Skip to main content

The Circle, April 10, 1997.pdf

Media

Part of The Circle: Vol. 49 No. 18 - April 10, 1997

content

~NENVS--.-
Student~taklJp·th~ir
·
swbrds and
-SPORTS-
Women's -lacrosse win first
. Renovations will make
.
._
"battle
it
out
in McCann.
- PAGES
do~ more
like
home·
-
PAGi
·4
Vi
hreaks
.all rules\v'Hh 'new release-PAGE J3
.
.
.
.
·
..
varsity home .gallle
-
PAoE16.
.
.....
Ta£
61K<en£
Volume49; Number 18 ·
·The
Student Newspaper
of Marist
College
, April
10, 1997
.. Studenf
speaker
atBaccalaureatewill
begll1-_:new Marist College
tradition
. by DARYL RICHARD
;.The Baccalaureate is sup-
imprintat Marist.
. Circle Cdrrespondant
posedt<J bea time of reflecticm,
"We're setting the guidelines
values, and an opportunity to
for this, so
it'll
be carved in stone
think aboutthejmportant things
forthe future," Mara said. ·
.. A.new tradfri.on
h~~
begun at
in life," Muriaysaid. "Thiswill
The idea for
a
speaker, Which
Marist, courtesy. of the senior further.the involvementof.stu-
Mara said has been brewing
class,
.
dents incommencementexer-
throughout the school year,
· The annualB~c:calaureate cer--
cises:"
rocked back and forth between
•· em·ony, a senior awards event - Mara said it has not yet been
having the student speak_ at
· held each year . the• day before ·-_decided who the speaker will be,
graduation and at Baccalaureate.
graduation,wiH :nciwad~ a stu~
but it will.likely bea choice•be- ·
It
was decided that having an ad-
dent speakerto
the
progr_am. in
tweer Kadus and himself .. He
ditional student speaker at
past years, only faculty and ad-
said he wants the student gov-
commencement would detract
ministrators spoke at the hour-
ernment connection because the
from the valedictorian's speech.
long event.
club's officers do most of the
Mara said it will be decided
J
.
·c . .
.
.
Cin:lc Photo/ Krislin Richan!
Student Body President Pat
planning and interaction with the
within the next few weeks who
umors _ hris Jette, Santos Orellana, Tom Hardy, and John T.
WiUiams made the most of the power outage and used the time ·
Mara worked on the idea with
senior class.
the s·peaker will be for the cer-
off from class to play roller hocky in the townhouse parking lot.
Senior Class President. Chris
Kadus said he agrees with the
emony. He said he wants the five
·
- ·
Kadu1! and members of the gradu- · possible speaker choices, adding
to
IO minute message to summa-
N orth End ·-pow er_ .. outag.e.
·ationcommittee;
that he and Mara are close with. rize the last four years at Marist
"I was excited that we can start
the senior class and do a great
and inspire the graduates. · ·
causes
annoy··
ance forstudents
a tradition where students will
cJeal of work for them, including
Murray said Baccalaureate is
·
-· -_ -
.
.
.
.
- . -· - . , -
participate in the ceremony,"
planning senior week events and
traditionally a ceremony honor-
byKRiSTIN RICHARD
Editor-in~chief ·
Patrick Mara said this was one · Mara said. "Never before has a
graduation activities.
ing about 40 to 50 seniors who
-
-
-
student participated."
"The ceremony will be a little
may receive awards from the col-
of the_ mo
_
st_ fru_
.
strating a_spe_ct_s
· · ·
·
Dennis
J. Murray, president of more personal [for the stu-
lege, specific academic depart-
_
of Jhe power outage b.ecause
Marist, approved the new addi-
dents)/' Kadus said.
ments, orexternal organizations.
· Mother nature la ed the bi _ communication was. li1TJitFd
t_e>
tion to th_e B_acc_alaureate_ la_st
Mara said having a stud_ent
This year's Baccalaure~te is on
-.. , ---..
-• . P
Y : .- -•
g
word ofm9u~.and .. ~1
8
11~·,,; ,, ; week saymg 1twdl enhance the
s·peakerwiBalso beaµotherway . FriqayiMllY lf>,from5:00p.m.to
~.,.,
_ges~
1()~~,C>P.
~any,M:l!flst
,tW:: :
?'.'~,f:i~~-~?
1
(!I
0
)~~!~e.in,t1m':~}P<'Cereitio~y.
'
. ..·
.
for
.
the.Class
()f
·~n tcHeave its
c,6:00
P·!1.l:.in
th_eCbape\;
,. ___ ~~~
-
---. ,.<
.1.:?t~;-~t~".'1Pnt.E:ogls clay:f"'"="""':::·.;;t1on·out:.w1thout:any~technology,·:~-'"'·':"· ' · ., · ..
~·:c,
. ·
-
--- ~-''--'
c. ·
.
. .••
Due
_to),~t_
¥<>~c1-~y?s
snow ___
madeitmoredifficult,''.MarasaicL.
.
··- · ·
· -
'
·
·- ·
· . .
.
·~~~71ff~i~~~§§1
··&~~~~l~i~til~?~i
Flf-~t~!~;!~~1i~~~~t~~filfh~;;piar
6:30 a.m.1p~l 2. _ . _- _ . _ .•
Residents without po~er were
FaUen
_
tree_s a11d downed wires
giyen free meals inthe cafeteria
caused more than 100,00? C:en-
f<>r. the duratim1 of t_he power_
tral HudsoffGas & El~ctnc cus-
cititage; J'hey were also permit-
tomers to los_e pov.:(;!r, a11d hun,
ted to bring.bottles
t()
.
collect
dreds ofstudents and professors · water in the cafeteria because the
were among those.left in the dark. . students were not allo~ed
to
~se
Some off-campus stude11.ts and
their water until lateTuesday af~
professors d,id_ not get their'elec~
ternoon:
· · _ _
_
·
-
tricity back until the weekend.
. • Student -activities also setup
Mari
st
canceled classes until
t.elevision sets in. the perfonning
12:30 Wednesday afternoon; an~ .
arts
room for students to watch
residents of -townhouses sec-
sports· events, . soap operns, .or
tions A,
:S,
and C were required
any other programs th~y,did:not
to relocate tOo_ther donns by7:QO
want to_ miss, and-_
·
telephones
p.m, Tuesday to avoid any hai-
were set up in the DevinciLab in
ards associated with reil'laining
DonneHyHaH, atwhichsttiderits ·
· · overnight in a residence without
could use their ph(}ne c()des. •
.
power. .
Since;
noi
everyone wa~llble _to
Many campus:phones were
taketwofuUdaysofffroirlschool
also out of commission, which
work, students were als_o p~rinit.;
.

. .
<::ircle Photo/ Kimberly
Showers
.
Circle Photo/ Kimberly
Showers
made keeping students informed
tecl to study inthe rooms
011
the
The hollow remains of
a
building are
all that
is
left
of Nite Cap,
a
once popular college bar.
of the situation all the more_ diffi-
cult.
North End Resident Assistant
Please see
DARK,
page 4.'..
What
is
the most pressing issue that _needs to
be dealt with at Marist College?
Food: 122
Safety/Security: 101
Housing: 15
Academics: 3
Clubs/ Activities:
2
Other:
7
The Circle conducted
an
unscientific poll on March
26-April
6.
Two hundred
fifty
students were asked this week's question.
by KARIN OL0FFSON
Staff Writer
A• late winter storm brought
Poughkeepsie a violent end to a
very mild winter. Heavy snows
brought down trees, leaving
thousands of residents-through-
out the county without power.
However, ~ccording to City of
Poughkeepsie· Fire Inspector
Brian Mac Isaac, it was not the
stonn that brought an end to Nite
Cap, a popularPoughkeepsie bar.
"Two young women who had
just moved into an apartment on
the second floor didn't have
their electric turned on yet and
were using candles," Mac Isaac
said. "It was just a coincidence
that they didn't have power at
the same time as many others,"
to Nite Cap; also sustained clam-
he said.
age. Heat from the fire caused
According to Mac Isaac, the
windows to shatter arid alumi-
fire department received the
aJann
num siding to melt.
at4:57 a.m. on Wednesday, April
News of thefire spread quickly
2 for the fire that started : at
67
on campus; and many of the stu-
Washington St. and spread to
dents that frequented Nite Cap,
neighboring Nite Cap.
Ii
took a
·.
including John Burke, said they
couple
of
hours to get the fire
·
were sad to hear the news. A
under control.
few students· even cried while
Tony Marchese, owner of Nite
remembering all the good times
Cap since 1976, has beenJeft to
they had spent there-meeting
deal with the devastation the
fire
people and drinking; with songs.
left behind.
.
. .
by Billy Joel and Garth Brooks
"It's sad. I'm just happy that
playing in the background.
no one got hurt. But, atthe same
"A
lot of people are upset
time, it is hard to understand how
about it," Burke said. "We're not
I could lose everything in a mat-
sure where we
will be going now,"
ter of hours," Marchese told the
he said.
.
Poughkeepsie Journal.
Nite Cap has been a favorite
The 160-year-old home in which
the fire started, located adjacent
Please see
FIRE,
page I I ...



























































































































.
.
;
~
ii¥
if~
hartd._gre~~&is_
·
·at
·
ih~
··
111<@(s
.
~~§
\
ot
.
}?rilllie(••·
·
i
~
.
~
-
~~,!~~$£.!jfe~ri#
.
¥9
Y~rnm~#te
fficial~
.
.
.
~;,
_

.
····
,{,
;:'
_
:;.<:
-
-:~
.-
;,\;
-~u,a~iliii•■ il\inif•■
April 10, 1997
_
.
.
.
.
Arafat sayS
1srae1
'cieCHiP.rig
war
61tpeij¢~
'
Pr◊~
::.
.... '
.
.
.,
-
,_
.-
:.
_,~:_>->_:
*::..',·_
.•-'~'.:·-··.--·
··:;:,'::·
·
.
.-·:,:
..
...
..
.
.
·
:
·
:
·
·
_
...
'.''
_·_'.:·: _,~
·

.
-

·
.
:
·•
:~
.
:
..;
.
.
::·:
,.·.:
,_
:
:
·'
-
.
·
.-- •
.
·
ceSSY
~ILIP GANGULY
'
'
•'
:'
. ' '
:
.
'
.
.
; •,
'
m?re difficult
.
for
the
Palestinians," lie
-
Associated Press Writer
said.
·
_
.
.
,
..
. ...
-
-
.
Accordirigfo Vaydna, what makes the
.
.
NEW
DELHI;
India (AP)~Foilow'..
situation especially difficult is that the
·
ing
·
an
·
appeai by
-
Palestinian leader
-
·
.
+~w
Labor and Likud Party are evenly sp!it
.
·
·
Yasser Arafat, the U.N; sectetary
·
gen
-
...... ...._.._,
a__,~~
;...i::~::1~!;
Neither party' has a clear mandate;
·
era! said Mondaylhe General Assem-
~~-~
-...+=i;~
Vavrina said he thinks Netariyahu is
bly may meeU,i-a
·
n emergency ses-
'n-++.-;-7"
going to change his position partly in
sion to discuss the Middle East deada

response to U.S. pressure.
lock.
'
.• '
; '
.
.
·
.
l
'
h
.
h
l
,l+fi
.
h
"I think he would be likely in the long
Arafat said he sought a meeting of -
S
t
ere any· ope
ep or
t
e
run to soften [his stance],'' he said: "Of
the
.
Gene~arAss_embly.because the
Middle.East peaceprocess?
course, if
,
he
·
does
-
that; some people
United
·
States had vetoed two Secu-
- - ' - - - - - - - - ; _ , _ _ _ _ _ might think he's a traitor."
.
.
.
rityCc,uncii resolutions in 10 days that
He also said that even
'
though
were critical of Israel.
--
.
to piecesandisolating it from its Pales-
Netanyahu is taking a hard line stance,
_
Secretary Gen
.
era! Kofi Annan, at-
·
tinian surroundings;''
.
.
.
.
.
he may
.
eventually have success with
..
tending
·
a meeting
'
of
Monaligned
In a speech Monday to ari enthusias-
.
the Palestinians.
·
·
Movement countries iri tile Indian
.
tic gathering of thous
·
ands of <:hristians
"Sometimes we see thaLcoilserva_.
capital
,:
said "it
:
is quite possible" that
·
and Jews, Netanyahu ridiculed the Pal-
tives, or hard-liners, can
-
sometimes
· ·
.
_
the assembly would convene in spe~
estinian assertion that Israel's decision
·
make deals more readily with the other
..
cial session.
·
to build a new Jewishneigh,borbood in
·
side than one might assumet he said.
. -
Half.the United Nations members
Jerusalem amounted to a declaration of
Vavrina cited the example of Presi~
.
must agree before the assembly can
.
war ag~inst the p~aci process.
.
dent RichardNixon, who had
a
reputa-
be summoned to an emergency meet-
.
. -.
Netanyahu also said
75
percent of the
tion for being a staunch anti~Coinmu-
ing, he s~id .
. ,
. '
·
·
" _
·· ·, ·
. ·.
.
.
land on
_
which Har Ho
·
ina housing
nist and was the first presidentto rec-
-
-
Arafat,
a
!iilrprise speaker at the
project
.
~as being built wa~ myned by
oghize Communist China.
same conference, urged the
·
meeting
Jews and that Israe
_
Lwas
.
building 10
.
Another problem is
'
that both sides
to
.
support his call
·
for a
·
General As-
..
.
neighborhClods for Arat>s, as well.
_
·
think
of the situation in black and white
senJbly
myeting t~ consid~r'action to
.
·
.· ,
Heden
:
o~nced the Palestinjanbo~b-
terms.
pressure on Israel to abide by its obli-
ing
,
of a Tel Aviy caf~ that follow~d
~'The Israelis
'
think that if the Arabs
_
gations.
,
:
, .
.
Israel's decision to construct Har Homa
lose, the win,"Vavrina said, ''The Ar
-
Arafat; speaking· as
-
Israeli
'
Prime
..
arid called it a w·ar crime.' Three\vomen
abs think if the Israelis
-
lose, they win."
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was in
.
'
.. ·
were kiiled a'nd scores o(p~~ro~s in-
Vavrina said
.
the two sides :need to
the United States for talks with U.S.
Jured ..
·
·
·
· .
. ···
·
.
·
·..
.
·
look for creative solutions. He said, for
President Bill
-
Clinton, made no men-
:
Palestinian' leaders; he said: were
example that more

people would like
tion of the Israeli demand that he take
maJdng ''almqst, ze~o efforts, and at
-
to visit the HolyLand
·
but do not do so
tough steps to end terrorist operations
times zero, and at times worse than zero
because of the
'
violence;
If
a lasting
against Israelis.
,
efforts
.
to st()p terrorism.:•
.
·. ,
,

.
peace were achieved
;
more American
He
.
denounced Israel.'s heightened
Arafat has demanded construction be
tourist doJiai-s would

flow into
Israeli,
.
security measures
.
and its plan to build
halted before peace ta'i!d are
·
re~umed.
-
which would benefit both Israelis and
a new housing projectin east Jerusa-
But Netanyahu said
"we
are being told
-
Palestinians
.
.
Iem; th~ immediate
.
cause of the im-
to pay for the pn\iifoge of not-being
·
'. '
Milton Teichman, professor
-
of En-
passe in Mideast peace efforts.
.
killed: We are not going to do this."_
·
glish, said to have a lasting peace the
.
"The Israeli
.
aggressive measures
These latest developments clearly
·
m-
two sides must honor their commitments .
... : and actsdtsJighJ_,security_ Q1easures,
dicated that the
·peace
._
process
_
has
"I would say that agreements have to
1
:·l\~:~;!\;;~~~
-
;~:~~~~i;;~:if :~
:~•
1
~~;~ij
~
11i~:
0
!.
·
:
m
·
tf~l
,
~h;it1,t
'
;{:
:;~~~YJ~}~!1~J#i~~~ff11~
1
,s
-
.
declaration of "Y~r. not._qnly
,
on
_
the
.,
poht1cal
-
sc1ence
.
departmentat
-
Manst
.
Te1chman
:"
said
1fthelsraeh
housing
Palestinian
·
peopl(!
_,
but
:
· al_so
.
on the
College, said tJ1e M,icldle East pe
:
ace
Pf,?-
_
project is in violation of prior agree-
peace proce~s,','f\raf.at told th~ repre-
_
cess beganto
,
:
break
·
down
)
ifter;Isra~li
·
·
ments, then the
:
situation has to be
sentatives
.
of the l 13al,1:lember move-
Prime Mini
_
ster Y}tzhal_cR~bin
;
~as
_
'
a's-
.
~
st9pped
/
Teichman
:
also said thatthe
ment.
..
.
.
.
sassinated
.
·
'
'
:
·
·
·
·
_,
·
·
~
Arabs have to stop using terrorism
.
.
Arafat said lsraers plan for more
Vavrina said theNetanyahu
'
election
because atmosphere of hostility is not
Jewish housing in east °Jerusalem, the
intensified the situa
_
tion even more.
.
going to allow the Israelis to move the
Arab sector. of the on,ce~divided city
_
.
~
'Whe
.
n N~tail~~h~_ancl
hi~
P~Y
\\:'O~;,
.
peace proc;ess to fof\\'.ard_.
it captureci in the 1967 Mideast War,
they were labeled as
'
hard~hn~rs
:
and do·
·
·
·
was an attempt to "JudaizeJerusalem,
some of the things that hard-liners
With additional reporting
evacuati1_1g
·
Arab residents, cutting
·
it
would expect them to
·
do;
·
making

life
by Laura Myers and Michael Goat
.

