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The Circle, February 13, 1997.pdf

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 49 No. 13 - February 13, 1997

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by BENAGOES
-

Copy Editor
acade~c computi~g. ha~ing · a_
. Wirifield said she is pleased
more user-friendly site is onlY. . with)he prbduct.- . -·.
. -· .
. one of the advantages.
.
_
. .
_ -
· "[The site] is
ni<><Iern~
clean, so.:
..
·
. ''One'important aspect of the · phisticated, and·: repf~sents ·
· ·The v.-orlci will see Marist Col- . new, ·site is that:i( caters -to a .· Ma:ristin_ amuch mote positive
Icgein a fresh perspectiye by the· broader audience," -- she' said. - way,~• she• s.tjd. · /'Visually, the
end:of this month rudinal revi-- ;"The
·
institutional page has to · pictures represent Marist of
io-
si'?ns_ a_re
_
l_Iiadeto the C()llege's
play to slower m,od~ms because · day. They show our students and
new insti~llt!0nal web site.
..
we ,want those folks to coine·:in
our faculty interacting.~'. .
.
.
The in_stitritiqnal page has bee~ . and see what .we have to offer.'~ _ M!lSsie said tipdati!}g'
the
site
. renovated three times withillthe
.
-_ Academic ·computing put the.
·
. \Vasjmportaiit because many
past few years
·
·as technology has. final touches on the site; but was
people use its resources.
advanced. Ir-will be introduced
notinvolved with.the initial de-
Hesaidhereceivesbetween30
in early March, and it will replace
velopineht.
_
_
and 50 electroni~ m#iings
per
the . _ existing
site
· at
According toAnn Winfield, di-
week as a result of the site..
·
www.marist.edu; which has rectorofeni'ollnientcornmunica-
"Mostof them,''-he said,-''are
drawn criticism lately.
-_- lion, sh~ first approached anin-
from prospective· students,
· Tim Massie, chief college rela- _ dependent designer to create the
alumni,· reporters, and commu-
. ~- .•. lions officer. said he is pleased
site in order to meet time con-
nity people interested in Marist
with thl' new site.
- straints. . _
_ ·
events.'' · ·
''The first site was not graphi~
The designe~ created the first
He said the changes willhope-
cally appealing,'' he said. "Now.
and second pages of the site,
fully entice more people to look
on this second site, there is too_
which-were rejected because
of .
at Marist.
much information, On the·new. a sudden change in focus.
''To be~ competitive site you
one there are only six broad cat-
Winfield said she then ·ap-:
don't want people to ·getbored
egories that make it easier to use
proached academic computing to - with
tt,"
Massie said. "We· want
and navigate."
firush the site; after realii;ingJt
people to say. 'Wow, this is re-
According · to Barbara would be tooexpensive to con-
ally new, let me explore with it a
McMullen. acting· director_ of ··
:
tirme with the designer.
little bit."'
_,.,
-
.. _:Sr,oaTS~ ..
· Swimmin:g<. hosts·, MAA C
championships today --
PAGE
16
Pho10 courtesy of •Stalen Island Advance
Susan Molinari will deliver Marist's 51
st
commericement speech.
Molinari
to
speak
at
51st
commencement
FasJjJqµ.
·
~~§.!gg.
,
§fp{J~~ts, ~~r~:r~£9gtjjti9n
;)>~~l>,A,RYI, ~CI½~-•
.
GhD~,~adus,_s~nip~class ~resk
•··

--. ·
.
s ___ -_ •. _
·
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,
-. :~·,:''''

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·' ·,:
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__ .
·
:
.
,-_
-
,
c···
·1
·
·c
.. ,,
da
-_ ·
dent, saidhed1d not11nmed1ately
-·- -~--~~¥-~
-
:~~;~-1~-~~-~~t:;;
~
; i ~ : ~ - -
-
-
by'
CHR~OPHt;
_TifoRNE :_ '
sioilalS ih the field/who ha~e·
.
·_ :; , I<risten Dreyer Said a cornpeti-
lJ;S. Rep;' Susan Molinitfi, has .
:
_Mai-~·menµoned the: Republican
Copy Editor
. ~n-r¢ccignized
by
their-peers,"
.tio'n'lik.~"thls pushes stiid~nts,to
agreed to
_
give this year'.s
COill:'
'C:onveritiori; ·_ -_. ·.• ·..
. ..
C:sordas said: ··:',,:. ·
-:-
:-;:;.;1,:
.
-
perform
theirbest:·\· ~
-
::>:
.
_
1 _
:niencement adclress, ptittfog an __ --
0
Allfour[class] officers like the
-
~-
_ This is the secdnd year. of the
- "[IQ g~ts people motivated; to.
,
uniisualiy early encl to.the search
idea/-Kadus said. "She's a na-
F,or si_x-Junfor·design sti.Iderits,
CFDA Scholarship Competi:.
get
IJS
to work llarder to, reach-
for a graduation speaker.
C
••

tiorial figure with a lot of cred-
theopportunity to display:their · tioir; which salutes excellerictC our ftilf potential/ Dreyer said.
While mqst pursuits
for
a · ibilityrightnow.''.
.
-
work in front
of
respected
pro-
in student creativity and design
_
. ?Jrinadeit an inspiration .to
po
·
speaker cairyon _until early . :
,
J\:1ara said on_e of the first
fessionals will soon become re-
al:,ility.
It
is offered
fo
a select-
beitef because it is a competi- . spring, Molinari~ a Repupltean . things that grabbed him abour
· ality:
.
_
.
. __ _
-
number.ofinyiteduniversity-:
tion:" · '
. · .
_
_
· .
·
congresswoman -froni ·New Molinari was he liked the idea of
. Jessica• Hipolito;• Melissa . level schools
wttli
credib!e fash~ -
. Csoidas said the greatest im-
York's 13th District, accepted the
having a woman speaker.
Graybill,.Holly Munger, Jaime ion programs .. _,.___
_
poitance
of
this•competttion.is
invitation late last semester.
"We haven't had ·a woman
· -Frost,J{ristenDreyer, and Paul·
Csordas said µieCFDAsaw:
the recognition
it
bring~, _ .
. .
TiJTIMas.sie,Marist'schiefcol-
·speaker for sorne--time,'' Mara
Schhut
will
represent Maris! Coi-: · the presentation of thedesigns
.
.
"It's great that they.recognize Jegerelatio1:1s officer,_ said many
said.
_ _ _ _
_
. _
legejn the Council.of Fll.Shion . as tlie crucial
.
efoinentin this
the
.
[fashfon design] program,
pe·ople have
_
their eyes o~ --
Mass_ie said Molinari is also a
Designers
of
Amenca
.
(CFDA)
competition,: __
_
_ _ _ .
, and• that they recognize the tal-
M<;>lipari as shempidlyclirribs to : goodchpi~e because the college
Scholar-;hip Competition for the
"J>reseri~t1011:is what they ...
ent
o(the students,'' Csordas
the top of the.political_l~dder.. . . has ~ot h.id a pqiiticai speaj<erin
1996~97.acad~micyear..
_ considereclthemo~timportant,''
said.· -
"She'sarisingstar,bothinthe many .years; Sen. ·Alfonse
_
_
According to._ Elizabeth Csordas ~aid.
-
. _ _
_
"
Th~ awards
are
granted to JO Republican
I>artf
ancf in. Con- -. b'Ainatowas
~m~
Qf.the last po-
Csordas; director oftheFashion
__ ·
As
'for those students in- -
full~tinie students in their junior gres~," Massie said. ~sh~'.iS: pru:t
litical leaders to)end off these-
---Design/.Mercharidi5-ing
Program,
\iolve<(Holly.Muriger said she
yeaf~ -_
based on -tnerit· after pre-: . of.one -of Washington's -power ·
_
nior class, back in the late· 1980s.
the_
CFDJ\
is a group of . re-
·
is glad to
be
a part of this ~om.:-
seating a portfolio, and
a
com-
couples," headded, alluqing
·
to
spected fashion design special-
petjtion.
_
_ _..
__
_ _
.
· ·
plet~ application. Last year's
her marriage to Rep. BHl Paxon
ARISING:STAR
· -ist~.
_ _ _
''It really is a gr~t experience,
amorintof each scholarship_ was
(R-NY).
<
,
_ _
_
-
._ . __
"[It's]-an·otganization whose
somethingthatithinkwotildbe
-$3,000. The. amount of the
SttidentGovernmentPresident.
.- Speaking at
_
the R~p~bli~an
memlicrs are recognized prof es-
helpful!" Munger said.
-
awards vary ea£h
year
b_ased on
Pat_ Mara said '.this year's early..-- Convention. may have launched
What quality
is
most important to you when
pursuing a romantic relationship?
Appearance: 16
Intelligence: S
Personality:160
Senseofhumor:48
Other:27
The Circle
conducted an unscientific poll on Feb. 2- Feb. 9. 1\vo
hundred fifty six students were asked this_week's question.
See relaUd
artkla, page
S.
company involvement and dona-
decision was largely the resultof. Molinari to the forefront of the
tfons.
student· collaboration. :
·
· · ·political arena, but she was
·
far
Muriger said it does not matterc
· · Mara said the i~ea of pursuing
from ·being a political unknown
who wins. Taking part in the Molinari first hit him lastAugtist
·
before that.
competition is reward enough.
while _he .was watching the Re-
·
Last
December,
Glamourmaga-
"No matter who wins, the fact
publican National Conveqtion.
zine named the 38-year-old con-
. that
the six of us got to compete
Bob Dole chose Molinari to give
gresswoman "Woman ·of ·the
with other schools is the impor-
the keynote speech during the Year,'' and
in
1994,71mecal1edher
tant thing," she said.
convention.
·
one of .the 40 most influential
Dreyer said if even one of these
While researching the possibil-
people under 40.
students wins an award, the im-
ity of l;>ringing the -congress-
For the last two years, Molinari
· pact on th_e Marist design pro-
woman to Marist, Mara dis<;ov- -has been the highest-ranldng
gram
will be_ huge. -
ered that one senfor had a per-
woman in the House leadership
· "If
one student wins from sonal connection. The student's
and was reelected to a fourth
Marist, it will
be
a big deal for the
father is editor of the
Staten
ls-
term last fall with 61 percent of
Fashion Design Program,"
landAdvance,Molinari'shome-
the vote.
Dreyer said.·
town_ newspaper, and knows
Her rising stature has given this
According to Csordas, Marist's
Molinari.
mother of a I-year-old daughter
participation in the CFDA com-
.Mara then proposed the idea
a chance to tackle some high-
to the senior class officers and
profile issues.
Please see DESIGN, page 4.
President Dennis Murray to get
their feedback.
Please see
MOLINARI.
page 4.






































































































































































































































































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-~Rli~iliif1l
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i1ii11iI1I
·
February 13, 1997
,
·
-
·
..
-
·
.
·:
__
JurY
' ·
awardi
:
{
~2l5
f
~fil1(irf
f
1ij
?!
~~i(i]i~
-
~
::.
damages
to
Bt~wti~atI(.t (3Qldffiaiif.~1~ie§~
J
•.;
Bothparties contiiiue to
)
zj,
~x,6rbita~t(J//
1
~(~
§i
~
~i6W;d
i
tJ~t;z:£~i:f
,~rt~
dispute Simpson's worth
'.-
rJ~s7~~st
:
t~~~;~~ii:~fii~
~Ji1
.
.
against ~impson,
.
they_
said
.
Jas
t;
~eek
,
.
.
·
.
.
-
•·
·
-
-
·.·
_
·
.. ·.
.
.
.
·
·
-
·
.
. ·,
·
.
willhavetopayaprice)nordertohold
thathewas$9
.
3millioriindebt;
:"
·'·
' .
SANTA MONICA
,
.
CAiifornia
.
:

off creditoridlidn~
•.
the appeal process,
.
.
His ilt!Qrney
s
also deni¢'d tha(his fu:-
.
(CNN) '-The
jury
in the O.J. Simpson
·
the deferidarit mus
(
show th¢ ability to
ture earnings would
be
wo.rth
,
anywhere
civil trial reached a verdict Monday
pay his bills. Usually,adefendant must .
near
plaintiff estimates, arguing against
.
concerning punitive damages against
_
put
,
up
a:
bond equal to 150 percent of - estimates that his autograph is worth
the foimerfootball star, deciding that
the jury award. .
.
.
• ·
·
.
.
·
$(JO.
-
·
-
·:
·
he must pay $25 millicinto the families
Simpson niusfhave coUateral to back
·· Neither estimate
:
includes his retire.,,
-
·
of Nicole Brown Simpson arid Ron
up such a bond. Finding so much col-
ment and pension funds, which caimof
Goldman
,
$12.5 million each.
_
lateral could be difficult; since he
stil)
be
_
seized
by the court
.'
Simpson!s de_,
;
The jury's decision on punitive dam-
:
6wes legalfees fronf his civil, criminal
fense li~ts the retirement funds
·
atjust
-
-
ages, which
are
intended to punish the
_
and child custody_trials,
,
ilot to mention
'
over~ million.
·
AC:::NN-TimeMagazine
-
·
defendant for
.
malicious wr~mgdoing
,
the$8.5 miHion compet1sat<>rydarnages
investigation found Simpson
'
s net
-
came after about five hours of delib-
already levied in the civil trial .
.
:
·
worth lobe about $2.Smillioil; m6st:6fit
erations. Last Tuesday this same jury
Simpson's lawyers
are
likely to argue
in pension
-
and r~tirementfunds.
, -:·;.
-
·
ordered Simpson to pay the Goldman
·
that
the punitive damages are unreason-
The CNN-TimeJnvestigatiC>n
·
also
family $8.5 million in compensatory
able.
In
court, during qte punitive dam~
found that since 1993; Siinpson
has
sold
damages:
.
ages
'
phase ofthe
-
civiLtrial; Simpson ·. most of his property;
·
with the.exception
.
However, their verdict Monday is far
·
attoniey Robert_ !faker
·
said
·
Simpson
is
·
of ~s house

and}i
.
~~
-
Fr~pcis,c~ cof
._
·
from final. "Excessive damages are
.
'.'in effect; without
ass,ets.
Herice; puni-
doinmium where his elderly mother lives;
·
grounds for appealand a reversal in
.
tive damages are
totally
inappropriate
- Price also sounded *eptici~m towards
manystates
,
"CNNJegalanalystRoger
in this case."
· ·.
.
the plaintiffs'
_
high
.
estimate of
Cossack
_
told audience members
.
on
The prosecution argued the
_
opposite.
Simpson's worth
.
"For the plaintiffs to
CNN's TalkBack Live Monday.
"Mr. Simpson has a lot of money, in the
_
say that this maii has the possi~Hity of
-
"If
they came out with some
.
thing
neighborhood of many millions of dol
.: ,
making $25 million
in
the future seems
that was clearly out of scope, some-
.
lars," said Daniel Pe~ocelli, the attor
-'
problematical
.
· ·
.
,
times the judge will change it himself.
ney for the family of Ron Goldman.
I don't see where he
'
s going to do ariy
Or the parties can get together and
The plaintiffs say Simpson's assets are
endorsements except possibly for
agree" on a lower payment, he said.
worth $15.7 million'. They include his
knives," Price said.
Civil attorney Howard Price agreed.
.
future earnings
.
in that
.
estimate -
·
a
"HistoricaIJy, it's quite common for the
plaintiffs'
.
celebrity marketing expert tes-
trial court, if not the appellate court,
tified that Simpson would be worth $24.5
to cut down punitive damages be-
million, ifpaidouttoday
.
cause punitive damages quite often
·
According to the defense, Simpson
Correspondents Jennfier
Auther,
Jim
Hill_ and Greg LaMotte contributed to
this report
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Musgrave leaving NAS
·
A after three decades
Turns
'
down trainer posfrign, now
·
looking Jor
·
other
opportunities to sparkpeople's interest in space,sciences
;
·r
CAPE~~AYERAL,
fj9rida (CNN)
;'
Hubble Teies2bp'e.
·: ;
:,
,
.
,..
.
.
.
.
.
.
-
.

