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The Circle, December 12, 1996.xml

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 49 No. 10 - December 12, 1996

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-NEWS-
.
-
· ·
Peer
grcmps
heih
sttidents
in
crises.··
-P~GE 6
Groundbreakµtg
date• set .. ·
~
. .
;---SPORTS-
'lrack begins indoor season at
Fairleigh Dickinson ·_
PA~E 15
f~r new
libnuj
·- - --
PAGE 3
Save
yofirseif.from\~iriter boredom -
PAGE
12
Volumc49. Nurnber 10
The
Student Newspaper
of
Marist
·college
December
12, 1996
Water quality adyisoeyJiftedafter turbidity incident
by
TIM
MANSON
water treatment plant, .due to
Staff Writer. _
heavy rains in upsta~ New York
--
--
--
·
two weeks ago, which det~nO-:
After
much confusion, thew;-
rated the raw river water quality.
ter quality advisory for the city
The problemJaccording to
The
and town of Poughkeepsie was
Poughkeepsie Journal, was that ·
lifted
a
Poughkeepsie radio station had
The
advisory, which warned · announced that all residents of
people with weakened immune
_
the · cit)' ·· and . town of
systems to boil their tap water or Poughkeepsie should boil their
drink bottled water, was posted - drinking water.

because ofincreased turbidity, or
·
John
Glass, chief of engineer-·
cloudin~ss, in water leaving the
ing at the Dutchess County De-
pariment of Health, said this was
never a major problem for the
general public.
_ ..
''There was never a general boil
water.advisory," said Glass~
. .The advisory suggested that
only iinnlune deficie.nt residents
should'J>oil thefr \Vaterin order
to
_
protect them ·against possible
infection by water-borne organ-
isms, such as cryptosporidium.
The initial reason for the advi-
sory was because the turbidity
levelof the water was between .4
and 1.0 Nephelometric Turbidity
Units
(NTU),
according to Glass.
The national standard for water
turbidity,- set by the Environmen-
tal Protection Agency (EPA)
three years ago, is
.5
NTU.
·
The standard
had
beenl
.0 NTU
previously, but it was changed
after a number of outbreaks of
cryptosporidiosis, the worst case
being Milwaukee in 1993 when
the peak turbidity was
1.
7 NTU
and more than 400,000people fell
ill
According to Glass,
NTU
is the
m~ure of suspended matter
in:
w,.~ter,J;,utis not entirely accu--
rate
in
~termining whether there
are actually contaminants in the
water.
"For a test like_ a bacteria test
it's easy. You can get the results _
in24hours. Butcryptosporidium
Please see
WATER.
page 4 ...
Students push· for
more canipus lighting
by
MICHELLE. BRAMICH
Staff Writer
ion department," said Daly.
According to Daly, every light
costs-$3,000 .. He said the two
The Student Government
As-
lights are on order, but he did not
sociation (SGA) wants
to
shed know how long it would be until
more light on Marist campus.
they were in place. He estimated
. Student Body President Pat this would take about 12weeks.
Mara· said Marist needs more
Mara said the lack of lighting
lighting. He asked for_increased
will always be a problem due to
-.. .. ligh_tJng ata_ Stud~nt
Life
Colll:-
c ·
insufficientfunding .. ,
·
.:@ttee
to
-n'l~e
c:aftip~ssaf'er.;:.·_: , , _.-::. 'miis ·issue
has
been on-going
--c·\:~1.}£S<>f.4.i~g_:to,··~~~(i:9~;~~::::--(9r,,tl:l~J~t(2.~r-"?~;that'l·hav:e _
-.-that--need the-most;iighting/ate:
·:'beeii:liertf
'tsaiclMara. ·'
-
·•-· ·
-
. ' -
Cin:le
PhololDiaJle
Kolod .
Pictured
al>ove ls.one of six giving treti~ on carnpua:· Despite
an
ettrly lack
of
student .
respon84!t, thej>roject
I~
plc~ng up~ Still, several lte~s ne~d to be bought to_ supply
. focal famllles with
th~
Chrls~8-s gl~ Marlst prom_lsed them.
-
--
-
Please see
relt:lt;d story,
page 5:
Maristpa.t{folRate~il1Wor10AIDs·.week
Peer
ed~cators· stress ·educatio~ and _awareness .in
fight
against
AIDS
by KARA FLYNN
Staff_Writer
One moment
of
silence stood
for
the
millions of people _in-
fected with and affected by the
lilVvinL,.
·
The
lllV /
AIDS Peer F.ducators
promph~ll a campus-wide.
mo-
ment of silence from
1:15to
1:16
p.m. on Dec.
2. This moment
markt'li-1he
15th
anniversary
of
the
of1idal
recognition of AIDS
as
an
epidemic in
this
country.
This moment' also marked the ·
beginning of World AIDS Week,
a
week dedicated to educating
students about
lilV
and AIDS.
Hem Borremeo, lower
Champagnat mentor and
ro-ad-
visor
10
the HIV/AIDS
Peer F.du-
cators, said the group aims to
raise awareness and educate
about the
virus.
"Thb is an important topic to
talk abc>ut_b~ause
~ a popula-
-tionofyoqng aclults, itc9m1.:5 as
·no.surprise
a lot of
peers are
sexµ-
ally active,'' sai.d Borremoo, ''Col-
lege is a time of experu.ne11ting
in
alot of different things. It's all
about making·choices
and
being
responsible about our choices."
FromDec.2-6,lllV/AIDS
Peer
Educators.also honored World
AIDS week by displaying an in-
formation table in· the student
center. Students there could re-
ceive information and
ask
edu-
cators questions.
Debra Alfano, a lllV/AIDS
Peer.
Educator said on-campus events
raised her awareness of HIV and
prompted her to join the group.
"I went to the Ryan White lec-
ture
and
a
presentation on rape.
They made me
reali7.e
the reality
of
HIV,"
said Alfano. <'It blew
my mind when
I
saw the statis-
tics."
Alfano, a freshman said she
witnessed much carelessness on
andoff campus. ·
-
.
..I
.~a\Y a lot of irresponsibility·
on campus, and
I
didn't know if
students were ignorant or just
didn't care," said Alfano. "'That
is why we have to-educate."
__ . •According_to Alfano~- the
group plans to· further educate
students next semester.
.They hope to create a newslet-
ter, which will be distributed
throughout campus and have
planned demonstrations show-
ing
s~ggering AIDS-related sta-
tistics.
.
Alfano said the group needs to
· work on methods of awareness.
"V{e have put up posters and
displays which are geared to our
generation and have an impact,"
she said. "We're not just wait-
ing for it to happen. We're out
there working, especially on pub-
Please see AIDS, page 4 ...
'
tJi.e·northentrance
Or
Doimelly.
.
.
Accprdi~g
tgjv.tara, this year
by theJashion department,· the is_ different because the Btudent
Grado; which -is the. ~heahan Life Committee
is
aware
of the
parking
lot and driveway towards
problem. -He 'said the past. SGA
·Donnelly, the_ gravel path from
senators failed to bring this is-
Leo
to
the McCann center and
suetotheadministration'satten-
behind the Old Townhouses.
tion.
_ , ""These areas are so dark that - -Students have split opinions
they pose a threat to_ any · indi-
on· this matter. Junior Michele
yidual walking in them at night,"
Araneo, who works nights in
said Mara. "Thefirsttimelever DonneHy, said Marist .needs
felt afraidjm this campus :was more lights at the north entrance
-'.Valking home from I)onnelly in of the building.
that pathway towardsLo\VeU .. "It is really_dark in that path-
Thomas this year because of th~ way.. rve seen people stumble
darkness.'' -.
_ . .· .• -_..
_ _ __
on the sidewalk because they
TQmDaly,·directorofphysical couldn't see where it was," said
plant, said he had requests over Araneo.
his past seven years:from the
According to junior Alicia
Safety and-Security Committee
_
Ross,_thereisnotaproblemwith
for more lighting on campus, but the lighting on campus.
the funds were never made avail-
· "Personally, I've never felt un-
able.
_ _.
. . .
_
.. _ .
safe here. !think they've done a
"I
was rec_ently authorized to
good
job with Hghting because
put two lights at the north en-
they've put up more lights since
trance of Donnelly bythe fash-
I've b~n here," said Ross.
Approximately how many hours do
you sleep on an average night?
Less than 4 hours: 23
5-7 hours: 123
8 or more hours: 36
The Circle conducted an unscientific poll on
Nov. 21- Dec.7. One
hundred eighty two students
were
asked this
week's question.
.i
_!i
.
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·'
Marist and Be and
. De~emberJ2,J99_6_·•
·
.
.
.
.
.
'
,
.
:.

.
··,
..
·-
..
Christopher urges
S~rb
leader t9 -~ccept ·election
.
t¢~ults : ·
'
'
\
',
.
'.
.
by BARRY
SCBWEID
AP Diplomatic Writer .
BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP}:: Threat-
ening a new. economic squeeze, Sec-
retary of State Warren Christopher
Monday urged Serbian President
Slobodan Milosevic to accept' oppo-
sition election victories and open talks
with his opponents .
. Christopher said Milosevic should
show the same kind of flexibility that
led htm last year to negotiate peace
· terms for Bosnia.
''Milosevic's position at the present
time is self-defeating and he should
, recognize the importance of accepting
the election results," he said. '.'Having
a dialogue with. the opposition is in
his own interest."
.
·...
. ..
Christopher. also said the United
States could cho9s_e to r¢i.mpose·eco-
nomic sanctions. against Yugoslavfa
FBI asksforpublic's
help in :OlyJ)lpic
Park bombingcc~se
· by
Russ BYN:UM. .. . .
~ssoci~tedl'ressyi.i-iier ·.
that were ·dropped
10
exchange•for ·we'Hjust have to keep the pressure on'
Milosevic's cooperation"i~forging last.·: and
see
whl;lt
we
can;accompli_sh," he
year's Dayton peace accords.:· :/ '
.. said:
.. · .
.
,
. · ·~ · · ·
· . . Other sanctions remain in force, in~
Christopher and top advisers are here

eluding U.S. opposition to international
for NATO's annual winte.r meeting.
bank loans for Serbia/freezing some
Plan~ to expand eastward toward
assets. and not sending an American
Russia's border is the liveliest topic up
ambassador to Belgrade.
· ·
for consideration.
Christopher gave no sign at a news
The 16 allies also are expected to call
conference the Clinton administration
on Milosevic to ease up. NATO is di-
would give its direct' backing to any
rectly involved in the Balkans, espe-
political rivals inan effort to bring down
cially with its peacekeeping force in
Milosevic, the target of sustained dem-
Bosnia.
· . · ·· .
· ·
onstrations in Belgrade .. ·
The Serbian leader had refused to ac-
"What we are saying is that ifhe does
cept election results in Belgrade that
not clear up his act he will be in a deeper
were a setback to his rule. He has
hole," said a senior U.S. official who
shunned political· foes. And he .has
spoke on condition of anonymity.
. closed two ·popular ind~pendent radio
In· Washington, State Department
stations that covered the massive daily
spokesman Glyn Davies said the U.S:
protests against him.
·
would continue to
tnit.
pressure on
. The Serbian Supreme Court ruled Sun-
Milosevic.
· ·.
·
.
day against opposition parties who say
. "Clearly pressure works in Serbia, and
they were robbed in recent elections.
·'..
·.#
>
'
"If
anyone believes they recognize the
voice of the person ... please call,"
Kennedy said. ·
. .
·
.
Kennedy annou~ced
,a'
ton.:free tele:.. ·
· phonenumfor.: 1-888;324-9797 ~forthe
public
fo
call _with ~ip~, ;; , · .·.· :·;

Russian
·
·voters
pverwhelmingly
.
. .
'
'
.
reject nuclearpJant
byGREGMYRE
Associated Press Writer
The bomb exploded duririg
ari
early
morning conceit' in. Olyh.;ipidJ::~ntennial
Park.. Orie person
was.
kilioo ·and more.
ATLANTA(AP)- TheFBIMonday ... than 100 were injtir~.A cameraman
asked the public• for h~lp)n identify.:.
rushing to 'tlie sce,n'e died ofa heart at-
MOSCOW. (AP) -- Russian· voters
ing the voice of the man who called t0:-
tack. .
.
.•
, .
, . . . . . .•·.
handily turned down the government's
warn police of the bomb just before it ,.. Kennedy• said
th~
:hti!llb was heavy,
bid to finish· a partially constructed
went off ... ' .. , . •.. ..·· . . .···
. .
more than 40 pounds,
and
was carried
nuclear power plant in their impover-
The FBI offered a reward of up to
in a green, ArmY~~ty1~knapsa<!k, which
.
ished rural region,jnthe first referen-
$500,000 for information leading to the
was left beneath a bench next
to
a sound
dum of its kind.
.
arrest and conviction of the bomber
towerin thepru:k. : . . · ·
·
Resultsofthereferendum,announced
or bombers, Deputy Director Weldon
Because
~~iµ¢o#<(
~p.clged,.th~ pack,
Monday, mean Russia'~ Atqmic Energy
Kennedy said.
. .
.
..
causing
ittofall
ori}tj; ba*, th
e
expl~ . Miriistrywill not be allowed to complete
t:w~.'.ve
.
~.icle
a
lo,tClfpr~gi:essin this
sion.went Sttaight~p,·he' said: Had
tbe ..
the project, which was halted after- the
'. · ... investigation,;but.w.~ still continue to .. force of the blas(gone'c::>utwaiff along· . 1986 nuclear catastroph~ at Cliernol:>)_'1
.,._ se~k the public?~ as~is,tui~e," he said,: the gromid; it would havetatised many
in Ukraine.
.. ·
,
Meanwhile, NBC reached a settle- •,more casualties;Kennedyssaid._;. ·
·
·
Residents in Kostroma; 250"miles
ment today with lawyers, for security
"W~
woulc!_have seen a higher num-:
northeast of Moscow, had feared a
guard Richard JeweH,. who for three
ber of casualties,-and many, many more . nucl~ plant would drive away the tour-
months was considered
a
suspect-in
kdP_,!e injured:or ~
11
<!9-~IlJinWhatwe
istswhosteadilystreamiritoenjoythe
the bombing, over coriunen~s made oil
· .. ,,;;,
·
region's. clean lakes
.
and,·wpi;,,dlands,
the air by news anchor Tom Brokaw. · . Kennedy said it was possib.le for on~ 's_aid·Karen Richardson of Greenpeace
Details were not released.
.
per~on to. h.~vf plart¢cf
the·-fiomb
and . International: ·. . .
. . ·. . ..
At the
FBI
news confer~nce; inye5= riulcle the 9P phon~.c:a,11. '•: . :;," .· .. · ·.•,: : .. ·
:
The ~nvironin:ental organization-had
. tigators also displayed
a
replica of the · : ,
'
'.~e tim..e f~ftors)~i:e
:
~~t;?_.~at
i~\:
J1~lped ¥sidents pu_t;theissue to
a : ·
knapsack that contained the born'?,
possiQle one person did bo~h,
·
he said.
·
referendum the first time Russians had
<!D<l.
asked, .for witr1.es,ses or photo-
"But . ·•· it. co~ld also have' been two
the opportu~ity to vote on a nuclear
graphs taken in the par~ shortlybe"' people actmg m concert.,O
. ·... .·
issue'. ,
. . .·.
. _ . ·. · .. ·. . .
.
fore the July 27 .atta~k that might help
:. After
.
nearlythr¢ me>nilis as
·
the only
•~obviously, we're_verypleased about
identify the person wpo ~arried it. . ;
·
nam~
suspect, {~well; who'f,rrst pointed
this,'.'.
Richardson said.
·"If
shows . .
Kennedy,sajd th~tf!le fBifirmly
out
·
the kriapsack to
:
ofrn:ers, :Was
thafwhenpeopl~ have a cb(;jke,·they
believes that someone has a photo:-
cleared by ttie govemnient on Oct. 26.
don't want nuclear power."
·
graphof the bonib being earned into
JeweU had been put under suspicion
More ~an 80 percent of voters op-
.. the park; Kennedy
.
said.
.
on the possibility' th~t he fit·a l;cnown- ·. p9st!d the pliµ1t
in
Suiidafs reforen-
Kennedy piayed a recording oft}le
psychological type~·;i;soie
6
~~:tbirsty ·: dum; accordinito Russiat11i~ws agen-
911 · call recdv.ed by Atlanta p_oU~e
for recognition, oftefr
l'yla.'Y
:
~itforce- .· cies. Final results were not available.
about 22 minutes before.the bomb ex-
ment, who creates;_iCcrisis. so 'he.
·
cao
P!~~~
is a bomb in·.~e~t~nnial Park. ~:;~i~:!~~:t:!f~~id months · ~ - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - .
You have 30 minute!;," a man said
ago there were other suspects. They
.
The Weekend
slowly and calmly during the 13-sec-
·
have been described
.
by law enforce-
ond call.
·
·
ment sources
as
linkeq to some private
Weather
A transcript of the call was released
militia groups, but no arrests have been
shortly after the bombing but the au:.
made.
. .· . ,
.
Today:
dio tape was withheld until today.
KennedydeclinedtQ comment today.
on an .militia-connection.
-
Chance of
rain
or snow · •
south. Lows 25 to 35.
Highs 35
to
45.
Friday:
Considerable cloudiness. A
chance
of
flurries and
sprinkles. Lows 25 to 35.
Highs 35 to 45.
Saturday:
Chance of rain or snow. Lows
30 to
35.
Highs
in
the 30s.
Sunday:
Chance of rain or snow;"Lows
30 to 35. Highs in the 30s.
Source: Associated
Press























































