·
..-
.
·
The Weekend
--·
:
weather
·
Today:
· ·
·-
-
.
,:
:
·~:
F(iday:
..
.
_
Satur.;.
,- --
--
;
~~
-
n~y
'.
J1i~h.
3
,f
.
-
.
P~;;ly
-
cloudy. High
.
J.,ow
2
_
J.
-
:
54; Low 43.
:
~











































THE CIRCLE,
April 10, 1997
3
Fashion department prepares for
11th annual Silver Needle Awards
by
MEGAN
ST.
JOHN
Staff Writer
Tli~
M~ri~t Fashion Department is get-
ting ready to unveil its newest produc-
tion.
The 1 Hh annual Silver Needle Awards
and Fashion Show will be on May
1
at the
Casper Kill Country Club, fonnerly the
IBM Mid-Hudson Valley Conference Cen-
ter.
There will be two perfonnances on May
1,
an afternoon show and an evening
show.
Last year; a to
.
tal of748 people attended
the show, and Elizabeth Csordas, director
of the fashion department, said she is
optimistic about increasing that amount.
"Consistently, we've been having over
700 attendants at the shows, and every
year we pass the previous year's num-
bers," she said.
Half of the available tickets have already
been sold, and Csordas said she encour-
ages the Marist community t~ attend and
to buy their tickets while they're avail-
able.
"For those of you who miss this year's
show, you're missing the opportunity to
see the talents of future stars introduced
for the first time at Marist College," she
said.
tory pieces, as well as an overall theme.
"There
.
are certain rules and require-
ments of those six outfits. There has to
·
be a knit, a tailored piece, evening wear,
and a dress. Each student has to include
at least one of each of the components,"
Csordas said.
In addition to the fashion department
faculty, seniors are paired up with promi-
nent New York City-based designers who
help guide them through the difficult pro-
cess. Several designers, including Marist
alumni JR Morrissey, have served as de-
signer critics for the students and will be
attending this year's show. The designer
critic system is just one element that sets
the Marist program apart from other
schools.
"Each designer works one on one with
the student, which is the most unique fea-
ture of our program, in comparison with
other schools, where they would have one
critic for the entire class," Csordas said.
Design instructor Sue DeSanna has
been intricately involved with the shows
for the past
10
years. DeSanna, who in-
structs design students
fonn
sophomore
to senior year, accompanies seniors on
their trips to their designer critics.
DeSanna said the process begins in Sep-
tember with an idea. It then progresses
into a sketch, which is shown to the critic,
and eventually a garment is created.
"It's a cooperative endeavor among the
.
critic, the student, and myself," she
·
said .
.
DeSanna said a tremendous amount of
Circle Photo/ Diane Kolod
Sal Randazzo, senior vice president and worldwide strategic planning director
for Mccann Erickson of NY, stressed the importance of a brand over a product at
a series of advertising lectures throughout the Marist campus last Wednesday.
Ad expert discusses gender and the
mythic image at all-day lecture series
by
TIM
MANSON
A&E Editor
winter afternoon.
Hayden said Randazzo changed his
whole outlook on advertising.
The show will showcase the talents of
graduating seniors, as well as underclass-
men. Nine seniors will be showing collec-
tions of six outfits they have designed
and created. Members of the junior class
will each be introducing one garment. The
only restriction for the senior collections
is that they must include several manda-
time and effort are put forth by the stu-
.
Sal Randazzo, senior vice president and
dents in preparation for the show.
.
worldwide strategic planning director for
McCann Erickson of New York
spoke
on
"I
thought it was interesting because
I
never looked at ads that way before and
how deeply they're embedded in the
psyche," said Hayden.
"It
showed me
how ads really work."
Please see
FASHION,
page 11...
Fax Service - Sending
$2.00
for first page
$1.00
for
each additional page
'
NY
·
TIMES BESTSELLERS
25% OFF PUBLISHERS LIST PRICE
REFERENCE BOOKS
.
SPECIAL BOOK ORDER SERVICE
IF IT'S IN PRINT WE CAN
ORDER
IT!
COMPUTERSOFfWARE
DISCOUNTS OF UP TO 85%
SNACKS
& REFRESHMENTS
FRITO-LAY, KEEBLER, PEPSI
CLOTHING
CHAMPION, GEAR
GIFTS, GREETING CARDS
.:.Plus school supplies, decals, and ,nor(!!!!
·
.
.
STORE HOURS
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY: 9 AM TO S PM
SATURDAY: 10 AM TO 4
PM
*MARIST MONEY*
·
VISA- MASTERCARD -AMERICAN EXPRESS - DISCOVER
ACCEPIEDHERE
Wednesday for the Ambassador Program
of The Advertising Educational Founda-
tion.
The Ambassador program sends high
level, experienced advertising or market-
ing executives to colleges and universi-
ties across
the
country to speak to stu-
dents and faculty about the advertising
process, including how it
fits into the eco-
nomic and social structure and the issues
surrounding
·
it.
Randazzo, who spoke mainly on the top-
ics of gender and mythic image, stressed
the
·
importance of psychic
archetypes
in
one of his four lectures on Wednesday.
"We have to, by psychic archaeology,
peel back layers to get to dark places
people don't know they have," said
·
Randazzo.
Liam Hayden, a junior marketing major,
said this means when someone buys
something, they do not buy the product
they buy the brand.
"According to an article Randazzo wrote
entitled
Advertising Builds and Main-
tains Brands. By Creating Mytho-Sym-
bolic Worlds,
Hayden is correct in his in-
terpretation of Randazzo.
"Advertising transforms products into
brands by creating mytho-symbolic
worlds and associating them with a prod-
uct," said Randazzo.
Randazzo backs this up with examples
like Campbell's, Marlboro, and Harley-
Davidson, who have all created a myth of
what their product represents. For ex-
ample, Randazzo says that for Campbell's
soup, the mythic image is of a mother serv-
ing a bowl of soup to her child on a cold
In his last lecture of the day, Randazzo
spoke to a large class of advertising ma-
jors. He spoke about personal experience
on an ad campaign he recently worked on
for Mariott Hotels.
Randazzo said that in creating
a
blue-
print for an advertising campaign, one has
to figure out who the article is address-
ing, what to say to that target, and how to
say it. This is known in advertising terms
as the target, the message, and the execu-
tion.
Randazzo explained how the business-
man traditionally is considered to be a road
warrior, but the modem businessman is
not the money hungry type that existed
in the
I
980s.
"The businessman of the '90s is the 'En-
lightened Warrior' who works hard but is
not just about work," said Randazzo.
"Mariott is the caretaker to help that war-
rior
.
"
So, Randazzo's message for the Mariott
account became that the Mariott will help
you achieve mastery over the business
oflife.
Joe Didato,
a
junior advertising major,
said he thought there should have been
more time for
a
question and answer pe-
riod.
"I had a couple of questions I would
have liked to ask, considering he is a strat-
egy specialist, and I know other people
wanted to ask as well," said Didato.
However, Didato said he thought
Randazzo was impressive overall.
"I wish Marist would get more people
like him to come and speak," he said.
BE A GOOD NEIGHBOR
During these last weeks of the spring semester,
whether you live off campus or not,
consideration for the people of the area,
in their homes and in their neighborhood,
is important.
The Marist tradition includes consideration
for and committment to the well-being
of our local communities.












































































































4
THE
CIRCLE, April 10,' 1997 ...
Friends
and family
renect
on Dyson's life
at
memorial service
teo:
:renoVautins>l'vlliti''-r8:~a~
. A~;,_8
:,w~kd~or
.
.
.
COiiif9~t.e"iitinj~j~~~-w!fE
The campus flag fl~w at half~
mast this pasfweek
in
ine~ory
of Charles H. Dyson, following
his death on Friday; March 14;
A memorial service was held
April l at StJames' Church on
Madison. Avenue to revere the
life of the 87 year-old philanthro-
pist. The Marist community best .
knows-Dyson by the.North.End
building dedicated in his honor,
and by his family's involvement.
with the college.
·
·
Marist College President, Den-
nis J. Murray, attended
Tuesday's
i
l :00 a.m. service, as
did many New York City leaders,
including Mayor Rudolph
Giuliani.
A soprano from the Metropoli-
tan Opera opened the service,
Charles H. Dyson, who d~nated funds to improve the Dyson Cen-
ter, passed away on March
14.
His memorial was held April-1.
according to Murray, and was
According. to Tim Massie,
and huge generosity," Murray
followed by eulogies from John
Marist chief relations officer,
said in a recent memorandum:
S. Dyson, Dyson's son, Kitty
Dyson was a success in many
In
a separate interview, Massie
Carlisle Hart, chairwomen emeri-
things, but he never lost sight of agreed, saying the exact mon-
tus of the New York State Cciun-
what was important.
etary amount of a recent Dyson
cil on the Arts, and Frank H.T.
"He was a self-made man. He
Foundation grant for the new li-
Rhodes, president emeritus of started with nothing, yet he main-
brary is secret.
Cornell University.
tained his roots in Dutchess
"Some people seek recognition
"I feel the loss ofa man lgreatly
County," Massie said.
for a good deed," Massie said.
respect and admire," Murray
Dyson maintained his roots by
"One of Mr. Dyson's character-
said.
financially supporting the arts
istics was that he did things qui-
Murray said Dyson Jed a model
and education through the etly."
··
life, what many would call a real
Dyson Foundation, which he and
Dys_on is survived by his sons,
American Dream.
his wife, Margaret, began 40
Rob Dyson, chainnan ofMarist's
"What he had was just brains,
years ago.
board of trustees, John Dyson, ·
ability, and hard work," Murray
In 1989, agifttoMaristCollege
Peter Dyson, his daughter Anne
said. "I have great admiration for
from the Dyson Foundation
Dyson,
IO
grandchildren, and his
peoplethatstartwithnothingand
helped build the Dyson Center .second wife, June Marston
make a success of themselves."
on North campus.
pyson. ·
Dyson began his career as an
According to Ma~sie, the
Murray
·
said_ he is confident the
accountant while attending:Pac~
.
. , building was seen. as a tribute
,
Dysons.~iU carry on theirfather's. ·
Vn_i~ersity~tf!ight.,
H.<?¥f.~d-~;-{: _fr9~_Dys9t1's children tg th~ic:le.gac.r:G:,.: "•.· •
../ ,.
.
atedm 1930,andin 1954founded
parents. ..
·..
. · · .. "lkn,o.~Robandhisfamilywill.
the Dyson-Kissner;Moran Co_r- . "He instilled in each of his chH-
continu.ethe good work;'. his
poration, which became one.of dren .a true understanding of : Ja~9er's _goal of giving back to
the largest privately held compa-
community service. [The chil-
the community," Murray said. ·
IJy
,
AMANrA?~RADLEY.'
.
·:·r~e,t,ty·~~99~,::IJ.~.tp3~~~sr~t~~~:
·
.
':·
,
iSiiijfWriier-•
·

.
.
..
·
.


unprovements,".he•said;'ii\>
·
'
_
,
.
.
\:
.
. >:::.
:
.
:):~
,
,::\\
.
_,':-
.
-\:
·
.
.- ·
,~~i~~:u~tj•ftt:x::~)ti:~:
:
Infriquenf:~e.~nind•hot,wa-
.
,
40~50_peop]e
'
per· floor/ ancJ..'es-
. t~r. :nf ~i
_
ndow
,
:-S'c:reens; anq
·
• .•··
~iaJtf
enjoys liav_irig'the Storie.
·
>
aging. b
_
at!{~ facilities_ ~
·
a' p~
< .
· Lou*g~Jiic:<Srp9~ati:d
.
hitp
I.i{1{

of ever:
day
life
iri
Leo
HalL
. ·
,
·
As: a resident'
of
Leo/Oerteil".
•·.
·
Renovations to .. Le<>'Ha11
a1-e•:.
:s'aiti
he'
cari
.
uiiH~i-sfanct'ilie'.con~·
,:
icheci~JefJ'.h(.begf1f after'the':}c~iji'sl~(UtJ
',:
sttiderits}•ifot'=filsb/
• M~y
eyacuatioll of the
'
re:i,
'
oshaj"OS
1MffUstratiOn ·'of·
mi'

tt~s.' provided
i
should''
be
:equate:?
'
~'.llliiri
..
nova 10n'o
•.
:}is~r,ti~;~t;;tjt~~}it ...
;:water; :and:tedone
i
bathroo
~:ltJi*o
-
·
:
Znecessitfos
like:
01
e
\t2Jm1itt~i;
. .
e
i
~McGrbrty;
:silia:
siielid'iimil
·
er
b~ttir
personali
'y' '.;
iii
said:;;;:
:i;t11itaiatllf
tiiili!~!!f:
.
drafts
_:
a11.'!)!f>.~~
w.at_er/at.:·~1
;
df
P;hysica Plant,
ti1tbathi ·
·
tim·es ''.shes'., ·" '
..
.
...
· .
.
·".,...
·
.

·.
, .... ,.1 ....
.
•c-
·--: ·"· ( ,
.
r:-l:t;·, · ;:,,
:}this':~tlildiii'
.'?~..
·~k
ntir~:il'~W~
. ~~:tf(tt
,
~~'
!i':
I
~ - ;
nies in the United States.
dren] reflected that sense of re:..
·During World War II, Dyson
·
speer.for them by giving some-..
served as Special. Ccmsultant to
thing to the community,., he said.
Marist announcesimnual
'Who's
Who'l1onorees
the Secretary of War, and he
.
Dyson generously supported
M ·
·
w. orked with the military, drafting . the c. ollege_ ove_ r.the years, _but
. . .· anst College released the.
~
'
nam~s of 66 students who
will
·
.
the Lend Lease Act. He also
according to Murray, never with
appear in. the 1997 edition of ·
worked for the Department of the
much display.
. Who
s
Who Among Students in
Treasury; and he was made a
"He was recognized and re-
American Universities and Co/-
commander of the Most Excel.,. spected as a giant in American
I
· ·
·
·
.-
. lent Order of the British Empire
business, but he was also ad- : el':~d A. Cox, Vice President
for his war service.
.
mired as a man of quiet dignity
and Dean for Studenf Affairs,
Marist provides services
chairedthecommitteeoffacul_ty,
· . administrators and student who
i .
or students left.·1·n the dark
_chose the college's nominees.
"We are delighted· with this
At a meeting with townhouse· · year's selection of honorees,"
_
residents at 3:00 p.m. last Tues-
· Cox said. ·'This year's nominees
third floor of the student center. · · day, North End Resident Direc-
n::present a broad spectrum of
Senior Rafael Ali Solomon said
tor Sam Johnson said restoring
students completing degree work
... continued from page 1.
h
I h
h
d
in 1997."
·
·
t at a t oug stu ents were
power to Marist was a priority

