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The Circle, February 20, 1997.pdf

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 49 No. 14 - February 20, 1997

content

..
e
.
a
teams
,
-
.:
pre"il~i;~
·-,
to
·
·
·
ltosf
.. ~
,Kid~
:
~
biy.
_:
out'
.
·
~y
MEG~
:
ST.
·
Jo~
• :
staff Writer
.
.
A
fun
day"for
.
a good cause is
tion ]_a_st
_
S.~11!1:gay;~
'
s~i~(a!j~n'.'
... '
t<{
Manst's
.
:
valuefof education
·
;
.
the idea
.
behind
a
basketball pro~
ior~ recejy~J~~i(ch1ss
~
ririg~jn ... a'.senseofcmruinmity
;
and sei:~
··
·gramthisSunday; Feb
:
·.
23, from
:~l~~i~l@ii
·
-~;~~i~~
c
~
.
··
~~~i~E:rtc:~::."' :.:
Feb. I ~
r
lt
,
CQll
,
~1~
.
t~ of~
~~Q
. :
o~~
1deals
;
of 19e mstt~
.
~~n,'' he
,
<
·
L:,i;
..
)Vcimen
;s. basket ban
·.
teains, in
by _Pr~s1q~n~ ~~n~1s ~\l~r• tlu~ ·
.
s_a1~.
i
'.~Y{e.hope ym1
!
U
_
;
~e~-1::tllat
: .
~,
;;!·
conjunction with the Office of
~le~~tng
'
~n~
_
d1~~!!
.
blltt9n
:
9t
•..
·
ring prpudly, buCperhaps most
.
. "·
;;J
.
-~pedalServices~
will
be hosting
n~g~~
a!l~
-J
h~ pre_sc::ntati()ll of
.
,
importantly;
,
assume
·
that new
.
if=.
Kids
.
Day
:
Out,
a
.
one day clinic
awards to
:
~u~tandingj'!ni~rs
;
.
' ,
leadetstiip'role;t,
~
i
"
:
, ,
:
~
::
,'
·
:>
.
' .
for local players
,
ages 4to
18 . .
..
~u~y
<
sajd_rlngs;pl~y
_
a
.
v
_
~CX
:;·

.
.
,
'(
hi~
prayer
~
bl~sslng
~.e'
fj11gs,
:
·.
·Steve
·
Sauers,
.
assistant coach
·
.
syit1~lt~J<:)lem~oc1ety
(
Fpr~~~
-
/1
.
th~rJ::.~1:ceMc~~n ~ajd}~if
.
..
::,
;: .

.
.
.
_
.
.
_
.
.
:
.
c
.
.
anhall

.
ofthe men's t~am; stressed the
ample,.nngs
are
given for athletic · ·
·
•Wtll
.
be signs, of never-endmg
·
-
·.
A
.
. ·

·
d ·•. •
.
p
·
.
.
·

-


-
• •
.

·.

·
importance of the day as a unique
·
·
:.. H·
·

cl
·
eddi ·
·
·. . -
,

·
'
·
.
,.
·
<,
·
..
..
,
•·
·
.c •
..
· ·
.
·
·.
.
~
el!'tc
Vice resident ArtlrfA.rslanian
.
presents junior John
.
. .
.
co.ID~~! ,
9
ns
·
~n
·
_.
at
.
w
·
,
--
0~~-
'
.
c9
_
D)Illll!l!~~t ~d b9n~ betwee11
·:
Wl!ll~l1l
_
s
with
his ring atthe junior
.
ririg ceremony in ~he c
·
ha
·
pel;
opportunity for evex:yone in-
~ir;s~l~t~~
.
:;t;~1~;!j~i:it~
;
:

.
:J:~;gh\~
·
~~
~~~
yet
:
.
:
~Irt
;
ri~;
qer~d tox
;
·
vic~ pr~si-
·
_
h'ay~
·
~?~tribut~
J
o
·.
the
.
o~~~a11
.
..
~~~~~
nicest
.
thing is ~at
·
the
.
ru.td coiµ~••m~ntto his or!tercol-
.
• <
to ~;
·,
the
·
men and woD1en

who
.
.
,
.
·
.
de11~ and dean
for
student affairs; Manst community/'
·
men's
and
women's teams get the
L
..
.Jfg~'.
-.
,:
/\.
·
;/
} :
·•
;~
:
.
.
.
.
/::
:
.
c
:.: '
·w~'lliesirings
·
willl>elx>
_.
uii!f
m.
·
·
9Js
,
ti,;jbuted
.
• .
: a\Vafci~
,
-
:
.
to
.
Junior class members voted for. chance to work together and use
·
.
. .'
.
.
'':fa,qay
;
:,
)V~'t'e-recognizing lbvtfru.iJoyalty
tt>
one
:
ariothet
(
.
ou
.
~t~~ing _i~d
.
iyicluals in
the
'
:
·.
a
.
m<tl~
_
and female student
-
they
their
·
sldlls to·help kids,
·
and the
·
>
i
.
. .
·
_
these
.
_
meµ· an?
·
wo~en
,
are
.
be- · and
·
to
dietfalma
mater,'
'.
,
he said
;
,
jQrtlor.
class
,
.
·
, .
-\<
.
,
:
'
.
'.:
.
.
felt made
~ti
outstanding
·
c:oniii~
.
kids get
a
chance
to
interact with
:
~
,
:
, ..
.
'9
0}lting
.;
~~
~
k,ehol(l¢~s
:
in this
.
''Then ~less tttes~
·
':
sign~ts
;
·
.
.
the:Y,
i
<
.
.
\
~.ro,t~er
_.
~ra:nk
.'
J(el
_
ly!
:
)
~
R,
O
:
·
,
butio~
ifr
.
the
.
fields of
.
athl
.
~tics
.
_
the~~~ andc():ach.es
.
they
-
USU-'
.
1
1
.
,
,
. .
dassmen
:
\;.
IJe
:
~aid
;/
th~
f
stu- .
\
sistan
f!
&an Jor
'
shident
·
'
affrufs
.
_/
produce
·
wen
.:
rourided'itidividu:
, .
.
.
with an av.raid for having th~high-
..
. ·
:
baskeJb.all Jund
.
a!}lentals
.


For
.
a
.
i
!,
den~ \VHl
'
tj
~
y
~
~
iiii'inte@
.
i&I~in
_:_.:
pr~
:
~ntedapproxiinat~lY
80
stu~
: '.
a.1s
:
_
:
\
h
~
~
;
said
~
+
~'.
pu,ri~g
:
the
·
ring
·

e$t cuniu~aci
_
ve
Gf>A;
?-95.
·
.
; :,
.
· .
.



·
.
·
..
s~
~
Jlfe¢~play;rs
~i~pe~
~ore
i
J
-
l-m~~!
~
::
~
~
'
~
%~~--~
j(
f
x~
;
t~►;sb
t
l
;
cerC
.
}
;~,~n61"Zf
]'li,i:ci~
'
.·.;'
ei~;;~iRIN&,
)>dg,4 .

'.
·
t~~~N~f
.
:;11:.e :::~:;;.
.
J~
.
Man~gert:ie,~t,
-
~s
.
i~
!ts,:t":1!'8r~~ of
sel~-~s~s~~nt,
~
~h.ich c:~n
.
be
.
,
~ real qualicy
·
thJ:tist
-
~~re; and}(~
'.,
.
~!l
:we re
_
~9n
5
taotly_ m~ng
ad-: . :
:
flyers were.p<>s
_
t~
·
~oughout
'i
l
.
!'t11~~l•n~
}
!~.!1:U.~?J(~~m,e!fto
.
c~mpar~~ :with
:
na~1
_
onal stan
~
_-;
1pip_o.~f
to fipd
~
out
:
].lo~
.
tpe
.
·
.
Ju
.
st~ents,
:
~~!
1
Y
~f~
:
,
.
A!!
?:°r
_,
PQughkeepsie to
·
·
advertise Jhe
.
.
d
· ..
ll}Cr~
:
q~~o/
:
~~
f
W}l~~tive-
.
.
~~~~
~-

:.
_
.
.
/
·
·:,
'.?
·
·
c"

:
.
:
:
t:
:
,
.
:
f
'··L;
{•
c
:
~
:
tu~:l:1.t~YJ~!~
:
a¥.\ltthar·
: .·.
~~hie~
.
~w~
~
t~
,,
a,r~
,
.
doc~
.
P.:1~
11
ted,-
·
prt:,gram
:
;
\V(.lic:11
'.
isiri, its sev~nth
.
!
,
·
.n1l;•iti1i
:
~i~J:\i~
L
•'-'
~
m1t6~~~;;JJ;!
-
~:l~~
-
~f
ity
:
.

~
l
1
l{J~~~~~~f/~;
-
.•
·
..
:
·
;i~~;;:~~~~~
f
'
0
f
\~at

·

·
•··
Yr-.Tu
~
.

.
~1irtic
·
.
~C>s
~
·
·•
$iO
ror
·
·
6ne
·
·}
I
ne~s
·
gep.amn~ntf
has
played
~
~
'
<Ool#tl
'.!11eater
yesterday
tq
help
.
·
f
(
s~P. up"
.
ll!ld
p<>sition the bus~-
··
.
.
·.•·
.
<
~e
s,c:~?
0
}'~as
dete
.
l~~; lln.
.
~hilg,
:,
~~
·
p·are~ts
.
are
ch!lfged
.
·
;
:
a~ttye
.
r9~~
J
~
;
f:b
.
e plan~
.
~d d
.
e-
.
t~
.
e
::
s~~d .. e
_
nt. body understan~
.
.
~~s
sc~qolto
~
more compett:-
, ,
a~v.
15
ory
,
~ou~c._t1,
"'hii~
~p~SI~ts
five
:
·
dollarsJor eacli additional
.
\
1
ve~opment of~
_
e new s~hoot
· ·
more of its purposes
_.
··
uve. The department developed
·
··
0
corporate
.
exe_cu t
,
~s
·
111
.
.<>

child parl,icipating,
-
~ees
fpr the
··
i
,
~av.~
·._
~e~~ WO[lpng :w.
.
•t~
)
he
.
day'will
6¢nefit the MarisfCol-
·j
sch~lfor
.
_
lhe P~ttwo
:
yeax:s
:.
·
1ege Siho,larship fo
r'°
Stu
,
dents
The school ofbusmess manage-
·
.
·
·
·th
·

·
·
b·1·
1
·
·
,
.
· ·
h
.
·
·
h
·
·
·

··
:,.,i
·
·
h
. ··· ·
·
.
·
d
·
·
d
·


·
.
·
w1
.
·
.
1sa 1 1 1es,
w
1c . 1s
men.
t
.
a.rso
.
a s
.
a sec. on a
v1sory
· :
•.
d
.
ed
·
1
·
·
·ru· ·
bl
·
ed
· ·
tu
·
·
c1e·
·
'ts·
· ·
t
· · ·
·
.
· ·
·
·.
.
. ,
,
.
·
·
·

·
·
.
, · ·
·
·
. . awaf
o
sa
s
n
o
councd,
:
bµttt1s made up Qfbu
.
s1., . h
··
. -
1
,
·.
·
fi
·
·<
0
·
··
c
'
·
t.h
.
·
·•
0
·
11e
·
·
g
·
e
·
.
·
.
.
..
.
.
.
.
. .
· .
.
.
e
1n
ma e e1r c
ex-
.
: ness students rather than execu-
,
·
'.t'..
.
·
·
·
.
·
·
,
·.
·
.
·
lives
.
.
·
,
:
;
'
.
pe~
.
~t:s
:
.
<
<
>;
,
.
.
,
.
··
·
Th
·
·
·
.
.
·.-·
·
h
•·
.

·
1
·
-
,

·
t
·
fi"-
;;.
Ab
.
~
-
k
-
·
.
.
Lmda
·
Scorza, adnumstrat
.
1ve
.
roug cons an

=
ac
.
.
··
.
·
-
.
·.
;
.
fr
.
· _.
bo
.
th
·
·
·
.
-
1
·
th
. ·
h
.
1

sec
.
reta,ry
.
for Special
.
Services, 1s
•.
.
om
counc1 s
e sc oo
·
·
· ·
,
· .
.-
- - . ·
·

·
1
"
··
·
. . ..
.
·
·
.

.
.
· '
·

·
. .
c<;>ordmatmg the event.
·
,
,.
~as ~)?le!°: fo1,1I1 a ~~nnal age?da
:
Accordin to Scoria, the three
.
{
.
and
.
W(!~k
toget!ter.
-
toward
llil'.'
h
'
r
.
:m
be
fits are
ts
!
.
provement
of
the school and its
.
OU
fc
p ogr .
-
·
_
ne
l
p n '
,
.
.
;
·.
.
.
· ·
·
·
·
·
as.wellas kids.
.
.
r
°.1!s.sipn.
:
.
.
.
. .
.
.:
.
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
.
.
>:
Kids
Day.Out
gives paren~ a
.
pi~
~ch0<>l also Ifi.lplem~nted }?reak without .
.
ih~m having to
· fi~e ~J:c:fo~ to lle
:
lp
~
5<:~0?
1 .
·
\Vorry about
~e
kids,
"
It's also a
.
~~th develo~meJ!t
;ID?,
g~
t
put
.
financially successful program:
m anformal_izecl fashion.
.
.
A®Qt $1,200
.
has be~n
.
raised
.
.
·
·
.
;
On~ W.k force c~mcentrates each year for the
·
scholarship
p11marily on the cumculum, one fund," Scona says.
.
·
c,oncentrates on !acu!ty develop-
The
organizers
·
said they hope
ment an~ keepmg
_
m constant the children
will
tal<e something
.
contact
"".!th
facu~lt}'.~ and an?ther more than a
good
shot away from
concerns itself with mstrucuonal
the day, although that would
be
resources, such as computer and
nice too. The main goal is to
other technology.
·
'
·
Pleas.e see SCHOOL, page 4...
Please
see KIDS,
page 3 ..•
-
-
-
- -
-
-
-
·
-
-

--
-
--
..
)
I
'

























































































































































































































/'
sexual
t
~it~u,
t:
Forem
i~?
:
9n_cte
:1
m1ss us
·
tf
theiate 1
f;i'>
Tom
i!
p
(ansto
;,
1
:!"
·
\i'
tiIBedd
}
and
Sha
1
)
byLaure
X
ior'!heL
t.
~i
~irr
j\
w
~i~
i,1j
·
.
·
,
.
ent
jet
·
1emati
,
said its
f
ii
/
Octobc
;0
t
IThf
:'.
;(~
Dus
).~
o#

Fe~:
.
.
.