_
-:-
,
~tory
Musgrave, a fi:ee spirit a
_
nd
·
Musgravejoined NASA'
fo
1967~ur-
one
.
of NASA's
·
most
_
experienced as-
ing theApoHo progfam, but had to
.
wait
tro,nauts
,
announced Monday he is
until I 983 fcir his first space mission,
_: j
leaviQg ~e
.
space
·
program after learn-
.
aboard
.
the·shuttle
:
, -_
_

.
- .
.
_
_
_
:
iiig
he
would never make another
He also holds twc;> records,
_
o!'le as the
space flight.
·
oldest personto·go into space, theother
·
NASA officials told the astronaut a
a lief.or the most flights by
an
individuaL
yearagothataNovember 1996space
· ·
·
·
·
·
.
.
shuttle rnissionwould be his last; and
Musgray~. said

aith.ougli\e\vould
re.,affirrn~ that decision last week
.
hav~jurnped at the
c:hanc~
'
9f
flying in
·
space again,-he was not unhappfwith
Jtlty to stay \Vith
NASA helping to train
new shuttle crews, saying he wanted to
p~rsue new
,
proj~~-
.
.
.
<
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waritednie to stay and·work,
:
..
butl'
in
a
'
flier?
iie
'
saii:l
'.
'~I
know
.
my
caii
/
"
.
ing in space is no
_
t c
·
omplet~; It;s going
to
move into
a
different realm
.;
'
-
.
-
'
.
.
_
'
Musgrave also said he wants to
make
.
the most of his life after NASA . .
.
"I've alwayswante9 to expandniyho-
rizons, Iiv~Ufe'to theJullest Ican. I°Hke
to _do the m<>~t \Vith \Yhateverhand I've
been
·
dealt,
.
-
~hat's the important thing.
Make the
best
use of the
'
opportunity
you get."
_
·
"Storydoesn 't necessarily fit

the decision.
·
·
··-
·
_
.. -

· ·
·
the mold when most people
.. ·
"I'm
upbeat about
i
t.
i
ac
c
ept
)
t/' he
"S
_
pace needs toget
:
t~rnedinto
·.·
··
_
_
think.of the steely-eyed original
-
said
.
.
"rve
had one iietk ofa ti111e of
it.
.
seven astronauts
.
Hi
brings a
I've been able to do.this for 30
.
years."
art, itne~d$ to be c:ommunjc_citfid,
free spirit philosophy
to
the
·
Musgrave adrruts
fo
heing out of the
·
-
if
·
needs to
.
Ee expressed;
'
••
:
whole thing."
· ·
-
_-
_
.
ordinary;andhastaU
_
ced
_
freelyabouthis
-.- .-...
·•-•·
·.
belief in theexistericeofextra
~
terrestri-
.
.
SroryMtisgrave
.
David
~=:o:::s:~1!s_
.
.
ghl
.
.
als .
.
He has trihi.
ed
.
tq C?I!lID
,
u~Icate ~ith .
.
astronaut
them during ·s missions llS~ng
_
telepa.'.
thy~ but has reporte~
_
no
·
~~~cess.
.
-
_
·
"It
\Vas not my decision," the 61..:year-
.
old Musgrave said.
"It
was not a deci
~

sion lcould
make."
·
_
.
_
Musgrave has made six spaceflights
-
and had
'
a 30-year careerwith the
:
space agericy. He has conducted medi-
cal experiments in space, deployed a
:
defense department satellite and led
·
the mission in December 1993, that did
.
the first round of repairs on the
_
David Leestma, director of flight crew
operations at
NASA's Johnson Space
C:enter, said
·
Musgrave has a different
_
attitude than most astronauts
.
"Story doesn'foecessarily
fi.t
the mold
·
when most people
.
think
of
the
:
steely-
eyed original seven astronauts," he said.
"He brings a free spirit philosophy to
the whole thing."
Musgrave turned down the opportu-
Musgrav~
s.ud
he was con!lid~ring or:
fers to host television programs on sci-
ence, and
_
wanted to find ways of com-:-
municating the romance of spaceflight
_
to the public.
''There's five lifetimes tif work out
there that people want ine to
·
do with
them," he
.
said. "Space need~ to get
turned into art, it needs to be communi-
cated, it needs to be expressed:''
_
The Weekend Weather
_
Today:
Mostly cloudy. High 37. Low 19.
Friday:
Sunny. High 41. Low 34.
Saturday:
·
Sunny. High 46. Low 36
Weathemews
Inc
.














































































Greg Moses, assistant professor of philosophy, recently released a book entitled
Revolution of Conscience, which portrays Martin Luther King, Jr. as a thinker and
philosopher. The above picture has been taken from the cover of his book.
Professor portrays MartinLuther King, Jr.
as philosopher and thinker in new book
byTIM
MANSON
Asst. Editor
Moses, who has recently been doing
work with the Praxis Project at Marist,
helped coordinate a set of seminars en-
Journalist, doctor, and professor are a
titled
Prison. Workshop on Spirituality
few of the titles assistant philosophy pro-
Today,
where Marist students will have
fessor Greg Moses has held. Now, as an
an exchange of ideas with a group of in-
author, he has found another way to honor
mates from the Green Haven Prison.
one of the most influential figures in
Dr. Mar Peter-Raoul, assistant profes-
Ameriran history.
·
soi-·of religious studies who works with
. McDowell create·s nationally acclaimed website
· Student interns wiih International Radio and Television Society
by
JENNIFER FEMMINE.LLA
Staff Writer
While other Marist seniors have been
anxiously searching for jobs after gradu-
ation, Mike McDowell has been hobnob-
. bing with the big wigs from television and
radio. ·
Last year, McDowell did some indepen-
dent study work with
Leo
MacKenzie, who
had a connection to an executive at the
International Radio and Television Soci-
ety
(IRTS).
McDowell and MacKenzie invited the
executive to a lunch at Marist, where they
mentioned they believed IRTS should
have
a
web site. Three months later,
McDowell received clearance to create a
page. Over the summer, with Marcia
Christ, professional lecturer of advertis-
ing, McDowell began the page and an in-
ternship with IRTS.
McDowell's web site for IRTS was
named a "Site of the Day" by Six Pack To
Go, an internet site that lists six sites it
·recommends on the World Wide Web.
McDowell said he felt especially proud
of his website.
. ''The site was listed along with one cre-
ated by Microsoft, who have expertise in
this area," he said.
McDowell interns for two days a week,
one day in Manhattan, and another on
campus updating, getting research and
confronting problems. As another perk
to his job, not only does McDowell set
up speakers for conferences, he also gets
to attend the conferences and make valu-
able connections in the television and ra-
dio business,· even though his internship
is not directly related to this field.
· "By simply showing a WPIX executive's
secretary something small on America
On-line, I was given a meeting with some
' executives to talk about possibly making
a web site. The opportunities presented
are fantastic," McDowell said.
McDowell said he is one of an eight
member team.
"I
feel like
I'm
part of the organization.
I'm part of IRTS," McDowell said. "My
experience is an exception to the rule,
though. Very few internships will allow
you to meet the range of people IRTS al-
lows, or work on such a level."
Barbara McMullen, acting director of
academic computing, said she agrees that
internships like McDowell's are rare.
'They require forging a special relation-
ship with these companies. Students
have to seek out these opportunities," she
-said.
In 1995, CAUSE, the association for
managing and using information re-
sources in higher education, ranked Marist
tied for second as the most technologi-
cally advanced college in the nation. Tim
Massie, chief college relations officer, said
students like McDowell are the substance
behind the words. .
"It's wonderful to claim we are one of
the most technologically advanced col-
leges, but we also need a product to show
for it," he said. "When students like Mike
achieve something like this, the college's
reputation is enhanced by proving that
we can attract intelligent and talented stu-
dents, and the student also benefits by
learning a craft that is then marketable
when it comes time to find a job."
McMullen said she agrees with this
statement.
"We are in the business of education,
and our customers are our students. If
they are not benefiting from our accolades,
we are not doing our job," she said.
Although countless books have .. been
Moses on the Praxis Project, said Moses
wrfucn· about the life and· works of Dr.
does things'on campus that have a sig- .
Martin Luther King, Jr., Moses has taken
nificant impact. ~he also said King was a
an entirrly new approac;h. l:Ie is portray- . man who voluntarily lived in· the slums
.
.
K"
· · ·
h"l opher and thinker
as
and that Moses' involvement in the Green

.· · .:
• . ... ·
·s·. , ...
.
,
.
. ~~os~~ft61hslakflats~*er,fo'hliJ?bok. lf,;,1en,;p~.o)ec
.... ri~,,wha. Iw:~~s.M~'s.es'.and ·, ;
'.:'M·
·
...•.
r}A;
;, \
RI·
y ·.
1
J'~'
Revoiution
~if
Conscience \' ··
"
' ' . :
King smular. . ·
.
· ·
.
·
..
r
1
r· ··.
1
t ·. ·
!L
i
· · ·. ·
·
· · ·· · · • · ·
· · · · · ·
· '.'I-t's· · o·n·e· th·.·. in. g· to'p.· hilosoph. i.ze, bufit_'.s
· · ' ··'"""-""""
=·=
""'-='·
w.
·== .
.
"I
think it's time we reevaluate King as a
philosopher; which
·hasn't
been done re-
another •.to.go. o. u. ·•t. t.here and live it," she
K.·•
..
1•_.~·
) J f ~
..
v· ..
J;·.·'·.1.;'11
cently,'' Moses said; .
said. "H_e [Moses] works in proximity to
i
"
.. ~ ,
!
Moses said he discovered King as a
those who suffer deprivation."
~ -
~~f
.,,.,
1
philosopher.while looking for a topic for
Raoul said she thinks Moses' new book
his doctoral. dissertation.
·
is compelling, passionate and perceptive.
"rwas
looking for a thinker who took
"He gets to the many-layered King,
American problems seriously enough to
which is far more profound than the
'I
have
_ . _
think systematicaHy about them,)) he said.
a dream' King," she said. "He [King] had
· "And so, whose thought maintained a
a dream, but he also knew the nightmare
· relevancy and a contact to the ki.nds of that is America:'
·
crises
we
find ourselves in this country."
Please see l\fOSES, page 4 ...
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4
THECIRCLE,February
13,1997
·
M
,
.
.
0
i
::
;:
~?'.
i
.
,
,COi/fi
>
·
,
':"~_.
:
C6mirillriit)'
walks to raise money
·
[
;
~~1
Mt~
·

.
J:4<
·
<r
·
·
·· .
•.
i
s:
yeart
\
~~
~
·
ph_t
.
~~
.
nan:Q
N
~
¢k phi
-l
i
m
s
ofa
.
;
;,;
J
'.
Ilslni
-
.;.
-
-:,{,,/
~;..~
-_--
'
1mpressr
'
1>hy
i£'
~aid'
-
inthehl'ii
;
periia11s mo
jOpearcm
f~hture in
ti
>
Moses
sat
'
narrowed
.
Jrn(g was
f
v
idiml int
'.
'.;;
••king
vj
;
tativc: to
dr
·
p
r
e,s
_
i~e
·
t
black philo
·
S
Mosl's sai
his
.
_
rc:a,lers
:
Kirig, in
tcfiri
hin1 :111,1 his
t
·
;
/"
:
'I
\\'l)Uld
Ii
1
ers]to
uric1e
·
better and
;
f
i
~
f
~
lhin
.
~
-
Desi gn s
eI1ts se ecte or competition
.
.
. contillued from page I
.
sign program has also been
asked to participate
in
yet an.,
other competition.
petition is a great honor, given
the few number of schools that
can act11:ally take part.
''The Fashion Group Interna-
tional has now invited Marist to
their scholarship competition.
"
Csordas said.
,
''Then~ are only 12 schools that
have h,!en in
_
vited," Csordas
said.
The winners in the CFDA
scholarship competition will be
announced in April.
·
Accon1ing to Csordas, the de-
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O
1 7 We$lffll
Pw1ic Airlines
for American
·
Heart Association.
-
by
~GAN
St;
JollN
.
Staff Writer
'
Although spring is
·
not yet in
sight, many people
~e
preparing
-
·
to head outside for a good cause.
The American Heart Associa-
tion is holding America's Great-
est Heart Walk and Run
Jar
the-
Dutchess region on
.
Saturday,
Feb.
22
at
9:00
a.m. The annual
walk is a fund-raiser for
.
the orga-
nization,
.
wh.ose
_
goal
·
is to pre-
vent and combat heart disease
and strokes. Profits from
·
the walk
go towards research and educa-
tional programs.
Joan Nies, secretary
.
at Marist
Institute for Public Opinion, is
chairperson for the event. Nies
said she became involved in vari-
ous charities as a volunteer, but
she was recruited to become a
member of the American Heart
Association
.
"I am overseeing the entire
event, along with many other
dedicated volunteers," Nies said.
"Many Maristparticipants will
also be helping out.
"
The Marist Milers, a group com-
prised of students, staff, and fac-
ulty, will be walking for the As-
sociation. Sororities Kappa
Kappa Gamma, Kappa Lambda
Psi and Sigma Sigma Sigma have
also volunteered to help
with the
event.
Cara Mccaffrey
;
a member of
Kappa Kappa Gamgia,
.
said she
will be walking.
-
·
"It's for a good cause. The least ·
.
year•~ even(and hope
to
double
riizers
;
that amount this year.
'
The event
·
Walking
'
ivili
rioi re
·
the
o
:
11ly
·
.
.
_
i~
-
~~~~t~d°to attract
100
walk_.
activity
taking
place pn Saturday
;
.
·
ers,
350
more than last
year.
··
An
eventful day is
'
plariiied with
_.
·
.
This year's walk starts at the -' entertainment; prizes and
gifts
for
·
Poughkeepsie Mi
_
ddle School·ai
.
everyone.
-
Theevent
wili
beheld
55
C~llege Ave
;
A
heart healthy
rain or shine, and participants
can
lunch will be provided for the
choose to walk~ run, or just relax
participants on race day. Items
and enjoy the activities and at-
included on the menu are bagels,
mosphere
of
the day ·
turkey hotdogs, baked potatoes
Inchoosingtoparticipate,walk-
·
and fruit
·
ers are taldilg a stand against a
·
T~e event is organized into
deadly
.
disease. Nies said many
·
three,
five
,
or
·
10 mile walks
.
Walk
-:-
·
of- the part
j
cipan
~
ts
·
have been
ers
can
registedndi\'idually or as
personally affected
'
by
:
heart
·
a group
.
Ninety teruns of atleast
problems and
,
wantto help
:
oth-
.
five people are already registerecl.
.
ers.
.
.
.
.
The Pawling Savings Bank alone
.
Nies said she encourages all
is sending
-
70 employees to the
members of theMarist commu-:
walk. Funds are raised through
nity to supportJhe
_
event. _
pledges collected
·
by
·
partici-
"Come and join us for a good
pants. A minimum donation of time arid help donate to aworth-
$25
is encouraged by the orga-
· while cause/' she said.
-
I can do is
-
donate lilY tim~,'l:
~h~
.
said. "My
'
hbuse ancl hfo
'
gt>ing _
,
to walk together.••
·
..
,
The Dutchess chapter ofthe
American Heart Association
.
raised more than $34,000 at last
·