· . •. •
• ·
stuck in a bad situation, Marist
becaus~ the section of campus
.
forty-three women and 23 men
did what it could to make the best
without power is corinected to ·.weni:se!ected. They come from
of the situation.
the same power lines as Saint · I I
states.
Among the states, New
"They did what they could to
Francis Hospital.
. York ll~d the highest number with
make sure everybody was safe
"One of the positives that we
·32
nominees (
10
local).
·
and secure," Solomon said.
have_on our side isvMre on the
• Among major fields.of study,
Senior Michael Kane, however,
same line as Saint Francis, and com~u_nication arts (17), psy-
said the school should have been
obviou~ly, _Saint Francis' power chology (11) and English and bi-
aware of the problem sooner and ... is essential," Johnson said. ·
ology, each with five, were the
reacted more quickly to the .
.
Johnson also stressed that leaders.
.
blackout.
Marist · could
do
nothing about
.. · Twelve had been involved in ·
"They should have
·
a:t least
the_power outage.
some.aspect of student govern-.
been aware of the problem and
-· "Unfortunately, we have no
ment, fifty:-fou~e~ed academic
given us food on Monday,"_ he
control over the situation" he ho~ors (De_an s List), and 41
said.
.
said. <'CentraIHudson is doing . co~ pl~ted an intems~i~.
Mara said h~ hopes ~arist will .· whatever they can to try and
get .
~•ft~n cor~pl~ted m m,tercol-
Jeam from this expenence
to be ··: peopl~ poVJer."
. leg1~te· a~let1cs. wo~en s bas-
better prepared for future po'Yer _ :
~'As
a !"¢su!t'o.f Monday's stonJ},, ketball; crew, football, ice ~ockey,
outages.
_
·
·.. ..
.
:Marist
alsc, lost two cable anten-
soc~r, so(lball and tenms.
"They could fonnulate a plan
·}-i-ia-s;.which
;affected television
:-- Other ~i¥nificant membe_rship._
to
be
a little more ready for [an- -- cli~nnels"six./iri,and
rroncairi-
include mtra1"?urals, Re$1_d~nt •
other power outage)," Mara said.
pus. New antennas arrived on
~tudent Councd~, ~mpus Mm-
"They could have flashlights
Fridayandwereinstalledoverthe
istry, ~d-~e GIVl_ng
Tree,
the-
and lanterns to avoid using
weekend to restore cable televi-
atre act1v1t1es, rad10 or TV and
candles."
sion service.
the student newspaper.
•·>
.
,
I
<
.. ·.,
t
i
!i!J~~¥.
'
.·N}:l·•;.
c:,
·,
·
·.
,
:
ni1wcana
-
· e son
1
l~i!I'
,6
:
c~~,~t~
.
,.{
'.
ThoinasN.'Piiyitere•
;
',);/~-/_.· '.':;'
'
Gru:istopliei:"J~
=
p~•Autono··
.
·t~~tf::C.;:
.
;itli;?iltik:~'·• .
.
Judith 'A. Reid ··•·• , •·
·,< .
·
.,
,
-
·
,·,
¥attli~w.D~mbrowski
!JJ!1tc'"'!'~r/i
'
~~i~;~;••
·
Daniel
RiS~
Rose
- . : -
~eterJ. Faustino
. i
'fodd~-t:a!~P,
Mel~~
F,~lichmo
_:
.
Tanyit:vfuiiTag·-
·
'~n;Fu_sarq
.
)
.•
. ,Stt!ven,Tedforo-,-:, ,
. QuystineJ\.Gilchrist.
.
. DavidTetil{yck···..
B'ernadette~Goebel
'
.
'. Ni@l~Trupia ..... · ..
Chris_tyL:(]rolllund
Dena
.-\on
Yan
Lenten
.
Christopher R. Kadus
. Dns~n
¥,
Waitekus
.Ellen M.Kalaus.
qui~~oplief'M,,Webb
Tarua.Kemf. .
Elisac:Widmer ·
:
·
· curden'I{ennedy·
·''.Mi~h~l~J.~iW!l~~~
·K~nH ..
4nchy .
·
JenniferWueiz- ·
·
· -
Todd
M:
Lang
1
Timothy Joseph Yates
Heather Lynn Lippert
Cynthia
J.
Zimba
Jennifer Leigh Malcame




















































































THE CIRCLE
.
AprillO, 1997
5
R_Oom
selection
.
.
process
causes a.n~lety for students
·.
by
EMILY
,
KUCIJARCZYK
-
.
-
.
-
siajj
w;;,~r
-
--
"A lot of times, the split option deter-
mines where-we place people," she said
.
"ff
members of a group
.
did not select ttie
- -
-
-
-
· ·
-
split option and they definitely want to
_
Deirdre Ken~edy and Kristy Yacovone
stay together and their pri_ority points
are frustrated.
·
·
aren
'
t enough toge( them into their first
·
Kennedy and Yacovone,
.
both sopho-
choice, we'll be like, 'well, they really
mores, are trying to figure out housing for
want to stay together, so let's try to get
next year. With room reservation forms
them into their second choice."
dueApril 14-16, both said they are feel-
Kennedysaid basing the housing se-
ing frustrated about the process.
lection on priority points is a good idea.
Yacovone, who is applying to live in the
"I think the system is more reliable
Old Townhouses, said the months before
based on priority points because if you
the room selection forms are due is not
a
have enough points, you know you're
p1easannime of the year.
going to get in," she said.
"It's just very aggravating and stress-
However, Kennedy said,if a member
Circle photo/ Dione Kolod
ful, and you feel a lot of tension and hos-
of the group does not have high
·
points,
tility when making decisions," she said.
then that person will feel like he or she is
Friendships, Yacovone added, can be
bringing the group down.
hurt by the whole decision-making pro-
"It
just makes you feel horrible if you
'
Students practice their techniques in the Spring 1997 fencing class in Mccann.
cess.
_
_
_
_
_
do not have enough points," she said.
"It's frustrating because I think that the
"You feel li
_
ke
·
you are hurting everyone
whole process of deciding who's
-
going
else in the group." .
to live where and with whom can make
Another c
·
oncem is not having enough
or break friendships," she said.
people in the group to fill the number of
Kennedy, whois also applying to Hve
people needed for
a
particular residence
.
in the Old Townhouses, said part of the
Kennedy said it will be difficult to have
reason for the tension between friends is
someone the group does not know come
because group members do not talk it over
in and live with them.
_
A classic sport of skill remains a
popular physical education course
with everyone in the group.
-
"I'm a little worried about someone who
by
DIANE KOLOD
Photography Editor
"There's definitely a kit ofsecrets and
doesn't match us because we're all one
Fencing is currently generating much
misconceptions that go around because
type of person, cine way, and a transfer
interest as a sport of high skill and cun-
people only talkwith one other person and
may not be," she said.
ning.
not the whole group,"she said.
Eriole said students should be as open
Fencing, also referred to as physical
According to Yacovone
,
someone not
as possible to the idea if having a trans-
chess, is hundreds of years old
.
It
origi-
speal<lng up abmithis or her concerns can
fer.
nated in Britain as training for more
ad-
also hurt friendstiip
·
s
:
.
_
_
_
"I
encourage students
to
remain as flex-
vanced weaponry, such as epee
.
The foil,
"People get veryoffended and hurt by
ible
.
as possible when it comes to adding
a thin, lightweight sword, is the training
decisions and if
a
kind
of
quiet person
people in that they do not know," she said
.
weapon. The aim of fencing is to train
doesn't speak their mind, then they'll end
Eriole said
_
stµdents who are need of a
the fencer
to
aim for the torso
,
which is
up getting hurt too,'; she s
·
aid
. _
_ .
few more peopl
_
e
.
to live with should try
the target area,
Housing assignm~~is are
,
bi_tsedprin:ia-. · to find
:
people,they
,
might know who need
·
Fencing has'now come to
·
Marist Col'-
riiy
~
o~:Qu.rnper,
:
<>tP#ority
;
pqints
a
'
stu,;,
_a,
'
pi~qt9).iy~
;:
,,
.
-,
·
,
~--r;
:•·
'
--
.
'
.
lege as a:6riecfedit'c\ass; which"iitaught
denfoniroµp
'
h~s .

·
~urie~tF,reshman
are
_
('I encounige students to doa
·
lotoftheir
-

every f&esday in the McCann Center by
guaran"tee<l housing,
.
while
cui-riiit
sopho-
,
own research
~
''
.
she said. "If they
-
know
Chri
.
sii.n
'
a
'
Massiala, Pro vest d' Armes.
moies;
-
juniors, inf
seniors
.
are llOt guar-
of peopl
,
e tllat an;n't in a large group,
.
Mas
"
siaii
'
s:Ha fencing is
a
very engag-
anteed on~campus hotish-ig
·
aue
·
to
a
lack
maybe somebody they take a class with
_
ing
'
sport; but one must master the tech-
-
She has been in more than
90
tourna-
ments. She said one of her most memo-
rable tournaments was in a town outside
of Detroit in
1976.
"I
have a lot of good memories from
that tournament
,
" she said.
"I
met some
of
my
best friends there."
In
1975
,
she placed second in the jun
-
ior nationals. One of the reasons she said
she enjoyed this tournament is because
she learned much about fencing.
"They were very good bouts,'' Massiala
said.
Massiala has also been on the Junior
World teams for Greece and the United
· States. She has trayeled to places; such
as Argentina, Mexico, and Turkey.
This is her first time teaching fencing
at Marist. She said she stresses enjoying
the sport, but also learning the skills.
of available spate. ~owever, if.there
.
is
a
.
.
or
_
~now even remotely, they should try
tie
between two
-
gro,tips
;
fQr ri'u_mber
qr.
·
-
:
16"
·
app1p~
~
-
W
'.
that
'
pe~soij
or
people,"
'
..
ni
_
ques.
_ ·,,
.
,
"I
stress in class to learn the tech-
'.
'
fe.ncing
is
a
lifetime sport," Massia\a
niques," Massiala said.
points, then' room
·
reservation is
_
deter-
Eriole said the main goal of the process
mined _by which group handed in their
is to make students happy.
room deposits first.
:
: ,
_
,"We don't want students to be unhappy
Su
_
sari. Eriole,·acting assistant director
with ihe people they are living with, and
of housing, said if a group does not wa11t
really try
,_
to avoid
an
_
of that,'.' she said.
to split up the Housing Office will try to
"We wa,nt to m~ke students as happy as
keep the group together.
--
·
·
poss
_
ible."
Light
-
Up
-
Your
-
Su.ni111er
o
·_
;a.t
MAR1sT
Ccf1.ti
·
oE
-
--
o
-
0
-
-
~
----
O 0
0
.
0
0
.
0
Accelerate a
degree program
!
Reach
,
academic
goals!
Earn ll semester
hours
of
college credit !
Registration
is
currently
taking
place
at the
School of Adult Education, Dyson}::enter 127.
Stop
in
today to register!
1 / 3 deposit required.
said. "It's fun, but there are some tech-
Some Qf the techniques the students
niques.one. must learn, so their opponent
learn are advance, retreat, disengage,
is not hurt."
· parry, and lunge.
-
Massiala has been
-
fencing for 29 l/2.
-- Sophomore Daniel Reiser, a fencingstu-
years and said she became interested in
fencing from an Ann Arbor summer rec-
reation program.
·
•~inotionally pre1ent, polltkally
earnest, Dar Williams
ls
a born
storyteller with a ulf.dfaclng humor,
and armed with a volu that soars
-arid
rattles the bones .•
Chlago Tribune
Julien J. Studley Th
Please see
FENCING, page 6 ...



















6
THE CIRCLE,
April 10, 1997
Students share their hangover cures
by
GYNA. SLOMCINSKY
Feature Editor
Sunday mornings are harmful.
That is because Sunday morn-
ings are usually known as "hang-
over day."
According to Keith Owen, se-
nior finance major, a hangover
is a terrible experience.
"A hangover is having extreme .
nausea, your head pounding,
feeling like you are still drunk,
feeling dehydrated, and having
cotton mouth," he said.
Melanie Berrios, a junior fash-
ion design major, said hangovers
give people an uneasy feeling.
"You wake up in the morning
feeling icky," she said. "You just
don't want to be awake and
sometimes you get sick to your
stomach."
Saturday nights are big at
Marist College. Several students
hop around the few local bars left
standing.
1
fV\
NoT
SuR.6
1J6SS
()Je
HA
C:,oob
But, many students believe the
hangovers.
blood thins out a great deal and·
resulting product the next day
"I'll wake up really early, like
could be very dangerous to the
may not be worth all the money
7 a.m., I'll toast some toast and
body.
spent the night before.
drink a glass of water," she said.
A popular remedy among col-
Pat Sullivan,junioradvertising · "After that, I will go back to bed.
lege students is just to keep
major, said that certain parts of
It
works like a charm every
drinking the next day.
the body suffer more than oth-
time."
Richards said there are certain
ers.
Sullivan, who said he does not
drinks that are better to drink the
"That little flap of skin in the
get hangovers, said there is an
next day.
back of your mouth swells up,"
easy way to not get hangovers.
"Bloody Marys are good to
he said.
"If
you keep drinking water
drink because they have tomato
Kevin Richards, junior crimi-
while you are drinking, you will juice, celery, and nutrients to put
nal justice major, said he agrees
most likely not get a hangover," ·J:,~cl{in yi;mr body," he said.

.



.
.
._.. ..
. •
-~'.

.-i.
• --
:-~ ••
_l• • -
. _
_
.•
with Sullivan. .
. .. ··
.. ·· ... ··
-
he said ... Dnnkmg water keeps,-
<::;Ac·cf!rdm~ to Richards, for
"I always 'seem
to
have:sore r,:,tliebloodcitculatillg,·lfthe_blood . lome:p~ple;-Jtis almost i'ritual
muscles tll_e., d~y-·after-l,g~4put). -i~ drculaiirihl•·itier¥whi: Demore
td:go
oi:~e~11e~(day;t1}tr{. -
drinking," he said . . ·
_:.·
blood going-to the brain, and in
:i1:'/'We}g~t up, go tcrRennys,
Through the years, there have
tum, you won't get a headache." W~tch foot~~], and drink Bloody
been several remedies that
One dangerous remedy is tak-
Marys-:','h~-~aid.
.
people say cures hangovers.
ing aspirin before bed, so you do
Even though there are so many
Some say black coffee works.
not wake up feeling bad. Alco-
remedies going around ~bout
Some say a cold shower.
hol thins · out the blood, and so · how to prevent or get rid ofhang-
According to Berrios, she has
does aspirin.
overs, it is
a
fact that only time
a no-fail method when she gets
When both are ingested, the
can cure a hangover.
Career Quest:Listen up, unemployed students
SEIZED CARS from $175.
Porsches, Cadillacs, Chevys,. BMWs, Cor-
vettes. Also Jeeps, 4WDs. Your Area. Toll
Free 1-800-218-9000 Ext. A-10205 for cur-
rent listings.
GOV'T FORECLOSED homes from
pennies on $1.
Delinquent Tax, Repos, REOs. Your Area.
Toll Free (1) 800-218-9000 Ext. H-10205
for current listings.
by
A.Mm
LEMIRE
Special to The Circle
Aahh ..... spring has finally
sprung!
It
is the season of
sunblock, dark shades, and win-
dows rolled down in the car.
Time for staying out late, wak-
ing up late, and ...... finding a
summer job.
Yeah, you knew it couldn't be
all fun and games, right? Well,
fret not, dear friends, for it is
about that time of year again-
time for the annual "Summer
Job/Internship Day" here at
Marist College.
What, you may be asking, ex-
actly is the "Summer Job/Intern-
ship Day?"
.
Well, it is only the best oppor-
tunity for you, as students, to
meet with prospective employ-
ers and find a summer job or in-
ternship. (And this opportunity
is open to all students, freshmen
and seniors alike).
As you know, it is never too
early to start thinking about your
future (Do I sound like your
mom, or what?), and -landing a
key summer job or internship in
your field is an excellent way to
get ahead.
And, unlike last summer, when
roasting on the beach ali day and
waitressing at night seemed like
a heavenly way to pass the time,
this year you will be able to put
something professional down on
your resume-as there is no way
to make "sundae machine opera-
tor" sound respectable.
So, whatdo you need to know
about "Summer Job/Internship
Day?" Well, it takes place on
Wednesday, April 16, in the
Cabaret from
14:00-2:00
p.m.
And, there is a major plus in-
volved-all employers will hav~
paid positions. •Better than ca-
sual dress encouraged,' which
means wear something your
mom would be proud of-:-no
shorts, no sneakers, no birks.
Also, it is recommended that
you bring along some resumes.
This is not mandatory, but rather
a strong suggestion. And don't
worry if you think your resume
is less than perfect.
This is what the Center for Ca-
reer Service Office is all about.
Just get something on paper-
anything--and bring it down
during "Walk-In Hours" and get
it
critiqued right there on the
spot, no appointment needed.
So, from one Marist student to
another, please take advantage of
this opportunity.
It really is a perfect way to talk
with summer employers, a
chance not everyone is
priviledged to receive.
Students learn the art of fencing
... continued from page
5.
dent, enjoys the class for many
reasons.
"I took fencing to learn the art
of fencing and I've always loved
swords," Reiser said. "It's a
greater discipline to learn about
the art of the blade than that of
the gun."
Jeff Novakauski, also a sopho-
more fencing student, said he
took the class for similar reasons .
"I took fencing to stay in
shape, and I am fascinated with
weaponry," Novakauski said.
In addition to_ mastering the
techniques, one must wear pro-
tective equipment, including a
mask, glove, and vest.
Massiala said fencing may be
offered again next year.
..I'd love to come back and
teach next year," she said.
