\>
Sadirov
,?
niahdrd
'
t
f
Rimon
·
,
-
>
fi
eighbori
i;
·
(
'.f!leTaji
}
Jightersl
·;'.
undersrail
';
tives,wh
·
.•
¼:};x
i/
.
.,.
....
THE
CIRCLE :
I~
ijj
Q
-
~,,,
I
It l
:
~l«Jn I
It
I
.
:,February20,
1997
""
_:_,_:
-··
·


·.
·:·
j3

ritairi,
'
chiiia

f;tlio
·
11~0W
.:
aiffereiipes
:;-
8x~r
1:
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,
/
·.·
·
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··
>
.
.
. '
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.
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·
.
.
;
_ ··
.
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.
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: _

.
.
_
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.
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·,,.
:;
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. ·.
·
.
·
·

-

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-
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..
·

-\
//'.•,
:
t
;t
.
': HONGKONG(CNN)..;.;;
:
BritishFor
.:.
.
.
''Thefrepotgo~ngtq;be
'
elected.?t{
·
.
eign Secretary Malcolm Rifkind met
,
_·,

·
:
·
SheiJi:als6
-
siud)he.reis going
0
to
:
_be
.
···
with ~~rig K(?ng's future leaderfor
·
~e
.
>'.
.
·
·
.
,··
..
'
"
·:
:
'
:
q
ii~stiops
_
.0f_ll~
_
i

tJ:i:e
:
·
¢hi~
f
~
g':)v~fn
.::
firsftime Sunday, but.the t~o failed to
·;
·:
-
:
··
~e!}f \\'il(deal ~i(h
_
disSi~~~ts
·
.
in
:
.Hqng
·. ·
-
·
narrowth~gap
-
between
-
theoµtgoin~-r - -
-
~
..
F__
··
,
_
___
J(ong
,
.
:.2./J'.:::;
,
,,
'_,:_;~LC
...
~
'.L·
.
::
.
:
,;)
__
:t
~--
..
and incoming goveminerits. .
.
.
.
-....r~i...
'
.
.
<
.
''The· C~inesc qorinn~riisi
Pa.rtY
_l'.!as
Hong Kong is
:
to be reverted from
~"T"",,-,..:y,
.
-..,~:..-aw
·
nof been
a
friend of individual liberties
British control to
'
Chiriese ru
_
le on July
.
. ...
.
.
.
.
•"
'r-\-+h'-;,'
.
::
andpghts
;
and
,
Ithiµldhatihis
:
is asign
l.Thetwo sides
·
h
_
a
_
ve
:
sha'rply split
.
.
.
..
...
.
.
,
.
.
..
·.·
.
_..
'
th~i
.
they
_
:
¥lgoiQtftotake
:
a
·
mor~re
_
-
o~er" changes to cu~~!lt)?w_s, espe
.
-
How
.
-.yill
JIJ,,e,
'
chqnge
from
·
-
pre~sive ~pp~achC
.
~e sclid;
_

:<
:
c1allythoseconcemmgc1\'.tlhberties
:-
·
B
·
·t·
h
=
t
.
·
c
·
'fi•
, ..
·
1:
"
if-
.
'
0
:,.:
~ueGronewold,ass1stantp~fessorof
• Tung(::_h
_
ee~hwa;tllfftlture9hiefex~
·.·
rz
l~
-;,:
f
.
·
.
z.n._<:_~e._r!,f e. a -
:
..
/
hi~toryatMarist;sa:idsheis'pessimis-·
~utivc(ofHong
·
_
~ong?
·
~aid the two
~
.
:
JecfHoiJg
·'
Koiig?
/':°:-
.
:
'.
ti~
-:
a~~u.t!b,e_}mte
pf_ll~~~
!,(Ong'. .
She
sides havt! had maJor disagreements.
· ·
·
·
·· .
said that
,
Chin~ 1mtation at
_
_
the :U.S.
''The British ·stand is clear;but I wish
,,
Ho~ev~r,
-
Tung
;
citing responses to
-
'for its relatio~~
.
with
-
taiw,an
_
and its
they would reconsider,'' he said.
.
..
· several surveys
fr.orn
international com~
threatening to u
·
se:Jorce l~st year,
·
.
..
.
Tung
·
·
described
:
his meeting.with
.· ·
·
panies
·
in Hong Kong; maintained
·
that
·
.
showec(hQ\V~usJ:i they were WiHing to
· Rifkind as oth(?rwis(? constructive
.
and
·
confideri~e remai9s
,
high.
'· ·
·
·
.
_
.
·
.-
.
takeds~ in ~iltematicinal
affai_n;'.
.
·
.
.

useful and indicated he :would "listen
The
1984
Sino
·
~BritistiJoint Declara-
0/;
Gronew9ld
i
said China
_
has
·
already
very carefully
'
' to input on how the
tion; which established the
-
hando~er;
~:
designate.<f '
:
~pecial e~onomic
.
zone
_
s"
.
laws should be changed.
.
.
calls forChina to keep
·
Ho11g:Kong's where there is s<>me
:
capitalism within
But he stood by his
.
conviction that
civil liberties and capitalist
·
system iri-
its countiy
:
and might
do
.
the same for
Hong Kong should embrace whathe tact for
.
SO years. '
.
,.
-
.
Hong Kong;
:.-.
SJi~:si:tid; howeyer, al-
calls "Chinese values," favoring com-
The

main disagreements over the
though the Chinese iriay give economic
munity needs over individual human
-
handover'revolve around Beijing's plan
·
freedom, they will not embrace deriloc~
·
rights
.
·
·
·
·
to weaken two civil liberties
'
laws and
·
-
racy and dissent.
·
.
·
-
·
->
·
·
Rifkind called the disagreements a
install a largely self~selected legislature
''.There's economic leeway,
·
but they
_hindrance to a smooth transition.
·
pending fresh elections in
1998.
~aw-the Hne,"
:
she said .
.
.
"1Jiere's ·no
He also said Britain
:
would maintain
China says Britain changed the elec-

political flexibility whatsoever.!' .,
.
.
"~aximumpressuie"_
in
its opposition
,
tion ruies and brbadened civil liberties
·
Gronewold aiso said China would
.
try
to China's plans until June
30,
the last
with9ut its cq_nsent.
.
. .
. .
.
.
.
.
to
.
use Hong Kong to their
.
economic
day ofcoloniafrule in Hong Kong:
Shawn Sheih, assistant professor of advantage
.
.
-
.
.
.
.
In line with this, Rifkirid said the in:-
·
political science at Marist College, said
''They've got a stock market in Shang-
. temational community, including the
he, does not expect that there
.
will be
h~ and they're going'to
try
to use it as
United States arid other ·powers, will many economic changes in'Hong Kong
the source of international capital it's
monitor developments in Hong Kong
after.the transfer of power
. ·
·
-
been and reign in its political freedoms."
after
1997
because i
,
t "is an asset for
"I
think China has an interest in main-
Gronewold said China would hope
the world, not just for its own peoplie
tain!ng the current capitalist system as
-
·
that Horig Kong foll~ws th~ e?(ample of
or for a particular regime."
.
it is," he said
.-·
·
.
·
.
Singapore; which is
a
couritrythat has
With
.
the region's eco~omy boom-
Accordingto Sheih, over the last sev-
.
a booming economy and
.
an authorita-
ing, Rifkind said he is concerned that eral years there
has
been an
.
e
_
ffor:ttQ
:<
·.
tive govenirilent.
..
China's hard-line stance
_
could erode
ward democratization. There were elec:.
.
·
She
.
said in Singapore, the strong
.
Hong Kong's economy
:
·
.
··
·
.
.
.
.
tions and th~ l~gislattire was given more
·
economy made people
'
riot
as
worried
"I believe that people
·
are neryous
·
power.
·
No\v
;
he
'
said China is attempt~ about losing
any
political freedoms.
and worried and anxious," he said.
"I .
ing to
roU
back these reforms.
.
.
·· . .
''Basically what Singapore did was co-
. W~>Uldn't say confide11ce
_
has
:
clisap
~
'
'
''Chiria
'
-is going to e
_
stablish its_owii'
:'
op any disse
_
nt}?fbuying people
.
offt
)
.ih~arecL;
rii
;
e
.
econ(?,'iny1~
still
very
:·,
goverhirifcommunitfaiti:f thesepeople
"'.'}
:'
'
:
,
__
_
,
'
.
:
·
::'.';:•
:
·
--
-,
-,
'
·
--
=
·
:
·tn
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.
.
·
/'
\
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:
pii<Jy~nL
,
.
:
,/,'
>
·.

_:.
.
.
;-
aie
-
goirig
"-
fo

be appoiilted,"
'
he
·
said
i
'
'
Additional
'reporting by
Michael Goot
Pro~ecution lose~
·.
cfucii1l\vitnesses
_
.
in Okla.hoinaboinbing
i
C£.1Se
·
.
·
:
_
oENVER
(CNN)_;
Theorily
~main-
·
.
incire
ti{its
evidence evapo~at~ before it .
:
contend~ the FBlbot6hed
.the
identifi-
ing eyewitness who might place Tim~ evefgets tQtrial;
·
.
·
-
·
cation process.
·
·
·
.
.
·
''
·-
·
·
thyMcVeigh_at
th~
Oklahoma
City
.
,_
-
Stephen Joiles;
-
McVeigh's attorney
·.
Toe
·
onlywitne~s t(}takethe
'
stand-to
bombing scene has been dropped from
.
.
said ·these cl(?velopment's strengthened
·
.
tryfo place
·
Mc Veigh
·
near
!
the
bomb
. the case,
.
.
-
. -
·. ;
,
.
.
. .
.
·
.
,'
'.
'"
the deferi~e·s
·
case~
.
.-
.
.
.
.
.
scenewillbeagas station attendant from
The
"
prose:cution
·
has
_
removed
.
·
·
..
'~lthinf it's animportantelement of
.
.
a
.
truck stop
·
about80 miles
,
nortll of
Wlliam Dunlap, who said he sawa a
·
:
our
·
case)hat
_
the
government; after
ajl
·
Okl$omaCity.
.
. :
_-
-.
.
. .
.
.
mand standing behind the ~mb truck
_
~f this publicity, h~decided notto call
.
That \\'.itness
has
identified Mc Veigh
.
and thoughtitwas McVeigh.
.
.
a
·
singl~ pe~rifr{)IIl Okla:1t9maCity who
as
·
the !Jlah\\lho paid
'
cash tobuygas
::
~
They did not saywhyjtr~nioved
.
can'posHNely
"
identifyTim McYeigh,"
foraRy<iertrucksometimf;

afterl
a.m.
him, but CNN learned-prosecutors 'he
.
said
/
t.;
·

..
.
..
·
.
. -

.
.
·
on the morning of.th,e
:
bornbing;
·
~ow:-
ilever asked Dunlap to identify .
·
Othe.r partsof the pro's~ution'scase ever;
CNN
has been
·
iold,"that witness
Mc Yeigh in a police lineup.
. . .
.
.
are
also Being SC11ltinizecL
;
·
The
'
owner
.
once

filed
a
co~perisatiori
.
cJaiin for
.
The los
s
of _I?unlap
_
lea\'es µie goy.: ; andamechajuc3:taRyd~rQffice_inJU:nc.:.
.
blurred
vision .
.
·
..
.
·
,
:-
· :
'
.
:
·;,
._-:
,. ··
.
.

·•
-
ernm¢ntwith no one to place McVeigh
·
tion(~ity;I(ansas:
·
w~ere the bomb truck
·
..
McVeiglj's tiiaps sche4uled to begin
• atthe
·
s
.
cene of the
.
crime .
.
Such
·
a
set-
.
.
had been rented, identified McVeigh
as
·
·
¥arch
~
1.
~e
:
faces Cliarges
of
terror-
back coulcl prove

c::ostly
.
to
the pros~
; .
-
the man
·
whO- rented

the truck that car-
·
'
·
.
ism; murder
and
conspiracy iri
·
.
whaf is
ecution, which has seen more
;
aricl
-
ried
the bomb
;
butMcVeigh's a~omey
·
thenation'sworstterrorisinattackever.
: - .
_7
_:
· • .



' . -
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·.
High6L
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Sunny.
High39.
I..ow28.
:
·
Source
:
Weath~mews Inc.
































































































































































































































































































S
'
oiith_eiicl
'
c
,
offeehouse provides
substim.ce~free alternative to
partying
.
.
.
.
.
'
~
,
'by
TIM MANSON
..
Asst. Editor
.
.
''The first time we had about 50 people,''
he said. ~•But. since then, we've had
<l_!lY-
where from 100 to 120 people in the
·
·
·-
,

.
··-
-
·-
-···
-
··
·
,
--
---
·
-
-:---
·
·
·
···--
·
•_·- ···-·
·
·
·
--
·
·
lounge;''
·
--
-
--
---
.:
..
;
··--·--
-
---
-
··
Students
:
have been pouring into Leo
·
Pam Harayda, a freshman involved with
·
·
Hall
lately.
.
_
the

Southend society, said the
,
The Southend society has recently been
coffeehouse is starting to bring the cam-
'
.
sponsoring cafe--like coffeehouse pus together.
gatheripgs in the lounge of Leo
.
Hall
.
to
"I think it's really turned out to be sorne-
prolllote campus unity and give students
thing that no orie expected it to be," she
·
an entertaining place to go every othet:

said, "We have people coming over from
Thursday night.
Gartland and the townhouses. Now we
·
Amy Donahue, assistant resident direc-
not only see familiar fac~, but we also
tQJ' and co-fouild~r of the coffeehouse,
see new faces every time
.
"
said the concept of the coffeehouse gre\Y
·
Donahue said the setting also makes it
from the Southend society's efforts to pro-
.
easier for the performersto get up in front
vide students with activities on campus.
of people who are just sitting around and
"W~ originally wanted to provide an al-
talking.
·
·
·
·temative for freshmen to going out and
"It
brings out students~ talents," she
.
,
•·
,
.
.
Circle Photo/ Susan Goulet
Alpha Sigma Tau sold ab~ut 160 tickets to
An
Evening In Venice
in
the Cabaretto
ral~e funds for the Xerodema Pigm~ri~os':'m Society of Dutchess County.
·
drinking every night," she said.
said. "It's easier being able to perform in
Donahue said the lounge opens at 9:30
an informal setting, rather than being on a
p
;
m. and does not close until all the per-
stage with everyone looking at them."
fonners are finished. She said students
Oertel said he agrees it is a good place
go there to
talk,
drink coffee, eat cookies
for students to get
a
start in public per-
.
·
· ·
·
·
·
or crackers, and some even write their
forming.
.
·
·
A
.
·
s
·
·
T
.
h
·
··
·
o
St
s
·
·
Ev
·
e',.;, •
.
.

.
..
l
7 .

names on the performance sign-up sheet
"It gives students the opportunity
,
in a
·
·
•·
·
·
· :
.
~
·
.
.
,
'. •
_
.
·
_
-,..11,J
_
ng
.
,
.
J
~
n
.
__
r.en
fC
e
and do whaJ~_verthey want in front of the
very informal setting in front of friends
fu
·
.
n_
.
drm
.'
·s
·
e
.
r+-o
·
·
r
.
chi
·· ·
.
·
:
1d
·
w1·t
·
hrare
·
.
d.1·sease
groupofpeople.
.
.
.
.
.
arid students
;
to perform in any way,
,l
I
Chris Oertel, resident c;lirector of
Leo
Hall
shape, or form," he said.
·
.
·
.
~d co-founder of the coffeehouse, said
Oertel said performances have ranged
· Karen .md David
Mahar,
Katie's parents,
thecoffeehouse provides a place where
from reading poems and short stories to
.
established the,
XP
Society of Dutchess
students can just hang out and have a
playing music and even tap dancing.
.
byKRISTJN ~CHARD
Editor~,n~chief
.
County
·
with the intenticm
·
of increasing
good time without going off campus.
·
Harayda said th
.
e posters that are up all
awareness of the
.
disease, protecting the
''The Southend society itself is a group
·
around campus
-
and the word of mouth
~
Alpha SJgma Tau (AST) did
:
not spend
children, and promoting research for a
.
of students who are looking to provide a · that has been generated have strongly
. _
the
_
money raised at last Thursday's Ali
_
cure .
.
Tlie society also aims 10
:
help XP
substance-free, alcohol-free alternative to
contributed to the success of the
.
:
Evening in Venice
fundraiser on
.
national
.
children l~ve as n,ormally
ru;
possible.
.
going out." he said
.
·
coffeehouse
.
dues,
·
~ocials, or
any
otiie
r'
sorority func.,
Amy Guerin,
.
rush director andfonner
.
Oertel said the Southend society also
_lion
'.
,
:
.
·.
·.
-
,
;
.
.
_.,
,
_
::
.
.
.
philanthropy fungraising coordinator of organizes activities and movie nights, but
..
•: .
Instead; AS.T donated the proceeds
AST, sajd the
:
sisters of: AST have been
nothing ~as taken off as weil as the cof-
.
:
fro111
~he tive_Qt t9 anorganizatio~.fev.r have
.
volunteeririg"i9 hei!)'i<:atfe's family since
feehouses have.
Please see
C~FFEEHO~SE,
page 4 ...
·.

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:
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.
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;: ;
.
.
,
i
-
·
fyfah:.µ-, a 5-year"'.old from Poughk~psie
she said.
· .
·:
·.
-
·
·
·
·
.
.
_
.
.
'.
/
.°"
;.,..:!:
~
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<

afflicted
,
with thi~ rare and
'.
fatal
:
genetic
·

·
AlthQligp Kati~
;
can
.
never ~e!)ture
·
_
-
,
_. '
·
-
,-__
·
·
'
disease
;
:;
:
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·

;
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:
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·
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'.
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outside during
.
the
.
'daylighthours,
-'
she
:
.