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·•·
.
THE CIRCLE,
December 12,
1996
3
Circle
K
lielpSdliildren,
.
·
·
one pennYatatiine
'-
.
.
..
by
·
BENAGOES
Staff Write_r
something nice between lunch and din-
.
ner,.,he said.
. •
Amato recomrriended that Liberty Part-
nership contact Lisa Annor, Circle K
.
: :
M~risr!s Circle K club reached out to area
president and Mid-Rise resident assis-
·
c:~iJ.~re
·
n recently, literally helping them one
tant, to help raise money to offset the
pennf at ath:ne.
.
state's budget cuts.
:
'
1nfchtb
teamed with the Marist Liberty
Annor said she immediately liked the
.
.
Partnership Program
.
to organize a penny
idea.
·
·'
drive. riit
_'
i.·alJlpusto help "at risk" children in
"I think [Liberty Partnership] moti-
Poughkeepsie and Kingston.
.
vates the kids to do some academic
.
Maris, is thihosi institution for the Lib-
achievements," she said. "Some people
erty P
{
1rt1forship
Program,
which is primarily
just need that little push to get them up,
funded
hy
the New York State.Education.De-·
andl believe it keeps kids off the
partrri(!nt.'.
-
:
,
·.
·
.
· ·
streets.''
.
·
·
According to Rob Wright, director of
.
.
Circle K raised
$334 with the penny
Maris!\ Liberty Partne~hip Program, the
·
drive, _which Annor said is only
_
the be-
program helps students in grammar and high
ginning,
..
.
_
.
schQol who are struggling
with
their home
·
Wright said he was pleased with Circle
environment, shyness, peer pressure, or any
·
K's support
·

factors preventing them from doing their
.
. ''We are very grateful to Marist stu-
oest.
.
dents. It was a good amount of money
.
Wright said Liberty Partnership provides
raised through student efforts," he said.
counseling and academic tutoring through-
Amato considered the penny drive a
out thl' day
.
toits students, but recent state
success, and he said the real work
budge! cuts forced the program to scale
·
started after the collection.
down irs services.
"They haci
:
hundreds and hundreds
"The state is having problems all around,
of pennies that they spent hours wrap-
and I .iherty took a $45,000 cut," Wright said.
·
ping," he said.
The
program
had to· eliminate after-school
·
According to Wright it is important
snacks. which Wright said he believes led to
that Liberty Partnership and Circle K
decreased attendance. The program: he said,
continue to help local children because
can
now
only afford
to
offer snacks once a
·
the five-year-old program has proved
month. not every day;
·
to be a success.
According to Peter Amato, associate dean
·
He said Liberty started with
25 stu-
.
of stuck·nt affairs and Circle K advisor, food
dents, and out of those still in the pro-
is an important incentive for some Liberty
gram,
15-20 are expected to graduate
Partnership students.
high school this year.
"When these kids get home, thereare no
·
..
"I
would say that is
a
very good sue-
snacks for them, so the [Liberty] snack is
cess rate,''. he said.
::
: m
,,
:: ::
1::;:
:;
1
::
m
l!)li!!i/
:
r
::=
!
/I
/Iii/
i!/
l:l! :,:::::
<"''·
••••
BRING YOUR BOOKS TO:
SELL YOUR BOOKS
at the Campus Bookstore
·
·
We Are Happy To Buy YoJ!T Used Books
Back During Normal Business Hours
Mon. thru Fri., 9 am - 5 pm
Saturday,
10
am -
4
pm
Closed Sunday
*
Please Note
*
The Best 1ime To Sell Your Books Is During Finals
WE BUY THE LARCEST RANGE OF BOOKS
HARD OR SOFf BOUND
~
-
-
--·-
···
-
·
-
Cin:le
PhoColDianc
Ko!od
A
May 1998 groundbreaking date has been set for the construction of the new
library, which
will
replace the existing facility pictured above.
Library fundraising continues,
as groundbreaking date is set
by
LEAH
.
SHELTON
Staff Writer
All that is standing between Marist
.
and
a
new library is $6.7 million dollars .
..
·
According to Shaileen Kopec,
vice
president for college advancement, a to-
tal of$
IO
million dollars is needed to re-
con~tnict the
library.
Kopec said Marist has already raised
some funds;
"We've already raised
3.3
million
through gifts and pledges," she said.
The funds have come primarily from
trustees and other contributions, Kopec
said.
"We are conducting a trustee campaign
to raise $700,000," she said. "We hope
to have
$4
million by spring."
All avenues of funding will be pursued,
including private donations, money from
government and alumni, as well as from
the regional business community. Marist
is actively seeking a lead donor to give a
multi-million dollar contribution. This
donor, according to Kopec, will have his
or her name on the Hbrary.
"This is a campaign to get furids to go
into the library," Kopec said. "It is a very
ambitious gift to achieve."
A May 1998 groundbreaking date has
been set for the new library, according to
John McGinty, library director.
The
new facility will consist of three
floors, instead of the existing two. More
seating will
be
available,
as
well
as more
·
areas designed for group study,
McGinty
said.
·
McGinty said
he
hopes the new facility
wHI
enrich the academic environment at
Marist.
"We're
trying to build on teaching and
learning culture at Marist... faculty/stu-
dent interaction, a hands-on approach,"
McGinty said. "A new building will allow
that, and we are trying to get the building
to be actively used."
The existing library is inadequate, ac-
cording to McGinty, because there is not
enough study and stack space. There is
also old plumbing, inadequate infrastruc-
ture, too few periodicals, and not enough
digital library access.
A September
1999
goaJ has been set for
the completion of the new library, accord-
ing to McGinty.
Kopec said the funds will be in place by
then.
''We hope to have the majority of funds
raised by September
1999," Kopec said.













































4
Date
rape
prevalent.
on.college· campuses
'
. .
·.•
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'.
'
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.
.
'.
,
.
.
.
'
~;-
'
.
~~
.
·~
-:
.
-
. , •. ·t
-.,•
..._
;.·;-
. ,'.hy}Jn.i.'~i:ocoNl><>·
playedavJ~~'.9(an'qpriihspow:
.
-SiajfW,rire/ ·: ,
mi':.'~ap,e.:•·?n: cC>llege:·ca~P,use_s:·
.
.
,,_,-_. ·.- '.:: · •· ._ ..... ••-• .\,: '.·.·. ,
.
Stude!)ts.,y.r~re_ a,b_le.,to ~b~am
On~.
in
'four.c·ouege women. sheets ofstatistics:thaf showed
have dther
l?een
.
ra~
_or:suf.:
hdw
prevaient:the crirne is.
·-
fered ati~mpted_rape, aild_84 ~r'."·
-
tMelissa;Ruot, secretary of
cent
kll()\\'
th~ir-assaili11ts •. ··- ·,. .
:pE()P~E{srud
_there
was
a
posi-
. The pee(
.
~du~atimi':-group, ___ -·tiyir~sponse._tq-th_~~able, .-.-_ .
.
People_ Educating _Qtper People
·
. ·_'.:''.~1fl<>.f
of
~tiicl4nts>t:ame by
tq
iri a'-L~ami~g :Envfron·nierlt ,
:
see:wliai'tfi~:fap\e,was about,'' .•
(PEOPLE), spread. th,es.~~statis:.: ., she.· said,:}'V{e'.need
to
be·m9r~t
·
::
tics_- to students in an
-
effort
to .
\
awari'as
a
community, because ·
educaiti about and prevent rape/_·;;
this
problf!lil
~~
exist, especially _·
PEOPLE began this_ fight wiJh· ·. :here·af1-tarist~'.:' : _
,- · __ .. ,
Da_te Rape Awareness Day
on
.
'.
bonnaNastasi, ajunior,··said
Dec.4. . . --
.
tlie·dayvnis
very
inforina_tiv~.-•.
Jamit.'e Nardiello, treasurer of
"I thought that the Oprah show ·
_
__
_
,
PEOPLE, said the day was a sue- · ~as very po'we~ul,} ~e".e(rea}-:
·
., :
Pl::O~LE hosted
a
:date ·rape awareness table last
Week.
Pictured from"left to right
a.re
_
Mells,;sa
cess.
.
1zed how prevalent it 1s on cam-
·
-·Ruot,'- Debbie Gargano; Darren Valdes, and Cory Durdovlc.
· · ·
"Datt! Rape Awareness'Day is
puses everywhere;" Nastasi said.
. . -
.
·
·
to make people aware and to pre-
"I noticed that it was . mostly
vent rape:: Nardiello said. "Date
women speaking out about the
rape
i,
more prevalent than
subject, however."
people thin!:-,"
·
Nardiello said both women and
On this day, the group set up a
men need to be educated on the
table in the student center to give
topic.
out pamphlets and hand out
"Alotofwomensharetheirfeel-
'lUestionnaires. They also
ingsondaterape, but many men
Students encourage AIDS awareness
... co11til/11£'d from page
J:
Mica, a social work major, said
students come to her when they
licity.'·
. .
.
have questions, mostly about
The members of the group plan _ being tested for HIV.
to be 1r:iined by AIDS. Related
"Students stay away from the
Community Service (ARCS),
whole testing thing because they
which will enable them to speak
are scared," said Mica.
"I
think
atjuninrandseniorhighschools
there should bea ,workshop
in Dutd,css .County:·_ ··
_
· ____ _ _
about
how
:you .· should. _be
. Keri
t,,lica,)farisfjuilior.,ajid ·:tested:,;_ .:,'(.''': ;;-_ ·,:, ·:
.
'•••.,:/:~:;_;
_· iriemlx·rofthe'organizaticm, s.µd
Borreineosaid the organization
she h't)pcs to bring
the
ARCS
exhibits what MaristCollege tries
training into the dcinns.
· to achieve.·
"Once ,,·e do get educated, we
"By.trying to raise awareness,
can go out arid touch stud~nis'," . , we build.·a community of good
said M i,:a. .
"I
don't think stu-
examples of\vhat Marist College
dents 1:1ke ii as seriously ·as they
students can be," said Borremeo.
should. and
a
Iot6fthein don't
.
"We are reaching our goals by
think it can affecithem."
trying to reach out."
Water-turbidity _no longer problem
,
..
, _
.
does ni ,, respond to· chlorine dis-
inf ecti;
;11.
so in order to test for
it, you 1\l'l'd l ~000 gallons of wa-
ter, anil it takes two to three weeks
to get th.iresults.''
Glass said that because of how
long it would take to have the
water tested, the Dutchess
County Health Department had
to pos1 :m advisory as a precau-
tion, di:-spite his belief that there
is nothing wrong with the water.
"Th,'rc
were never organisms
meas1m•d in the finished water,"
said Gl~1ss. ''The chances are
very small for passing organisms,
and th1•re is no threat to the av-
erngc person."
Jane O"Brien, director of health
.
servic~s at Marist, said she
agrees with Glass about the· se-
verity of this problem.
''If
there was a little heavier
concentration of organisms·in
the water, it won't do anything,';
said -O'Brien. "Someone who
can't fight anything- someone
with a depleted immune system,
HIV, AIDS, someone who has
chemotherapy,_ or tends to have
a low white blood cell count- for
them it was advised that they may
. want to boil their water or drink
bottled water."
Sophomore Monica Barratia
said she is tired of hearing about
problems with the water around
the area, and she thinks more
should be done to make the wa-
ter cleaner.
"It's ridiculous that we have to
deal with all these water problems
all
the time," said Barritia."
HELP WANTED
Men/Women cam $480 weekly assembling
circuit boards/electronic components at home.
E.xperience unnecessazy,
will
train. Immediate
openings your
local
area.
fl
~
,...._
Call
1-520-680-7891
E X T _ ~
_ _
_
. think it.is a taboo subject," she
. said.
"Men
need to realize what
· date rape really is, and what they
can do to prevent it."
Nardiello. said the question-
naires. were handed out so that
men and women could give dif-
ferent points of view on the topic.
Ruot· said· the group
will
be
"We .want to put together a . holding more awaren~ss days
show on date rape, but we also
like this one.
, ; ,
.
want it to appeal to everyone,"
··"There are a lot of issues that
. she said. "We received good in-
people our age need tocl>e more
ptit from men on their thoughts
aware of," she· said. "Date rape
on the topic.''
is just one of them." .
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'
·
i
.•

. , :
• One owner. 4-door, auto, cruise, AC/PS/PB. R~d. ·
Body: fair. _
Mec;hanically: gooci. 147 k;
·
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Asking $1100.
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become an·
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• 15 Credits
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For further information about this unique opportunity,
contact Kent Rinehart in the Admissions Office,
ext. 2188. Any major may apply, and applications are
due by February 21, 1997.
(Only seniors can be Admissions Interns. and the Internship
Is
for the fall semester of the senior year.)































































































.

