" .. .
CB:
Okay, thank you very much.
,;
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September 18, followed by van
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Murp1y sa.1d the
'
l~tures
,
w~elmmg amount. ?f freshmen
:_
1~to her office
_
thj~J>~t~pnng ·
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t · ~' ~di
empha~1
.
ze the µi~meof eth-
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µoder the p~textJllat
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and
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825
freshm,~n ~d
·
daughter was c<>Iajng
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'The~
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wiU be a·delegati<>n from
·
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25
·
transfer· students, said
:y:; ~~
11
t~;~!WJ
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J;4:f?!r!;Ji~t':\ffiWllf
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1
fnd°fu:
puters. When
.
s~e
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91~tr~
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IJ~i~g~H!~W
:
formation technology,"
.
said t~an .4,72~ freshm~n apphca-
•-.
~s1;:~:~lioris,
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e
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·
t~~~~~sie
.·
s~d
_
_
the
·
pro~lem
·
.
of
·
·
Several
_
fli~rs
~ti~se.9~entlt
' -
~?n~
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at
.
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.
rdetn1
,
.
<; -
college in
_
the
!asty~~-"
.
·
overp?pulat!on_ of ~anst stu-
appe~r~d on ca.it1p_llS
,
J
_
n l~gt
.
lions
0~
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a~t
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7
vents
,
mcl~de t~e
de~ts ts Manst_ 1~elf.
..
_
_
quantities. S)'l~r~~tllesal~- , thedomut?,rt~s,
i/
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a~1cum of ~ur,?wn
man was not authonzedto dis-
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.
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.
1on
·
helpmg Manst students ob~
·
success, said Massie.
_
We
tribute fliers.
..
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.·
.
.. ·.
.
·
.
.
pus bti~iile~~s
l9
pJci.~:ta~id'Wt
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P9-s.tlri
()~JU:·
senre· WNBC's
'
election cover-
.
have many students that want
10
.
. "He's certainlj-ptjrs~nf-
.
··
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comehere,. which is one of t~e
:
t10ned
by
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possible c9_nstruct1on of theD1g1-
reasons the I3o~d of Trustees 1s
computer store," sh~ saiq.
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Libr:azy m
_
the sumn,ierof 1998.
C?llstantly l
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.
to ~urchase
.
Sylersai
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d infonu3:tid~
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urrent
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more~omesandrenovatingthem
vices is involved
'
in 'this type
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.
face~
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Betros;satd
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he-1
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houses all of our information and
on their own to make them more
:'!:::
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be~1eyem,~tw~enwedothi~11ew
placed
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m~t~gw
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budd1ng;1t
·
w1n be an entire step
.
central-heating system w~ ~e-
us; wekn?Wlt!~Y.'1-l~iIBPPtj~
)/c''.;§,an~81
,.·
;
~ff
upJorMarisfin te~s:ofhowwe placed in t~e old Townhouses,
machines," she
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s-•
image
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ourselves and how
_
\Ve're
th
.
e completion of the south en-
According to
Si~Y~
Safi~gliy
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¥t~J~g~~~
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:r ;
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.
pe
'
rceived
by
,
t~e
~
lugh~r
educfa-
trance
.
?f
camp_us and
.
the pur-
assistant dean fo
(~H
,
Y
iA~
/
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J:·,
:
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W:°Y
M~~~Wt
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,
.
.
,
_
tion society/_'
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_
.
_
·
:
.
· ·
·
_
chase
:
of Talmadge
_
Court t
_
o
correct procedtire'Jor
·
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arn
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.
Tim Massie; chief college rela-
house 36 students .
.
.
.
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·
.
pus ~usinesses_
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,
,
tj~ns 6ffip~r; said
ow
·
new libr~y
.
M1:1rray said he ~lieves Marist
vert1se at Manst
IS
to come
'
to
?'
appi:?,V~
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foi:
p<>~mll8
~
>
·
.
.
«
r
f:.
11~
-
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will Manst
a
state of the
art
fact!-
IS
looked upon With envy.
'
the c
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ollege
·
activj!i~
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ity that
~illne_v7rb~outb(dat~
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"Many
colle_ges
;
subst~ntially
first.
·
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because everything
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olde
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he s~td. "We
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ofour;longtennrelationshipw1th
THE.
.
CIRCU:
wiiI now feature a
·
.
Classified Ad Section
It's A
Gr~at
New
Way
To
Advertise!
Anyone
·
wishing to advertise should send the information
via campus mail addressed to
THE CIRCL.£
·
Each business card-sized ad will cost $3.00;
Please enclose check payable to The Circle
-
with advertisement
TUTORS
_.
NEEDED!!!
Tutors are needed for after school programs in the
City
of Poughkeepsie and Kingston School Districts.
Tu-
tors will work
:'-Vlth
~tudents i_n grades five
·
to twelve.
Hours are 2:30pm to 5:00pm Monday to
Thursday.
Reliable
transportation
and a valid NYS
driver's
liscense
required. Mi.lSt
l:ia:ve
completed at least
.
one year of
col-
lege with
a
2.5
index and
··
a
3.0
in subject area to be
tutored.
Salary
is
·.
$5 .00-$8.00/hr.
depending on experience.
Please
send
application or
resume with the names of
three references to:
Robert Wright, Director,
Liberty Partnership Pro-
gram
248-250
Main Mall
Poughkeepsie, New York
12601.
.
.
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY/AfflRMATIVE ACTION EMPLOYER
•·
s~
:'
PreEJi4en~
--
~~
~
~p<»n
_
ds
··
to·_
•
,c_~pus
••·
employnt~ijt
,
.
.
I
~~~e
been approached by a
,
n~~~er
of
sttidents regarding work
-
s
_
tu,dy a11d C~J.)US. e~plO)'lll~
-
nt
:
_
-
The~e
-
_
ai:e_ severa! ~tude~tsapply1~g
·
forw<Jrk5tudy positions,
.
but unf<>rt-unately, not everyone i
.
s
gett1~~
~
aJob. This 1s an issue th
_
c1t
_
spouJ~ no! only concern the people who approached
·
111e;
bu(all
119,7 s
_
tudents who are eligiblefor this aid.
:.
,
. -
·
•
· .
- .
•
.·
•.
. .
,
,
..
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·
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:
.
Wha~
_
is
'
the d}ffe~enc
_
e b<!tw¢cn *ork studfa~dcampus ~mployinent?'Workstudy is award~jp
s!u
_
dent.
~
fi!lanc1a1 31d packages,
\1/
_
h,d~
campus emJ,>l~yment 1s open to all students r.egardl<'!Ss
1Jf
their
aid p~c;~aies. Seventy-~ ye percent 9f th~ cµrrent fund~nglor work study comes frqm a feqeralgovern.:
tpe!lt grant and the remaining
25%
i~ paid l:>y
.-
Mru:isc
·•
,;
~
:
_
,
.
·
:
·
._
.
_
:.
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Jhe
_
fedenll gra~t, is based'on formulas
from
over 25years ago.
This
means Marist is paying substan-
t1al!Y. ~Qr~ than 1t
,s
25%
share· of the grantforwork study; The only way Marist
can receive more
fiindin~
.
is
to
en~ure th~t
5%
of
_
the)obs are_comiminity-serv!ce rel~ied. The federal government
de~~es commumty service as
,
those Jobs that improve the quahty of
hfe
oflocal residents.
If
Marist
paid ~?re students t~ do communi~y service jobs, then there would
be
more jobs on campus
and the
gqvern
_
ment would give the college more money.
_· _
.
_
_
_
.
.
·
.
_
·
·
._
•.