·.
t''.
,
.
.
'
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,,J
.r
'
·

:
Child re!} with
.
~erod~ma ~gnient9su~

·
;
·
do.es
,
_m;mage
:
to maintain
_
a relatively
.
.
.
,
.
.
.
-
(XP)areultra-sensitiveto-ultravioletlight
nonnalschedule.
,
.
·
.
··
··.
,
·==
.·_
i
Ex.p9s~re ~o thi_s Ugh~
can
-
~~~sicellular
..
• . According to Gu
~
rin
,'
Kati
_
e goes to bed
·
_
,
ffeunage; menutl r.etardatio*, deafness, and
,
.
at
ab9u~ 9:30
:
P
'.
m.~ in o~der to keep the
·,
blindness.in these children.
.
..
·.
family functioning on th~ same schedule.
'
.o.: ·-,
;J'he
'
disease is so
'
rare that p~pie with '
.
; I<atje is
~I}y.
o(~i children .
.
·
.
XP
d~:>
not usually suryive past th~ir teen~
.
Last swnm.t:r,
,
Karen Mahar organized the
.
age
:
y~r(
'
.
,
/
:
.
.
.
·•
.

..
'.
:
-
~
.;:
......
:
,
:.
.
·
.firs!
·
.
.
Sµn
.
.
Doii;i Camp
~
for childr,en
·
.
·
XP,is
cur'r.¢lltlyj11~urable
;
~d th
,
e gov
7
-
.
throughoµt 9Ie
_
country at1d the world with
.
.

'
eriiµ1~nt
;
C
_
Ut allJ11nding for
.
the cqs
_
ease in
.
,
_xp.
At
the
.
CaIJ,lp,
tl,te c
,
hildren played bllll;
C:
October:
;
{Dier¢fore, the
'
Jamilies of those
,
socialized;
.
and played games at
.
night
.
···:
afflict~cf~i~ :xP
.
niu
_
~fr~ly~l~ly ori
do-
>
when
_
'.they cpuld,
-
~
-
outside.
.
.· .·
..
nation{ arid
-
volunteers.
.
.
'
..
·
:
Later this sern~ter, Alpha Sigma Tau will
·
·
.
·
..
:~
At ihe
:
fundraiser, the AST sis!e~ \V~ted
..
be posting_
·
s1gps
'
/or
"
anyone interesting
·
.
,
tables and
.
served-mi Itµian
~eal
consist-
.
Jn:volunteering
_
at thjsyear's S_un Down
.
ing
'.
C>fs_al~d~
'
pa~t
_
a wi~h phoice of
Punp.
. .
., ,
·
,
..
,
.
. . _ .
·
p11tanesc:A
_
or:clam sau~, rQl!~; and cook~ - K_arenlv,tajiar atte~de4 f?oth the 5:30 and
--
ies
~
a,ncl
_
~aj-e fordes~e;tt
_
:
i
: .
,
.
_.
, .
:
.. ,
,
'.
.
7
:
_
30 p.m: A1n4taising d~nneJ'.S. She spol_ce
·
:
They also seryed
.
soda throughout the
at the 7:30 seating,- at which Katie also
:
meat
.
and tea
:
and cC>ffee were available
,
made
an
appearanc~
~
;
.
.
.
.
·
. .
.
.
.
.
.
witfr
:
cies~ert
/
Scxiexho provided most ()f .
Guerin said the sisters ofAST were
.
the
food
;
ixcepf f9r
_
the dinner
.
rolls and
relatively p
_
leased
_
with t.he turnout of ap-
desseits
·
which
"
were donated by Price
proximately
160
students
and
faculty Diem.,
.
,
Chop~;, Stop & Shop; and Sugar
-
& Spic~
.
hers. She also said the Mahar family was

?
~~ery
:,.
·
.
·
·
..
· .
.
happy
.
with the ev~nt,
.
-,
:
.:
·
.'
;>
.
Some
ofth~Marist Singel'.S P.COVided
·.
"Everything turned out w~ll," Guerin
.
,-:
musiiareritertainnieiit dutjng the meal,
.
said.: '.:Wed() \YaDtto
try
,
something else
and at the end of the evening; the sisters
like this agai~ next year," she said.
gave out door- prizes donated by J:C.
·. Katie
.
Mahar iSontfof three children in
Penney,. Merle No
_
rm~n
:
C9smeti~s,
Ne~ York State ~d 132_ chil~e~ ~n the
Walden Books, and Sossi
Formal
Wear.
.
Uruted States affhcted with this disease.
;
~
~.:
~:
. !

;i
~
~.·
;
:•
.
.
.
Marist
-
prep
'
~es
to
host~Ki.9~~
-
])ay
,
Out'
-
..
.
.

- ;

;
• _·
'
.
•.
~

:
:
'
_.,
:
.
--:
·
':
.
.
-
I

.

•- •
~

.
.


.
.
. continued from page·]
;
·
.
encourage
,
a
iove
of
s~rts and for every-
.
one to
·
have
a good
time.
Randy Encarnacion is
a
member of the
men's
basketball
team
and
aKid's Day Out
veteran .
.:
:
He
has volunteered to help in
the past. and he
will
also be helping ~s
year.
·
.
.
"It's great working with the kids, and
it's a nice
way
of giving J>ack to· the com-
munity by encouraging kids to stay oui
of trouble and dp something with their
lives," Encarnacion says.
Encarnacion said he looks at
Kid's Day
Out
as a positive experience for everyone
involved
.
.
"1'he program makes the parents happy,
and it gets kids going in the right direc-
tion,'' he says.
Fax Service - Sending
·
$~.00
for
first page
$1.00 for each additional page
NY TIMES BESTSELLERS
25% OFF PUBLISHERS LIST PRICE
·
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<

'
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.
·
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·
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SNACKS
& REFRESHMENTS
·
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CLOTHING
CHAMPION, GEAR
.
_
GIFfS, GREETING CARDS
. .. Plus· school supplies, decals, and
1nore! !
!_
STORE HOURS
..
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY:
9 AM TO 5 PM
SATURDAY:
10 AM TO 4 PM
*MARIST MONEY*
VISA- MASTERCARD -AMERICAN EXPRESS - DISCOVER
.
ACCEPIEDHERE

-
··
I,
1
·
il
((
II

I
I
i
\
\
.
r























































I
I
4
Students
.
.
·
·
relax
and.
·
p¢_rfc,,:
_
~
·
.
·
t
ai
.
··
new
coffeehouse .
. ;J:ontim~~djrom.page-3

.
•·
"It's really kind of tak,fog on a
lifeofitsown,"shesaid
.-
'
.
'Itgiv~
people a
forum
to express ~eni-
selves.'
I'd
like to
think
that
we've
created a ho.me-like atmosphere
.
.
of people who feel con.uortable
performing.''
Oertel said notonJy students
are attending the coffeehouse
anymore;
·
He said faculty, staff, ·
resident assistants, students,
.
and even the director of housing
occasionally attend;
Melissa Ru
·
ot, a resident-
assisl<!nt

in Leo Hall, has
attended
a
few
of the
coffeehouses and said she
thinks they are a good thing for
the school ·and the students.
"I think it's a really good idea,"
she said. "Each coffeehouse,
.
more people seein to go artd
·
more
people seem to get involved.
It
was a good idea to form the
Southend society to have
activities on campus for those
students who
.
like to stay on
cam-
pus."
According
·
to· Oertel, the
southend society, sponsqred by
the Office of Housing and
Residential
Life,
meets every
Tuesday in the Leo lounge to
discuss suggestions for poss
_
ible
activities. He said all
are
welcome
to come share their suggestions
or ideas.
·
Task forces used
to
-
strengthen
New
.
.
.
·
School
prograttii
.
..
;
continued from
page/.
.
,
.
.
'
A
task force has also
been es"'
.
'
tablishe
.
d to deal with student
.
development and
·
admissions

and helps students communicate
with employers, and thefifth
task
force is involved with graduate
.
'
education. and working within
the business school's two
Master's programs.
.
"We're really trying to provide
,
·
ourselves as leadership role
.
models
·
for
Marist,
and
it
you
look
,
·
in tl)e new catalog, all majors now
have objectives," Kelly said.
·
"We know
we
had something
to
do with that."
..
B
·
e
.
s
ur
~
e
:
·

to
.
read
"
.
·.
The
Circle
.
every
Thurs.
·
.this
Spring!
I


























































































































































































..
..
..
.
:
.
'
.
F.
ebruary 20, 1997
5
g\j~,'{~r(?~lf!ef
inSightirito
.
.
Wprld
.
of
tJie
.
aosiifctas~characters:searchfor
an·author
-
-
-
,-
.
·
-:1:}S
!-~~i,iRJn1•
i,'.
:_
·
.
.

).
}~W!}
-
is a~Iyinrere5uOg tlunitO
__
>
.
.
:
·
.
.
~ee,"
he
said.
:
,

·
·
·
·
· :
.
.··
·
.
..
·
.
.
·

.
·.
·
.
::-
.
,,
·
:"..
.
.
.
,,.
: :
Sophomore Matthew Vincigueqa:; who
.
vJi~~tf11@
'
5~f
;1s
:
~n
'
evening
.
of~~i'-
..
'~:l~s
i:sf~~~f{n~!;
0
~1::ci
0
thi
s
dde;

murder, and prostitution
·
for many
: .
"It's alot of fun;'
.
'Vinciguena said. 'The
Mariststlidents.-
·.
.
·
.
.
·
.
.
,
·-
.[cast and.crew.] inadeitfun." .
:
:
Th~'Miii;ist College Counciton_Theatre
·
. ·· _Accordjngto ,Vinciguerra, the 'play is
AI1~ (MC
_
CTA)
·presented
·
·
their perfor-
,very deep
·
and
·
foreshadowing.
mance of
Six Charqcters in Search
of
an
Vinciguerra s
·
aid wh
.
en he auditioned for
Author
on Febd3'-l 6.
·
tlie play, it was just a fluke. Then, he got
·
TI,l~
Expe_rimentafni~tre Guild (ETG),
a callback, and then the role.
,
a s~bdi
.
visionofMCCTA, presented the
"Now I'm addicted [to acting],"
play
by
Italian playwright LuigiPirandello; · Vinciguerr~ said.
.

:
·
·
.
MCCTAestablished the ETG to'
'
explore
.
Senior Shannon Fitzpatrick played the
more challenging and thought
=
provoking
.
stepdaughter in the production.
.
theatre works.
Fitzpatrick said she enjoyed her role
a
Senior Thomas
V.
Privitere, director of great deal.
.
.,
_
Six/;iiaracters,
said MCCTA was very . "It'sverychallenging,,,Fitzpatricksaid.
excited to
.
do the play.
.
.
.
.
·
· According to Fitzpatrick, her character
'
'.
It's a ch1:11l~nge that_ we
_
don't get
·
to
goes through many emotional changes.
do," Privitei:e said.
,
"We've
never done
"[My
.
character] is very angry, but
-
she
Circle Photo/ Susan Goulet
anythingJike this~~•
.. .
·.
·
·
·
·
.
.
·
e~pts into sparks Of maniacalJaughter
·
MCCTA presented
Six
Characters
In
Search of
an
Author
last weekend in the


• __
Accor.cling toJ~~vitere, th~ play gives
·
[throughout the play]," Fitzpatrick said.
Nelly Goletti Theater. The play provided a glimpse into the world of the absurd.
,
the audience insightlo the world
·
or
the
, , .
,
Thifacfors had to memorize several long
absurd.
,
:
;
.
.
.
>
.
·
.
.
.
.
:
-
..
monologues, and Fitzpatrick said for two
.
''The show reflects on poor family val-
whole pages; she was the only one who
Unflat said the character~ are not realis-
.
u~s/'.
:
Prh
1
i~ere said.
_ ..
·· ..
.

·
.
. . .·.
.
.
spoke .
.

.
.
·
. ,
·
.
.
.
tic .
.
.
Stallkamp said his role was challenging .
:
·
·
•••
Tb
.
e
play coyer¥
_
several hot topics, in--
·.
"If
lcan
.
handle this, I can handle any-
"We
're
in the author's imagination.
eluding sexuality, suicide; incest, murder · thing," Fitzp3tricksaid.
:
.
.
.
We're tryingto be brought to life," Unflat
"It is hard to keep the audience's atten-
tion and to keep my voice full of action,"
Stallkamp said.
n
.
d
··
· ·
u•t t·
·
·
S h
·
K
·
U flt h
I
edth
s"id

.
··
"It's
·.
as1·fwe're· real,b
.
utw
·
e•
.
renot."
_
a
,
pros
.
.
u 10n.
. .
.
.
·
.
.
.
· ..
.
.
~p omore erry n a, w op ay
e
...
He said
Six Characters
is the theatre of

:
The pl~t of the play deals wit11 six cQar.,.
mother
.
in
.
Six
.
Charq.cters.
said:
·
she en-
·
Senior Todd Stallkamp played the role
·
acters iri
1
sear,cl) ofan
:
author. The author joyed her
.
role immensely.
.··
..
o(~e fatherin
Six Characters.
Hiss char-
the grotesque.
·
.
v,,ho
·
wrot~ their stories neyerlet theni live,
:
·•
·
"[My
role] is more eniotion~ly taxing/'
,
acter was the storyteller
.
.
·
~ild :they
'
desperately want to tell their
,
Unflatsaid.
·•
"She is weeping
·
throughout
"He
is a remorseful, shameful man who
"It challenges the boundaries of the
stage," Stallkamp said.
,
·
stoiy,
-
The characie1:5 ~rid
:
up in
a
theaµe
.
the.play.';
.
.
.
: .
> ·
.
-
·
·
is bllter at his family," Stallkamp said.
·:
at
li
r~he~~l_for:_ a play.
_
1:'h~yj:oax,,the
Unfl~t said her lines were never a prob-
p
'
·
-
.c
,.
. .
· .
.
.
'
h
,
·
·
.
'
h
, -
'
, ,
·
·
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·
·
1
·
·
<
directorof)lieplayto·pulilp
:
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.

fom;buttrying
.
tqpes
_
omepneels~vias .
. .
J()~~SSOf
teac
·
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.
()WtO
pe110fffi a
.
tnp e
JUIDp
·
'
and the
.
storysp,n~ pfffrmp. tlte,re
:
/.
·
. . .
, ·.·
t':tvl~Il!otjzaticni
,w~n•
_
t
~udi_
-
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·

.
·
·· ..
£;'
.
,
·
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.. : .
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·
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!f~tas~~t_s
of.
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le~ge·t-ll_nfl~t's~
,
d
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Qetting
in
<;hat~~i~r_
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\Vh,~:are going to the Olympics can also
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JJj~
,
pl&y,:~~,clhlS
1!1'*-<tµP
,µ.1,~Jigbµ11g,
~e,_;:
~
·
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an~,)5~p!ng 1tJ~~~llo_ut~as.' .
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U~IIARC~YK
. ,
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":
learn from the book."
,
-~~~~
~=
~~~~~~~~0~
~
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7~~-
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·
~~~

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·
,
.
,
.
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..
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_-i-
-,
,
.
":.:
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-
. ·
_
·
·
_
·
·
_-
·
_
-
~
.
e_~~
:
sh_irts
,
:
.
/
--.
:
)Vlfl(yC?r,r
,
pr_ga,v~qt{on,
d
.
orm,
team
or
cl(!b's
·
logo
~~~
-
··
·s
·
c:reen-prin·ted
c;,n
:
th~m?
.
-
~
. .
.
-_.
~
-
'
-
,'
•'
.
·;
FAST.
EASY
DIRECTIONS FROM MARIS'lf
.
··
Take Rout~ 9 South To Routes 44/55 EAST ([he Arterial}
·
·
~ue
On
The
Arterial - We Ive
One Block Past Raymond Avenue.
·
·•:
:/
.
Q~
:
~1IIy
:
~g;
·
?5
_
SIStantprofe~S?for-,b~s1~
·>
skating.
·
.
.
:
·
.
.
·
·
·
.
.
.
,•·
.
:
:
:
n~ef
s
;
'.;
~p~f
ilo,t want
f
,
,
be
·
~?wn
:
~
·
JU St
:
_
•"
,
?
'Ids a sport that is an art as well, so you
.
:
anotll~r: professCJr
~:;_-:·->
~
;
:
·
.
·
.
.
:
.
.
:
:
have to look good, but you have to be
':
·
.
N~;)~
1
ho h~
}
~.U?htatM~~t fo~ abr:mt

extremely strong
.
and competitive," he
.

.
four
ye,ars,
has wntte11
a
boo~ about fig-:-
·
said;
.
·:
w:e
~kating;:organiz~ t1;1e M,~st fig~ring
.