r
l
f
_
. THE CIRCLE, April' 10,
1997
7 ·
The food babe enjoys ·an· Asi~n fea.st at.Lucky· Cheng's ~n the Village
.
--·.
.
.
.
..
.
.
- by'JosIE INALDO
Food Babe
City.· The town ovehvh~lrris; · it
can height~11
my
j9ys and make
me ·weep ~ike'a ~hild.
.
Simply ·.
put, it is every.thing.
Different places mean· differ-
entthings to me. Places such as
London, Madrid, Boston .. :a11
hold beautiful memories for
ine.
But, when
I
set my eyes_ upon
that _famous skyline and
I
ani
amidst the hustle, my heart skips
a be.it, and
I
kno~ my first trite
love wiHalways be New York
This past Friday,
I
went to the
city for an important all-day in-
terview. Afterwards,
I was ab-
solutely drained, My friend, Ta;
took me to Lucky Cheng's in the
Village.
It was one of the many
places
I
have peen dying to go .
to, especially because
I
live in
Geisha
10
·(GIO in Gartland).
My house has been dubbed "Gei~
sha 10" because_ half of us are
from_ Asian descent. The irony
of it is that none of us are from
Japan, where the ·word geisha
originates from.
Anyway, people have been
. saying a lot about the Lower East
Side establishment. What was
so special_ about this place, you
may ask. Well, the staff prima-
ri
I
y consists of Asian drag
queens .. My curiosity was
piqued.
I wondered, was it a
.•.,-·,-·.--.,,,
..
·.•-;
•,
-••
ct7Iike'to'\velcdme our .
. · .
.
.
'•
_..
.
• ,,, .- .
,.
..
.
_ .,.
·;J{c;:a6~!¢~.~9
-
ttj~r; .
: 'Jiies~Caidona·Biair;Danielle
DuPont;'
bbi
Jo
ftiller,'.Diana · _
•·
0
:~!r:~
f~;>::
11
!~'.
,
9~1
1
~11~::f
7
t?Ar~t$~0:
·
t~~ris~i-rte···~u~as;
· .. · McC<l!1hY, Jennift:r
.
Tal>_ano; and Heatp~r 'Yoods>
·
·
·
.Literary
ArtsS~ciety ..
·

.
·
-
·•·- ·
.. ·
·
...
< •··• , ,
.
,:
. April 1
_
2, Trip to Woodstock .•
MCCTA 's The.·Humarists.
·.,··
' ' , ,
' · . · _ -
'
,_.
' '
'
'
.
BIGSHOWon :Monday, April 14 at
9:30 p.m. in the Nelli Goletti
Theater. Admission is free.
Model United
Nations Club
M~etings a~e scheduled Thursday Nights at
9:30 i~
the
'downstairs
library study room. Anyone interested in attending model U.N.
j
conference in New York City this April 25 to 29 must attend this
I
Thursday nights meeting. For more information call Christine
i
ext.
4821.
!
',
: Teachers of Tomorrow
1
!
I
From
April 23-28 the Teachers of Tomorrow Club will
be
hosting
their third Scholastic Book Fair.
Thousands of your old
favor
ites and
current titles are being shipped to Marist! Students-
Start your own collection of classics. Faculty-Pick up some
books for your children's summer
reading
list. The book
fair
will be
open
from IO am to 7 pm every day in the
Performing
Arts Room. Hope to see you there.
L--------------------~
tourist attraction? Is it done in
.horrible. taste? Would
I
even be
allowed through the door?
My fears quelled down a bit
upon entering the place. A typi.,-
cal Chinese restaurant, a com-
fortable darkness and chinoiserie
abound, meaning Chinese prints -
on the walls and Chinese um-
brellas covering the length of the
entire cejling. The only aberra-
tion was the motorcycle chick
tending the bar in leather regalia
and tattoos to match.
We were seated by 'Madame
Woo' the grand dame or what
one would call the matriarch of
the den. She gracefully led us to
our table, clutching her dainty
paper fan. We sat_ near the rear
of the restaurant where the 'girls'
were hanging out waiting for the
night to commence.
·
After I unsuccessfully tried to
get over the fact that they were
'he's,'
I
sat in amazement. To
me, aesthetics is still aesthetics,
no matter how you slice it. Ta
laughed at me when
I
said, about
a particular stunning waitperson,
"I
wanna look like her someday."
You know how girls get, flipping
through Cosmo in disgust, going,
"I hate her. Look, her legs are
unreal."
I
tried to concentrate on the
menu. It was just as exotic as
the staff. They offer Pan-Asian
cuisine, which is a mixture of all
the countries in Asia, particularly
along the Pacific Rim.
I
was expecting the usual
sweet and sour chicken and Lo
Mein. Was I surprised - to a de-
gree everything on the menu was
something I have never tried be-
fore. (And that's saying a lot
coming from me!)
Some of the appetizers were
steamed mussels:\,vith a gin and
• Kaffir Lime Broth
($6.95)
and
Vietnamese marinated and
grilled Quail over mesclun
greens
($7.95).
Some of the en-
- frees read so colorfully: sauteed
soft~shell crab with a Wasabi
Honey Vinaigrette over ·greens,
crispy noodles and baby veg-
etables
($19.95).
The range of the kitchen was
very impressive, but it does
come with a hefty price tag. To
start, we shared a serving of
spring rolls which had a hint of
tangy peanut sauce. For dinner,
I
finally settled on the broiled
pork chop and navy beans sau-
teed with Bok Choy and Thai
Basil served with Yin Yang,
black and white sticky rice
($14.95).
Because we had made
early reservations, we were
served in no time, and our meals
were superb. Our server, Anita
D. was very friendly and sweet.
(You know how much
I
love be-
ing mothered.)
For dessert,
I so wanted to in-
du
I
ge and order 'Imelda"s
Chocolate Shoe.' It is a life-size
stiletto made with a pound of
dark Belgian chocolate filled
with a chocolate-grandmarnier
mousse and fresh raspberries
($34.95);
It
serves three to
four
people!
I
p~ssed on that and chose the
Plum Wine Tiramisu with fresh
fruit
($5.95).
Ta and
I
shared.
and it did not disappoint. .
-In all aspects. Lucky Cheng's
was truly fascinating. The next
time
I
visit,
I
am going to either
catch a show or go to the Shanghi
Sunday Brunch with Endless
Asian Pear Mimosas!
I
felt like
Alice in Wonderland. or then
again, maybe that is how
I
al-
ways feel when
l
am in 'my city.·
Marist's Global Outrea,chTeam spent their spring breaks working in Mexico from March 7-15.
3 Housemates Needed
·
For 1997-98 School Year
*4 Bedrooms
*Bathroom·:
*Living Room
*Kitchen
The house is located on Taylor
Avenue
·
For more information, call
Jessica at 485-1936 or after
May at (914) 235-9735
JOB OPENING: COPY EDITOR
The Poughkeepsie Journal, an award-winning Gannett Co. daily in New
York's historic Hudson Valley, seeks a news desk copy editor. Strong copy
editing, design and headline-writing skills required, as well as flair, creativ-
ity and vision. Write managing editor, Poughkeepsie Journal, Box 1231,
Poughkeepsie, N.Y.
12602.
Or e-mail newsroom@poughkee.gannett.com
The Journal values diversity in the workplace.































































