,
,
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c
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:

,.:
---:·
•.
THE CIRCLE
.. ·,
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~
:
-
.t
;
.:
"
:
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--
~~:
:
.; ..
.
_
..
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..
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~:
_
.
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·
..
..
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>.:
.
.
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<-.· ··-
:·;_:_
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·

:
·•
_•:
:
by
KRISTIN
RICHARD
·
Editor-in-chief
.·.
More
studen
'
ts than usual at-
tende{
,
mass
:
on Sunday, and
they
ha.I
more than usual to cel-
ebrate
>•
.
.
' Sunday's mass was the annual
Giving Tree ceremony, and the
altar
w:,s
lo~ed with packages
of toys.
_
dothing, and even a bi-
cycle.
\
.
The Giving Tree is in its sixth
year at Marist, and it is a chance
for students and faculty mem-
bers
.
h'l
sl1are tile spirit of Christ-
.
m~
,,.
_
ii~ local families by buy-
ing C'lothes, toys for children, and
houst'hold necessities.
The wrapped gifts are then
dropped off in Lowell Thomas.
·
The deadline is tomorrow; and
the
-
sorting of the presents will
begin Saturday .
.
Accor&ng to
.
Tabitha Zierzow,
Giving Tree coorclinator, student
response to the project was poor
until last week
.

"Some students complained
·
that' the presents
.
·
were
·
n
_
ot
needed, such as a
$35
bottle of
perf1:1me
for
·
a 38-year-old
woman," Zierzow said. "But,
I
don't think·that
;
s
·
unreasonable
·
when
·
all of the othetpresents she
·
asked
.
for
·
were
·.
c
_
lothes
.
for
.
her
baby."
..
December 12;1996
Zierzow said the Giving Tree
committee
·
took student com
-
plaints into consideration arid
put more "needy" items on the
trees. Since then; response has
picked up.
Colin Mccann Is a resident director on the North End of campus.
5
The Gi\'ing Tree
committee
col-
lected
·

wish
lists" from 28 fami-'
lies in
:
thc
area
who could not
af-
ford
to
huy gifts this holiday sea-
son.
·
.
The
lists consist of five
needs
·
and five wants for each
mem~r of each family.
The requested items are then
wrinen
on
paper ornaments and
hu
_
ng
on
lhe six Christmas trees
around
·
campus, located in
.
Dyson. Donnelly, Lowell Tho-
mas, th~ Student Center, and the
Seat
of
Wisdom Chapel.
So far,
30
percent of the oma-·
ments have been
.
taken from the
trees,
as compared to
35
percent
last year.
Profile: Resident Director Colin McCann
Stmkms and faculty members
take rhc descriptive portions of
the ornaments to attach

to the
pacbgL'S they buy. They place
the other halves in the drop
boxes next to the trees.
Some of the remaining gifts will
be supplied from the Giving Tree
·
budget, and SGA recently do-
nated
$500
worth of gifts to the
project.
Several clubs and organiza-
tions also contributed
to
the giv-
ing tree project this year, includ-
ing the Mid
-:
Rise RSC, Kappa
Lambda
Psi,
Sigma
-
Sigma Sigma,
Circle K, and
~p~
Sigma Tau.
by
JACQUE SIMPSON
Feature Editor
Working in bookstore, teaching
art
to emotionally challenged chil-
dren, and being a resident direc-
tor are just a few of the many hats
which Colin McCann wears.
Mccann, a native of Red Hook,
attended SUNY Plattsburg to
pursue·a degree in Communica-
A c
.
elebration
,o
,.
at
-
tlie
.
Dutch
·
cabin
.
Jackie/Brian.and Sophia to the
.
·
DutcnCabin fordiriner.
(I
drove.
.
Oo
;
you really
,
~i
.
nkT d pick up
hy
JOSIE INALDO
Food
Babi
.
.
"Oh.
rhe weatli~r outside is
frightful..." Christmas! Christ-
mas! How llove this season!
Sant
:
1 Tjtist
know
you're
out
the
.
re. lf you get a chance, I'd
like
·
the CD boxed set of
•Am
a
li,
~
us', a new white silk
scarf
.
;J
New Year's trip to En-
gland. Pierce Brosnan with a
how
.
mached, dinner
at
the CIA,
and
\\,1.-Id
peace.
Th.is time of year is very spe-
cial
h)
me;
gift shopping, deco-
ratin
!
!- haking ... finals, projects,
papers ,lue.
Oh
1ny.
I have never experi-
enced
~n
much stress and plain
hyst~ria these past f~w weeks,
especially with capping.
This past week was my cap-
ping pr~scntation; the accumu-
lation ,
,f
all our labors. (We
coum,·,I and totaled
65
hours
and
45
minutes in group time
this S<·m.:-ster ...
l'm
not
a math
ge-
·
nius
bur·
that
'
s almost
TIIREE
FUI.I
.
n
,
\YS!)
So.
what does our group do
whrn it's all said and done?
Sp~~.1
MORE TIME TO
-
GETJIFR.
of
course.
This time,
in ccld,ration. Knowing
full well
·
my status as the ·food babe',
the
tab?)
.
. .
,
,
We
:
were
·
a
:
rowdy bunch that
•.
night.
·
sophia
was
finished her
last presentation of her college
career and I was simply giddy
that capping was over.
The Dutch Cabin is located
·
around the corner from the
Beechtree Grill, across the street
from Vassar. The Dutch
·
Cabin
offers a great bar and Mexican
food. We chatted over a bottom-
·
·
less basket of nachos with really
spicy salsa.
For drinks,
I
had a Diet Coke
and the rest of the bunch had
·
bottles of beer. One would think
they had
.
the better deal in the
beverage ar~ b
_
ut think again.
I had a straw with the paper
.
wrapper majestically twisted
around. This little work of art pro-
duced many •ahhs'. (Anything
,
could have amused us that
evening;)
My capping group has been
following all my trials and tribu-
lations in my column and now
had the honor of being my din-
ing partners.
·
I got ridiculed the whole
evening with questions like,
.. Josie, how are you liking the
ambience? Does it have it
enough? Howisyourfood? Are
you enjoying yourself? Why
didn't you bring Amie, your
roommate?"
These questions stopped
when the food arrived. I ordered
a shrimp chimichanga with
monforey jack and cheddar
cheese, sour cream, lettuce, to-
Al ycia,
matoes and guacamole ($8.75).
we,, ent out to eat.
I
1110k
my
group;
·
A
chimichanga consists of
the aforementioned ingredients
or a variation of similaritems
such as chicken or beef, roIIed
in a tortilla and fried.
It looks like a huge egg roll
and was really good.
The rest of my capping group
incidentally had the same meal-
chicken quesadillas (around
$4.75).
Quesadillas are cheese filled
flat tortillas that can include
chicken, beef, shrimp or steak.
Sophia also included broccoli
in her meal. They also offer
many other Tex-Mex entrees,
such as fajitas (around
$9-
11.00).
We discussed the ordering of
sizzling fajitas just to grab at-
tention at
'
a restaurant. (People
always seems to tum around
and look to see what the fuss is
all about, isn't that just like hu-
man nature?)
_
_
·
The Dutch Cabin may be a bit
far away to go drink with your
friends.
But Ido find the atmosphere
welcoming and intimate. I hear
you can always get the nachos
and salsa, even if you're only
ordering drinks.
The food is your run of the
mill Mexican fare, nothing ex-
traordinary. The cost of the
food was fair.
But when you factor in your
drinks as well, the meal came
about to ten dollars with tip in-
cluded.
The setting is casual and
warm, hence the name of the es-
tablishment. The Dutch Cabin
is worth going to and
I
give it
three forks out of five.
:-
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
tions. While there he decided
that he wanted to be a part of the
decisions which affect the living
situations of residents. Thus,
this began his career
in
residen-
tial life.
As
a
freshman
,
Mccann was
hired as an orientation leader
.
After having experience helping
students acclimate themselves to
college, he decided to apply to
.
become
·.
a
residenl"'assistant.
McCann was the younges(o1r a
·'.
staff ot'siven
:
'
Hc
f
was
'
a
iesU1ent
assistant for
.
three years at
SUNY
Plattsburg.
·
After graduation from
Plattsburg, he began work for
SUNY Morrisville for four years
as a resident director. But, he
says after four years his time there
seemed to reach a plateau.
McCann left SUNY
Morrisville, and moved to Al-
bany, where he began work in a
small bookstore.
·
Discontented with this he
moved back home, and pursued
his interest in Marist. A position
opened, and he then joined the
residential staff as a resident di-
rector for Gartland Commons.
"This has been an excellent ex-
perience thus far."
He says that he likes working
with the junior and senior popu-
lation, and he enjoys the oppor-
tunity to use his creative talents
in programming .
A particular problem which
McCann encounters as a resi-
dent director is the unique expe-
rience ofliving at work. He says,
.
•'Living at work is sometimes tax-
ing. When do you take off the
tie?"
He says that students always
see him as the resident director,
and not just Colin McCann.
_
Finding peers on the campus,
other than other resident direc-
tors and mentors, is sometimes
difficult
As a
group, the resi-
dent directors try to fill up per-
sonal time with one anothers
company.
Some residents do not under-
stand that resident directors
have some of the same concerns
that they do.
••If
the heat goes out for you,
then the heat goes out for me,
and that makes us all upset. I'm
going .to do what I can do to get
that heat back on."
Gartland Commons, being
a
population of mostly juniors and
seniors is much different from the
freshman donns
.
McCann de-
.
scribed
Gartland Commons as an
eclectic group
.
·
What McC:ann likes about Gar-
land Commons
is
that .. Behind
each door is
a
group of six
and
sometimes
:
se:ven individ~a\s,
tJ:fafare' very
unjgue
jn
each
.
:
apartment,' tfuu
'
are
right next door
to each other,
can
be
so
differ-
ent It's a very eclectic popula-
tion,
with
many different
person-
alities."
He would like to see the devel-
opment of a common area in
Gartland Commons to bring resi-
dents together.
Although, Gartland Commons
does not have a common area,
residents manage to keep in
touch, whether it
is
leaving their
door open, or a friendly game of
touch football across the grassy
knoll between apartments.
According to McCann, a train-
ing manual cannot always give
you all of the right answers
.
Much of the training comes from
observation and communication.
ijeing a resident director in-
volves listening, and learning as
one goes along
.
McCann said his staff of resi-
dent assistants has a great bal-
ance this year
,
which helps when
coming upon obstacles.
"I
think that this is the best staff
that I've h~ in all of my years of
doing this. They all have indi-
vidual strengths and weak-
nesses. But, as a group they
support each other really well."
Programs that residents can
look forward to next semester in-
volv
_
e some resume writing
ses-
sions and possibly a relaxation
technique program.
McCann would also like to try
some spiritual program, and
a
discussion of religions.
He
says
that religious programs are lack-
ing. "It's one area of program-
ming that's kind of missing cam-
pus wide."
In
his spare time, he likes to
write.
Curren
_
tly he is working on
a
novel of vignettes with a friend,
entitled "Rugged in the '90s."
.,
,


















































































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6
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THECIRCLE,DecemberJ2,.l
996
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Peer support groups
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help
studentSin:
Cri$
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es
·
by
CH..\RLOTI'E
PARTRIDGE
.
Staff Writer
The leaders
of
tile Peer Support
'-
Line
are
Jill
Dontigney, Gayle
Ore-
.
gory
.
and Dennis Kennedy. Stu
-
dents involved with the Peer
There are people ready to help
Support Line have inade an-
you. M~frist College has several
nouncements on MCTV and
peer groups coordinated by the
have a homepage on
the
web
.
Counseling Center that
are
pre~
.
·
From the Peer Support Line
pared to help students. The Peer came the idea for the Peer Me-
Advocate Volunteers is one such
diators. This group is trained by
group.
Yvonne Poley and Andrea
Roberta Staples, director of Rapheal~Paskey, who are on staff
counseling services, works with
·
for the Counseling Center
.
This
student;; who are certified with
group tries to alleviate conflicts
New Yt
,
rk State for dealing with
that arise in students'
lives.
crises. The advocates are a sec-
Brother Nash is also involved
tion of the Task Force for Sexual
in the Peer Alcohol Program,
Awarcn,'ss and Prevention.
which will begin next semester. It
"Wt'
are advocates for the vie-
takes a total of three semesters
timiz, ·,
I
student. We try to get
of training to become an active
sympathetic volunteers," Staples
mem~rin the Peer Support Line,
said.
Peer Mediators, and the Peer
Al-
Another peer group for stu-
cohol Program.
.
dents to tum to is the Peer Sup-
Nash is currently working with
port Linc. which began under
the psychology faculty to get
Brother John Nash .
.
The support
students three elective credits
line
hcg:m
almost three years
for training. This has yet to be
ago.
approved.
·
Peer Support Line presently
Nash said
many
college stu-
consist~ or about 60 participants.
dents are looking for help im-
The
linc
·.c.;
hours
are fromJO p.m.
.
proving their lives, and therapy
to
12
a.m.
all week,exceptFriday
at the
·
Counseling Center is
a
and Saiunlay.
good answer.
"It
is r.n
anonymous and confi-
"College is the
last
chance
to
dentbl service. We have no way
conveniently make major
to
trace 1he
calls
,
" Nash said.
changes in your life," Nash said.
EXTRA
INCOME
'
F'C)R
.
1
96
'
Earn $500 - $1000 weekly stuffing
envelopes .
.
For details -
·
RUSH $1
.00
with SASE
to:
GROUP
6547 N Academy Blvd.Dept N
Colorado
Springs,
Co~ 80918
. . - - - --_-_
-_
-_
-_
-_
-_
-_,
-_
-_
-_
-_
-_
-_
'-_
-__
-_
-_
-
_ -'-_:_
- : _
-_-_;_
____
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-_
:..;.._ -:_-_
-_-_
:-_..;,__ -_
-_
-_
-_
-_;__-_ -_-'_
....:....J--.
TONIGHT!!
·
·•·
The South End Society willhostits annual
·
Coffee
House in the
··
Leo stone lounge to-
night at 9:00
p.m.
·
All
:1re
welcome to attenff
and
perform
~
The Coffee House
will
feature student per-
formers and an open microphone.
The ;,farist Chapter of the
Society of Professional Journalists
is sponsoring a
writi
1
11: contest for all interested Marist students. Students from all majors are
invited to submit entries. The genres
will
include
print, television, radio, and
phot,1jm,rnalism, as well as general writing.
The
categories will cover
:
Best news story, best feature story, best in-depth or
im·c
s
tig;11ive story
,
best sports story, best opinion piece, best composition or
essay
.
'1~c;t research paper (no less than
6
pages, no more than, best literary essay,
and h~st non-fiction poem
Winnrrs in each category
will
have their piece published on a special section of
the SPJ home page. Also, one grand winner
will
receive a gift certificate. The fee
is$'.' prr entry and entries are due by
March 21, 1997.
Entries must be accompa~
nicd with
a
cover sheet.
Lool
.
f,
,r further infonnation and details arou11d campus. Cover sheets and drop
boxes
will be
located in the faculty mailroom ofJ nwell Thomas beginning next
sem, ..
ster
.
In ;:,lclition, there is also a national SPJ writing contest
.
The entrance fee is
$7
for Sf'l
members
and 14
for non-members.
For more information, contact com-
mun ;; :,!ions professor Randy Hayman
)11116 HUDSON
B_J)_QYBUILDIN~
.
&
'
i=ITNESS
·
"UNDER
.
.
NEW
-
MANAGEMENT"
.
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NORTH CLINTON STREET
:

.
POUGH~EE~IE, NEW
YORK
12601
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f

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-
_
i_
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_
;
. ·.·:
.
.
.-
.
~
,. .
.
..
..
)
·i
'-:
.
;~
:
':
.'
,
-
..
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·
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.
}
/',;
.
"jl-'.
1
- ALL NEW BREAKFAST MENU -
"
LOTS
OF
.
SPECIALS
ALL THE TRADITIONAL
·
DISHES
.
PLUS." ..
Buckwheat
Pancakes
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&
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Mug
of
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Any Meal Purchase of
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Bloody
Mary
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Any Meal Purchase over $4.00
Saturday Morning
&
Sunday Afternoon
•-=--•.....,
(8am - 12pm)
(12pm - 3pm)
~
Proper I.D. Required
~
Attention: MARIST
.
Students
!
.
.
~
.
,.
.
:.
This _is your last reminder
!
·
Winter
'97
Intersession
Registration
continues at
the .
School
-
of Adult
Education
.
Dyson Center
127
· -
Please
register no later than
.
December20
-
Catch up on credits! Gradua_te on
tirne!
·
One-third tuition ($3 50) is due at registration.
Twenty-eight courses will be offered between
January 2 and 14
in art, biology, communications, computer
·
information systems,
·
criminal
justice, English, environmenfc!3I studies,

foreign culture, history, math , philosophy
,
psychology, religious
_
studies.
Call 575-3800 for additional information.
Course schedules are available for pickup
at the School of Adult Education, Dyson 127.
7
1
q~
v
oQll&QY:J'T
IF YOU SHOW US
YOUR COLLEGE I.D.
ALWAYS ... REALLY ...
WE
·
no TAKE-OUT!!
Call us:
473-1576
Fax us: 473-1592
Have Your People Call Our People and We'll
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SiOP IN FOR A LAiE NITE NOSH:
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(WIMELTED CHEESE
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*
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8
THECIRCLE
EoITORlAL:
December12,1996
THECIRCLE©
The Student Newspaper of Marist College · ·
Kristin Richard, Editor-in-Chief
l\licha.-1 Coot,
Managing Editor
Stephunie Mercurio,
News Editor
Amil· Lemire,
A&E Editor
Chris Smith, Sports Editor
Jacque Simpson, 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,
Marist College, 290 North Road, Poughkeepsie, NY 12601.
Editorials
Santa Claus really does exist
Since I was younger, a burning question has played on my mind; Who is Santa
Claus·~
When I was young, I would stay awake as long as possible, trying to catch a
glimpse of the wonderful man who brought me really great toys to play with. I never
got to
see
him, of course, but I
felt
like Santa Claus was the greatest man ever, next to
mydaJ.
As I
p11t
a little bit older, I got a little nervous.
The
kids at school started to spread a rumor that
this
wonderful man did not exist.
I
was .:rushed. Santa DID exist. Who else would have brought me that Cabbage
Patch Ki,
I,
or my favorite stuffed animal?
Burdened by this nagging doubt, I confronted my mother on the subject and
demanded to know who Santa really was, and if he existed.
Aftt•r pausing a minute, my mother told me that Santa was everywhere, that he
existed in my heart and that he was what
the
true spirit of Christmas was.
My
ci
;Jht
year old mind
took
all of this
in, but
I
stiU was not
sure
ifI
felt any
better.
This arnhiguous answer left me completely confused. Did the guy exist or not?
After that year, I realiz.ed that my parents were actually the OI~es who put my
favorite -;turfed animal under the tree, but Santa Claus did still exist.
He did not come down the chimney, or eat the cookies I left out, but he put a
childish, innocent hope into everyone's lives.
Santa allows everyone to believe there is goodness out there, and maybe a little bit
of
magi,·.
I
do 110t think you have to celebrate Christmas to believe in Santa, either.
He is a
symbol for .everyone of the innocence of childhood, when we did not
ques\ion.
but just
accepted:
· ,;-'
·
., .
. ·
·
I think
that everyone should.hold onto the vision of S~ta Claus, and not question
where
goi>d
things
come from.
-
-: .
. .
.
.
.
. . ·
After all. my parents never did know where that Cabbage PatchKid came from. ·
Stephanie
Mercurio, News Editor
Semester's end: a chance to r~flect ofi time
Hm!
i1
is the end of the semester already. It seems like just yesterday we were
moving in. Time really does go byquickly.
: ·
· . . . . ..
• .
"It's nice to be important, but
it's important to be nicel'
Letters to the Editor
'Marist pa.rents'- are just too strict
Editor:
As I complete my first semester freshman year at Marist, there ~s one thing that has
begun to. outrage me. Although Marist has provided me with a great group of new
friends, a good education, and an overall pleasant atmosphere,
I
have a hard time with
spending this kind of money to be treated as ifl have Marist parents watching my every
move.
I realize the rules placed upon freshmen;or first year residents, are in place to ease the
transition from high school to college, but many of these rules are more strict than those
I
had living with my parents. _
.
.
At times,
If
eel as iflam on a high school trip and cannot have girls in my room, Also,
I
do not like the fact that
if
we aredrunk and sent to the hospital, our patents have to be
phoned, and. they also get sent a notice if we are written up for anything.
• As -18-year-olds, the country recognizes us
as
adults. with_ th~right
!<:>
vote, get mar-
ried, have a job, and live on our own as taxpaying citizens without the burden of our~
parents.
·
Yet, Marist denies us many of these rights to be independent and let us live our own
lives and deal with the consequences by ourselves, or with our parents by choice.
. I realize that some rules have to be made to keep order and protect Marist from
lawsuits. However, I do feel many of us are responsible enough to recognize when we
have to do work and when other people can be in our rooms.
I also feel students should have. the choice about telling their parents about their
actions. As adults, we should have the right to make this choice. What gives Marist the
right to tell them? Are they paying forlisto.be here? No, I am.
Personally, I have never dealt with these situations myself, but I have seen my friends
go thtoughJhis and the turmoil it: causes, ;it home, · It.is all a result of Marist and its
inethodsofdenyingfreshm~nour
·
freedom: :: :.:.:: _,_; . ·
'.
:, ..
·. ,.,. ,,, :
0 :· , : ; ; , , ,
.
.
In these last few months, Ihave to come to love Marist and the opportunities it. has.
offered me, but I cannot give any praise for many of the rules· placed upon freshman
residents.
. . . .
·.
.. •.· ..
·· · • · · .
.
·
· ... ·. .
.
. .
.
·
Maybe Marist officials and the security personnel should place a little more emphasis
on the education and safety ofits residents, and not the bogus rules that I did not have
from Morn and Dad, but go~ from the $18,000 I spent to come here.
·
David Brandon,
freshman
,
·
·,-
.. ·
.. ·
.•.'·
,
:~·
;'
-
....
·,
,,
....
_
-,
;._
.
Time ,;eems to control my life. Sometimes
lam
so wrapp¢ up in getting the next
thing d11oe before I run out ofiime, that I d6 not stop to
see
ho\.V everything is·goJhg.
. . .
.
.
.
.
Thus,
:it
the end of the semester, I like to step.back andJ~flect on iny experience.·
Volu.·
·
..
titeer._•.
•.<•.a.
nd
·
y•.
oh.
w . ·
.
.
· .. ·
.
ills .. l. eep. bette.
rat
night
Some1 i mes it does not seem like thereis enough time to do everything; Timejs the
.

one thing that humans do not have.control over. Even in tltls great age of tecµnol- .
Editor:
ogy, with high-speed computers, satellite communicatiori:.and mass production, the . ·
rate that time moves cannot be changed. Itreniains con~tant, ticking at a stea4y
We are a senior'communications capping group that has concentrated our group
pace.
. ·.
.
.. · . .
·.
projectthis semester on Marist's volunteer opportunities on campus. Our group's main
Timt' c:m actually serve as a motivaticm. It inspires people into action to f!elp them · goal is to bring awareness of volunteeris~ to the
_
:M:arist community; Some of the
finish a task or achieve a goal. The time that human beings spend onth_e
_earth
is such
volunteer opportunities we have encoun.teredare peer support line, the learning center,
a small fraction of eternity. This past semester, I took
a
class on the Bible taught by
special services, campus mjnistry, f~ternity and sorority volunteerisn, and the escort
Father Luke McCann. lthought Wwas a really interesting class becauseit got.me
service.
. · ·
·
·.
think i
l_l ;:
about human being'srnle in the world. One of the things he stressed is the
. During the holiday season, make it
a.
point to take time out to think Qf those individu-
fact that God sees tinie d!fferently. Where humans mark time withseconds, Illinutes, · · · als .who are not as fortunate ~you and I. We are trying to take our project one step
hours, itnd days, and years, God sees time from etemityto eternity .. He sees the
further than merely receiving a grade; We created
a
brochure consisting of all of the
whole :.how going on at once.
·
volunteer opportunities on campus and their contact numbers. This will be available in
The fact that we have a limited time on this earth forces us to make the most of it.·
the Student Activities Office.
Each moment must
be
treasured and must not be wasted. Every decision people
Now, it is up to you,Marist community, to offer a helping hand by getting involved in
make i-. important. If they make the _
_wrong one, they cannotgo back and do it
one of the many volunteer opportunities on campus..
·
.
differ.:-111ly. Although sometimes I wish I could back and do things differently, I
Lend a hand through volunteering: You will sleep better at night. We promise! .
realiz(' I have to learn from my mistakes and
try
to do things differently the riext time.
Als,,. in class recently, he said something to the effect of "Someone's in charge of
Christopher Rawls, Gina D' Angelo, MelanieFeliciano,iason
Geise,
Kirsten
Bakhins,
this wh,
,le
shooting match." I took this to mean that even if events appear to happen
·
Patrick
Treanor, and
Gina DeDominici
random!
y
and with no purpose, there is some kind of plan to things. For thousands
of year<.. people have had faith that there is some kind of a plan. Many people who
have come before us were faced with some of the same problems and decisions that
we hav~ to deal with. They also reflected on their mistakes and thought about the
future.
Is there some kind of plan? I think there is, but only time will tell.
Micluwl Goot,
Managing
Editor
Good luck on finals arid have
a Happy Holiday Season!




































































































·
Wl1:1talongstrange
friiYit's
been
,:
.
.
THE CIRCLE
.
OPINION
.
The Most Wonderful Time of the Year
December 12, 1996
9
1996: The Year of the Moderate
• · .
.
:
·.·.··'
,,·
;
-
.
•...
.
·:
.
' ' .
_
Ml')!
,
nnd I were ona quest
.
,
Years(:romnow, whenlthinkbackon
1996,
there
·
In 1996,
the United States of America continued
for
·
I
hnsc
Ii
Ule cone.:.shaped
_
will be severalimages burned into
my
mind.
down yet another path towards new territory.
party l~ats.
_
Our: search ulti-
There was Bob Dole's tumble off of the stage
'In
1800,
Thomas Jefferson began an end to feder-
match
II
lOk us to the local CVS.
that made everyone wonder if maybe he is a
alist-dominated government and ushered in the be-
i
wnJ home in the suburban
Kennedy, PatBuchanan's "nastier, rougher" cam-
ginning of strong representative rule. Aridrew Jack-
to,vn ";{Teaneck, Nl Most of
paign; the FBI's storming of a little cabin in the
son, in 1828, returned the focal point of politics to
you
ilo
not know Meg, me, or
.
woods to find the one guy in the country crazier
the many implied powers of the president. Abe Lincoln and the
Tea net
'
k,
but that should
·
not
.
than Ross Perot. (That was the Unabomer, by the way, not Crispin
Republicans that followed paved the way for capitalism to seize con-
be
rim,
·h
of a problem. There
Glover.)
.
trol of America.
was also a guy in. that very
Peace in the Middle East has been a notion that rises and subsides
In 1932, Franklin D. Roosevelt began an era of government domi-
CVS\
101
that really did not fit
more frequently than Space Mountain, while peace in the Balkans
nation in the private sector. Presidents who followed maintained a
th¢ picture. Hence, my story.
.
seems about as likely as a full-scale media blitz for "New Formula
war-time economy by fueling the Cold War and "policing" in Viet-
H\~
\\':ts a_ frail greying man
Crystal Pepsi: Now Even Clearer." China's human rights record is
nam. In 1992 (and continued tenaciously in
1996),
Bill Clinton has
dad
in
ri
tie-dyed shirt and
about as likely to see improvement as the ratings for the Warner
begun the era of the Moderates.
grcri
1
cotton pants. He was
Bros. network, yet the United States still helps them out, like the
We have seen an explosion in the art of popular democracy in our
appro:ic:hi ng
passerbys,
drunken uncle that the rest of the family has to support.
time. Originally, our founding fathers intended to model a new gov-
th0U
t
'h
he
may as well have
It suffices to say that the world is not exactly a fun place right now.
emment in a free world based on the ground-setting governments of
heen
b:,ltl,
robed and passing
But, here we are at the end of another semester,
at
the end of another
·
ancient Greece. But, the combination oflarge and uneducated popu-
out
pt,
1
-;tic poppies. People
year. We all know that we
will
manage to get through all of our work,
lations led the Framers
to
take a less "democratic" approach to gov-
walked hy swiftly.as if he was
.
··
and
will
soon be home sitting in front of a warm fire (or almost as
emment. What resulted was a government for and by the people,
a
Harr Krishna at JFK.
warm television screen)
-
with family and friends, gorging ourselves
yet necessarily detached from the inner workings of the institutions
Mei•
and I had ended our
on homemade holiday food, and greedily tearing open our packages
that ruled them.
seardi
of
the drug store in vain,
as we hope that we get everythi11g we ha\le asked for.
Representatives took the concerns of their constituents to Wash-
alld
\\WC
debating ·a trek out
Just what is our obsession with ignoring everything that goes on
ington D.C., but they acted in the best interest of the nation even
to thl! t!ver so distant "Party
around us and just concentrating on ourselves? Well, I think that we
when contrary to the constituency's whims. The president had little,
Box." This debate was termi-
do this
·
because we have to. We cannot dwell on all of the misfor-
if any, tie to his wide domain of constituents, and the office hovered
nritcif hy the fellow in the
tunes of others in order to plunge into the depths of despair.
in an aura of dignity and separation.
handicapped space.
As
we
Christmasistraditionallythetimethateventhemostmiserlyamong
Today, technological breakthroughs in communication and ad-
drew ..inser, he gestured us to
us open their hearts wide, and open their wallets almost as wide and
vanced research in the
art
of public relations has brought the opin-
join him between
·
the yellow
will donate money and help the less fortunate. But, I do not see that
ion of each citizen into the forefront of national policy making. Tho-
lines
on
.
the pavement. We
same kind of generosity as I have in the past.
mas Jefferson would be proud to live in this world; the biggest con-
complii:d.
I
find this ironic, considering that the last couple of years have
cem of today's presidents is the people.
"W,
,utd
you guys help me
been economically difficultfor many Americans, and we are suppos-
Popular democracy thrived in ancient Greece because the small