At t!J
.
eFaculty Convocation, Pr<:>f~sor Richard Lt:wis had afl inter~ting concept for creating
.
more
campus employment. Profes~r Lewis ~ugg~sted usmg st~dents as
aids
10
facuhy while r~ching:
If
every faculty 'Q}ember had
_
a ~tudent aid, tl11s ~ould provide a num~r of students with at least a few
hours ~f work each week. His idea would.createmore jobs for students and would increase
'
the amount
of scholarly research J,>roduced by
.
our professors:
·
. ·
U
.
·
,
~fypµ ar
7
still
_
looking for a work study pm,it!O~, Carol M~Jquee~, Assistant Director Qf Finan~ial
Aid,_1s
av~tlab}e to help you. Just stop by the financial
aid
office and she will
be
able
to
point you in
the nght dtrect~on.
If you cannot fin~ an on-campus position, you may want to look off campus. Nancy
Moody, Coordmator of J~b Location and Development, may
be
able to find you part time, off campus
employr_nent: Contact her_m Donnelly 226, the Offic~ ofCareer_ Development, to make an appointment.
'f!te, solution for solvmg work
_study
problems 1s not a simple one, especially considering that
Manst s enrollment has grown while federal work study moneys have remained the same.
7
·
What do you think? Stop by the SGA office or can me at x2206.
I
look forward to hearing from you.
Pat
Mara,
Student
Body
President
l
l
i
i
THECiRCLE
September 19,
1996
9
News
and Reviews
~"
~;:
-·.
Trai~ns11onin1
a:·be111sh
roller
coaster
ride
into
the dark side 01111e
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_-:~s~i6.fecI,up}~,a ~qualid ·
hovel, watched oyer by a
leather-clad. cleal~r, aptly
•·•·'-'Choose
youriJuture. Choose .~arrie~. Mot~er\ S~pedor,.
_life;
... bufy.,hy;w_ouldlwanttodo.
:~~y
philosophiesand·ra~.
a thing'like that?". And so the
·
tionalize -their addiction.
essential Zg·uestion. of. Mark
'.'Take ihe"best brgasm you .
Rentonis
life is uttered as he . ever had, nmltiply it. by a
. .
·~i
~'.t~:J
·A&E Editor
}ligh~tails
tt
down.an Edinburgh .thotis~d/and you;re ~still
·street;doggedly.purs_ued by men · riowh~re'. close," Renton.
in uniform.
i
Renton:, as he is
states,.
. .
,
....
. known, .has not chosen
life;
.While this hand-to:.
rather he cheerfully .acknowl-
mouth existence is fine for.
edges his ','sincere and truthful
some; Renton tries to kick
.junk
l;labit.•~ The movie which I
Ute habit. In'one scene, he
. speak
<?fiS
''Trainspotting'.'; a tale. ·, ticks off all the ingredients
of drtigs a_nd sin. and good dean _ . needed for a heroin with-
fun in Sc_otland's underworld. .
drawal, from cold mush- -
Ewan McGregoris the· best
.
rooni soup to vanilla ice
thing to come out of Scotland · cream. However, in a final
since the kilt, brilliantly portray-
panic, he breaks down and buys
ing Renton
.as
a tortured young
opium suppositories, and nearly
soul who would gladly choose
losesJherri. This segues into
Hfe; ifonly it weren't so woefully
"the worst toilet
in
Scotland"
boring. , Renton '·.s so-called
scene. While the scene alter-
friends are a motley bunch con-
nates between outright gross-
sisting of Sick Boy,a suave plati-
?~ss and underwater,mys~icism,
num blonde with a stunning
1t sho.ws., the desperallon of
- knowledge
of
Bond films; Spud, . R:nt_?n an~ hp~ tight heroin's
a
wiry goof;Tommy, the Adonis
gnp ts on him.
,
_.
.
character, who will- come to ac-
The_ addic.ts share needles,
knowledg~ his Own Achilles
steal/mm the ~at!onal Health
heel; and Begbie,
a:
scary, violent
Serv1~e~. and dn~t
1~
and out of
man who frightens everyone in
consciousness, pausmg only to
the group. .
cook up another batch. Finally,
he needs a place
ting o_n that couch watching
to hide out be-
mind-numbing, spirit-crushing
.cause
he's
game shows, stuffing junk food
wanted in con-
into your mouth:. Choose your
nectfon with rob-
future. Choose
life." As he
be·ry . charges.
walks aw.ay, somehow, it is clear
Then Sick Boy
that this is ~enton's wake-up
follows, with
call, and fr.om here on out, he is
scars in his eyes
definitely choosing life with a
in the hopes of vengeance.
becoming a Lon-
The casual display of drugs,
don
pimp.
usage and addiction add to the
Renton is both
deadening feel of the movie. Life
. frustrated and
comes and goes. and who really
disgusted; he's
cares'! Just shoot up some more
tried so hard to
and get over it. There's no cry-
·leave. Edinburgh
ing or hysteria when Alison's
and all its' misery
baby dies, or when Tommy
behind, yet he
chokes to death in a puddle of
can't seem to
his own vomit; Renton doesn't
in her crib. As.she wails in the
fully break away.
battle loyalty or morality when
background, the boys are
But he returns home, for
he steals the bag of money.
shocke<i into a numbed.~tage of Tommy's funeral. The "normal"
There is no epiphany where he
clarity. But the gravity of this situ-
one of the group has fallen down,
realizes what a deplorable human
ation is too much for their frag-
succumbed to junk. After his
being he is; he knows that chis
ile, heroin-soaked minds to take,
girlfriend leaves him, Tommy
money is his last chance to ·
and Renton's only solution_ is to
turns to heroin to numb his pain.
change, and if he doesn't jump
"cook up." _
Not long after, he, becomes a
now, he'll never get another one.
The five frienqs spend their .
~
jolt of r~lit~ comes into their
days ~hooting up, coming down,
lives when Al_1s0,n, a re~ular at
and -stealing stuff to get more
Mother Su pen or s, reahzes ~er
junk-and endless cycle. , much-ne~~ected baby has died
. Rentondec1destotryachange - bonafide addict.
This is the
ThetrioofDannyBoyle,Andrew
of scenery, and moves to Lon-
moralistic message of the film-
MacDonald, and John Hodge,
don where he takes ajo,b renting
the tragedy of Tommy's life and
who brought us the delightfully
flats for a real estate agency.
lri .
death. That he should be the one
twisted •~Shallow Grave", have
these scenes, his c,haracter .who dfos is unfair; he is the scored another hummer:--
progresses to a level of normal . quintessential victim. But this
""Trainspotting"" is a
human productivity......,.he has a
just contributes to the realism of hardcore flick.
It
has been com-
decent job, is dressed in suits,
the film.
pared
to "Pulp Fiction", but it has
and has a place of his own., Most
While in Edinburgh, Sick Boy
a harder edge. Where "Pulp" had
importantly, he's away from
reveals that he has opportunity
black humorto offsetthc graphic
Edinburgh, away fro!ll his _loser
to score a major deal; all the four
violence (i.e. Butch's selection
or
friends, away
of them have to do is move the
weapons, while Marsell us is in
,-------'---~--'----'----'---..;.;....,....;.._;...;..--..__;,;-'-'---'--~--'-----'-----'-----, fromthedrugs.
drugs
to London, and they.can
the .bascmcni, with .Zed),
Unfortu- · each,nakcIA,000. Thedealgocs -
""Ti-ainspoiting>'"
has
no su·ch
nately;,
·
. his
·off
successfully, and the boys
balancing act.. The garishness
fonrier lifestyle
celebrate in a London hotel. Dur-
and horror is laid out on the table
still has a hold
ing the night, Renton steals the
with no apology, no explanation.
on him, trying
bag of money and slips oul the
This is highly unsettling, but also
to pull_ him
door. As he walks away, toward
strangely exhilarating. Fora gen-
· Map .. otJt your
game-plan at.the
~lf
il
n1·sT
G;'
D.
nu~:fl'W.
