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The Circle, January 30, 1997.pdf

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 49 No. 11 - January 30, 1997

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given no
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the
college
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pla,~rµ
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people
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,
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also
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cotnplete!l{d~yotedto hts work,
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·
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f
the housing. office
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,
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w~
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sii~said. "He really
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J{a_iin9,
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he never lefL"
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saicl she is notsurewhy
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often \v9rking at his omce·as late .
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,
Jan.
1
·
issue
.
of
,
The
~
Hatifsn:·d
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.
,
watt.bulb can-attain a
·
tempera-=:_ ·
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.
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up
toJ
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29Qdegrees
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According to an article
m
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30
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~jJ:cl~,!Jliat
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tions,

and
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suiprlsci'.1'
at.
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atdieilo
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.
h~r housernate's
· .
.
.
prori1~ses
as
_
he
'.
begiris
·
.

·
·
According
to
·
thi
i::
9~uraii
i
;
-•
-
haJ<)g~6 l~p h~
·
also
:
cau
_
sed
. -
;
-
_
his
second
terfut
-
:
.
R.ickfrost~
){
spokes
'
ma~ffor
the
-
prq~l~ms
:
( \
'.
.
~-,
.
_
._
,
:
,,
·
,
.
-
-_
'
federatcQnsunier
,
agenct
·
said
.
"W,e
haci
ii
in
our
~
c
'.
omrnon
·
area
"--·
YEs
·
-102
--
NO --180
.
these
.
lamps are nofUke
~
ne>mial
..
iitGartlaild:Wehad~ep
f
the}ronf
lamps;°-.
.
_
'
.
,
,
door
open~
arid
bu~s
liact'
g~tten
:
"These Ja111ps need to
.
be on the bulb," sllesaid
:;
'The lamp
treated differently than ~~her started ~!!lo,kirig an~
_
we had to
lamps because theybutn at J11UCh
take
it
outside; ~ause we were
-
Clldepbol()'JalieMatsllall
The
Cin:ie
conducted an unscien-
tific poll on Jan. 2():..Jan.27. 1\vo
hundred eighty two
students
were
·
asked
this
week's
question.
·
Sre rtlated artkle;
page
2.
higher temperatures,"
he
saf~.
afraid it might catch on
fire
:
"
.
.
.
A 300-watt
tubular
:
halogen
.
According to the
Courant, of-
-
bulb can reach temperatures as
.
-
.
..
. __ .
high
as
970
degrees, while a
·
500-
Please see LAMP,
page 3 ..•
.
.
Halogen
·
tamps,
like~
one
pictured
above,
have become popu-
.
_
laramong
college_
students. However, studies have shown
these
lights are also potential fire hazards.










































































































































































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~i;}!itt':cil%i~I!\~~~~~"ltifilllf!i1if
Marist and Beyond
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:
:B~~~,?fa,S}!ll~llq~_ffD.d}ie
~,<!!1
po_si_~ion
',. WilliamJeffersonCHnton became
ihe<0

~n1;seJf,'.'hesaid:·;;:,;?'.>>
'·\r
,•
/'.c•~.:
'firsf'DeirtocriiHcipresid6nt since:·0-°'
-T"""\•J'....
·
:\l\1ad~rfajso.
sai(ih~r~.w~~g9irtg.to.· •.
Franklin
o:·
Roosevefr'
to be sworn •iii·
t--,,-.L.:..f-,
... -
.....
- - -
\.be
~•p~iifali'feelh1giiri'the:eon'gress: .
·
;.
/or a second
term
a
we_ek ago Monday.
\-\--t-,f--1-'--f
- . . . - - -
·I:J:e s~d:it coul~ ,i9rk to C:l1~ton'.s)id-. ·
.
· · ~nd_ is now ready
to
begin building his
'<'+-!H-4.,,,
.. .
van ta~~ ~.ecause
~~-
got· 111ore,.vv.or}<: .
bridge to the twenty-first century."
==========:::===============
done
m
the,:last two y~ars. of his, fii:st
In his 22-minute in~ugural address, . ·'
_c·.
a· ·n·
.. ..
c·.
.·1··i·n·.;t'
o'
·n·.
·.·.··h·a--.
·
n·.
d'
z·e ·.·t.he·
term, wit~ lh:e RepubJic.a11 C::ongiesi ..
·
·/:VALLEJ
Jhachines
·
. : eiplosicm
~
<,3o·stkkso
.. · n,ear
iq,iib1
::::No
m·oney
·
Jrom
the barik
<
sail The lib ·' ·
:··.·•••Pctecli,•es
w
;
sil,le 1notive·,Co
Wells Fargc1'B'
·• manager for
Wei
;o,'..
'Police
said"'
··~pfstick.
'Yalkingor
examining.
that
night; • .
.... Two
·miles
a\Y
backp:1rk
ct>hthl'
:•.111:>rary'dJ~:it.;·
ffahighwayan·
wn area
iri
i ·
st
of Sait'>
Fra

~:
:··.·
·
:-
.
,:;
.Russi
h~l
~
..
·-.-~-
-
•·'WAS.!f ..•
,
·' weighing
tw
hardware
th
tiomic
prgbie
· •Qfficiais
··• anonymitys~
produce·
a
$C,
.?nuslially brief for Clinton, he prom-
.- Madun_s~td_the arno.uri~of g?dl_ock
1sed a government ''h_umble enough"
h' .
·
--·z
· : ·, .
b
..
C.z·
:. : :
> :
·: .. '
1n,S?n~re~s w~U d~pe~ds .9A9~~t?~· .•
. not to try to solve allthe nation's ms
e_t
lCCl
pto ·.
ems.cindthe ..
~
thmk.it,\V11fhi_ngeonwhat1ssues.
yet "strong enough"to help Ameri.:.
.Republ.iq.a.'n
.. ·.·.
Congn
..
~~s_.?< ..
~e will advocat¢_:~~s s,~ond)erm.and
cans improve theirown·lots~He called
. . . . . .
.whethel"!hef
&~
·9n}ne_,sam~ page~ as
it a government
of
"New Promise." .
.
• :with
them,''
hisliid. '. .. ·.
. . . .. · . ·.
. . . the R,epubli~an.s;''.
h~
said:
f, : ~.
>> ' : ,,, .
"Let_ us build our bridge, wid~ · ..• ·, ln hIS speichi Clint~n_also prorrused
: Casti~g
~
~fia_ii?Y{py~r.ttj~).ecq~d;.
enou~h and stro_11g enough foreyery ·'.that the elected- officials would-heed . . te[lll c_el~b~~l!9~~ aj:~
_
'.l(?~a,t~pd ~µt~¢al .
American to cross over to a blessed . voters~ desire'Jor c_iyHity i
_
n Washing-
problems hpg~r11~gJr01n_.tlle-,first ter_1n:
land of New Promise,U he said.
.
ton .
. : . ·.
·<<
'
j '
..
· .
. .
.
\Vhitewater;qµesti§tjabJeJµ~i;l ,r.il~irig,
. Froq1 his speech, itwas apparent that . · .
Accordf~ii~
Sllaffe~, the budgei is·· the piles 9fFBIJtlesa~d
1
thesexu~l ha-
Clinton favored less govenimerit-' . going to.l:!e th~ mo~timporianfissue in
r~smentalleg~ti9ris C>fPauljl)ones.
"We need' a government for .a new; CHntori'.s second
term,
. . . , . .
'{a~~saidethicalquestionscC>u.fdcause
century," C::Iinton said:· "A government . /'I_ tl_iinkili~-budg~tf~ifi~i_tis
~Hll'.g~~
...
Clintoll, problems: :
L .• ,; . ·
.. '·' . .
'
e-·.: ' .
that is smaller,- lives ~ithin its means·_ . 1ng
!<?..
be a,b_ig issµe and really that en- . · : '-'I do~'t lcilow.forsui:e he'Hbe/able ·
and does more with'iess. We the
.
tails'"Yha,tpi:6grainswillbe'cht;''tiesaicl; .. to.come o_utbfth?,t·.·pufelY:tinblem-
peopfo, we arethe solutiorithesaid.
,_He
said
he also thinks education.will
ispedt he said.
. " ·_,_.
:
.
_
be the centerpiece
of
qinton's ·rtexi: sb(
./.
.
,:_.,.~.,- \ ..
.
..
, "He'f_gqing: to·have to pick a
mo11thsinoffice: Hisprqposalsindudes
··
·
··
· ··· ··· · · ··
couple'ofideas
qnd.stick
with_
tax:credi~ forchildren·and making 2~ ..
''Cli~'ton i/reallfgdod>Jie~an
them.
!_'
.
.-> '
. .. . . .
. .
,y~ar_colleg¢ th~ eqµiyalentqfwhaihigh .
rea[{Y ..
·gs./?s.s_tize.<P.; ..
-~.#tt.
~cal,
,.'ifjp.
:ac.(.<Jf
school used·ttrtie:•t · · " ·.,_ ,: • .. · . :'·:· ··

, ·
· - · .
A
.
·
·
· · · .... · -
·
·
. .:

·
:a..·situa
... :.tion
and.·.·· h.~ ctin_·p•'os_·· ..
it.
ion
..
M. art_in Shaffi. er..·,• ·.,a·ss
..
1
·s·tant
.··.• ..
c.cording ~QVern
... on Yavri.·na interim
..
··
· · · -··
.
chairofthepolitlcaisbi'enced~paitm'~nt/ ";
himself:"
. . · ... ,:
.
·· prof~r .. ~fpoliticalscience
a significant issue will be whether
. qh,
c;~~11f0f! ;~
seCOJ?fl ter,ri,
~!ft~~~-will br ~~leto_deal~~th- partisan
.
~
,"
junior
.
Fouryears ago/Clintmf s~ept.in
".I
think it's h~w·h~._will
b~
~hie
i~
get . Shaffer said the scandals could be an
from Arkansas promising hold action
along with the oppos_ition party control-
. impediment to Congress and the presi-
and cleaiie'i-' ::government. The ling the Congress,';
1
he said.-.
i.
.
de_nt getting \VOrk done.
.. . .
'.are
consid~ri
?biiilding'
al
shifting
te>
#
:
provide
'lif~
:sWithoutt
:been puii
/nbi:b~ :
<

-.·. economy was weak''and the federal .. ;Yavrina also &aicLCJjnton.wasattempt-- . . . "Clearly_ '_th.e inv~sifgati~ti and ~he
. · goveriimenfwas
$4
trillion in debt . . ing to extend an olive',brahch:tothe Re- :·scandals, the extent ~o which they're-
.
_
Th<:
ec1nomt -~~~9.v~r~d and,b~dget -.. publ~cans, ':"._ith his'._inaugur~lsp@ih .. :
·
~eive attentfon,,:"'il! '!i~n~_sh. the/apac~
.:: defi_cits hav~ fb.bect:m~~e.ver, •. f~nt~n . .

· Shaffer said h~ th~nksClinto~--W,ill
try
:,;;;,J~rJor the
~r.<c~l~~r~
i.trd,thf
s~~~~fSS
_ also los_t_ltls Democrattc · maJority·.1n ·":to: In~~t.the R(!pllbJ~can ,Congr~ss half-:.
}?
-get w?rk_d~~~~ .
,~~
sai_~'.;
_>
.

~• .•. · ...•
>>
.. ~op.gress and,Sa\\' his plan.to revamp i,way;s·-,He,also saicHli~Jnak:e~up ofCon;,: ·. , _
_¥cidlln ~'!ld Jt\\'()ll!cI~e ~-b~~,1cleafor
;:_ rh~a,l}hC~<:JailjHe ~pnj:~-eleciio~
0~
?.gres~_js_I~~ing,,to:preyent;atiy;tjyert bi'-,c~S?p,~r~f~,to leyx
~~-~~~; ~~~n~~~~~}t-
. ·
· ,'.Rtissia
,5,5--, ..;..,-.;·•).:_,-,._
;:prpJeCt•
Yday,
Jiu!
,:\Jn
De
;:theJirst
Crfon; a P
wiU_con
···• .TOKY
·allowed
t
'.199l~butd
't1isiw~dtd
.'{ Pt:
AtSllS
';pi~inK ,.
iihe
th .. ··
;i;:;i,
1
_
\Patien
'.~<1yth~
.•aiedw
1-Ni',•
]~ft!
.,;._
, .• __ ,·,.·.·t·,.
:i,~:J~Jtin
: :Monaay'for"
SPwi¢111irtlliJ~
;'3?iilSt
pef<!r«?i?
t .
According'.Jc,'
:Bruu1.-19.re •
§mistake
aricfis'-

.. · again,"
.
roiio~g
•.
·
· Baiul
did .not .. . .. . . ....
'J2,whenslieriitiherijl
"
,dtiving an
estimated97
:i:::)She
re&iv¥\12t#t"'
fl#ned a
concu~iorf '•
·-in
Bloomfield.>;
c_:l:;:~
j\.
Baiu I, a
Ukrairliitit
''urb
of
Simjhuty/is{
,.ano
reckl~~ymg!;$=
,
.. , _ . ..
ter a
pleaYThe ::
. recklcss_d~vi?g~hill-g~_w9~lcl' ...
:¥)1f(~teclp½Ll
her
adm1ss1on
to
~~cph.c>J,program;). · / .
<. :,

,.
.•.•,•-
_.·_.,,.· -,;,·,.-:·,.
· .. ·.:- .. -,.-,-:'.:,··. ·;,
,
,
. ;·.' :-·· •. ,.:-:.:':-- ;\:'::-·.:-=--,=:.-, .. ;;_,:.
. ./~ R~~Jfof;T.~of
ZJC.~-S!~1~t
lpw.cc9st
llil::'.'-'
partis11_11s91pf [
'.i<
f::l:i.!. ., : :,, :::; ... ,
cc•.
:,.;·: .•
~rg
:P,~~~15leN: ..
1!e,
~~q:
f
;,yo.~~~:A1;1.rt ...
. J~~!1ye~;·• such as helpmg
0
schools_: re-..
-.
tBot9; the,H'o~~e_i1n(:I Slell?t~¥~fairly.,, ..
P.~~~
1
:~-~ ~~f,prfr,a_gilf ~~~!We!1~~-m,: . } .
·quire st~dent unifonns.
· .· . •
<j . .
,,:~V:eQ_l~!Ji.y~cl~~• sp,11either,sip~~cah ge>.
·.
_l'_Ohti~~a11s:•:
..
: . · · .. _
i
0
> ·: · :· '•· · ·
-.·• Mar_t~n Shaffer, assistantprofessor .. · , t90 l,t_bera.I
·Qi::
cqns
'
ervative,'.', he said. · ·
·.·• ~re;maugural polls. showeclClmt~n
·
of
political s.cience at Marist C:ollege,
..
• . ;,; S.haffer sajd_G.ii.nton
w.m
pick certain.· •. :}~~J
0
Y
1~_g a_ honeyI1109ri\'!:ith
'~ot~r:tln
. said Clinton may have picked-jssues
.
spot~ -Wh<?re,hewm c_oncecle·
to
t_he.Re~ · · :sµrveys .. by
1BS
1',Je~s(W~s-~ington
that are too s~~ll ~nd safe. He said to
p~~H.cans:.
·:1:1_1!~.
will
pr()~~llly; d.raw · _Pqst and :'.fh~ :Ne~. Xor~· J~~~s'.~~S
secure a place m history, whic;hisim- . cnttc1sm froaj theltfft .. ·.
"
~:.:-

<
.
~e\\'s,Ct1nt?~sapJ?roValratmgw_as60
portant to Clinton, he is going to h.ave . ·.· . ':l)~rn,9~ra1s wiH,probab~yC~riticize-
.
pe,r~~n};'
.It;
w~s .: 57: perc~ht )~ a
to. do something about some big prob-· · .Clinton· as pe triesJo allgl~,befween:the
News~.~k
~~1:'~.Y'.
.
, .
.
lems such as reforming the entitlement· , · Republicans and Democrats''fhe
·said.-.
- " ..
system orcampaign finance:
. .
, FranKMaduri; aju11i9r.po,fid~a1 saence
.. "He's goingto have
fo
picka couple .. majqr, also s,ajd.Ql\n(on}~'.yery 'g9_9d aL.
.
;-
'~n Asso}i~i~d
1;.~s~ ;;~~ was
:ideas ~e feels strongly about and stick d~icJing whatstance to)~~-:-:,/._··.•.•. ·
·
. .·
,
.. '.
in~lritf:ed, in this report ..
Poughkeepsie··man -iu"f(!st¢d'i1f 3.tt6ttil)ted•tlf6ff ()fsfud6nt'.S
trre
. by
KRISTIN ~CHAR~
.
•·.
·J\c~Jr4i_~!( toi~(~&kf~,\t_h; :BPf~l~:,
rihi~~
~illrestil(.
iri a fine clthe~rop;.
Ediii>r-in-ch~ef
·.
atfelllpt
W.c,l8-
u~~~5f~~,sf~LJ:?~a~s~ ~er ..• ~rty'~amage and~
$40
court surc_ll~ge
fnen~,Gei:ald_Laqureg~_,Il'r';Okeduring ,tf hejs .:round. .. ·gujlty/He\vas: also
_
. .An at~empted off-campµs burglary · the mght, Jooked out the'..wmdow~ and
charged with criminal mischief in··the
of a Marist student's tire resulted ih a _ saw two_p~n,·p~~ h~r car.~~ t\Vo·o_th-
fo~rth degr:~ fordaJ11aging the car by-
. fight and led to the arrest of a ;ers:lc,okin? to mak,e sure noone was
ctropping it on its brakes once-the.tire
. Poughke,ep~i~ man last Thursday,. · · :;~ound._ Pis~ut~-~cl ~CJ~t:!?ie P.~t: on _. w~· t~moveg;: · :.'\~
~
. : . ;
7.; .(· ..
· ,;;· .
According to senior Carie Piskura, a his shoeS, ~hased t_he m~ni,_~d ~rag~ed
·. Piskura said police confiscateifihe
tire
_mai_i ~emoved ·an~ attt:mpted to steal
;
~e man w_ith~th,e,tir~J>ac~
!~
~e lc_>t:
A:
for evidence, so she was forced to buy
the ng~t f~ont tire from her 1995 scu~fle e~s.uea betyJeen
_
the_
t~?
me?,
a _new t~re even though.LaGurege re-
8:yundai Accent at 3: 16 am. on Jan .. 23. . during which
~G~~~e
spramed_ his
trteved .1t from Davenport.
. -
. Piskura had been staying with a friend _- ankle_ and,sus~ned-a'k'.nee contusmn.
·
" Piskura has an order of protection from
· on Chufoh Street, and her car
was·
.
.
·PatrtckJ.-Dave?poi:t,:'.?-9;of.15} .. l\)any .:: Dav,~nport, who has
.been
released on.
parked in· a residential commuter lot st:' P~ughkeepsie· w,~:arres~ed several· . ,; his
own
·recognizance ... : He,
wm ··
be
ar- ·. ·
across the street.
mmutes lat~_r a~dccharge_cl_w1th larceny, .· raigned on Feb; 11..
. -
.
..
..
.
'
.
..•
.
.
.
'
..
-
'
..
-,
.
.
.
-
·.
.
.
-:
.-._
--
.
,
.
. The
Weekend Weaiher,
:Today: .
fucreasing clou~.' Highs ;o:to
25.
, - Friday:
qirui~
<;>flight
snow. Lows
·
·
··
· 5 below to 5 above zero .. , :
~
·
Highs IS to 25. .
.
~
:. Saturday:
Fair-and cold.
Lows zero
to
··
· 10. Highs 15to25 . .
· ::,
Sunday: ·. Chance
oflight
sn~~: ~ws
in the teens.
Highs 25
to
35. ·
Source: Associated Press






















































































































































































































i
f.
i .