8
.
_
THE
CIRCLE
·
EDITORIAL
April10, 1997
_
.
,
··
·
TIIE
/
-
:
_-
_
-
_
-
-
•·
-
-,,~
©
·
The Student Newspaper of Marist College
.
_
Kristin Richard,
Editor~in-Chief
Michael
_
Goot'.
ManaRing
'
Editor
.
·
-
..
...
4._
Stephanie Mercurio,
News Editor
.
Tim Manson,'
A&E Editor
.
Chris Smith,
Sports Editor
Gyna Slomc:insky,
Feature Editor
.
Christian Bladt,
Opinion Editor
Diane Kolod,
Photography Editor
Jason Duffy,
Business Manager
G. Modele Clarke,
Faculty Advisor
The Circle
is published every Thursday. Any mail may be addressed to The
Circle,
Marist College. 290 Nollh Road, Poughkeepsie, NY 12601;
Editorial
Storm rekindles old
·
art of talking
"The best way to win an
argument is to begin by
being right''
Letters to the _Editor
Western
IIledia
coverage of
China
can
-
be
misleading
Editor:
In the aftennath of last week's stonn, part of the campus was without power. It
made us realize how vulnerable we are. We have become so dependent on TVs,
telephones, radios, and computers. We are almost powerless without them be-
cause, then, we have no ways of communicating with each other. Our society has
become so technologically driven, that we do not know how to function without it.
However, once we strip away all these electronic gadgets, we still have one thing
left-interpersonal communication.
Friends have sent me several clippings on China since I arrived here on Aug.
29, 1996.
Before, talking was so difficult. People were often separated by large distances.
I am in Xiamen, a special economic zone, teaching oral and written English at Lujiang
Now that it is so easy to talk to somebody, the value of communication has been
University, a three year vocational school of some 1300 students.
degraded. Sometimes,
it seems like we have lost the art of good conversation.
It
Unfortunately, most of the reporting on China is negative: human rights violations,
takes thinking skills.
Three Gorges Dam ruining China's heritage, and the religious persecution of "under-
Sometimes, we think we are communicating with other people, but we are not
·
ground"
·
Catholics.
really. We ask people what they did last night, what they did today, what they are
These months of daily contact with the Chinese people, students and adults, have
doing tomorrow. We do not often explore deeper issues, such as their inner fears,
helped me understand both my country and China better.
hopes, goals and dreams. Those are the types of conversations that we need to
Over one billion people here are very happy with the development of their country
have. We need to communicate with a person on another level in order to fully
under Deng Xiaoping's "socialism with Chinese characteristics." What's more, they are
satisfy ourselves as human beings.
blatantly proud of their country, and say so repeatedly. They do not at all understand
As crazy as it may sound, it is good to talk to yourself. It does not have to be out
why
_
the US media are so intent on portraying China so negatively. I believe it is because
loud
.
It
is sometimes good to just sit back and reflect on things with one or two
our media come from a priori, that is; pre-judging, prejudiced positioils.
thoughts to keep you company. Sometimes, you have to shut out all the exterior
China is Communist, and Communism has never been any good anywhere; therefore,
voices and what people are telling you to do and listen to your inner voice. Then,
it cannot be any good
in China. From_ the reality I see and hear, this is not true in the
when you have sorted out your priorities, you can re-join the group and move on
present China.
with your life.
The US media also believe that
a
one-party system has, historicaily, riever done lasting
Talking is really an art
form.
Sometimes his hard toget beyond the basic!'small
good; and has never been democratic. Again, Chinaseenis
'
to be, for the present,
talk."
.
But, however, you have t9 start someplace.
_Then,
you
can
move on to ~lking
.
·
-
:
~e
_
lying
,
PJ.it historicatfact Th~r~isno
.
other way, for
.
the time being, that China could
about the question of the rn.eaning of.life: :,: :,
..
,
, :
.
":~ -
.
i
-
.
'·. ,[:,
;
.. 'ti;c,
;
.
:
.
:
~~~
-
J
mts.ig~:~tiS. l?f?.gms~
.
.
.
itj(f~!!,<:Pt1~
.
m~1Jg~'.~;
1
TT~!l~
P~f~~'1
1
~~-~1,!-~ ••
9PR
in_-
.
·
We
.
need
_
to turn
-
the television set off once in a while and just chat. with
.
one
crease--'-,'--under a USA--typl:: Congress. Coses need authontanan lea~ership. Successful
·
·
another. People should take tim
_
e to talk about current issues and problemsJnclud~
CE0s do-
.
not need committee consensus.
ing what bothers theni"in their lives. Talking can often prevent a
-
conflict from
:
-
Things
·
will change in the course of time. The 8th Plenuin"of the National People's
·
happening
;
Wars have often been started because of a lack of commuiiicatiori.
Congress ended on March 14.
·
.
Silence is not good.
_
·
·
Jbe official paper of the country, the
China Daily, reported
in one of the many articles
Michae
_
l
Goo~Man
_
aging
Editor
on t_h!s Plenum that it was the most successful ever because the percent of approval of
.
.
;,
.
.
'
·'
~~i::=:=,..~◄~~
,.
_
~!!~'L'~'!:rl~~L~~~,,;~,;.;,:,fflt-~--
-
:z,.,.s
,
.
::,:j
_
]f-(~c
-
'.:!§w~'
-.e;~¼~~¼~-~,~'
,
=
:~" ,;;.,-·:;-i~.:,.....;.,r·•:
·
;;::;::,:::.::::~,:..-
_
'
_
~
-
- •.
- //_i:'f:i::_77"',
~
/ -

#

::-
-
-
~~•r~
-
~
.
·
·;-.
:
I /
decisions made was the lowest ever!
·
'Ibis
·
was taken as
a
sign of the growing intellectuai quality of th~
27()0
delegates.
Approval was still at a more
thllll 75
percent high, but nonetheless indicated gr()wing
debate and
_
opposition. The constitution of China presently bans
a
second political
party, and to start one is tre
_
ason'.
I
believe
.
that,· in time, a second
_
p ~
will.
naturally
emerge;
·
_
We must not forget that missionaries came to China by the hundreds, especially in
the wake of British gunboats that forced opium on the Ch
_
inese because the Indian
market was declining .
.
,
· · ·
After Hong Kongis r~stituted to China this July 1, perhaps the Chinese
will
start
forgettin~ the in~a~ous Unequal Treaties dictated by Westen cannons.
_
Then, perhaps
once agam, Chnstian schools wll be allowed in China and will not be perceived as
colonialist tools.
.
.
.
_ .
.
More than one b~llion Chinese
_
are eager to leamEngJish.
I
urge you to sp!!nd iyear or
two-some Amencans here with me are in their eighth year, so happy are they !-teach-
ing English and experiencing for yourself the reality of New China and the wannth and
graciousness of the Chinese.
·
You will then no longer be misled by a handful of expatriate dissidents played up
sensationally by the Western media.
Brother Joseph L.R. Belanger:
·
Help is available for sexual violence survivors
Editor.
The Task Force for the Prevention of Sexual Violence on campus would like
to
thank all
those who attended the Katie Koestner presentation on acquaintance
.
rape entitled
"No/Yes."
.
Your participation helped to make this program an overwhelming success, as well as
showed how this subject touches many lives.
·
We are currently working on a bulletin board that will exhibit the infonnation collected
from the que~tionnaires which were available at the program.
.
If _sexual v10lence has affecte_d your life, or the life of someone you know, ·please
be
reminded that there are professionals and peers on ca1'1pus who are willino and able to
help you.
0
Pl~se feel free to contact the Counreling Center, located in the Byrne House, at
extension
2152.

I w~uld like to close by extending an invitation to any and all to attend a ''Take Back
the Night" march on Sunday, April
20,
starting at 8:
15
p.m. in front of the chapel.
We look forward to your participation in this and future events.
Hem Borromeo,Lower ChampagnatMentorand Tusk Force Member






































..
.
THE CIRCLE
0PINIO N:
April 10, 1997
9
Heaven's Gate took-advanta.geofmodefn. technol(!gy to take advantage of troubled people
Its hard to find a deeper meaning t~ thetragedyatRancho Santa Fe. A society left
When I was 10, I missed out on all the Haley's
behjnd in bewildennent ponders the_circumstahces that.might lead an exclusive group
Comet furor. It had something to with living be-
to kill themselves. The. world is a cruet·ptace; and
if
your father.is anything like mine,
tween two mountains and unfavorable atmospheric
you have probably heard him tell you the world is anything but fair. · The ability to
conditions. Either that, or there was just a really
burrow yourself away into the hoards of people and agencies and institutions that
compelling episode of ALF on. I forget which.
civilization creates gets easier every day, and the difficulty of everyday life makes
In any event, since I missed the last once-in-a-
.
-seclusion.a.tempting.altemativ.:eJoi:.some._
lifetime astronomical phenomenon,
I
was com-
As normal social interaction becomes a necessity for work and pleasure, it·seems main streamers LaKe -pelled tJ;?-see-this-one.
for granted that everyone they meet shares in the normal procedures
of
social exchange. Our society
When"..! first caught a glimpse of the comet several weeks ago,
I
forces a self-centered orientation on· us, and we have little time for those acquaintances who do not
c_ommented to myself how it was a truly wondrous sight. How such
benefit our endeavors. So, cordially, we dismiss the average acquaintance with the perception that he
a thing co~ld exist in the same universe as Pauly Shore is utterly
has business of his own to attend, and p a t h s . . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
baffling.
may or may not cross with this particular person,
~'
·
'
It was not until several days later that
I
depending upon future circumstances. This is
_,.....,--_....u-
---.. ...
,~A_.,,._./)....,,
began to think of the appearance of this
quite a normal, societally acceptable method of
comet as something to be dreaded (though
social interaction.
not nearly as much as Pauly Shore).
Commercials get more creative every day, but
( ~
/
Then, I realized that the problem is not
one of my favorites that stopped airing recently
,w.:.--=-,-...::,,.}
the comet itself, but how the Heaven's
featured Dennis Leary walking between computer
J
Gate cult interpreted its presence.
monitors occupied by blankly staring internet
,71
It
is hard to do much else than feel sorry
surfers. Leary asks, "What are you doing?" The
,
for them.
monot<;>nous reply is, "Just browsing." The ad-
r r - - . ; , . . .,.:;;-~
There was obviously something miss-
vertisement advocates more productive use of
__ ,
ing from their lives if they would sign up
the world wide web. "Raw capitalism," accord-
for a whacked-out crusade led by a man
ingtoLeary'scommercial, would make much more
'l•'' ,, .
who looked like Leslie Nielsen after a
effective usage of the internet than "browsing."
,
-~
couple of all-nighters.
The relatively small faction of social misfits
•. ,
Tl-/
16 JS N
oT S'vt CI
b€ LI lt.E
Would any of you sign up to be sheep
that comprise groups like Heavens Gaters, Mon-
/J.
to a man and a woman that called them-
tana Freedmen, Branch Dividians, and white su-
tCJPLS
1HJNk. - TH€
ON
LY f2€lJ S
selves "Bo and Peep?"
premacists take advantage of the web for the
W8
flAV
6
TO
LE/JV€ OU/2
Bob
What is probably the most troubling
purpose of combining forces and recruiting mem-
- - -
thing about this particular cult is that it is
bers. Instead of normal social interaction, con-
1
5
8
6C
f}
uSE
T/lf)j'f<E
No T
~'------,,.-,
not filled with the kind of misfits, rejected
fused orunsociable people may choose to browse
C
tl
I/.
,~ ..
a'
circus freaks, and former child actors that
the internet, and during their browsing sessions
OM
Pi
c
I
f3U5
W IT-H
'£AVA"
'S
v,m----~i!f"
one would expect to find in a religious cult.
they fall victim to the emotionally appealing traps
l~~::-----.a
(;AT£
i
9
5.,
Much like the Doomsday cult that made
left by extremist groups like the Heavens Gaters.
~, - -
headlines in Japan after the gas attack on
Multi-million dollar corporations, like IBM.or
. - - - - ~
a Tokyo subway, the Heaven"s Gate cult
AT&T, do not expect their commercials promot-
.
1111
\\\t /
1 ,
is comprised of seemingly normal, some-
ing the internet, laden with the innocent faces o f ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
what successful, average, every day citi-
children dropping profound lines of future euphoria, to bolster the efforts of extremist groups. Unfortu-
zens. Unfortunately, that just makes the whole thing that much more
nately, the KKK web page can instantaneously link a web surfer with other white supremacist sites.
baffling.
Applewhite admitted the resurgence of his cult came about through internet contacts.
As time went on, the appeal of the cult grew substantially. People
To suggest that the internet is to blame for the mass suicide is absurd; the internet can only operate
from all walks oflife chose to leave behind their jobs, their families,
as its human instructor intends. The many positive attributes of information transfer that the internet
and everything that they had known before, with the hope that they
provides cannot be outweighed by the sparse accounts of misuse. After reading the information about
would be able to hitch a ride on Amtrak's interstellar line.
the suicide, I wondered
if
the infonnation about Heavens Gate would remain a popular cite to browse.
With the advent of internet technology, it became much easier to
Perhaps a link has ~!ready been made between Hp balm and Heavens Gate.
I
must admit, if I was. not
reach out to prospective members. After sucking down ga\lons of
computer
mi'ieraie,
and·
if
a
Ihad"the
time;Tmiglit
have
iookedfoi.- 'i\pplewhite's page·
out
of curiosity.
packaged fruit juices and caffinated beverages, the Heaven's Gate
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~":~,
~
,cultists sat down to design web pages, and to post in internet groups
Bill Mekrut
is the political columnist/or The Circle.
like "alt.suicide" and "alt.crazy.bastard.seeks.same." Not surprisingly,
ours.
':Mypare11tS
Iiket~-take
me'to
schools
to
which Iwould
never
~
accepted .
.
Tsuppoie;.
that they figure if we showed
/ tremendous conviction
.
fo
.
the
<
place, adII1issions wbuld come
· ..
·
around and feel obligated to Jet
. . me in. If not, Dad could always
. . ·...
e · c::ontestit: After all~ _he bought
irru'f~:fl .-·. _ .
i ·
aT.a: shirt In _one
.
such spring
cl;t<>
.
tlunk
·
·


·
trip to Villanova, I felt so utterly
nC>.t
,
od~.
<
o~t
of
place
·
that I insisted to.
al
_
t<:>':
tl_l~,
'µiy"parents Jhat my iuikle was.
ressed to

·
otheririg .-·• me
·
and
.
I just
:1dn'igo on with the
·
tour.
.. d.:suggested that we swing
by
tqe, athletic training mom
and
talk
to the trainer, which I
.
:found mortifying. So, I pressed
n
ore.' · /
o~,
ancl
perhaps one interesti.
t(
_c
ign)s
>ing
·
thing, though not very'
. J:i~-~;f~t~r~
·-
...
t:;?;~U::o~;
gri~~~~~!s~::
'caxnpus, guided ,by our the tour parents fervent warn-
. .
M~stTouf_ G
_
uides. ' .·
.
ings! plunged back\yards down
. mpusJ01irf for pote~tiai · •·-
a
small flight of stairs. (Yes, she
'
'ivilized'
~odd
:er'
\V •
.
metlll>ers of.tlleClassof100Uei'- '. was okay~well, in good
.
'
'a
bit of ~confuidittion
<
surely stroll by;:·Well;I suppose
enough shape to finish the
ianyway~Tam
at least ot1eof the . ·.
Walking
backwards
is a
little less
tour).
few bligh~with'an illness
in _
·
than leisurely.
The
guides. at-
Well, despite my seemingly
these
first
,
days
of_.spring. It
tempt to perf~t this
art
of while
_
mixed review of a season, per-
seems I have tried evei:y con-
juggling
. names ·. _·
like
haps a result of Robitussin
ceivable drug, (Hmm. Every
"Champagnat"
and
"Benoit" on
slightly dulling my senses, I am
conceivable drug? _
Would that
their tongues with gi:ace that can
·
as grateful as a can of parmesan
be every drug aside from binh
only
be
attained after at least a
cheese about the arrival of
control?), available
.
over the
semester or two at Marist. Even
spring. Wait, no, that would be
counter to at least numb the
more interesting are the poten-
"grated." Heck, maybeI'mjust
symptoms of this virus. -Any-
tial students trying to hide the
as cheesy as that can of
way,
not only
does
spring bring
embarrassment that mom's in-
parmesan.
skunks and disease, but the
quiry about bathroom sanitation
. sight of the Marist crew team
or co-ed floors and the humilia-
gliding a\ong the Hudson is as
tion that Dad's plaid pants bring
mainstream around here as the
about.
Hudson itself (pun intended).
I never took· one of those
Tara Quinn
is
The Circle's
humor columist
this was incredibly effective, as it enabled them to reach the special-
ized groups of people they were scouring the globe for.
One of the problems with getting a look inside the mind of the
members of the Heaven's Gate cult (which would probably be about
as unnerving as hearing Mickey Rourke's answers to an ink blot
test) is that they were discouraged from communicating with their
families.
In fact, there really was not much contact between them in the
outside world.
This was probably because they knew they were not going to have
to put up with the hustle and bustle down on Earth for much longer.
Besides, who needs to go outside when there are episodes of
'Battlestar Galactica' and 'Space:
1999'
to watch?
The reports featuring family members are filled with stories like that
of Robert Maeder, whose daughter had joined the cult three years
ago.
Like other families of cult members, he received a handful of post-
cards throughout the years.
David Moore, who spent 21 years in the cult, only saw his parents
on two occasions. He stated that contact with family members would
"tug at his vibrational level."
Speaking of which, one of the biggest tenets of Heaven's Gate was
that one needed to renounce his or her sexuality. Apparently, this
was more difficult for some members of the group, as a significant
number of the men in the cult had been surgically castrated .
I guess if you are discouraged from ever seeing anyone else, and
you cannot even touch the other cult members, you have to find
some way to relieve your pent-up sexual frustrations. For these mem-
bers of the Heaven's Gate cult, the most logical thing was to get out
the old testicular guillotine.
Not that logic is really an appropriate concept here. What I cannot
figure out is that if they were no longer going to need their bodies,
what were all of the quarters for? Just in case the E-Z Pass on the·
Hale-Bopp comet did not work? Perhaps their souls were not as
clean as they had been told, and they might have had to stop at a
laundrymat somewhere along the way. It could be that the space
ship following the comet only has public phones. Or maybe they just
wanted to make sure they would be able to play Donkey Kong Junior
when they reach the great beyond.
Of c~urse, it is probably just another example of what a crackpot
plan this was. For whatever reason, Herff Applewhite, or Bo, or Do
or Don't ... whatever he was calling himself that week, felt the need t~
drag 38 people down into the disturbing hell that he created for
himself .
Worst of all, we do not know why he did it, or just what it was that
compelled these people to follow along. Most likely, we never will.
Christian Bladt
is
the opinion editor for The Circle.




















I
I,
I

,;_.
I
~-
THE CIRCLE,
.
April 10,.1997.
·,
.....
~
:
·_.{\})~)
·.·:
SGANEWS
This year's sophomore class
and finally came to a successful
president has accomplished a. ·· end
at
the March Board ofTrust-
great deal for the benefit of the
ees meeting.
entire student body.
· -·Currently, Brent is serving his
Brent Knapp is the individual
second term as president for the
responsible for the recent in-
class of I 999.
crease in the activities fee, which
,Through his two years of ex-
will allow for more monies to be
perience in· this position,· Brent
distributed between clubs and · has seen his class become closer
programming.
· together and increasingly 'sup-
This process began in the fall
portive of events the class has
semester with Brent's proposal
sponsored. One such event was
Name:
Brent-M. Knapp
. Year: . Sophomore
Hmneto:wn:.
S1dney~·
NY·_
.
Major: Politic~! Sciei:ice
Favorite Band/Musician: Dave Matthews
Favorite Movie: IIWhere the Day Takes You"
Favorite Food: ·veal Parm·
Role Model: Mom and dad
held this past Christmas.
· The class of 1999 brought on
campus the orphan children from
Aster Home to celebrate this holi-
day.
Brent has made a profound
statement· for the class of 1997
with his leadership'in.SGA, ·arid
he .is confident-that in the next
tw6 yefui;
"the
class will continue·
to make a difference in the Marist
'community.
Attention All
, ,.r.•
'Audjtion·sfor·commencement
19:97
CYCLISTS NEEDED
FOR
CLEAN AIR CHALLENGE
The American Lung Assodatio1fis asking people to team.up to fight
air pollution! Teams of friends, family, co-workers, students or oth-
ers who are concerned about the environment and the quality of air
we all breathe are invited to ride their-bikes or hike in the 6th Aimual ·
Clean Air Challenge on
Saturday, May
3,
1997
at Collins Park
(Moe Road), in Clifton Park · In addition, people with• asthnfa are·
eligible to join the "Asthma All-'StarTeam" and qualify forspecial
incentives. Individuals are also welcome to participate.
The Clean Air Challenge is a pledge-based bike tour or fun 'walk to
support the
air
quality-programs of the local Lung Association.· Bi:.
cycle routes will cover 15, 25, or 50 miles, and walkers will hike
three miles. There will be a party, sponsored by Shop n' Save, fol-
lowing the event.
:
To take part, you need only obtain
$25 in paid pledges
arid pay a
$15 registration fee,
or $10 per-person registration fee for teams of
four or more and "Asthma All-Star Team" participants.
All participants receive a one month membership to Gold's·Gym and
may win other prizes, including a two-day stay at the Sagamore Re-
sort in Bolton Landing and a $100 gift certificate from Shop n' -Save.
For more information, contact Joyce Jacobson at 1-800-LUNG USA
or (518) 459-4197 ext. 306. Additional sponsors of the Clean Air
Challenge include: Albany Medical Center, WTEN/ ABC I 0, The
River 99.5 FM, The Times Union, and the Down Tube Cycle Shop.
· . . -
J
3Solo Singers Needed ,
1;._M~zzo or BassJor Nati~nal Anthem .
2-·
Of any voi~e·part to sing the Marist College Song
Contactthe ¥usic IJeparmient.toset up an audition
,, ;;, e-mail.MUSICDEPT@MARIST.EDU .
.
.
..J.
Auditions close_
April 22; 1997
'
.
,;-):
=
·
~
·)i,ii<Ii:;f~··::Af~Vl\L:,
.
. Plio~~Jf~r~1ulN@TICE·
.
-• :
;
:)
.
>-
~
.
~
-
t,_.
~
;,":;r: ..
?
,,
·
//;\}/
:'r
:: .. ·_
'
:
::,SWde~i;~J"~Jniiiic1~
'
tJf;fuµi _their
pµcmes
io
tliy
Iieip
·
a;k
.
. in
DN 243. froniriow untiHvfay 2; or fro~ Iv1ayS9 ;
·
from 9:00
-·. a.m. to5:0<?
·
p;rii;; to the Performing
Arts
Rooni in SC 346.
.
'
~
-
_PhbnC$
rii~iiid
be
·
ri~~ilyJ;ack~
_
in their original boxes, and
.fue original cordsshould
be
included. .
. SENIORS:YOllffiUSt return your phones for damage assess-
. ment by 5_:0ffp:m. Friday, May 9: You may keep the phone
during Sen,ipr Week, provided it is checked out.
RAs
will
now be accepting any phones.
THEY MUST BE
DROPPED OFF AT THE PROPER LOCATION.
Roommates will share the charges for all damages.







































THE
CIRCLE
April 10, 1997
11
Seventh annual Holp
_
ca~st_·cere~ony
.
will
focus on "unearthing
_
fhe
_
trtjth'
_
'
·
.
.
·
'.
.
'
.
.
.
.
'.
:-:'
·
·
.
;
_
·
.:
.
by
KATRINA FUCHSENBERGER
Staff Writer
Lifo
in
a
concentration camp.
Death all around you. Living