F'·ion·u:·
(Mr
lfll)N.~l .·
rlVUI' i.tl.l.ll ~--
.Jl\.
1
~_: /.'
. back down.
a brand new beginning, he reit-
eration who grew up on happy-
First, Begbie· erates his initial ranting. "Choose
ending movies, this is what
comes to visit;
life.
Choose a job. Choose sit-
you've been waiting for.
CMJ festival: a showcase of young talent
~-
CINDY
MATA
Staff Writer
· Once a year,
CMLhblds a
four day music
marathon in
Manhattan
that showcases
about 500 up-
an d-c om in g
new bands in
various night-
ch1bs through-
out )he city.
bands that play the festival to
gain exposure to the public and
the music industry.
complished musician speakers.
This year's speakers included
Les Claypool of Primus, Patti
Smith and Prince.- These panels
are extremely helpful
for stu-
dents because it gives them the
opportunity to speak to differ-
ent types of people in all aspects
of the music industry.
· CMJ also showcases movies
and presents advanced screen-
ing of independent films. This
year's screenings were "Feeling
Minnesota", starring Keanu
· Reeves, Cameron Diaz, Dan
·Wednesday, September-25,·
-
1996.
The m:ajority
of the perform-
-~. ·"5:00
~
7:00
p.m.
Cabaret -;Shldent Center
ers involved in
The participating venues for
CMJ range from small clubs
such as CBGB's to larger places
such
as
the Roseland. Each of
these places have specific nights
that showcase either indepen-
dent of major label bands and
sometimes the label will special
guests to perform. The festival
not only has bands perform but
also holds question-and-answer
panels during the day with key-
note speakers. These panels are
specifically targeted for college
students who have an interest in
pursuing a career in the music
industry. At these panels, stu-
dents can ask experts on how to
make it in the music business.
There are also panels with ac-
Akroyd and Courtney Love, and
"Hype," a movie chronicling the
decade-long rise of the Seattle
music scene.
11-----.-~-·'_·; __
- ~ - - - - - - - - - - - -_ _ _ _ _
· _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
,
CMJ are either
~.-,Speak one-on-one to graduate,
MBA,
and law school
unsigned or
So, if you're a student with an
interest in music and have an
extra
$200
to spare, the CMJ fes-
tival is a great investment. Not
.representatives
*
·G"~.finformati6n regarding _programs, financial aid and
entrance'
requirements
'' . ' . '
*
Explore your options f_!Jrlhe future
-,..
-
,
....
·
..
Sponsored
by
the Center for Career Services
226 Donnelly Hall - Ext. 3547/3543
newly signed
i . - - - - - " - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ~
only do you have
the opportunity to
Get Your Four Year Degree Tuition Free!
Part-time
military
service with the New York
Anny
National Guard can get you a college degree.
Go to school while
you
serve
your
country and
community.
Call our career center 24 hours
daily:
1-800-356-0552
see cool bands
and meet new
people, you also
have a chance to
learn the In's and
Out's about the
music industry.
L;.
:
.
<:'T~ ~iRCLE, Septen1ber 19, 1996
f_;yid.~ ,,,
r!iilit"
:}{1':'
'
.
sale~ _associates
full '~
part
time
Ca!vin Klein, ·1nc .. a leqder
in fashion design for women's
and men's sportswear, coll~cfion and accessories, seeks
customer service professionals for its company store in
WOODBURY CO/WI.AON.
Previous retail experience, strong soles ability
and en:iphasis 9n customer service, necessary
· for consideration.
We offer a compifitive salary, o · comprehensive benefits
package and advanc.emenl opportunities. For imme:iiote
consideration, plEfose· apply in person Mondoy-Fri::by,
1
Oam-5pm al: Calyin Klein, Woodbury Cornm~r.
Rt 32 26,27W, Central Volley,
NY.
Calvin
Klei'n'
equal opporruniiy employer
A.;pben~menQil
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Ii'SJUSt agreats'oulfurtovesong·.
. ; .. __ -_}:•?StaJfWrjt~r _
.. -. _·._
~atj>utsy?ti)nt~.~at._f~l~~;
/;;ThePh~iiijinenon·Soundtrack
1srtmoc1~ ..
;l. ~~u~.l,Y\~Pll:1:1.1~ten .. to
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·Aaron Nev
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l_le· but_
\J_ •.-..,_
e_ ·· hste.ned
..
.·-. grea nµxo songs om
... ; .. , ... • ,,_., .. . ._ ..
·tlle _sot1Lde~lin~.
with.
love and · ·-to th1s,o~~ nu~~rous
ti~es
and I
.
·
th~ poYler:of l<>v~; -If you are . }!aven_,~·gott_e11 tl~~
_
o(Jf• . __
.
· _
d_own, ;th~se s~ngs ~.Ul-lift. your
~so
Q~
.thi~,
album.~ Jewel 1oes
spirits, It's an album that reaches
her version of "Have•
_1:1
Little
_tow~ds'.you'· arid h','llps ·you ·see Faitll inMe.'·'. Grea(:song,. She
the bright~r side
of
the p_\ct~~·
aqds
life
!o the lyric~-'5 s~e•c~es
Th_e albu,m starts_· off,stroiig ?ut foyfruth _and t"!st:,;You .rru,ght
wi~.
,the
pjf ~in.gle ','Ch~ge· the get_ sic~, of' hea_~ng_ ~he ov~r:-
W9r\d" by EricClapton~ 'Listen
playe~ ._ Who· W1H_' Save Y.our
to this song a.nd yoti
wi°ll
imine~ ~.oul'_' ·on.
t~~
radio/ but this one
-
diat~ly
!,e
~napping yo~rJingets . !s here
1?
stay.· _Jewel's version
and singirig along .. .It's a fabu-
is ~ost 1mpress1ve, an_d very in-
lous songlhat gets you thinking spmng. _Ilo~eit ·
J~--
··:
~d mak~ you feel great
.
.
AndJilSt as you thought you
. The backup vocals ·at the cho-
rriight_hav.e·h,eard the-best ~~mg
rus really _keep this.s()ng moving oftlle album; Peter:Gabriel's "I
. a_ncl __ th_o~e._,n,ic~; _
gl~esy ·guitar Ha~e the To~~h"_
~O~l:5
on.· 1'his · ·
nffs give 1qhat oh so special · song wakes you up and·gets you
Claptqh sound.
· '•
'. . ·
·going. You can~t
go
wrong with .
The nexfscmg on ifie.albJm is PeterGabriet _ . :' · , · ·
<
<
BryanFeny's,''Dance WithLife".
The rest of the album inciudes
It'sasong~lxli.ltl~vinglife. There Taj Mahal,
~ai-viii
Gaye; The
are some
gie~t key c~ang~s.to-
Iguanas,: Do~othy · ¥~ore, JJ
wards t~e ~ncUh~t )nake the Cale, and Thomas Newman.
sqng and it's theme
'a11
'the more They all perfonn good songs, hut
· eff~ti:ve· anq_ quite'.,
.
. .
.·.
atthis point
_
in the alb~ni the
en-
impr~sive:. . · .. ) .. ; . . _ .. _ e'rgy level has hit a pfjteau. · ·_ .