·

-
.
-
~

.:
,

·

,


.. :

_h ..
.
:
~


















































































































!
'j
.,
THE CIRCLE
.
.
'
..
,..
·
.-:
.
~
-
~
February i3, 1997
.
·
5
Loveisinthe
,
air
this
Valenti~e~s Day
by
GYNA
SLOMCINSKY
and they don't think of the real meaning
Feature Editor
behind it," she said.
r--\/\-e.11,.,
bo/2.M
KOON\
Wow
w6
'
.
/wow
-
Wll-lf
Love
IS
-
BL~NDJ
.
Kathy Gazzillo, a sophomore history
Love is in the air atMarist College.
major, also said the word is used too much.
Valentine's Day is approaching, and the
·
"I definitely think that the word Jove is
tho
_
ugh1 o_f th~
_
h?liday is making many
thrown ~ound a lot on campus;" she said.
students think about·
thaf
certain some-
··
·
Berrios said that saying the word "love''
one.
.
.
to each other takes many more than com-
.
Bu
_
t wliat is love? Is there such a thing
munication.
·
as love at first sight? What about
"I
couldn't say if the word is used too
soulmat.?s? Is there a special person out
loosely because I haven't been in love
there only for you? What about relation-
here," she said. "From past relationships,
ships
at college? These are some of the
I've learned that the big three takes time
questions that students will be thinking
and respect,\Yithout that, the word love
about thi,; Feb.
14.
is worthless."
~
Senior Christina Papadopoulos said she
Junior Ronald Lyp said he believes the
believes the word "love" deals with un-
.
word is used to further the situation.
.,
'
~~,
condi1innal trust.
"A lot of people use the word "love" to
,
"I am in love when I can trust my life

further the relationship. People use the
~,
--------.1..·....,
-
.J_'J-,,,,_ - -
-
with someone," she said.
word
to make things better during the
·
·
-- '
'

¥
r y
MelanieBerrios,junior,saidloveisabout
break-up period," he said. "People mis-
learning obout a part of yourself you did
take lust for love.'.'
not knmy before.
Lyp said people in college can believe
"Love is a weird knowing. You just know
in love, but many are not in love.
this person makes you feel incredibly dif-
"I believe in Jove, but I don't be1ieve
·
ferent," she said, "You feel safe, needed,
-
people being in love, especially college
Attitudes to,vards sex altered during
college years for many students
and sexy.·•
·
students," he said. "Most of the students
by
MicHAEL
GooT
lower inhibitions of alcohol," he said.
Laurence Sullivan, assistant professor
have only been datingfor2-3 years. They
Managing Editor
According to O'Reilly, relationships are
of philosophy
'
and religious studies, said
don
~t
know everything there is to know
important for many college students
:

the defini1ion oflove deals more with the
about one another."
Although sex plays an important part in
"They see a relationship with another
souls
.
oftwo people.
·
Sullivan said he agrees with this.
the Jives of many college students, it is
person as a very important part of the
..
"to,·~ is the quality of one's soul that
"[Love] means something different for
often not treated as a serious subject.
college experience," he said. "Some seek
reaches out and allows oneself to share it
everyone," he said. "As the relationship
Laura Agnello, ajuniorcommunications
to find love, some seek to find compas-
with ea.:h other:" he said.
develops, understanding for love devel-
major, said college students do not have
sion, some seek a sense of belonging in
Forsc-.-cral students, the word love has
ops."
.
a serious attitude about sex.
another person."
·
a deeprr meaning than people talk about.
Sullivan also said people must dare each
"If
they did, they wouldn't go out and
Chris Oertel, resident director of Leo
Many people will tell someone they love
other to define love for themselves.
get wasted and hop into bed with the first
Hall, said college allows students the op-
them, hnt do theyreally mean it?
·
"You have to challenge each other and
person
_
they kiss," she said.
portunity to interact with a whole new
Papadopoulos said that the tennfove is
be conscious of their definition of love,"
.
Many times, young people change their
group of people, and this changes their
us~d foo loosely.
·
·
sexual practices when they come to col-
attitudes.
··
''The word love is abused. People say it
.
Please see
ROMANCE,
page 6-
lege. Their attitudes about sex are often
"There's a whole new social atmosphere
C
·
,
·
·.
1
·
·
·
""
·
·
.
db
.

1
·
1
·
1•
-12"
J1_1flµence(lbymediaandpeers. The freer
that they have to adju_st to, and that at-
:
asua
.
·
sex prompte
.
·
y
CQ
·
ege l1e
-
socialenvironmentofcollegealsoiinpacts
mosphere
'
presents
:
them with opportuni-
.
.
.
,
sexual behavior_
·
ties that may not have been available," he
by
.
STEPHANIE MERCURIO
-
;
....
~unior Ro_nald_Lrp said se~ can
_
happen
:
NicoleOrnek, a freshman,
·
sai9
,
co11ege
:
said:
;
··
•;
C :

_
·
.
.

.
·
·...


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_
.
,a--:,:;. students treat sex too casuaily
and
ma1:1y~
.
_:
~C~<:>rd,~ng:_tq.Laur~~?e Su\hv_an, ass1s-
.
·
_
.
see nothing wrong
with
thefr behavioi
."'
'
f
·,
_
.Jant
,
prQf~s~ot
,
of ~eJ,1g1ous stu~1es, so'!'e
.
·
.
:
.
''Theredoesn 'thave to be love involved
"I
think they think it's part ofcpI
_
lege:_
·
students
.
are
~o~
~kely
to
expenment with
·
:
'
·
-
·•
·
to be ha~ing s~x\vith someone?he said.
the night scene and goiJ!gbut,'\~he said.
se~ than others_'.
.
>
.
.
'
• 'Aiiit~dcs
towiri-ds
'
seX: lla.ve bec~rne ca-
''A
lot of my friends are having one night . .
,•
Omek_ also said casual relationships
·''Those
that
ate from very
restnct1ve
sual
·
at
:Marist
College.
stands without being in love."
·

have escalated among college students.
·
backgrounds where they felt there_ was
·
Alcohol, new-found freedom, an
·
d a loss
Junior Donna Nastasi said love is an es-
·
.. It's not just kissing anymore," she
said.
no freedom, perh~ps th~y are m?,re hk~ly
of inhibitions are all contributing to the
sential part of a sexual relationship:
"It's basically sex."
_
·
·
.
to be the o~es trymg th1~gs out~
_
he s~1d.
rise of casual sex.
"I think there needs to be a strong foun-
Sophomore Christopher Henry also said
?ertel said casual sex 1s a very real s1tu-
Stucknts, such as sophomore Joseph
dation oflove before sex is introduced in
college students do not take sex very se-
at1on for many college
students.
Scotto, said they agree that many stu-
a relationship," she said. "A lot of people
riously.

"I (ion't believe it doesn't happen here
dents are
-
having Sex with people they

don't take $ex as seriously, though, and
.
"It
should be treated as a very serious
because I know that it does, but I'd like to
have juc;r met.
-
·
don't really care if there is love or not."
subject, but from what I've seen, it doesn't
think today's colle~e students are better
"Pcop le are looking for a ~ommon
Scotto said lov
.
e may play a part for some
seem to be as serioust he said.
educated about the nsks and dangers than
grouncl ro build a relationship on, as well
people:
·
Stephen Lapolla, a freshman history
-
as a way to grow up too fast," Scotto said.
"There isn't necessarily an absence of major, said people do not treat sex very
Please see
ATTITUDES,
page
7.
·
"I don't really think it's something to rush
.
love in theserelafjonships. People just seriously.
·
into."
..
.
·
·
.
_ · ··

..
-
_
·
·
.
havedifferentdefinitionsofwhatloveis,"
"For_ the . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
Melissa Ruot, a junior arid resident as-
he said.
.
most part, I
.
.
sistant of Leo, said there is
a
slight pres-
Lyp said Oth!!rpeople's sex lives are fairly
think it's more
sure to h:we sex with ·an acquaintance.
well known around campus.
·
of a casual at-
''The1e is a pressure for people tobe - "\'ou h~ar ~bout it everywhere, from
titude
.
that
accepted as
_
an individual person,"
-
she
everyone,"_he'said
.
"People have those
people have,"
said. "Sex is a way to gain that accep-
.
'nightly talks' Y(ith
their
friends, and you
he said.
tance."
can find out from there."
The freedom
Ruot :,aid alcohol plays a large
part
of
Seo.liq sai4 tti'e ~opic of sex is a huge
of
-
college
casual sexual encounters.
.
form
of
gossip:
·
..
'
.
seems to allow
:
"People come in
.
so dru.nk and under the
-
"I heat about sex in every possible way;
some experi-
influcnce. they don't know what they are
through gossip,
~
rumors and
.
even over-
men tat i
O
n
doing," she said. "New students, espe-
,
heat:ing:
:
it_itithe
,
hallway," he
·
said. "You
with sex. Sean
cially freshmen, are exploring their can hear who's having sex with who in
O'ReiUy, resi-
-
newfound freedo111, which they don't
al-
ev~ry_ posstble
,
way."
·
i ·
dent director
ways know how to handle."
·
.
Soucy
.,_said
he
,
feels one can find out
of
upper
Junior Ryan Soucy said he agrees with
about anyone's sex life.
·
Champagnat,
Ruot.
.
·
.
"You hear a lot of conversation. A lot
said students
"I think people may have feelings for
of people gossip about sex," he said.
are probably
someone butthe alcohol will make them
·
NasJasi:said
'
she hears about sex on
going to be
go horn"' with someone they wouldn't campus from her group of friends.
curious about
nonnally go home with," he said.
"I ri~ver realized how many people are
sex and might
Scotto. however, said he disagrees.
having on,e night stands and casual sex
be willing- to
"Alcohol does not play a part in a sexual
until I paid attent
_
ion
to
what was being
experiment at
encounter because no matter how drunk
said when we talked," she said. "So many
college.
you arc. you still know what you are do-
people are having casual sex on campus."
"I think
ing," he said. "You still have the power to
Lyp said he feels that although many
they're prob-
stop it."
peopl~ ar~ having int~rcourse, many are
ably likely to
Soucy said there are not many people engagmg m or~l sex, mstead.
have ques-
who care if there is love involved in the
"I think that so
.
many more people are
tions about it
relationship
having or~ se~, ~ather than_ sex," he said.
when they first
"In college, not as many people care "It seems hke 1t 1s not as big of a deal as
come to col-
about lov~ in a sexual relationship," he
sex is, so more people don't feel as bad
lege and when
said.
about doing it on a one night stand."
you add in the
Serving The Marist
C~minunity
Sin_ce
1918
.
-
FAST. EASY DIRECTIONS FROM MARIST:
Take Route 9 South To Routes 44/55 EAST (!.he Arterial)
Continue On The Arterial. We Are One Block Past Raymond Avenue.























