i
i
.
·
THE CIR<:LE,
Janti!ll)'
30,J.9
,
97 .
.
:
.
.
.
'
.
.
.
3
·
Mair donates Hbrary funds
by
CHRISTOPHER THORNE
Copy Editor
.
ship
at
Marist named after her.
Murray said Mair's donation did not
come as any surprise.
Though she is gone, Margaret Mair
"Mrs. Mair told me that she was going
·
uves on through her donation
.
s.
to remember the college in her will,"
Mair died on Dec
;
6, 1996, and she left
.
Murray said.
almost half of her
$8
million estate to a
Murray said the fact that Mair donated
dozen non-profit organizations in and out
such a large sum to Marist was not out of
of Dutchess
·
C::ounty
.
character.
Marist College, t~e Vassar Brothers, and
"She was just a wonderful woman
.
"
.
St. Francis Hospital were the biggest bene-
Murray said. "It was typical of her."
factors.
According to Massie, Mair's donation
·
··
According to Tim Massie, Marist Col-
is
a
significant contribution to the library.
·
· ..
lege chief relations officer, Mair left half a
''This may be one of the biggest dona-
million dollars to Marist.
tions to date for the library," Massie said.
·
:
.
·
·
.
.
·
.
·.
.
.
·
.
.
,
.
Photo
courtesy of Tim Massie
The Marlst Singers travelled to Hawaii from Jan. 3-13 to perform In several con-
.
certs
at
churches and schools over the winter Intercession.
Singers petf orm in paradise
"Initially [the donation was] $500,000,
It is also the greatest given by any es-
but there wHI be more coming from the
tale in the past, according to Murray.
estate," Massie said.
"Clearly, it is the largest estate gift
some-
In
her
will,
Mair stipulated that Marist
one has given to the college," he said.
College, the Vassar Brothers and St.
Massie said a donation of this size is
·
Francis each be given $500,000 and then
evenly split any residuals leftover from
her estate .
.
Marist President Dennis
J. Murray, who
.
knew Mair personally, said the total do-
nation will be almost double the initial
.
donation.
·
"We believe the gift will be in the range
ofamillion dollars," Murray said.
Murray said Mair had told him her de-
sire that the money be used for a specific
purpose.
quite uncommon.
"A donation of this size is rare," Massie
said. ''There are few people who can give
on this level."
Margaret Mair was the wife of William
J.
Mair, who was once vice president in
charge of manufacturing at IBM. William
Mair died in 1965.
Murray said Mrs. Mair may have been
wealthy, but the
life she led never re-
flected that.
.
Marist sbigers travel to Hawaii over
.
winter break
·
"Mrs. Mair expressed to me her wish
that the money be used to help build the
·
Lawlor said he feels the singers were
new library," Murray
'
said.
·
by
JENNIFER FEMMINELLA
.
sraffWriter
well received by their audiences and at-
Massie said Mair will always be remem-
"Although she was very wealthy, she
lived a rather modest life," Murray said.
Murray said that toward the end ofher
life, Mair was very generous with her
money
.
. tributed this
·
·
success to
.
what he called
bered for her generosity.
"At the end of her
life, she used those
assets she had [attained] to help others,"
Murray said.
the choir's "New York Sound."
"Whatever ~s done with
.
the donation
·
What began as
a
joke
'
ended
.with
10
One perfortnance at the Kaahumanu
will be dedicated in gratitude of Mrs. Mair,"
days in paradise for tlle Marist Singers
Center on
·
Maui drew about 1,600 people.
Massie said.
·
this C.hristmas yaca!ion,
.
.
.
·
.
.
Senior Laurie. Buckley recounted
a
This donation does not mark the first
. .
'f!le
SiQgei-s
_
take a
:
big
,
trip about tvery
funny story
·
about this particular perfor-
time Mair's name will be
,
remembered.
!\VO
years. Lastyear;whencJmfrdirector,
.'
·niailce.
',d
.
;
'
'
·1
•i1
_
.,,,
;
~;,
·
.. ,
,
,
.;
.
There is
a
Mair Hall located in
.
the Mid-
.
Ma,i:kL!!wlor asked the
·grmip
wherethey
.
·
She said she had gorie with some friends
Hudson CivkCenterras wen as
a
scholar-
Murray said he believes that everyone
could learn a lot from Mair.
"Mrs. Mair is a role m(>del for all of us."
Murray said, "We could all learn a lesson
from her
life and her generosity."
.
would,
!jk¢t9
tra,v,ello
_
r_th~i(n
.
ext
trip
,
,
one
.
on a helicopter
-
ride the morning after the
. . . . - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ~
·
~
:
Sijtg~~
jO)qngJY
-
~Pliedt~·
:
~C?w
._
~®µ~
_
Ha~
·
::_~_
:.
,
:
con~~
·
rf'
~
and
-:
Were
.
:
s
.
uri?ri
_
sed
·-:
.
when
th
_
e
~
.
,
--
~
·
·:
;
:
.
'
.
'
.
--. :
.
~;;
~:~lt
;
:;
~Yt
fqfpf~~p~J~pif~iqft~it~a-
...
~
-
°-~an in ~~arge of
.
~e
-
~de
~-e
.
w
'
about
,
.
,1\
.
.
·

~
..
.
·
•:·.
·
.

·.:
.
:,E·
·
. . .
.
.
.
~
\

·.
:._:,
f t
.>
!I.
·
,
.
.
r
~
.
~
!
1
']
_
-
.
.
.
i
.
f
·
~
.
--.
...
• ..
~
.
.
f.-
'.
••
·
.
.
.
~
wan
an 9ption,
;
th~_plull'sb.9ai:cI
,aPP,f9V~dL'i:theJperroiman¢eanhe
'
c¢1it~t.
/
-<
:
·
..
.•.
1-J~ft
·
~
~
i
~
,
.
theJrip
::
and-the

sirigers began hunting
.
Eager to hea/how
·
their audience had
..
·?t'."
.:=
·, ,
:
. .,
·
'." .
.
- ~
·•
:
.
w.
:.
for their su11screei:i.
0 .
:
.
,
.
·
.
.
received
.
them, the singers asked
if the
·
.
·
r
·•
s
;,
,
, ....
.
·--
··
,
·
·
On:Ja,n.},.3~ M~stSingfrs and nine
· ·
woman had liked the
'
concert,
.
but they
.
~
'
.
,
;
:
M~ari~tf~cultY,•an~ staff leftfrom Newark
·
.
, we
.
re confused
.
when the woman admitted
,,}
.
..
_,,.,.
:.'__rJ
.

.
InternatfonalAirport to travelto Hawaii.
she
:
had not been
·
there.
·
·_
'
The'
singers performed
.
v,arious
:
tonnal
.
The woman
·s
·
mother had c
'
alled her from
and inform
·
a1
-
·
concens. at
.
churches
.
.
and
the
·
center raving
·
about the cho
.
ir singing
·'
schools on the islands ·of Maui and Oahu.
there, and she
,
had held tlle phone out so
,
.Marist freshman Kristina Neweil said it
her daughter could hear.
.
.
w
·
as
'.
a wonderful trip because everyone
·
Junior Michael

Accousti said the trip
was so friendly.
·

· ·
.
.
. .
..
·. .
was more thanjiisf singing;
.
•.
.
·
''Orie
'
thurch presented us
,
with leis and
-
"So many memorab1e experiences have
·
qe.I~
(r~c~ption,
a(ter mass;
_
" ~he said
;
·.
·
C<?mefromthistrip,':he~d
/
'Bikingdown
·
i
'!This-'.
'.
was
·
especially nice because we
' ·
a volcano; diving off a twenty
-:-
fivefoot
. were)1ble totalk with the parishioners
water(all,body surfing, kayaking, and
·:
.
abou'iid~afcust9ms:
_
things to do, their
eve~ jus~ sunning on the
·
beaches tight-
:
lives;
a
nd
whyJhey had decided
to
move
ened friendships. That was the true goal
)oHa~a.ii
or staY:ttiere."
of the trip.':
'
·
,.
:
.
.::
-
~
.
'
:
'
,•

.
.
'
Neyy
:
guideli~es
for
hal9geri
·
laµip
.
~wners
.
·
...
~

..
.
.
.
'
.
.
.
.
.
:
.
..
.1
:
:,
-:
.
.:_
. . .
.-
.
·,
;

~-
.
.
·
Cominued
from
page
1.
' •.
;
ficials saida. hafogen lamp was the cause
·:
--
ofa fite..in
:
legendary musician Lionel
)I~pton's
,
M:anhattan apartment earlier
this month. The.lamp tipped over and ig-
.
nited
.
~ear~by bedding. Fifteen civilians,
1
t
·fir~Oibters
and
~
a medical worker had
injuries from the fire.
.
- Because of the fires, Underwriters
Labo-
.
ratorics Inc., an independent product test-
ing an~ certification lab, began develop-
ing ne,v
·
standards for the halogen bulbs.
ln;April, Underwriters Laboratories said
it would no longer certify the 500-watt
bulbL
'
.
The Jab has also begun a three-month
effort to revise lighting standards, such
as g1ass shie1ds, wire guards or devices
that shut off the lamp when the bulb be-
comes too hot.
Consumer officials have devised the
followini~afetf tips for lamp o~ners:
.
·.
..
.
.
.
....
-
.
1. Neve~pl~~
tl;te
l~pwherethe bulb
could come
'
in
contact with curtains or
~
.
.
.
.
~
.
.
other draperies.
.
2. Never leave
a lamp
on
when no one
is-
home or
in
the room.
,
3. Never drape clothes over the lamp.
4. Operate lamp at a setting that
is
lower
than
maxim~ w,qeneverpossible.
5. Keep the
Ianips
away from elevated
beds, such
as
bunk beds,where bedding
may
get
too
close
to the tubular
bulb.
6. Never put the lamps where they can
be
knocked
over by children or pets.
-
Papadopolus said she thinks warnings
should be placed on the lamps.
"A lot of people use them, but not many
·
know how dangerous they are," she said.
'"The company shou1d put warning labels
on the lamps and on the bulbs.''
Fax Servic~ - Sending
$2.00 for
.
first page
$1.00
for
each additional page
NY TIMES BESTSELL~RS
.
25% OFF PUBLISHERS LIST PRICE
,
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,
SPECIAL BOOK ORDER SERVICE
IFIT'S IN PRINT WE CAN ORDER IT!
COMPUTER SOFfWARE
DISCOUNTS OF UP TO 85%
.
SNACKS
& REFRESHMENTS
FRITO-LAY. KEEBLER. PEPSI
CLOTHING
CHAMPION. GEAR
GIFfS, GREETING CARDS
... Plzis school
SUJ!
plies, decal~, and_ 1nore'!
!!
'
'
.
STORE HOURS
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY:
9 AM TO 5 PM
SATURDAY: IO
AM TO 4 PM
*MARIST MONEY*
VISA- MASTERCARD - AMERICAN EXPRESS - DISCOVER
ACCEPIEDHERE
_ _ _
.:..:...;..
- - ' -
= - -
.
....
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,,.~..;7".ai .... .., ...
A_~1.~•i.: .
.a._·,•~:::--,
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-.\);;~,c1J6~/J;hut·:ih~f!:991:, .
Sen_ator·:relafes-clatightet'-s
d_eathto'·_alco~plr·-> -
.
.
.
. ,. '. ·. ·. <,
.
~
. .
//}.:
_
-:.;~' _:,..,.·- . . :·:\
.
by MICHAEL
Goor
Managing Editor
Former senator George.
McGovern does ·~ot look at
statistics about -- aJcohol-related
deaths the same way most people
do.
.
.
_
.. -_
_McGovern fost his daug~ter,
Terry, two years ago to alcohol. .
She had been an alcoholic all of
her adult
life.
McGovern, a two tenn U.S. rel)"'.
resentative, and
a
three
·
term
senator as well as the 1972 Demo-
cratic" pres-idential candidate
spoke
in
the Nelly Galetti The-
ater on Wednesday, Jan; 22.
He sai<l he loolcs at the statis~
tics differently now.
''That statistic has
a
new mean-
ing for me because I know who
one of them is," he said.
McGovern· descrihed his
daughter
<c!S
intelligent, strong-
willed, witty, fun-loving and hu-
. morous and with high morals.
She dropped out of the Univer-
sity of Virginia to help campaign
for her father's run for the presi-
dency.
When Terry entered the Uni-
versity of South Dakota, she be-
gan drinking. She drank heavily·
and realized she was the
.life
of
the party.
McGovern said e_ventually the
week,~nd drinking slide over to
the weekend and then it was ev-
ery day.
.
"But, unfortunately, after two
or three years of that, she woke
up one
day
to the reality th~t she
was an alcoholic," he said.
According to ¥,cGovern,,
_
his
. . .
·
..
:·.---•·
:_-
..
·-:·•.•·.'-
;
;
,
,,
·.,'.,.··
·
-
_,.,
daiigh_ter went. thrtiugh. p<!ricids .
hab,"
h~ said., ''Uri~h~kcitat~~->'
of sobriety, one
as
"long as eight . holism· is just as dead1y·as un-:
years, but she always fell into re-'·
treated cance1,:.'' __ ··.·•-
.
.
. · _-__ . ___ .. ; .
lapse. .
. _
__
_· McGovern said ~ople hll~e ~o
. ''That addiction took hold of separate their hatred ofthe dis-:
her Hfe in
a
way that she seerried · ease from their love fofthe per-
almost powerless_ to respond," · son;, He recalled one time· when
he said; · .
.
. .
he and Terry went out to.·dinner.
.. McGovem·said his.side of.the · He told her that when she was
_
family had a•history of alcohol-
sober,.she was the_mosiJovable
ism. _
lll
addition, Terry also suf-
creature on the earth; · · , .
Jered from clinical depression,
His daughter said; '"Ih~t's
'.
nice,
which compounded the alcohol -· bµt'doyou think I'mjusta Httl.e
problem;
lovable when I'm not sober," he
On Dec:
12,
1994;
Terry had
said .
.
•-
been out of a detoxification cen.:
· ·. M~Govern offered advice for
ter for5 or
6
days. She rented a
college students. He·said non-:
small apartment and then started· · 'drinking students · 011. campuses ·
getting settled i_n.
-allover this country.have to do
Pholo
courleSy
of
Tun
Massie
-President Murray speaks.with former Sen. George McGovern,
who delivered·a speech atMarist on alcohol addictions~
At about 5:00 p.m., she went
more to stop binge drinking.
shopping. -One· her way, she
"I'm hopeful thaton this cam~
passed by the Crystal Corner bar
pus, the_ other ·students·
-
•them-
and went in to have one Christ-
selves win take more responsi:.
mas drink.
A
Vietnam veteran
bility to
·
develop some kind of
recognizeC, her and ·bought her
countermeasures against_ binge
another drink. After 3 1/2 hours
drinking," he said. •
of drinking, she stumbled _out
He said these students should
dren. They're more m~ture. -
"I thought it was very emo-
into the alley outside the bar. The · put social pressure on students
They're better abllHo appreciate
tional," she said. "I don't think
police found her body the next
not to drink in much the same
that their.bodies are fragile."
he gave us any real answers to
day.
.
way that pressure caused smok-
McGoveffialso read some sta-
binge drinking."
.
.
- .
After his daughter's death,
ing to become unfashionable. ·
tistics ·from a ~arvard study ~n-
· Sean White, vice president of
McGovern read various books
''Those peopl~ have a right to
titled "Binge Drinking.On Arneri-
student progr~mming,' said the
on alcoholism.
organi_ze and put pres~ure on the
can College Campuses;''
A
1989
message was good.
_
He wrote a book entitled
Terry: .
binge drinkers to cut it out," he
survey of colleges found that._
"l
think the students that were
My Daughter's Life and Death
said.- "They're not only damag-
coBege· president alcohol was
th~re could not have helped be-
Struggle with Alcoholism.
ing their own health, but they're
their number one campus prob-
ing moved by it anq realize what
He said he is not
trying to pose
_affecting the happines~ and well-
lem. Also,
44
percent of students
a prpblem alcohoHsm is," he said.
as an expert on alcohol. He just
being.of other people.''. ·
in
195
colleges studied said they_
-Tim Massie, chief relations of-
wants to share his experience
McGovern also s'aid he sup.:.
were binge drinkers. The survey
fleer. said McGovern's message
with other people.
ports the drinking age of.21.
defined binging as
5
drinks in a
w~ :good.
McGovern said people have to
<'People ~ho wait until they're
rowformalesand4forfemales.
"He said Tm not-here to be a
realize that alcohol is a disease.
21 to drink are fadess likely to
· _
SarahAssalti, aJ.miorjournal- ,. teetotaier or
to
get people to ab-
"If
you get hooked on alcohol,
become addict~d,". ~e
.
said.
ism major said the speech was
stain," he said. "I'mjus~ here to
you ··re g9irig to die
:
unlessyou
'.'Thefrp sinarter;Jh~y hav_e -ir- . g~od, _
but it did
~at
off~r solu-
·
_get ~eOJ?le to act resEonstble and
manage somehoVJ
to
get into re-
teres~ m careers,
fanuly
and
chil- ·,Aions .. _ . _
.
. that s the message. _
... -· -.-
.
_
·
• .. ' - ,
,
·
:
·:·:,,: :<
.
-::-, .
r: ,,,
,.
,
.:y.
' _·_. ·
'
·
,;r .. ' .. -.•. _
.. •. . •. .
<' ,
.. ·. .·.
. _, -,,.,,:., , .. _;,;·,;,.,,
i,
. L'Marist celebrate~ p:eactfwitnir{college 'community
M~rtin Luther King
Jr.
's birthday weekend celebrated on campus forfirs,t time.
by BEN
AGOES
Copy Editor
;'We have-.to change.-our.atti-. recited'thep~a~e'pledge;'honor-
tudes now before :someone gets
ing
Dr:
King's· dream ·of apeace-
beat [because they are black or
ful America free from racial seg-
gay ].'' ·
i __
· ·-•-
·
regation.
>
<
·
.
.
:
.
·
Martin Luther King Jr.'s birth-
· ·The poly way tocomb~t preju-
. "Everyda.y,we wake tip and are
day is a national holiday; but
this
dices, he said;-is
tel'
get people to . faced with ugly violence,''; said
.. was the first year Marist College
talk more, not just at sponsored. Boyd: ''That night: we basically
held student activities to com-
roundtable. discussions.
pledg¢ to work forpe~c~."
.memorate the civil rights leader.
.
·• ChandlerOwens; presi~ent
of
Owens said the peace-dog was '
The reason it was the first time
theBlru=k S,tudentJJnion, sai_d the
so successful because
~o:.
many
· is _because Mari st has ·always . roundtable. was successful, but_ • people helped org~ize it/includ.,
· been dosed for winterfoterces- ---. did not necessarily reach those Jog BiGayla,tlleH:o~singoffice,
:..::tiit~?:;e~~Jaj~~ri~-~~t:•tm1ffilf;irft:J:?t~c1
'
ili
'
~tthe:;iiiiy:_~=-i!g;;~tl,\s~r;
~Hk:~~~:
!
i:,.,_-_
_
·
students
and
faculty of all back- ·· people
wlio
·wanffo'foake