out?
~I
year ran out of gas over
edly in the midst of a full-fledged economic recovery. Now, some
population could gather and voice opinions. Now, the United States
in Hrr.·kcnsack.
I
walk~ up
peoplefindithardtobelievethateconornicindicatorscouldbewrong,
has returned to the roots of its conception, and elected officials
here
111
get some money from
but I understand that is a possibility.
bend over backwards to
.
respond to the factions that pay for their
an
old
friend
.
up the street.
That would be much preferable to my initial reaction that as people
campaigns. They aim to please the audience that will rally behind
Coul.t
I
just get a lift back to
are
getting to have more money on-hand again, they are more reluc-
them the strongest.
my
car?'"
Meg glared at @e as
tant to part with it. This may be because it is still technically early in
What
has
resulted is the next wave in politics- the wave of the 21st
I
drhatcd
giving this guy a lift
.
the holiday season. Although, I will chalk it up it the.fact that "It's A
century.
If
you read my first column of the semester, you are well
I rcplic,I; "Wen, so long as you
Wonderful Life" is only on TV once a year now. I think that has
versed in the concept of the Moderate Party. Bill Clinton is a card-
.
don ,
1
kill
us or anything:"
·
.
severely diminished our
_
holiday spirit.
carrying member of the Moderate Party because he exhibits all the
·
'
_
'Nah
man, I'm for peace
:
·
One of the best indicators here at Marist is that this is the worst
characteristics ofa middle of the road,
"I'll
respond to whatever the
Look
:
'.:
~,," He revealed tattoos
.
yearfor The Giving
T~,
lknowsome organizations give the hard
voters want," president .
.
on
hi~
a~ms an legswith rath~t'
.
--sell,
and ask for ass~stance. They are the ones.that some people find
Clintonbegan his presidency with staple moves ofa liberal admin-
,Yl!r)'
intricate depictio,ns
_'
()f
.
,
)he)easi
tol~~~~~i
Qu
,
t,)(r~ilH~
-
~~·a g~(l progr;µµ;
,
amt
~
lot of the
0
istration:-
his
·
stand oi\lgays in the military;
·
a complex and costly
tr.1
_
niiuil}cehes;allwith
:
an ob-
·.
\
tlling1.
:
gn t11e
h.;~
are
Very
i11exp(?ilsive, especially if_ye>u get some
health care proposal, and several
il1-fated
attempts
at
executive n01ni-
vfotkhratefulDead motif;
'
.
:

.
·
friends to help
.
you
pay
for the
gift
:-
,
.
.
·
nations, like Lani Guinier and Jocelyn Elders (both openly consid-
.
..
we
ki
him in the
'
backofthe
Thinkbacki:m all the Cfuistmases you have ~yer had
:
Was there
ered to have views contrary to the mainstream ideals).
statiQt! wagon
,
and adju~ted
·
:
ever a single yearwherey9qqid not have anything under the
.
tree or
However, Clinton has sung the chorus of traditional, conservative
every ,nirror so ouihitchhiker
. .
.
in your stocking?
Was
there ever a.year where you did not have a
·
administrations by advocating the shrinkage of government, and
was
iil
fLtll
view
/
~'You
:
guys
.
treeorastocking?°Inalllikelihood,mostofushaveneverhadthings
pushing (successfully) conservative legislation like NAFTA
that
are
h)o
niuch.
_
I really m~
it.
·
that tough, and, any'
"
ofus
.
who
:
did should understand the disap-
badly hurt his relationship with most blue collar, die-hard democrat
Thanh a lot.
rn
remember
pointment associated with not heing
'
abie to llave something.
.
supporters.
you.··
As
he began his mono.:.
I have always hated any organization
or
person that tried to make
Bill Clinton should be hailed as
a
good leader in our complex and
__
logui·
:
:
r
,omehC>~ <.loi.ibted that
me feel bad for whatl have. But, there is nothing wrong with feeling
modern world, and I think the next four years will yield a stronger
he\v,iiild remember us.
.
·
bad for those _who have
.
not been
as
fortunate as
I
have.
move towards the
"middle
of the road" politics. Governments and
· 0
:•(
have to go to the
So, when you are outbuying that Tickle Me Elmo for your baby
politics, like most otherlong-standing institutions that take on lives
Ha
_
<*c iisack
:
Courthouse to:-
sister; or some game for the Nintendo
64,
just take a moment to do a
of their own, grow and change with time. Clinton advocated change
mofi
·
1
i
w,'
L
ouf
glances at the
little something for someone that you do not even know
.
The person
each time he ran for president.
mitrcir:
~
intensified. ''You know,
may never thanf you in
.
person, but, they
will
certainly be grateful.
.
The American people got what they asked for, and Clinton will be
th¢
.
i.l
:
;;
1,
0
·
.
cops
have no sense
A~d, who knows,.you might even feel better about yourself
.
remembered as the barer of a new age in politics.
humiir.
·
: · .
.
.
. .
:
::
(da
.
r~i).ask
why he
was
ger
Christian
Bladt
is
the opinion editor for The Circle.
Bill
Mekrut is the politi.cal columnist for
1'Jie
Circle.
i(lg frn:ourt. He continued his
monuli)gue, ''I'm out on bail for
seilini•:1cid
at the Dead Show
at Gi
;
1'o1~ Stadium last summer.
Cops:
.
~;;lt no sense of humor.
Told \:
ni
that too .
.
I had 5,000
hits
c,n
me and they took it all.
{ hat
I!
the east coast, man.
Don·, .::vcn have a licence.
Fif-
.
teen S
;
t::ars driving and I never
got
so
nmch as
a
ticket.
I
live
out in San Francisco."
·
·
·
HI! directed us to
a
gas sta-
tion
hy
the courthouse, and we
stopped rhe car. "You guys
are
too much. If you're ever in
Frisco. look me up. Hey, you
guy~
·
qr1oke? Trip? I haven't
got
any
extra cash on me, but
how
.,hout
some weed, a
coupl,'. ,lfhits of acid, I've got
somi:- PCP too." Of course, we
polili.·k
dec]ined. He vanished
Into
11;1.
Hackensack night.
N,, the old feJlow wasn't a
:Hare
Krishna. Though, I sup-
pose:
it
could be said that he
did
ti:,,
c
an affinity for pop-
pies-
t .,
wait, no. That would
be
opi1
,m.
wouldn't it?
Tara Quinn
is
The Circle's
mm·
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I
;
SGANEWS
,
..
:
....
Hello
and
Go0d~bye
(tefil~,
por_arily)
fo
Marist College
.
,
•.
:;.·
'
· 'm
everyo:ne. 'This is Adrienne Janetti, vice president for
Student. Life
·
in:piy~econd and last letter to the Marist community.
I
will
he spendi~g tlleSpring'l997 semester in Geneva,'Switier-
lancl. and my position'jn the Student Government Association will
be
filled
by s9phoriior~JoeYerderame.
I just ·,w~nted to make the Marist community aware of
some
of
the accomplishments and issues that SLC (Student Life
Council) .dealt with this semester. One ·of our major issues was
commuter representation, and
I
am happy to say that for the first
time· in a while, the position of vice president for commuter affairs
was lilied. Talmadge Cqµrt was supposed to have·a represeilta,;,
ti
ve,
in
SLc; but thafaid not happen, due to scheduling conflicts.
SLCis currently in the process of formulating a survey
on dining services, in coordination with Joe Binotto, which should
be distrihlited next.semester. The North EndRSC(Resident Stu-
dent council) a.nd Gartland RSC are investigating the possibmty
.of obtaining a pos_tal drop~off box for that· area of campus; and
security concerns such as poor lighting aild the likelihood of ob-
taining security beepers
~re
also issues that win continue to be on
the agenda of SLCfor next semester; ·
RS(; programming was ·quite successful this semester,
with activWes
ranging
from Halloween haunted houses, trick::i.Jr.:
. treating for local schoolchildren and a party, the Assassin game,
a
Great Adventure tfip' and movie nights. That is just a small sample
of the numerous activfties the _RSCs sponsored.
I am proud t~ say that ~LC and the individual RSCs have
all hcen involved in gi.ving ba~k to the community this semester.
Each RSC)s sponsoring a f~ly
·
or
an
individual forthe Giving
Tree project,
and
several .members of SLC participated in the'Hun.:.
ger Walk as weIL .
·
.
. . . .. ·
·.
. stc sentten deiegates from both RSC's ahd SLCto the
\99§NEACURH(North~stAffiliateofCciliegi;andlJriiversity
~e~i~\en.ce
HaUif
conferencehe\d
at
theUni'.versity,ofMaine;'No-·
···vemhe,:
1
~J.··.··::~.~ .. _, ~-
!--. • •
<~;t~
~-~~
·:·~-~
~
__ ,_·, --'
_:!;~1
.(;···;-/:t3_
!
!'1f!)
~,g·;(/
:";_~:::\:\~-=~1.
!f~i!J_- ·
This ,is aconf~re~c~- of all the residential life
organiza-
tions in the Northeast .region· of the.·US. Marist;receivedtwo
prestigious ho!}ors.aubis·_conference, the'first being the'Most
Spirited. DelegationJ\ward,and the·seconctbeing the appoint-
ment of}oe Verderame .on the Regional Board of Directors' of
NEACURH as the parliamentarian chair. . .
. .
. . . . .
Marist
is now
ari
affiliated member ofNEACURH
and
its
nation-wide organization, NACURH (National AffiHation of<:'.ol-
lege and University Residence Halls).· This membershiplea<is to
the possij)ility ofMari'st hosting the NEACURHconferetice at
some point in the future,
as
well as opening up amazing resources
to Marist f;oli,ege for programming and residential
life
ideas
-
or
issues.
·
·
·
·
·
One of our biggest fund-raisers during the course of the
semester is ihe Support Basket program. During firials, we distrib-
ute care packages to students. This program is very popular;aiid
this semester we received approximately 650 orders from parents.
As a reminder, Support Baskets can be pic:ked up qutside of the
ActivitiesOffice from 12-5, Wednesday, December 1 l_and Thurs-
day, Dc~ember12 .. ,
..
In conclusion, Jhave every confidence in
Joe
\VbenI
officially hand over the reins of SLC. I wouldlike to thanknumer-
ous people for their hard work and dedication this semester: to
making SLC a productive organization.·· SteveSansola was a won-
derful advisor, .Bob. I,,ypch,
-
Unda Muhlfeld an.d the Astivities
Offic~ were indispensable during the craziness of Support Bas::.
kets. Jim Raimo and Joe Binotto added their valuable input to the
issues that SLC was discussing.
·
My SLC members were a great crew, and I hope they
continue to work as well for Joe as they did for me. I especially
would like to thank Sam Johnson and Chris Oertel for the amazjng
work they did as advisors to the NEACURH conference. Th_ank
you also to the NEACURH group, Stag, Salsa, Hooch, Goober,
Mouth . ..J.-Comers, and Steamy for making NEACURH a fantasti-
cally fun and educational experience for me.
A final thank you goes out to SGA members and SGAAs.
I am "orry
if
I forgot anyone, and
if
I did, then please accept my
gratitude. I wish everyone the best of luck on finals and for the
next semester. I know Joe looks forward to working with and for
the Marist community in the spring 1997 semester. Good luck and
good-hye!!!
Sinccr~Jy,
Adrienne Janetti
Vice President for Student Life 1996
Bring
your conce~
.
s
tc)
student gov~rn}nent
Dear Marist Community,
.'.
· l .
As the semester draws to a close,
it
is always positive to take a look back anclx:ecognize your
accomplishments. In student government, your student leaders are working hard to improve the quality
oflife on campus: From scheduling the major programming acts, like Jewel, to chartenng new clubs on
campus, SGA is working on issues thataffectyou. ·

L

:
.
.
.
; . _
,
,
...
:.
Throughout the·semester, we in student government have been striving to ttS<,;ertain those
issues that concern you the most. Many issues have been addressed in The Circl.e and many others we
have heard by word of mouth .. However, this ~ly is not enough. I strongly urge any of you reading this
letter to bring your concerns to Student Government; we want to do nothing more than f9cus on those
problems and find solutions for you.
In conclusion,
I
would like to vJishevery last one of you a happy holiday _season. Good luck
during finals week and have a safe trip home. For those of you seniors that have finished your capping
class this semester; congratulations! For those of you that have it next, good luck! A.nd a special "thank
you" to Adrienne Janetti for all of the hard work and de_dication she has put in throughout the year in
SGA. I wish her the best ofluck in the. future. Again; happy holidays to all and see you n~xt semester.
ErlkJ;Molinaro
Sttident
Body
Vice-President
CorJ1e celebrate the
hqftda.y
season. ..
.
::-.._:-.:"·
...
·
•. · ~ ' 4
...
·•tk ...
11tatrt4t··~
s~
·
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, : / ~ - ~ ~
§atu/h·aJJ,
IDitrrn~rr
14-,
1996
6:45
p.m.
Instrumental Program
7:00
p.m.
Program
Af
arist Co[fege Cfiape[






















