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~
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in the Cabaret Seat-
ings will be at 5:30 and 7:30 p.m., and tickets cost $5
each.
All
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THE CIRCLE,
Fe~ruary 13_, 1Q97
Stijdehts discover a new ·world on line·
by
KELLY
B~ER
Staff Writer .
.
'
.
.
.
.
.
With the difficult readings
'
we
!:
.
ll~'is
also,~ilkirig
the ·f~uir~ ', '.
have for.class, and-it's great to
Introduction to Computers class
see what
·
other students' per:.
and is requfred to use e~inailJor
·
·
spectives are.":
it
.
.
.
.
- ·Carlson· said she uses the
Many students, w.hile passing
At Marist College, e-mail and
internet to learn more about her through the halls
:of
Do~nel,ly
the internet are
• ·
and Lowell
new discoveries
. -- - ... - ,
T h o
m
a s ,
for many stu-
·
l
~NCW
!TIS
NO{liML-
Fo~
t£oPlc
·
·
st<>p in :the
dents.
For
• • ·.
computer
some, it is sim-
{O
TALK
TO
THeR.
p~-rs,
labs
to check
ply a new way
\lT (\\~
et)o
(VI
fW'rTh
___ ·-
J)oGS
i
J
vJ1
·
e-mail or to
of communica-
,_. _ _
....,.,,,~
jump on the
tion. But, for
_
_,,... __ .
1
-
IL.-
~=-----
internet.
others,itcanbe-
·
~ - -
r
,
Kelly
dd
.
\~
t:>
t
!
t
come an a 1c-
r,:--. ·
; ,
Quinn; a se-
tion.
C; :: · -..
--
··,
J
/
niorpsychol-
Most .stu-
ogy/special
dents
learn '--'---
education
about
the
niajdr, works
internet and e-
in
the ·
· . mail through the
~~~
,-.,., _
Donnelly
Introduction to
computer lab .
Comp u t er s
She · said
course.
many people·
Students learn
1J-----1..__,....._,
come into the
basic funda-
lab for a
mentals that in-
IID~~~:::_ _____
-'__.--(_1l[JP
quick check
elude how to
of their e-
use the Marist
..----r--1•
r~~~
mail.
mainframe and
"":a!,,.-;~-....:;:.
"Some
how to get on-
l - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ~
people, · of
line. It is usually
course, come
outside of the
to
type
papers and do other work.
classroom. though, where most sorority on the sorority home B'ut, many times people will stop
students put to use what they page and to find out what is go-
in quickly to see. if they've re-
ha,•e lesmed.
ing on at home, She said she ceiyed any e-mail," said Quinn;
Kristen
Carlson, a junior En-
also uses the internet to find in~
The internet is an outlet for
_elish major, said she first became
formation for her brother,'who is
many people. to· find out· about
involved with the internet and e-
learning disabled.
national and world events.
mail when she came to Marist.
''The internet is great with that: . Rather than turning on the tele-
"It' s so much easier and I can find things to help my
vision orlistening'to the radio,
quicker to keep in touch with
brother, like medicines and students are able to inquire about
friends frQm home, rather than
things for him to do," saicl
anything theyw~t by simply
calling them on the phone," said Carlson;
typing in the. subject arid doing
Carlson. ~'There's no fee withe-
Bill Raniolo, a freshman com-
a search.
·
mail, and you can keep in
_
touch .niunica.tions
.
major, has. a. com- ·
·
tSfudentsco!Jle into
_
the com-
with anybody.F ;:: ,:' ., .::: ;;,,;: .
puterin his
·
donn·room and
.
said·· ·]>utedali'~d:gef~ri'tlie i1_1te~e~
C1;1rlson said she also. uses e-
he checks his e-i.nail at least
five'·
and many people s~y for a·while
mail to. subscribe to a literature times a day and uses the internet and hang .out on it,''. said Quinn.
discussion group for her class in -at least once
a
day~
. . . .
.
''It's a:great
way
to learn:, arid it's
Arthurian Literature.
"I've always beeninto it,.,said entertaining at the same time."
"Sometimes I
Raniolo. · "But I definitely use e~
. Whethe{a person is an 'e-mail
get· 30 to 40 mail and the internet more since or internet buff or just lik{to get
messages· for I've been at Marist.'.'
·
in touch.with the world.once in a
the discussion
Raniolo sa_id he fhecks his e'-. . while, the cmnputertechnology
· group a day,". -mailo_nce_in awhile in the com-
is.certainly putto use by a large
saidCarlson. ''It · puter labs, but he mostly uses
percentageofMaristCollegestu-
helps so much the coinputerin his roorri. ·
dents. ·
·
Wake 'n' Bake
Spring
Break '97
· . ~
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l
·1
l'
<.
i
I
I
I
I
\
i
l
t
.;;;;::....
THE
,
CIRCLE,
February
13, 1997
Eating like
a
mahara,j a
.
by
JOSIE
INALDO
·
Food Babe
.
short) decided to meet at 8:30 p.m.
because that is traditionally
when Indians eat dinner.
At the beautifully-decorated
·
restaurant, I let the
·
boys order
for me. First of all, they ordered
all vegetable platters because
most Indians are vegetarians .
While discussing the menu, we
ate "papad," which is an Indian
.
version ofa tortilla chip. It is fried
Last week;
i
attended a lun-
.
or roasted, very light
fo
texture,
cheon given by the department
and is dipped in chutney - a
oflntcrn:itional Education. Dur-
mildly spicy sauce or vinegar.
ing the casual discussion, I met
.
I was more inquisitive than
several of the international
u~ual, asking them googles
graduate students from India.
(meaning more than 'oodles' and
They fo1d recognized my face
less than infinity) of questions.
from bci ng the food babe in
The
"When
_
do
-
you eat breakfast?"
Circle
.
One of the first people I
"Do you like Poughkeepsie win-
met,
J\ 1:mish, asked ifl only re-
ters?" "What do different re-
view
.
eel American restaurants. I
gions of India eat?" "Who usu-
said that
I
was
not exclusive, and
ally cooks in your family?" I am
I noticed that I had been only
fre-
very thankful that my dining part-
. quentinp. American cuisine. I
ners were very patient with me
also remembered how wonderful
(not many people are).
it was
io
have my friend from
When we were served, I had a
Madrid t:ike me to my first tapas
crash course in Indian dining.
(snack i har and introduce me to
First off, customarily, Indian food
Spanbh food and drink. Let me
_
is served in a big plate or bowl,
tell yon, [ loved my first glass of and then each person takes from
·
sangria!·
I
asked Manish ifhe and
the common plate.
I
n
·
oticed that
his fril·nds would do the same for
this too is commonplace in the
,
me.
Filipino dining table
.
We like the

Since I do not have the budget
idea of sharing. We also eat with
to go t,J India; I suggested we go
our hands. I remember as a child
to the Maharaja Room, located
eating a bowl of rice with my
on Route
_
9 in the Poughkeepsie
hand. There is something soul-
Plaza Mall. We: Manish, Piyush;
·
satisfying in using y
_
bur:fingers.
Nikhil. and Jignesh ("Jigs" for
While Filipinos eat with both
~;
t
f~~k':
i.''.Cl
>:
univerr.it
r
o
flt
Lud
it
i?;i
Jfim
'
V,
hands, Indians use only the
right. They toJd me since this
was my first
.
time, and if I was
finding it difficult, it would
be
okay to use both
.
I
managed to
eat with only my right hand but
found it a bit cumbersome. I
was
also amazed that all Indians eat
with their right hand, with the
exception ofleft-handed people .
In the northern and western
parts of India, there is what is
known
as
a "thali," which liter-
ally means "plate." This is simi-
lar to an American-fixed lunch:
an appetizer, main entree, dessert
and drink. For appetizers, we had
Lentil soup and samosa
,
which
is a veggie stuffed crispy pastry.
Samosas, not to be confused
with mimosas (champagne and
orange juice), were one of the
highlights of the meal. The thali
is served on a tray
will
bowls of
different sauces: raita (yogurt,
cucumber, herbs), yogurt
,
a·spin-
ach dish, a cauliflower'dish and
kofta (veggies and cheese). You
dish some of these onto your
plate. Then, yciu break off a piece
-
of bread to dip with the sauces
and dishes. Experiencing Indian
bread is truly delicious.
_
There
are sooo many different kinds!
.
Chapathi (whole wheat bread) or
poori (puffed whole wheat bread)
is usually what is served with
thali.
There is
·
also naan
(unlevened bread, grilled with
butter) and Tandoori rotL
I learned that evening what
makes a
·
dish "tandoori" (for ex-
ample, tandoori chicken).
Tandoor is the type of furnish
·
they use to cook differentfoods.
Tandoori

'
roti is made .in the
tandooi: and bashed on the wall
·to attain
a
specifi:c texture.
·
: -
-
·
We also had three
,

other veg-
etable
·
disiies
:;
Nlivanttancurry
(minced veggies sauteed in
·
mild
·
sauces);Saag Pariir (home made
cheese with spinach and Spices)
.
and Dal Tarka (a lentil dish with
ginger, garlic and spkes). Din-
ner is almost finished when you
start on the rice dish. We fin-
ished our meal with lassi, a type
of yogurt milkshake that you cari
order sweet, sour, or mango-fla-
vored. I opted for the mango
lassi.
·
EVERYTHING was excel-
lent! I did riot know a thing about
Irtdian food. They could have
·
given me a bowl of salt, and
I
·
would have eaten it if they told
me to (they are such nice boys).
l
enjoyed every aspect of the
evening,· from the captivating
company to the saporific ("giv-
ing flavor") dishes
.
·
l
give the
Maharaja (meaning 'kirig') five
forks. How did I come to this
rating? At the moment when
·
Manish told me "it tastes just li
_
ke
home." P.S ..
.
. next week, I'm go-
ing wassailing! (sounds kinky,
doesn't it?)
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8
EDITORIAL
February
13~
1997
TH£
:
CIRCLE©
The Student Newspaper of Marist College
.
Kristin
Richard, Editor~in-Chief
..
'
'
'
Michael
Goot;
Managing Editor-
.
Stephanie Mer
.
curio, News Editor
Ami~ Lemire,
A&~
Editor
Chris Smith, Sports Editor
G~a Sl~mcinsky,
.
Feature Editor
Christian Bladt, Opinion Editor
·
Diane Kolod, Photography Editor
Jason Duffy, Business Manager
G. Modele Clarke, Faculty Advisor
The Cirr:le
is published every Thursday. Any mail may be addressed to The
Circle,
Marist College, 290 North Road, Poughkeepsie, NY 12601.
Editorial
For love or for money?
-
,; A soul that hasn't been
.
warmed
.
by
the f1re of
lov~
is lifeless"
.
Letters to the Editor
Literary Arts Societycorrection
Valentine's Day is typically a day of romance for those who are dating and a day of E.ditor:
mourning for those who are i:iot. It is a day that I firmly agree with in concept, but a
I apologize on behalf of the Literary
Arts
Society for a mistake submitted in last week's
holiday
·
that I feel has recently gotten out of control.
paper. The trip to see Rent on Broadway is not definite. Weare not
.
sure of what is
Valentine's Day has gone from a day that celebrated all that
is
romantic to one that playing nor can we purchase tickets until we know what is playing and who is definitely
reflects everything commercial
in our society. Instead of people expressing their attending. Advertisements about the trip
_
will be posted soon
.
.
Any questions or com.,
love and working on
their
relationships to celebrate the holiday, they are now en-
ments about the Literary
Arts
Society or the Broadway trip can be directed to Jason
couragcd to put a price tag on theirJove and romance.
Crandall (X5672),
HZAt
on Musich, or our mailbox in Student Center 368. ThankYou.
I am not anti-Valentine's Day: I do not dress in black and go into mourning because
I do not have a boyfriend.
In
fact, I think the concept of Valentine's pay is quite nice
Susan A. Goodwin
because it is the one day of the year set aside solely for the sake of expressing love.
Head of Advertising, L.A.S.
I have. however, spent the past three weeks consciously avoiding Hallmark stores
and their obnoxiously large displays of Valentine's paraphernalia, ranging from stuffed
animals to chocolates to silk flowers. Signs in stores around this holiday seem to
Professor responds to Core program
·
1etter
·
imply love can be measured by how much money one person spends on another. It
is the perfect holiday for those who measure how much they are loved by how many E.ditor:
flowers they get.
.
I am gratified that Alicia Cosenza (Letter 2/6) benefi~ed from my class lecture and
I agree wiih whoever said, "It's the thought that counts." I, for one, would
be
just
·
discussion on the Marist Core/LS Program. Her mourning over a:two-year educational
as happy ifl got
_one
rose as I would ifl got a dozen. I always thought the whole loss serves as a challenge to all of us to address the problem. I wonder how we will
.
point of the holiday was to express to a person how much you care about him or her
·
respond.
·
· ·
·
-
and to let people know you are thinking of them.
My idcalValentine's Day would not consist ofme being bombarded with gifts that
Ed O'Keefe,professorofpsychology
will ei
I
her die, be eaten, or end up col1ecting dust. It would be a quiet evening alone
with that special someone, with maybe
a
romantic candle light dinner and some soft
-
N
..

·
E
. · ·
:~!:c,;~~i~~~~~tlikethisthatwillliveoninmymemory,notaballoononstickthat
_
·.
,
-
et
_
·
..
s
·
9~p
;
y
·
.
.
_
It _is ~qr~ apJ?ar~nt
\h~:n
~v~~
.
~O\ln<lValen~ne's. I)~Y
·.
tll~t~e
~re,ri~i~.lll
~f ~~
:.
.
:
~
i-tµ;
p~t
Cbri~tl~uis;:my
'.
hopes
:
fciri
gl9wing
"iiew
IB~'.l
wire
"
obltteratecl"by a ~Jfg!ttly·
, ;
soc1ety
-
1s
-
~reatmg an ~mph~ correspp11~ence between love and money.·
.
. '
'
.
. ·
:
·
.
. '
'
:
·
mofe
itchaic in
_
struirierit.'.
';
No;
:
1
·
ma
not
ieceive"'a
1
'sec°?ild
;
hand
:
pal(y~How
.
electric
F
·•
Not

h~vmg a boyfnend this
.
Valentine s D~y does
.
not ~other me._ The fact ~at typewriter'.
.
My loving
.
parents
.
bestowed upori. me somethinf that predated ev_en th
_
e
co~pamcs have turned a day <Jf the celebration of love mto
.
another commercial Brother
:
Elecrtrotypell.
I
receivecl a shiny new two~toried Parker Insignia; That's right/a
'
·
,
~
hohday_does.
c
·
A M
,
.
. _
·.
p
·