a ,:
peace ~ithini<>urseJves and ,- .
· grounqsjoined in weekend-long · change come out,_ and not the
~hange_ campus," said,Owens.
celebrations.
ones who need •to hear it," he
"It was goc,d to have ·people
The festivities began Saturday
-
said. , . . ·
.
_ · _.
_ _ _
C0f!le out and have soinethhig
. _-with· round fable discussfom(
'in
•·
'Owens also praised two other
accomplished_. It was a real holi-
the Performing
Arts
Room
(PAR)
events:)im Luc.as' presentation ·day.''
_. _
_ ,
<
and. culminated M;onday night
andJJli p~ce-rii:ig ceremony.
Other_ ~v¢nts during the)veek-
' with a successful peace-ring · Accqrding
_
to_~eneeBoyd, as.,
end included Saturday night's
,gathering.
_
_ . .
. ~istant dir~tor of student a,ctivi-
JUCA qoy, lJnclerstanding, Cre-
. MikalLee, Marist sophomore, · ties,:30-4<>.~pl~attended per-
ativity, Abtmdance) concert_ in
said. the roundtable· discussions
formanct}-l~iiirer
run
Lucas'
pre-
the cabare~ Sunday's ve11der fair,
centered on the -state of race re-
sentation Sunday night in the
_
. and the unveilipg of Dr: King's
. lationsin America and on social
Nelly GolettiTh_eater.
_ _ ' ~ortrait near the Stude~t_Activi-
:_change.
_
_
· Lucas r~Hed .sever:al of Dr. · ties Office., _
_.
'·;
..
. : _ According to Lee, the discus-
·
King's speeches and gave the
Boyd said _the w
.
eyKeild's ac- ·
sions were productive and
history behind them in a style
tivities were ·an overall success
bre>ughttolightimportantissues.
remii:ii~ce11.t,of the civil rights
that brought ·a lot of ~e clubs
"On campus; as a whole, there
leaclel'. hiI11.Se)f.
closer together.
· ·
is a lot of hidden racism that isn't
"He so_qnded just like Martin
· addressed," he said.
Luther K~ng Jr:," said Owens,
· •Leepointedspecificallyto_rac-
"Afierwarps, people asked him
ist and homophobic graffiti in . questions about pr. King and his
numerous bathrooms around
life."
campus.- He said -it has never
To,e peace-ring ceremony ~as
been fully addressed by the-ad- _ thelarg~teventoftheweekend.
ministration, sometimes marring
Accor:~ing to Owens, it attracted
walls for weeks before being
about300people ..
cleaned up.
The event began in the student
: . ''We live in a place that is mixed,
center and was led outside by the
and at the least, we must be tol:-
Mzj~t Singers.
·
''The most important .thing is·
that weacknowledgedJ)r. King's
life. Marist did something won-
derful," she said.·
_
Owens said the activities were
successful despite a low student
turnouL
:
:;
''There were a lot more people
that could have come out," he
said, "but I'm not disappointed
· because it was the first time ·
erant of each other,"
Lee
said.
Once
·
outside, the participants
we've ever had
it."














































































































































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·

-
-
-
-
-
---------------------------------
·
students
·
·u
,
se
·
:
wiritet
·
tecess
.
JopaJCij
11.p on their sleep
.
by
CilARLOTIE
.
PARTRIDGE
.
.
.
Staff Writer
.
is better.
.
.
·
'' At ~ome lcan't sleep because
I'm used to being up later,"
>
Ma1~y Marist ;tudents feel they
Keilerson said.
do
·
not get enough sleep.
But, many Marist students said
• ·
.
Senior Shevone Adams said
they sleep abo~t 10 hours a night
shefee]s
•.
homework gets in the
at home. At school, it is a differ-
·
yJay
Qf
her sleep.
.
ent story for Adams .
.
.
"I
_
don'tihinklgetenoughsleep
"I
need about 8-9 hours of
atschool because I have so much · sleep, but I only get about
6-7
.
homey,iork to do," Adams said.
hours," Adams said.
.
.
.
:_ :
Senior Trevor
-
Hill said he
Peopl~ whpdo not get enough
agrees with Adams.
.
sleep said they caught every-
.
:
'Tm
':
usually up working late at
·
thing from laryngitis
to
the flu.
night in the library; butl still have
·
But mostly, they
_said
their con-
.
to
get up early," Hill said.
centration in class suffers be-
e
~ut; not everyone is up doing
cause of their sleepiness.

:
homework Sophmore Lisa Bing
Artz, a resident assistant, said
·
said h<!nuitemates preveI_lt her
he thinks he needs time tc;> him-
·
.
fromgetting sleep
.
self to get some rest:
·
.
'.'Sometimes my suitemates and
"I need to learn to say 'no' to
lstay
up
late talking," Bing said
.
people. I need to close the door
Many Maris( students, includ-
and take time for myself. Iflcould
ing senior
Bill
Artz,
said they-got
add three hours to a day, I'd be
-.
--
-January
30, 1997
5
'(.
--.
-.
h
.-:-
.
.
,.
'.
·
.
~
>:-
,._
.

:
,:
·
.
..
:
_
·
·
-
::
~
:
::~·:":
·:.
,
'
" ~
~
'
·_
:
:
·
·
:=
-~
~
~·,
·
;
,
Chess club combines strategy with service
·
·
mqre sleep over the winter
.
break.
fine," he said.
.
"I go~ more sleep over break
-
Adams said she agrees there
becau~c
·
I had no schedule to
is enough timeto sleep at school.
keep. I had no assignments due.
"We need to get better at bud-
by
EMILY KucHARCZYK
the meetings are something
the stereotype that chess club
I got aboullO hours [of sleep] a
geting our time. Don't
try
to do
Scaff Writer
.
members look forward to.
members are uncool. Fisher said
night," he said.
everything and go to bed," she
"Some places you go and
club members have a wide vari-
·
_
Artz said he takes a half hour
said
.
·
you're Jike
'I
don't want to,' but
ety of interests, ranging from bi-
.
·
·

The Marist College chess club
nap almost every day to refresh
Mason said she 1s not sure yet
then you come here and it's not
ology to computers.
.
h
1
·
·
·
M
·

is notJ·ust about chess. It is about
fi
him .
.
He said many Manst stu-
ow to get mores eep at
anst.
like that," he said, "you're like
Devito, a field goal kicker or
·
·
h
·d
·
b
I
·
having fun and serving others .
.
dents d0 not
-
get enough sleep.
"I ave
·
no 1 ea ecatise
am
'hey there are some co
_
ol people
the Marist College football team,
·
·
·
·
·
all
The chess club,
·
which has
.
.
"Some people study more, some
busy all day, and
I
am up
hours
·
·
here and I want to play this guy
said the club members do not let
·
g
·
o out,
.
some
..
\va
··
tc
·
h
.
TY
·
..
or
.
.
hang
of
.
the night. I guess I
.
'llJ·ust wait
about
20
members, is open to all
toni·
.
ght.'"
.
th
b h
h
·
·
·
·
·
· ·
'd
stu
_
dents interested
·
in chess.
e Slereotype ot er
1
em.
out. People try to see that last
until
I
crash," Mason sai .
Junior computer science major
"There are people who walk by
.
1_11oyie char starts at like
·
ll:30.
·
But, not everyone is on the
·
·
The club meets
9
p.m
.
to
11
p.m
.
Alan Wood, who joined the club
and they're on their way out to
Then, thenextthingyouknow,it
.
.
verge of coUapse, Maybe those
·
~ ~
2
~~ursday _in Donnelly
his freshman year, said the club
the clubs
·
or something and
is one
·
or two in the morning,".
'.
who
are
should
'
take the
:
advice
.
.
p
· .•·
.
cl
. .
S
b
.
.
has helped him become a better
.
they'll make chess jokes, but we
. Artz said,
.
.
.

of.those who are not.
·.
D
:
_re
s
i
~~!iiJUf
1
~~
fie aSll~n
player. Wood also said he liked
don't care. We're just having
..
FreshmanJessica Masonsaid
.
SotileMarist st
_
udents, inc,ud-
.
.
~vHo, sat
hec \ is orpeop e
·
that he did not have to be a chess
fun," he said
.
her b
.
ed
.
a
.
t
M
..
arist
.
i
.
s
..
mo're
.
·
.
·com-
ing sophomore
.
Mic
.
hele
1
Tice,
.
wh
·
••o w,ant .
10
abve unh. .
.
..
f
·

;
·
e. xp
·
e
.
rt.t. 01
·
·oin.
·
..
.
.
Devito also said people should
·
·
·
·
·
·
.
·
·

·
·
·
•·

·
We re Just a out avmg un
·
·
fortaple
than heded at home,
1
,,· ,
.
,
sa1~t_tJl~Y
0
[!!~Lg1::tt~ng
_
~npugh
,.
.
;
·
·
•.
.
.
·
.
.
. .

.
. ..
-
.
:
.
.
·
:
."We
Ii'ave
everybody froinbe-
11ot be hesitant to join because
:
"lean
't
get
sleep
iii
home;
'.flike
:
,
,

sleep
is
'.
riot
a
pr.e>blem.
:
.
.'/:
'
i
';
.
. ·
..
. ~
-
;
It
_
s
,
110
!
/~OU
t
_
.
C011JJ?7f}
V?n.
.
ginners,
.
some
.
who don't e_ven

they
might
not know a
great
deal
m~
_
b:d
.
here.
_I
g?i.
,
used
.:
to the
:
_
.·.·
'.
•• , sleep alot
I
u~tial
,
ly
.
go to
:!~':r;.:
1
s~~out havmg a good
.
·
knowhow to play, a11
the
wai up
about chess .
.
.
n01se;' Mason said.
··
·
-
·
bed betweenl0-11
-
p.m. My
.

.
·
.
·
.
·
.
.
.
to people who are rated with the
"A lot of people have this idea
.
Junior Wendy Kenerson said
roommate is the same so it works
_Devito_ sai
d
,
th
e atm~sphere
~
United States Chess Federation,"
that when they're going to walk
·
h
··
·
· · ·
··

h
·
1
·

·
t
.
M
_
·
t
·

out"T1'ce
·
·
said
tbemeetmgSisrelaxe · Hesai
he
·
sa1·d.
·
1'nhe"ewe'"ea11°en1·uses,we'"e
s eagreest ats eepmga
_
ans
.
,
.
.
.
·
;

.
-
·
·
·
•.
..
~
•.
·
· ·
·
·
·
·
·
.
..
·
-
'
·
·
·
·
Wood said members are in the
all chess experts, and that's defi-
{;,-
*'"
·
·
club to learn about chess
nitely nouhe case," he said.
m.
'
~
.
Besides playing che~s. the
According to the members,
.
·
.
·
testing.
group watches instructional vid-
chess is not difficult to learn. The
eos. The club also holds tourna-
games involves maneuvering the
me11ts on campus and competes
pieces around in order to capture
with off-campus groups, such as
the opponents king, a check-
West Point.
mate.
·
A
chess master also came in
Each piece has its own name
to play against all the members
and can only move in a certain
·
simultaneously. The chess mas-
direction
.
The king can move one
·
ter went around the room to each
space any direction. The queen
·
person so eachperson would
moves in a straight line in any
·
have a turn to make a move.
direction and any number of
The chess club also does com-
spaces.
·
munity service.
·
Members of the
-
TIJe rook can move any way,
club are involved with a program
·
·
except if there is a piece blocking
called
Adopting Mt. Carmel.
The
·,
.
it.
·
The bishop can move any dis-
program entails members going
tance
:
diagonally across the
to Mt. Carmel, an elementary
board. The knight moves two
school in the Poughkeepsie area,
squares at any direction. How-
and teaching a class
.
of third
ever, it must move in a L-shaped
graders how to play chess.
patJem.
Craig Fisher, Assistant Prof es-
And the pawn moves one
sor of Computer Information
space, except at the beginning of
Systems and advisor of the club,
the game when it can move two
said the Mt
.
Carmel program is a
spaces, Each piece has an order
·
good experience for all those par-
of importance; with the king be-
ticipating.
ing the most important and the
"Students here that go love it
-
pawn being the least.
as much as the students there,"
The members said that after
he
said. "It's just great to
see
their
learning some of the strategies
smiles."
and playing a few times, anyone
The club went to Mt. Carmel
can easily play.
three times last year. Fisher said
Professor Fisher said playing
he hopes to go there twice a
chess is the main reason for the
·
month this semester. He said it
club.
has been
a
wonderful experience
"'The number one priority is for
for the club members.
them
[members] to come and play
Although the chess club, ac-
and enjoy themselves and have
cording to Fisher, is all about fun,
a good time and exercise their
members still have to deal with
creativity and minds," he said .




































































































































































































































r
!
I
I
i
l
t
'
6
..
·~
..
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
,..
.
Circle Pho
i
o/Julic Marshall
The ~stonishing Neal performed in the Nelly Golettl Theater on Friday. His performance
included ESP and the hypnosis of several students, such as the one pictured above.
Gateway to Federal jobs' on t);ie WWW
··
·
·
.
.
,
·
.
.
,
..
byMi~ll~lle
GrilTJS .·
.
.
-
-
tc
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tii~
;-
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)
.
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·
Staff Writer
·
·
.
/
'He
.
has a
·
_.
ne\Ver
;
teaching
·
.
_
.
_
.
. __ .
.
styJe.
;
)
He
,'
says
·
~her~'(the big
.
·.
lf
·
arguing is a
·
forte, some
·
.
stuff.andliere's
.
theiitdestuff,"'

Marist students have been
.
Goldstein said
;-

·
_
' :':
.
. ,
.
blessed.
·
.
·
·. -
-
·
· --
..
-
--
.
·
··
Gold~tein said whil~ b.¢ing
·
·
on
.
According to
.
Scott Thomson;
the debaie
:
team,
:
shetias
·
gone
·•
Marist College debate team many places.
,
.
<
...
coach,alltypesofpeople,includ-
.
"I've made
a
lotoffrlendsl
ing assertive and shy people, are
wouidn'tgeuonieet otbef\Vise,''
debaters.
_
_
_
_
,.
Goldstein said/
·
·

. ·
__
·
.

·
.
:
Thomson said debating helps
.
·_
.
:,.
Heather
·
suydam,
a
fr~hntan
•.
students on a
.
personal and in-
..
criminal justice major;
was
a
de-
.
tellectual ievel and provides ex-
.
bater in high school.:
:
She
said
cellent networ_king possibilities
:
-
·
she enjoys
_
oeing
\
:ii{ th~
'
Marist
..
·
This is Thomson
'
s first year as
debate
team.
· ·
.
_:·
_·_.
·' ·
;
_ ·
·
. -
•·
debate coach at
·
Marist Cqllege.
..
·
"It'
s
a
_
lot
.
offun)ncfa really
"My style is different than the
good experience to
:
me~t
other
previous coach's; but I
was
left
.
people,"Suydam said'.
_
_
:
·
with anfotact team of super kids,"
:
~
Suyd~

said slj~
:
has gotten
Thomson_ said.
.
.
_
to kriowthe
·
peopfo
;
ohjhe de-
Thorrison
·
said he debated in
bate circuidn the region.
_
·
·

high school and
·
as an under-
. "Aftert~imiaments,
·
evecy-
.
graduate
.
at The University of
.
body
get~
-
together and hangs
.
Utah. He
was
also
a
member of out,".she said .
.
<
~
-__

.
·
_
_
·•
the Urtited States National De-
.
Suydan
i
said
'
allof
th~
inf~r-
bate Team.
.
.
. .
.
ination
·
in the debates pertains to
Accprdirig
-to
Thomson~
Stu-
.
current events
:
C
.
.· . ·
, '


dents
_
do not need
·
high school
·
-
.•
".It gives you'a. perspecd~e for
debate experience
to
join Marist's
your classes. You get out ofit
debate t~arn.
·
.
_
what
·
you
·
put into it."
·
Suydam
Jessica·Goldstein, senior psy-
·
added.
· •
·
·
chology/special education major,
Matthew Dombrowski, a se-
said sh~ joined the debate team
nior double majoring in English
Even in
an
era of downsizing,
cancy announcements, and
try Level Professional; Senior
hersophomdre year.
.
:
and
history, haJ, been
a:
member
the Federal government, the
fonns
_
needed to apply for jobs."
Executive; Summer; Clerical and
"I'm really competitive, and I
·.
of the Marist debate
team
since
nation's largest single employer,
OPM developed this website Technician; Trades and Labor like to argue
;
" Goldstein said.
-
hisfi~hman
Y#-
.
. _
, _
_
brings
in about
44,000
new,
full-
in partnership \\'.ith the U.S.
General Employment-Related In-
Goldstein said she has learned
.
.
Dombrowski said
-
Thomson is
time hires a year to join its
Postal Service's Web Interactive
.
formation
'
·.
alot)Jirough her experience
on
different than thej>rey
_
ious de-
workforce of 1.9 miUionpeople.
NetworkofGov~mmentServices
Veterans and Uniformed Ser-
the debate
.
team.
.
-i_
.
_
·

bate c
·
oach.
_
.
_

·_·
Director Jim King of the U.S.
(WINGS) initiative
,
WINGS is a .
.
vices.How to Apply for Federal
.
.
-
.
"I'v
(
becqme
'
orgtmized imd

..
·
·
"
~ehelps
::
us a lot
·
mo
.
re
_
with
Office of Personal Management
resultof a National Performance
Jobs; Presidential Management
.
0
ha.veJ
_
eam,~
to
thinkbnmy feet,"
._
,
.
0\11"
~guille~ts and evide11ce
;
He
(OPM) said finding the right Fed-
Review recommendatio11 arid the
Intern program, Federal
·
Salary (.folds(ein
_
said
:
.
.
..
... _
•.. _. _
.