minute to minute, struggling to
survive. Family members gone.
All of the above
are.
feelings
victims experienced during the
Holocaust, a devastating event
that occurred more than 50 years
ago.
This year, Marist College is
holding its Seventh Annual Ho-
locaust Memorial Program in re-
membrance of all the people who
lived through it.
The program, "Unearthing the
Truth," is being held on April 17
at
7:30
p.m
.
in
the Cabaret and
Student Center. The Marist Col-
lege Holocaust Remembrance
Committee is presenting the pro-
gram. The committee consists of
both students and faculty, one
of whom is Dr. Milton Teichman.
Education <::enter of Nassau
County,

_
.. _
_
_
.
According to Teichman, Roth
riever forgot the memories of the
Nazi camps and joined in the ear-
liest efforts to establish the Ho-
locaust Center. There, he
.
ar-
ranges the center's artistic and
historical exhibits, gives lectures
to groups of all ages and pro-
duces pedagogic videos. He also
inaugurated the Children's Me-
morial Garden Million Pennies
Project, and he developed
teacher training seminars.
In
addition, as chairman of the
Speakers Bureau for the Shoah
Foundation, Roth is on the plan-
ning commission for the 1998 In-
ternational Scholar's Conference
on the Holocaust and the
Churches.
Roth also designed and di-
rected the building of the Holo-
caust Memorial Park at the Shel-
ter Rock Jewish Center in Roslyn,
NY, and he is the Holocaust
Center's link to the North Shore
Promotional Alliance
.
Besides Roth, there will be other
presentations during the pro-
gram;
·
Two Marist students; Jesse
Steinberg and Avi Tzadok, will
speal< about what the Holocaust
means to them. Students will also
read
'
writings from the ghettos,
which were buried during the Ho-
locaust and rediscovered many
years later.
The Shalom Singers will per-
form music from the time of the
Holocaust, and films about the
time
will
be shown in the Perfonn-
ing Arts room. The films include
"They Risked Their Lives," "The
Wave," "The Last Klezmer," and
"The Eighty-first Blow."
An award of $150 will be given
to the winner of the Mari st Holo-
caust Essay Contest. Half of the
money will go to a charity of the
student's choice. The essays
were
based
on Elie Wiesel's mem-
oir, Night. The program will con-
clude with a candle lighting cer-
emony in remembrance of all the
victims of the Holocaust.
Teichman, professor of English,
said he became interested in the
Holocaust because he lost aunts,
uncles and numerous cousins in
Poland and Belgium. Also, as a
student of literature, he noticed
that literary works were written
after the Holocaust by survivors,
and he wanted to know what
they were saying about the great
tragedy of our age.
New information technology
major awaits state approval
Teichman said he hopes the
byBEN AGOES
Asst. News Editor
memorial program will have a
·.
·
·
·
.
positive educational effect on the
·
Mfuisi
;
is expe~tingthat at least
students.
IO
students in the computer sci-
"I
hope they will get a fuller
ence and information systems
sense of the human
.
capacity for
majors will be unsatisfied by the
evil, a capa~ify;;.._Wbii:;l:\J!.S
,
!°lU!P
.
~IJ
:._
;.ehd
.
of
.
this
.
year .
. :.
_
-
:
,,:
:,
i,.,
.
. -
~-
~--
beings
·
we must learn to control,"
It is hoped that these students
he said. "They will also get,
I
will transfer into Marist's latest
hope, a fuller
.
sense of
_
the
_
d~g-
undergraduate. program
_
offered
nity and grandeur of the human
·
·
next semester; a major in infor..:
spirit as exhibited by the victims
mation technology.
themselves and by their rescu-
The department of computer
ers."
_
science and information systems
According to Teichman, there
currently offers only two under-
are several reasons for having
graduate degrees to students.
the memorial program at Marist.
The
·
first, compu~er science
First, he said,
.
it increases the
(CS), emphasizes the theoretical,
awareness of the Holocaust as
scientific, and mathematical as-
·
an event of enormous signifi-
pects of computer operating sys-
cance in recent history. Second,
·
terns and programming. Students
it remembers the victims of Nazi
majoring in CS traditionally work
atrocity to keep them alive in our
as systems or applications pro-
memories as
-
a people Hitler
grammers following college.
sought permanently to erase
The second major offered by
from the earth .
.
_
Third,
it
recog-
the department is in information
nizes
·
the profound dangers of systems (IS) which has been in
racial hatred.
Last,
it recommits
place since 1988. Students are
ourselves
_
to our Christian and
taught to analyze and design
Judaic beliefs that all human
life
computer systems for business
is·sacred.
use. Most IS majors become
Teichman teaches
a
course on
system's analysts or applications
the literature of the Holocaust,
managers.
which shows the relationship
According to Jan Harrington,
between history and the creative
department chair of computer
literature written during and af-
science and information sys-
ter the Holocaust. He has also
terns, students majoring in IT will
edited a book called "Truth and
have a broader range of careers
Lamentation: Stories and Poems
to chose from.
·
on the Holocaust" along with his
"The IT program has a lot of
wife Sharon Leder. Teichman
breadth," she said. "CS and IS
gathered all the material for the
have more depth."
book and it's used in many col-
The reason it has more breadth,
leges and universities across the
Harrington said, is because as the
country.
Internet expands further every-
Teichman was responsible for
day, so do the opportunities as-
locating the upcoming program's
sociated with it.
guest speaker, Irving Roth, a
·
She said the IT major
will
focus
Holocaust survivor. He was
primarily on multimedia applica-
born in Kosice, Czechoslovakia,
tions, local area networks, and
in l 929 and endured the death
the World Wide Web. Jobs aris-
camps of Auschwitz and
ing from the explosive growth of
Buchenwald. He came to New
the Internet and smaller Intranets
York Harbor in 1947. Roth now
include user-support specialists,
devotes his time and efforts to
network administrators, and
the Holocaust Memorial and
webmasters.
The Marist IT program is mod-
eled after
a
similar program intro-
duced in I 990 at the Rochester
Institute of Technology. The
RIT
M .
f
h .
.
f
program has been a tremendous
artst as lOil maJOfS prepare Of
success with nearly 800 students
,
S · 1
N
d} A
d
enrolledinthemajorthisyear
.
.
. :
_
1 Vef
~e e
Waf S CefeffiOilY
Marist expects a totalof2~ ~tu- . .
,
dents will e1:uo\l in the degree
-
-'.
..
continued from page
3.
program next
fall:
q
fres~r,nen
,
..
,
·
and l
O
transfer sophomores from
.
CS and IS. By 2006, Marist
"Every extra minute is spent
projects 89 students will be en-
perfecting patterns and samples,
rolled.
/
.
learning new techniques, learn-
Harrington said she is optimis~
.
_
ing how to handle new fabrics,
tic about the degree's success.
working within deadlines, and
"We had a great deal of inter-
setting time priorities," DeSanna
est in the department
.
at open
-
said
.
.
houses, and a great portion of
The show features awards, but
[the students] were interested in
.
the emphasis is on camaraderie,
information technology," she
not cut-throat competition.
said.
"We don't encourage them to
compete against each other,
but
there are awards for best collec-
tion and best garment," said
DeSanna.
Senior design student Eyoko
Robinson said this year's show
will reflect the individual talents
of the class.
"Our class is really diversified.
Everyone has their own stylized
techniques," she said. "We also
have a lot of colors this year.
Everyone carried out their
themes very well."
ATTENTION!
The Financial Aid Office is currently accepting applications for several Privately Spon-
soredScholarships offered through the college. These scholarships may
be
awarded
on the basis of academic peifonnance, financial need, major field of study and loca-
tion of pennanent residence, or a combination of these items.
A list of the scholarships offered and their eligibility requirements is provided in the
Marist College Undergraduate catalog, and it is available in the Financial Aid Office.
All students returning for the 1997-98 academic year are eligible to apply.
To be considered for these scholarships, students must submit the following to the
Financial Aid Office (Donnelly 200) by May 16, 1997.
1. A completed APPLICATION FOR PRIVATELY SPONSORED SCHOLAR-
SHIPS for each scholarship in which you are interested.
2. A letter from you, addressed to the COMMITTEE FOR PRIVATELY SPON-
SORED SCHOLARSHIPS, outlining why you feel you should be considered for the
particular scholarship in question. (Note: a separate letter is required for each schol-
arship you are interested in).
3. A completed SPONSORED SCHOLARSHIP RECOMMENDATION FORM
(for each scholarship) to ensure full consideration from the scholarship committee.
APPLICATIONS AND RECOMMENDATION FORMS
ARE AVAILABLE IN THE FINANCIAL AID OFFICE.


















12
.
.
.
. AprilJ0,-1997 _:
···~
News:
and
Reviews
.
"
'.
.
.
.
.
'
De§i-,ite inaccess3bility, Kenneth Branagh'
s.
'Hanilet'
is
· worthWliile
b; Christian_ Bladt
Opinion Editor ·
· It is perhaps one of the great-
est shames· of the cinematic
world in recent years that most
of you cannot get to see Kenneth
Branagh's "Hamlet" Not in the
sense that most people are turned
off by Shakespeare or
4
hour
long films, much less the com-
bination of the two ..
No, the· great shame is that the
film, which opened on Christmas
day, is still only playing at one
theater in the area: '.fhe Sony
Paris at 58th and 5th in Manhat-
tan. Sure, the film will eventu-
ally find its way onto video,
which will make it less of an en-
durance test, but the film will
lose so much when it is trans-
ferred to video. This is the case
with any movie, but, Branagh
makes ample usage of this film's
70mm film process. (Most films
are 35mm, so there will naturally
be twice as much of each image
lost).
Perhaps this is because of.the
two aforementioned reasons why
it the film is notexpected to have
much mainstream appeal, and,
thus, the film has not been
widely released.
Whatever the case it, it truly.is
a shame, as Branagh 's film· is an
extraordinary work of_ art.
Branagh should be c_ommended
for the Jp.ere concept_of thefilm,
which ·is the complete un-
abridged text of the tragedy· of
the Prince of Denmark.
Of course, the real commenda-
tion should be given because he
has made a truly magnificent
film. There are -numerous rea-
sons for this, not the least of
which i$ Branagh's own perfor-
mance as the title character. He
Photo Counesy of Castle Rock Entenainment
Prince Hamlet (Kenneth Branagh) looks on during the celebra-
tion of the wedding of his mother to his father's brother.
gravedigger, is delightfully ·
Branagh.also makes som_e in-·
campy and incredibly amusing, · triguing choices w,ith his move-
and Williams, as the obnoxious
menr of the .camera. There is a
Osiric, adds a humorous touch to . scene in the early part of the _film
the tense sword fight at the di-
where Claudius is professing his
max of the film. Branagh very
love for Gertrude where Hamlet
capably interacts with both of is positioned directly in betw~en
these characters in such a way
them, providing the obvious
that Shakespeare himself would
symbolism of Hamlet's dissatis-
have been pleased.
·
faction with the recent events in
But, it is not Branagh's role as
his own family.
·
an actor in this film that is solely
He wonderfully pans in a dr'...
responsible for making this film
cular motion through all of the
so wonderful. His work behind
characters in a scene, showing ·us
the camera is just as astonishing.
each of them several'times·.
. ifhe
film uses some wonderful
These shots are so .wonderfully
picturesque outdoor sho.ts -that choreographed, and he·_ actually
are outstanding onthe. big
manages to get to dose-~ps of
screen. When Hamlet"is first
characters instich
a
way thafit
confronted with the ghost of his · is relevant to the dialogue being .
father, it.is truly a mystical ex-
spoken.
_
· perience. _The screen is shrouded
There are also some iriterest-
in mist, the ground shakes, seem-
ing flashback sequences that
ingly in an attempt to engulf show us incidents that have tra-
Hamlet. The ghost's voice· is
ditionally only been referred to
electronically modulated and
in Shakespeare's text. The audi-
amplified so mucl~ that I could
ence sees just what kind ofrela-
not help but be startled as he
tionship Hamlet and Ophelia
commands Hamlet to "Swear!"
had. There is also a flashback to
that he will avenge his death.
Claudius's
poisoning
of
There are also several scenes
Hamlet's father, as he lay in his
remarkably honest.-His self-
Jacobi: (Of course, anyone who
that take place in the main throne
garden. I was glad to see that he
l(}athing at his own in~ction is : saw the BBC Production of room where there are a multitude
chose to show these things, as
. chillingly convincing.
. Hamlet'~itereJacobi played the
of extras in the background. The
I've always been rather inter-
. At the same time, Hamlet's ·title role would probably see fit
room is just so visually striking
ested in the ideas that this ghose
supposed insanity is delightful to
to kill Jacobi.)
that
it would be interesting even
cob.Id have lied to Hamlet, or that
watch in this version oftlie film.
As Branaghlays on the ground,
without the massive crowd, or
Ophelia may have misinter~
-From the moment that he, first : )sp<:>uting aSelf-hating soliloquy,
the enormous confetti that pours
preted Hamlet's intentions to-
. speaks to his father's ghost, lie ·•·we actually see the spittle from
from the ceiling to celebrate the
wards her.
immediately begins to exagger-
his mouth drip onto the groi.md.
wedding of
.
Gertrude and
Branagh's workaH fans
WOI}-:.
ate his mental state. He becomes
As:disgusting as that may souncy, .••.. Clau~tlls. __ . ;·: _ , ·.
,
, -._ ,.
·:
.
____ : d~rflllly __ in!o place, buf itwolllfl
-a-·delfghtfully· pfayffilyourig it Jtf_rC:ally: remarkaple; that.,
'::S·
0,11~,
of th<?, m?~\(;otppelli11g
<,
h~JA <111,_l?eei;i
fqr;
na
,
llght.
if
~lie~
man, we~ririg masks, making
Branagh was able to work hi1I1--
moments. of the_ ftlm · occurs rest of the cast had been poorly
_
·faces, and over-pronunciation of Self;frito'a state· where_ he_was so .while Claudius is in the confes-
selected. Fortunately, this
:
film,.
::. words, in hopes to convince fools
capable of feeling what the shar~ _ sionaL" lJIIbeknmvrist to h_im, . has one of thefines
_
t 91sts
i<;i
ever .
such as Polonius thathe is really
acter is feeling'.
_ _ . _ _
Jfarn_let places .his sw
.
ord to
assembled for
a
Shakespeareiin _
insanei
- These ·accolades for Branagh
wit~in an i9ch of _his uncle's
film. The c~st Is wonp~r[u_l,id,e_-
.
He is so immersed himself in "· w.~uld'"ifot be complete if I did
he.id, as he
.
contemplates killing
spite the unfort,unate_inclusion of
the role, that he feels Hamlet's >noicominend his ability to keep _ him thenand there._Th~ tension - ·Gen1rd Depardieu. His r~Ie is
outrage at his uncle that I actu>::' ~pwith two of the greatest co~ic
in this .. sc;ene is, far, m?re pulse-
blessed! y ~hort as Reynaldo; the .
ally started to think that Brariagli
1
~miri.ds' of :our generation: Billy • pou~d~1:)~ than anythmg that I
man Polomus sends off to France
might go-,ou.t. and
~m
the
attar'·:
cfri~~J:-'a.Ild
Robin Williains, _ have see11_i_n ary,ofthe big block-
_ ,, .
con,veys Hamlet's emotional
p<;>rtrayi __ rig Claudius_, DereR
Crystal/in the role of the _bus,terthrillersofrecentmemory,
Please see
HAMLET,
page)3 ...
roller coaster in a style that- is
. J.,ose yourself
in
,a.tole ..
.{)Jaying
VideOg~rn~
__ :.' . · --- by"Jim
Pziezynski·
Video Guy
Spring is here! The .weather is
getting warmer, love is in the air,
and
life
is good. What better way
-to invite the new season in than
,
.,.
to find yourself a good role-play-
, fog game and keep yourself up
· 1,mi:il the wee hours of the mom-
. iµg so that it completely con-
-· sumes your time to the point
- wlwre you drink six packs of
M:ounta_in D.e'Y to keep yourself
~le[!: i~ case you happen to come
' -across
'
the mystical orb or magic
talisman or what have you.
Studies conducted by this au-
thor show that your average RPG
takes.about 20-45 hours to com-
-piefo,)Vhil~ not necessarily re-
spected as artistic endeavors by
academic institutions. role-play-
i ng ·video games do provide
elaborate and .wondrous worlds
where the player can easily lose
himself in the·realm <>ffaritasy.
you take the role of a vengeance
Many of the games are accom-
.
hungry vampire who slaughters
panied by
a
bea!Jtifully arches-
his killers only. to find out im-
trated score: In Japan, separate
mortality has its price-'--and that
CD's· of these 'Soundtracks are ·- would $49.99 for the-CD at any-
sold for non-vide_o game players
loc_al s_tore ..
whoju;st enjoy m_usici -
__
·
Another A+ game for the Su-
•- A:mong the:gieat_games of all
per NES is Breath of fire 2, se-
time; certain titles stand otit from
quel to the smash' hit Breath of
the
pack:
The Final Fantasy Se-
Fire. Perhaps the last great effort
· ties;
the Ultima series, the Breath
for the 16 bitfonnat; BOF2 puts
of Fire sedes; and Y's Books one
you in the role of the legendary
and two. Two ofthe best games
Dragon Clan member (your
. ouf there 'can be 'found on the
name here) who must find a bevy
Sony Playstation and the Super of animalistic friends who have
NES. For the Playstation,
to solve the mystery of a strange
Suikoden i{the best_game out
new religion spreading across
there and the first superb effort · the land.
for ·a 32

bit system. -The game
Those of you whodo·notthink
brings you' into a world where
these games are legitimate ex-
you and l 08 of your allies battle
pressions or artistic achievement
the ·"textbook" Evil Empire.
should know the text version just
You are the leader of the Lib-
the story was over .700 pages
eratioh
Army:
The-game plays
long! The game beautifully in-
through at ~- comfortable pace.
tegrates a complex storyline with
You can create a party of six for
great gameplay and detailed
the adventure aspect of the game,
quests.
while you can control annies of
Well. there you have it, my
thousands in wars. The game
ideas for a few games to really
stays int;r_es~ng and uses highly
take up a lot of time: A word of
detai1ed· sequences when show-
warning - renting these games
ing b~ttie·sc_enes.
If
you _love
may make you either_bµy them
RPG•~ and owrf a Playstation,
or run up the bill at Blockbuster
this ,is-th_e game for you. Also,
to $137.54 ( a compl;tely ran-
check out Legacy of Kain, where
dom number of course
'j.
Enjoy!


























































































































































·
THE CIRCLE;
.
A,pril

10,
.
1997
·
13
~~sf c~;tb:J~t~s •~d~.rAf
iti:
·
{i
j~~i~~!Haililet'
hitsthemark
·
·
:
...
_
.
c9fiti{1uedl
ro,11
page.'12.
-.
:
1
·
·
a~:ri!;t
i:l;~~f
fi~:l:i~h~;~:~;~e:r~
.
.. -
.
·
-
-
Pho10
Courte
s
y oflsland
Record
.<
The members of U2 broke all the rules with their latest album release,
.
POP.
_
by
Eric Bergmann
Staff Writer
would be incomplete without their sig-
nature style of passionate and emo-
tional songwriting. The beckoning
"Do You Feel Loved" and sultry
"If
When the members of U2 began work
You Wear That Velvet Dress" fill the
on
POP, th
_
eir 11th album release, the first
quota very nicely. No matter how hard
thing to go out the window was
the
Bono tries to
escape
his intense, al-
rulebook. And in the tradition of Achtung
luring
style
of
singing,
he
always
ends
Baby
and
Zooropa, their previous two
·
up spilling
·
his
emotions
all over the
releases, they managed to do everything
recording console.
·
but reinvent the wheel.
·
·
Yes, it's all
'in
this
-
one ... sex, Jove,
Only 15 months after the members of Jesus;etemity
,
mckand roll,
and ''Mi-
U2 were brought on as "passengers'' to
·
amL"
·
Along
·
this
·
journey of sound;
Brian Eno's Original Soundtracks
''
!
the fab four from Ireland spend the
·
project, Bono and the boys recruited their
eighth track ii) southern Florida. Well,
:_
own pass~geis
in
redefining rock'~n'
rclH'.;
:>'la
c'i:ff.11ly;r'they'
c'apiiife' th~
essence
'of.;,
Enter Howie B.,one of the UK's most
iri-
·
the cheesy and tawdry vacation and
.
fluential disc jockeys,
.
and produce~
·
retirement ce
·
nter of Western culture,
A~od,
whc{workelonAc
_
htungBaby
and
·
·
and
then ptit
'a
heavy bass and
'
drum
-

Zot>ropti
'.
'
··
,
:
;
_
,
J
·
_
-_
.
.
,
.
_
.
·
·
'
loop behind it The
final
product is an
-
A mixturi of rnodem rock,
folk,
techno'.
.
.
insightfuFfive minutes into the jives
and
dance; U2 and their new studio crew
of
the wealthy, and those who ernu~
have proyen
PQPto be one ofihe
most
late wealth, leaving a funny yet sour
innovativd1rid:flawless r~c9rdings seen
taste in the mouth ofthe listener.
-
this decade; _
...
_ ,
.
""
. ·
·
·
. .
There is nothing sour about the re-
POP
begins with ''Discotheque," the · lease of
POP,
however. The final pro~
first radio
_
release off the album. Driven
duction is Grammy worthy; Bono,
by computergenerated.techno loops and
Edge; Ad.am
.
Clayton, and Larry
a heavy bassJtroove
~
and backed by
·
-
M~llenJr.
:
a~l
;
spen_tJhe time offsince
Edge's distortion
~
heavfguitar work, it is
Ahe
end 6ftheifl 995
Zooropa Joµr
to
obviountiaf this
,
is
not'.l'he /oshua Tree;
expand their musical talents
and
_'
Perhaps thegreatestleaptheband took
-
minds, and
_
worked
on such side'
was"Mofo/'thethirdtrackonPOP.With~
:
-
projects as Soundtrack
releases
for
.
-
out doub~ ttje heaviest production U2 has
_ ·

Batman F
orev_er
and
Mission:
:
iinpos-
relea_sed, Mofo borrows elements of ei.tro-
.
·
.
sible.
WhenJhey
-
retumed to
the
stu-
underground techno found evident
in such
. dio, their sole intent was in makingthe
groups
·
as Prodigy and Chemkal Broth-
music they wanted.to make, and only
ers
:
'l;'he presence
of
Howie B.
is
more
-
the way they wanted to.
·
evideritcin this track than any other, help,.
Although this shedding of influence
ing U2 to cross
,
into yet another realm of
-
and press
_
ure
,
from the music industry
·
music.
-.
-
-
.
_
-
and
cpnsumers
_
seems very arrogant,
The
_
oyerture of loops and spins con-
itnevertheles
_
s
_
ha~ proven to work
ti~µe through
_
"LastNight on
Earth" and
beautifully.
PQP
_
is unlike any album
-
<(Qone."
The soimds and treatments range
currently on the market, and unlike
from
segments.of
synthesizer-wound si-
any other project.by U2.
rens
·
to
.
flashes of bass grooves looped
U2 have brought creativity to a new
over and over again.
AU
of this interfer-
level with.POP, combining old heart-
ence, andit somehow blends right into
felt emotion
,
with new styles and
thebackgroundasharmony,complement-
-
sounds. Four stars, two thumbs up,
ing U2's mel9(fy with precision.
whatever.
POI'
is a true journey into
Needless to say, this
·
is a U2 album and
musical innovation.
-
The Circle
is searching for
dedicated A&E
writers
'

Any
students interested in
reviewing movies, books,
CDs,
0
.tideos,
or concerts
should
~
.
contact Kristin
at
X4428.
·
·
·,
,
.
·
.
·
-
·
.,
~
i~~iii~il~111~1
{t;~
·
.
.
•·
~~~ii~~~~i~~~i1?;1~'.
d:
I~*P~'.~
',
pe
~f~
ap(f,oj-
{
ov
,
~racting
.
has
This Ophelia is truly a troubled
young
:
}l~!'ff
r)>
,
een
;
a}
deliqiot1sly
,
:ippropriat~
.
as
.
.
'~
woman, whose
·
death
.
is
touching
··
and
.
'
l?t
:
~ft9~tof
_
thtki_ng in
''The
·
M<:>Use-
.· •.·
Illost tragic.
;.
~P,
,
i
•.
w~
,;
pl~y ~1th1n
tlly
_
play