u
·
_
s
·
_
_
·
M
.
-
.
_
·
I N
·
.. ·
-
.
·
·
·
·
1s
·
-
·
.
T
-..
-
R
·

·
·
y
·
_
-.
--
.
·
·
.
~ ~
-
con~inc~thatthei~areonlyaboiltahalfdozen
·
cartridgepen;incirculationthese
days .
.
It
.
seems thatmanyhave received one as a gift, thougll
few
actually ever use
•.
,
·
L
'
_
·
E
··
N
..
·
·
T.
·.·
•9
· _
7
.· _· _
_
,
·
~ytl)ingbutcaplessBics
,
withtheendschewedoffbysonieoneelse.
_

_
.
·.
·

Pens, along with electric
,
Breadmakers an
_
d Epilady shavers are the type of gifts that are
used
perhaps once, and theri are fe.:\\'l"apped for some distant relative with whoni
Y?U
Sundays
Tuesdays
Mass
>
Chapel
Prayer
Vigil
12:30
a.m. -
·
1
iufi.
_
·
Chapel
(Peace&Justice)
-
·
Wednesdays Nigbt Prayer 10:00 -10:30 p.m.
Byrne
Fridays
.
Sm,tions
.
of the Cross

12:05
p.m.
Chapel
.
·
(F:xt
7110- DailyLenten Thought)
_
share no common friends, or \Vho has
.
no friends at alt·
_
.
_
.
.
.
_
_
.
·
.
·
The· new pen also poses
a
di
.
lemina tha(I must constantly keep in mind: My pen can· no
longer do
_
uble as a coffee stirrer .
.
This pqtctice, though I deemed it to be environrne
,
ntally
sarie, was probably quite unsanitary. After all, most of my pens had been partially de-
voured by a foreign mouth (vvell, at leastsonieone else's mouth):
.
·
·
·
I suppose I could have made my Junior Girl ~cout Training useful and sterilized
th~~
hr
holding a lit match to them. Jboug!l, the fu_mes could very well ~ e me a little woozy.
This would be
_
no suitable
:
coriditioiffo(anyone to be handling hot coffee
:
.
__
_
-
-
~
-.·
_
.
. _
.
_
-

·.
-
_
-.
Speaking ()f coffee,
_
letipe
yike,
~s~om,e~t tobejustslightly" preachy ~d
_
al_lego,n
.
cal,
:
_
Due to the lack of student eval~ationfo~s m the Cabaret and coffee shops, this_ column
is my only outlet to expfess
:
lllY ciee'pcon
_
cern· about a foible,
in
the food service afM:aris\ .
If evaluation forms were
·
availa~le, a student may notorilynote the obvious absence
of'
ham hocks and collared green
·
s in
.
these venues, but also that coffee and fountain
drinks
are
served
in
Styrofoam cups.
.
,
_
.
._
.
..
.
_
.
_
_
,
.....
_ _
.
,
.

.
I understand that this is an economical practice, but so are outhouses,
_
nuclear p<>wei:
plants, and ''Marist M(?ney Only Washers.'' That
does
not Il:lake
.
them right.
.
·. __
.· -
'.
'
.
Anyway,
_
d~pite my initial di~~pp<>intment,l have _com~ to appreciate my littl~ pen.
-
Perhaps a personal computer
·
would have drawn me closer to thtfrealms of becoming the

·
complete anti-socialite communicating only by
-
tickling the synthetic ivories
·
of the old
IBM. That could really be the final iceberg
to
sink my ill-fated, less than titanic social life.
My abuse of chatting on the net recently became quite out of control. For example, last
weekend I missed the firsthalf of ch
.
lJrCh;
n
completely slipped off the slimy
gray matter
~tween my
ears
asJtyped awaiaboutcheesy irrelevan(inatters.} am.not ~rribly
fanatical about church, but it was a value instilled upon me bymy seventh grade
,
religion
class teacher.
..
·. _
·
.
.
.
.
_
,
,
.
-.

_
.
·
_
_
·
.
·
.
.
·

··
.
.
.
_
Actually, I still have the liµIe orange pin he made for our class ~o many years ago...
·
·
We were assigned to give o_ur cl3:SS
_
a nickname. Being the rebellious, anti-establish-
ment 13-year-olds we were, we settled on naming ourselves af"ter the music group~ '
:
'Faith
No-More.,t Much to our surprise, our teacher,
Mr. Messner praised this name and we
were permitted to keep it without the argument we had anticipated'.
.
;
_
.
.
When Christmas came around, Mr, Messner gave
.
us
a11
·
orange pms that clearly dis-
played
·
the communication conflict between a catacist and cantankerous kids .. ':fo our
utmost dismay, underneath a sketch of praying hands, the pins read, "Faith, Know More."
(Okay, so perhaps that little story was more suitable for Reader's Digest, not
The C~rcle
humor column, and it could have been worth 30 bucks).
·
WelJ, perhaps for Lent I
will
give
_
up something other than chocolate, as that may
be
too
easy. I have plenty of bread to hold me over, courtesy of the TastyBaker 2000. I could
even take a break from shaving my legs. They stay silky smooth for weeks, courtesy of
that new Epilady. Most importantly, I ought to take a 40 day break from
the
Net. After all,
who needs computers with ttJs nifty twe>:-toned Parker Insignia?
·
Tara Quinn is
The
Circle's humor columist










































-
·
THE
CIRCLE
-
State of the balanced budget amendment
/ T,l!_~re
are handful of us.out there.~ho actilaliy realized
tltat
.
::
Bill Clinton ranks
.
among the most intelligent leaders of our time, and as he
-~om~thing
_
happened·
·
last Tuesday
·
that
.
had
'
nothing to do
prepares to guide ~erica for his second and final four
years
as president,
'Y,ith some washed lip football star that killed his ex-wife and
he will rely on the time tested truths of history to shape a future history that
some waiter guy.
.
.. -..
·
.
will remember him kindly. Clinton's inspiring State of the Union Address
''_:
Even so; the verdict in O.J. II was impossible to escape.
prepared the president, weary from four years as the leader of the free
The country's fascination.
.
.
.
world, to valiantly carry his people to the threshold of a prosperous first
with this
tired
tale is the real
·
halfofthe l;Jpcoming century. Learning from the legacy of
stateoftheunion.lmean,howcouldTHENEf-
Thomas Jefferson, Clinton has used his moderate stance
·
.
WORKS, the supposed bastion of
all.
that is
;==:~~=;::-:~-:--------=====---;;;.;.,:.;,:.
=~ .. ,
to blur party lines.
goodwithtelevision news, treat this verdict
~;_::~3;?"
--e-
-
·
-

·
·
-··
--·
-
~
-
--
-
~
NowClintonhasbeguntheprocessofgleaningbi-parti-
like it was just
·
as important (and in some cases
-==--=--==:::,
-

\ \
·
? /
·
·
. - ~
san support, and Republicans approach the first year of
moreso)thanthepresident'sStateoftheUnion
.~._--,:;r
·
ttAt • .·
T
He-{
IN~n-r..
·
this new term as a chance to weed out the hoards ofpro-
Address?
r
11
posed government programs.
How
_
could they? wen, the heads of the news
€,
Q
J,
Tf.-1
irt.
7Ht
N
Clinton will bring America into the 21st century with a
di visions alf know the sanie
sorry
fact that we
·
bold attempt to unite the country behind one dominant
all know" because the American public wanted
(2.
{H-
is
-;>
·
faction with security, prosperity, and freedom as the binder.
if that way.
- - - - - -
The measuring stick of Clinton's commitment to ensur-
-
And
·
what a speech it was for everyone back
·
ing his place in history, and in the process ensuring
.
.
home! There was talk of
tax
cuts, education
.ui¥Al~
America'splaceatthedawnofanewageofworldleader-
improvenients, funding for the arts, balanced
7
ship and domestic abundance, is his grasp of historical
budgets, and, most importantly, mention of the
'-<....
significance.
21st Century without having to resort to any-
~~N
'<
When Truman suggested in his State of the Union Ad-
more of those infernal bridge ~etaphors.
dress that partisanship stops at the water's edge, Ameri-
The only disappointing
·
aspect of the , (:,
,___..,.,_ cans feared the coming of a great crisis. Since 1932, the
president's speech was the way in which he
,
;:;,;;,.~~n
country had survived under the domineering guidance of
triedto gloss over the fact that he was propos-
·
1 '
Franklin D. Roosevelt.
ing
·
tax cuts without cutting any existing ser-
_.,_~~
With fascism then scattered into fragments of economi-
-
vices as well. Come on, Mr. President. You got
>
cally struggling new governments, the red haze of fore-
your job back already. We don't need anymore
·
~~7=:~~~L-..:...:.=.::..!1--~«:f;,
boding communism loomed threateningly on the north
__
c
1
am~a~gnd~~o~ses.thMr. Clinton did an exfcthel-
,
-
_
, .
,
easThtern horizond.
_
11
.
·
.
entJ0ldl wessmg e greatest menace o
e
1
,
_
,
at urgency oes not sll exist as a motivation to whip
90s: ourselves.-ln
hi~
finest "carpe diemn tone, ·
·
·
'
~
_
.
___
America into action, but as citizens we must congratulate
he urged Americans not to letthe moment pass
·
'--1~~
_
~ZG=
Clinton's ability to re-capture that urgency in an attempt to
us by: We must take to the forefront of the
prevent the debilitating clutches of complacency from tear-
world's events, instead of watching them on a
ing us off the stable pedestal that we now occupy, and
split-screen with the channel flicker in one hand, ~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' perhaps wrongfully take for granted. Indeed, partisanship
and
an
ice cold Foster's in the other. In a call to arms that should act as our
-
-
should stop at the classroom door.
·
generation's<'theonly thing we. have to fear is fear itselP', he passionately
The media spectacle that carries the Constitutional name State of the Union Address
implored us to "be shapers of events, not observers. For if we do not act, the showed a host of secretaries basking in the glory of hearing their respective departments
moment will pass- and we will lose the best possibilities of our future."
endorsed by the president.
Truer words have never been spoken. (Okay, except for maybe "O.J. killed his
Madeline Albright sprang
into
action like a wind up clapping doll each time Clinton men-
ex-wife and that waiter guy." Or "J. Edgar Hoover was one wacky guy.'') As tioned foreign affairs, and Janet Reno barked vehemently every time the president mentioned
much as I detest the term "Generation
X'',
there is some merit to the belief that cutting down on crime. Chuckles sprinkled between the raucous applauds of Democrats
our generation just does nof get worked up over that much.
when Clinton vowed to reform campaign finances; Republican National Committee Chainnen
What have been the big cultural movements of the past few years? The drive Jim Nicholson said, " ..
.I
think Democrats ought to concentrate more on abiding by the exist-
.
to save "My So-Called
Life"
·
from cancellatio11 is the only thing that comes to ing law."
_
mi~g,
1
}Y!1.~re,.!~i9}~,9]~g1.\~!Hn.j¥
,
~(g~Y,~~IT1.<?~t~ i
_
~
-~~~j!~~
,
?r,
~?~l~,
~:1.::
, ,.
})1~
1~
stages~f Clinton's educati~n program do not co~sist of bold measures ~at provoke
blUJla? Wby,~,w.,w~
,
9_11Jy
:
g~t
_:
m
:
an
'.
llPJ;"Par.whe11 the home team dc,es weH?
,,
,
;.-
Jie
_
ated,:idpolog1cal debates
'as
previous
·
State of·the Umon
:
addresses have,

ltke Wilson's
Wejust have. it better off than the generations that came before us .
.
We have
·
_
_
.
Fourteen Points. But,
with
important
legislation pending,
the framework of
the 21st
century
no
_
Worlg
·
Wars
.
or \Tietnam
_
s that hold us together
·
like
_
our
·
grandparents~ and
..
-
has
been
thrust upon Clinton's and Congress' shoulders. Some of Clinton's message grounded
parents' generations. We're not even allowed to hate the Russians anymore!
dangerously on the government-oriented era of Franklin Roosevelt.
·
so, .th~ p9int is, President Clinton
w~
rightwhen he said that, despite the fact
With a swelling budget, Republkans in Congress have been left scratching their heads in
that there are no imminent threats, there is an enemy. ''The enemy of our time is
a vain attempt to comply with the fantastic network of government involvement proposed.
,
inaction/' Iri so many ways, that isfar worse than the Axis Powers or "the red
The hap'"hazard fiscal plan that will take America into the 21st century re1ies heavily on how
--·
menace.'.' Inaction grabs ahold of you when you least expect it. Mainly because future presidents will interpret the Clinton plan.
something else has your
,
attention. But, worst of all, it just feels so good not to
-
The president's budget reduction plan calls for the most controversial money decisions to
giyea damn what happens, and just let the world pass y9u by,
Is
this why so be madeafter he leaves office, which means Congressional Republicans will have difficulty
~any Am~ricans have died i~ the name of freedom? So that we can apathetically
seriously considering his proposal.
·
sit around, taking it for granfod,)etting everything they fought for go to waste?
If Clinton insists on solving the difficult social problems of healthcare and welfare
with
a
·
Think
?briufitthe nexnime you chang~ the channel because the news is on.
reverse
_
on his previous ".,.end of the era of big government..." stance, then budget balancing
.
Do you care? More importa!'tlY, should you care?
,
may remain a metaphysical concept that Democrats cannot grasp.
.
. ·
Ch~ti<in Bladt
is the opinion editor for The Circle~
·
Bill Mekrut
is the political columnist for The Circle.













































.
.
10
SGANEWS
SGA S
·
potlight
·when
lie
is not on stage, Todd
Stallk:\mp can
be
found playing
the
roli!
t
,f
vice president for club
affair:,
for the Student Govern-
ment Association.
Todd's previous leadership ex-
periences include being presi-
dent of Sigma Phi Epsilon and
acting president of the Greek
Council. During former Student
Body Pr.-!sident Malt Gi11is' ad-
mini:-.1.-iltion, Todd worked
closely \\
;
ith the VP
.
of Clubs. He
was also
a
member of a commit-
tee estahlished
to
raise the club
cap
for
lh<~
GreekAdvisory Coun-
cil
_
in order to geUJ'le
,
fratemity
Alpha Phi Delta a charter
at
Marisl.
.
After his experiences working
with the
VP
for Club Affairs,
1'odd i.\eci,led
to apply for the
po-
sition:
.
Name: ToddF. Stallkamp
Hometown: Queens, NY
Favorite Movie: Star Wars
Favorite
·
Food: Bacon deluxe
cheeseburger from
the
Palace
He did admit that the biggest
challenge for this position is
try-
.
ing to "serve
.