-
.·.
~•
-
ispragriiatic, andheicnows what
eral job has been made
.
''a
lot
_
Service to theCitizens l'rojecno rand 13e~efits
;
Other
Information
,

:·:··
-
~ssq
'f
~ing
.
tfqol
,
~teiri; she.

tile
:
judges
.
(at
:
debate tciurna.:
Homepage
;
USA

Jobs,
·
which
.
vices;
_
,
\:
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_ _ _
sistance
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·
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,,
D.pf!1l>row~ki1,aidbeing on the
was unveiled this past
:
falL Itis
·
The homepag~. located at http:/
How to Apply
:
·
_
Goldst~i~ ad~ed.
.
<


:
d~
.
b~te
'
teain_lj~ also helped him
accessible on Internet
at:
http://
_
/www
~
usajob,s.opm
.
gov,
will
pro-
Overseas Employment Infor-
Goldstein said Thomson
t~
able
_
t<?, ~anage
_
histime.
.
l?etter
;
.
.
www
.
usajob
.
s.opm
:
gov
.
vid<! worldwide joQ iistings that
mation forTeachers;-Adnunistra
.:.
.
.
,,"'
·~
.
"We not only wanted to make
areup<lated dailY.. Internet users
tive
Law
Judges~
-
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·
--
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it easier to find afederaljob open-:
.
. can directtheir job search by tai-
vice
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Agencies; Reinstatement

Spri1-}g
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·
'97
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t
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ing,PrcsidcntClintonfelt~~were
.
loririgtheC>Ccupationalcategqry,
Eligibility;OutstandingScholars;
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lah
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.
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obligatedtomalceiteasie
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geographicJoc
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Qualification Requirements;
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· ·
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said. "With the administratiye
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·
nearly 24Q,000job
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mation and forms vfa

personal Attorneys~n the Federal Service;
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·
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.-
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OPM already operates the Fed-
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This is
ings from theirpersi:mal computer
·
Director of CareerServices _
particularly critical because; de-
and modem by dialing (912) 757-
·

.
.
·
-
·.. ·-
·
-
spite downsizing, the Federal
.
3100. In add~tion,
Career
America
.
government still receives_ about
Connection
~
a telephone'.'based
.
,
_
six-and-one-halfniillion inquiries
·
system
;
allows non-Internet us-
a
year concenJingjob
_
openings.
.
ers to conduct job s~arch¢s by
Our new Web site is another as
-'
dialing912-757-3000,orTDbSer-
pect of the governing philoso-
-
vice at 912-744-2299
.
Job seek-
phy which requires that we do a
ers also can access job informa
-:
better job of providing services
tion from
·
touch screen comput-
while costing taxpayers less."
ers located in
·
major
.
cities
·
Http://www.usajobs.opni.gov
.
throughoutthe
·
nation,
-
OPM of-
lists all federal job openings OPM
fices, Career Transition Centers,
provides,
.
and serves
as
a:
gate-
and soine federal
-
office

~uild'.' .
.
way to other employment infoi--:
·
ings.
.
_
_
_
.
'.
·
mation. King said Federal jobs
·
In
.
addition to providing theJaf
~
nationwide, and around the est in
federal worldwide job open-'
globe
.
are carried on the new
ings, the Homepage also willlist
.
USA JOBS site
.
state, local government, and pri-
"lf you
'
re interested in a Fed-
vate sector job openings. Infor:
eral job. this is the right place to
mation on a wide variety of em-
go. It's one-stop shopping for
ployment-related topics and pro-
Federal employment informa-
·
grams, (including special infor-'
lion," King said.
mation for veterans, students,
In announcing the new JOBS
people with disabilities, and ..
site, Director King said, 'This is
outplacement information for
one more step in making the job current federal employees) also
search as quick and easy as
the
is available.
touch of a hand. USA JOBS
pro-
The following items
are
available
vides Internet users with access
on the USA JOBS web site:
,
tojob vacancy listings, general
Current Job Opportunities Cat:-
empJoyment information, va-
_-_-
egories:
-
Professional Career;
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-
-
·
-
_
~~t!~r:preside~{~~rg
·
~s
p~ac~ftil
solut1on·to e
_
cori6iriic
·
c
·
risis
~
:
·
-
··
'
by R<>~~
PRINZ
.
D
_
emocrats deny the charge.
As~pdated Press Writer
·
Many Albanians are angry with
·
(
:
T.IRi-~A.
,
-
AI
_
bania
,
(AP) _ :::~;e;~~~!;~!;~~~~n~~:~
Presi~entSaliBcrisha,inhisfirst
operator~:
.
They suspect that
publi_c
.•
appearance after t~o
officials were invofved in the
week~
:
of unrest,
urged
.
schemes or feel officials should
Albamans Monday not to resort
.
have warned people away from
to violence over failed get-rich-
the risky investments they
quick schemes.

·
.
flocked to in a bid to escape
.
. Berisha spoke on the capitahi
poverty.
.
.
.
Illain
·
~kande
_
rbeg Square to a
.
.
·
,
In two weeks of sporndic
cro
,
wd of3,000.
_
The square was
viole
.
nce across t
.
he country,
t~e scene of a clash
.
Sunday
protesters
.
have batt)ed police,
. betwe~
,
n police and anti-govern-
and burned government and
ment protesters.
ruling party offices
.
·
·
He said the government wo~ld
.
Go
,
vernment officials
.
have
-
t~ke
.
~tep~ to address the
promised th~y will begin paying
economic problems.
back investors
.
from the frozen
:'
'I call
~:m
the Albanian people
assets on- Feb,
·
5, a pledge
t<?
remain calm because we all will
reiterated by Prime Minister
solve all, the
.
p~oblems together
.
.
Aleksander Meksi today. He said
in a serious and fairway," he said.
the government expected to be
"The (uture of Albania is not
·
able to reimbur,se people for 70
based
·
on pyramid schemes
percent of their principal.
· . ·.
w,hich
,viii
not exist anymore. But
.
Meksi said the government had
.
..
~her
~
\
".,
iH
·
be in Albania a great
-
·
retrieved about $300 million. It is
.
freedom ofinitiative."
.
-
.
not clear how
.
many
·
.
people put
'The
_
protest on Sunday could
money in th~_ funcls,
,
but it

is
be
~
sign
-
.
of pubHc discontent
believed to be between 300,000
W.ilh his ruling Democratic Party,
and
500,000.
which is accused by some people
.
Meksi, howe.ver
~
·
wa~ned it
.of profiting from the apparent
·
would take months to return the
.
_
p
.
yramid
schemes.
The
-wake
'n' Bake
Spring Break '97
money
.
Serving The Marist Community Since 1978
.
.
·
FAST, EASY DIRECTIONS FROM MARIST:
.
.
·
Take Route 9 South To Routes 44/55 EAST (l]te Arterial)
Continue On
Toe
Arterial - We Are One Block P~ Raymond Avenue.
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8
TH£
:.
Cll{<Cfil£
·
..
~
~
~
The Student Newspaper ofMaris(College
·
Kristin Richard, Editor~~n-Chief
.
MichaeLGoot,
Managing
.
Editor
.
Cb.rj~ Sinit~
;
§port,tEditor.
.
Stephanie Mercurio,
News Editor
Amie Lemire,
A&E Editor
Gyila Slomcinsky,
Feature Editor
Christian· Bladt,
Opi;,ion Editor
Diane Kolod,
Photography
·
Editor
Jason Duffy,
Business Manager
G. M~dele Cl~rke,
Faculty Advisor
·
·
The Circle
is published every Thursday.
Any
mail may be addressed to The
Circle,
Marist College, 290 North Road, Poughkeepsie, NY 12601.
.•
1
.
'!
Injustite anywhere. is
;
a
:
threat to justice everywhere"
·
-
~
~ •
·
-;:"'9~
l)z,.
Letters to the Editor
88.
lWMCR
is off the air
BoOkstoreis itiSanelyoverpriCed
·
Editor:
WMCR, the Marist College radio station, is off the air due to technical difficulties.
On Wednesday morning (1/22), the morning DJ heard the feedback that is now ring-
ing through the ears of the WMCR management. The feedbaclc is being caused by
the broadcast console, which is the main piece of equipment in therndio station. It is
·
now 22 years old, and
'
it has apparently seen its last
.
broadcast. Unfortunately,
without a console, broadcasting is impossible.
Righi
now,
we are meeting with rne~bers of the faculty, as welJ as the Student
Government, to discuss our options. A broadcast console is a fairly expensive piece
of equipment. Bought new, the consoles range in price from $3,000 to $15,000. There
has been anoffer from a local engineer to sell a used console for a slightly more
reasonable price. We are still exploring our choices.
If you have any questions, please call me at x.4530.
Charlie Melichar, WMCR General Manager
Need for
.
lighting in
townhous~
I
~'qts
Editor:
Editor:
Has anyone else at this schoolnoiiced that the Marist College Bookstore is the most
insanely overpriced place in Poughkeepsie? lcould notbelieveit when I was in there at
the erd oflast semeste trying totirid some reasonably~priced Chrisµnas presents.
The
prices
.
were absolutely outrageous.
.
.
.
·
. ·.
.
··
.
,
Think about this for a moment. How much do you figure the price of the average
sweatshirt is? Mostpeople
_
will say around $30. For that pri
.
ce you should be abie to get
a fairly good quality s\Veatshirt. Jwould say thai: the quality of
90%
'.
of.the Marist
sweaichirts
are about a $30 value. lcollld not belieye itwhen
i
found the average
:
price of
a Marist College sweatshirt t~ be appi:<:>xaimaiely $47 ! Who does the bookstor~
.
think is
·
buying these items? A work study: student a(this school should
·
nothave to
spenci
the
.
..
·
pay he/she earns from more than 10 hours of work on a single sweatshirt! At this rate, a
student making $5 an hour
·would
have
.
to work 25 to buy one
.for
each of his
·or
her
parents. The high prices do not stop there: . .
·
.
,
.
.
.
· ·
.
·
·
·
I also purchased one ofth~se threeJ,utton. tenni~.shirts: Tlle
i
av~rage.cost of 6neof
.
these
_
shirtsshould ge bet\V~n$~9 and $?5
,dollari"AII
of
th~
on~_iri the M~stGollege

·
Bookstore are $40. This is for
a
plain ~olored ten~sshirt with"the \Vords
.
'~
.
iuist Cpllege"
·
on the breast There is
rio
fan
,
cy design
cm
thC: back. There.is
ho
~xperisiye fabtjc being
us
.
~,
either. !tis a
plain
~ol~red
,
shirt
\vith
a six
.
inch
.
squ~ logo on lhe the front left
Since the beginning of this semester, the lights have been
-
out in the parking lots in breast.

How could this possibly cost$40?
·
: ·
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.•.
. ·
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· •
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·
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front of Townhouses A,B, and C. Although this may not seem lik~ a
.
big 9~al;it gets
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)'he last time I wentirito
'
the
Bookstore,
I
did riot
see
.
ilie\vcirds, ''Stnic
.
tJre
0
'cir
extremely dark in these
areas;
'
For the first time, I do not feel
safe
waikirig'
.
6ackt~fniy
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"~~~~~Rmh.i~~tf.itc_~j;#~~r
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townhouse after parking my car in Gartland at night. Also, it is rie;u-}fimpossibleto pncesforManst Cqllege a~tire?I !lllght add, too; that fue.re 1s a
·
qefirute. d1fferenc~ tn
.
the
·
see the white lines iffthe parking lot at night when you
are
trying to.park in either of
.
qlfality(>f $e shirts·
:
that:gtje,:wiJtbtiffor
$50
at
;
one
.
of.~e~e
·
cliains;

Afl;tlli~.~iµct'_a'iici
... .
these lots.
I
would like tcrknciw when these lights
are
going to
be
fixed_. After all, this
\
d.cin~,Jqill purchas~ 011f;;;
.
wea~hirt
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enjoytheril'beforeI gi:ad,fat~,
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of
the majdt businesses
in
theai-ea
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offerdiscounts to us
·
6ecause~eareMariststudertts.
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I think it is disgusting
to
see
lhe
m
·
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·
es in the
.
school
/
Bames
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.
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If your life is affected by qbsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), there is support
I would like
,
the BdokstoreJc,
'
respondfo
the
Mansi
Conu:nuiiit}'
_
t>fsubmitting their
available locally and in cyberspace .
.
·
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.
·
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owrirespons~ letter to the edito
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o(Thldird,r to
6e
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following
.is~ut{

..
.•
.
.
·
·
.
OCD is a neurobiological ~isorder which grips sufferers wiihobsessfons (in.cessant
Michael
A.
McDowell;
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hurting a lov~d
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Every second and fmitth Tuesday
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P·I_ll•
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sgro~p playingchesswiththirdgnideisatQurLacifofM:tCarmei)~lem~ntacy .
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This
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·
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.
that
wiil
contintie

thtotglloutthe
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·
.
monna10n,contac
·
av1 a
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473-2500
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·.•.·•.·· ..
·
Support in' cyberspaceis
·
also a~ailabl~ for.OCD. Acliscu
.
ssion formn.for.QCP
and
·'
~~g
Fisher~.c~~s
~~b.
:
J~f~~
',
,4~t
.
·
-
,
howit affects lifeis
.
mai~t,µried byChrisVertullo, aMaristlectui~dnM~tfie,mlltic~
;
· ·
·
·
·
·
.
The group, OCD-L,
has
·
~bout 300 members and
.
consists
of
those
.
wit!J.
'OGD,
.
~e
.
fr
.
families and friends, a.rid ~eatirigprofessionals. In addition; this forum has'.anAsk
th~
Experts comer to field questions about OCD. Send &Mail to chris;vertullo@inaristedu
fodnformation on hC>WtO subscribe.
.
.
. ..
: .
'
.
;
.
.

·
.
. .
:
,
>
'.·
·
:-.
It is estimated that two
·
or three percent of the p_opulation suffers from O<:D; Effec-
.
live treatment comes
,
in the foiin of a combination of therapies. Drug
:
therapy lielp,s
OCD persons by raising the
·
level of a brain chemical called serotonin

tQ stifle'the
runaway thoughts and lesson the frequency and intensity of
the
rituals' of OCD.
Behavior therapy assists persons with OCD to face their fears by decreasing anxieties
.
arisjng from obsessions and reducing or eliminating compulsive rituals ..
Face
to face
,
support groups, ~·well
as
ori-line discussion groups help pt!9pl~ calm their anxieties
.
as
the
disorder waxes and wanes.
In
addition, they provide
.
valuable information
about th~ state-of-the-art therapies.
·
Come join us at Vassar Hospital or in cyberspace to learn more about this treatable
disorder.
Chris Vertullo~
Lecturer
of Mathematics



































































































~HECIRCLE
,
.
0PINION
January 30, 1997
9
. :"
Ne~t'
.
s
;
~
§{ap
_
:
otj.tlle
wrist
.
.
·
Mr.
N
eWt
goes to Washington
.
.
.
.
.
:
:
It
w~
'
a
_
bitte~iy r;oid;~iildswept Monday ~o~ing
.
in our nation's capitti For William
'
~~f,fetso11
.
Clipt?h; it was aday of celepr.ition andrejoicing; He
w~
re-elected despite
·
The reprimand of House Speaker Newt Gingrich
o,nce-dismal approval ratings, countless
·
scandals,
and
a reµiarkable number of Ameri-
last week left most Americans shaking their heads
can.swho feel they canriot trust hiin.Jn short: he had puHed
it
of[.
.
.
.
with shameful "I told you so's." Since the allega-
.
.
lt
_
was a fa~ colder day for New~ Gingirch. While Clinton celebrated his successes, the
tions of Representative Gringrich's wrongful us-
~pe~er of~e Ho~se was preparing (or
a
House vote regarding his ethical impropri-
age of tax-exempt funds first broke over the hazy
.
.
·
,
. .
..
. eties;-In short: he had not pulled it off.
·
·
·
·
·
horizon of the fields of negative news hungry
. .
.
:
The
.
followingday, the Hol!se would overwhelmingly vote
.
- · - - - . -
inedia people, the American people have been
·
395 to 2~
,
19repriiilarid the Speaker, fining him$300,000. The fine
~--....
waiting for their favorite Republican to get the
was imposed bt!r;ause he had used tax~exempt money to fuel his
·
.
ax. If you look closely al your fellow Ameri-
.
perso~al_'propaganda projects, and then he lied to a committee
••
can, and perhaps at yourself, you 'II notice the
investigating this behavior.
.
,.,--
-..
satisfied snicker that ensues after the feigned
·
·
Jri208
Years, this was the first time that the House had ever
/
shameful "I told you so." We've gotten used
had
'
fo vote toimpose sanctions onthe Speaker .. However, in a
·
·
.
f
to the routine, and Gingrich stands as just an-
delidous bit ofirony that
'
political analysts live for, in 1989,
·
1
other example of America's disenc_hantment
Speaker Jim. Wright resigned rather than face such a vote. The
with insider politics.
lynch mob of power-mad politicians that led to the downfall of
Gingrich will pay $300,000 for his Jack of moral
Speaker Wright
w~
spearheaded by
O
none other than the man
,
standards. Is the penalty too severe? Should
·
with the biggest
.
torch: Newt Gingrich.
·
.
a man who promotes unsound morals be al-
.
.
:
This ruling state.s that no one is abqve the rules of the house.
~
lowed to command a post as important and
It also states that Newt Gingrich is a traditional Washington
influential as the Speakerof the House? Cer-
insider: untrustworthy, unethical, unprincipled, unconscionable
tainly one who is well-versed in my previous
arid unscrupulous. (Notto mention unattractive and unable
to
•·
opinions might argue hypocrisy ifl denounced
say no to a meal, particularly a free one).
_ _
,.
the decision to reprimand Newt Gingrich. My
In
_
true Washington fashion, Gingrich will have no trouble
faith in the investigating committee's thorough-
cotighirig tip the
$300,000
for the fine. But, if Gingrich salary is
·
/
ness prompts me to agree whole whole-
onlya paltry $171,500, how, you may ask, can he pay such a
heartedly with the outcome of the proceedings.
fine? Well, don't cry for Newt, Argentina;
·
Questionable moral character did, after all,
·
.
Since Gingrich's party has long been in the ba~k pocket of
spearhead my countless anti-Bill Clinton ti-
.
speciafinterests and large corpor~tions, he
will
have
rici
diffi-
rades. Justice was done by levying a penalty
culty raising ihar ki
.
nd of money.
In
fact, one breakfastfund-
____ .,_
... .-.. - -
on the Speaker, and the question of his
.
suit-
raiser for tobacco manufacturers would take care ofit, with
._.,._,...
ability to continue
_
his post is a debate that is
enciugh\notiey left over to pay off any d~linqtient parking tickets;
·
difficult to formulate an intelligent opinion on.
This is exactlywhy a great deal of people (not all Democrats)
I firmly believe that with an air of controversy
are saying that Gingrich should have to pay this fine out of his
exists a lack of efficiency
to
lead (see Bill
own pocket (and whatlarge pockets they are)
7
·