.
_
Ng said
IO
percent
of
the proceeds from
,:
~kaµng club, ~d part1c1pated m ~onunu-
·
the book go to help students who cannot
.
·
.
nity s
·
et:vfoe-9riented .ictiv~ties,
...
.
·
·· ·
·
afford to attend college
. · ·
·.
Ng;~ professional figur~ skater,
_said
he
· Ng;who also gives financial seminars,
establ~shed the figur~ ~k,ating ~lu~
m 1
?94
said community involvement is
an
impor-
.
for

more student andfactllty mteracuon
.
.
·
tantpartoflife.
lie
also
said
he established the club out
He said he hopes students at Marist
of love
_
fo{tlle sport,' which
.
he said is an
become more involved in activities on and
.
·
escape ~or him
< ·
·
.
.
-
_
.
.
·
off campus.
·
·
~
·s~atmg heJps you get away from
1~
all,
"I
truly encourage students to be more
away from tpe pressures and frustrations
involved in activities and get out there
ofJife," ~e said.
.
.
and do things and live out your
life
in-
.
r,Jg said the sport
is
al] about having
stead of just studying," he said.
,
fun, something competitive figure skat-
ers. often fC>rget. • .. ·
.
.
. .
.
.
·
"Skating
is forenjQyment;
·
but! think
· ·
people [conip
,
etitive·skaters]lose that be-
.
cause
.
evei:yonejust wants
.
to win med:.
als;
~
' he said
;
"If
you don't win the gold,
then p~ople dori'.t lookup
.
to ycm. Then,
Qiere's just too mu~b pressure to win med-
_
als
;
rather than enjoying the sport.''
·

Ng said after
·
some practice; anyone can
skate. He said people just need to remem-
.
.
bei:·that
when they.fall, they shouldnot
getdiscouraged,. ,
·
~•It's
[sk~tingJjustfun and easy,
.
and if
yc)Ufall down~ getyp and do it again," he
·
said. "Everybody falls. piere's no such
.
thing as tcx;> good to fall.''
Ng also added there are many benefits
from skating,
._
such
as
_
better health, im-
proved concentration; perseverance, and
greater coinmitment
,
'
,
,
,
"It's
a
sportfor aHyour
life,"
he said.
JnApril 1996, Ng xeieased an instruc-
tional book ahout figure skating,
Yes! You
Can
Do
The Tfiple
Jumps:
He said he
wrote the book after numerous requests
from people for instruction.
·
He said
'
the
book is for all levels of skaters.
"It [the
.
book) helps people skate," he
·
said. "People who do not know how to
skate can pick it up and learn, and people
Ng said the one thing that matters the
most to him is getting to know the stu-
dents .
·
"Students have
.
their own lives and fac-
ulty have their own lives and I think it's
important for them to get to know each
other aQd they'll find they have a lot in
common," he said.
Ng also said professors are not all-know-
ing people who only care about academ:-
ics.
"Professors are just students who have
graduated," he said.
Sophomore business major Jason
Phillips, who first inet Ng at an orienta-
tion for business majors his freshman year,
said Ng seems like a professor who cares
about his students.
"He's very charismatic and friendly and
seems like he's really interested in what
you have to say," Phillips said.
Ng, who previously taught at Arizona
State University, said Marist College
needs more interaction between adminis-
trators and
·students.
'There should be more interaction be-
tween faculty and students because I
know students will say 'Well, we never
Please see
SKATING,
page 6 ...
I
I
.
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6
THE CmcLE~
February 20, 1997
.
·
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-
•.
'
.. ·
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.
.
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.
,
Storytelter
·
spreads Illes
sage
·
of
,
a~ceptarice.·
:
·
,
·.
-
-
·.
'
..
:
··.·
.
:
..
'
.
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:
·

.
_--
:
_
·
·
~
;
,
:
_
~
.
·•
.
.
:
:
_
.
. ~
.
,,·
:
,,
:
:_
,
;
.
.
:
~
{
-
;
· by
STEPHANIE
MERCURIO
·
News"Editor
A griot told.stories and
sang in
the Performing
Arts
Room
li,lSt
·
Tuesday night.
.
.
.
Shindana Cooper is respo
.
n-
si
b
le for telling the stories
passed dowri through her family
and
tribe.
She is knoW!} as a griot,
·
the historian of her family.
Mikal Lee introduced Cooper.
''.Shindana. Cooper stimulat~s
.
awareness by sharing
·
the oral
history of her family," he said,
"She has always aspired to
tell
authentic African stories."
Cooper and her daughter
Malicka told sf<>ries about
women, medicine men and tribal
life
through music and dance.
Malicka played a drum, while
. Cooper spoke.
.
_
Cooper said the role of griot
has been passed
.
down through
herfamily
·
''The griots used to
be
only
men," she said. "But, necessity
passed the traditfon oil to
women. My grandmother was a
griot, my mother was a griot, and
now
I
am
a
griot."
·
Cooper asked the small audi-
ence to
fill
up the front rows.
"We have to create a family at-
mosphere," she said
:
"We are all
brothers and sisters here
.
"
Cooper said each story had a
meaning
.
·
.
"Every story teaches
a
les-
·
son," she said. ''.That is why it is
;~!:r~~~!n!
th
e
:
~
st0
ries are
,
.. _
.
-
··
.
.
Circle Photo/Susan Goulet
·
:pr9~e~~or
'
,
writes
figure
sJ(a.tirig(bbok
.

Cooper said people ~hould pay :
(TOP)
Shin~ana
Cooper,a
griot told sto.ries
:
and sang
:
~ortgs ~1th
.
'
"
':.
·
, ·
. ·
.
.
.
,
.
.
'
,
'
' ·
·
.
.
.
·
-
"
,; . . -. .
-
.
attenho~ to what the elders of a
Marist
.
students
..
last
.
M
-
ohday~ ,°(BC>1T9M)
i\
:
~oo~er's daughter,·.
:
·
.
·
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Malicka, de
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nee~ and play~the drums dµrittQ
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thtfperformance.
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ten to them, and pass on
.
what
tobeawareof"thk';
.
;
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\ .
.
.
'.
:
.
coop~
{'.i
saici
'
~ch
.
ni
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emberQf
.
one rriakes the.effort, then there
.
hand
;
y_ou
-
hav1(pi:ofes§<>~
-
\\'.ho
·
they say."
. _
.
.
.
. . .
.
Cooper said everyort~ needs to
·
_
tile audi¢n~t!Was therefor area.,
:
will
~e
:
no tnteraction,'' he said:
.
~
-
at;e
th~rean~stti~eil~wlfo
'.
dol}'t
-
Cooper led the audi~rice}il_ ~g
·
respect all cultures
'.
·
·
· '. .:
·,
.
,
,
;:-
S<>~
~
''You
·
are all brought here
be-:
,
.·.
,
~g said both tlie f~c°.lty;and
,:
)~O.W.