the students fair
and just when confront¢
_
with
problems."
.
.
.
.
Among Todd's accomplish
;-·
ments as VP includes the char-"
.
tering of
Phi
Delta Epsilon, a
·
·
Medical Fraternity, and the Soci-
·
ety of Professional Journalists.
Currently, Todd is working to
charter PEOPLE,
-
Bi Gala, and
Sigma
Iota
Alpha
'.
·
.
·
.
This weekend, Todd will take a
·
break from his busy schedule in
the Student
·
Government Asso-
ciation to star as the Father
in
MCCTA's
latest dramaSixChar~
acters In Search Of
An
Author..
·
.
c,
'
Other plays '!'odd has pe~furmid
"
-
in include Prelude to a Kiss, Guys
and
Dolls,
.
and
Rumplestilskin.
_
Breakal~gT~dd!
.
.
.
·Delta
Air Lines
_
,
-
Opens Up TheUSATo Colle~e Stud~
·
·
WithAYear's Wor
,
/
·
.
¢If
Low
far-es
.
AndUnlimi~d fun~
>
·
You deserve some fun. Get ready for some with El{tra Credit;M
..
Enroll today in Delta's new coll~ge travel prng~a~.
'save
up to
50%
··.
_
- sometimes mor~ - off nor~a_l (7, 141.21 day) advance purchase,
round-trip ~oach fares. Hurry, membership is limited.
Get the whole scoop on the Web at
_
.
http://www.delta~air.com/college
To
enroll, call
I 800 335-8218
or
1 800 DELTA 18
01!1.17, li,.u.
Air
IJn,s,
Inc
.



















































THE CIRCLE
.
raking
.
ti
.
Closer Look at
.
.
]3o
·
sstories perforlli"ertergetic show at the
-
Chance, despite rough crowd

,
. ,
.
'

._
I

by
Joe Scotto

Stajf Writtr
· up bass
,
it made
·.
me wantto go
back to
.
.
_
last
summer and do
· ·

Hello
I
tidies and gentlemen
;
~y
the twist
:
name is
Joe
Scotto
:
Many of you
The next band
.
probably know me fromRugby,
to play was one
the HuMarists, or as the kid who
~
.
o.f r.ny favorite
.
got fired from his R.A. position.
ska bands, the
But
;
right now I
am
here
.
to tell
Pi et asters
.
you about the Mighty Mighty
Don'
i
let
.
the
.
Bosstont~S show this past week-
name confuse
end atthe Chance.
you .
.
·
'
All
lhaveto say is, many of
These guys
you misse
_
cl an incredible show
crank
-
out
for the low
.
priceof$15.
lam
an
songs
at a
avid Bosstones fan, and
I
·
break-neckpace
coughed up the money and got
that will leave
a show worth three times more.
you at
.
th~ end
The opening band, the Rack of of the set won-
Tears (or
,
if
you say
it
fast, Rack-
dering
what
eteers) was a 50's style sound
·
happened.
complcle wirh greaser looks right
They playedfa-
oufof the movie "Grease."
. vorites, such as
..
I
was not terribly thrilled with
/efaggie May,
them,
·
but the different sounds
Freak
Show
·
and styles were enough to peak
·
·
and
Girl Take it
my interest. Also, it is always
Easy.
good to hear something new
·
and
The
guitar chords, mixed with
Bosstones. These eight guys
different, and let me tell you, they
the trumpet, trombone, and saxo
-
from Boston have been around
were difterent.
·
phone, makethese guys great to
.
for almost
IO
years. They really
They sounded
as
if their songs
.
·
listen
·
10
on
a
stereo
,
and if you
know how to rock a crowd.
were pumpingright outbfMarty
are lucky, in concert
:
·
Leaning more towards ska-core
McFly'sdelorianonNoy. 5
;
i955.
After the Pietasters
came
the
than traditional ska, the two
With a fu~ky beat from a stand-
headliners, the Mighty Mighty
.
sounds (hard core and ska) blend
·.
HolJyw9od. makes
_
'd~clarf1tioµ of jndependent~'
LOS
Akot:tES(CNN).:.:....
Inde-
~rets and Lies_in
th~ pest picture
.
··
actress were: Brenda Blethyn
pendendilms swept the nomina-
category .
.
Of.the five, only
.[erry
for
.
her performance in
Se
-.
tions

for
_
top Oscars Tuesday;
·.
·
Maguire
was produced by a ma-
crets and lies,
Diane Keaton
takingfoJJ
_
r
_
out of five qftheslots

··
jtjr
;
flollywo~~ stud\p
~
:.:
ic'I
;
~,
;
':·
·_.
·
.
·
. .
J
ori\1a~in~Rpo_
11j
,
!4r_?.n(:es
.
.
for
·
6es(pictu
r
e
:
i .
.
~
-
·
_
·
.
.
·
\
-:
on
:
CNNSliowbi
z
'[oday
;
~
Ro/l~
::
'.
M_cDomi
'ii
iid
foi:
,.
hei
por:.
··
.
...
~
-
.
.
.
Thl'
_
gnglislz
'.
Patient
:
-
l~d
-
the
·
ing
.
Stone's
_
movie
.
critic l~eter
.
trayalof.the pregnantp<llice
.
·
j,ack
vilil
f
l2
nominations in the
Travers; said this
was a
milestone
chief in
Fargo,
Kristin Scott
top categories,
-
including
.
be
.
st
in the film industry
'.
.
Thomas
_
for her role in
The
·
picture
_
, best
·
director, best ac-
"I'd never believe that fotirout
English Patient
and Emily
tress;
.
best actor and best sup-
offiveofthenomineesareinde-
Waison for her role as the
·
.
_
,
porting actress,
pendent movies. It's a revolu
-
long
-
suffering wife in
Independent films
Fargo
and
tion,'' he said.
.
Breaking the Waves.
Shine
.
also did well, garnering
.
Travers
·
also said he was
The best actor field fea-
.
stwen nominations each in the
surpised of the snubbing of two
tures three Hollywood stars
·
top nine
·
categories.
.
.
musical actresses.
and two lesser known ac-
Tllc nominations wete
·
ari'"
''Theshockingthi!}gtomewas
.
tors. Tom Cruise, who
nounced Tues
'
day by Arthur
.
.
the Academy's message to Ma-
.
·
played the title role in
Jerry
Hiller,presidentoftheAcademy
dorinaind to Courtney Love:
Maguire,
Woody
_
-
·
of Motion Picture Arts and Sci-
'Rockers go home,"' he said.
Harrelson, the controversial
ences,
'
and
actress Mira Sorvino,
"Both women were passed over
porn publisher
·
in
The
the winner of last' year's. Oscar
in
·.
the best actress category.
People vs
.
Larry Flynt
and
for
best
supporting actress.
Madonna starred in
Evita,
while
Ralph Fiennes
,
the lover in
T~?. English Patient
;
Fargo,
Love starred in
The People vs.
The English Patient,
will
and
Shi,w
will
be competing
Larry Flynt.
face
off
against two new-
against
Jerry
·
Maguire
and
Se-
Instead, the nomineei; for best
-
comers: Australian Geoffrey
·
· ·
·
-..
Rush, who played classical
c
·
ampus
··
community
·
Prayer
Vigil
For Peace and Justice
Every Tuesday
12:30 p.m. - 1 :00 p.m.
in
the Chapel
(Come spend a half hour in
·
prayer for our world)
Sponsored
by
PRAXIS/CAMPUS MINISTRY
·
pianist David
·
Helfgott in
Shine
and Billy Bob
Thornton, nominated for his
..
role in
Sling Blade.
.
The nominations for best

director closely shadow
those for best picture with
Shine
(directed by Scott
Hicks),
Fargo
(Joel Coen),
Secrets and Lies
(Mike
Leigh) and
The English Pa
-
tient
(Anthony Minghella)
nominated in both catego-
ries.
.
The People vs. Larry Flynt
won Milos Forman a nomi-
nation for best director al-
though it was not nominated
for best picture
.
The Oscars will
be
pre-
sented during the 69th an-
nual awards ceremony on
March 24,
to
be hosted by
comedian Billy Crystal.
Correspondent Jim Moret
contributed to this repon.
to create an
incredible
·
r
sound.
·
The
Bosstones
opened with a
song off their
.
up-coming al-
' t
bum, which
"
got the crowd
into the inusic.
They
then
dove
into
,
their old
fa-
.
voriles, in-
'
1
c I u ding
·
Where'd You
Go, Someday
I
Suppose,
Drunks
.
&
Children,
and
Hell of a Hat.
I have seen
this band five
'
times,
and
they get better
.··
each
tiine.
They are into
pleasing the crowd, and they let
the crowd know it.
Dicky Barrett, the lead singer
,
frequently gives the microphone
to people in
th~
crowd to sing.
He also invites people onto the
stage to dance
.
With this unself-
ish attitude, you can tell they
know that without the fans, they
would not be a band
.
One aspect about the show
that upset 1ne was the crowd. It
·
seems here in Poughkeepsie, ev-
eryone tends to think they are
the greatest or the strangest
(maybe it's the water), but ska
shows are supposed to be fun.
This means you should not
punch people, kick people, head-
butt people, etc.
I mean, it is a concert
,
not the
Ultimate Fighting Champion-
ships. Save the aggressiveness
for something that deserves it,
like a Gwar show.
And, all you people who still
think crowd surfing is cool
should go see the up-coming
Great White show at the Chance.
That is about the time floating
went out of style. Ska shows are
supposed to be fun, and you
cannot
have
fun
when
someone's boot is stuck in your
mouth.
Overall, the show was great. It
gets an 8.5 out of 10, and I sug-
gest if you ever get a chance to
see the Bosstones, you go be-
cause it wilfbe a show you will
never forget.
J


















Some Valentine's love tips
from the Video Guy
--
-
-
by
Jim Dziezynski
_
3)-''l'rn with.Stupid T-Shirts!" for
·
Staff Writer
·
·
-
sale
_
at yari()us:locations.
·
Valentine's Day is up~n us. -4)-Go
Jc;n:
a rornant
_
ic midnight
Love is in the air, and the season
walk
through
down town
for dating is right around the cor-
Poughkeepsie, where Jhe soft
ner. That is why, for the second
·
glow of policeHghts and sooth-
week in a row,
I shall transcend
-
ing sound of
·
gunshots
·
in
·
the
my
role as video guy to give ad-
night will provide the perfect at-
vice fQr the sophisticated date-
mosphere to
faJI
in love!
ready college student of the 90s.
5)-I'rn volunteering my services
College is a time for love, love,
as a van-=driver to take you to all
love, so where better to get the
of the romantic sights in
theMid-
"low-down"
on all the secrets of Hudson valley. Do not let the fact
the dating scene than from your
myvan does not have any
·
win-
mosttrusted Circlecolumnist-me!
dows discourage you from en-
The feast ofValentine's day joyingtlletrip. YoucanstiHmake
originated in Rome, where the
use of the couch!
.
ancient Romans celebrated the
Some of you with last week's
fertility rites of certain birds. This
paper on hand may have noticed
celebration
was
calied Jerome Pickett, featured in the
"Luperc.i
I ia" ( translated: Luper: · spotlight section, described him-
the feast of, calia: birdy nookie.)
self as being "very single." La-
The legend of Valentine also in-
dies, need
I say more? What you
corporated the myth of Cupid,
may also not know is that there
the chubby cherub who, when
are other people in the newspa-
in range of two young people on
per who are also without a Val-
the cusp of romance, shoots one
en tine date, such as myself. That
of them with an arrow iri the butt.
·
is probably why
I have to write a
This supposedly caused the two
column on video games! In fact,
young people to fall in love, but
the last date
I had was with Prin-
in reality caused the person not
cess Toadstool. Ha-ha; just kid-
hitto pull an arrow out of the butt
ding! Get it?
1 - -
-
---:---.:.====~~=========::'::'::=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
of hi~/her lover.
If
that isn't true
Princess Toad-
love, I don't know what is!
stool from Super
Nowadays, Valentine's day is
Mario Brothers!
the holiday where you let that
I
guess
I
am
just
"special someone" know how
" c h o o
s
y, "
much you really like him or her.
right'f That's it!
Then, you can have the "giddy"
If
only they put
feeling of having the person not
my picture in,
·
only tell you that you should
Jerome and
I
have spent the money on her
could
have
flower" on acne cream for your-
dou tile dated
self, but also that she would some "foxy"
rather
date
a
monkey
with
_
odor Marist beau-
problems.
If
you
are
lucky, her
ties ....
·
boyfriend
will not punch
all
your
Anywise,
teeth out,
_
which brings up acer-
whoever you
tain problem:
spent
your
Let's say, intentionally or oth-
Valentine's Day
erwise,youlookatagirldatinga
with, you can
fellow
·
whose name can be noth-
thank me later
·
ing other than Thor. Thor comes
for the
·
great
up to you and says, "Are you
tips. For those
looking at my girlfriend?!" Do
of
.
you who
you answer:
have not had a
date in a while,
A)No sir,
I'm not, to which he
will
.
respond "What, you
think
she's
ugly?" and promptly.beat you up.
B)Yes sir, I was, to which he will
respond by saying "Grrrrr" and
beating you up.
C)Muml>le a few random sounds
hoping it
wiU
translate into his
native tvngue and prevent you
from getting beat up.
.
D)Tell
the
man you
think
he
bears
a striking resemblance
to
Guy de
Maupassant and hope that
"short-circuits" his brain cell
long enough to make a run for it.
Rem~mber, you can always
give your Valentine to one of the
fun-loving inmates at your local
county jai I. They love to get mail!
For those of you lucky enough
to have secured a
mate
for the season of love, here
are some dating ideas for young
couples in the Poughkeepsie
area.
1)-Skinny dipping in the icy
Hudson, a super slippery caval-
cade of fun! Just like Dough boy!
2)-Guys, tie your date to the train
tracks and rescue her from the
speeding locomotive at the last
minute, just like in those old si-
lent movies.
Carry
whatever parts
of her are left back to banks of
the Hudson for a little "intimate"
moment where you
try
to find her
missing limbs.
do not be dis-
couraged,
it
could be worse.
Plus, hey, who
meets any girls
at
college?
Come on, get
real! In other
very important
news, today is
the birthday of
·
Henry Rollins, a
pretty romantic
fellow in his
·
own right!
0.K.
lovebirds, go to
it! And girls, re-
member, some
people in the
Inner Circle
would describe
me as "very
single," so con-
tact the editors
of the newspa-
per for a pos-
sible date in-
volving video
games,
ping
pong, and if
you are lucky, a
grand tour of
Poughkeepsie,
NY...
the
epitome of ro-
man tic geta-
ways!
Apply
to
_
.pecome
an
• 15 Credits
• Professional experience
• Travel opportunities
For further information
·
about this unique opportunity,
,
·
~ontact Kent Rinehart
f~
the
_
Admissions Office,
ext. 2188. Any major may apply, and applications are
due.by February 21, 1997.
(Only seniors can be Admissions Interns. and the Internship Is for the fall semcst
r
h
er o
t
e senior year.)
f
l
i
/,
i
I
'























































































































THE CIRCLE
February 13, 1997