·
·
.
·
,._llllillilL.,:
Clinton).
''.I find it inconceivable that th~ ethics c<>mmittee would allow
A deeper issue is at hand. When will Ameri-
himto pay the fine with
.
carripaigri funds, That isnt a slap on the
_.__
cans learn to trust their highly skilled and in-
wrist, that's i;nissing the wrist entirely,,. said Rep: Gene l'aylor,
telligent insider politicians? At the concep-
.
I).erriocr11t of Mississippi.
,
.
. .
·
.
.
.
·..
. .
tion ofour present government; our founding
·
.
:
Thatjs not just
a
great sound bite, i~ is· entirely true. What
fathers purposely created a system that would
kind of lesson has
·
the Speaker learned if he is abie to use
.
gov-:
keep the intensity of insider politics out of the
emment µioneyto pay for his misuse of government funds?
·
· .
.
hands of the general populace.
,.
Of course, President Clinton has been able to dip info a legal
.
ll!~=~~~~r
The Hamiltonian Federalists, whose architec-
.
defense
·
fund.
td
take·
cirre
of
~f(of.
the
·
various irivestig~tfo
.
·.
ture greatly shaped the government of which
.
info his own
·
atleged improprieties:
But,
the big difference is that
·
we are a part, provided for the all-important
'..
N~~h~:~aiitittedtohi
_
s
,
c~m~.
'.
.
'
:
;,:.
'
·
.
.
..
,
;
,
'.
. \
.
:
'
./':
·
:
:
.
··
'
·.
,,,
'
. ,
·
\
.le'.,
.
'
.
.
:


·
.
creationoftheinside~politician. The insider
..
·. :
·
~
:
:
:
,
;,
f~!!t9rt~,~~~
~~}?m~
,
~~?.J~
,
r~~,~~<:\~~LS:tiNJo.~,~
.
~f.W!-L~~,,al
~~,!~f~n!.,~~~~--Qn,
_
another on~
9~':.
"~QJ:~
·
day and qight with the complex negotiation~ ~nd the :"are-
,
)99
,
~
-
r}JPPlrr~1tti~tg<;>Miw~
.
J1TI~r~t.§
:
~4°"r~):.,;;,
,:,:
,;;
;:
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·
.
,,
:,
:~;
!
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:;:
·:,
.o
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;w
!'
t
:CJ;

f
;.
,
;' '
.
f
.
ho_uses full of documents to
k~~
o_ur g9,y~mment_runnm? e~~c1ently.
:
·
.
·
But,piere ~sa ~~t:ld ()fd1ffer~n':~
:
be~~een Gmgnch)
;
!-]nethtf~ d~1s1011s-and theJeg1on of scandals
If
1t
weren't for our career poht1c1ans and Washington ms1ders, the
U$Sociatecl with.
the
president. For one thing, Gingrich's c
.
rime is directly associated
,
with his duties as
. ;
legions
.
of constituents would haye no on~ to carry their voice onto
· ·
:
'.
~p~er
'
o(theJJ;Pt1.Se
:
·
:
-:
:

:;
:
.
-
:ri
>

,
,
:
,
,\;,
,,
;
;
:
_
.
:
.
,
:
·
·
>
.
..
.
<
.

.
,
.
" ..
· :
_
.
.
·
i
'.
:
the floors of Congress. When one of these politicians betrays our
··.
·
,
,'rtie'.f~~
-
t
.
of thfmatter is, Gingrich s~Qle
,
~paxer
~
~oney
:
to
,
d9
_
,
~ith
as he pleased. While his expendi-
trust, as it appears Newt Gingrich did, there is a sense of vindictive
.
.
I
tures w~rfnotJrivolous_fo
;
the seps~ tliathewen
.
t ~ut
arid
bought himself a gold-plated BMW, but, it is
violation.
'ftjvolou
·
~ .i4
'
ihat'ifwas
·
u
_
s~ciJC? ~piea
_
d Oll_t~dated, out of to
,
uch Republican ideqJogy.
.
.
_
The
_
American response has been to elect outsiders to our
.

Pt:~~ident C:ltntc>n'spiobl~tris, oritli~o~erha_n,d, are tied into allegedly questionable activities before
government's highest post. Bill Clinton never burned the midnight
'
.
~e
Was
:
presideni: _Not only tha(bl}t they are problems tl:Jat
thf
average perso_n can relate to. Plenty of oil with Sam Nunn to put a piece of presentable legislation on the
.
.
.
Americans can easily unders(and sexual harassment problems~ and having a number of your associates
floor for his constituents, but I assure you
·
that Bob Dole did for
30
·
itj pii~on~ N'tck~l:and-:di
_
m~ stti
,
lf
~h~11
c<>mpar~ tp steali!}g
,
fi!o~ey from taxpayers.
· .
.
·
years. The insider politicians do not have
·
time for Paula Jones or
>.
In resp~mse to ethical woes regarding the president; his spin doctors usually make a statement vowmg
·
Whitewater. They have a greater responsibility to our government.
<·
to
.
proyy his tnie worth ttj
the
American people through taclding issues that Americans are concerned · I thi
_
nk Clinton's superiorintelligence has made him
a
responsible
·
· ·
with .
. ,
.
·
..
.
.
.
,
.
· ·
.
.
..
.
.
.
·
·
.
.
.
·
.
·
.
and effective president, but in the future, we may llllow someone
.. --'
How~yer
/
how
,
could Gingrith's spinnerspos~ibly
;
do
.
the
i
same thing; considering the fact that he
.
unprepared for the
-
tremendous responsibility of the presidency to

.,
hiiµ~elfis
aiready iirunensely
.
unpbpular;
and
has proyeit himself
to
have concerns that greatly differ from
·
.
~cend to the greatest nation's highest o(Qce
:
.
Our fear of insider
.
.
the>~
p(the\~Illerican people?
/
·. · ·.
·
·
.,
:
:
,
, .
.
.
po!itics must not hinder our ability to choose wisely.
.
.
.
.
:~
.
.
.
-
.'
.,
-
'
. .
.
.
:
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
·
·
Christian Bladl iS the opinion editor for The
Circle.
·
-
·
Bill Mekrut
is
the political columnist
for
The Circle.











































































































·
'
·
·•
.
•,
,
,
...
·

· ·

·
1
A ~
-ffi~w~
[
.
.
'.
I
~m
wel~o~~g: tlie'sp~~
-
~g of
199
_
7wi~
a rie,w\e.tf:~~
~
l~idriqt
g~{~
no~e j6bover the
_
br~~- isi!Ilply ~~li~ed\'vhat
~
waste
!TIY
_
first
~
_
Jmesterat Maris~ h~
,
l#~-
fr
i1;0
.:
~ e d
.
..
what a waste my entire scholastic career has been
:

These are
·
not particularly monumental revelations.
-
I realize my scholastic ineptitude as frequently as report cards are mmled:
Unfortunately, this is no coincidence.
.
_ _ _
_
_
_
.
·
_
_ ·_ _
·
.
_
.
___ .
_
_
__
_
_
_
·
·
·
·
_
·.
.
. .
.
_
. .
..
·
·
I am not giving up so e~sily
.
-Thei-e cl!~
:
~ome
_
fu.ea~ures thatl must take;
_
No; actually, I
run
not ref~rring
\O.
the me_asurements of my stately schnozzle
;
-
Li~e many of my peers,
I h~ve taken my academics about
a_s
sedously
:
a
·
s one mighttake
:
M.ark Fuhrman running for chairman ofth~ Nr\ACP,
/;->
.
·
_
.
·
·
·
.
_
·
·
"
. ;
·
. ··_
.
--
·
:
-
·
Fu-st
off, the lame excuses have to
:
stop~ Too often
·
my professQrs have heard excuses such as, "No, I'm sqn_-y
sir,
but J.
-
don!t have my homework. I was rrussmg a ~sk.

Um,
no. Well, I woke up yesterday and !couldn't move
;
Uh
,
huh
";
I realized achunkofcartilage was missing from'my spine
:
Yes sir, adisk:" Okay, so p~rhaps they're not THAT
bad, but my excuses really have to go the
.
way
of'ro
:
tary 9ial p~ones arid coin operated washers inthe fresh1:nan
_
donnit9ries:
_
.
_
·
.
.
_.
·
.
.
,
·
:
.
.
-
,
.
I also need to get my act together. No, actually, this past semester did not tum me to quitting school and
'
ge!ting a traiped dog a~ttogether. I merely need to ge
_
~ org
_
amzed.
By the end of last semester, my room
was
engulfed in an ocean
·
of papers and clothing
.
Walking fronuriy desk to
iny
bed had become more miraculo~s ~foat than parting the
Red Sea. Actually, it was quiie a siinilartask, as most ofmypapers were garnished with red "C's.:•
·
,
· '
C.
•·
·
.

·
-
·
.
·
· ·
.
· .
.

__ .
.
,
.
.
_
·
Yes
,
getting
·
organized, though difficuit;sliould be easier th
_
an starting that dog act. Times are tough.
_
uStar Search'' is not
on
the afranymore. Even ifl incorporated a soulful
·
tune with the ac4
·
1 would not go over weJl
at
"Amateur Night at the ApoHo
:
"
. -
·
·
·
·
·
·
· ·
·
·
·
-
Bob Sagel is not even around anymoreJo give me ten grand if theiogs
.
,_
_ _ _ _ _ _ _
_;_ _ _ _ _
_;_ ___ ;.._;.._..;;__~_;_...,... _ _ _
...,..._;_ _ _ _ _ _
_,
suddenly attacked me on video tape.
_
c:· ...
'.
_
·
·
:
,
Finally; I have to stop procrastinating .
.
I go to thelibrary to do research
·
and I often find myself just looking through random devoured books. I did
·
,
notice odd things about books in generaL
·
.
For
instance,
-
_
newer books
contain the phrase, "This book is pririied
·
on acid free paper
.
'.' At fii:_st
_
I
deemed this rather odd, but then I figured itto be quite valid
;
The volumes
ought to be preserved for posterity without running the
risk of being
li
_
cked
by dried up hippie librarians
·
up in Woqdstock
:
There could very well
:
be
more than one way to drop a book.
.
-
,:;,:
·
.
·
I supposeTcould follow the latest tr~11d and blame my genetic compos
i_.
tion for my not being particularly studious. It could be said that iny punctu
-
ality genes are late. Well, no
,
I mean latent
·
Though this would conflict with
my previous statement.
-
Alas
,
I must remember that my days aflame e~c
_
i.tses
.
.
are as bygone as M
&
Ms with no reds
:
.
Incidentally, severaL'ye~~
_
ago
;
t.
'
·
asked my brother why the red M & M's
.
had been takenof(the shelves
:
,
He
.
said McCarthyism had gone to the extreme during the Cold War.

·
·.
··
·
·
·

·
'
No, I do not beHeve my genes have much
fo
do with my tendency to slack,
aside from that they both sound kind of1ike a pair of pants
.
I
would rather.
·
like to say that I have a mild wazzu "Fiddle-dee
-
dee Complex." Yes, Scarlett
O'Hara
_
set the standard
-
for procrastinators
.
No one could have said.it
.
,
better: "After all, tomorrow is another day ... "
.
·
Well, l still have seven semesters
·
to pull my GPA out of the gaping
i,ji~
of
.
·
hell. This isa good thing, I think. Hopefully, when my college careerenqs,
.
my pleas of
"
Where should lgo? What shall I do?'' will be·answered by
graduate school- not an irate Rhett Butler. After all, without that no~e j9b,
__
_
·
·
sitting pretty at thehoinestead that bears my name won
'
t ge
t'
me particl}l~ly
·.·
far. (Rest assured-: Alexandra Ripley has no
-
intention of- writing a sequelto
.,
this column
.
)
I
I
I
I
Chechnya11
war
hero elected pr~sident-by wide margin
.
'
.
.
,t
{
_
:
· .
:
.
:
,:
'.
_f
-~
.-
,;

:
··
,
.'
>
:~:.
;
~
by
GaroMYRE
.
AssociateiiPress Writer
1991
,
"hesaid
.
·
··
;_
,
/
furpal-Ali'Atge~eyev, a
·
-'
'Now the only thing that remains
Maskhadov spokesman, said his
·.
,
,
is to have it recognized
~Y
the
.
.
candidate was
·
getting
-
abotit60

·
,_
GROZNY, Russia (AP}
~
The
whole
.
~orld."
.
.
·
:
:
,
·,
.
.
·
'
p€frcent of the
y
ote,
-
Miknial
_
·
Chechen in!litary leader who
Lawyer Magomed$fagoadov
,
-
Gazayet, a spokes
·
man for the
:'.:
inastermindedthedefeatofRus-
.
saicjthe
:
election Sh()~
~
d
he>w
.
Basayev campaign, conceded
·
:;
sian
..
foi-c~s
;•,.-
and
.
wants
.
Chechens
'
feel
.
<
.
about
'
Maskhadov
·
was
-
.mead
;
.
:
.
\
indepen
.
deri
.
ce
i
for
'.
Chechnya
illdepen~ence.
_
·
·
_
_
. _

.
.
· .
Toeother
_
carididatestrailedfar
..
.
appeared to have won~ decisive
·
.
"We had a democratic vote
:
and
.

·b~hind. . __
.
·
·>
_.
·.
-
victo_ry Monday
in
th,e region's .it's
.
clear that all
_..
~hechens
-,:-:
_
,
,
.
Th~ q~es·tion
.:
of
.
Chechnya's
',
presidentialefoction,

.
s1:1ppqrf this position.'
'.
..
'
:
'
._
\
;
·
.
political future
·
defiries the'elec
~
.
·
.
Russia promptly trid1c
-.i
ted it
,
.
Nl_tlie
presidential caridi~fates
·
· ·
tion
~
Russia has vowed tp bkick
.
·
would
·
not
.
accept
j_
ndepen
_
deiice
.
'
·
suppo~ independence
·
[.ron
(
Rus-
>
Cnecheri
,
sec¢ssion
;'
and the
:
l\vo
:
.
_
..
··
!
·
·:
. .
·.
.
'
,.
,.
..
'
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"('i(}
·_·

.
,•
.
'/
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,
.
·
·
~
.
~
..
~·-
·•
-
-
·
·
-
for (:nechiiy~.
.
.
.
_
.
.
.
sia
;
bii(M~khadov is regarded·
·
sides appear headedforrenewed
, __
.
With
·
aboiif90percent6(the ·asapragmatistwhomigh(have ~onfrqntaijonif~h!fChechens
:
.·_
,
·-~,
T
;


!•
.
••
-
.

,
.

:


.
•.• ,
.-_·
.
_
.
.
.
yote counted,
~~offidal
results
a b~I!er c~ance _ofw.or~irig
.
out' a
_
·
·
.
· '
mq
y
e
:_
··
_
t
_
0
-
Ctit
al}: ties
·
.with
·
Mos-
.
_
·
.-
M
_.
_.
·
_
.
_
.-
.
:.
1
.
·
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9
_
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e
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_
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d e f
_
- y
_
·
.
·
_
'
showed As\ari M'iiskhacfov\vin-
pohucal deal with Moscow By
cow
·
·
"
·
.
riing
_-
6J
-
per~eril
'.
of~he
;
vote,
.
..
contrasi;
_
Moscow
·
cons
_
ipers
·-,
,_.
iµ~siahas
:
:
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ci
-
-
-~
~
~petitef~r~
.:-
.=
i n t e m a t i o r i a l

e1ection
.:
m.onitors
·
.
·
·•
·
enoughto give him an outright
~as.tyev a terrorist for his J995

·
.
new
-
war after
.
a disastr'ous
' -
·
.
·

,
:
:
·
.
.
.
.
-.
.
·-
.
.
victory.
fo
second pJace with
27
host~ge,,taking
_
r~jd
:-
on a
-
military campaign and a hasty
.
.
· ·
·
·
··
·
·
percent was
_
Shamil Basayev, a .· sout
_
hern Russian
.
to..yn;

.•
.,
troop.withdrawal, but it will
try
.

...
;by.l)yS/\~
/
STOJANOVIC
miles
"
from Belgrade,
,
the
young rehe! lead~k
_ .
:
.
,
Russian Preside
,
nt Boris Yeltsin
-
Ao
'
put
-
political,
_
economic
,
and
. .
. ;
.
.
,4.ss9c
f
qJedfr:(!SS Wrifer
.
_
·
.
.
Socfalists
·_
and jhe
:
oppbsitton
Theballotfollo~s~fn~lytwo-
said in
_
Moscow he was happy

~
·
wplomaticpressureonChechnya
held separate
/
con$titutional
year
war
·
for
Chechen
the ~lections had
been
held. but
.
to keep it in the fold
;
.
i . .
_
BELGI½.QE,YugosJavia (AP)
.
sessions forthe local towi1hall
-
independence. W
_
hile
'
th~ fight-
.
Chechnya had to remain
'
part of
._·
.
.
Chechens wen~ buoyant
:
- .\Vith the help !)£,riot
.
police;
.
today
:
The
opposition did ifin
·
_
ing _between separatist
_
rebels
Russia,
_
according
·
.
to
a
Monday as they
·
headed. to the
:rz,esiden_t Slob,ocfa.n Milosevic's
front
·
of the building, while the
-
:
~md Russfati
_'
Jj'_bops
'.·:
ended
·
spokesman.
.
Presidential
;,
polls in the snow-covered towns
·
_
Soci~li.stf as~urned control
of
a Socialists convened inside.
·•
w.itho~u resolvjng
'
tlie {~public's
·
spokesman
.