. 'fhe, n_ext.son:g)s Aiiro'n
ff
yo~ hear
C]~pt011'~
song'pn
N:ev1Ue:s '.'Gr~y Lov~•,:· Aaron's the radio and think that is
ptob-
disti~~tiye y9ic;egiv~sthisjong · ably the '?nl(good so_ng· on the
the s_oul .that
it
~eeds,to·
make
it a . album; th1n.k again. Eyery song
~e~tJoye SIJ;ng: _
Itii19t'q.uittfa :
.
,on this album is g<>9d_and at l_east
sl9w, love_ ballad
that
p·uts you
halfofthem_are great··And each
to sleep~ nor is (ta fast loveJqng song tells -you _to sit· ~ack;· rel~,.
that gets your ol~od"flowing'.
and enjoy life. I highly recom-.
·
·
mend
it;·..
·
:r;
·
BoW St~q~]~ot,Mii
g~~~t~~~
.· · ·
hfl~sielnaldo .·
__vorced;·a-i:npth~{ofim;elbv~n
:
. . .. si~ff
Writ~~ '
-year boy-and'aiic
ID~~tm~nf
~na~ ' .
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H<;>w,,stella Ootb.e'rJ3~ove . : __
home __
.and:ha_·
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:ariothe_ ~-._: __
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e.;
o_· n_.; .
Baclt: M"cMiOari'goes into'a'n~w ·
:tJ{k'e
,'.fah'oeJ
i
She, dri vei,:i1er
~dif.~ti9ifirthefWntinf
'$he uses
BMW fast
and
createsftinctional
the streanf ,of· consciousness
.
,art-(i.e.,)!xpensive furniture)
:in
technique thls'time~ 'The'inain-
h_er,splll"etime:••.~-h~:keeps:her. ·
.Sh~racJer; _· ~teJia Payne
would•-
'pe~ont1Ftrainecon·c.iifoirid~her •
.
.
~lll~o~'.VJith_her"thoiigl}~'and·
-Land'C~ruiser,Hi
tht{gaftfge/The
-
.
•
•. ·feelings;)giforink
grafurn~
and >Cosbf_s'look likea welfare'fain-
punctuatton;. __ -_-_ .. •-. _ .. ,
:
.
-
; : ·• . ily.cc>mpared to 'tije'_life
'stelfa
_
.• ·J\f(etg~tting'lls&;{'to·the:·~tyle, Payne l~aqs. The only·_thing
:I
could se,e whyM:cMillanchose· missing in this picture'isza_man
. : tlus \V~y.9f}vti~~g.))telli?fcfufr-::; whq ~an ~ock her world. .': , .
.
,_' ,
,acfei is·revealertlfrough~her•._ .•:--\_Vhil_e. her son,_Qufncy· visits
. -.· tnonologuianothe'read~r'Linder.:i: -hi_sff~~h~1\qunn
·
gr11e(s-uili.rli~t
·
. -~_tands ,SteH~•~,f~ffngs~t'tei:-'::
t
-
\~telli!~~!g~s)o
thlc~
iv~i;~titiit-
. • •• An,d .what
a•~yofr
g9;"gffl !Yciiif.:·:·'.
,byhe~~lf.?I(is in Jamai_cawhefe
·aqt~(~telJ~Jsi:,$_~e'is'whafthe ' Stella: ·-•-)Deets. ' :',Winston
•
. moaernjvdma1ra'spfr~s)0Jt;,e. . Shakespeare,
·
a
'it
'year
old
v,,ho .
~tel_la. is 'forty.;.tv,,c{ye{l!S old; di- . just finished Ouniversi ty : and . is
.... ::. ;,,!
·•
<=·
1,:,.:·
.
Jookingtof,lea·chef'saP.::
»o.,te,'.~~" .
,,ffF_c.r~J.-
a.
0
los-s.:
.
prentice
ibtlle
resort that
SOWlCO"-r
l\f.ll_f
·
·
o.ncl. clco.r
~
'/0'1
cliecL
f
A,..
'fCl!I
9rit,"
i
°j.
.'~,i~ : . ·- : -.
.
·
nu.J
IOlnG
'"frorT
i'
Stella is staying a.t. ·.
- Despite.her.rationale
saying that
iqs'
nQt
pos-,
sible. it ·happens:. _
.. she
falls in love w1th
a.
boy
$f01\;Qt'fl4.
~y
T\.e.
Co11nae.li"!J .
U.l\fe.r
,o-\c.J..
't,y
A..lrc«-
~"«-fl-
pd.Skc.y
loc.a.t~t
i
1v
--ff,\'-
'm.cc.t("j ·
'1(o,;-..v
.
o.(:
o.rJ..
€.d'.
;tJ)j
.
: '/vor1n
e.
Po
f.,
1
(,ct,
,U5J ,
ftCClu.
tct.l\11,
if
-t•u
hll-'c.
4"'f
i~u-fions,.•r
if
1°"«"c.
11e+
Am,1.\.1, . ....
t
-tt.,,
.Ji-..
,.lo-r.
e1rnc.:
~uiclence,
Wt!r.<,iki'·
-for
u3"t
I.Alt~ks ,
~{t\"'
'"j .
S9--t. ~.
~~30 k &.t!~O.
£Nf"l(ELY
COi\/ FIOWI/
ftL
· half her age. Ste Ha finds
hers
.
el( in''an infernal
battle; · Hennind:insists
that· "thiflhing" is not
love but only-afling.A11-
other part·of her . simply
doesn't believe that this
young man· would want
her as a person.
Through her .thoughts,
we see that this woman
that seems like she has it
all together, still has her
own insecurities and
fears
that she must deal
.with. This book is differ-
ent
from
her·
past
books.
This
time:
it
isn't about
si~terhood, or•the strug-
gling black
family,
or
about
the
men.
who
treat
us bad.- This time· it's
about love
and
a woman
going for hers ..
I
J
.
I N S I
■
'.)E
=--·TttECIRcLE,
:
S~ptember.'19,,1996
SPO.RTS
11
~
.·
·
..
·
:
·
"
..
i
: ·
•
·
•
,
. FOOtb
'
aliftJseg:()
r:~her
/
:,r
.
:.
,
y
;
,
.
·
•
·
i
:-
·
.
·
·.
'
•.r~',.
C
i
·
.
. ·•.
·
at
II)u_qu~SI\@J
~::
;
a
;
Q7
:
.
~
/
7
-,
::-
A Closer Look At ...
,
·
1
•
;
-
-:
'
,
·
.
.
.
,
:
_:
.
. _
•
. -
:
...
::;~
-
~r·
~
-~~
::_.
-
. {
;
•
.
:
,
-
..
--:
~
,
j
~
,
-
-
•
•
:
·
·
-'
,
}
~-
;·
_:
.
:
·
·
~~
--
;
.
:
.
.
'
:
:
·
--·
.
.
_
-
_.
.
;
.
,.'
.
,
.
.
,
.·
_
by
'
CHRISSMijil
'
i
:~
:
J~t
·
f~
·
Jes'tle);';
:
A~~~n-:iiaid.
,
· .
.
Spprts1J4,i(or
.
''There were·arew
·
\jad calls; but
.
.
•
.
'
-
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
· ·
wf
h
a,
d
)
niin
·
y·Opportunities· to
.
.
i
Their
'goaf.or
:
•igoing all1he ptinhem away.'
"
,
·
·
•
.
.
·
·
·
.
\Vay''. io
.
tfl~-
:
ch~pionspip wa(.
_.
:
Alleri
/
atransfer'from Howard
.
slowed down
.
this past
Saturday'.:
U,~~•i~rsity;h~s beenthallenging
asthe
.
football
.