Ham.let
_
.
>
That is part of any Shakespearean trag-
i\
ll
:
~~s
t9
~
q:
,
t~r,min~ q1audit1s's guilt: Eyen
·
edy, particularly this, th
.
e
·
greatest of
:
..}~9l<
i;
~rriin
,
9ri,
,
»1llo/01a)' see111Jike an

tllem all. Everything that happens in the
;::
~~,n~~IY
·
\
Sh8iSy:for
Shalc~~J.)!!are;
~apa~
play is unbelievably tragic, mainly be-
?
f?!y
'.,
pqi:t,i:~t~

!Y{arcel!us,
e>ne
,
ofthe night
,
cause it could
,
all
have been
avoided.
r}
i
.
~~
~
-
~
:
~ep
,i
y;,tiq
·
fir~~
?
s
.
ee}IJ~
·:
_ghosf ~(
c--
There are a
n~mber
of minor decisions
:
!;!~ml~
t~
;
f~th,,$r-
·
(
£1iy
&!}~~t
h1m
,
self
;;t
f
.,
ma9e by lllUlt1ple characters that would
;;
no
r
~~~y
,
e~
/;
tj~
i
:,
t
,
li
.
~
.:
~9.14
.
~rr,u1
,:
Bri~11
·
have prevented
so
much carnage
.
iI
!3.l~~~~d
;
~
Wr.gm
:
~<>111e
ofyou
-
may recall
-
.
But, the point is that
-
it did not. Be~
·
/
roll)
'-f
F1a~~
'.
(}9ro§n'\
.<
.
L
··
...
·
·.·
··
......
...
.
-..
cause
·
of
·
character flaws such as
l;fli
!ij
'.
~~~
i4
:i
n~?
~
al,l:pftheaforiill
.
~~ti()n
.
yd
-
Claudius's greed,
.
Hamlefs
inaction,
or
i
·
,
ffi!~n~
}
tTT
.
~t~i~tJl.~
wa.tji~c:ally
.
eyitl?dnc:e