___
.
-_ .•
:
-
~ergei
,
and
·
.
villages .
.
Turnout among
-
.-.
tow11
~~~th
ofBelgradeMor:iday.
.
Opposition deputies
·
:
were
political status. Chechens see the Yastrzhembsky said
ttie
outcome
·
some 400,000 vciteJ"S was heavy
·
·
Unfazed
~
the opposi~ion held its
prevel)ted
.
fr.om
'
eµtedng
:
the
·
presidell'tial
vote as
·
an
provides a hope for prC>ductive
atabout450pollingstatiorts.No
own tow~
.
.
.
building hy riof
'
poHc~
/
who
opportunity to formalize iheir
negotiations "in determining the
-
major violations were reported
,
hc:!1! _l,l,leet1~g m the ~treets.
surrounded the area as hundreds
break from Russia. ·
status of the Chechen Republic
said Anatoly Shabad, a liberal
~,ke 13.
_
other Serbian towns and
of opposition
'
supporters
In Grozny, the
..
capital,
withjn the Russian federation."
_
Russian lawmaker who served as
~1t1es
1
~me<i~~evska Palanka was
demonstrated in front.
·
·
' -
Masktiadov t'old
.:
reporters
.
_
-
.
Some Chechens, incl~~ing
·
·
an observer.
wqi:i
_
b~
-
~e oppo_sition in
N?v.
Dusan Naric, Smederevska
Monday that he
w;is
ready
_
_
Akh
_
med
_
Lukayev,
were
·
..
.-
Late Monday, election officials
-
·
17
_
111um~ipaJ elec~ons, according
·
..
·
l>alanka's° would~~ mayor, told
for direct talks with Russia.
-'
appre~ens
_
ive.
.
_
.
estimated turnout was more than
to.in~erJ!ational monitors.
The Associated Press Television
"Unfortunately/ certain circles
_ ''.Tlte l_lussians have never used
·
.
60 percent. Security was tight,
-
. Milo~eyic
.
has ignored both
that the purpose of the riot squad
in Russia are n
,
Qtready for a
·
conu,non sense in dealing \Vith
·
but there were no reports
·
of tJ!!emat1
,
onal pressure and 10
was vague
.
'
sensible approac~/ he said. "I Chechnya," he said
.
"I think
;
trouble.
AH
the leading

week$ ofdaHy protests. While
"It
is
riot
clear
:wl?at the police
'will try to coi:nproinise, butonly
they will_continuewiµi the same
president fat candidates are gn1dgingly recognizing six
are defending," he said.
within
·
reasonablelimits."
.
bad policies, even if they
·
know
:
heroes of the guerrilla war for
opp_osJtion . victories,
his
"Maybe
this is
·
even better, as
·
-
Maskhaciov said Chechnya has _
they ~hould change." -pte Central
.
.
independence, which sapped the
Soc1ahsts claim B~l?rade and
we constituted our rule together
to gain outside support
:
·
_
E
_
lection Commission was·
·
tiny republic,
.
whose population
Sl:lven <>ther
_
commumt1es won by with the people," he said, as
"We declared
:
Chechnya ari
expected to release official elec-
was only 1.2 million before the
the opposi\io~.
-
.
opposition deputies addressed
independent, sovereign state in
tion results later Monday.
war and is even lower now
.
In Smederevska Palanka, 50
the crowd with a megaphone.





































































































.
...
·.
·
·,
·.
Ja11uary
30, 1997
11
Newsand
·
·
'§l}i11~'is(tbrillianf:()Ortrayal
of
genius and madness
.
i>r
-
~ie
Leoiire
·
,.
A&E&litor
··
:
bavic(Helfgot( ihe
"
mai~ ch~;_
'
.•
acter inScptiHick's film:'ts'<~on-
. sidered insane by societfs stan~'
..
.
dards; buias 'Shine' unfolcif the
line between whafis
,
san/and
·
W'.hat
'
isnotbecomes blurred.
:
In
.
tlie
:
ianddowflunder
/
the year is
-
1952 a11d David is _a child prodigy,
gifted with a precious
flairfoi" the
pian<>. At
__
the ·age
i
of six, he is
already
..
·
playing
.
·
Mozart's
Polonaisse while his ciassmates
·
·
are
plindcingaway at'Chop-
sticks.'
:
He stands
'
out at
a
local
competiti<>n
·
,- much to
his
proud
papa's delight;
·
·
·
And his papa is
-
indeed proud.
Petej'Helfgott is a
~
huge, strap-
ping man who is keeping a watch-
ful eye
_
over his son. Played to
mgged perfection
.
by Armin
.
·
·
Mueller-Stahl,
-
Peter
·
insists on
being David's sole mentor, even
when successful piano teachers
approach them. YOl~ng David is
played by Alex Rafalowiez; a tiny
_
little thing
-
with huge doe eyes
.
sparkling behind wire
riin
glasses.
·
·
He wants to please his
father and make hiµl
proud, at
ariy
cost.
while some young geniuses
might grow swift and cocky,
pavid is
.
woefully shy and inse
~
cure. Painfully thin; with thick
Clark Kent glasses sliding down
his nose, David might be winning
on the outside;
.
but he is defi-
·
nitely losing within.' He just can-
As the years go by, David's
piano career
,
fllirishes .
. ·
He
wins
competition
.
after competition,
_and his
,
picture
·
makes
'
the lo
.
cal
papers time and time again. But,
.
not please his dear papa.
When David fails to win
a
na~
tionwide co~test, he encounters
.,
·
llellat home.' He cowers in a cor:-
ner as Peter rages about: "What
do you want to do? You want to
.
win!'' Over and over David is
forced to repeat this mantra.
·
However, there is
a
terrifyi~g fear
that Peter Helfgott holds dose
to his heart-the fear that David
win someday leave him. He sees
·
David as a possession, a creation
that took him years to shape.
And he will never allow his
prize,
his beautiful caged bird to ever
,. ;
by
J.'iii'i
Dziezyn~ki
:
.
.
'
.
have read inany
.
video
'
game is a
.
ics are jerky and not as smOoth
.
.
Staff
Writer
..
lJi~, fatlie. It's true--
:
<mly on the
as they could be. aowever
;
I do
.
:
.
>
·
;
.
/
·
>
--•

.
,
.
pagesofsuchradical,rightwing,
_
like the girl who gives you the
As~ sit here inn:iy
pajainas
Ii~-
.
underground papei::s such as this
trophy when you win!
.
tening)o Mr; Bungle, I think
·
onecanonehopetofindaspark
._
*WayneGretzkyHockey-Ifyou
aboultP,~ b~oad
:
specttuinof
_
·
ofthetruth.so;forgeteverycol-
lilce hockey games where
-
the
_
event~
:
f!iat
has
p:apperied since
:
_
umn,
.
before ( in~ludi11g fr()m this
score ends up being 7 4-56, be my
we
'
last :talk~d.
The
good news
'
columnist,wliol,ad
,
a
:
specialdeal
guest!
_
_
.
.
,
_
is:next
:
~eek
}
l.
109
w1.i1
be
among
.
with So~y!) aild
'.
prep~e
'to
.
be-
. _
.
*Shadows of the Empire-Please,
·
the featµ
_
re
_
djoutn~II~t$ 1N1th
a
h()!d th~ tiuth:
THE NINTENOO
I beg you, rent this game first.
I'll
. pictl.ire
_
~extto: his'coiumnffMf 64STINKS.
,
..
.··
_
..
_ . _
admit,
the stages look really cool,
. very ow:n
'
pictur~! Isn't that
c
~
,
\\'e,~,;
·
9K
M:~o
·
64isn'tthat especially the battle on Hoth, but
.
great?
N()~
perhaps
.
this visual
.
.
.
bad; burev~ry otli~r over~priced
•.
.
·
.
after.that
.
it
.
goes downhill. The
•·
aidwill
:
caich
''
theattention of.
.
··
gameoutthereforitis.Trustme,
·
.
Doom
--
styled levels
-
are annoy-
those o(you \vllo only read the
I played themall.
In fact, pei::haps
.
·
·
ing and the play control on them
security_briefs"'.""{ *Marisi secu~
·
·
future
··
columns will n
·
ot even
·
stinks.
I
expected more from
,

rityresponded to a call regard-:- . cov~rvidtX> gan:i~ but th~y
.
will
LucasArts.
.
Jngagiant,
,
gl(}wingskunkcrawl-
·
be
more ofa "crime-;dog'' type:
.
.
'
*Mario 64-As
I
said, the one
.
_
ing from the'Y~ter
works
at
12: I~
.
.
styl~
.
of investigating corrupt
good game out there.
_
·
am Wednesday, They promptly
:
agencies. So my f~s.-prepare for
·
*Mortal Kombat Trilogy-Ok,
reacted by driving to Citgo
arid
a
big change in t~s column! But
it's not a bad game, but with a
buying donuts: In other news,
~efore completely changing
'
reducedframerateandanempha-
someone you don't'.kriow
'
got gears, Jet me explain 'why the
sis on gore, the game play is not
drunk and threw up
in
a fresh-
gam~ for the
N64
~
quite a let-
smooth. The jerky style makes
rilandonn .. ~),VivalaPhoto!
down,oneata time.
.
_
·

the game play less fluidly
than
.
·
In other gcxx,l news, a key mem-
*~lotwings 64-this gam~ is bor-
MK
2
or even MK. Not to men-
ber. of my research staff has re-
ing and all eye ~;iridy. After you
tion they are coming out with the
turned froinalongsemesteraway
play through
all
the events
ultimate MK in
2
months!
in
_
the gforiClus countryside of (which should take about a week)
*~Iler Instinct Gold-The worst
Spain
;
It's
greattci
have
Eric
Conti
the game has little replay value
.
·
game out there forthe N64. It is
backworkinghardforthecolumn
.
The first_ Pilotwings was much
awful for so many reasons
,
the
andreadytohelpanywayhecan!
better,EncPetersonevensaidso.
main ones being slow, dull
This brings the number of re-
*Waverace 64-A decent rental,
·
gameplay and terrible combos
search
.
assistants in my column
but not worth
bu
ring. There are
with. crummy graphics.
to four.
.
.
·
only about ten short tracks and
Maybe the next generation of
But enough of this infonnal
the game it self isn't anything
games
will be
better-I know I am
chit-chat. This column is dedi-
specialaftergettingovertheneat
-
lookingforward to Super Mario
cated
to
events circulating
feelingofdrivingajetski. Why
.
Kart64.Iamnotlookingforward
around the ever changing
·
and
vi~eo gam~ m~gazines rate this
to buying another controller and
exciting world of video games!
stmker so high 1s beyond me, but
memory pack. Well, that's all the
A speciai shout".Out to the guy
I assu!Ile th~t it is ~use they
news that
fits,
so I am going to
in Benoit ( or is it Gregory) who
are bemg paid off by Nintendo.
finish listening to "The Bends".
is always playing
·
Dr. Mario for
*Crusin USA-A poor transla-
Look next week for this dynamic
the NES. It's good to see a pur-
tion from thearcade-=-mostofthe
column to go in bold new direc-
est out there. Here is the bad
great play control and touchy
-
tions! And
try
to read more than
news: my friends, ever thing you
steering is gone, and the graph-
the security briefs next time!!
fly_away. David receives multiple
invitations to study at various
schools, even one offer hails
from America. But Peter will not
allow
it;
each
invitation flies into
the fire. He alternates between
verbal taunts and physical terror
to ensure that David lives each
day frightened of his own
shadow
.
The breaking point comes
when David receives a scholar-
ship to study at the prestigious
Royal College of Music in Lon-
don. After a round of shouting
and punching, David is stagger-
ing in the doorway, crying and
bleeding, but there is a strange
glint in his eye. Proud papa de-
clares that David will no longer
be a member of the family, should
he leave the house. And with an
eerie hollowness about him,
David leaves.
David relishes in his newfound
freedom. He meets friends, even
a few girls. He goes to a bar for
the first time, and he smokes his
first cigar.
Noah Taylor plays the adoles-
cent David; at first glance, David
is
a
wallflower.
It
is only the
mischevious lift of his eyebrow
that reveals his depth.
·
·
He connects with a professor
at the school, Cecil Parkes, who
gives David the combination of
strength and praise that the boy
hungered for. However, there is
a dark shadow hovering over
David's new
life.
Each week he
writes home, sharing his new ex-
periences with his family. And
each week his letters are re-
turned, unopened. This lack of
stability and foundation begins
to take its toll on David; he is
slowly losing his mind
.
After his
final performance at the Royal
Please see
SHINE. page 12 ...
J+
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-
12
VidCo
Guy's
Pickofthe'Week:JleijYJ:::;,:

·.
·.
,.·,··--
.
·._,
__
.,,,•
..
_.;•.;···
by Brian Hill
Staff Writer
"Last
year at this time, going to ·
the movies was something to get
excited about.
We had Bruce Willis traveling
through time to find out the se-
cret of the Twelve Monkeys; Al
Pacino, Robert DeNiro, and
Henry Rollins living life in the
high tech world of crime in
Heat;
and those kooky buddies Buzz
and Woody delighting us with
their outrageous antics and deli-
cious banter in
Toy Story. ·
.But now, the situation is very
different. Since the beginning of
De~ei-uher, there have only been
iwo movies that I truly looked ·
forward to seeing, Tim Burton's
Mars Attacks,
and
Evita.
That's
it..
. Je~ry Maguire, Turbulence,
Michael, Beavis and Butt-head.
Must I go on?
.
Sure these movies might be di-
verse in content, but don't they
all seem vaguely familiar?
I mean, after seeing
Beavis and
Butt-head
repeats for the past
few years on
MTV;·
do w.e really
need a feature length film about
them?

•·
In the corning months, the only
thing that I am evenrem9teiy in-
terested in, other than
tJ:ie
re-re-
lea~e of the
Star Wars Trilogy,
is
that Paci no/Depp· film,
Donnie
Brasco.
While it may, in fact,just be an-
other crime movie, I always like
to see what· those two actors
bring to a role: .
<
_
•. _. _ ..•
Since there is,nothingtq.be •
gained by stressing· how · bad
movies have been lately; I think I
will
change gears now and
talk
about the film that I thought
was
the best of
1996.
:~o
{
\:
/
.;
:)Poets
~~liiect+1
· 7i9J1
i11
:,}/?}~:\:_.\ -·~ . ,:::.~:,
,soonas
··-:¥..t:?:C_":(.)
ti
~,1
imci·a
}~;:Ifr ..
{'.<'fJOur
-~~
~y~
-? :'· -~-~
;~kn

.
.
(,h);'
•i;r
~
;
:~~
.;.,
\
/·:-./·:\\
·•
No ...
·ttwasn-'-ilD4. :·· ..
-
~
:~~
· ..
>
Though mHli_oµ§ ~f: people
<
. flocked to this
gem,
l
got rioih- ..
ing outofit. Upon vacating_the
theater, I thought about how•
much more I liked the trailer than
. the actual movie. -
But; {digress ..
James Mangold's,
Heavy,
gets
the nod
as
my favorite
film
of '96.
Filmed in upstate New York,
Heavy
tells the story of Victor, a
middle-aged man who has not
been able to make the transition
from childhood to adult life.
His mother· has kept him
chained to the past for so long,
that when she pas·ses away, he
does not know what to do.
1·was.enthralled watching him
in his search for identity.
What makes this movie is the
keen acting done by the entire
cast, especially Pruitt Taylor
Vince, who plays Victor.
Mangold's attention to detail
is exquisite in this film: Every-
thing, from the way that cool guy
strums his guitar while his girl-
friend watches, to the decora-
tions that
adorn
the walls of
Victor•~·room; is so dead-on, true~
·
to-life, _.that· I ·constantly found
myself thinking about how much
JA.O
.
gliinmer·ofhope shines through
likedmyJife
thi
s~ofyi,ewas._d-
....
Continued from
page 11.
Finally, one stormy night,
new life by playing at the bar
.
I o not know
I
its on vi eo,
.
David escapes. . . Running
where Sylvia works and in his
but ifyou ever get a chance io
College of Music, David suffers - through the streets, he is laugh-
relationship with his wife.
see it, do. It's a very authentic
· ·
-
·
· ·1dl ·
h
· ·
·
Th
·
d
·th
d
rep·res_entationsofhow the world .a complete nervous breakdown
mg
Wl
y m t e ram, a soggy
e movie en s
WI
Davi
and is hospitalized.
cigarette clamped between .his
playing in_ his first concert since
works.
'Shine' then fastforwards to
teeth.-Hehappenstowanderinto
his tragic performance at the
To end this article,! am going
modern times,_and David has· a bar, complete with one kindly
Royal College of Music.
to talk about a film that 1 think
grown up. His is still brilliant,
waittress named Sylvia, and alas!
He plays perfectly, to a stand-
ma~ be good. . - .
...
bQta lifetime of fear and n_eglect -
-
~piano. And David finds salva- . ing ovation.
In
the audience is
. ~tis called,
_J\!zcroCosmof,
and _
haS.;
tr~ppe!.l that).tleriC deep , tion.
-- his mother, Sylvia, Gillian, his sis-
It is a close-up fook ~t,t~~ ms~t?
,
:iwiihin",' .'Stuttering incoherently, -°<Sylvia's friend Gillian; played
ter; and old friends who remem-
world:. ._
.. · · - · '
'°':
>
-
. -_
~:-:J:/tfo.vid llstlessiy wamie1i from bythe excellentLynn Redgrave, - . bered the frail liitle boy wit11 the
Theimagesar_efsuppi95ed ~o be institution to ·institution. clicks withp~yi<i.o.nai}.ein9tjqnaj .. magicaltalent.·'.,. ,.._
v: ...
·
spec_tacular,
S?
I you ove
U?S,
Geoffrey Rush plays the adult
level.
. . . . .
•·
. .
: As
the·
appi~use'
iiiJriders
y~u are notgomg to .want to 1U1ss
David, still shockingly thin.
His fragile innocence touches
through the auditorium, David
· tbis.
There is
life
to David, but it's
her, and she falls for him. Gillian
breaks down. Tears are streain-
·. irapped_beneath tile surface'. His is just the ·suppor,t.syst~ni tp'at ing down his face, but bert~ath
. -sister visits him; but he doesn't David needed; inher,'.he finds ·. tile~ ts .the first light of recogni-
even recognize her,· lost. in his
courage·; strength;
and
ah?ve all, . tion •. And something els¢ is evi-
own world.
unconditional love.
He
i
finds ·. denionJ)avid's face .. :.hope .
.
·,
"·
.
,
. . .
MO'l1IBRw/ALB~TlJi(ci6K
~:ofs1nEREYNO~DS : __ ...
.
-
'<FIU;:3)&9:~T
1~,4f.0,7:30&9:40;SUti ;~. 4~:7:00&9:15;
MON:THURS1'.oo,
;15
·-.'.-.,THE:ENGLISH
PATIENT
·W~Bm~
--FR/
i.45;
SAT3:-45&
7:46:SUl:f
3:45,&
7:45;
Mcm:rues
7:-45; ~lllURS 7:45
· SCREAl\1·
wloREw
sARRvMoIIB
a:l
FRI 7:25 & 9:35; SAT 3:45, 7:25 & 9:35; SUN
3:45,
7:10
&
9:20;
MON-TUES 7:10 &
9:20;
weiTHURS 7:10 &
9:20
IOI DALMATIANS
SAT1:3l&SUN1:3l;
-
_ ·
SPACE JAM
Fri
7:00
Sat.
2:30
&
9-.30 Sun, S:00
&
f:00
Mon
&
Tues
9:
I
5 Wed
&
Thurs, 7:00
a
8:45
(Fraoce,
lffl)
l(s
splendor
ia
the
ps.
m
~
Job,
t.e ife and dUlll
dnms
of
iRSec1S
using
desipr
mao
1ms.
• A
MUST!
A BRfAlHTAk'l«i
RB1INDfR
™T MOTHfR NATIJlf
RfMAINS
THI: GREATEST
SPECIAi.
BffC1S
WARD
Of
AliJ9
H_.,_J
. MABOROSI
Fri
9:00 Sat, 4:30 & ·7:00
Sun, 2:30 &
6:45 Mon
&
Tues,
7:00
(lapu.
lffiubJl!nbmlo!f.Ea)
•All
aquiielJ
bmtiM ilm _ follows
Ille
spiritual .
odysstJ
of
Y111111\o,
a
young
~
waaian
ncmring
hai
her
hasband's in-
oplialilt
~
a
pic1DriallDClepoem
astoaishillgYismlia-
tensitJ
and
emolicaal







































































THE
CIRCLE,January
30~
·
1997
·
13
.
...
.....
SGANEWS
SG-1\
,
§potlight
.Name: Christopher Kadus
Year: Senior·
Major: Psychology
Hometown:_Parsippany~ NJ
Favorite Movie: Rocky IV
·
Favorite Food: Stuffed Shells
Role Model: ·oylan McKay on 90210
The past
few
years
have been very
exciting
and busy .,.
·
_.;;.;
--
_ _ _ _
c_m: __
1e _
_Photo'.....;..J_uli_eMars_h_a1_
1 ___ .....;.. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
__,
·
fofChristopher Kadus. Currently, Chris is the President
·
of the Cla~s of l
997.
During his. sophomore and junior .
years, he was the Vice Presid
_
ent of his class.
·
.
.
·. ·
·
·
·
Chris decided to run for President because he felt it
.
was time for some changes. His classmates approached
him with the idea of beginning new traditions,
as
well as
updating old ones.
As
president; Chris attempted to get
more support for the football
·
games by organizing the
Footbal
I
Publicity Committee.
.
·•
·
Another of his accomplishments as President
was
the
recent establishment of the Senior Twenty-One Soci-:
ety.
Th
_
e
first meeting of this society
will
be Feb.
7;
in the
Cabaret. Inconjunction with this event is a
.
Karao~e
Night. Incideritally, this'dayalso marks
·
120days before
·
graduation: This' evenfis for seniors only.
.
:

The Serifor
~
Class Officers
are
looking forward to the
.
changing events during Senior Week. Changes ii} this
'
·
·.
traditic>n
.
includes
'
'inbre
"
evefits'ancfiliemes'
to
piovfde:
;
,'.F
<t
)t
:
·
;
nfo~e
'
siructute.
;

'(::fuis
is
happy with the participation
'
of
.
his class. "I am pleased with how responsive my class

·
has bee
·
n; there have been a lot of newideas," he said .
.!
'.
Other
~ventsto take place before
graduation
inc Hide
a .
Mr: And Ms:
_
Malist contest and
a
Singled Qut to be
among the list
'
ofnew traditions. As president; Chris'
goal
·
was to begin

new traditions. It looks
like
he is
.
succeeding .
.
What'sin
·
storethisspring
.
Hello Mafi~t folk. Welcome back for another outstand.:
.
.
ing spriiig here
:
atMarist Gollege
~
·
HopefulJy, everyone
had an
'
enjoyable holiday season
and
d
.
idri't
eat
too much .
.
.
.
In an'yevent,
'
yourStude!)f Government Associatji:nf ~iil
.
c
·
ontinue
'
to w9rk diligently for you throughout
1997
.
.
.
.
·
:
Firs
(
of all
/
ele9tiop!i
for
next year'.~ Student Gov em-
·
'
::,/
me~
f~v
•!.l Q~@cingplaceoverJlie~~~t
;f
~
,
~
\
ve~l
_
c
f
M~~
'
'
.
:•·
·
'
:
··
shreti:ihirieiritol.1:CTVfortlielive
'
speechrijghtand
;
.
or
·
-
.
. ,
·
.
'
.
.
.
cburse
,
the
'
debate between
"
the candidates for Student
'
.
~ody President(look for tllefirst ever state ofthi
earn-
.
pus address
ir
i
March!). Already, infqnnatitinal mee
µ
ngs
·
have
'
taken
'
place for the numerous
.
elected
·
positions,
but
if
you
·
woilld still like to participate in
·
SGA, feel free
to call meatX2300. ·
·
·
·
·
·
·
· ·
·
·
·
.
The SGA Activities Fee proposal is als<J nearing comple:.
:
tion. After interviewing over
20
differentschools similar
·
·
to Mari.st,- students t:tre realizing'that changes ma/be·
:
.
needed
.
in
the
current
.
fee. Additional funds co'uld be
.
.
provided for
,
clubs a11d campus programming if the
_
pro-
.
·
posal is accepted by the Board of Trustees
.
· .
,
.
.
SGA willa,ls<J
'
cQntinue to represent th~
_
peeds o
(.
stu
::
,
..
·
dents 'to administrative and faculty committees
:
Wefeel
:-
·

.
many
o{
these comnuttees should have a rep~esentative
student to explain the wishes of a
:
typical Marist stu:-
.
dent. Recently, SGA.gained representation on the, fac'-.
~
:
.
ulty Core Liberal Studies Coinmittee, w~ch maj(es
IJ.lcl!lY
·•
of the decisions regarding the core curriculum. We feel it • ·
is important to
'
have s~udent involvement in mid to
up::
'
per level d~ision making about our campus
life.
·
SGA will
.
continue to do the things we've always done.
The SPC
will continue to bring us "exciting entertain-
ment live" and is planning new exciting events for the
·
spring.The Student ~cademic Council will bring us Col-
.
lege Bowl an9 will holding the Faculty of the Year Awards.
The Studen(Life Council will continue to represent the
interests of ·resident
.
and commuter students. And, of
course, SGA will continue to fund and charter clubs
.
Par Mara, Student Body President
. Apply
to become
·
an
AdlllissiOns
Intern
·
:
-
.
·

:
.
15
,
Credits
.
.

.

-
.
.
·.
. .
.
. .
__
_
..
..
.
.

·
• Professional experience
• Travel opportunities
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
ls
for the fall semester of the senior year.)





























































































































































































































r
I '
SPORTS
.
14
; -
-
.
,
.
.
....
.
.
.
.
The
kids
.
Can
s
·
bott,ut2
:.
:
~ ~ 4 ~ ~
··
·
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.
,,

~ ~
·
-
-
~
·
·•
.
.
7
.
have trduble
wirilfi*g
·
Sports With Smitty
·
The Marist College men's bas-
ketball team so far has experi-
enced a bumpy road as they roll
past the haff-way point of the
season holding a mere 3-13
record o,,crall.
These numbers
are
not surpris-
ing as the Red Foxes are a young
·
and Luc~ Pisar6zyk recording a
double-double.
When l..lU came
.
to town, the
Red Fo~es devoured the Black-
birds by shooting 50.9 perce~t
fonn the field and 45.5 percer:it m
three pointers and handing
.
them
their first league loss of the sea-
son.· Otero was on the top of his
game hitting six three-pointers.
As anyone can see by looking
at the numbers, when Marist's
shootingis on, watch out. How-
ever this does not mean the Red
Fox;s can rely on three pointers
to win their ball games.
A Closer Look At •··
.:·
stacey
:
Dengle.r
.
..
·
·
·
Team
:
:
:
Baskbtb~t
·
·
·
.
:-
,-:
,
. '
•·
·
Cla~s:
.
'.
sefuor
·
'.
,
.
".
.

.
team i·ith a lot of new faces. The
Sure, when Otero hits six three
inexperience
is
blatantly obvi-
pointers in a game, it adds acom-
ous. As· I have said in the past,
fort
zone but shooting comes and ·
the talent
is
present but the team-
goes. Everyone
.
has bad nights
work is inconsistent, and as the
and for a team just to rely on th<?
Red Foxes are now in the home
shooting of one player is dan-
stretch of the s
·
eason
it
is still
gerous. This is a big pr~blem f~r
absent.
Marist and shows the mexpen-
Gra.duafo

:
,
.
·"
.
.
Public
Admirf.
The one aspect
to
focus on is
ence once again.
the level of play when the team
as a whole comes together to play
Th~
three
~ins were big moral
basket hall. We can look at the
boosters for the team, the coach-
.
.
three wins that the ~ed Foxes
ing staff,
·
and the fans but the
have undl!r their belt and see that
Red Foxes must use all their op-
when they play
weU;
they play
lions to
try
to salvage this
:
sea-
Stacey startedplayiligbas~etball
·
l'o year~
.
ago~hdJs
:
~~ he'r
.
fif~
year ar Maristdue to ardnjui:y.
·
She

was
.
n!llll~ Manst :f.em:ue
·
Athlete of the year in 1995'"?6: Stllceywas ~lso named to ~e First
.
All
-'
Conference team in 1995-96 and reached theJ9()0 pomt
.
mark
during
.
the same year.
.
·
·
FJvorite TV
Show:
Semfeld
.
]favorite
Singer:
Maryt
Blige
extremel)' well. That's the main
n
problem with this team; inconsis
-
so
'
Favorite
Food:
Bread
.
tency. This team just needs to
Many might believe that this .
·
play solid e\'.ery nig~t ~tit
_
U?d
P
season is beyond hope but if the ·
.
.
·
·
-
·
·
·
':"
,. --
• ·
·

·
'
·
losses shows tha
.
t thtSJUStts
.
nQt
team focuses, concentrates
·
on

.
Favorite
Pro Tem:n:
New'Jersey N~ts
'
~:;r:·:~!7..:.·,~~a·::
.
:~i~~ie:~·~~;,,~t.':
·
.
··
.
·
M
·
·,
.
.
·.
o
.
.
s
.
·
·
t
:
.'M
·.
'
e
·
m
.
.
··
.
o
..
r
.
· .
.
·
a
•.•
b
·.

·
·
·
..
1.,
·
e
·
M.
·,
·
.
.
o
...
m
.·.
·

.:
.
e
.
n
.
·
:
,
·
·
·
.t:
·
Fre,
·
_.
s
..
h m
•.
·
.
. · .
.
· .
.
·
an.·-
·
·.
;
Y
.
..
e
.
.

.
ar
..
·
.
···
.
·
.
.
.
·
.
w
....
.
he~
M~
.·.
·
;
.
fb.
:~~~,-f{?JJ~•
:
.
The
wi
11s that
:
M~stpas
~~~
-
~'-
.
home games they col!ld
~~~
ttie
.
rriulated has
:
cqm~pve~.~y,?n
,
,
·
record and gain someres~ct.
..
"·
':
.
s··
'
iJ
..
'
·
' ..
.
..
<:.<
f
.
.
<
'.•s
..
,
(
,i
:
ii
,-.'.·
.
.
· .. ·
:.
'. ..
.

.
January 2; Mount
!
..
St/:¥ary's o~
.
·.·
/(
.,
.
i;
~:::}:.
, ·
·
..
·
·
·
·
'
·
.
'
·

·
·
'T'l.
.
-
' ·.
f
· '
·.
January 6

and LongJsland Um
::
,:
The erri'otion Jevefi
{~
ilj-eineJy
:
:,
Favorite
Aspect'of
Mans!:
';
:a.:ue
·
p
.
eop
~
i:.
\.
· ..

vcrsity on Januaiy-17 all at the
high on this team
as
·
th
~ys
p~ye
:
:
.
·
.
''
/
.
. .
.
.
.
-
,
.
.
·
·.
.
·
·
.
.
'.i
,' ,
\
..
.
" .

·
~.·,
.
. .
.
!'.!~:':2nf::~e;i;,
r~!li~J:~
f
~~~
llie occasion fortb• big