. team fost
:
10
_
Juriio()9:(aO'~h9des
,
Jor the
.
Duquesne,30, 17,
at
Rooney field
·
sfaf,t_ingj~l> at
)
ail~ac~
i
-·
· ·
:
.
.
.
in
i
Pittsbu
_
rgh.
j
:i/~
. .
·
.
.
.
(..
,
'
.
'.
'.1
put'fo
'
a
Io
f
ci(
workJ>Ver the
.
Going into this
.'
gam¢,
'
tliere
.
were
summer
·
and
.
it paid off," Allen
manyque~tions still.unanswered.
said
:
-
<
·
,
,
·
<'
· ···
'
·
·
·
·
Whowiliget thestartiii"thequar'.'
.
'
On
-i
tiie
:
defeit'siJe side: bf; the
.
terback position'(WiU
-
the long
d~y,
_
'
M
~
~is{~l:!,sielbyjunior
trip
have
.:
l!,n
,
~ffect~
.
Could this
· _
d~fensiveJ~ne~an Darren Valdes,
·
game dictate the outcome
·
of the
who
__
;
h
_
~d
-
-
_
fw_o
:
'
0
_
1_1
(
of the
_·
Red
.
entire season?
.
'
p
.
.
.
·
oxes
::
·
·
0three
·
interceptions.
.:
1unfor' (]uarterback Jirti baiey,
~
Valdes also had
·
nfoe solo'tack-
,
who start~911
.
S~turdajib~twas
!es
ori-
qi
f
c
_
ta>
<
/
'
: ·
:
.
.
·'.:
·.'
.
.
rqtated with
_
B1H
Tram;i,glini
·
Valdes s·aid
'
that the Red Foxes
..
.
~rou,ghou~ the en~fre
'
gaine; said
,
dicfnc:>t'lack'efthrt but
'
rath~r sii:n-
thatmista~es by Marist were the
piy
rii
_
ad~
mistikes
:
.
. .
.
key Pf9b}elll
'.
.
·
.
.
"We
.
came :out with a lot of
Favorite Movie: Braveheart
.
.
"(TheJ~m) pla.xed 'Nell ~~twe
heart,"
'
Valdes ~aid;
·
~we;vebeen
.
just c:,9
,
uIR,n
_
~t
,
ex_ecute in
,
tht:
:
r~
inte11seinpracµcearicl hopffully
_
.
..
F
·
.
·,
·_
,
·.
•
.
B
..
d
'.
·
u
"
2
·
ZC>n~. Daley Sllld
-".,_:
.
..
.
.•_.
·
things
will
work out
-
We stil1
avonte an :
.
.
. He
'
sl!,id
_
thattne rotating situa-
ha~e)l lolof footb~iIMt
t9
play.,>
,'
_-
·
--
,
·
t•?.~W?rk~dout \VelL
. .
.
·.
Th
_
e
::
r.l;!~OiOR ~t~acKthat Jhe
.
:
Favorite Food: Ravioli .
'
It d1di:i
,
tcause that much of
.
a Dukes' used ·againsLMarist is
problem,~· he said. '.'It's tough
.
to
.
·.
whiC'
'
macle ~
-
tlle
''
•
tl'ifference.
•
Favorite Athlete:
·
Fran Tarkenton
·
·
chris
D'
Ai,.torjo
Team: Football
Position: WR/K
Height
5'
11 ;,
.
Weight:
185
Hometown: Danbury,
Ct.
.
Major:
Marketing
getacc~~t.?m~ to, but I'~ sure jopht?
.
ij•<?[<r
;
~~~J~i
:
V
~ck
_:
f~>r
-
.
.
.
.
,
.
everytli1ng
,
w10W<.>{~OU~
.
.
-
·
·
.
,
Duq~esne,AndreHatcher
·
had
-·
.
·
F
_
;
_t
A
'
·.•
,
•
:
r
:
'
:
M
·
.
,:
.
·
•
o
· .
•
.
•
.
..
·
1
···
.
·
'
. ·
.·
...
Daleyy.,~7c;of"'l5onih~day
1970
~i
·
ofthe
:
Duk~s;
242
fusfi~
.
'
·,
avon e
_
•
specto
·
aq~~:
'
_
pp
_
ortumty
_
tp pay two sp6rts-f'ootball/
-
!0r
78
yards whi~e Tramaglini fin-
. ing _
·
yards. · He
.
g~ve
'
the Mari~t
.
·:
:,:::'
-
-·
1shed 5-of-:17 with
108
yards:
rushing defense, which was
·
:
.
Baseball
:
:
:
R~~~t~!id
,
~~~tal ~ombi~~
:::
~~ed
;
l9t
,
h
_
th~
'
natio~
.
l~st
i
Year,
·.
·" ·
··
·
·
·
Wttli some phys1cal
-
nustakes IS
,
'
some trouole
;'~ '
'
.
·
·
.
,
-
..
·.
.
.
/
Sports
.
Highlight:' Game winning
score
against Mqnmotith
in
'
9
:
5
'
.
.
·
""'.hat
_
fOSt
_
Matjstttie gain~.
.
Vald
_
es
_
s~ct, thlltJle
.
~oughtthis
'
;
.
,
.
. ,
. . .
.
.
.
,
,:
.
'
..
.
.
,. .
. •
''We ju
_
~thaye
to
bou1.1ce bac~ ... W¥ hnly_'paj:(p(Marist!s prob
,;
·:
/
.
&
·--
rnrr·
-·
i
s.
SW
"
0
t:t
,
£;E?P
~
-
:
f.'oxes()1,1
_
.
,Satu~y; Elefimshed
:-~
-
tenttal ''Valdes said;
.
'There'is
t:
-
:;
\,\·
<
:,
oc--:
·.
<
:'J,"
-·
,~
·
.
:
,
·
.
.
_
_
.
.
·
··
-
·
.-
- -
._
..
.
-- -
,
·
•
--
..
.
.
•
.
.
.
'
·.
~e'.g~
{
vi@lllyaro~ru.sru
.
ni· ;
~
Mfin1
:
t~ly ~oom for
'
ilJ}proVe-:
'
-'.-?
:'
l:l<>.':Vey.¢r
;
_1:1er~e$ e~p~~t~~fa
:
.
the.team around:
Cary
Smith
.
arid
Wednesday;
:b~(dic
'
fraveling
(0
· ,
,
,
m22
·
cames arid had
•
25)
1
ards in ·''
:
meni.'.'
.
. :
:
·
.
:
.
.
.
·
'
~~~.I}
~~()\V!~g
,
f~qm
_
h1s
,
players
•,
-Kevin
llardy
are two of the play-
.
Fairlield
_
and Siena next week.
·
·
: .' .
~
at~~mpts
,
#'~ixi~g
<
;
He
~
sc9.r~
~arist takes
,
~~
'
Iona
:
College
..
:
i~ t!t~if;IJ9me
,
~e'f?~f.:}\Y,~g~y~ _ers that make up the core of this
; .
•
•.
.
,
..
.
.
.
.
' .
'
.
·
<>he of M¥.~!
~
,
~twg
·
10~~
-
~19W?S
.
:
on
S~turday
atl ..
eoiiicioff Field
.
·
·
Mou,r.i;~
~-
~
k
Mazy
s
_:
t°?
111
~(:h
r~~
:
team, 1:1
,
erodes
.
expects
,
a
:
g
_
r~!J.t
..
,
,
.
:
As
,
ttt<!
Red Foxes head into the
of
th~
,
dat~~
:
a:f
y~d
:
nin;
·\
,
·
atl :~
p.m.