THE CIRCLE, Decemb~r 12, 1996
11
Ehglish
SeriiOfSshoW)fie~ expertise
l;y
,
AitJE L~E
·,, &EEdiroi-
about English majors'.sfeelings
and
sounds,
.
and the way

in
>
about: the cu'rrent curriculum,
which
they are joined. For ex-
sung to the tune of "Do You
Hear
ample~ images of concentration
the People Sing?'; from Les camps were put to sounds of
On Tuc~day; Dec. 3, in
the
-
Miserables.
~
>:
·
laughter. The result was jarring
Cabari-1.
·
the English capping
-
Other.
·
notable petform.ances
and attention-grabbing; it fully
class hdd afostivalshowcasing
included Chris Laline's orie-man
absorbed the audience.
their many talents.
.
soliloquy entltled,'~Hemingway
A group of English students
Scnil•
.
r capping students dis-
in Paris."
.
LalinerecitedaboutlS called the Children's Literary
play(•1l their projects, .which minutes of material, and through
Group combined their sources
rangt',I
from
one-act plays to an
his w'ords, actually brought and talents to create a Children's
interpr,
:
1ntiC1nal video
.
question'-
Hemingway to life; if butfor a
book of stories. They alsomacle
ing,
'·\\'lnltis
Art?"
.
momenL Choosing not to
micro-
a videotape, with capping stu-
Fc-;1
ival
:
producer Clifden
phorie his voice, Laline began
dentsreadingtheirstoriesaloud.
Kennedy said of the evening, "It his soliloquy in a smaUvoice that
The children's
.
faces were alight
starte,1
nut
as a suggestion, a
threatened to waver, but as tie
with laughter as their teacherread
way
.
to -.howourwork. No one
continued, his
-
words gained one English major's story to
·
rea11y
knows what English majors
strength and aµthority.
·
.
.
·
.
them,.
do, so this was a way to show to
·
Tom Privitere
·
and
Todd
The final group of the
others what exactly it is we do."
Stallkamp produced a videotape
evening were four English stu-
Hc
a1
I,
li'.d,
''The important thing
proposing to change the English
·
dents
·
who read aloud their own
is the srudent's own initiate. rm syllabus to include two new
.
poetry.
Clifden Kennedy, Chan-
very
p.-nud to be able
·
to share
courses
;
with one class teaching
dler Owens, and Gina Trapani all
this with the Marist cqmmunity.
production skills
.
such as
shared their own words with the
Hopefully. next year's students
stagebuilding,
.
Hghting, and
audience. This was one of the
will
1.·1
,;11
inue
this tradition;"
makeup. The other class is a
best moments of the evening; live
Thc- k:;tival commenced
.
with
Shakespe~re. course; eilcqi:n-
perfonnances take away the pro-
Open i
11
~
·
Speaker
..
Matt passing all his works. Together,
tective barrier that videos pro-
Domh,owski, who pondered the
the two courses would work to-
vide. Trapani read a beautiful,
plight, ,fthe English student. His
·
gether, teaching English stu-
lyrical poem in a light, whispery
spe('d1 was both humorous and
dents not just the word alone,
voice even as her hands shook
thought-provoking.
but the skills needed to share its
holding the paper.
Dornhrowski believes the fes-
vision, namely a full-scale theater
The English Capping Class
tival isthestartofanannualrite.
production.
Festiva~was a huge success,
·
He
s:,itl.
'
·J
hope the festival went
Another English majornamed
bringing out English and non-
well. h,~cause it would do the Jennifer shared a heartbreaking
Englishmajorsalike,aswellsome
m:tjor
:11hl
the school well if it
story of personal tragedy. Her
faculty members.
contin11,·d and became a tradi-
voice was clear and strong, and
English major J.D. Lewis thor-
tion:·
very brave.
oughly enjoyed the evening. "I
Ea.:!;
pl!rfonnance was intro-
.
Chandler Owens and Amy
·
thought that the presentation
duccd
li
y
Karen Landry, dubbed
Howard
made
a very original vid-
was great," Lewis said,
"It
.
"The f\ti1~ical Minstrel" for the
eotape, questioning the concept
blended traditional and contem-
nigh1 She wrote and sang her
of
art
in the modern era. "Art in
porary elements; every time you
own
:
snn g$, to
·
complement
.
her
'96'' paired cotnp~Uing;
-
sqme-
thought
ycm lcnew the direction
:
f.eJl()\~
':::
\
1i1dents
'-
:
0
·
acts~
/
siiiging
:,,;:':
tirlt~~
i
9.isturbfng
i
s
fo1'ages
,
.
to
.-i
:::
it
,:;
V{aS
~
going
1
iri;
:
it turned and
.
1
i
I
!cs
·
Ii
1
:
r
'The
Chaucer
Review
sc>unds;
::
tfie
'
in,pact
o°f the video
:~
:
slapped
--
you
.
in
the
Sonf
-~
and
·
a funny" numtier
carries fronhhe
_
cpoice of sights
face .... phenomenal."
.
.
. .
.
'
..
•.·.
.
,.,
.
.
Marlst bands to perform
Christmas concert
POUGHKEEPSIE-The Marist College Concert
Band, Jazz Band, Woodwind Ensemble, Flute Choir,
and Handbell Ringers will combine talents during their
annual Christmas Concert on Sunday,
Dec. 15,
at 3
p.m., in the Nelly Goletti Theater in the Student Center
on the Marist campus.
The bands will perform selections from Mozart, Wyle,
Bizet, Tchaikovsky, Handel, Liszt, Haydn and others,
under the direction of Arthur Himmelberger.
The concert is
free and open to the public. For
further information, contact the Marist College Music
Department
at(914) 575-3000, ext. 2142.
-
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·
>
· 12
THE CIRCLE
Taking
:
a Closer Look
ij'
by Amie
Lemire
A&Ei:diror
·,
~ •
-
:
:
·:
·
~
·
.
.
.
'
..
.
·
••
. .
.
.
·

.
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.
·
December 12,-1996
-
.
.
.
·

,
News arid
·
Reviews
Two to rentwh~n you are bored during
Christmas
l)reak
by Amie
Lemire
A&EEditor
.
.
·
If you arc like most college kids
I
know. hy the second week of
Christma
s
vacation, the
thrill
of
home
-
cooked meals and free
laund1')
has
long since dissolved
into
d:,ily
nagging sessions with
parents, not to mention heated
debate-. over missed curfews and
messy rooms. By the third week,
you'v,~ made up a chart count-
ing down the days until you can
finally n
:
1um to the blissful
free-
dom
of
school. ·
·
We IL
if
you suffer from that af-
fliction. f
e
ar not
.
Ihavetwomov-
ies guai-.mteed to hold you
r
at-
tention, 1he kind that you'll
be
talkinl~ ahout long after the final
credil
l,
:
:lVC
the screen. These
films arc razor-sharp, with finely-
drawn
,·har:1cters and breathtak-
ing ciw
:
matography.
_
While one
takes
pl;u:c in the grimy city
of
Glasgow. Scotland, and the other
is set in the chilly landscape of
Minnesota, they both have one
grisly element
.
in common: mur-
der
.
If
you haven
'
t figured out what
.
two movies I'm talking about,
then I guess you must not be the
cinephiles (translation: big
~
time
movie buffs) that I am. No worry,
I'llletyouoffthehook. Of course
I'm talking
·
about "Shallow
Grave" and "Fargo." Thesettlrns
are twisted and wicked, a won-
derful combination in my opin-
ion.
·
Okay, let's tackle "Shallow
Ground" first. Released in
'
1994,
it had great success overseas,
but didn't receive the enthusiasm
it so rightly deserved here in the
U.S. Jt is a deliciously evil little
flick about the ties of friendship
and
greed among a trio of single,
swinging Scots. Alex, Juliet,
a11d
Davi
_
d are snotty, yuppie
flatmates looking for a fourth to
share their enviousness, sump-
tuous, Ethan Allen apartment.
The threesome are bitchy and
ruthless
,
taking great pleasure in
screening potential
·
roommates
on the topics ranging froID mov
.
-
ies to music to sexuat habits.
They skewer each candidate;
tak-
ing sheer.joy in rejecting ev~ry
.
new Ioser
>
.
No one,.it seems; is
cool enough. .
.
.
.
However, someone
·
does. The
·
suave, self-assured Hugo re-
.
ceives group
'
approval and
moves in at once. However, no
sooner does he unpack his bags
than
he is discovered naked and
dead by his three roommates.
While Juliet checks for a
pulse, Alex rummages around
Hugo's belongings. And as
Juliet heads for the phone to call
the police, Alex finds a suitcase
under the
bed,
stuffed to the hilt
with money. And at this point,
the film takes off.
Okay,Iknowwhatyou'rethink-
ing
.
And yes, this has been done
before-corpses buried, money
stolen, and friends betrayed. But
"Shal_Iow Graye
!.'
puts a
'.
devilish
spit1to it. '!'rust me; y0,u
'
.
ve seen
·
it before, but never like
·
this. Un-
.
defsrandf
·
.
·
·
·
.
·
.. -_
s~
·
~ton
·
g~edA]ex and lofty
Juli
e
t
_
c.in'~ wait to start spend.:
ing the cash,.
'
aM they can't un-
:
derstand
,
why
,
David is slowly
losing his mind
.
(Oh,°David, by
the way, lost a nasty little bet~
and won'.the
'
dubious honor of
severing off the corpse's hands
and feet).
Timid,
wallflower David is
turn-
ing into
·
an angry psycho, lock-
ing himself up in the attic; he
drills holes in the flooring to spy
on Alex and Juliet.
Ewan McGregor makes a lovely
Alex, sarcastic and biting, com-
plete with
··
feathered hair that
wo~ld ~ak,e
.
AcicUil Curry proud.
Alex is
'
Ioµd
·
an9 obnoxious, and
his mind works like its on an
espresso high
.
Kerry Fox is
Juliet, a character who tries for
confidence, but falls closer to
bitchiness. However, don't un-
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"'THE
CIRCLE~T)ecembe~-
i:i, 1996 -
13
• ; ·Fangb'
and
'Shall◊w
Graie•;·two chilling sJ;p~~sefilriis frohii\1/~ different 'worlds
, jerc_sliniate her; Juliefloves'
her friends, but she loves her- .
self
more:=
.
.
/·:.ChrislQpher·.Edcleston
round(,
ouf
U1e trio ·as David .
Stephcns~::·_1n·tqe beginning~
~e al I o.w,s . himself to be
pushed around by Alex and
·Jtiliet; strangely, it.isn't m1til
· after his grotesque finishing
off.·or·th~ body, thaLDayid
begin< to
grow
a backbone of
steel.
·.
·
· ·
By
the end of the film, he's :
changed so rµiich that his so~
called !"1icnds bar~ly recognize
him.
It
is ·1he transformation
ofDayhl th~t)s so chilling
abotif "Shallow Grave."
_·· The lhing°that makes "Sha}.:.
low Grave" so good is the fi-
nal scenes which reach out for
yqu in
a
chilling grip. There is
looked Hke
a
bunch of black
splotches on a white screen. (I
actually thought it was wallpa- .
per, or something). Then, at the
bottom of the screen, Jerry's for-
lorn figure is seen slowly trudg-
ing through: the snow. to his car,
which sits alone in the parking
lot. It's a wonderful scene, so
brilliantly depicting Jerry's life, as
well as foreshadowing what's to
come .
.
The appeal of "Fargo" is its'
irony. The idea of a brutal string
of murders taking place in such a
picture-perfect Midwestern
town, and
tile
local neighbors'
reaction, ( or rather, lack thereof),
is wonderful. Also, the pairing
of maniacal
Cari
and murderous
Gaerd is right on.
· ajaw-d.-opping
finale;
reminis-
cent
r,f
"The Usual Sus-
pects"-,--t;he kind of butt-kick.,
ing m11vii endings that make
you
brcrik
out in uncontrol-
lable goosebumps. That is the
sign of ucally good movie.
wants to save his own butt>so he
comes_ up with the·.perfect plan
·
to
have his wife ki_dnapped•"so
·
,her
wealthy f~ther
will
fork ov.er isiz-
able ransom. After payfog off the
kidnappers, Jerry
will
have close to
a million dollars.
ness of Brainerd and its residents
cheap, dirty car salesman, how
is overwhelming. · Phrases such
could I not?
. as
"oh yah," ""ah jeez," and my
However, thanks to Macy's
personal favorite, ''yer dern
superb acting ability, the duality
tootin!" are quite commonplace.. of-Jerry isfolly realized~
But, of course, the heart of the
movie is Marge. Whether she's
chasing suspects with revolver
in hand, or chowing down with
her co-workers at the local buf-
fet, Marge is always sweetly,
calmly, nonchalantly, a step
ahead,
Jerry's first mistalce was believ-
ing that his half-baked plan would
actually work; his second was hir-
Oby,
i
blabbed quite a bit
ing such stupid thugs to perform
about rliat one, so let's move
the deed. Steve Buscemi and Peter .
on with ~•Fargo." Well, what
Stormare play the two kidnappers,
can· I say· about this movie,
and they are the epitome of night
bcsidcs ..
:.ITR6'CKS! Every~
and day ..
thing :·,hout "Fargo" is supe-
Buscemi 's character Carl
rior, frOm the direction.to the
Showalter is a fast--talkingloud-
actors
111
the landscape to. the
mouth-all talk/riO show.
In
con-
plot. ~rayo!
trast,Stormaie;s
·
characterGaerdis
,
. Oby.J mµst admit that the .silent, but deadly. Carl ta1ks alotpf
Even as Marge goes aboui in~
:At times, my heart w~nt out to
vestigating a mass homicide
him;Icouldfeelhisdespair. He's
case, she· continues her daily
trapped in
a
job he hates, as well
routine,completelyunruffledby · as under his father-in-law's
· the recent string of events in.her
thumb; he has sharks breathing
usually quiet hometown. She can · down his neck, while his back is
uncover three dead bodies in the
against the wall.
morning, and still remember to
The landscape of "Fargo" is
pick up some nightcrawlers for · bleak, frozen, dismal-similar to
one of her husband's fishing
that of a few certain characters.
trips.
There are a lot of outside scenes,
Everything .about Marge is · where you can see nothing but
calm, methodical, unruffled.
white straight to the horizon.
Frances McDormand is excellent
· The cinematography is exquis-
iri
her role:as the·expecting po-
ite, breathtakingly beautiful and
lice chief,'aild she''d better
be:
In .: desqlate a.f~~ , -- ')· .
real life, McDormaild is also
the same .
,.·C ,_ -. ,
So there you go, kids. My two
picks for "How to Save Yourself
From Boredom this Christmas Va-
cation." My only advice? Don't
watch "Shallow Grave" by your-
self, a·nd give "Fargo" a real
chance. Ifby chance, you've al-
ready seen it and didn't like
it,
try again. You just probably
didn't get it. Happy Holidays,
and see you in
'97!
.;,C~n b1:~~th.ers~e an acquired, trash~in~foct hittalks.Hke·he's·on
t~~te;
eirh~•· you like the works,· speed' _hut- he's
a
bit. squeamish.
of
Joel
an,IEthan Coen,,oryou
Gaerd says abput
15
lines the entire
<.ds>.!1'.t:_
~
,
movie, but his
lobk
says
it
all; he
_; : :gJ1h,:r,y0µ
dig .t~(?ir use of can gei it done;· and god help who
'.kn9wn as Mrs. Joel Coen. (Talk · time. Each
· aboutnepotisril!)
s_h.ot gets
Marge is the epicenter of the
most
"Fargo"; everything travels back · :meaning as
to her._ She can find clues, track · · possible.
dead•·P:Jl})mmor and lust f9r _ tries to stand in the way.·
·
· blood. nr,-y94, fincl tl}t:m ~eircl.
As the body count dses, the po-
and
gross. (m
the-film world
Hee _can in the bigwigs to find out
though, t_hey are gods)._
what's going· on. Enter Marge
.Thi:..
is_
the deal:. Jerry
Gunderson; the very clever,' very
Lundc1 gaard is a desperate
pregnant Brainerd chiefof police.
man. I
fe
~~es some people a
Blame. it on her
.
pregnancy, but
lot
of
money, and he has now
Marge doesi1't niove tq·o quickly;
way: of_coming up with the
T.J. Hooker she's not. lrl'fact no
cash. F.rcnjf you've never
one in Brainerd motes qui~kly.'
seen Targo", you know Jerry.
The movie, which_ takes place
in
Played
to
perfection by Will-
the frozen region
of
northern Min-
iam H. Macy, Jerry -has his
nesota, · has a distinct small~town
back lo_the comer; he'.s a
feel. The dialects, the Midwestern
sneak::li1tlefellowwhoreally
cheerfulness; the hometown good-
down killers, and have time for
In ari-
an in-between meals snack, with-
other per- ·
out batting an eyelash. In a
feet scene,
small~town turned upside-down the camera
by senseless chaos,· Marge has
is shooting
control. .
·
.from over-
William H. Macy is superb
as
head. Ini-
Jerry Lundergaard. He is multi- ·ti ally,
I
faceted; he can be a sniveling,
didn't know
slimy double-dealerone moment, · what I was
and a desperate, lost soul the
looking at;
next. I had an instant dislike of it
just
Jerry from the first scene-a
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'



















































