~~
ii
~
~
~t•io~Y,".:.~~~~
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:::
songs, one from the Zulu nation, .
·
·
?We
.
have
.
to stop trymg
to
:
.
:
caµsey91:1
;
are
;
the
_
~mes that are
.
sµidents_Aeed to make
th~
effort
.
:
-
.
e
_
ry~o~y n1cilces ~e f~t
,
move
and one thatwas ~eant to
.
bring
make everyc>ne the s_ame and stop
.
- need.edtc;, spread the wor~,'' she
.
of ge,ttingto
.
know each
'
other.
'
.
~~~wyou geq~te~ction,
!
(.
•.
.
the audience closer
:
,
'_.
.
ignoring color l_ines,'' she said. . said.
·
·
· ·
· ·
·
"None of us are
free
unless we . "It's played out. We
,
~~ to get
.
Wake
'n'
Bake
Spring Break '97
~
organize a small
groop
&:
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a
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.
re-.varding
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suinmt?rJ1t
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CatT1p
:
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·
Sussex which
iSlocatedin
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~
the
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of
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nort!J¢m
_-
~e'Y
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Jersey
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-
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,
e.
_
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·
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.
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counseiors
;':
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.
.
pion~ring,

~qc,al
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y,,9r~er: LPN/RN/S
tudenl'Nutse,

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·
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261~870Q




































































.
THE CIRCLE,
February 20, 1997
.
7
The food babe goes
a
wassailing in the orchard
··..
.
.
.,.
.
'
'
..
.
~
-
:

.,
-.
-
-
~
byJ0s1E WALDO
.
Food Babe
.
·
fe\\' meri becauseoftheirfuriny-
,
iritroduced each diner.
·
and really
·
~avor ~ach ,:Ii.sh.
_
The
'
attire
>
The{had
bells
arouncl
..
~here d6,:ibegiri

describing?!
·
best
item that lfelliri love with is
their legs and brighily tattered
Let's start with the soups. That
.
the onion and walnut muffin. I
l"ags
_
on their jackets
.
I had a
night, wehadpumpkinsoup
·
and· knowyouaresaying; what is she
feeling
·
they-were
-
a part of the-
-
potato
:
&
.:.
apple
-
soup.
'.·
:-:--
-
-
.
_
..
__
talking .. about. .. bnion_and_wal-
English
.
contingency from . My group had a strategy. We
nut? Eeww;
·
Somerset.
-
.
·
were to getwhat the other was
I had my fears too, but I tried it
.
~fte~ ~e tasting, we journeyed
not going to get, in order to taste
because life is all about experi-
.
back mto the. farm to shop.
:
.I
everything: I had
·
the pumpkin
men ting. I was very, very glad I
·
picked up a jug of apple rasp-
soup, which was good, but I do
did. These muffins are beautiful
berry juice, and Liz bought some
not really care for pumpkin. Liz
and unique things.
"The.casks are brim full of ci-
preserves and the Hudson River
.and
Tahirih had the potato &
We discussed the dinner at
der. The bubbles are
·
starting to
<
V~ley Cookbook. She even got
apple .soup, which was truly Jength. The price for the buffet
.
tise
:
It js time for drinking and
the chef, Waldy Malouf, to sign
delicious.
·
was $30, rather steep for stu-
. feasting and
·
dancing under the
it. The CIA
·
graduate and
For the first course, there was
dents, I know. But, it was abso-
skies!" Indeed it was, and indeed
executive chef of New York's
The. salmon and cucumbers, potato
lutely worth it. We ate food that
my two. companions,. Liz and
Rainbow Room was ~esponsible
salad, and a pasta salad. For veg-
is not readily available at the
Tahirih, and I did just that this
for the
.
evening's rnen1:1.
etables, we had grilled yellow
Galleria food court. We had a
wee~end .
.
· .
.
.
, .
·
:0c
,!he buffet dinner began at 6:00
peppers/eggplant and zucchini.
chance to really sample what the
BeJngat- Breezy Hill Orchards,
p.m.~ ·and there was a long queue
For the main course, I had the · region is capable of. We drank
~n nearby 9inton, w,as l~e being
_(thatis British for a waitingHne)
~xcellent spiced loin of pork with
cider that was made from the trees
m
the Enghsh'~ountrys1de. We
for dinner. Although I was
baked acorn squash. Liz had
a
justafewfeetfromwherewewere
~tarted talking tcithe people w~o
.
queasy in line ( cider on an empty
chicken en tree with a mushroom
dining.
·
·
·
were ~uring
·
the cider, who were
stomach is not a good thing), the
sauce, and Tahirih had the
At 8:00 p.m., they lit the bonfire,
in fact
the makers
·
of the drink.
dishes
.
were truly worth the wait.
·
venison-apple chili with red wine
and the crowd of about 150
We also sampled some cheddar
Atthebeginningofthebuffet,
and New "'.(ork State cheddar.
peopleproceededtotheorchard.
that came from England. I eyed a
Chef Malouf greeted
_
and
Everything was just so flavorful
-
Spirits were high and stomachs
and excellent.
were full.
The only thing that would mar,
·
The weather was chilly, but the
the dinner was the fact that it was
moon was high and the sky was
eaten nearly outdoors. We were
laden
with
stars. We were ready
under tents, and there were riot
·
to
·
wassail the orchard. Every-
nearly, enough furnaces.
.
one had candles, but they were
.
So, after 15 minutes, our food
constantly being blown out by
was
_
cold and not as enjoyable.
the wind.
·
·
This is the kind of inenu that a
All of us surrounded the
pers~n wants t
_
o take time oui:
.
biggest and oldest tree, and Mike
Rogers, president squire of the
"
West Somerset Morris Men (the
English dance team) led the cer-
.
emony.
You are probably wondering
what wassailing is
.
Wassailing
is
a
1,000-year-old English pagan
ritual that occurs in January .
You place a cider-soaked piece
of toast on the tree for good luck.
Then, you sing lots of songs,
and the leader gives a signal for
the crowd to make as much noise
as possible to scare away the evil
spirits that might be in the
orchard.
And then, you sing some more.
That is precisely what we did.
Afterwards, we all congregated
back in the old schoolhouse
and
watched the Morris men dance
in celebration of the upcoming
cider year. I had the distin-
guished pleasure to watch the
first American performance of
·
the West Somerset Morris Men.
Before we left for home, we had
some apple crumble and hot
steaming apple cider. Let me tell
you, I was a content girl. I was
laden with cider and scrumptious
food
.
.
Saturday was
a
wondrous ex-
perience, and if anyone ever in-
vites you to a wassailing, think
twice before declining.
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8
. ·
.
THE
CIRCLE
EDITORIAL
February 20, 1997
·
THE
CIRCLE©
The S111dent Newspaper of Marist College
.
.
Kristin
Rich~rd,
Editor-in-Chief
.
Michael
Goot,
Managing Editor
Stephanie Mercurio
,
News Editor
Amie Lemire,
A&E Editor
Chris.
Smith.
Sports Editor-
-
.
..

·.

.
Gyna
Slomcinsky,
Featun Editor

Christian
Bladt,
Opinion Editor
Diane Kolod.
Photography Edit<1r
Jason
Duffy,
Business Manager
G
.
ModeJe Clarke,
Facultj

Advisor
TIie Circle is published every ToUISday. Any maif may be addressed to The
Circle, Marist College, 290·North Road, Poughkeepsie, NY 12601.
"None of us
.
are free
unless
we
are all free~'
Eclitoria)s
Risk taking
·
can

enrich
your
life
The incurable
disease
~
~
·
Life
is a delicate balancing act. Because we have limited time, there isa limited
.
.
Let ~e tell you a secret.
I was told not to ten any(ine, bu~y6u willpever, believe what
numberof things we can accomplish. B~ause of this, we learn to P.rioritize. Every-
.
·
·
happened.
· .
_
· •·•.
.
.
.
·
.
.
,
.
.
.
.
·
.
,
.)
.
,_ .
.
,
·

thino should be in moderation. We have to be careful not to over-indulge·ip any-
·
How many times have you heard that phrase. and bstened eagerly to wllat
.
the story
..
thini. such
as alcohol, food, or work. Through moderation, we should be able to
would be?
.
_
.
.
,
_
·
·
.
.
.
. .
·
. ·
..
·
.
.
.
live happy, productive lives.
.
.
·
·
I
have, many times.
I
love to gossip. Not maQy people wilf a~t
.
to

:bµt
I
.
think
However, we have to be careful not to over-moderate
~
We hav,e to be open to 11ew
everyone
has
this
sick, perverse Jove
'
of knowing the intimate details of other people's
ideas and experiences because we do not want to
be
deprived of anything that
lives.
.
...
.
·
.
·
.
·
.
_
· .
. ·
might contribute to our development as a person.
.
·
.
.
.
·
Think
abo
·
ut it. You and your friends wake up on the week
.
end and
,
swap stories for
~-·---
We have to
learn
to take risks. Everyday life is full of risks .
.
You take? risk every
·
hours about what happened th~ night b~ore, who wen
,
t hom1: \Vith
;
~ho~ or w,ho made
·
time you cross the street or get into a car. However, we have become~~ accustomed
a:
complete ass of themselves becaus~
_
they were so drunk at the bar.
:
·
.
.
·
.
.
.
to these risks, that they seem like second nature. We ha:ve to desensitize ourselve
.
s
Or, for that matter
,
how many times has that random person confided adeep, dark,
and learn to take bigger risks. This may include becoming friends with a person that
horrible secret to you, and you could ·not wait to get hoine tot~U yi;>ur bestJriend .
. ·
.
.
shares different interests than you, signing up for a class that might
be
a bit of
,
a
Many people justify th
.
e spreading of gossip, and they honestlr do not ~Hey~ they
stretch for you, or taJcing up a new activity or hobby that sparks your interest.
are really letting a rumor start. Because, as everyone know~, if you only tell your
Risk taking does not mean not suspending rationaljudgment and throwing ~e.
.
housemates, or your
three
closesffriends, that does not count.
.
. . .
..
. . :
..

..
..
caution to the wind. It can often be
as
simple
as
opening
·
your eyes and le_tttng
Because Marist is such a small school, pretty much ~veryone knows everycme else's
yourself see a different point of view. Sor_ne~es we
are
so passio~ate_ and ~n-
business. You might not be able to put a name to the face of who ycii.uu·~
tan,cing
al>9ut,
vinced that our interpretation of the world is nght, that we shut other s vi~wpomts
but you know who they are sleeping with, or w~t
the:y
wor~ to tha~
I?
,
artY
,
~e other
.
out.This
is
limiting our growth as
a
person.
.
.
.
.
. ·
.
.
night.
.
.
·
. .
.
.
.
.
.
,
.
.
.
.
Sometimes we do not
want
to take
risks.
There are certain things that feel
.
comfort-
I often wonder why myself and others love to gossip so much
_.
Is it because my own
able to us, and we do not wantto break out of these patterns. However, if we do not,
life is so mundane
I
have to live through other people's? ldo not
think
so
:
·I
think
it goes
we may end up ~alli~ginto a rut, Ifyou
_
try somethingnew,_you maydiscoveritis n
_
o
_
t
.
deeper than that.
. ·
·
.
.
> .
,:
·
.
·

.
.
. ·
.

·
-
·
.
· .
_.
-,:
/
·

.
.
.
all that bad. This will encourage you to take even more nsks.
.
,
.
I
think
it has to do with belonging. Everyone wantS
.
to b~
~e4
a.Il~
,
b~lcmg to a grc>up.
For t~ose of l?e Catholi
.
c faith, we are in the season of
.
I:ent
.
·
n
~s u~~all~ abme._fot
-
One\vay
to
keep people interested is to entertain them
;.
an~
everyone loyes ;to
_
hear
a
.
reflec.t!on and mtrospectto
.
n: However, eveo/bo~y, ~eg
.
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take time
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do
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Sundays
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Tuesdays
Prayer
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.
tZ:30
a.m~
-1
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p
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..
qJiapel
(Peace
&
Justice)
.
.
.
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Wednesdays Night Prayer 10-10:30
,
p~m.
Byrn~
Fridays
Stations
·
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of tl:te Cross
·
12:05 p~m.
.
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Daily
Lenien
·
Thoug~t)· ··
.
a different way of acting; and, no
:
matter how _'l:nzarre it
_
ml.ly s~r,n, Y'e should:not ~udge
·.
others
·
by these
,
actions,
.
~
.
.

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Gossiping Js
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a way
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?Jld choose

!1valuf~y~tep
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ah<>utsomeon~ els
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e:s ~sg~~tit1g
lil}l~
g~ll pan~
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llp~}}:l~Y;~'2ll1P-.~eve.r be C~\lght
.
dead wearing Ute~ it
is
pretty safe to ~ay your frie~~ \ViJl n~:verw~ar
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,
err e~tire
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tgtiess
whadazn
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say_js gossipin;
·
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you
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for someone outthere.Jt is n~tJust a st<lcy
,
it iS
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S()!',leo~e
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However
.
even
lean
never resist a story
-
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.

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....
Lellcr to
the Editor
Editor:
.
..
·
>?
-
This
past
Wed~esday,
M~st,
Colleg~ Teievisio~
-
corn~l~~ theJ 997
_
SGA Preside1:1tiaI
.
debate. Needless to say
~
~s pr~xhic;~o~ is. the ~gh ~mt of.our
y~
.
Tb~
members of
MCTV saw
five
mori~
:
of
hard
work pay off
,
-
~<1
:
~xeryone s~~l!ld
be
pro:4d
:
·
:
·
·
>
.
·
.
I would likeioipologize
on
¥half of the crew, though
;
for th~wQrding of some of
01;11'
questions:
·
One in particular, regarding racial unity, should have included other cl~bs
m
the wording. We did not inean to offend anyone or any club on campus, and we d.i? not
mean any disrespect. Our question s~ply intended to detennine .how each candidate
stood on the issue. Thank you~
·
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I
















































·
,
T~CIRCLE
.
OPINION
"
February 20, 1997
9
Sw,iss
b~nks
·
co
:
1:11-e
:
through
:
for Holt>caust surviv~~s, but the lawyers' deal has more holes than Swiss cheese
:
It ii rath~dronic how many'people s~m to vi~w World War
. Lawyers are the lowest form of life known to mankind, according to the
~
11s
so.m~thinf !P,at occurred a1funbelie~ably long time ago,
generally acc~pted doctrine of contemporary Americans. Americans tend
~d that everyone should have· gotten past it by now.
·
Tmean,
to puzzle over whether
·
or not the term "representation" has multiple mean-
aj't~rclll, th~
·
\Vorld_
\Vas
stiHin black-and.-\1/hite bac!c then; tele-
ings.
.
.
,
_
·
.
vision was
·
heralded
as
''the
next ham radio," and
The
Monkees
For example,
·
does representation mean that if you have enough money,
-
were riot
-
even
-
a bad ide~-yet
:-
·
··
.
-
- -·
-
:
-
-
.
.
you
.
are notguiltY.Ufy_ou
d.Q
!l.<>tll_a__y~ enough money, does representation
Of course, anyone
I
have eve~ heard say this was neither alive
·
mean that you must talc~ your chances with the personalities ancfmtell1geice
·
of}udges
·
and
during t!:te war; nor did they reside in Nazi Germany,
.
..
juries? For many survivors of concentration camps and relatives of Jews who
.
survived the
The ironic part about all
,
of this is
·
that
·
World
.
War
Il
is still current events.
·
Holocaust, represel)tation is a headache full of questions starting with "How long before we
lvfaybe
_
!lorthe Allies landing atNonnandy, or 'Yho else Bob Ho~ would be get what is ours?" and ending with "How much must we give to our lawyers?"
b~nging
·
over for the 11ext USO show. But, there is a rather in.teresting story that
.
Recent
_
ly, the apparent "neutrality" of Switzerland during World War II has been cashed in
··
has been circulating betwee
_
n stories of Michael Jackson's baby and O.J.
·
for the funds that once belonged to Jews. Placed safely in Swiss vaults, the money collected
Simpson.·.
. . .
. .
.
.
·__
.
·
·
.
.
.
from the victims of the Holocaust waited patiently for their Nazi depositors to claim them.
Actually, the story
.
I
am
talking about
has
a similarity to Simpson's woes.
Now Jewish survivors and relatives want their plundered fortunes returned to where they
There has been· talk that O.J. actually .has a lot more money than he says he belong. With almost Shakespearean dramatics, the Swiss bank officials gallantly " ... washed
does. It just happens to be in a Swiss bank account.
.(their)
hands from this affair
...
" and created a $70 Million fund for the
.
rightful heirs of the
_
Switzerland must run
a
"murderer special'.'. when opening an account,
as
it has stored treasures.
recently come to light that known Nazi war criminals have Swiss bank accounts
But, the lawyers hired to bring about this justice have complicated the issue, and questions
filled with money and gold, stolen
_
from the various nations. they
_
occupied of when; where, how, and to whom the morie.y will be given to have further hampered the
during the s~cond wor]d war.
~,
,
·
·
.
_ _
·.
:
.
·
.
.
efforts that have already taken
50
years to commence.
Of co
_
urse; the interesting thing is that_"good old neutralSwitzerland" was
On the practical side, survivors have lived the last half of this century embittered by the
hardly very good or neutral.
If
this had not recently come to light,
l
doubt a caustic memories of the Holocaust.
As
they enter into the twilight of their lives, the comfort of
single Swiss bank would have done anything about this situation.
their successful survival should not be tainted by the greed-driven battle Hnes drawn over the
As it is; they were shamed into coming forth. Swiss banks have built a repµta-
fortune that remains
as a
legacy of their brut~l ordeal.
·
tion on their anonymity, which is
.
what attracted the Nazis to Switzerland in the
But Switzerland's reluctance to initialize the fund until now, and the legal battles that have
first place. However, theywere understandably wary about becoming known as ~nsued after the funds conception, has forced the survivors to cross the threshold into their
.
a
safeJ1aven for those who profit from genocide.
golden years without the security and peace of mind that they deserve .
.
Of course,
'
I expected something a long time ago,
_
when the Swiss Miss kept
It is a disturbing possibility that the fortunes stripped from them and ~heir ancestors during
showing up at numerous Oktoberfests worldwide, and would only pay in deut-
the halcyon days of Nazi rule will remain suspended in the
static
accounts.
·
·
schemarks.
·
-
·
-
·
-- -
··
·
.
.
The American Jewish groups that have pressured Switzerland for half a century finally
__ ·
.
Actually,
I
would think something like this would have been taken care of gained leverage on a counlry struggling between its tradition of Civil rights and its refusal to
.
decades ago.
But,
it was not until just recently that three leading Swiss banks admit preference in the neutrality that they adamantly insist on preserving.
established a fund for Holocaust survivors, at an estimated $70 million dollars.
The
.
unanswered international questions suggest that the Swiss are unable to legitimately
This is the part where a most unfortunate wrinkle develops. It would appear continue to claim their neutral stance. If Switzerland banks were used by Nazi leaders to
that the Holocaust survivors themselves cannot agree on how to divide up the finance the Holoc~ust; then what role shouldAmerica take in ensuring the return oflost funds
·
money.'
.
Who gets howmuch, and why?
to Jewish Americans whose assets still collect dust in their dormant vaults? The Swiss gov-
.
So, this whole thing could be tied up in the courts for years to come. I suppose ernment would prefer to remain unaffected by the Holocaust fund, and reiterate their belief
.
the
.
immediate response to that
·
is "Well, okay, so they can wait." Well, no, that they did not violate their neutrality by insisting o
.
n their lack of obligation to contribute
actually, they cannotTalce into consideration for
a
moment that
we
are talking to the fund. After Ieading·the crusade to thwart the Nazis in WWII, does America still carry
aboufpeople who survived something'that happened more Qtan 50 years ago. that banner today?
.
These people lire
nc,t
getting any younger, which is why it is really a shame they
Certainly, the twentieth century American tradition in intel)lational intervention suggests
-
cannot c
_
ome tog!!ther _on
_
this
issue.
. _ _
_
_
.
.
.
that America does indeed have
an
obligation to recover Jewish moneys that were ~rongfully
·
·
There should be some sense ofsQlidarity among the people entitled to any of talcen during the war. Whether the injustjce that rots the fiber of our international society
this money._Maybe
by
agreeing you will get far less money, but you
will
get it festers in China, Rwanda, Bosnia or Switzerland, America has established itself (regardless of
. .
·
no..y. Is·n•t thafbetter: than
'
getting twice
as
much after you died?
.
·
whether it has the authority to do so
or
not)
as
a bastion for Civil Rights refonn and a leader
·
,
·
n
Why \\
1
illingly put yourselves through all
of
this? Just c
_
onie together and let·
'.
injustj_ce for all.No other nation has the capability or the right_ bestowed by tradition to direct
: ,,
.
..
a
lit~le.Jit; of ef}j<Jmtent l?e
.
a~ded)?. U.,.
,
e last years of your life.
the SY-'.iss t~compensate Jews whose fortunes were used a~ainst them in the most horrible
-
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-

.
-
Christian
Bladt:is the opinion ediJ!),:for ~Circle .
.
..
Bill Mekrut is the political columnist for The Circle .
-_
BLADT'S
.
IN
-
DEX
The statistics in
boldface type
are re~l, those that are italicized
are the jokes: Thus, the comedy ensues.
Chan~
that
a dollar of foreign aid
is
spent
in
the United States:
4in5
Chances that a_ll these dollars were the result of Indonesian
contrib
.
utions: 5 in 5
.
Number of years the mother
in
the Faµtily Circus cartoon had
the same hairstyle before changing it last year: 36.
Number of years until the mother in the Family Circus cartoon
leaves the family to shack up with Beetle Bailey: 4
Percentage of Americans who believe that Joan of
Arc
is
Noah's
wife:U
.
Of these, percentage who refer to Hee-Haw as educational pro-
gramming: 100
Percentage of the heroin and cocaine consumed each
year
that
is
consumed by people on
bail,
probation, or parole: 60
Of this a!7Wunt, percentage consumed by Washington D. C. mayor
Marion Barry: 98
.
.
'
Percentage change since January
1995 in
the amount of food
that the average Mexican fainily eats:
-29
Percentage change since January 1995
in
the amount of food
that President Clinton eats:
29
·
Percentage of public high_school teachers who favor banning
students from kissing and hugging on school grounds: 69
·
Percentage of the same high school teachers offended by the
previous percentage:
JOO
Number of Shakespeare's 37 plays that West Virginia senator
Robert Byrd has quoted on the senate floor: 37
Number of Bazooka :Joe comics read by West Virginia senato,
Robert Byrd on the senate floor: IQ8
.,.....:
--
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{
..
..
f_.
f
iO
THE
cmcLE
O
PINION
(
Fe~tJ~
20~ 1997"
·•
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,
.
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.
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·
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-
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,
.
.
·
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-
--, -
.
.
Over the years;I have pondered a variety of profes~ions. There ~as one career in p~i~t1fu- Iihci~ghf
of
less serioJsly; thouihI was quite seriously interested
it
ft~i
m~y
serious thoughts can be applied to the sometimes
art
of_s~and-up comedy.
:-:
,
-:-
;,
.
.
·
,
.- ·
..
·
.
·
· .
·.
.
.-
·: ·
·
. ..
.
.
.
.
·
.
<,
.
. _,
·_;::
Th
.
is maybe a difficult endeavor for me to pursue; as Ihave t}Jtfconfidence ofa two-toed three-toed slothl
.
This pessimistic view of myself may sound rather h
_
arsJt
/
a:,
~
~o
·
have·muchmorethan
·
aslothgoing for me
;-
l-have-four:mbre
-
toes
.
-::
----
-
-
-
-
-
-
~
-
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-
·-


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I do not exactly have muc~ support fromjny fri~nds
,
.
.
·
For
·
exainple;
·
one dayov~r break,
.
my friend Kate gave me
_
ac
.
all~o see how
·
things were going
:
-
We chatted a bit a~ut
school, and then she said she had not been up to much and was in the middle ofreading Satanic Verses. If this was the old Kate,
I would have assumed this wa:s the latest qmck-
_
press bio of Marilyn Manson.
·
.
· _
.
. .
-
. ·
_ .·
·
.
.
· _
·•
. .· • _•
.
.
.
.
.
,
'
_
-
. .
·
.
.
.
·
.
.
·.
·
.
,
.
.
Alas,
I
knew this was not the case. The "new Kate," wjth
a
semester oflvy League schooling under her belt; had become 01ore cuitu.r~ ttian two quarts ~fYoplai.
~!
collfse,
she was referring to a book by Solomon Rushdie
,
someone who
I know nothing about: After fumbling
·
a bit for so01e intelligent conversation (my fumbles more remm1scent of
the Patriots in Super Bowl
XXXI
than small
talk
about contemporary authors),
·
I
changed the subject I asked her what she
.
would_ think ifl were to make an attempt at stand-
·
up comedy.
_
·
.
·
.
·
-
·
·
.
·
·
.
:
-
·_
.

.
·
_
_

.
_

·
.
_
·

.
· ·
·
.
···
·
.
·
·
She laughed at me.
It
was not tlie "Haha, Tara, that's pretty furiny" sort of laugh~ No, it was the sort of laugh
I
could have rendered had
I
a large piece of broccqli wedged
between my two -front teeth. (Well, she had not noticed the bro~coli. Asidefroni my slight lisp, it was hardlf detectable oyer the phone)
;
:<
Shewas laughing at me, sol quickly
inquired about that fascinating Rushdie fellow
,"
and she gabbed about some
stuff so high brow one would imagine her having the need to pluck the back of her neck.
.
After this and othetembarrassingly unfunny episodes,
·
lhave come to the conclusion that stand up comedy is not
for
me. That is
·
something
I
_
would swear by. Though, aside
from members of the clergy and little old ladies, there is not much hvould nQt S\1/ear by . Anyway, it \\'ould be tough getting started in this little hamlet some call Poughkeepsie
.
Noting that members of the clergy and little old ladies may be reading this
;
I
will refrain from stating what others may call it.
·
.
. .
·.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Though
I
must say, this area really, can
re.
an adventure. !mean, just the other day,
I
called the Duchess County Loop Bus system
to
firid out about bus service
.
to the
Poughkeepsie Galleria.
I
asked when the bus t6 the rnall was coming and was toldit was to arrive in
'2.0
minutes, which seemed ideal.
I
hopped on the bus with a couple oflarge
bills that needed to be broken.
·
·
·
As
I have already abused
·
my rights to insensitive endan"gered
animal jokes (honestly, thr~e toes are just as good as five), let me put
it clearly that
I
am
referring to
"cash,"
and not platypus bills. Though
-
I
hardly deem it riecessary, let me add that
I
am
talking about money,
.
not old black clad country singers.
·
.
I
faired well,
as someone was kind
.
enough to pay for me. However,
my luck
ran
out when the bus pulled into the last
stop
:
Expecting to
.
be dropped off amidst a frenzy of shoppers in a large enclosed area.
I
was quite taken aback by ending up in an all together different sort
of frenzy.
I
then realized
I
had asked the bus company for a bus to
"the mall."
.
·
..
There
-
I
was in the heart of downtown Po-,Town at dusk
.
.
I
had
·
arrived at the Main Mall, which, as one knowl~geable about the