·
wo~st Aspl!Ct of
Mans~=:~eq,pty
/
B!1l~t1\l!lc'
8
~~~~r:::f;;~:~::;
1~::~6n~~(~!~~\~ ..
~~
.
P~ci~ns
.
.
.
.
·4·fie
'
&atiOnal
'
S~ene
c
Maristhad
'
a prt:lty balan~ed
·
prepare}µst as
_,.
~ar.d
;J
d,r
'.
~
~&
ry
,
..
;
coniini1ed.fromp9g~l5
·
.
.
.
·
·
.
·
·

·
.
·
·
.
,
,
scoring auai:li.wjlli ~_vlayers
game.
This is
inst•
~ q f
~•·
·
ihid
Parci,1fS
i\hd lifi1pif\S"l)tac
·
·
py
N,f
~
§il18.ppl3'
•·
J<4i,

~ifm
~livf
f~(tj,~
t:fC
Scoring in double 'dj!lits.
:n,,ir
·
·
. . . · i
-'"-<
':\
iiVo's
.
etSO,vhOre
'
iii lli,
,
city,
·
:
,
'

?
.
c,
.
,
for a fe1'1
morey~,

.
,
,
,.
.
,
shooting per:c¢r:iJ~g~.froni
;
the
.
The R~d Foxes.' play is
sti
,
ll'in-
·
:
•.
Patriots spoke's~a~
\
D9
.
n
·
i
,
The
.
NFC
:
ltasits
~
ow
.
n)ittlefrjl-
field
Was an OSioQisliin!\
5L9
per-
consistCOt buf
loQ
.
kjpg
,
1>',~~
t.
0
.
·
t:Ow'eiysiiid
the team
'
WQilldhaye
>
>
..
,
.

i
~tY
lhii(lhe
Packe,'s haV
.
• ju~t
·
tentOlld
a resi\0Cta~l'1~85fr<im
.
t~O begiifniri& of llie
.
~ri;lliis ·
·
'
Ilo
;
~eiifunii\Tag\ia
,
b~ ~:
.
.
, \ \
,
,
.
/
\
>
.
,
.
'.
~niere(l
~
'.JJte)'ai,i ljl<(tI,~
;
gl~~r
three-point land. Tljisjs eJ<.actly
·.
team has
.
made ~ometr~mendoµs
'
sued his decision:
,-
.
.
.
.
,

:
·
,
.
·
.· .

/, "
So the Gi-een Bay.J?a~k~rs ~ave
.
.:
l:,rqth~f
i
ii?
:
the
.J\F~.
:
~
.
e_y
\Vlll'
.
what
l\
fad st must do all the
.
time;
strides.
,.
''
"t
think everybody's
·
kind
·
~f returned the Vince Lombardi~ '!>lay' witl'i:the
.
young~r brother
USO
al\ their weapons...

.
.
.
·
.
.
,
.
.
.
.
.
,.•
' f~
.
illg
.'t
JJ<e
~
.
l'c"Vi~g)
i\ji>·
phf to-.its
,
original
c
sj,Ot at
.
~ause .t~ey Jta~e
'
lo
;
.
b~! llie
;
In
the con
.
test
:
versus the
.
J
'.
h~
,
n~w
.
players ai:e stepp
,
tpg
,
'.
ey1ta~le; llllf~rtuJI~telr,
.
~~~le
Lambcini field. Evep Patriots f~~
.
older
-
J>ro!-heMs
·
aJways
_
.
b1gger,
Mount; ihe Re,(FOXei shot 36$ up
.
an~
,
/i~allt~~"1'8g!}~·
.
.u••&•ck~t.J~
,.
~o
,
h~JOf
>
~!Id.
,
.
.
niUSi
airie)hj,i
,
lli0J'a.ck~
IM:'
stronger ru)d
faster.
SO).!•,
"/JU:,
.
percent from
t~e
-
fie)d
and 43.8
-
Too bad It has taken so long.
<.
·
0
"But
there'rn9tll
.
1~g
;
~~
'
~anq9
.
·
ill
·
superBowl-champs is ago6d
Patri<;>t f~ns seem.ed 9pt~rrµsttc
·
from bofond
19'9\
M,nny
Qtero
·
~•.\
/t
A
lot of
~~rs"""';"'
))'i's.
',
.!,;.g.,
;,
S

• · ·
.
..
,
<
.
·
that
theii
team
co~lfl
be
!4e
,
lemn
was on fire as he hit
+ror,6
from
4~
1~
.
JlU[!
t~
Iii'
.
•ff?,:'
.a,,
.
/lo/
.
Tite ·Pats<were
t!Je]ale$!
'M'C
.
to
.
finally bteak
tli• • ~
butm
.
i,ey()nd llie arc
!
.
1gain. MariSl
Chris
S.;;lth
Is
the
C1rc1e·s
i:oac~c It's go,~ to be
)~!"'"5•-
.
team
10
.
take
oft !he big'badNfC
" '
!he
·
en~
lli~Y
~'!'!
pnej,ro~l~'!L
spreatl Out their SCOring willi
fo~
Sports
llditnr
in$ to
.
see what happens,
·
Oiily'tO
'
ksioniped

on like
lhe
):lief a,e:;n
·
~AI:C
,i
l)i~
.
ll<;st
players scoring in d~llble, digits
Bills, Bronc
.
os;
·
Steelers; etc.
,
, •
team i9 the
\\'.()rlcJ
<;ou.t~
¥
J!l
tile
.
Think-about it The
,
last time the
·
AfC, ~utifi

qte en~l~ey \Vtllnot
·
Ru· n
·
.
n:
.
e
·
_
.
r·s
_
-
f _
inis
..
h
..
. ;
£
.
.
ou
.
.
rt
.
.
·.
·
.
h
.
·-
·
.
·~
.
af
MAACs
.
·
~';~~!;\'!g~~~~
bOt!keant~~J;~;.,:;~or
·
,
·
,
-
·
·