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ATTENT
·
ION ALL:
Accounting,
Business
&
Economics
Majors and Minors
Have You heard about
·
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the
NEW
School of
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Wednesday, February 19th
·
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·
11
:00 AM
_
- 12:00 Noon
Presentation and
·
oiscussion
·
.
Nelly
Galletti Theater
Reception
Following
in the PAR
·
.
Sponsored
by
the Business Club
&
·
.
Alpha
Kappa
Psi,
The Professional Business Fraternity
Refreshments will be served
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·IN"SI I • E
THECIRCLE,Februaryl3~1997
·•&PORTS':·.
14
Swim
teani to .
Womert look for revenge at MAAC
chain.pit>IlslnpS
hostMAAcs·
.
.
.
.
'
.
McCann ·Center may
determine Marist'sfate
Sports With Smitty
Unlike last year at this time, the
buzz down at Mccann is not about
the men's basketball team. This
year.everyone is interested with the
men's
:mu
women's swimming and
diving t.:ams.
There is nothing new this year in
tenns of winning. The teams are still
swimming and diving well and still
winning but there is a new twist to
the scenario. The men's team
is
look-
ing to win the Metro Atlantic Ath-
letic Co
1:
ference championship again
and the women look to redeem ihem-
sel ves bnt this time look to capture
the title at home.
With Marist hosting the
MAAC
championships, starting tc:>day and
concluding Sunday, much attention ·
has heen hrought to the swimming
and di-.·ing teams. The questions to
ask are:
I)
Can the men handle the
attention and pressure of the excite-
ment at tl1eir home and.2) Can the
women step up to the level to actu-
ally capture the title this year.
Ifthe men win again this year, they
will be c,n\y the-second. team.at
Maris! in any .sport to capture three
consecutive conference titles. (Only
baskctbnll can boast the same feat.
They
will
have at least a few• more
years to worry about doing that
again!)
·
If
the women win, they will re-
deem themselves after losing to
Loyola by 1.5 points last year at the
MAACs.
The team has a lot on the line this
year
ai
the MAAC:_chainpionships:
Since the meet is being held at
Marist,
ii
means so much more. The
Red Foxe~ can feel comfortable in
their nonnal . stift~undings while. at
the same timefeeling ~he pressure to
win on their home turf.
Beside-; the swimmers· and divers
knowing tl{e
pool,
the lighting,
the
temperature
bf
the water
arid
the air,
and thl! d1ving boards, the fact that
they
will
have their home fans will
give thrm a great advantage. Even
though the
.
regt1lars· will
be
tµere, the
Red _Foxes will get support from the
student body.
.
· · · .
I am confident that the Marist stu-
dents will show support mainly
be-
cause
it
is th~ championship. This
is the meet that means everything
and I pzr;onally wish the swimmers,
the divers, and
the
coaches good luck.
From what I have seen in terms of ·
preparing the facility in the past few
weeks. the overall operation of the
meet Joe.ks to
be
a success. Although
we have one or'the
best facilities in
the M,\ACdue to a kparate diving
well, I still have one question; Where
are all th,~ people going to go? There
will
be over 300 people on the· pool
deck at_ any _one t_\me and if you
haven'r noticed, t~ere•s· not much
room. Also, there is a.very limited
bleach;!r and spectator area so if you
want good seats, get there early and
settle in f,)r the day.
Chris Smith is the Circle's
Sports Editor
Marty Sinacola
Despite the fantastic seasons
by both men's and women's
swimming and diving teams last
year, there was still a sef\se of
unfinished business. The men's
and women's swimming and div-·
ing teams both had outstanding
years last season, but something
was still missing.
The men topped off a great sea-
son by winning the Metropoli-
tan Association Athletic Confer-
ence championship. The women,
who also had a great season, fell
short of the title by a measly one-
and-a-half points.
· ·
"At the end-of-the-year ban-
quet I dido' t want the female ath-
letes to feel bad, or the men ath-
letes to feel too good," Head
Coach
Larry
Van Wagner said.·
''I
told everybody that if the
women'steamlostachampion-
cause they have been ·prepar-
eluded themiast,y,e~... .. .. . ..
ship, we all lost, and if the inen ing since the beginning.
·
"I think we are
a
little.more fired
win a championship, we
all
win."
"I
believe you have to utilize · up because ·of what happened iast
Nobody cannot argue, how-
the full
21 weeks of the season . year,,. Go.ldstein
_
said. : ~~We domi-
. ever, that the Marisi swimming · to prepare the athletes .for this
nated that meet, and then to come
program as a whole was still one
one competition;" he said.
upwith a loss. It 11,urt!' . ;
of the best programs around.
Senior Danielle DeGeronimo : .· • . The women
are
led by seniors
"Marist had the best swim-
andjuniorChrisBlackwelllead
BeckyTatum,AlysonMqrrillaand ·
ming and diving program in the . the always solid diving squad,
Stephanie Raider, who.· will be
conference • last
year," _who will be lo~king
to
repeat
Goldstein's first recruited 'class to
Van Wagner said.
upon its. performance at last graduate. .
The Marist program is in its-. year's championships. Marist·
Goldstein said
the
last meet will
second season in the MAAC,
diversJanMartin(a1996gradu-
tieaveryemotionalexperience.
and_startirig tonight will be host-
ate) _and
·
Blackwell gained
"It wiHbe a happy and sad day,"
ing the MAAC championships
MAAC diver honors,
· ·
he said.
"In
a large way tpey have
for the. first time. It will be the
· Diving · Coach Melanie been the backbone of the success
first time that Marist has hosted
Bolstad also· said the season is
this team has had. Hopefully we ·
any kind of championships to get ready for the champion-:
can give the graduating seniors the
since they hosted the Metro-
ship.
gift ofaMAAC championship."
politan Collegiate Swimming
· 'The whole year is in prepa:.
·
·Goldstein said one of the women's
and Diving Confere_nce champi-
ration for the: MAAC champi-
strengths could be in the team re-·
onshipsfrom 1984to 1987.
onship," she said.
lay events.
·
·
·
"We have one of the best fa-
The women's
team,
despite be-
"I anticipate that we wiU place as
cilities in the MAAC "
ing one of the most consistent good as last
year,".
he said:
"I cer-
Van Wagner said. "Our primacy
teams on the Marist campus in
tainly anticipated us winning. four
advantage we have is ·th·e fact
recent years, still eludes the re-
of the five events, arid possibly all
that we have a separate diving
spect from both the campus and
five."
well," he said.
·
-
local media .that it deserves.
Vanwagner said the men's
LedbycoachLloydGoldstein,
Marty Sinacola
is
the,Circle's ·
team is ready for the "final
they are looking to get that
senior sports columnist
exam," as he likes to call
it,
be- · championship that so painfully



































TheCircle, February 13, 1997 .
15
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~::.: •.. -
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._. __ :· __ ,, ...... ,,:.: ..• ::-:~--~---··" '·.·
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F1ve119int swing hurtsm~nsbasketball vs. Red Flash
bySTEVE
WANCZYK
: si~ff
writer
..
·'
,.:
...
The never-ending string of bad
luck continued for the men's bas-
ketball team·on Saturday night.
A tough, 64!55 loss to St. Francis
(PA) sunk the Red Foxes to 3-11
in the Northeast Conference and
4-17 overall.
·
The _Red Flash of St. Francis
arrived fn Poughkeepsie for
Saturday's game standing in the
middle of the NEC pack, fighting
for position in· the upcoming
conference tournament. Marist,
meanwhile, was coming off a win,
but head coac.h Dave Magarity's
squad was still struggling to stay
out of last place in the league
standings.
The game began slowly; after
eight full minutes·of play, the·
score was tied at
3,
and even af-
ter the teams picked up the pace,
the half-time score saw Marist
leading, 22-20. The low scores
were due to both ineptitude on
offense, and ·solid defense.
The Red Flash and the Red
Foxes both shot less than 33%
from the fl~or in the first half, and
both team~. committed careless,
costly .turnovers. And when a
bound and faced down the floor,
.
shot did h~ad toY1ardthe basket, _, seuing up Sotiris Aggelou '.s
Marist's Tom Kenney and. fourth three-pointer of the night,
¥elvin Scott of St. Francis ·were
and stealing the momentum from
there.to tum them away; the t~o Marist for good. .
.
.
big meff comb,ined for ~even·
. "I saw the s~ot go up, and I
blocks in the first 20 miimtes: .
tried to contest it," explained
The. game remained close . Adekunle .in hindsight. "I was
throl!gh much of the second half.
just trying to block the shot. . .if
When St Francis pulled ahead
the refs don't blow the whistle,
I
by seven (it's largest-lead until
keep playing."
.
the final minute), Magarity in-
Mccurdy added his thoughts
serted junior guard Joe Taylor,
on the· controversial play!
whose two consecutive steals
"When I went up, it seemed like
sparked an .11 point run, giving
goaltending ... we didn't get it,
the Red Foxes a brieflead.
and that turned the g~me
The Red Flash's big men took
around," said the freshman·
control at that point; with
6'7"
swingman, who started his sec-
Eric Taylor and·
6' 6"
Emmanuel
ond game in a row. "We were all
Adekunle scoring seven straight· thinking about the refs, and they
points, and handing St.. francis
just pushed the ball back up. As
a lead it would not relinquish.
a result, Aggelou hit the 3-
Withjust over 3:00 remaining,
pointer, and that was it."
.
Marist had narrowe~ the gap to
Magarity, whose disparagfog
51-49, . when ··fr_eshman Joe
comments on the officiai:ingaf-
McCurdy led a break towards the
ter a game earlier this month
St. Francis basket. He laid the . earned him a reprimand from the
ball up on the glass. for what
NEC, agreed thatthe no-call was
would have been a tying bucket,
the turning point in the ·game.
but it got swatted away by
"It
was a big swing, a huge,
Adekunle- a play that bordered
huge play," Magarity said: "The
on goaltending.
· . · five-point swing was too tiig a
No call was made, however, and
nail for us to overcome. We had
the Red Flash gathered the re., . used too much energy
t~
get
Ra,\quetball teafil _has
best,puting atProvidence
by
RAtHAEL.VOLLARO'
,of
~ chaUe~ge,"· Haig~t. s~id ..
• . · : ' · · . . . .·
·
· -
"The team did great. They make
>?~ff
Wri!er_.
.
areal!ygo9d
shqii~g.'.
1
·.
,
Th,~;,¥ai-is_tc'racquetb~ll 'team - :::on
,
the_woineii'sside; pena
c<Jmpert'd
J.11
th~ir third Eastern
VanLen,tenw~ un?~feated m the·
·
CoH,e.giate..~acquetpall·•con_fer-
·
. , womens ~econd_Smgles bracke~
ence tournament of tfieiseason
.
· and combu1ed ~1thGena'.f,rap~
oii'?j~~bruhcy'?/~
ancF
8
·'at'Pr'byf
;f7Z!OJ>l~c~th~~,Il3'~~jyomeif sJiist, ·.
dence <:;oifoge in Prov1dence,-
·
:
double~ brackec
. . . . . . ·.·.

. .·
_
Rhode:Islarid:·:::
<
_ , : _
VanLenten said she was
· ''Ofi
-'
ihe;wtit>il
'if'was otie°tjf .J)lease1 with her.doubles experi-
the best;°if;riolthe best tourna- . enctk". . : . . .
-
. - . ·.
; ;.:
mertt~ ever/captainCI:ms ~enda ·-.
-
''ThiJ
was the fi!sttou,mament .
said of the weekend. ''Individu-
.
that _I competed
m
the .doubles· .
. aily:we accofuplished themqst,. ?racket. I was :C~ally glad to do
we ever have." -;
C •
.
.
·.
.·•
it,we played really well together.
back into ttie game; and we
. weren't mentally tough enough
to come back again." . .
.
And that was all she wrote.
Over the ·final two minutes of
regulation; St. Francis extended
its lead to double-digits; and
cruised home with a 64-55 vic-
tory.
Two days earlier, the Red Foxes
won a thrilling contestover Rob-
ert Morris, 60-57, and moved
ahead of the visiting Colonials
in the conference standings.
Bryan Whittle scored 8 of his
· 10 points early in the second
half, and helped Marist
roeµ-
back
from a IS-point deficit. Manny
Otero drilled a three-pointer at
the 9: 10 mark to erase the Robert
Morris lead entirely, tying the
game at 49.
Over the final five minutes, the
lead changed hands four times
as the two teams, the doormats
of the NEC, battled for a much
needed win. The final swing
happened with 32.4 seconds left
in the game, and put Marist
ahead to stay.
Sophomore point guard Bobby
Joe Hatton took control of the
game in the second half; it was
,,
'
appropriate that he put up the
eventual game winning shot.,
"When I looked at the shot
clock, there were 11 seconds
left," explained Hatton .. "I had to
make a play, so
I
did a little spin
move and the ball went in."
The home crowd at the James
J. McCann Center exploded fol-
lowing Hatton's spectacular
move in the lane, and Joe
Mccurdy iced things when he
calmly h_it two free throws in the
final seconds.
Magarity was pleased with his
team's performance as they
battled back from the l_arge defi-
cit.
"If
we're not going to win,
we're going to go down fighting.
All season, the team has given
great efforts. Tonight, we got
fortunate. We had some guys do
some good things."
The coach went on to praise
Hatton specifically.
"Bobby Joe played the best
20
minutes of his career, and con-
trolled the game. He brought us
back."
The Red Foxes will return home
after a two game road trip on Feb.
17 to face the Rider Broncos.
W.Swim.-
... continued from page 16
them.
Addington also said she feels
that the Red Foxes are the pre-
liminary favorites going into the
competition.
"We're the home team, so I'd
.. have to say we are the favorites,"
· Addington said. "All we have
to do is stay focused and accom-