THE
CIRCLE, Dec~rilber 12,1996
SPO
.HTS
14
Youth movementposes
.
.
problems for hoops
:\ Closer Look
:\t ...
This past weekend; the Marist
College basketball team played
host to the Pepsi-Marist Classic
at the James J. Mccann center.
However, Marist was not much
of a host. Playing on their home
court, th~ Red Foxes finished in
fourth place. Now,
fourth
place
does not usually sound so bad.
Too bad only four tecl.Ills partici-
pated in this tournament.
.
In the opening round, Marist
took on Lafayette College on Fri-
day night and basically was em-
barrassed in front of their own
fans. In the first half, Marist
played decent and was able to
hang
with
the Leopards, only
trailing by five at the half with
the
score at 32-27.
In the second half, Marist was
trailing by 13 with 7 :20 left to play
and started to make a nice come-
back. With
5:24
remaining,
Marist was able to cut the lead
to seven. Not bad
.
They then
fell
to inexperience. They
ran
into
big trouble. Stupid mistakes
were the main culprits that killed
Marist due to their youth.
The main
prob~em. was on the
defcnsh'" end
of the floor.
·
''Our
big
problem
is that we can't stop
anyhc)dy from scoring," head
coach
Dave
Magarity said;
·
Well,
yes cnach, that could be a big
problem.
Lafaye1 te employed a zone de-
fens\! which totally blew the Red
Foxes minds. This caused all
sorts of problems.
What
we must remember is that
Marist is extremely inexperi-
enced. The
.team
is full of tal-
ented basketball players but
many l1nve very limite(f or no
minuti:!S at Marist or Division I
for that matter. With only one
returning starter in Randy
Encarnacion, Marist
will
continue
to ~tmggle in pressure situations
where experience is vital.
Lm,king at Saturday
·
night,
Marist made
great
improvements.
They still lost and it was not
prett}
·
by
any means but the de-
fense really stepped it up. They
only allowed
53
points to
be
scored in a game that went into
double overtime. On the other
Iriaod
l
;
\?
\?~
~-
;
.
.
.
.
;.
·
:com:1111c
-:
;
_
·
.''{_,.
t~ip'§
lO
C
IrivitariJn
.
·
dttier
tJi.m
thcconh!
tJl«;fmlCCSS
c
,
This
se.lSQ
participai~
MAACm
-
thcconvcrs
a'hc:l
'
thc:y
.
~i~ely int
·
·
tothtlfo\
inierin is~
i
pl:lllS
t~i
1
.
~!nf:~h!~
,
e
._
.,_
!_{1r,htn
9µr
\
fect
l
~yezybc;d
·
them
'•
Will'
6~,"h~
D>.'..
\
"
\
hand, they only totaled 51 PQints
and continued to struggle
to
of-
·
fense. As Magarity said,
..
the
·
breakdowns are due to a lack of
experience and is something he
will have to clear up.
-
·
.
.
Everyone keeps harping on the
inexperience excuse and this is
understandable hut this
·
reason-
-
ing only goes so far:
With the teams that Maristhas
played so far, holding
a
0-4
retard
'
is close to
,
embarrassing.
Lafayette was comprised
ofa
.
'.
.
·.
freshnian
·
and four sophomores
..
as the s~ng squad. niey were
a good, disciplined teamfor be:
ing
.
so young. Marist
iieegs
to
follow their example. They need
to
become
a
team- quickly.
'.-
: ·
Marist will start their Northeast
Conference
.
competition
.
soon
and they
will
need
to
step itup.
It appears thatthe team needs to
gel- they need to be a team. This
' .
'
Randy
_
Encarnacion
·
Team:
Basketball
Class:
Senior
-
Hometown:

Guttenburg, NJ
Major:
.
.
Inteniatfonal
·
Business
·
.
.
.
·

.
.
Minor:
.
Sparu~li
team
concept needs to be applied
overall but specifically to the
defense. They look like a bunch
of individuals playing one-on-
Favorite TV Show:
Married withChildren
one in the school-yard that keep
getting beat-badly. They need
to bring it inside to the hardwood
and p~ay team basketball.
Favorite Music:
Spanish
.
The Classic gave Marist a bit
of a reality check. It dropped
them to 0-4 and showed that they
really do need to get to work. It
proves that theywere not just
unlucky in the first two games of
.
Favorite Food:
Pork Chops with
:
Rice
.
Most Memorable Mom
_
erit:
When Mari~t made it to the NIT
the year .
.
.
·.·
'
.
.
.. · .
.
.
.
.. ·
This tournament showed
them
thar if they<do
·
nofget theii
'
act
together on offense and defense.:
·
total team play- any caliber team
will be able to hand them a beat-
Worst Aspect of Marist: Patkin.g reguh:1tions
.
·
mg.
--
Magarity summed this team up
adequately.
·
"We have
a
long road ahead
.
of
us," he said. "It's not going ~o
get
any
easier. It's going
_to
be
tough every
_
time out; no matter
·
The National
Scene
who we play.n:
·.
.
.
·. ·
.
At least the team is aware of
ln1992,JimmyKey, the~aBlue
··
reality.
·
Now, all they must do
is
Jay,· pitched the Worfd Series
work
·
through this
·
adversity:
clinching game
for
the Toronto
·.
Hard work will pay off-:- eventti-
Blue Jays
-
againsfthe Atlanta
.
ally.
If
the R,ed Foxes
are
willing
Braves
i
Before the next season's
·
to subscribe to_ this hard work,
first pitch
was
thrown, he had
they wiUbe worth watching.
signed with division rivals New
The fans are not usually inter-
York
Yankees;
·
ested in waiting for the team to
.
.
Fast-:forwardto 1996ifyou
will.
"gel." They want good basket-
Jimmy Key,
_
then a Yankee,
ballallthetime; Hopefully,:Marist
·
·
pitches game six ofthe World
·
will be working overtime or the
Series, and gets
·
the win, much
cheerleaders will be out of work.
·
like four years previous. To en-
Chris Smith is the Circle's
core his performance, he did the
same thing to the Yankees what
Sports
Editor
he did to the Blue Jays. He
jumped ship to a division rival,
this time to the Baltimore Orioles.
·
What is this world coming to
when nobody is loyal enough to
stay with their team?
In
Jimmy
Key's case, he not only jumped
teams, but did so to division ri-
vals,
twice.
This brings me to:~ .e issue of
loyalty. What brings a man to
jump ship to another team?I can
understand Alex Fernandez and
.
his desire to go back home and
play for his hometown
team.
It is
one thing to have a good reason,
what
I
consider to be a reason
other than money,
than
for purely
financial reasons.
Think about it, if Jimmy Key
didn't care about money, what
reason would he have for going
to
the
Orioles. He is just coming
off a
~ n
in which he wort
a
world championship
for
the
Yan-
an~ from the Red Sox or else
he;ll sign with someone who
can
give it to
him
like the White Sox
orY~kees~
.
·
·
·

~ees.Hecontrt uted
:
~
'
great

·.
,
Don•tget me wrong, the Red
especiallyj11 the second half of Sox; not-signing Clemens would
the season,
:
\vheti nobody even
·
be
the
worst move
.
since selling
expected
him
to play a quarter of
Babe
Ruth, butl thinlc myself, as
the season.
a Red Sox fan; would take it easier
If
he did1ft
care
about money;
·
if
he signed with
the
White Sox
he would be still playing for the and riot the Yankees.
If
he signs
Yank~,gettingr~ytodefend
·
with the Yankees,
.
you might as
the
_
world ch.llJDpionship, but in~
.
well rip out my heart. as well
as
stead he took hisshow on the the heart and soul of the Red
roact'to the hated Orioles.
·:
Sox.-
This bri~gs
·
mito the Roger
·
Clemen~ situation. Clemens is
a
.
free agent and he is considering
leaving the only
team
he has ever
played
_
for, the lloston Red Sox.
Mr.
Clemens.is first on the all-
time Red
·
Sox list of starts,
strikeouts, innings pitched, and
is tied with Cy Yo
_
ung for most
wins and shutouts. Tied with Cy
Young!
.
He is the greatest pitcher in
Boston Red Sox history, without
question. Here is
a
player who
himself has changed the Sox phi-
losophy from having a team of
right-handed power hitters to
that of trying to have a team of
great
pitchers. He is the greatest
pitcher is Red Sox history,
a
hall
of famer, and the best pitcher of
our time, and he might leave.
For
what
good
reason would this
be?
Clemens
wants
four
years guar-
The bottom line is
·
loyalty is a
two way street. While players
get lambasted for leaving and not
being loyal, so too must owners
be held responsible. How can we
blame the players for
-
notbeing
loyal and leaving their teams for
more money? The owners
are
not
loyal either.
Take
Mr.
Clemens as an example
. Ifl
am the owner of the Red Sox
signing Clemens is a no-brainer.
.
lam
loyal to
Mr.
Clemens
and
give
him whatever he wants. If I am
not loyal in
this
sense, how can
I
expect the player to have the
same loyalty towards me.
The answer is simple,
I can't.
Just
a
little message to the Red
Sox.
be
Joyal
and
give Roger
what
·
he
wants.
.
..
I
.I
i
























_ :.\ · The Circle,'
Decerribert
2; 1996
15
Men's
SWinnnitigaqd.divillg
faces
t()ugh
cbrnPetitiOn
.
~
.
-
-
.
'~.
·~
·•
.
.
h
y
PHILLIP WHITE
knew that we could not. contend
Staff·Wfiter
with them, so we concentrated
onColgate," he said. · . . ..
· ·
Marist did have· a few
standouts. Sophomores' Craig
Chat_los and Griffin McNeese, as
well as juniors Chris Blackwell,
Michae_l Murphy and Chris
O'Connor helped the Red Foxes
beat Colgate. Blackwell placed
second in the one-meter dive and
fifth in the three-meter dive.
The lll~'n's swimming and div-
Marist ended this meet with a .
ing t~am·s.gefoated Colgate at a . winniilg score oY-28-20
··()ver
d_ual ml~~t with Yale and gained
Colgate.Yale scored
a
total of372
valuahk experience
in
prepara-
·points for the entire meet. Yale
tion fort he last four meets.
won because it
has
an enormous
Junior Chris O'Cohnor said the
amount of swiI1Ullers and diver-
atmosphere of the meet was in-
sity on their team It could enter
tense.
as many four swimmers per race,
"This meet went well and it
and they all placed and scored
gave
1l1c
image of
a
champion-
pointsforYale. ,_
ship race," he said.
Van Wagner said besides the
Sophomore William Brennan
said the meet was a positive learn-
ing experience.
"This meet will help us prepare
for the MAAC Championship,
and this meet gave us time to
watch Yale and educate our-
selves on how to swim better,"
he said.
Mari st :-.warn against Yale Uni-
goal of defeating Colgate, which
versity, which is ranked in the top
Marist had done
last
year, he
fifty in the country for its swim-
wanted this meet to
be_ a
learning
ming program. ·
·
experience.
· ·
Coach Larry Van Wagner said
"I think that it is educational
the team focused on the team it
for any team to c;pmpe_te against
though
I
it could beat.
a team that is better than then:i so
"We knew that Yale was going
that they can learn from that team
to be
a
tough competitor and we · and see how that teani ·co·m'-
petes," he said.
With the Red Foxes nearly fin- ·
ishing the first half of their sea-
son with a
6-1
record, Van
Wagner wants his team to focus
on winter intercession practice
and the four dual meets still
ga
C:Hlf:AGO(
J3uiJs susp~tj
matwith6ut_
;fti~sday,
citifi_
guage in
a
~e}~,
folio"
in!!
thett(
te>'thc 1,7i·ont6'r
\ '!he
Bnlls·~~i
~hat 1h.:: su~P,tf
into
ctlcc1
irri ·
rnari
mi,,;ing'
~gain:-.1 Minn
game
a,
Ne"-1
t,Jcri-\ Kra11
presicl~lll
of;
tions said
Rod
a·disgrm:c
tc{ .
''
"Dennis'
tis'
siye
lan_guag~·
inerilhe
c.tti ....
Robinson h@peS·t©J1angon.
one
mqre year,·
go
611.t:a
winner
hy.-MARY
FosrER
A~'
~pons
Writer
GRAl\fBLING,La.(AP}-Withhis
team Jugged by scandal and a
losing record, 77-year-old coach
Eddk
R_ohinson wants one more
sea~on.
:i
56th year at Grambling,
and a d1ance to go out a winner.
"Then
that's it. Then,
1'11
walk
away a, a coach.
If
I
win, fine.
If
I don'
r.
well; then I'll feel OK that
at lea-.t my concerns had been
consid,·rcd," Robinson said in an
interview published Tuesday in
The Ro:-.ron (La.) Daily Leader.
H,
,wcver, Grambling presi-
dent Ravmond Hicks wants
Robin-.on, college football's
winningcst·coach, to step down
and a-.<-ume a vice president's
post.
Rohinson 's wife told The As-
sociated Press on Tuesday that
her hush:ind hoped to meet with
Hicks hi,discuss the situation.
Hick'.-. 1 ctu~ed Tuesday from
an
out-of-hi\vn meeting and said
that, \\
It
ilc he had met with
Robinson, he deni~d 4emaiiding · were ~sted and charged with
the coach's resignation:_·' .
the dormitory rape of a 15'-year-
"Coach R~b!~S()Ii -a~d
I
~ave
old ~irl a ~ Gram~ling's home'..
met and discuss.eel his _fotµremle _ c~mg-v1ctory agamst Alabama
at the university~ bµtlhaye not ,,,,State.
· ·
· : ,: ·
issued any ulti1_11afiim.To specu-. ·
· Robinson, regarded as one of
late on the outcome'aithis time
college football's bestteachers,
would be inappropriate,'' ·Hicks
sent ~ore than 200 players to the
said in a statement iss~ed by the
NFL, mcluding Doug Williams,
school.
·
. · · ·
the first black quarterback to
Last week, Hicks sent Robinson
start in a Super Bowl.
a letter conveying
his·
wishes,
Hired in 1941 at what was then
then informed him in person that
Louisiana Negro Normal and
he wanted the coach to relin-
Industrial Institute, Robinson
quish his job.
.
initially worked
as
coach, trainer
"He called Eddie into his of-
and bus driver before transform-
flee and told him_what's what,"
ing the school into one that
Robinson's wife, Doris, told the
played before sellout·crowds in
AP.
the nation's largest stadiums. He
Robinson has a'i-ecord'of 405-
coached 54 teams in 56 years,
157-15 with OJ1ly seven losing
with play interrupted for two
seasons. However, four have
years by World War
II.
come in the last 10
years·
and, for
Grambling won its first black
the first time, he
his
had con-
college national championship in
secutive losing r~ords.
I
955. In
I
960, in its second year
Last April,_tp~.NC¥ began
as
a member of the Southwest-
. investigating allegatforis
of
rules
em Athletic Conference, the Ti-
. violations in
°1i.f~tii~:1
pro~.
,
·gt_
1
et_lrs~· --~on_
~~
.~~!
~f
17 ·
SWAC
And last m.on__t~,
fol;lf,
pl~yers
· ·
.
••
• - • • I
• •
.