terback was
foe
Tllei~man,
.
_
e~ample. TJC9Joi:th~
_
~ t ~
_
of!l
Junio;Eric
Deshaies
and
fresh-
Without
test.
he grabbed
·
the
.
whose
leg
'
still' had·
riot
rrief
,
.
jri
the
.
regular s~on; f?ut they
by
DENNis
Dow»
Staff Writer
Last Saturday, the Meri's track
and field team continued
·
their
·
never ending season when they
traveled to Manhattan Co.lege's
Draddy Gymnasium, to_ com]?Cte
in the MAAC champ1onsh1ps.
The squad finished· a
.
strong
fourth
·
out of seven, just five
points away from
third
pl~ Iona
College. First place was taken
by the host Jaspers with 230
points followed by Rider wi~ 74.
Despite the final: standmgs,
coach Pete Colaizzo was upbeat
with the team's perfonnance.
"I'm happy with the way we
1:111
and competed," Colaizzo said.
.. It was truly a team effort,"
men Brian Jingeleski finished
b~ton in the last leg and gained
Lawrence Taylor
.
on M:onday
feU to the J;i,gu~ m
~~
P
.
~~~offs.
second in their respective back
·
Six seconds, to
C:111)'
the
·
night
yet.
J,lcinald Reag~
\V~
IftheBroncosw~~!ll
~~_!WC
events, while se_tting new Matj~t
.
team to a third place fimsh three
·
President'ari.d nobody knew who
·
tltjngs would have ~ n dtffer-
records
.
Jingeleskicleared
1.r~"
secondsaheadofRider,theteam
.
BillClintonwas .
.
.
.
..
.
- .
·
·
ent
_'
·.
:
.
,"

.
·
·.··
.
in the pole vault as Deshai~s
projected to finish first in the
At
this
poirit,itis

n6tfarfetched
.
All tlte -.vor~ that Joe ~~ath
hustled through the
55-
meter
Northeast Conference.
.
to thinkthat this'streak wiUlive
did to
·
put_the
-
old
AFL
on the
.
high hurdles to finish in 8.20 sec. -
..
-
" .It was reaUy nice beating
on for a
-
good· many years to
map in Super Bowl
ill,
'
has been
onds.
.
[them],"saidMel~, "None of us
come. Just aftedhe Raiders _be-
erased.
Toe
~C is once again
"I wasn't focused on
.
the
..
werefreshandlthink we proved
camethe
·
IastAFC t ~
towm a
the AFL, gettmgno :respect. A
.
·
record," said beshaies, "I j~st
·
a huge point." . .
:
SupeiBowl, a team called
.
Jhe respect they cannoti~ommand,
wanted to run
a
good race."
. .
.
Unlike
.
most D1v1S1on I sports,
49ers f'.ipped apart the rest of the
and do not deserve_until they can
The
·
effort of the day was
the
.
track and field
_
season cov-
80's, with
a
little help from the
win the big game.-
.
handed in by junior Mike Melfi.
.
ers Septem~r. to May de?1and-
Giants and Redskin~.
.
. The Super Bowl w~ not last
.
Due to an illness, the3000meter
·ingafullcomnutmentfiomitspar-
When the
·
90's came around,
Sunday, buttwo weeks before
.
relay team was left without an
ticipants.
.
and San
'
Francisco seemed mor-
that when the.Packers defeated
anchor.
Co]~zzo feels such athle!es ~e
ta)
again; in came the Cowboys
Carolina in
Green Bay.
That is ~e
Moments before the runners
among the hardest workmg m
to put in their two cents worth.
way it has been since I was m
were in position, Melfi, who had
college sports.
.
.
Now ·this season, the Cowboys
the
third
grade, and will probably
just competed in a separate
-The Red Foxes will be compet-
again seem mortal, buy Brett
still be thatway when I am an old
event, was approached by his
ing at Colgate February 1st and
Favre and his troops appear to
man .
coach and asked to stand in.
8th.
I
I
-
.















































































-
15
MCn'.s basketbalLwins three over-bieak
:
ricf\1/ Stand at:
3-13

·
·
.
·
;
>
{ .
.
.
·
.
·
<
.
.
.
'.
C.
·. ·,
·
.
.
foron;Y
·
13 :intso~,;_15 shoot•
Luc>,~
Pisarczyk
fosse~ 1n
·
16,
. :
bySfiv.fW
ANczfK
.
ing..
.
.
.
.
.
but the rest of the frontcourt was
·
·
'St~ff/Wi;t~r -
·
After the game, Magarity was
again non-existent as the Red
.
·
·
<
Y
<
,;
:
·
·
>r
<
·~
-
·
-
·.
··
.
:-
,
.
-
frustrated with the team '
_
s lack of Foxes fell, 85-75 .
.
l
f
~t
~\lee~; Daye Mag~ty l:*a
productivity down low.
coaching
;
milestone;
;
when
-
-
.
the
.· .
.
"We' re not getting any points
'
Red
:
Foxei
-
hosted'St
'. :
Francis
.
inside, it's pretty
.
obvious. You
.
O'rY):
,
oi(ThUr~day
:
_
~ig~t
~
it
'
'
need to have an inside presence
marked theMaristmen'sbasket-
.
and we didn't have it," said the
balfcoach'S
;
30pt~ gameo11
:
ihe
coach.
sidelinesfodhe Red Foxes;
.
The Red Fox backcourt did play
.
·
,
'
'.

Magariiy~s
'
career re~9rd
'
at:
well; the guard trio of Bobby Joe
-
Matisfst09d aU,5.4:-145heading
·
Hatton, Randy Encarnacion, and
·
int
_
Q his terceritenriiaLgame,
A
,
Manny Otero kept Marist within
~eek
:
imd
tw.q
,
lo.sses later, the
striking distance for much of the
.
longtiijle coach
\
is looking
::
ror
game, but the team could not
· soin~ ~igger
/
better contributions
climb out of the early hole.
:
fiom his big rrien;~o
-
prev<mlthat
·
"We're not a good team com-
ovefall record froni slipping be.;.
ing
from
behind,"
said
neath
~
S
_
QO.
> .,,

·
.
.
.
.
.
Encarnacion, one of only two
·
The
.
'96'-/9Tteam
stands at 3-13
Red Fox seniors. "We had some
(2-/jnth~NEC)h~adingintothe
easy shots that didn't go
.
finalrn6ntfroflhe schedule
':
.
down ... (and) they stuck lo iheir
Jh~
St_)•r~ncisTerriers inyaded
press."
:
the McCann ~enter lastWe<:lnes-
Otero agreed.
·
"We're
not an
·
day with an
,
.
titjderinanned and
up~tempo team, and they pushed
;
inexperienced teani
.
.
With ohly
.
the tempo," said lhe guard, who
nine m
_
eri due.
'
to some NCAA
drilled four three-pointers and
rules violations, head coach Ron
scored
I 6
to keep inching his
iGanulin
's
yming squad press_ed
points per game towards double
_
their way to a 13~0 advantage
·
af-
figures, and to push his three-
-ter-,foi1r minutes, and never
===================:::>
point shooting success rate over
;looked backenroutetoan 87-74
.
..
~ - -

.
:
Carlisle Stockton
40%
·
victory.
.
Lucas
:
.
Pisarczyk tosses up
a
shot
in
the win over Army
OD
Jan. 2.
.
.
o.
.
''It's nice Jo
.
get ·that early
conference.
.
.
.
, ..
:
,:
.
.
-
Foxes expecteq top~trQl
tpe
paint
On Saturday night, Maristtrav-
-Ie.ad-:=-c1t
gives you
.i
cu~hion for
Freshman Richardl.ugc>'i;cored
-
in 1997~ Lucas Pisafczyk, Tho~
eled
~
to Staten Isl arid to face
the rest of the galJ}e,u said
26
points,
,
exploiting
;
Marist's
mas Kenney, Sebastian Bellin
?
Wagner.
i
Ganul in
.
in
·
a
-
post'"game press
weakinterior giurie
?
The
fo
_
~r
Red
.
.
_
and pennis Kre,nan--:-:--
.
~orr.i~
.
ined
Hatton and Otero produced
18
and 13 points, respectively, and
Magarity's squad managed
to
close the gap to 73-71 with 3:35
remaining in the game.
The Seahawks won the battle
down the stretch, however,
outscoring the Red Foxes 12-4 in
crunch time .
Junior_forward Bryan Whittle
put up good numbers in only
16
minutes of playing time, but com-
mitted two consecutive traveling
violations to kill the Red
-
Foxes'
comcb
_
ack as time wound down .
;
·
With only ten games remaining
on the schedule, Magarity
knows thai a winning season is
unattainable. He can, however,
hope to teach his young team
how to :,vin
i
_
n preparation for next
_
yem:
.
..
,
.
''We
h~veif t cxp~rienced
back
to back wins;
.
or a road victory
.
yet," s~i4 the
;
veteran coach
,
"We hayc
._
t
.
o
get that break-
i~ip~~~-"
.
;
'
..
-
,
Carlisle Stockton
·,
Beth
Shackel runs the show as the point gua,rd_ofthe Red Foxes.
·
.
.
i
.
:
o1
-~

.1
:"1
.
'.
.
.-
.
-
.
-
'.
.
,-
.
-:
-
.
·
·
,.
FOXDORO,MassachUS(?tts
(A-P)
he w
_
oulq
r1;1.l~
'.;ts early. as
-
:_With
.
'am1iarcells •
.
:
future at
.-
)Vedn¢sday_;.
·
Me11ntjm~ •
.
·
he
·
.has
-
.
~tlke,
.NFL
'
c9mmissioner Pa~l
ban,'ecl
Parcells from negotiating
'I_'aglia~
·
ue p~esid~
_
Tuesday in a _ with any otper'club.
:
.
conference calJ in which _the
_,
)~~port,s
_
h;iye
;_
sp~t1l~ted
_
that
·
coach and the New England Pa-
J;>arcells has alrea(ly d~i9ed to
triots
aired
their contract
take over the N~w,York Jets.
diffe~en_c~
,
_
_
_ .
_
_
-
At Foxboro:Scadium on Tues-
.
_
The pi§PUie involves a provi-
.
day, players
dea~ed.
out
_ .
their
sion
.
arlded to the contract in
lqckei::s b11tcQajd Qf{e.r li~tle about
1996;
,vhict1the
_
t~claimsgiv~
the
·
.
.
.
future of their coach.
it the exclusive right
to
employ
·
Fr~ safety Wil!i~
,
G}aysaid
Parcells
.
for 1997 ifhe wishes to
Parcells didn't
,
talk
.
about his
contiriue,'.as the
_
team's coach or
·
.
pl~ns
'
at t:heir _final_ m~t'ing upon
in
a
co~p~rable NFL.job.
. -
the team's r~turn
'
Jrom J1:5}5-2 l
Parcells
.
daims other
parts
<;>ft~e
Super Bowl loss to Gr~n
.
J;lay .
. ·
contract eniitle him to leave the
.
·
'.'He
talked~~
_
us al?qut
_
the sea-
Patriots '~nd coach another
NFL
son
_
andjust said it ~as
a
~~k
of
team ncxi season. Tagliabuesaid
a seaso11, anQ•
:
he,taJk
.
~d
.
,
about
·women's Hoop~
·
...
'
-
·
- -
.
,.
;_
continued from page 16
the future of the team;" Clay.said.
«Atthat
time, he gave us no in-
dication he· was going.
_
any-
where."
Parcells was heading into the
fourth year of a five-year con-
tract last summer when he asked
Kraft to cancel the final year.
Kraft agreed. Although reports
had Parcells deciding to leave
because of growing
-
tension be-
ball over 23 times in a losing ef-
fort. Against
LIU
the
·
Red Foxes
committed 33 turnovers and
·
against Wagner the
Red
Foxes
committed 21 turnovers.
In the loss to
LIU,
Marist as-
sistant coach Kevin Sherman
said LIU's intense full court pres-
sure caused a major problem.
tween the two, pubHcly, Kraft and
.
=
"We need to move the ball
Parcells said only that tl)ey
··guicker,"Shennansaid;
Weheld
would discuss plans at th.e end
the ball too tong."
of the season.

.
. • ..
Tuesday's meeting took place
with Tagliabue in Lo~
_
Angeles,
-
Kraft and his attorney in Boston,
Please see
Parcells
Oil
p
:
:/4 ...
Marist assistant coach Norinne
· Powers also commented about
the turnover plagues as of late
·for th~ Red Foxes.
"The players must realize that
the ball-is
'
a-gem," Powers said.
"You must take care of it."
The Red Foxes took on the Ter-
riers
.
of St. Francis· NY on Mon-
day January 27th. Results were
unavailable at press time.
The Reii Foxes head on the road
to take on Mount St. Mary's on
Thursday, January 30th.
.
'
The Red Fotes return back to
the McCann center for a three
game homestand starting on Sat-
urday, February 1st against
Monmouth. Game time is sched-
uled for 2 p.m.














































. ·: ;::.STAT
OF-THE:WEEK:·---
., , · . , Men;s
basketball coacti
Davel
· -. •.c. •• : ••.. ,,
t : .,.
--,,:~agaritycoached
his300th
at
· .·:QuOTEoF'IIIE·w~= ._ -.
"· . : .. · .. , · :.
~
·, · .; · : 'The
players niust.-realiz
_
e that the ·
'.-i'h\) ;.,
:.;v:.<i
::•
: ·" :•····.·.
.
.
:.balliS.ageiii>Youmusiia_keccireof
:_::i6i'.
'
:::·:·•
·:/~~;::_~6i~-(~f>~~/i~:
23
:::~~i::
,, :: ;H~g~di;",'SBO'l{TS
>.
18ll\iaj/3Q.1i~~
" .
~~~
·
. sWiffihlersf~re~~~t~;ii~~f,'~~·~naili~i~tts~s
' .. ··.•~rifiiTEii'
·•1a:~~~xli·,,1~ti,~i,iil
'
<
'.1:,:t:t~v;,,;,., .... ,,, ...
\,;/,',,ii, .•• ,.,.,,: · .•..
. ·• · ... , ,s_
if.f.
.
.
:,·"'er
·
c·_
the.RedFoxeshada-memorable·_ ••.toseta.record;-Hehadi.uecoro
:
::,
·
•During
the ~in'terb~ the·Rcif: ... season ;·cThe
'
;firstiJneet

:·~,as;:. :· liin~'io"ilie'i~ooo:.yilrd~n,le;c'/
- Foxes·rneil's s-.v,i~ining antl
~iv-
against
st:
P~ter's \Vh~J#jun_iC>r _. : McN¥s~:s~a,nb(f~9fc:(~fe,a1c;;:;. '
. ingJeam_hadanexcessivecon-
Chris Blackwell-~et:_a··schoQl; · --.
:
.irigtimej:if:lQ:03,:DespiteJhis:;:,
~itio.ning
'
i>rogra01.-The ;R~d ECAO andNOAA·iecord iii
'
~e _
~lli.e~efaiµ(ili,eRedF<>xe-s:iosf/
• Foxes swami
total
ofl57,000 ,
three
meterdive.Inadditiori,
~e:. -:
to;:StJohn's-hy tvigPQirits/120-:::
Yc!fdS~~·tiich't_ran~~rs into:87.-.64 · ni~rB~ndaxt_~dyilllW~~~':,;(}:1.8/,.;'.\/,~~l
:
it((\/,:~;~;:t,.'f)}~':
_
~1l~sm ten ancta half
.
days,-• score 111:th~.~-:me!er:g~ve,:SO/•- :
.
. ,:;_t{-'?.~~11_ tlf<>~gli::',V~~.I9.sk.t9;~t._;'.•.
- w~c~
fae~ght miles.of ~wi~ng. . . th~t-,bo~·h~ -~d 13Ia.cic~~ll :~i!t_ -__ 'l?:~~J}t~.9~il~~;,p~!: ~01_1ftd~r,ic~ .. :
.
_eacpday:HoV1eve~,thistrammg ·be_abletp compete.u1th~J)JV1--··. -.:~11µse,.t~~c:an~m9~t~ta ::

•- helped.Marist have a su9Cessful
sioriirneet,atPrincetorioilMarch .•
~ig ™8Heain".th,~rijv~ ca,r(de~
,
.
>
. and record, breaking season .. _
.
1445. .. : :
.
-
·, .
,
.. · . :--;
:fea(
Riq~i-."~ fre~hman -Treve>r
'1be•winter iritetcession is an
M~st'snext meet' was against , -· Baclu said. ·;; ;-,_·_) ,/ _•.:
:
- -•·
.
. ·
.
-__
.
-· absoiut~ necessity for 'the Metro the Loyola Greyhounds; .t~y~la .
·<·,
V~Wagnef
'vie':V,i
$is
meef::
Atlantlc Athletic ·conferente was not as difficult as
St·
Peters
.
aifa
confidente buildir; ·The
rea'- :
. chafupiO!)Sh!pS,';. coach, Larry according to the swimmers;_ ;
c°,'
.
_son: ~~Yc·-V~~Wa.gri~(~~ys_:th_i~
ii'
VanW;tgner_'said._ . _ · · _
•.
, :, ,
.- "Loyola,was·an,easy,mee~-it -·:isl:l~ause·l}~J(t:tci~Yal~@s~as:':-
VariWagneihad the Iled:Foxes
will
help
us
prepare,fortliecham;,
,tlie~Reci. Foxes ''most:difficulf -
t i _
OCUS
in on_tw_d main_ dbj_ecu_\ies_· .· . pionship/'-sophomore WHliajl
meet
. , . . '.
.
, ·.
dudng,
the
break/The
first-vaii- .·
Brennan said. "But- we.,_can't .. •
;j::11e)Red
0
·F~?Cesi~t
f~t:~f.,,.
al;lfo·th.atVa~Wagner,wanted,his
count them outbecause-we will-••
this,season:is)igainstFof4ham;
·:
swimmers to concentrate on was -have, to. rai;e _
against theniin the
~ordham •
hi1s
'
_;()ne ·
ofahe • best
that h·e wanted to raise the-level
championship.-''_ · _

.
_ - _-·--.
p_iogr~ !D'the.Atiaiitic Ten;.Jri
· ·
:
ot: organ'ic condiHoriing,of
e:vei-y
-
Maristcan11ot diSCOll~t-Loyol~- ·-: :ag~i9-~m/they: :are)n',the. ,J,'op,
: '.
. ~thl_~~te.in
th~
prograri:l. Secondly, -becausethey.,werethird Oin the. ..:Fiye_ih:th<fECA.Q.VanV{agner/
. y~itWagn¢r : _::·wan~ed. .to MM~last season, Iri addido~
C

see~
:
9!is'·~~t~n:a optiµustic ':,
s:ti:engtheD' M:arist's .confidence . th~Greyhounds havefour
swinF ·
·
.
view.
-'It-
wilt let him:to decide -
-
• -·
leveLBut above all these objec-
mers that. coulcLpose
a
.slight .
which
events
his
swinuriers
will
tives; Van Wagner wanted the
threat to ••Marist;- However, : . compete __ in:tlte champtonsl:lip;.
Red Foxes to center on the_ Van Wagner does nofseem.to
be
Also,itwillaUowtheRedFoxes
MAACchampionship.
wonjedabout:t:,;oyola.:.
to./get-one lasfch'ance to
"The main point I want •my
"Loyola does have
four
out-
-strengthentheniselves in :their
swimmers to zone in on is ·the standing swimmers, so on a indi-
events.
·
·MA
Ac
C
h a m p
i
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''This}ast
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Van W'agn'er said . ."It should 'be . with us but: not. as·
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team
H
expetjence ~d)t win
be
a
good .
easicrlo focus ()nit
now
because -. Van 'Y:agtj~r)aid;: \-,;;:;_:_:
r' .· . ·_
jlllilpiilg off point for
th~·MAAc .
.
lisle Stockton
we are closer to it'illen · wewere
The
nextmeef that the Red Foxes : cljanipionstVan Wagner.said. ·.
Div~tr
,Chris' Blackweil rew;cte the-record books·at St.Pet~r's fn .
in Sept~
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_ compet~~)n w~s aga!_nsf-J!;
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clisa:pl)~iifi.,ijiijf ',


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