.
.
.
.
.
_
.
•
..
s~7 Herlldes said
,
1'h1~ t ~ deal from t?.em, and he d~scnbc~
_
me~J
~
(
!he
schedule in this. their
H~~
'
~oa9~{!~m
_
P~~Y;~atd he
·
Jona Wa§ pick~ to finish sixth
d1dn_ t go o~
.
t~e field :XPe<;tmg
~he duo as strong, to~gh guy~ . .'
finalxear:_1samembcroftheNEC,
was ~tt~tiefi :"''
_
tlvA
.
ll~n's perfor-
in
:
this
·
year's. coac
_
hes
._
poll and
to w•.~· It was JU
.
st hopmg notto
·
·
Also\most of the new. recruits .
_
·
·
He,_fodcs 1s ho~cful that
he
can
.IB~C;e.
•
/.
'
'.}_
\\_
,·,t-'Y
:
.
_
.
.
_-.
·
bad
-
_
aJ~6record last year.·
_ ·.
lose'.
.
··
.
. .
..
.
:
. .
~or
1
,
996
know how to win_,
:
h~v:
',
~!l
_
fluence the future of Marist
-.
'Tlll
'!
eal!y
pleased
:
with how
-
,
.
.
Daley
_
_
s
_
aic.l th~ Red Foxes
will
·
.
In
:
thefirst.few
,
,
\\leeks
;
of prac-
mgcpmefrom successful JUntor.
,
soccer .
. ··
;
{Alietl)'play'eo;!' Parady said
c
,
'take rio gaines
:
easy
:
.
··
..
.·
.
·.
U~~.
,
the
.
new c
_
o;ich has
·_
focused
college and high school pro-
·
· ·
:~i{~5.
f
#}
_
iy only his
_
fi
_
rst game
'
''Tn:eir(Ip~a) quarterback from
orr
,
cI:ianging that attitude .
.
,
grams
:
·
Th_e team already lost its
·
•
!.0}11,i:~
·
y.~;
s_o I can't ~otnplai11
·
last yearfsnot reiumi
11
g.
•
it
de-
··
_.
y
,
Vie haye tooyefcJ~e. !J}e
.
los-
m.ost
_
ascla1med newcomer, how-
~~t~
h~o/,
.:
~<?
did.
He
did every-.- pends on the ~ew
·
quarterback as
;,1
,
11g synd.~om~ , _· IIerodes evei:, wh
_
en Robert ~yholrn s~f-
_·
,•il~)Jt!
'
c_o~ld.'.'
:'
·
.
·
.
·
• .·.
·•
·-··
.
:->.
.
to
ho\1/
_
&oaj~eY.
·
~~ll
~."
:
Daley
·
s
_
trefsed.
-
Los'.ng bec9Il)es
_
:a
.
.
~ered
.
l!
season-en~mg I:c
_
ncc
-
m-
.,
·
·111en-sa1d he was
_
d1sappomted
. ·
said
.
_
_
_
;
__
u\Ve
;
mllstjusf gq out and
..
,
,
habit
,
?ll~
I
_
can t really .~hange
.
·
Jl!t'X
only one gru.ne mto his fresh-
with the loss
:
·
::
.
.
_
.
play to the bestofourability."
•
that.
_
Its up _to the t~am.
.
_
=
,
man season.
·
''We definitely.could have beat
· ·
.
-
· ·
·
--
· ·'
·
· ·
·
·
•
:
,
_:
The
coach is countmg on a f~w
With
_:
a
I -
·
I
overall record,
··
;:-
.
.
.
ofhis veteran leaders to help tum.
Mari st hosted Niagara on
..
·
•.
WQmen's
·
crosSCOuni±y
,
hOpes tofinistrOntop
ofNEC
•
•
C
•
•
.
•
_.
•
by
PHiLiIP
WHITE
.
..
:
·
staffWrtter
O.
.
As
·
the women's cross country
team starts ;their 1996' season,
optimism
1
seems to
·
be
the word
around theteam's locker room.
·
c
In
his seventh season as head
coach, Phil ¥,elly said the team
should
'
finish in the top three
-
spots in
;
their meets and at least
second
fa
the North East Con-
ference
:;
.
.
;
•
" Mourit
St. Mary's
will be our
•
toughest competitor. They al-
ways have been," Kelly said.
.
·
Mount
•
St. Mary's is Marist's
most competitive opponent. The
Red Foxes challenged them last
year, but
-
finished a close second.
The Red Foxes finished first at
the
Hartford Invitational this past
Friday.
•
:fhey had taken nine out
of the top
,
-12 finishing places,
and Kathleen Woodson, a se-
nior, finished first by 30 seconds
from the second place runner,
·
·
son, the· Red Foxef Jpughest
" Kathleen is our best runner,
meet looks to be the National
the team captain ahd leads _the
Catholic Cross Country C::hampi-
team," senior
.
Mary McQullian
onship, held at Notre Dame, this
said.
Friday. Kelly expects this meet
The upper classmen have
tobeadifficultmeetifProvidence
helped the Red Foxes maintain
College and Georgetown Uriiver-
their winning record
,'
including
sity are there.
·
Jen
.
Delosso
,
Karen Mangan,
With a combination of experi-
MarY McQullian, Kerriann enced veteran runners and a
Redmond, and Ali.son Murray.
strong underclassmen nucleus,
Kelly, however, puts much of this Red Fox team is coming to-
his time and experience
in
his
gether.
freshman and sophomore run-
" Even though this is my se-
ners.
_
These runners are
.
Karen
nior year, not just seniors, but
Dg~,ilhue, Debbie Flannigan, Jen
everyone seems to be working
Glover, Merideth Halstead, Beth
·
together," Murray said.
Johnson, Leah Koerner, Terra
Despitethisbeingthewomen's
Quinn and
·
Krlstyn Russo.
last season in the NEC, Kelly said
"Even though bur senior class
he believes his team excels in this
is strong, our
·
freshmen and
.
sport more than most of the
sophomo~ will provide our core
teams in the conference.
strength fornow· and for the next
"
.
We're better than two thirds
coup!~ ofj~oijs
,
" Coach Kelly
of the teams in the conference,
said
.
·
·
.
·
·
--
and we should finish second, if
Looking into the rest of the sea-
not first," Kelly said.
Next season, the Red Foxes will
be in the Metro Atlantic Athletic
Conference (MAAC)'. Marist
would have been in that confer
-
ence earlier, but due to their con-
tract with the NEC, Marist must
stay in it for this season
.
Aside from the meet at Notre
Dame, the Red Foxes have two
other important meets
:
the con-
ference and regional meets.
Kelly said the Red Foxes must
win those two meets in order to
beat Mt. St. Mary's.
The final meet that holds a tre-
mendous amount of significance
for the Red Foxes is the Bowdoin
Invitational, held October I 2.
"Toe
Bowdoin is so important
because it is being held here at
Marist, and we have to win it
because it's on our ground,"
Coach Kelly said.
"I
·
left Iona because there was
.
more to offer here," Herodes
stated. "There were more oppor -
tunities with the kids here, and
I
c
_
ould see
SOffi<!
positive things
going on with the future of this
program."
olley----
.
..continued from page 12
n kills with an average of 2.26 .
In
addition to being named
ortheast Conference Player of
e
Week, Vir leads this year's
earn
in
kills
and has Ute fewest
rrors of the starters.
Fellow sophomore Schuerger
as
regained her position as the
eader in assists for the team.
Last
year, she averaged 7 .76
rgame.
Marist's upcoming schedule
ncludes games
at
Seton Hall on
uesday at 7:00 p;m., and the
'.
rexel Tournament on Friday
.
d Saturday.