-
area may know, is not really a mall at all, but rather a none too pretty
area of Poughkeepsie.
Well, since that incident,
I
have become a seasoned veteran of the
"Loop" System and often travel with other seasoned vete!ans, most
-
of whom
are
veterans of foreign
wars.
As
for the stand up comedy,
I
think
I
am content with my little column. People here at Marist are
too nice to shoot ine down for being a cornball or just plain not
funny. That is what
I
h.ave parents for. Though, every so often,
i
can
get Mom to crack a smile
. ·
Unfortunately, it is usually my smile she
cracks.
.
.
Tara Quinn is The Cirde'shumorcolumnist
·
;.
,
,..:
.
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m11E
am
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'
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· '
'
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'
'
You deserve
.
some fun. Get ready
for
some with E;tra Credit!~i
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Enroll today
in
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offnormal (7,
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Get the whole sc
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oop on
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To enroll, call
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THE
CIRCLE
February 20, 1997
11
-Ta~ing a Closer Look
af
''.'Pi
... ·.
1_·11_·
.. · -
·
·

·
·••.a
..
'
.
'
~
.
News and Reviews ·
-
.
... _ ~'Fli,i.G.tatefulDeagc;9h!ec:1,ljy~ with new television
program'

'




.

'
. . · - . . . .
➔-
➔-
• • • • -
· - · •
.
_..
..-:_
.·-
_,
:"
·(·
,';::
...
·•.
--
The Gratefu}Dead, the most
successful live act in music his.:
tory anchhe only band that gave
. birth to
·'a
culture; has created
a
hatf.,hoi1r televisfon·program,.
The Grdtefu(Dead ".
The
Long
Strange
Trip
Continues:··
which
· will~ on the Burly Bear College
Network from Feb. 28 to March
13.
.
The behind the sceneslour fea-
turesi look
a~
'The Grateful Deacf
oft 99Twith insider interviews; .
and a. never-before-seen peek
., · into their fabled, buttiue Marin··
CountyVault,
the.home of 'fhe
Grateful Dead's unparalleled and
extensive archival libr~. Cre-
ated together.with MarkeTVision
Direct, the premier Boston-based ·
. direct response agency, the pro-
gram will entertain and educate
·deadheads•and-non-deadheads
alike.
. Andrew Miller, ~esident of
MarkeTVision Direct~ said -The
Grateful Dead has mainiaihed its
following. · . · · .
,
·- Despite the passing of the legendary Jerry Garcia, "fhe Grateful Dead have created a new televi-
. slon program that will air on the Burly Bear College Network from Feb. 28~March 13,
1997.
.. '·'Despite the. passfog
of
leg-
endary ~d
member
Jerry
Garcia,
phe~omenon you
need
tQ live it .
Jhe intense popularity _of this
and viewers will."
. · group has not diminished in the
. The sliow will include rare,
least,'' he said..
.
unreleased footage -of behind-
The faithful came out in true
the..:scenes interviews with the
fi#m-at The·Further Festival; a
:Dead and Dick Latvala, the
$:ently conc;luded tour featur-
band's archivist since 1980 ..
i~g the remaining m~bers of
Dick is best known .. among
The Grateful Dead." . ·
·
Deadheads for
Dic1''s Picks,
his" ·_
Over 600,000 college students
personal chqices. for the-band's
have. already',watched. the. pro-
.
. best live p~iformance_s.-AI.so in:.
· grajn· with-tll()u~ands~·of
.
them eluded .in the. show are. scenes
now. -counting
'
th.eIDselves. from the historic FillmoreAudi-
amongJhc::
legions. of.Grateful ..
torim:nin
SartFrancisco.
:
.
Dead fans.
< •
.
·..
.
C.
.>· .,
:
_
Vie'V:~~wil!IJ.ave ~e~pportu::
, j:;,,-'flj_i~_jam'.,:packed program, · ,nity to obtain free copies of the
·:-h#it]g;fby\ ~ike .''Zappy"
Almanac, The Grateful Dead
ZapoH11(takes'viewers on a·pil~ ·., 'newsletter; and learri 'aboi1t the
. gi-im~g~
thr9ugh the.vault speak-
band's riew. video,-
·
"A Ticket to
·
ing with.people inside_ the orga-
· New Ycirrs"· which contains
an .
riizatihp.:\ ._;;
>
-
; . ' -.~.' ' . · .. '. .
entire N~w_Years' Show_ and ad~·
-.
~
4.ippy.said _he'.hopes tljis pro"' _ ditional nevet-seen-cbefor~video
;gram.-will give
·
cviewers 'greater
clips;·
Dic~'s
Piclcs,Voiume
s,
the~
i11sig_h(into tlJ,e Qand. . .. ·
band's Dec; 26, :1979, perfor'."
!
'''The adventure [went on blew
mance, and T-shirts will ·alsfrbe
my miiid," heisaic,l.- ''To. really
made available:··
.
.
·
·
··
'
u.nderstanp}rhe Grateful D~d _ · . l.Qng-time fanand friend of The ·
,_\¢anipliS
_
CoilJJilUnj
ty
_ .
-
. _· ·-·.·. _:Prayer:
\TigiJ .. · . ·. .
:,-For
:Peace
·and
Justice:
Every".ruesday; •
12:3.0
p.m. -
1;00
p.m.· ...
.
P
the Chapel
· (Come spend a half ho1:1r in
prayer for our world)
.
Sponsored
by
_
PRAXIS/CAMPUS MINISTRY
Dead, basketball great Bill
Walton, as well as family mem-
bers who have never before spo-
ken publicly arid other- celebrity
Deadheads will speak about their
personal Grateful Dead experi-
ences.
Mike Zapolin,_ chief executive
officer of MarkeTVision Direct,
said he hopes this program will
inform· more people about The
Dead and thei~ music.
''This program is designed to
entertain non-deadheads as well
as their legions of fans," he said
"ltwill
engage even those who
perhaps have wondered what the
fuss is all about!".
The Burly Bear Network, the
most expensive provider oftele-
. vision programming to college
campuses and
the only on-campus provider
that feeds entertainment program-
ming via cable and closed circuit
TV, reaches more than 1.7 million
college students directly in their
dorm rooms. The network, with
132 affiliates spanning 47 states,
continues to give college stu-
dents the first peek at this unfor-
gettable experience.
Maxell, whose very name and
famous "blown away" icon are
synonymous with the recording
of music, is the exclusive spon-
sor of The Long .Strange Trip
Continues ...
Peter N. Brinkman, national
marketing manager, consumer
audio/video products, for Maxell,
said Maxell was excited about its
involvement w1th this project.
"We're very enthusiastic about
sponsoring this program be-
cause Maxell has always en-
joyed a very strong relationship
with the fans of The Grateful
Dead," he said. ''The Grateful
Dead have evolved into a culture
and we are pleased to be associ-
ated with the long following of
Grateful Dead loyalists."
,,,r
















l
'
l
1
I
1
I.
12
--
Video guy's editotihl:ppl:)alld~~i_l~1},Q§1.
.
., -~/~.,-.-~~.-.·~. _::·:,, •,
.. ·. :_,~:_
' .: ;·._·'.:.: .. ·-.~:::.~:-i,' ... '·:~--
ha~e contact with-~severaCre-
'iliutkforM;&st}'\>{0:-·{_'.•·.;:.
spectedbands fi:0I11,~onn,ecti9uf
·
As-for
;Mtit~-~~d __ ~yric~)i ~.'
·and Massachusetts_ who agree to
sure they are busy and have a .
. play for~o money as long.astliey--fot ofagenaaflo work cm:·Ijust --
could put
a
gas money donation
think it islam_e that both hayeyet
jar
out They also have all the . to give a straight answer
as
to ,
equipment they need. So; all
availabµity,Jftheydidno_twant ·.
Marist ha<:! to give us was an
any young bands to.play, }hey
. emptyrootn, but they coul!i not
should say,"I'm sorry, but thafs
Circle Photo/ Susan Goulet
. by Jim Dziezynski
Staff Writer
For the
third straight week,
I will
transcend my role as video game
specialist and cover other topics
of interest.
I
am using the
"Halley's Comet" approach to
this column; going off on some
. strange orbit, but eventually
coming back_ to the point of ori-
gin. Not enough is happening in·
. the video game world, anyway.
Maybe this week's column
should
be
in the editorial section,
but being an
Arts
and Entertain-
ment writer, Heel this is the per-
fect place to put .an article on how
poorly run things at Marist can
be.
It
also illustrates the truth
·that'when push comes to shove,
goodintentions
are
often empty
promi~es.
On Feb.
2, I inquired: Student
ProgrammingCquncil(SPC)Vice
President Sean White-if it was
possible to. get live bands up.
here ori campus; In terms of dis-
playing any f9rrns
()f inµsic or. .
other, 1ocal. talent;.Marist· has_ a·
serious
pro6i~in
wiifi
1is" agenda ..
· Whereas· local colleges, such as.
yassar, have respectable,:well"' ·
known bands play, Marist re-
stricts.its choice,ofartists to a
limited stock ..
· . :·-·.:
. _ , . .
· . Sure,
we
had JeWel ancl Black•
47,
but'
how often does soine-
tlung like' that happen? OnceA ".
year?: What about_ smaller ~ts
or student bands? There are
sorne good bands right here
OJ}
campus;· hut.none of theqi seem_· .. ·
to want
to
play
011 campus~
Anyway, White said it was
a.
goQd idea to have some musical
_acts on campus ~d that
itWas
almost
a
guaranteed thing; · Y{e ·
set a tentative date
for
the week- .
end
of
FeK 21,
this
weekend:
Well, it appears that for the last
two weeks, little or nothing was
said to SPC committees about_"a __ .
band night. I coristar).tly asked.
White about the situation, which
·
he said was ''probably good."
Still~Tgot no ~traight answer. I
· asked
.
to talk to Bob Lynch, di-
rector of student activities, but
· White said that was not neces-
sary ..
For the next two and a half
weeks, nil I got was an ambigu-
ous response·or "we'll have to
see." Keep in mind, the proposal ..
was supposedly presented two
weeks ago. To make a very long
story short, it is Tuesday night
· and neither White nor Lynch has
spoken to me about V{hat is ger
ing on. It seems to
be;
if you do
not get in their face, you will not
get any respect here. I am as- ·
suming all bets are off .because
both men are avoiding the inci-
dent whenever I try to inquire. .
So what will you be missing? I
Two of the bands that. would
not possible.'' . . ..
have played were
Still I Rise
(Ex-
·
Honestly; ~at saves
a
lot of ·
Jasta14) and
Leaves
of
E,oath
time and troubJe:-Hopefully this
Lorian,
a Connecticut band with
editorial\vill motivate students
a unique "elf.:core" sound. But · to get involved and imptove the
there is not enough electricity.
SPC..
· .
.
At leaslnot ona Friday, and Sat-
Pos~iblyWMCR could_get in-
urday will
be
an open mic night, . volved .. SPCis
ari
organJzation
providing the electricity does not-
that is supposed to provide_ en-
cut out.
. .
. .
_tei:tainmltnt for students.· ..
I
know
·
That is the story.
I
would not
I
am not theonly one who would
expect SPC to go oufoftheir w~y . enjoy live ~usic on campus. ·
to give
a
hand to local or non-
The politics ofMarist are lame
major bands,
·
·
· . sometimes, ·but•
I
suppose • the
If you want to see people your
ideas of the individual and not
own age playing.music•that re-
the voices of the studefits di(?- •
lates to you, go to some either
tate what we. get - just like Evan
college. An empty room is too
Rivers.
















































































































































THE
CIRCLE,'February
20,
1997
SGANEWS
JN'.aDle: Clifden Kennedy
.
.
.
.
Major: English Writing
·.
Yefu;:
Senior
.
Hoinetow~: Closter, NJ
'
-
.
.
Favorite Movie:
·
'Happy Gilmore'
Fa.vo~te Foqd: Wings
_
Role Model:
flis parents
Circle Photo/ Susan Goulet
.
·
·
.
.
M~~y can
hlni
the w~nderer.
.
.
Other~ampu~
-
activfrie~Clifden
·
clifdcn
·
Kennecly, coniqiuter belongs t<;> incluµf being an ac-
.
senator
for,
student governmerit,
.
tive memberiri
the
Sigma Phi Ep-
.
was
born
in
"
Toronto,
tias lived iri
.
Sil()I}
.
fratern
i
ty
.'
'
M
a
ny may alsd
fort
.~
Lauderdale, currently
.
know him
,
as a summer orienta-
res~des)n New Jersey, and)ravels
.
.
i
tion leader .tr1d
for
.
his' roles in
to !re.land almos~ e
.
vecy .year.
:
·
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:
,
:
numetous theater
:'
pr<>du9tioils
.
·
.
·
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.
hi~ iraveli!_lg
:
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·
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·
center
schedul~
,
does not
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_
ake
,
rou

·
stage
at
:fyfarist, Clifden
·
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'
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/'
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:
Wlie1
t
a
club/

·
clas's chOQse not tq foll9w the guidelines
;
~nfaYorable res,ultef
9Ccur ;
-
.
.
.
In
9rd~r
.
t~
{
re_view
a
!>udg~t,
·
the financial b9~d
:
requi!;~
.
a
·
~lQb-
_
to
·
;
·
picJ
(
1ip' th
.
eir budgetpacket orf tinie; in¢lud:e
:
di@il~
.
jnf qimatjon

·
.
abcmt wfia
(
the'i"equesti
.
s
_
(i.e.; ~ines;dates
.
a.n
_
9lgc
,
ation,s); arid re~rri
-
:
·
.•
·
_to
Btud_ent
.
Government with an ~dyisor;s sig1iaturtf p,e(ore
:
the
"
an-
no~ncecl d~dlihe;
.'
_
When it'class/clu!i
~oes
not
folio~
·
ajiy
o~ these
.
·
guidelines; the financial
:
b.<>ard is 4epriye4
of
tlle
·
insight nec~ssary
for a fair review,
:
·
a,nd the class/club forfeits:their opportunity
.
f9i: a
judicious
·
review.
·
The responsibilttyJor the-budgets
.
are
:
on classi
cluhs.
:
not the financial boanL
_
_
.
.-.
/ ...
·
.
·
.
.
-
In
the~~
·
of Marist-Band; the budget
reqiit,st W~
.
~eived after
the
an
·
ridtinced
deadline;
and
it
did
riof
have
.
the
necessary
infonna~
lion for):eyiew. Marisi Bai{d \vas
·
not
the
only club/class th~t~id not
receivc
:
if favorable budget due
to
gutdelines not being
:
·
ronowed
;
I
.
hope
this
-
~heds some light on the overly imaginative
article
displayed
in the Feb
;
.
6 edition-of
The
Circle,
and answers some questions that
may
fJe
l
,
urking abQut the budgetary process.
·
Je~m~Picket4
.
ChiefFinancbd Officet
·
Editor's Note: The aforementioned 'article' was actually an
editorial oil the Opinion page of The Circle.
.
.
.
·
·
IF
-
YOU
SEE A RESIDENT ASSISTANT,
.
OR
AN
ASSIST ANT
.
RESIDENT
.
·
.
DIRECTOR,
.
STOP THEM ANp THANK
THEM FO
.
R ALL THE WORK THEY DO!
Tl{ANKYOU!
13
































































Ii.
I
i
.
r
14
The
progniin
wilf
pay
the
.
p:tjc~Jor.gr~atriess


.
.
'
-~
--:·

.
.
.
i
.


• •
. .
.
~
.



..

• •
;
.I'
.
.
...
.
.
.
Sports with Smitty
·
_..
.
:
.
·
·
·~
'
_
.

Qbyio11sly,
.
this program i~
:
the
.
_
best
0
arl'1~st ajl~
,
consisteiit}y
.
·· ·
records
·
~inning seasons :
·
and
. .
capt~es
·
championships .
.
If the
.
Marist swimming anddiving
pro-·
gram
is'go.ing
_
t<> st~p
/
up,

·
and
lead Marist'S athletics and start
·
~wing crow95 and m~a atten-
tion, the team needs to be pre-
·
pared for this attention; whether
Once again, the Marist Col
-
it be supportive or critical.
lege swimming prograrn was sue-
For example, when
i
wrote last
cessful at the Metro Atlantic
year on the men's team's
three
Athletic <::onference champion-,
consecutive
.
losses and drew
ships. As the meet was held at
conclusions, many
.
members of
~he James J_. McCann Recreation
the team, the coaching staff, and
Center, the men's swimming and
the athletic administration,
'
were
diving team captured their title
not particularly receptive. The
.
·
with ease, making it the second
-
prograin has not had to ·deai with
straight year to capture the
much negative publicity
.
so 1for
·
MAAC title and the third con-
wheni
_
tdoes,thiscouldbeaprob- -
secutive conference title
:
•.
The
lem
;
famconfident,however,ihat
women's team was what.made
the
.
program, which is strong
·
the big news this weekend.
Af.;.
enough to win numerous cham-
.
ter falling to Loyola College last
pionships, will
be
able
to
deal
year by
1.5
points at the MAACs,
with the
·
added exposure
·
and ·
the women redeemed themselves
publicity'._Let's face it-
this
expo-·•
on Sunday evening
·
in the last
sure will not be ofgrand
·
propor-
women 's event of the meet, the
lions. Nevertheless, winning a
400 freestyle relay. With the first
third consecutive conference title
place finish in this event
-
the
for the ·men and a first in the
-
-
women secured a first place ~eet MAAC for the women, expecta-
finish over Loyola by five points.
tions will remain high arid atten-
Congratulations to
.
both the
tion, no matter how minute, will
men and the women of this pro-
-
increase.
gr~. With the strength of this
_
This sounds like it could
be
a
swimming and diving program,
problem'.for the Red Foxes but-
the victory at the McCann Cen-
thiscmildactuallybposi'_thej)ro- :
ter this weekend
-
is
.
no surprise.
gram~ an even higher level. The
·
Themeet
was
weUbrgaruzed
and
·
team
will
.
be
·
looking·
'
to work .,
run efficiently, the competition
harder to retain their reign as-
>
level was high, and fan enthusi-
.
·
MAAC
champions
;
:
Also,
·
this
asmwas remarkable
.
The media third
'
s~raight c·onfer~nc'e
·
title
.
-
coverage of the meet was thor-
could"bi:irig iri a higher level of
ough as the PoughkeepsieJour
-
.
swimmers and divers
:
The facil-
.
:tthra:
~i~~%:~~;:og~re~: ..
tti::u~:2:~·:~
.
'Ufie
Nat
iQ:natscene
>
hand as were various reporters
or bettetto the otlier schools in
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
..
. .
. .
.
.
.
..
from the Circle.
.
.
·
·
the cotiference
/
ancf the Red
~:

·
-
The swimrning
_
and 4iving pro-
foxes are the defe11ding chanipi- . .
.
byl\farty Sinacola
~
.
.
,.
. .
.
•.
::
~atMaristisfinallydemand-
_
ons.
.
·•··
·
·
-
i
·
·
.
: .
..
·
:
. .
.
.

·.·•
·•·
.
'
_
._,
.
ing respect and is actually receiv-
-
!}le m~ll thing is ~at MarisJ is
,
.
:
.
'the
weather:
'
is beautiful,
the
.,
.
sptji:ts
'

Vvhy.?
BecauseJ:,~eball
ingJt.: to
.
a degree.
,
Since this
-
once ag~n th~
.
~ C
champi-
.
·
...
groundhog
.
did
.
noL
see
·.
his
·
.J
s
the
best
sport
'
ofall time. And
sportis low~profile, i
(
w~ll nev~r
ons
. -
'I)u~Y~; "".i!11 tli~
-
~o~en
_,
<
sh~,o.-.y!
t1Jesn9wJS}l}eltirig, and
it
will
·
contiriue
,
fo
be
the best
.
gain the same respect as
·
say
a
capturing a title,v1ctory1s even
'
.
.
yes,
_
spring training has
.
begun
sport
until the.end of the time
:
-'
sport
Hke
basketball. This comes
that much sweeter. Once again,
in Florida and Arizona. Baseball
·
-
.
__
_.
Baseb~l is afarrilly
sp<>rt,it
the
down to the issue of l)loriey and
Larry
~~
Wagrier
1
s arid Lloyd
is back and everything is okay
.
_'.
.
sporqny graiidfatheC: passed on
_
swimming wilfnever be able io
.
Golqstem
-
.s pr<?gram
,
s~ould
be
again.
:.
·
.
,
-.
.:
<
.
.. ·
__ ..
.
.
_
.
.
-
,
~
to
·
niyfather
,-'
whopassed'iton to
keep up with the sports in which
.
con~~atulated ~or
-
giving the
.
l
do
not
have ~()
be
wondering
in the
.
past few years, butttal-
.
his
~
s
.
ons
":
and daughters
:
.
L
'
alll
professional leagues·exist

How-
ManSt. _coIDilluntty
·
yet another what the h~k I snould be doing
\V!lYS survives.
It
lt~
to·~urvive~
,
grcll~ful for this
gift
that
was be;.;
ever, Maristswimrning and div-
reason to be proud.
·
. with my days; I
,
do
·
nothave to
~at would life l>~like,without
,
,
stow~ llpo~ Ille/
I"aw}}OW
as
ing has been gaining respect at
·
-
·
·
; s
.
ufferJhro~ghane>ther
.
.
boring
_
·
basebaII?:JccUiiiotitnagineit.
~ep()int~p.~relhav~maiJylittle
thisjnstitution each and every
.,
Chris
Smith
·
is
'.
the
.
.
Circle'
1'93A
.
gaµie, W!ltCh
_
thar~t~~id
Icanrememberhowl_~ame
-_
)~~eces and
.
nephews,
and
I can-
timetheywin.
:

,
.
.
.
_
·
·
sportsed.itor.
-
8
-
hockeyp
_
uclcthatFo.xhas,<>rlis-
obsessedwithbas~ball. ~y
-
ftrst
,,:
nof~aipogi"'et~e
-
~
_
~e~!'tto

· •
·
_
ten to any
.
more Je~ fru:is gloat
·
memocyofthegamecamem
_:
!982
.
them that.I
"".38
given
.
~~ ~uch
·
a
·
-
~.;
:
.
al:>Qµthaving
·
football's best
.
when ~auJ Molitor got five
hits
.
y~ung age._
.
.
·
·
.
-
'

_
_
".
c
_
oach.
:
."
-
.
.
-
,
,
.
.
,
_:
-
.
.
:
inaWorldSeriesgame.
:
TheMil-
.
-
~~_thereisnodenyuigi~.b~-
-
·
'
The Qnly -~ spo.rt, the Amer{.:
·
.
:
w~ee
Brewers
valiant effort fe)f
.
bijl
_
1s back, eve_iything in' the
· · c~ pw;tinle, Baseball, hw; 9ffi.;, : short_as th~y losuo the
'
St. Louis
,
w~rld is fi~e
·
agrun
:
_Everyone can
- c1ally
-
~tarte~
,
spring training:
-•
Cardinal~.m se~en gam~, but a
.
_
pr~e
..
a ~igh
·
of reli1:t.:J~ecause
. Every-yeai:I g<> through the off..
·
basebajH~ was born.
·
· -·
·
.
.
the bestsport eveiinverited is
•. -season v.ro.nderi~g_ what I s~orild ·.
.
I~~ a
basebalt fail:before my
back.
_
in ~iisine~~. {o.r.)a'!1<>ther
-
. .
doto
.
9Cc:upymytime.
:
h;ead al-
·
allegu~ncewas
:
w1thanyteam.
1
greapeasoi:i.
' '
·
·
.,
·

'.
mo~t:everyb~eballpubljcation
:
believethatisthefoundationfor.

·

•·
·
'
c~ver:-to
:-
cpver.
·
•S~me
.
of
my
,
any baseball-fan .
.
I grew to.love
·
n
,:friends cannot:und~rstand why
~
game before
the
1986
Red
Sox .
I pay attentiori to baseball when
captured my heart,
and
then pro-
.
:
_
it's
.
footb;tll, hockey, or basket.;.
ceededto break
-
it, as so ·many of
:. , ball
season
.
-
.
·
.
.
,
_
·
·
.
my New
York
friends like to re-
<
The reaso~ds simple.
·
Being a
·
mindme.
·
.
_,
.
.
,
.baseball fap is a full-time job. It
·
There.are memories in baseball
.
.
_takes up the whole year, as well
that will endllre forever, unlike
· .
·
. it ~hould. What other.sport any other sport Don Larsen's
·
. · could
l
argue with myfatherover· perfect game in the World Series,
who
played second base for the
Carlton Fisk willing his game six
.
1980 Pittsburgh
Pirates.
Baseball
homer
fair,
and
·
other memories
is
.
what it
J!leaDS
to be ~erican. like these will live on forever
:
There is mom~ apple pie, and
There are hundreds of these
baseball;
three
things that
.
I be-
moments that I can think of for
lieve all people can enjoy.
,
b~ball, while I can come up
. _
The game
has
had
its
problem
with only a few for. the other













































































THE GIRCLE,
February 20, 1997
15
·
.
.
...
,.
Men's basketball upsets
Rider at
Mccann, 5 8-57
..
'
.
1
:."
~y
.-
s~~
:
w;iz~.
:
.
i~::t~~l~~~
1
t:tstu~~!~
.
~tc:d(;~:ar~g~ ~~tie~
a;:
_.
;:
,
Staff:. Writer .
·
··
.
Rider
-
scored six
-
straight points
keep getting
itfrom
thfm, we can
·
,
.
:-
;
.
,:
-
-
.
.
, · .. : _:
·:·
·
:
··-
:
·
.
-
-
-
=
-
°a:iidgrabbedthe lead rorilie
firsC
·ooa"threatiiHhe playoffs;· -We're
·
--

·
Call
it
a
reversal of fortune:
..
'.
>
tfrrie
·
since
the
first half.
.
r~ady,. and we have some confi-
· .
.
··
-,()n'Monday" night
;
the upset-
-
As hasbeeri the case for much
.
dence now."
.
.
.
.
. _ .
.
.
mindcil
:;
rilen's
.
basketbaJFteam
·
.
:
:
ar
this' season
/
Marist
'looked
:
The 'foul
'
called against
-
Lacey
c'
~ed
.
a tough victory over Rider
i
uncomfortable in the final min- · in the final seco~ds
w_as.
one
_
of
(14~12;9-7)~afthfJames J.
·

utes
;
ofa:close
·
ganie, andwas
··
the first questionable calls
-
that·
· McCarin Center, in
a
g~e where
•.
unable to find
a
clutch perfonner
.
has gone Marist's way this year.
the close calls actm11ly went the
·'
··
·
to rely on.
-:
But on Monday, the · Last Wednesday, a s}milar
-
situa-
Red Fo~es

way,
-
.
'
.
.
__
.
team: deferi
_
se was enough to
tion unfolded in a gam~ the Red
·
.
-
Marist improved to
s~
19 on the
·
;
overcome that glaring weakness.
Foxes hosted at Madison Square
year as theybt:atRider58-57.
With29.7seconds remaining,
·
Garden against Fairfield- but
The Broncs came into the game
..
and Marist trailing by two,
·
se-
this time, the break went
. tied for thJrd place in the North-
.
nior.
co-captain
Randy
Fa_irfield's Way; and Magarity
· · east Conference standings; while . Encarnacion was fouled as he
.
and company trudged home to
the Red Foxes•
NEC
markof3-12
drove
to
_
·
·
the
basket.
Poughkeepsie with a heart-break-
was only ninth out often confer-
·
Encarnacion, who
,
had' been
ing 84-75 loss.
ence
·
teams.
_
_
_
scorelessjn tpe
.
game, cahnly
·
The ·Red Foxes trailed by 14
The first 4_:30 of the game
drilled both free-throws to tie the
points with 8:00 remaini~g when
seem
_
e~_I;to·indicatetroublewas
gameonefinartime.
_
.
.
_they began a furious run that ·
·
. •
on the horizon for Head Coach
_ -

Rider attempted to hold the ball
culminated
.
with Manny Otero's
Dave
"
Magarity's t~am. Rider
·,
··
for the last shot, but they could
.
three:.point buck~t, tying the
surged
-
to an
.
e~ly 9
.::
21ec1d, but
·
not shake the Red Foxes' tena-
scoreat62 with 1:48 togo.
·
then the
.
Red Foxes buckled down
cious defenders.
·
· Dan Berggren •
_
The teams traded baskets ~ver
·
·on _g¢fense, holding the
.
Broncs
shutdown Burston, forcing him
the final 90 seconds,
.
and fresh-
scoreless for six full minutes,
to throw up a'running shot high
man Joe McCurdy's assertive
while
'
they scratched their way
_
off the glass that never had any
reverse Jayup with 10 ticks left
back iillo the game
:
.

chance of falling.
made it 66-66. On the ensuing
··
· A low-scoring first half ended
.
And then, with 4.8 seconds left
Fairfield possession, Bobby Joe
withMarist ahead, 25-21.
in regulation play, senior.co-cap-
Hatton made what apv.eared to
."It
·
,,,asn't pretty in the. first
tain Lucas Pisarczyk grabbed
.
be a clean steal,
,
and then was
half," Magarity said after the
·.
Burston's missed shot and was
held by a Stag at half-court.
game. "Both teams
.
played hard,
fouled froin behind by
,
Rider's
Rather
·
than call thefoul with 3
and did a good job defensively."
freshman center, Ken Lacey. Af-
seconds remaining, the
·
referees
The defensive battle continued
ter missing his first of two free-
.
let the clock wind down; and the
in th~
:
second half; less than two
..
throws, Pisarczyk sunk the sec-
game h~aded into overtime,
·
minutes in,
·
Rider point guard
ond shot, pi,tting Marist back on
where Fairfield took control and
Kevin
-
Finefrock was pressured
top to stay.
outscored
.
a tired, discouraged
Carlisle Stockton
Junior guard Manny Otero
·
has been a inajor contributor off the bench.
·
by Marist, causing the first of two
The Broncs inbounded the ball. Marist team by nine points.
-consecutive steals that set the
to Finefroc. k; but Hatton clamped
Magarity voked his frustration
• -
d "B
a I 02-74 rout. Lucas Pisarczyk
up," said the Jumor guar .
ut
tone for the
.
rest of.the game.
.
down on him, and the Rider point
in th~ locker _room following the
we felt that when we had to go
played his finest game of the sea-
<
Tli
:
e.
_
B~g~£t
.
lf.l~~?l!~
-
to.
,
fi~~t
~
..
gll_~~
:
!1~~~r; ev~
-
~
go!?
.
S~?t
,
~f! ov~~me
p~np~-
.
.
,_
·
_
·
• _
·
_
.
into
.
_
overtime, it was a tough
son in a losing effort, scoring 19
_;;
_
t>a9l<Jg}1~
,1
t
_
~t32
,
w1tp
_
l4.'f8 to
.
.
astimeexpll'ed.
·
_
:•_.

·
· .
.
'·:
:
·c'.
'
That
.:
wa
t
a btg
:
play.
·
We
·
call,,
-
·
·
··
·
·
·
·
--
·
·-

points and pulling down J4 re-
go, but the Foxes 1?med up the
"I'~
·
pr?ud .. of the guys,,,
worked so hard to get there, and·
The Red Foxes busy week also
.
bounds.
lleat on defense agam.
·
Thfpugh-
·
Maganty said
.
.
,
w_e worked ex-
t~e game should have ?een de-
included a game at Long Island
Marist visits St. Francis (NY)
out much of the secon~ half,
tremely hard tomght. When
c1dedatthefree~throwlineatthe
U .
•t th to team in the
tonight before returning home
Marist was able_ to pressure the
v.:e:re-alert and makin? good d~-
end ofreguJation. Let's be hon-
N~~~r:~st ;ull:d off an upset
for th;ir final regular season
ball and force Ri~er
_
to take b~d
-
c1s1ons,we c!n hang m ~ere m
est
_
: he got f~~led.
It
~hould have
against the Blackbirds on Jan. 17 g~me as a memberof the NEC on
sh~ts; Greg Bu
.
rst~~
~~e
up _big
.
. -
these gcU11es.
-
. .
.
:
.
.
.
.
.
. _
·
-
been calle~.
.
at the Mccann center, but the
Saturday night, as they play host
for the Broncs with ~ight pomts
-
.
·
Hatton was full
.
of praise for
_
-
Otero tned to play dow? the
feat would not be duplicated on
to Wagner.
down the stretch, l:>ut the rest of
_
.
Marist's frontcourt, a group that
call, but he
.
adnutted that 1t af-
S t
·
d
the R
_
ider team was
·
unable to
has been criticizedfor.their poor
fected the team.
a ~~:ri~s Jones poured in 27
-
produce tl)UCh of anything offen-
play all season long.
Hit doesn't c
·
ome down to one
·
.
. ts as LUI gained a measure
·
sivelr
,
:;
_
:
··
;
;
_
.
.
.
'?'he w
_
ho
_
le
_
ye~, 'Ye':ye been
play; all the little mistakes ad~
~~~~v;ngeover the Red Foxes in
A Bryan Whittle Jumper at 3:08
·
trynig
.
to get the 'tilg
,
m~n to step
·
~
:>
.
.
J\/Ien
,
Win
MAA:Cs
.
.
'
..
.
.
.
.
-
.. :_co~~il1ued from
pake
16
'
.
'
.
.
_.
..
:

·
'
-
,
.
.
.
.
.
.
o~~!Jip team," Van\\7agner said.
,
Chatlos said.
·
·
'
:
.
-
The
Red Foxes had an optimis-
This feeling
·
,
was
'
shared by
tic m.ind
·
set during the meet:
Chatlos
.
and the rest of team be-
·
However, there was some
·
cause they knew importance of
_
thought
"
of concern brought to
this meet.
.
.
-
·
Van
.
Wagner.:Van
.
Wagner·was
·
·
_
· - ·
-
:;· ·
'
mostly
·
concemed about the first
.
Some of the Red Foxes that fo-
day of the championsti¥. The
·
cused on this
·
concept were
·
reason
for
this is van
·
Wagner
sophomore Michael Murphy
.
_ believed
that if Marist did not
·
who placed first in the 100 and
have
·
a decent start. then it could
200 yard breast, and third in the
im~eon the Red Foxes' chance
200 yard I.M. Another Red Fox
of winning the MAAC Charnpi-
that honed in
·
on this idea
.
was
·
onship
.
Also, the Red Foxes felt
Leddy, who was very satisfied
that there were certain events
that
with his and the team's perfor-
_
they wouldhaveto wi~ in order
to gain a lead_ and protect it.
mance.
''This is the best way
to
go out
in my senior year," Leddy said.
Van Wagner's thoughts for next
season
~
optimistic.
'The only thing tltat we had to
do W.~s;to protect 9ui lead," se-
nior ~rcnden Leddy said°' "The
wayJh
,
atwe protected our l~d
was'.by
·
winning in events that
we
were
iA by making a lead that
couid compensate for the lack of
"I feel very positive about next
·
evefit
:
s that
·
Marist was not
season because only two of my
.
_
pla~
ib
race;"
_
swimmers are graduating and I
_
-
.
·
Going into this meet the Red
will still have the talent from this
. Foxes
;
had one thought on their
·
past.season to use
.
it fornext sea-
nuno.,
:
.,
:
·
:
. .
.
.
.
.
.
_
son,"Van Wagner said:
-
,
'iv'inning was the only thing on
iny
mind." sophomore Craig






































