plish
the goals
we
set earlier
in
the season."
All four days of the MAAC
championships will have a start-
ing time of 10 a.m .
R.en<la.''contdbtited to the .· It.was a great accomplishlnent."
tea11fs su~e;ess, by. winning the . The Red F()xes
~~d
their,wor~
men's. hrs(singles consolation
cut out forthen1 g_()!Dg;to Prov.I-
·R_
·-u· ·n·ne·.r· ·.s ...
d· ..
·1·.·.·s·
· · p -
·
·· ..
•.1
·
.:e·
-
ased
w .

th
fac1· 11· t1· es ·,
· brackcJ. Supnortalso came from· •. dence. '.fheoppos!tionmcluded,·
Peter H~jg!1t; w~o_placed sec01id · ·_. Nic~oUs C~llege, ~p,9}s curr~11tlj'
.
.
inthemeti}.s'thfrdsin.glesbracket. tl:l~.d:efench11g;~at10~<,ll,C~a111p1- ··_
pe
·
·~o•·
.. rm···.····:
a.-n· -. ·c·
:e.'
.·.··.s ·n. _o·t affiec·.
ted
at· Colgate
and -from'Tlie: doubles· team of
ODS,
and
1¥rnY/ · · : · · · ·. /
1
J.
1
_
Chris Jeut
,irid
Nick Kost,
,.1110
-'l'he
Jeam
says fare\\'.~11 t~ ipany
.
. .. ' ..
placed sec6n4 in
the
Me!)'s· third _· sen
_
io~s _tpis yea( a~d-~el~oines
.
by DENNIS
:o_·
OWD.
to. begin to properly compete at
double5 bracket. . .
· ·
·
.
anyone mterest
ed. · . :-· :·:
.
,'the
NCAA Division ilevel.
Jette:ajd
Kos(alfo known as ._Experience isn'Cn~~sa'iy, bpt
8t
aff
":'riter
·"It's not so much an issue dur-
"AirMaristl? ·were ranked for the -
fun
and hard work sh~uld be ex:.
Imagine Marist College twenty_. . ing_ the indoor s,!ason,. than it_ is
. second st~tiiihi tournament in a . pected,accord~n~t~Xa.Pµjit!!n, . years. from now. There.~e'stu- '_
:
_f9n_h.~,outdo~r. Col.aizzo said,
·row; Haigh~_l~stinthefinalin~tch
.. -The Red~ox~.n;~tan?
1
~~
dents walking around with lap:.·· .ref~mng to his team? access to
to a tie bre*er ..
In
retrospect,
toumamento the~n erencewi . tops instead of books, security ... the}1cCann _Recreation Center
Haight wafconfiqent about his
be
the ~ee~en~ .
.9f
f~RI'I!~,
21
guards driving Range Rovers/.: dunng the wmter .months. But
match. and-_the team's perfor- · at West. Po!nt. ¥ar_t.s!·.Ras_quet-
and a tht'rd elevato·r·. has··be· en . ·.-.~h. en the·_weather 1s not cooper-.
mance.
·
-
·
·
·
·
ball also awaits the-,weekend of
d
h
d
·
·
- ··
·· · ·· ·" '
·
·
,-
added in ChampagnatHali t<>al-:. >~ti_ng
_
urmg t e_ out ~Qr cam-
".Ihad so·meg·ooddra·· ws.~or· my·
March 14, for the state fourna-
th t
b
ted t
11
·
.·--
.
leviateninefloorsofhumantraf-: paig~~ · e earn
15
su ~ec.
0
rilaJches, tlie'laslone was more
ment at Albany:· { ·;~ .. - -·
. fie. Across Route
9,
a high:rise _ run~mg lap~ ar~und t?e bask~t-
~~p~iiili~,
:;>~?Nemu·
;A\liine,"
.
~~, .··· ..
:-"ft:s"been.:'a.Jo
:inust:
1usRw9f
;l~h{Re$¥[~:
-
~\i:
1
~:~~~ei~1
·
::n
.
...... .
:'.l;he·Red·F~J!:~(~.tif~,
.
..
<>n .
Th
llrsday~'
:E~Qruiiiy;;.(
~Then
they, barile)$1ig}I$f
Universityon ~aturoay;,:fe
.
stud~nt parking lot has been.:
b.111
court. Like httle child_ren wtth
built between the new Wal-Mait ... f.rarops, th_ey mak~ sure to stay
and the Psychiatric Center. Ad'- ._-,:1??ide the Im~ which have been
jacent from this structure, in. the., ..
Icl!-,~
~ow~ to simulate a real track.
former Beck Lot stands a state- ... -It ~;slippery and dusty down
of-the-art indoor track and_ field
th~re, .. s?phomore B,en Heff:ron
facility, where everyday at 2 .
.
. ~~d.)t sno~~afe. I m~urpnsed
o'clocktheswiftpatteroffeetcan
~•th the add1ttons they re mak-
be
heard
as
the Red Fox men's
i~g to McCann, they are not r,ut-
track
and
field team circles
an '.
~ng
a
200-meter track down. .
Olympic
size
track.
In
the bleach- '· · ~o weeks from Saturday will
ers, Head Coach Pete Colaizzo
bnng both the start of a~other
shouts instructions as national
outdoor season, and the mcon-
championship ba;ners dangle
venien~e of having to travel t?
from the rafters.
· .
loc~!
_high schools to use their
The possibilities seem endless. facditi~.
. .
.
Hopefully by this time, the Ath-
. While p~cttcmg m such ad-
letic Department will fund such a
verse ~ond1~1ons, the squad w~
project
allowing Colaizzo's team. back.
m
action on Saturday
m
Hamilton, NY at the Colgate
Class of 1932 Invitational.
"There was no team scoring,"
Colaizzo said. "We only paid at-
tention to individual perfor-
mances."
One of which was Ben
Hefferon's 4: 19 record-breaking
finish in the mile run. The result
bettered former teammate Dave
Swift's record by nearly three
seconds. Swift, a 1995 graduate,
was in the area and ran into
Hefferon after the meet.
"He just told me that I ran a nice
race, and thanked me for break-
ing the only record that he held
at Marist," Hefferon joked.
Hefferon later teamed with Mike
McCarthy, Pat Casey, and Mike
Melfi to place first in the Dis-
tance Medley Relay, with another
record breaking time of 10:35.
Eric Deshaies contributed a
strong effort as well, tying his
own record of8.2 seconds in the
55-meter hurdles.
The team is tuning up for the
Northeast Conference champi-
onships at Fairleigh Dickinson
this weekend.
......
..
...












































STATOFTBEWEEK:
QuO'rEQF·~WEEK:
'The momentum will be like a snow-
ball
and
it
will climax this weekend."
-·l6
Senior ,Stacey .Oeitgte'r broke
ti!~.
school rebounding
record
with nine •.
-~rebounds
in
iticn~67
win
over Rob-,
.'i
. · : ert
Mottjs. :Dengler "now
has
a
total .
i .
·
of861
~f?ouads
in
her Maristcarcer..
SPORTS
·February
13/1997
·.-■--.~Y~~~er
Men's swimming coach
Men.Swim!llets .. prepareto·rewrite•.rec.or~ books
.
.-
._.·.


--~
.
'.
.
.
. .
'.
;
..
·,'
_:
-·.
~-
.-
·.
. .. .
.
.
-~
bf
PHiLu~
WBITE. .
?'~def~nly
·
1()()Jcs'gbod on pa-
.•.
·
. •
.
. .
.
·
pet:JbviUcoriie to the end of this
· Staff-Writer
· meet to deteririine the winner of
the MMC," Barrett said ..
: ThisThursd~y could
be
a nos-
talgic mqIJient
in
¥arist history'.
.'11:t~.men's swimming and diving ·.
team is:hos.ting the: 1997Metro
Atlantic Athletic .Confererice
championship meet. If the Red
. Foxes v.·in this chaIQpionship
they
will
be the second team in
any.sport-atMarist
towiri
three
c~nference championships in a
row . .
·· Coach Larry Van.-Wagner has
kept the Red Foxes in ·shape by
·giving ihem shorter .work outs
. and longer peripds .of recovery.
Van Wagner has been using-this
technique, tapering, for. the past
18 seasons that he has coached
here at l\.farist. Besides the physi-
capraining, Van Wagner
has
pro-
. vided mental training
for
tneRed
Foxes .. This .involves setting
r::~i~il~1~!0:~=d~t: _
Ken Ga~rlsh ~rep~res for the MAAC championship being held at the Mc.Can~ Cent~r this
w~'~:n~C:Ckti>n
"I have trained. niy swimmers . weeks oftapeiing and they se.em
aiid muscles.
Van Wagner said.
to set goals for both the team and
to show much enthusiasm dur-
· In additioii,to training the Red
·Despite the.projection
tnac
the
for themselves," Van Wagner · ing their practices.According to Foxes; Van Wagner is training
Red Foxes are suppose to lose
said. "These personal. goals Van Wagner, he feels the mom.en- .· himself. Van Wagnersays that he
to Rider, Marist shows a feeling
must he attainable, realistic and
tum from the practices .will help · is trying to maintain practical . of readiness for Rider and the
productive. Inaddition, these
.
the Red Foxes in the .MAAC · goals. Also, he says that he will
championship.
goals. must correlate. with . the Championship.
·
be. satisfied if Marist achieves
·"We· are projected· to lose to
team's go_als. Overall these goals
''The momentum will be like a
their goals. Van Wagner advises
Ri~erby 44points but that is only
must he positive."
· snowQall arid it will climai.this that in order forthe Red Foxes to
~ause they have more swim-
. This feeling of optimism is felt
weekend," Van Wagner said: · be successfuFthey must
swim
mers in more events;" freshman
throughout the entire
team. ·
Van Wagner has found a way
well, especially on the fustday.
Gary
Barrettsaid.
·
·
"We feel.very IJQsitive towards
to help the Red Foxes deal with Saine of the events on that day ·
However, this does not seem
this
ineet,
especially with all the
the 'pressure• that •·•they ,areien-
. that Maristwill have difficulty in
to effect Marist. The reason for
practices \_Ve hav.e gone countering. Theway to compr9:. are the 200 meter relay and the 50 . the Red Foxes confide11ce
is
tllat
itfrough," sophomore. William . mise this pressure is through
-yard freestyle.'. . . ';.
.
they have d~feated Rider in the
Bre,nnan said. "We
are
ready to
Cerebral·. Approach. This. is .. the
\'I will
be
s~tisfied, even
if
Rider pre-season. Also~ Marist knows
swim!''
coriceptofmind over matter, it wins,aslo.11gVremakeRiders\Vllll
thatRiderappearstolook com-
The Red Foxes have ha<ffour
controls
.
the swimmers emotions : to
:the1ast
everit of the last dayt . petitive by
Ui¢
criti~s.
Dengler
Orea.ks
schoo1··reQoullc.li~g
mark;
110\¥
~t8 ..
€)1 ·
·
·
by
CHRIS
JET.rE
.·· Staff-Y/dter
Marist head
\.cfoach ..
Ken
Babineau;ithe: Red Foxes made
some~J~trnents@nithe,it,prior
Jvlayl.Je
a record.:breaking· feat
.
is.a way.to turn a season around.
. On a night when senior center
Stacey Dengler ·br.oke ·the
lgss.
:. ·•
.· .. · •·
· .
•~~
dicl~~t:wa,ntto
Pl'.4~
tllem\'
this
µmf 'I'h~y
hav,e tllf quic1'~ .
·estguaf~ii)tlleconfere11~;·We
hacl
.
to ·p1ay'-al~tmore:~oriet··
. women's basketballschool's re-
bound_ing record,. theRed Foxes
. defeate~ ·-the
·
.Robert. Morris
C:olonials
by
a sea.re of 72-67:
. The .~ed-'F9xes

wei:-e led by
Dengler
·.
who .scored ·17 points
and. grabbed· the nine rebounds
that she ne_ed¢.coming into the
•Contest
to break Lori Keys•
schoolrecord-of860 rebounds.
Freshman·forward Carrie
Ciancone
helped
the •Red Foxes
with a 12_point and 7 rebound·
effort. Junior guard Jean-Marie
Lesko also added 17 points and
5
rebounds including fouroutof
nine three-pointers.
~ab_inea1:1 saicl. .
i ... .
. ·. ..
" . .
\011 $a~d~y, f~bruiuy.8th; the .
Red
fox~
clroppaj
~
ho_m~ co~-
test
to
tlie
Red
Flash
of
St
Francis
· (PA) 86-8~ iri, overtime ..
,bi
that·
. contest, ::F"r:eshman -forward .
Sabrina Vallery. broke )Jirough
with
a
2rpoint, 5-i:ebqund_·per-
fonnailce. Also playing_w.elrin ·
the loss ~as· Cortney Blore, who
adde4
18
points and
9
reb01mds.
Blore also corinectedon herfirst
three-point field goal in her ca-
reer ...
Despite the
Joss,
the Red Foxes
were
able to keep the game.close
to the.number one team in the
conference. The last
time
the two
teams
met,
St.
Francis
Pa.
handed
the Red Foxes a 92-70 loss.
by Cmus
O'DONNELL
· .. Staff
Writer
TheJ3 day stretch ofprepar-
:ing for.llie Metro Atlantic Ath-
.letic Conference ~hampio~ship
. meet is finally coming to an end
for
the
women's swimming
team.
''J{.e've
been
tapering down
our practicing in tenns. of yard-
a·ge so we can
be properly
restedt Magill said.
However, sophomore Melanie
Addington said the practicing
for the divers has · pretty . much
remained the same.
''The divers have five' different
dives that we have to execute in
competition;'' she said. "So we
work _on the ones that we are
weak
on."
: ., Iii'ofcler.for Marist to look
. cortipetitive; VaiWagner'
is
de-
periciing on· ·his juniors and se-
. riiors to.lead the Red Foxes. The
·eventsth~tVan Wligner expects
Maristto have an edge on are
500
yard
freestyle, 1 meter dive
. Md the
200
yard
1.M:;
which take ·
place on the first day, On the sec-
ond day, the Red Foxes are to
· reign victorious in the 400 yard
1.M.,
200
yard freestyle and the
100
yard breast. Finally, on the
third day, Marist is projected to
score· high in the 1650 yard
freestyie,
200
yard back and the
·3 meter dive;Van Wagner and his
swimmers and divers feel very
optimistic about the events and
the championship
"This meet willbe more com-
petitivethen last year's meet, so
we
will have to step up and fo-
cus in
'
order·for us to win,"
Brennan said.
The teams that will compete
with . Marist are Canisius,
Fairfield, Iona, Loyola, Niagara,
Rider and St. Peter's. IfMarist
wins the championship, they will
be
the only team next to the men's
basketball
team
to win three con-
ference championships in a row.
Also, this will mean a lot to the
players
and Van
Wagner.
"This will
be
up there with the
. 100th win," Van Wagner said. "If
we win this it will mean a lot to
the team~ program and the
school."
the freshman have been a little
nervous,'' she said.
Addington· added that . the·
team's
mood has been a little anx-
ious, but definitely not negative.
The team
will
have to stay fo-
cused if they want-to surpass the
competitive teams like
Loyola who Marist beat during
the regular season. The one ad-
vantage the Red Foxes do
The
Red
Foxes, who improved
to 8-13.overall; 5-8 in the NEC,
were able to.keep their turnovers
fairly low, 17-to
be
exacL The
Red Foxes also ·helped their
cause by shooting 48% from the
field.
The last time the Red Foxes
faced. Robert Morris. the
Colonials defeated Marist by a
score ot 91-71. According to
Despite the recent incons.istent
play of the Red Foxes, Babineau
feels that his team is improving.
"We are playing the best bas-
. ketball we've played all year".
·
The MAAC championships
will
beheld in the
Red
Foxes back
yard, more commonly known as
the James J. McCann Recreation ·
Center. Today marks the first of.
four days of intense competition.
Sophomore Lisa Magill said
the
practices have been getting less
strenuous for the swimmers.
Magill said.the team's mood•
during these practices have been
a little
mixed.
have is the fact that they are host-
ing the championships where
they know the facilities and the
suppqrt of the fans
will be
with
Please see W.Hoops on p.15 ...
"Generally the team has been
getting psyched up, but some of
Please see W.Swim on p. 15 ...


49.13.1
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49.13.16