.
Their next home game is Tues-,
ay, September
24
against St.
eter's at 7:00 p.m.
,
,
Si~1
:
6,:rim
·
W~:
,
:
•.
.
.
W
O
MEN'S
SOCCER
GOALIE
:
BETH
ZACK
.
..
-·
-
..
...
...
JJ~~
:
oF.
.
~
·
wm:
.
'This
·
team didn'rgo on thefield
~q)RDED
43
.
SAVES
IN
nm
HRST
3
.
.
-
'.
.
.
·
.
,,
,
T~
CIRCLE
·
.
•
SPORT
s
.-
·
.
~.p.~nitied9, i996 .
.
expecting to win
._
It was just
•
·
hoping not
.
to
lost(
· ·
.
.
·
•
_
.
.
·
-
'
:
.
: :
~
'.
&,If
Herod~;
.
_
.
.
12
.
.
Men's
;
soccer
-
coacli
_
_
,,_
:,.
.
·
:
·.:
:·
.~
-
--
.
'.
·
.>::-'.;/
-·:,
,,
..
,..
..
......
:··· -_._·•
..
'
\-:--·
·
.:, .
..
·
't
w9
,
~¢i?
f
§bt;~i
'
t6~fu·
·
triesto·break
-
out ofsc(}rfng
:
s1uni.p
~y
·
~:~IriMcBRri>E
.
·
-
.
.
.,
-
.
~
'.
tti~ytia
ii
;
l
~
i
~~ils~dre
:
:'>
.
St~Jf
W;ite~
.
Even
thot1gh the Red Foxes
~·
-.
The·Me~ Atl~nti~
-
Athleti~
_;
.
Conference wiilbe the rieW home
of lhewomen'.s soccer'
.
te
·
ruri
.
at
.
the start- of
,
the 199.7,J~9
,
8
;
sea-
son.
·
So how do
.
the
·
Red Foxes
·
wish to Ieav~ the NortheaslCon-
ference?
.·
.
.
. .
.
.
•.
. .
...
•
;
Senior cap.lain
.
Stacey
S
.
eb.astian said that they have a
goal.
.
.
·
.
'.iY,,e
~ant to leave our mark,"
Sebastian said.
·
·
.
· .
Second year head coach Maria
Piechocki is back at the helm af-
.
ter a
6:11
·
inaugu
r
atseasonjn
which the Red Foxes finished
third in the
NEc
:
Also back this
·
year are team
captains se_nior m
'
idfielder/de-
fender Stacey
:
Sebastian
,
junior
goalkeeper Elizabeth Zack, and
·.
junior defend
.
er Janet Oliver,
·
.
Piech~ki would Hke to again
reach the. NEC tournament as
.
iiavebeen
~
1r
{
a
.
slightscoring
.
sluirip
/
they have
·
already shown
-
~
.
sfgns that
:
they:~an
:
score;·
·
And
.
.
•
whili
f
~he
'
.:
offense
•
· is
•
looking to
·
(?riCtf
:
again
regai!) their
.
scoqng
· touch, the defense has been play-
ing solidly, ledby
_
Zack:
.·
·
·
Injustthefirstweek of the sea
-
.
.
son
·
; Zack
Jias
ali-e~dy- picked up
thefirstNECPlayerofthe Week
award .
.-
The junior has allowed
.
a
mere two goals in
"
the first three
games of the s_eason,
a
percent.:
.
age thatequals oulto a micro-
scopic o'.67.
·
She.recorded 43
.
saves
.
in those first three games
.
·
.·
The team can:ie up on iliewrong
side of a
l~O ga1T1e
<
against
Niagara this past
-
weekend. The
Purple Eagles scored early in the
. _
first half
;
and that would be the
only goafof the game.
.
.
part of the team's season goals.
·
.
.. .
·
•
··
·· ·.
.
. .
:
..
·..
.
.·
·.
,
.
Circle photo/Katie Robinson
Sebastian s
.
aid she ag
i"
eeswith
..
Freshman Sarah McDermott
.
makes a
rr1o
_
ve
on a Niagara defender Saturday at Leonidoff field
Zack registered
13
more save
1
s
in
.
the losing effort.
~~~~~:;~c:ut sai~~~~:~6te:~
goal.
.
·
_
.
. ,
,
.. ·
.
.
·
. ·-
.
great,'
'.
-
S~b
.
asti~
'
said.
·
-
: ,-
.
proveon if theywanf to havea
Monmouthwouldbeagreatway
,
Defensively
,
this
.
alignment has
.
The Red Foxes cuirentlyhave
solid farewell season
:
.
From here, the Red Foxes head
off on
a:
road trip that begins at
Boston University on Sept.
17
.
··
to leave the NEC.
.
worked in t
_
he~e
_
_
e~ly l?tages
.
oc
·
~
16
fre
.
shmenand soph~mor~ on
The team has been in a slight
:
'.'
(Our) biggest goal is to win
the season,
as
tpe
·
Red Fox de-
the tearil;'Yhile there
are
only five
scoring droughdn the la
s
t two
..
They will then open their NEC
the NEC," Sebastian said
.
"To fense has play
(?
d' solid in the juniors arid seniors, burOliver games, as they displayed in the
schedule with a road trip at Rob-
beat Mcmmouth would
.
b
~
in-
.
eyes of both the heact
•
coach arid
.
sees
i
his
i
s being
a
'.'
po
'
sitive
:
first two games of the
·
season.
·
ert Moms on Sept. 20
.
credible.';
.
.
. .
. .
'.
.
:
.
S~bas~ian
,
•
.
.
.
.
.
.
"(T~ere!
.
s)'you
.
th and en~~usi-
.
The Red F9.xes opened up their
.
.
.
.
.
.. ·
.
'.J'h_e team ri1Lbf~!ignedi11a
'
4-
. ~><\l~~g~tr,e
r;
·:
t~_~fxe
,
played .
.
as~, and,!t'II_be thei:e inth·eyears
••
.
·
. ·
se~on with a
·
).:t victory over
·
.•.
st~rancis (Pa) will ~
·
the
.
si~ht
4;-2_set, which llleans
,
there
will
.-
·.
~oh,dly,
.
P~~ch~ykt ~aid
:'
.
'
'°' _
·
.•.
···· ·. _ to come,
;.
Ol
_
1ver said.
;
:
·
· ,
_
,,.
.
.
•
Stonybrnok. They followed this
•
..
of their last game of this road tnp,
.
be
tW,(>
st.tj~ers
{
f6u
t
~idfield~rs
';,:.:C.
~:..~.eb
_
a~U~
~
sai
.
~~h,~
}
i2_fees~..:,;,~-..:.::J?te~lioc~
ai
d
'..
sc6i-iri.g:go~
'.
is
~
-
~
8~nlC
~
~jth
\:
a;.2
~
0<i.~hutout
.;_
o
.
vcr
~
,r
.-,"'
».'
.
~ish
.
».'i.lJ.c_gnc;Juci,~J)_l1.
..
Sept,
.
if-
,•.·
·
··•·
c
•
·
·
.·
·•·'
·
"••
,e,c..,_-
.
and fourdefende
·
rs wiii1
•
zackin
_
.
Defen~1yely
;
\
we are
_
cplaying .·
·
-
wh
_
arthe
'
team
.
:
~vilL'.have
/
tcUm~
.:.
~
Noi-th
e
astern.
::
.
,
But
~
since
,
then
·'
.
.
..
.
.
.
.
.
·c
;
:
-
--
.
-
.
··
'
,
;
·
..
;
<_
·;
·:
.