•:•;:_, .. •,._.:·
" f ; :
-.J
• ,
.
.
ahead.
These last four meets will be a
mixture of winning and losing
teams. Van Wagner said he con-
siders the first two meets, which
will be against St. Peter's and
Loyola, to be easy victories.
However, the last two meets,St.
John's and Fordham, will pose a
threat of difficulty.
Van Wagner said there was a
rationale behind the scheduling
of these meets.
"I strategically placed these last ·
four meets so that it would pre-
pare us for the season and cham-
pionship ahead," he said.
. Vanwagner said he feels that
this practice is so important be-
cause it will help the Red Foxes
realize their goals. In addition, it
will strengthen and condition
them emotionally, mentally and
physically for the season ahead
of them.
Brennan also said the practice
during the intercession is impor-
tant.
''The winter intercession will
mentally prepare the team for the
season and
it
will make both the
swimming and diving teams
stronger, if we concentrate on
these next three and a half weeks
of practice," he said.
Van Wagner said he is looking
to his sophomores and juniors
to lead Marist this season and to
give guidance and leadership to
the freshmen.
"I
expect my sophomores and
juniors to lead the'freshmen and
the team this year because they
have won two previous MAAC
Championships and they know-
how to win,'' he said.
Women. runners-
prepare for indoors
:hY
.DAVID McBRIDE
Staff Writer
Head coach Phil Kelly is just
going to try to do what his team
does best. And that's run dis.:.
t~I\Ce. .
:;:
·,i.;ir
·
· The women's indom:track team
. specializes in ft.mning the rruddle
distance events; and that is
where Kelly said he hopes to
score most of his points when
his team competes.
"We coach the events that we
can score in," he said.
The team is strong in distance
running, while it has trouble scor-
fog points in sprinting events
and in jumping.
. This is due to the fact that
!vfarist just does not have the fa-
cilities to practice well in the
jumping events.
~.Kelly also said Marist does not
have the support staff to main-
tain a top-rate track program.
"We don't have·any field or
sti:ength coaches," he said.
"While most colleges will have
.numerous track and field
coaches, Marist has but two:. a
m~n•s coach and a women's
coach."
The reason is Marist does not
have sufficient facilities to ac-
commodate the jumping events.
For example, Marist doesn't have
a jumping pit. .
Kelly· said the team travels to
West Point one a week to receive
a proper practice ..
The :women's strong events
shou~d-be_ the 5_,ooo· meter;the
3,00QITJ, the long jump, and the
highjump .....
Kelly said the team could also
do well in.other.events.
. '.'.We should .do wen in the 800
ryght_up·t~
'
111~s900,"Kelly said.
Marist is competing in a league
with many other forniidable
school!>. Kelly said Rider,
Monmouth, Mount St. Mary's
and Fairleigh Dickinson will be
pretty .strong. .
But still, the team's expectations
are high this year. Allison
Murray, who participates in the
800 and the 1500, would like to
see Marisl finish either second
or third, if not first. But more im-
portantly, she just wants her team
to do their best.
Kelly said he hopes that his
team can finish in the top half of
the league and that his players
can ~et'personal bests. And af-
ter their first
.event,
Dominique
Pino set a new indoor record at
thelongjump. She broke the pre-
vious recordwith ajurnp of 17'53/
4".
.
Coach Kelly also believes that
his new members will further help
to better the team.
"(With the) ne.w freshmen, we
should be_ a lot stronger," he
said.
The team finishes its play this
weekend; before restarting again
in January .. -
...
-,,


































~.-.,
l
•,-·
:
';;;_,..;,;,.';
r
I
I
I
I
~;
I
I
I
t
I
16
Men's indoor track·.• captur~s •·
first'four spots in 3000m at.
FDU Invitational.
THECIRCLE
SPORTS
EEK:
. ·~ true temn bounces
back,
steps
up,
and
does
what
is
asked
of
them."
-
Norinne Powers .
Assistant women's basketball coach
Bask:et&an .capffires
IaSfp13.ce
~ntlie Pepsi.-MariSt Classic
by
CnRisrOPBER
SMITH
rience of the team. The Marist
Spo~is·•Editor
=r~~
1
ta~~~:%~aa:!~ ·
As the-Mccann center was
LucasPisarczyki'Theybothorily
filled with various men's basket-
acquired six points
011
thenight.
ball ten ms this weekend battling . Magarity is well aware of this
to walk away at the top
,
of the
inexperience and youthfulness
Marist-Pepsi Classic, the Red
of his team. ·
·
Foxes crawled away with their
''We're just not a good team
tails hetween their legs.
·
right now," Magarity s_aid. "We
The Rt•tl Foxes fell to 0-4 on the
have
a
lot of problems and weak-
. season-l,y
virtueofa 53~5floss - nesse~ thatare hard to.hide. The
to Charleston Southern in a-
team is really strugglmg to fig-
double overtime consolation
ure out it's-identity.''
game on Saturday evening.
"I_though! we coul~ ?v~rcome
Yale wound tip winning the
the mexpenence but it s Just_ not
tournamentwitha77-72overtime
happenmg. ·Our players Just
win over Lafayette, the team
n~ !o ~omelo the realizatio~
Marist lost to in the opening
thatitstimetogetbacktowork.
round.'76-63.
On Saturday, the Red Foxes
In M.,rist's opening game with · hosted Charlest?n · Southe!n,
Lafayette on Friday night, the
who lost to Yale m the openmg
Red Foxes were led by forward _!'OUnd:
. .
reserve Bryan
Whittle who
M~st P!ayed m~ch b~tter de-
scored 13 points in 24 minutes
fense
ID
this game
ID
which they
while going 2-for-6 from the field.
only ~lo"'.ed Charleston to score
The Red Foxes struggled on of-
, 53 pomts m
~
gl!J]le that went to
fense, 5hooting 29.4 percent from
double overtime. . . , .
. .
the
fie
It
I
as a team. Head coach
The defense was tight on both
Dave Magaritysaid this was not
ends of the floor as ~e score at
characteristicofhisteam.
the half was 18-17 m favor of
"Olll· shooting from the field
Charleston Southern ..
wa'i ju~t pitiful," Magarity said.
The game was sent mto over-
''We are u~ually a pretty good
time when Encarn_acion hit one
shootin~ team. I don't know
oftwofoulshotswith52seconds
what h:1i1pened."
left in regulation. The score re-
The fa.:t that Whittle was the
mained 44-44 until time expired
leadi
no
scorer shows the inexpe-
and an extra session · was re-
0
·
quired.
Wom~µ's basketq-~ll drops
twointhe CarrierClassic ·
hy
CHRIS
JETIE
Staff Writer
rie Ciaricone had 11 rebounds.
.. Despite the loss, Babineau said
that the Red, Foxes made a posi-
Thc
\\'cimen's basketball team
tive statement towards their fu-
lost
two
straight at. the• Carrier .· ture
MAAC
oppone11t considet-
Classic and their record now
ing Marist had .to start three
standsat 2~3.:,
> . ..
freshmen because.
·
of the
·
ab-
The
Rd
Foxes defeated'.tlle
sence ofDenglerand Leslco.
Lady Knights of Army 76-5(j
· Tpe consola,tion, matc.h pitted
T
d .
·D
·3·
the Red Foxes v_ersus C_._ol_ gate
ues
::y. ec, . . .
. ·

. • .
. .
.
.
Headcoa_ch Ken BabiJ:1.eau de-
University. ?vlarist dropped this
~cribed
the
game as intense'.
.
.
contest by a scoreof6f.,.59. The .
.
.
The Red Foxes. were. able to
game w~ close thrqughout, but
overcrnne a shaky first half, to a . in the end the . Red Foxes fell ·a
domin.1nt second half, which de-
Httleshort. 'TheR~ Foxes were
term i
n.-,i
.
the · outc0me . of the led by Shackel andMacDo~gall,
game. The Red Foxesshot.44 'YhohadJ2andJ, p<>irts~pec-
. percent in _the second,halfand _.tively,FreslunanSab?naVal~ery
used n ,. cry effective full court
also play~ \\Tell, scortng
~
1>9mts
press
h)
force 30 turnovers from
and grabbmg 8 rebo~nds. ,
Anny.
·.
. . ··. .
.
..
.. . .. .
H~w~ver, the offense struggled
Arcnrding. to Babineau, the '
~ bit \V}thoutDe~gler and Lesko
· team, "met the challenge. of a .
·
mthe_lin~up. While
h<?lh
Colg_ate
physk ~.
1
team and rose to the
and Ma_nst were both struggl!,ng
occasion." ..
offen
_
s1veJy, . _both
i
shootmg
Howcv.!r the Carrier Dome was~ · around 35 percent for tJ:!.e g~e,
not as \\';lcoming_to the Red
th_ediff:rencecamedowntofree
Foxes as the hardwood was at
throws.
West Point.
Whileneitherteamwasimpres-
The Carrier ciassic featured
sive from the
free
throw line, the
Marisr. St. Peter's, Colgate, and
RedFoxesshot56percent, w~e
the
host
school Syracuse.
Al-
Colgate shot 57 percent, the dif-
thoui'!h Mnrist lost both of their ference was two more made free
mat;hes, they. played without throws:by Colgate.
.
.
two of their top scorers/Stacey
Despite the loss, Babmeau said
Dennkr and Jean Marie Lesko
he was proud of how the team
In thl'fi~t round, the
Red
Fox~ pl~yed defensively.
. .
lostt,,
S1.
Peter'sCollege66-51.
~ere,,was
~ lot of positive
St
Per.~rs. who is predicted to
emotion, he s~d.
.
win .
the MAAC this year, had _ However, Babmeau ~so said the
four or its starters in double dig".'
~
had trouble sconng and fin-
i ts, including guard Patty
1
~hing plays..
.
Man-hc:.e, who
scored
a
game
'Therewere_so~eoffD:Ightsfor
high 22 points. The Red Foxes
a
couple of girls, he said.
were
Ii-ti
hy Beth Shackel, who
. Assi_stantcoachNorinnePow-
had 13.points and seven assists. . e~ said the Red Foxes played
Liz
l\f." · Dougall was able to chip
with an overall
in
12
points,
while
freshman
Car- . . . l'leO;Se see
W.Hoops
on
p.14., ..
•·. \Vith ~--isecoii<Isi-einaining in
oyeriiI.De~-Bobby·Joe:liatton .
was foulcifand hi(a pair offree
thro~s to tie the<garrie at·49 a
side. The game was carried into
· a secorid overtime period;
.
The Red Foxes could not
outlast the Buccaneers as-Errol
McPherson was fouled. with
· 1: 16 left ori the
ciock.
Hatton
attempted a running one-bander .
with 3.1 seconds ·which did not
go and afollowup shot rolled·
off the rim. The final ended up
at53-5,1..
.,
Magarity said hefeltthe way
the· ga.me we11t was up to
Charleston Southern:.·
"It came down to their inabil.:.
ity· to. put· us away," Magarity
said.. ''They ~ere !JP• 11 pofots
·
atone point in the game;''
"I really feel tonight was a
positive statement for.this
team,
competing the way they did,"
Magarity:said .. "We made posi-
tive steps but therejs an empty
feeling walking away without a ·
win.''
.
Magarity also said he was
pleased with the defensive play
but was confused with what
happened on offense.
''The• defense was . where it
should'v~ been froni the begin-
ning," he said. ''The rebound-
ing jumps out at you. Out-re-
bounding a team by 22 and los-
Senior guard. Randy Encarnacion trying to decide what to do next.
ing, isjust nutst .
.
.
.
WoI11en swimmers improve to· 4-1
by
CHRIS O'DONNELL.
Staff Writer
A youthful women's swimming
team is off to a strong start
against formidable competition.
The Red· Fox swimmers im-
proved their record to 4-1 this
past week wiUJ. a dominating win
over Fairfield University. The
team also put in a strong show-
ing at the Yale Invitational by
placing third against stiff Ivy
League competition.
The Red Fox swimmers took
overthemeetatFairfield by domi-
nating the diving section of the
competition.
Freshman Jennifer Nafus said
that although the team domi-
nated, they did not really have
,.
.
any fast times.
"As a team, we did not really
perform that well," Nafus said.
"But it was good enough to get
the victory."
The following meet at Yale Uni-
versity presented some strong
Ivy League opponents which in-
. eluded Yale and the University
of Pennsylvania, along with
Colgate.
Nafus said that finishing third
was good considering what the
team went up against
''The meet really showed how
good you were against strong
competition,'' Nafus said.
"'There
really was
a
championship atmo-
sphere."
With the fall
semester
ending,
the Red
Fox
swimmers
are
excel-
ling. This is a surprise consider-
ing the
team
is very young, with
a majority of the swimmers being
freshman and sophomores. The
only setback for the young team
with only four seniors is that they
lack depth \\lith 17 swimmers in-
stead of the usual 22 swimmers.
Sophomore Jennifer Jaeger said
that thelack of depth could
be
their achilles heel during the
sea-
son.
"The lack of depth could hurt
us during duel meets," Jaeger
said.
With the. winter intercession
approaching, the Red Fox swim-
mers will not have
a
meet until
· Jan.
10
when they travel to Bear
Mountain to take on
Army.


49.10.1
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49.10.16