i
I.
r
l:
1
'
I
'
l
I
\
f
:-
•\
r
·1
'
(
,:.-
. STAT OF THE
WE~K:
· 111i:i'mer{'s:.~wirrimin
9
anct_c1iv-
. _
ing team finished the·
MAAG.. _.·
· 9n~mpionship_:with 1,000 pts. _
-_ --
,.;...; !lllu•OTE·.·o
...
F
...
l~HE~.
14
,.
"--E~R~K~: _
..
_ .,,. .
"Wln~:ing
·:;;,;r_,~~--:~~iy
..
. · thing·
oi{.
my.·:
in'ind;''.·· ·, .
-
·
·. ~{-Craig·
:¢.ba#!os.~ ,
.
, : ··,Men's
S~iinming,
~
•.''
.
.
. WoII1~1!-§wiriuh~rs@.d
divers
Capture
MA,ACCnan1Pf9~$WJ?-<
'
·.·_•.•.:.;-.·_·~ ..• ~~-J.·_>•,:-··
• '
'
.
- ··~~··-•·~---·--
''
> .


~

•••

, , , , / . _ · : _ - , · - ~ • : · :
. . . . . ~---
~ · - · -• •
- ·

-
,. .. -~: -,:.". :?,"":· ... , ':-./'-:·:::
<r:\; --~-- :;.\· ..,~.
<-~--. ·':.--- :~: '.
.
.
....... -,
:.Iri···efubers ..
of:the,team·haq:men:-
. by CHRIS
O!Do~LL ~. . .
. '
tloned
that
Was
tli~
iispect of.the
'
si~ff
viriiJ/ · .
-
. -
.
:ieamthai\vorrieciihemJhemost.
.. . . .
. '
' . : :;;,:,·,_·; ~.
. . RaideC:said.shcfiiad her wo,;-
. ~<E,~ieriijg
th~-
fi_6alttt.§}A~~~ ·:.
-
ries
before Sunday~s competition.
Qetitiori, the short:.ffanded;- :
-
. ,iJiciievv -we:didn't need· a
. woihen;s,
swiminmg
'
team
were : .
C '
mkacle/Jjµt\ve wereqi;:fiajtely an
· ~ghthehirid first place Loyol~:by · ":-
.outside shot
fowin,'"
said Raider.
- a·Inerefon·points.: / · ·.
.· .. _._ .. _
!~Plus
thedivetireaily.helped us
-· -Thoughts of a year eatlierwete. ·
a· lot'Jn· giving. us: ·a
:
chance· to
,Jociiµin-gjn their heaciswhich. sa* .
\viii::•:
·
< -
·
, ..... ·. ·•
..
the·.Red !<oxes lo~~a:l~geJead:
... 'Bufthose.worries
-
were putto
. to th.~ same Loyola·teain they .
·
'rest.wlien
Mora1f won the 1650
. trailed going into· the final day Qf
..
ft.eestyl~
:and'
Stephanie; Raider
the
MAAC
Champ1onsliips at .'
·,:,wOn
the 200-butterfly; Jaeger
theJru:nest McCann Recreation
~:.also.helped the ~arist cause by
Center. • . . .
. . . ... ·.
.
.
. winning the200 pa9kstrolce~ '
..
B_ut those ghosts of
_the
past
. Maristeasily·cruise3in the one
~ere SQOn:put.to sleep on: the
. metir.diving,:colilpetition with
final event which saw .'t1ie 'Red . .
·_·· DeGeronimo taking '.ftrst place
Foxes win the400-'yaid :freestyle
-
· and.· sophomore .:·Melanie
· relay, thus giving th_em
tliei!'
fir-;t
·
.
_°Addington .i~rig. second,
Metro Atlantic :Athletlc Confer:-
_
. .
,
The .champfons~ps cliqiatic
enceChampionship.':'~ . . . . ··., - -: :' ,'_
::. : : ·· .. ; ~-
. ·.
- .
:o: c .. ·. :.:
·
.
•.
> .· . · ,· . '
>
<;
·
aijlisleSt<JCkton
endingcameJothe-foref!'ontwith
· Tfie Chainpiorisliips Were ail
up .
>Sop~omon! Ken11a PJ!o~n · .was· named :Olfb.tandlng• Femall!
Swimmer
of the
M,AA~
champl_onshlps, •··
·_
the 400~yard freestyl~ being the
and down battle-for ihe,Red _ .. 'AltboughMohm
sitld
she\\'~ ;fu~l~y,al9~g~ith¥0~-taldng . -Tli;~ompe~ticm~tartecitoheat
race to decide the winner. The
°Foxes, who led afte~thefirstaay . yery happy·Jtiayshe· wot the .the.SOO'fn:estyle. DeGoronimo
up
as
Loyola came bac~ on Sat-
teamofSutfutandMorilla,Nafus, ·
by 42 points, but theil'trailed by
award, sh(said she· had a more rounded oiitthe wirfuing by
tak-' ·
urdflY: to Jake a ·ten pomt lead. . and Raider took the event whicli
tenpointsonSatur4ay;:Bui-Sun-
inip_ort~tc~ric:em. . . . .
· . , . _i~gthe_tru:et:met~rdiying. _ . How(!rer,:t!iat;did.not stop ·gavetheRedFoxe:s(985)thecon~
day sa'w the ·Red • Foxes swim-:
..
I was excited about the award .. • Moran said that the team was
Mcmm from taking two more
ference championships-by five .
mers win fiv~- of
:
t~~
sev_en · butthemaiil thing was tharth~ very'happy \vith the first day of .ev~°'tiThosewereihe 400-incli-
points over Loyola (9.80).
events, which ·ultiin;ately··pto.,.
team won," Moran said>
.
,
· competition. . --
.. ·
vi.dual· me'dley an~, the. 800 ·. Moran later said the memories
-pelled the team 'to. w_in .· by/five .. · Marist jurripecf out
to
an
early
'The
first day was
our
best day
freestyle r~lay _with the helpof . oflast year were still fresh in her
points, · .
.
.
. .
.
.
lead on Friday thanks in part to 'in tenns
of
perfonnancet Moran
Su~n;Morilla_and Raider.
mind on Sunday.
The Red Foxesalso:sweprin
the Red Foxes taking four of the :said. ''Thewa{the whole com-
_ s,ophoniore Caroline Foraldo
·
"I thought it was over the
theawnrdsdepartmentassopho-
six events held that day. The petitidp. wenL
.
w_as,.how we also.to0k!Wo events that day
whole time until the last race,
more Kenna Moran·was:rianied
highlightofthedaysawtheteam · thoughtitwoulcl go,"-
_ _-
which inc~uded the
.1_00 back.:.
which we had to win,'.' Moran
· Most Outstanding Female Swim-
of sophomore
· . Senie>r· Becky .Tatum said the - stroke arid 200medley relay with
said.
.
m~r while seni'.or Danielle JenniferJaegi;:r, freshman Tippy , team's sµperb'jlerfo~~ein th_e
Naflis, Taa.im and ~aeg~r. With
Tatum said the win
was
an
in-
,· Dederoniino was· riamed Most
Sutfin, fieshman-JenniferNafus · first_two:daysw.ere kind oftypi-
tWQ:gay~ o[competiti_?:n over,
credible way to end the season
· Outstanding.•female'biver.
andseniorAlyson
.
<··· _
-cal .. ,_·
-, ...
r'. /, : ,,.
·the::~~Fo,ceswere,in_perfect fortheseriiors. ·: .. ,
'• . Moran
won
the'S0(ffreestyle, the
Mon.Ha win the 200freestyle
rec.. . ·:_ ..
We ufoally Have str9ng Fri,-
striki~gdis~c~ f()r f!te ~~~-~Y:.
"Being a senior, this win was
400-individual medley; the,
800 .
Jay as. '-:Yell
as
breaking the sc~ool. ~ys
and.
w~:s~~r$,1~~; ~spe~. ·.
~
·.
''Yith'on~·day
of'c?niRetition
ihe way to go out," she ~aid:
freestyle relay and:the'_:1650
record.·w. hic ... h
.. ,was._. :s.e_·t1as
.. ··.t.·.year.:,··. _ c.iany.• ... ·with.C>u
..
t.···.h.
av .. i.ng. ".a.dt·v.mg.. _lef
..
t-
a!l_,d;,Lo···· yola)eadi!}.g by ten
freestyle;\vhileneGefururtic>'won
. · The.winning continuecLwith
event which··r~ally heip us win
..
points;·-the:Red
Foxef .lackof
irithe one and three meter diving
Jaeger;Nafus;Morilla, and senior 'the .. :whole~ thing.Jn the· first
de,pth ~ookedlike it was$oing to ·"
competition.
. , '.•
C .·
Stephanie Raidef'taking the
4-00 .
place," Tatum sai~:,
' be
_
tlietrd~wnfall. After
all,
some
Swimm.¢rs will!third'
Straiglit
1:itle
·
.
.
·-
"-.
'.
.•
.
.
.
.
:
.
-.-
.
:
-
. . .
'~:
,
,
--
.
:
-~
..
._.
.
•.
__
·
'
\
-
.
_.
,
b
Pmi · .· ..
W '· ' · ·.·.
·.
efited
from
llie inier.cessiO!}
wer¢
(placed. A9tllally he 'clid 'not plan
C,
. Y. '·., ..
lll'',:·•JJITE.,
se,_nior-~renden'.Ledcly;
~<?P~o:2'
·o·n··Manstwiiinfng:_the eµtire
. Staff Wr#er- ·
rnoresC:raig Chatlo~·an~Grif:fin ·MAJ\C:Champio~ship._.
;
. , -
--.-.This past.·,•~.
·
.
ee.·. kin.:.
a·ai. ·~.
•i.1.-.am.•.:."
~
.. ·.·.
M~N,eese ariffreshman 'frevor, · · . "I'did·nqfexpecfu~ to win the
.
-
..
-
- - ·

·
-
·Badui.µctdy_re,c~lvedtheCI_Jn-
meet;:Ijtistwantecl_ustobecom:- ··
,J.M.·
cGann.c.enterw.·.its
.. 'ihi.·~t.Clric.
&. -· ·· ·
Di
-
d
·
·· ···
·,,,r. · ·nr. ·
·d
··
.. -·
.
1er~n<?.e yer.~~ar . .. ,,
,
. : .'_petitive, v_an YYllgnerslll .. , _
.. ,
·_ tit11~)n:Mari~tG
01
!~g~at~etics.
•··''Led
...
dy..yas
... ake
..
i.:asse
.•.
t,io.$e·,·'·':-'~Th.
·ema.m.team.,
.· .·
tll_at.Pro
... ··.ved:to. ·•
... :-·
'Them~n'sswininiiilganddiving ·
·
·
• •
·
·
- --
1e.·
amt.apturoo
their.·
iliifcfstraight 'team,"Arvmg Coach.'. :fyl_efanie : :,~:a ~hallenge to ,Mm.st W<>U!d :
Metro Atlantic
Athletic
·confer-
.
. B.oJstld sajd; ~'fl.e h~J@rally tbe ' }?e·R.i#r-:Ho'Y~ver~ Rider
di_cl
not ·
·
. . . .·. . . .
.
. .
.
. . ...
team.
w.
}!en t.hey needed: th.· eir :.'-Iive
'
:u.
P.
_to·.
th
..
eir. fu.H:e.
xpecta.
tion;
•...
ence (;hampi9n·sfiip.M. arisfwon ·
'
nfid · · b ·
led ,,
··
·
Rid' - ·
f: · ··
d " ·
h
with a·total sc'ore of
one
thou.;. . co
1
ence. oos . : :,
.
: '
,
·.. _;-
er- w_as avore
t
0 wm
t
e:
sandpoints; . .
. .... '. -·
<~_aclu~\qlj'atI~s;·anc1
'
McNeese:-,_.MA-AC:Ch*rtfplop's~ip'._oyer
'
. .
.
.
.
excelledintheifevents.This.will ,Marist.by forty~four~·poirits;
''Thi_sw~ a great a~911).plish~ -
·
alloW:them_'tci race :in 'ilie'Eis(.;:Marist :proved to·~
·'tiie.
better ·.
riient since itha#eveh>eeri clone ·eoast Athletic Cqnference
9tam-
·.
:~
by defeatmg
Rider:
in
all
the· -
befoi:e :at '.Marisf/1:·,s·enior
·
- ·
Jonathan
·chinfos
said.''· . ·· .. ,
pion~hip. 1Jiis race is fonnedby .. div~ng and _ill).po~t swimming
-
...

-.
,
.. •.
;·, .
severitytwoteamsalongtheeast
.events:In'ruldition;theRedFoxes
.. :
·. CoachLarryVanW.agner·and
coast ;:,_ :
·
,:,\,_
-·:
:· '.
.
:·couidsoohow·Riderwas·notliv- :;
the, entire men's swi~ijg•and
There. were -~ome 9ther Red·: ing~up !o,tlieir fuirexpec;tations-:
diving
,team
credit ,their :victory
Fox highlights' during. theJn~t •.. and
~s
allo_wed Marist to capi- .·
to theirinte11se w.intet)riter~es~ . , besid~ L¢dy's J11eI11orabl€> ~-;::'
ta1ize
oii
this;
.
., . •:
-., .. ·
sion practice. The Red Foxes en"'. . fomiance. ChaQos placed_firstiri• '.'·\'.~'We ·could tell that Rider was·
.
clure;ct a
vigorousJ~eµty 'Week . thy 200. yard i.~t.and
in
the200 . ;
~oi
swimnµng up to their pqten-
practice. _Dutjrig
this
practice
Van
d
h ·
ks -
k
AI
Ch
tI
·
· ·
·a1
·
·
in
fi · ·
·
da , ·
Wagne.f focused ;in~ t~rioo· the
yar - ac. tro_e ... so,
a _os.···'tr ~on . e !fSttwo: y~, 'Van
Red
_Foxes in pre. ·para.·._ tion for the·· finishe4 ~ond in the 49(>. I.M. · · Wamter
sai~.:
t'J/e
o.ut swmµ
and
-
-
McNeese placed first in the
4QO-'
·
dove.Rider
from
the·start which:
·
-
MM<:~<;:hamp~nshit ~e'in-
I.~: ~d jn the_l659 fr~tyte: In ::-a11_~wed ·us __
._to
be: the;superyor
terce~~t~n prov
.
to
.
aye so~e addition, McNeese fimshed sec..: · .
team:.''· - . ·
-
. : . .
diffi.cul~es mos~y d~ing with
~
.. ond in the 200 yard back stroke.
.
· Vari Wagner
.
prides himself
scheduling
~t!ces.
Ho~ever,
McNeese 3et records in the 400 . on the Red Foxes win in the 400
Van~agn~r~ thetJl!po!-
and .1650freestyles. The other -yardl.M. Th~400I.M.isacom- .·
tanceof ~hispracticeand ~Jayed . events'that the ·Red Foxes- ex,-, _,biriation of all four strokes:
thi!,to the R~
f'.~x~. . . .
.
celled in were diving,
the400yard
freestyle, back, breast and but-
~n!ercessi~n 1s· very helpful
I.M, 1650 freestyle and the 200 . tertly.
and it is the _pnme reaso_n for our J.M. Marist placed in the top five
~I'm mostly proud · of this
success at meets and the MA.AC
in all of these events.
eveni·Jt shows that we have ver-.
Championship," Van· Wagner
_
Van Wagner did not expect his ' satility, which
inakes
a champi-
said.
. .
be
~ed
Foxes _to finish where they
Please see MAAC on p 15
Someoftheswunmersthat n-
_
. . ..


49.14.1
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