·:
·
..
~:.~
·
: .
...-··•·
.
··
.··
·-
:
. -
_/'·-
.
,
-:."····,.-:-:,::·
1
· . · ·
. ~ ·
.'::··
.~-
;_
- · · .
-
-
._
.-••
·
. ·
,
•
•
.....
:,-.
·
:
:
·-
;:
-
·-
~---
:>-
•i·'l:·.
·
_
.--
:
_
_
·
~-:--
·
·:·
·
~
:-·
I
~all~yJB'all
:
ftfli@~
"
t)h
>
_,..._
,
1~~!~~i
;
f
0~Wc!i{~~p~~k
-
-
.
.
·
siaff'Wr#er
> .
in·their owntourric1~~rit:_
:
.'rhe ·
.
--
·
·
·
·
Red
·
foxes
,
took
.
second
m
.
the
. iL:
Gpiriing of(
c1
~is
~
p~fo
l
j~g
J
J)-
.
tQt1mainent,lqs1ng cmly
-
to even-
.
.
:
:pyeaj-
;
the wo
.
rri
e
n
'.
S
•
vo.lleybalL
•'
tun!
"
chap1pio~
);>
rovidence
;
't
.
'>
.• ._
·
.
. .
... .
·
·
·
.
·
·
.··
·
In µteNew
·
Hampsf_lfre
'
fouma
;;.
.
teaI11i
f
looking forward
:
to what
.
.
ment
;·
fieshm
a
n
·
:
Jer
f
J>arketwas
/
•·•
-
~
.·
.
..
l
.
'.l6
_
·.·
,
·
p
·
s
·
·.
~:
_
.
.
.
::
o
.·:
~
.
·
.
~
.
-
,_·.
\
.
j
.
.
.
a s
_
:
:
,
t
.
1
_·.
f:.
.
)
.
m
.
:
_::
.
P
..•
r
.
~~
·
v
·
:
.
:~
. '..
-
·
..
namecfall
~
toutnameitt newccime
r.
..
-
-
.
'
SeniorTarab
a
fuadtiw~iiiimect
•
·
·•
.
··
:
'
Iil fact;
.
with
·
ali'twelve letter
~
..
to
the
all
~
tohrnillneritteam.
'
..
winners
:
returning
>
h
~
a
·
d cbach . The players the Red Foxes \iiilf
·.
Emily Alquist said she
sees
the
be ki6king
.
19
.
lead th
...
e
.
·
.
.
1n
.
thisyear
Red fox~s comp
7
~ing
\
vith
:
·
·
--
·
·
·
N~rtheast Conference
'
powers
are S.
.
~ni,or c
'i
jp
_
fains Jennifer
RiderandSt
:
Francis{Pa)forcon~' Weinbrecht
':a
rid
'
Liz
>
Herzner.
·
foren~~
·
§uprem~
cy'.
· :_
i
~\ :
)
: .
Along
i
:Witi-
{
feilow seniors
; :
~'Being a
C
o
r
riear
;
.
the
lop of
Da
_
~aHU
..
and
:
M~ry
;
B.eth
-.
~ef
,
~nf~ri11~J
_
is
{
v~r
f
r~Iistic
.
Ho_rman
;
\:
a.rid
i,.
~qphomoi~s
goal for this team," the second
.
H~~~herVir and. Elli~ Schuerger,
y~~
6ead toa~hsaid
:
.
:
-
..
'.
·.
.
tµey
.
mak~up the
:'
11uc~eus
of
th~
.
_
.
Alquist, i
l'.
1994 graduate
'
of ~W:t::::ht,
.-
i~
iddle blocker
.
Mirinesqta,
·
Vfas
.
eitcoufaged by
·
fr
.
pm
La
_
-
..
J
.
01
.
·
1a.
..
c
..
:
.
al
.
i
.
fi
,
o
.
m
.· ..
ia.
.
·.
led
th_
e.
the good play of the
..
h~~
.
'1~
at
,
· ·
-
· ·
·
·
team in service aces
and
was see-
the end of the :1995 season, as
<>.n
.. d
.
in
..
b
.
..
loc
_
·
ki
.
n
.·
g
l
.
as
.
t
.
..
Year
.-
-
.
•
.
Tot's·
the Red Foxes won five of iheir
year she is_in the SaJlle po,sition,
lastl0and
.
threeofth~ii:lastfour
first in aces with eight, and sec-
to e11d
.
their season in a positive
ond in b
.
loc
.
.
king .
..
·
.
.
.
·
.
·
·
.
·
.
. ·.
.
•.
_
fashion. What she
·
liked
.
even
rnore, however, was ihe dedica-
..
:
Outside
hitter Herzner
was an
tion her team displayed in the off
-
.
all-around
good
.
player for the
season.
·
.
Red Foxes l
_
ast year, as she was
.. It
takes a while when a new
in Marist's top five in every ma-
coach comes in, like I
.
did last jor category
.
last season .
.
Again
year, form.et~
10
adjust Jo the
Herzner.is found near the top of
coac~'s style and philosophy,
every statistic, including being
but we
·
really worked
.
hard in the
first on the team in blocking per-
summer to get better acquainted
centage at · 755.
with each other," Alquist said.
Damarau, from Tucson,
Ari-
The hard work has already ac-
zona, Jed the team in digs last
count~ for two wins
in
Marist's
year with an average of2.76 digs
first four games this year, a feat
per game. Horman led the team
that took them sixteen games last
season. Included in their wins is
Please see
V.Ball
on
p. / / ...
N~\V
rnen'sso?cer coach
brings
new
life
by Srtw
w
ANCZYK
..
]3~fore
aajving in Poughkeepsie,
way>•
·
.
.
··
Staff Writer
.
Her¢es s~ntfour :years on the
The s~cc~s ca~e to
an
abrupt
.
_
.
.
coaching staff at Icinii",
:
and was
halt ~n Saturday, however, when
New blood has been injected
liained
the 1995 MA.AC Coach
a different Marist team showed
into
·
the Marist College Men's
of the
·
year after
:
guiding
.
the
up tohosiMou~t St. Mary's in
soccer program, but the team
Gaels to
the
Conference Cham-
the first NEC contest of the sea-
may not feelthe full effects of pionship game in onlyhis sec-
son.
·
A lackluster attitude and a
the transfusion for some time.
ond season as head coach.
.
handful of key off sides calls left
Anew head coach, some key
Ironically, Herodes' debut
as
theRedFoxesonthewrongside
recruits, and a new attitude are
Marist's head coach came
.
on
ofa3
-
0score.
·
all part of the 1996 campaign to
September 4, against his fonner
Mo~nt St. Mary's is always
begin a winning tradition as
team. Thanks to goals from Matt
''very good in the conference"
MaristmovesfromtheNortheast
Day, Dave Seipp, and Cary
according to assistant coach
Conference to the more competi-
Smith
__,
the Red Foxes escaped
·
Michael Kenney. Along with
live Metro Atlantic Athletic Con-
Iona with an encouraging 3- I
.
vie-
RQbert Monis, the Mount is ex.,.
ference.
•
tory.
-
pected to challenge for the NEC
Th~ Red
.
Foxes' new leader,
"T~at was a big one for us,"
title this fall.
head coach Bob
.
Herodes, is a
Herodes explained
.
'1'he guys
product of the MMC himself.
were nervous abouUona, and it
1
was
good
to get that out of the
Pease see M. Soccer on
p.J
I ...
49.1.1
49.1.2
49.1.3
49.1.4
49.1.5
49.1.6
49.1.7
49.1.8
49.1.9
49.1.10
49.1.11
49.1.12