.
.
Polonius's inability to mind his own
t,
~<>tim
.
g~_~
l
eI~Y
-
f?·I~)'
,
~llf?sSe,',V~lF~~t,
..
6usiness, the tale of Hamlet is a truly
/'..
m~
::-
~HW£1,~mw~
~~h9lltPFtfo1111~~c:~ ,n
.•.
tr,agic
account
.
of one incident leading
:
J
~•sm.1m
\
~~
{
~c1te
;-
Winslet
1
as
,
c1
:;
c:()nf4s~p
/
ct()
_
the death of the entire royal
·
family.
,z;
\1!1~f9TT~~d:Qph~lia;
~P~
-
~C>tnina,tes
.
e
_
v
r
\
WiHiam
.
Shakespeare wrote this won-
}
~
r~
\
~~f9~
;
.
H~~t
',
sh~
;
J
s
.
i11
(
partic:ul!llly
i
af-
.
:
derful story nearly 500 years
ago,
and
i
J~~
,
,
t~~
i
g
_
~}n~{_~e.r:/8:ther
.,
;,
.
;
_.f
\
: /:,
;
,
.
K
.
eru~eth Brnnagh is now the first per-
J\'.j;t
+1i!te
r
1
,
s
1
f9
,.
aw!<,',Vard
.,
i11.t~nsitf
~~
-
t~e
,
sgnJe>
take the entire play and transfonn
·,;
(~l,~!i?~S.WP
::
1J~
.
~
~~~
.
n()ph~li~
_
:ui~
-
her
•·.'
1tint~a
wonderful cinematic experience.
~I.
~r9
J~e,
r,
{
citjfi
,i;
a
r
cii~t4r1Jing
_
abusi~e
(yla-
-
Itis truly
regrettable
that
so
few people
\
ti
.
M~
_
h
_
iB
(
l:>e
,
t~een
-.
her
i
~nd.
·
.
~e.rJath~r.
will be able to partake
in
this unique cin-
f
fe>l?llill~;
'
:'.I'll~s
_
:
was the first production
,
~matic experience.
·
New York City
Board of Education
~
SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM
WE WILL PAY YOUR TUITION!
Sha.»e
·
·
·
_
,:
·•
-rite
,
·
.-
;::
:;·
:
Future
Teach
:

.
,
·
New
York!
The New York City Board qt Education needs qualified staff in a number
of critic;aJareas. You
may
be eligible
for
a Scholarship in one of
the
areas listed !)elow.
If
you are interested in receiving a fact sheet and application
for
the
Sch<>lars.hip Program, please return this coupon and a self-
addressed_
stamped envelope
(business size) to Include
ssi
postage no later than April
11, 1997
to:
Bureau of Recruitment Programs
65
Court Street - Room
101
Brooklyn, NY 11201
__
Attn:
Scholarship Coordinator/Pamela Conroy
r--
-
-
--------------------------------------------------,
1
PLEASE PRINT IN BLACK INK
AMP
1
I
'
.
I
I
I
l
:
NAME
______ l
·
.
l
LAST
FIRST
Ml
SOCIAL SECURITY# :
I
I
ADDRESS _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
__;_ _ _ _ _ ( _ )
_ _ _
I

I
:.
>.
TELEPHONE#
1
I
------·
MOSTRECENTDEGREEl
.
.
.
CITY
STATE
ZIP
Shortage Areas -
Please
check
only one
box:
BILINGUAL
0
BILINGUAL SPECIAL EDUCATION*

BILINGUAL SCHOOL PSYCHOLOGY**

·
·

BILINGUAL SCHOOL SOCIAL WORK**

BILINGUAL GUIDANCE
&
COUNSELING**
.
.
MQNQLINGUALJBILINGUAL
-
0
SPEECH
&
HEARING HANDICAPPED*

DEAF
&
HEARING IMPAIRED*

VISUALLY IMPAIRED*
•Scholarships are offered
at the
undergraduate
(junior
status) or
graduate
level.
••Scholarships are offered
at the graduate level only.
(Check One):
D
Graduate Level
D
Undergraduate Level
If you ![lre
_
_bilingual, please indicate the language {other than English)
in which you can demonstrate oral and written proficiency:
.
.
.
·········································~·····~···························
IMPLEMENTATION OF THE SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM IS CONTINGENT
UPON
-
THE ADOPTION OF A BOARD OF EDUCATION RESOLUTION AND
THE AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS.
_
.
_
An Affirmative ~Clion, Equal Opportunity Employer.
·
I
\J
,
S.
Perm_an!"t Resident Status or
U.S.
Citizenship requ
ir
ed.
TC 3197
AMP
L--- -
-
·
I---------------------------------------------~


















,
.
r -
14
INSIDE
THEClRCLE,April
10, 1997
SPORTS
Marist nee
·
ds
-
:
to
see
Red Foxes on the links
The National
Scene
Sports With Smitty
port .
.
Once the program was es-
tablished, it could advance to the
Division I level.
_
What's great about starting a
golf program is that both men
and women can play so that
NCAA gender equity mies can
be met This would also keep
the amount of men's and
Well, the baseball season is just
over a week old now, and already
we have some good plots devel-
oping
.
Over in the National
League; the story has been the
Florida
·
Marlins.
by Marty
Sinacola
Despite the nearly $90 million
that owner Wayne Huizenga has
·
one can indeed buy a champion-
poured into the big money
.
free
ship.
·
women
'
s teams at
an
equal level.
This past weekend turned out
It is a shame that there is no
to be extremely productive and
golf program here at Marist due
rewarding for Marist athletics.
to our ideal location. Marist is
Both lacrosse teams accom-
surrounded by some great golf
plished firsts
this
weekend. The
courses. There are short courses
agents, and the $6 I million, 6
On the flip side is two teams
·
year pact that Gary Sheffieldre-
with a couple of poor starts. The
cently sighed, the key to this
St Louis Cardinals, last years
team is someb<;>dy who nobody
.
NL Central
·
champs, struggled
really appreciates.
,
outofthegate0-6fortheirworst
That person
·
is pitcher Kevin
.
·
start in
.
their fi::anchise

history.
men won their first game of the
such as Whispering Pines just
season to improve their recoArd
across Route 9 along with Col-
to 1-4 overall and 1-2 in the
lege Hill. Other longer cour~es
MAAC. The women won their
in the nearby vicinity include
first game at home as a Division
Vassar golf course, James Baird
I varsity sport
.
The baseball
State Park, and the McCann Me-
team took 2-of-3 games against
morial golf course just south on
Monmouth and climbed to the
Route 9
.
There are also many
top of the NEC standings. The
other courses in the area that
softball team now shares the
could be utilized.
honor of being on top of the NEC
Of course there are going to be
with the baseball team after this
costs connected to
starting
and
past weekend. The crew
.
team
maintaining a team but this could
blew Skidmore out of the water
be overcome. I'm sure that a
on Saturday afternoon at the first
deal could be worked out with
of two regattas of the year held
the McCann foundation that runs
at Marist
Individually, two
the McCann course so that the
Marist athletes were selected as
team could practice and maybe
Players of the Week. Women's
hold home matches th
e
re. With
lacrosse goalie
·
Melanie Kopf all the courses in the area I doubt·
earned MAAC Goalie of the
there would be a problem with
Week for her
·
performance finding a course to play at. The
against Wagner on Sunday.
players on the team would have
Baseball pitcher Mark Barron
there own equipment Maybe
earned NEC Player of the Week
balls, bags
,
and shoes could be
honors for the second time in
provided through sponsorship.
thrt:e seleqiqns with a
c
c~rrent
. ·
Finding
acoachwou\d probably
,-:
:
ERA of 0.60
.
be the easiest task since so many
..
Although Marist sports had a
people in the area play the sport.
great weekend and this was the
The biggest problem with the
place to be with such nice coach is the he/she would not
weather as a spectator, I want to
have an office in McCann
.
I'm
touch on a different point
,
With
sure this could be worked out.
.
.
the weather being so nice re-
Starting a golf program would
cently, and
t
he upcoming Mas-
be nothing but beneficial for the
ters tournament at Augusta this
school and athletic
.
department.
upcoming
weekend,
my
It would bring more local and
thoughts have turned to the won-
national exposure to Marist Col-
derful sport of golf.
lege. This is a legitimate

pro-
With golf gaining such popu-
·
posal that should be looked into
larity in the United States, even
for the near future. Even though
before sensation Tiger Woods
I would probably just be a
.
spec-
emerged onto the scene, I am
tator, golf would add the extra
surprised Marist College does
needed diversity to the Mruist
not have a golf program
.
To start
c.otrleee..athlPJic
1
degartmentte•s
·
.
off, the program could begin as
en
'IS'~ltlTm
~me
·
urc
a club to build interest and sup-
Sports Editor
Baseball-------
... continued from page
15
Marist is also suffering from its
share of injuries. Santiago is
having back problems and Jim
McGowan's shoulder problem
has crippled Marist's pitching
staff.
However. there have been
.
signs of improvement recently.
The Red Foxes have kept their
opponents' on-base percentage
low. Monmouth
,
for example,
was only able to post a .384 OBP
last weekend
.
"We have improved since our
game with FDU. We have been
swinging more and scoring more
runs
,
" Szefc said
.
Brown
.
·
Last year's ERA cham
-
The Cubs also got off to a
pion is back at it again in the
·
.
.
winless start thanks in part to
early goings, with a record of 2-
·
.
some horrendous defense
.
0, and
iut
ERA of 0.64. Brown
.
In the Naticmal League West,
also has
13
strikeouts in 14 in-
.
every team is over .500.
_
lt looks
nings.
like this
.
division will live up to
The potent Marlins offense led
people's expectations and be
by Sheffield and anchored by
very competitive. The Dodgers,
Bobby Bonilla should not be a
Rockies, and Padres are going to
problem, but Florida will only go
battle it out, while the Giants
as far as their pitching will take
most likely will fall by the way-
them. Lefty Al Leiter and right-
side before too long.
hander Alex Fernandez give the
The Colorado Rockies con-
Marlins a strong rotation to go
tinue to be the National League's
along with Rob Nen, one of the
version of an American League
best young closers in the game.
team: short on pitching, long on
With all the money invested in
offense and homeruns. Larry
his team, Huizenga is hoping that
Walker has exploded wi
t
h six
·
homeruns in his first five game£,
and is
.
everybody's early candi-
date
to
challenge the Roger
Maris record of 61 homeruns in
·
a season
.
Over in the AL, the big story
last week was Roger Clemens'
Blue Jay debut. He showed his
new fans just what kind of
pitcher he is by going the dis-
tance, and fanning nine in his
victory
;
However,
_
the Jays remain near
the bottom of the East in the early
going, and won't winthe
'
title'if
they don't get some c:onsistent
-
offense
.
In
the central, the team
that will most likely win the AL
pennant
,
the Cleveland Indians,
·
newly revamped by the big trade,
have not Jost a step and are lead-
ing early in the division, while
the highly overrated White Sox
are closer to reality at the bot-
tom of the division.
In the West, the Mariners lost
two of three to both the Yankees
and the Red Sox, and are last in
the West, however they are much
too strong to stay there for too
long. Ken Griffey joins Walker
·
as the other early Maris chaser
with 5 homers in six
·
games
.









THE
CIRCLE,
April 10, .1997
15
Softball Sits on
top
of NEC standings with a 2-0. record
. by
THOMAS· RYAN
Staff Writer
After
a
string of bad weather
canceled what was to be their
first games up north, the softball
team finally· got under way ·1ast
week, going 3-3 overall
and 2-0
in NEC games: Marist, now
7-7
on the year, split two games with
the Yale Bulldogs, got swept by
St. Peter's of the MAAC, and
then swept conference foe Rider
on Sunday.
Against Yale, Michelle
Hudson started both games of the
doubleheader, soineihing she did
not do at all in'her junior season.
In the first game, Hudson gave
up three runs in six innings and
took the loss for Marist in a 3-1 ·
final. Kerri Harris drove inAn-:
drea Gagliardi with a double to
account for Marist's only run of
the game;
In
game number two;
Hudson·had the Bulldogs num-
ber, giving up only two hits and
two walks in complete game
shutout. Marist faired only
slightly better on offense, as
Harris scored on an error to ac- •
· count for the only run of the
game.
On Saturday, the Red Foxes
hosted one·: of their future con-
ference opponents,
St
Peters. ·
Marist's offensive futility contin-
ued in game one as Maria
Landolfi 's sacrifice fly ac-
counted for Marist's · only mn.
Hudson gave up six hits and
Charles May
Sophontore R~chetAmmons contributes at bat against St.Pete~•s in Saturday-'s losses at North Field,: ·
three runs, two of them earned,
behind her •to lose 6-0 and cap
are throwing very well. We_'re
and Marist lost 3-1 for the sec- · off a very forgettable double-
just not scoring."
.
ond time in three games: Game
header.
_There are two things that
two was pretty much the same,
"We're really struggling offen-
helped Marist after their losses
as Marist could muster zero of-
sively right now," third year head
on Saturday: first, they were not
fense. Sophomore Jenn Hanson
coach Jonnah O'Donnell said.
conference games, and second,
got t_ouche_d for'sii(runs arid the
''We ·sho,uldn't be losing some of
the Red Foxes got to comeback -
Red Foxes commited thtee errors .. those g·ames where are pitchers
the very next day and get the bad
Baseball· beats·-H·awks;
cliinb. to. top
of
.
,NE.C
by
PHILLIP WHITE
· Slaff Writer
The Marist baseball team took
two out of three games against
Monmouth _in·a home and away
series last weekend. Senior Mark
Barron and' the rest of the Red
Foxes helped the team improve
its record
t<'>
13-8.
"I felt pretty:confident going
into the t}iird game
(cm
Sun- -
day)," Barron said.
-However, Saturday proved to
be a stalemate for the Red Foxes.
Maristwon the first game 3-0
and then lost the second game to
Monmouth 8-5. Barron's strong
arm, with a 0.60 ERA, and the
combination· of offensive pow-
ers Eric Becker (with a .323 bat-
ting average) arid freshman An-
thony Cervini (hitting .260),
proved to be the key factors that
helped Marjst wtn.
"Barron, Becker and Cervini
helped out; but as a team we did
all right in this series with
Monmouth," Coach John Szefc
said.
The first game seemed to be
the best Marist has played all
season.
"The first game was our best
game all season because we were
swinging at more pitches," Szefc
said.
Marist was then cruising in the
second game of Saturday's
double-header, until the last in-
ning. The Red Foxes were lead-
ing, 5-3, with one out in the top
of the seventh, when disaster
struck.
Becker pitched in ~he tying run,
making it 5-5.
A
fe\V
bloop base
hits produced two more runs for
Monmouth, before the :visitors
finished thelr scoring with an
RBI double. Marist came up in
the bottom of the im;iing, but the
Red Foxes 'could not get any-
thing going. with. tJle, bats, and
Monmouth held on for
a
come-
back win.
. _
"We just _seemed to have lost
our concentration,.we could not
nail the coffin on Monmouth,"
Szefc said. · ·
·
Despite the tqugh loss, Mari~t
came· back on Suriday at
Monmouth and won ..
"We knew we could win the
third game, as Iong·as we did not
dwell on our past loss," senior
George Santiago· said.
"If
we did
dwell on it, it would kill us."
"Monmouth is one of the
toughest teams in ,our ·confer-
ence," Barron said, in a previous
interview.
Last season Monmouth tied for
the league championship, and
the· team is predicted to finish
second in the Northeast Confer-
ence this spring. Monmouth also
boasts the defending NEC player
of the year, Aragona, who is the
ace of Monmouth?s pitching
staff. However, Aragona is cur-
rently sidelined due to a rotator
cuff injury. -
"Even though Atagona didn't
pitch against us, he
will
be there
in the end when we play
Monmouth for the conference,"
Szefc said.
Please see
Baseball
011
p.14 ...
UPCOMING HOME
GAMES
BASEBALL
MEN'S LACROSSE
April 13 Wagner
April 20 Manhattan
1:00
Noon
April 23 Boston College 3:30
April 15 Hartford
3:30
April 16 Manhattan
3:45
WOMEN'S
April 19 St. Francis(NY) Noon
April 22 Iona
3:30
LACROSSE
April 24 Albany St.
3:30
April 29 Fairfield
3:30
April 12 Niagara
April 30 St. Peter's
3:30
May4
LIU
Noon
1:00
April 14 UConn
3:30
April 26 Montclair St.
1:00
TENNIS
SOFTBALL
April 13 Manhattan
1:00
April
IO
Wagner
3:00
April 15 St.Francis(NY) 3:00
CREW
April 16 Hofstra
3:00
April 20 Mt.St.Mary's
Noon
April 30 Siena
3:00
April 19 President's Cup
.taste out of their mouths .
That is just what they did
against the Rider Broncs on Sun-
day. Harris hit a three-run homer
in game one, the second of her
career and first on the season, to
lead the way in a 6-3 Marist win.
Hudson actually gave up six hits
and six walks in the game, but
her offense and defense bailed
her out.
.
Hudson needed no help in
game two, giving up just four
hits to earn her fourth shutout of
the season.
O'Donnell liked what she saw
from her young team on Sunday.
as they did not carry over their
losses on Saturday.
"It
was very important for us
to come out and play well after
the way we played on Saturday.
It
showed alot about us as a
team," O'Donnell said.
'Based on her work in Florida.
Hudson was named Northeast
Conference Pitcher of the Week
for the week of March 24th. As
of March 30th. Hudson was sec-
ond in the NEC in winning per-
centage·with a record of7-3 and
third in strikeouts with an aver-
age of 5.7 per game. More im-
pressively, however. Hudson sat
I
0th in the nation with an
ERA
of .55.
·Marist plays home against
Wagner on Thursday at 3:00 p.m.
and then travels to Providence
College and University of Rhode
Island for games on Saturday
and Sunday, ~espectively.
slot f~r, the Red Foxes, said
the
schedule "affected our mental
capabilities down to another
element, school...it is a mental
battle blocking out your other
thoughts while on the court."
Orellana went on to add that,
despite the tough scheduling,
the team is starting to come to-
gether.
"We're becoming stronger as
the days go on," Orellana said.
"The hopes of winning the con-
ference become more concrete
each day."
The next match is against
Manhattan on Sunday, April
13th at I :00 p.m.
Trac~--
... colllinued.from page 16
the team.
· "We have strong unity and
·. team chemistry," Williams said.
"All we have to do is be consis-
tent and stay healthy."
The Red Foxes also posses
strong team leaders that keep the
team focused.
·
Lasker said the team has one
for practice and one for the
meets.
"Matt Pool is a very big moti-
vator for all our practices and Pat
Casey is our motivator for our
meets. The team always gets ex-
cited when he runs," Lasker said.
Melfi said the leadership and
motivation will come from the
seniors in general because they
have the most experience.
Williams said he agrees with
this.
"We have a lot of young guys
who are freshman and sopho-
mores on our team which means
we look up to the seniors for
leadership," he said.
The Red Foxes next meet
will
be the Columbia Invitational in _
New York City on April 12.



















































































































































































- - - - - .
.
-:
...... '.":"
.. '."'.'
.
.
-:--
.
".".'
.
"'."".'"'.~~~
.
...
.
...
.
... ~
_
.,.
_
-
~
-
.

·
""'
·
- _,.._
.

.
-..._
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
....... -,.-...,...~-:- . ·•
·
-
·
·
· ·
.
..
-
..
.
·_.:._
.
_V
1
:;
•;
_
·_
;:.~_1l_.;,:·;:)
)
£
:
tJ?/
:i.~\;j/,:})/,,
•i~:
~
f
;:t.-
\:,-:
:J;'.
,
::
~::·
;
:rt
~'
\~:°
~
?
~~-~~?f;
~L
-
,.:
:
, ·


..
'•
"' ,
,
;.,
".
h+
.
••
'/.•
.•'

~•
"'"~•
·••
o.;,.
:•
..-
"
<..<•
<0
,.J

•,,
,
:


..;.,

"
~
'•

•>
'


;
,
..,
,~
,.-.
••

>,
.,
.
..:
)
1·'1
:
-.
'
.

,•
.
,
'/;:
••
•.
'
~
i
_
i
'
,..,-
_;
;
l,'

>.
''
.
;
\/
;
~
::
_'•
:
'
_
.
;;
.
_.
;i:'.•.
:.·:-<•~_:
-,-.·
·
,'
,
.-
;
.•;{;'!
/
:'._>_!•
~
'
., ....
~
.:~
~
~.,;_<·
·
',

I
,
J
·,
.,.,..
;
.
·
,_
STAT.OF THE WEEK:
.•
.
.
.
,·,
.
. .
.

.
'•
:
Senior baseball pitcher Mark
.
Barron has an ERA of 0.60

.
·
:
_
in 44;7 innings pitched.

·
THEc~i:IB
SPORTS
ApnUo,
i997
QUOTE OF THE WEEK!
"It's
great to get
that winning
feeling:"
·
-
Greg Schneider,
.
·
Men's
Lacrosse
1VIen1s1acrosSe c(lpttifes first
victory
over
Siena;
how
1-4
·
.
.
...
-
.
.. .
by."STEyt\Vt\NCZYK
.
'
.
·
·
srfiff.\v;tt~~
.

.
.
.
.
.
.
. '.
The mJn•i
/
fabrosse team fi-
.
nally broke 'the
ic
_
e.
.
.
.
Last Saturday; the Reel Foxes,
le
.
q
:
by
·
rookie
.
head
.
coach
:
Matt
Catn.eron, can:ie storrnjng
.
:
back_
.
from
a.
7.;1
deficitto overcome
.
the'visiting Siena Saints,.16-f5.
.
The win was Marist's first of the
year, as the team iinprC)'Jed its
.
overall record to 1-4 (l-2 in the
.
·
MAAC) .
.
·
.
. :
.
,
.
.
Junior Stuart
.
McMillan
,,
the
Red Foxes'
.
leading scorer, and
the ninth most prolific attacker
.
in the nation goirig into the gallle,
_
tallied the firs
_
t goal of the con
-
test, early in the
.,
first period,
Bu
·
t then, Siena
.
rolled to seven
straight scores, and a
full
quar-
ter passed before Marist would
put the ball back in the net
.
.
.
The Red F9xes
'
comeback be-
gan at 8:40 of the second quar-
ter, with an unassisted goal from
·
Desmond Doyle.
Two goals in the last
30
sec-
onds of the half, one from Chris
Pistello and a second from Greg
Charles May
Schneider, completed a
1~2 run,
Marist midfielder Anthony Lucchetto figh(s his way pasttwo Siena players in Saturday's 16-15 win.
·
· ·
and made the score 9-8 at the
At that point,
.
Marist had
between two Siena
.
defenders,
but the Red
·
Foxes played keep
break
grabbed a 15-13 lead, and was
and lept intQ the air to intercept
away effectively as fime expired,
Doyle scored two more goals
desperat~ly
~
trying to hold on to
a pass in front of the goat Then,
.
and the Saints could not com-
in the second half, and turned in
its two goal lead. With
3: 18 left in the same motion, the
.
star
:
Plete the comeback.
his second hat trick of the spring.
in regulation, Schneider, the
midfieldedHcked the ball
·
into
. .
After the game, the team was
:i~b~h:r~':t~ff~ttt!ndi~n~i team's c_o
~
captain, mad
_
e the play
the net, for what would be the
.
thrilled with
th
'
e
victory.
.
.
of the day
game
-
Winning goaL
...
.
·
.
.
.
"It was a great comeJrombe-
-
e
_
".er play~d in.'' ,
·
.
Schneider echoed his
teammate's
'
corruhents .
.
. ·
''.It's great to get th~t w
_
in~
.
ing
feeling. -Th
_
e
)
vhole team earned
this ganie.
:.'.
The hustle was ~ere,
and
we
cut down on all the stu-
pid mistakes;" _
-
.
,
Cameron was just as excited
about the win, his firsf as a <:ol-
_
Jeg~ coach, as his players. "It's
·.
awesoine,"
'
he said. "We were
-C
down7~1 inthe second quarter,
<:
and just didn) quit. We kept
·
chipping away until we got back
into the game. The goal by Greg
was an unbelievable play."
. Schneider al~o att¢mpted to
describe his show-stopping goal.
·
··
"
"I.Just read his eyes before he
made the pass, and dove for it.
Then I took the shot, and it went
in."
After
·
the 0-4 start, Cameron
·
used a long layoff to install a dif-
forerit defensive scheme, which
included more pressure
.
..
Due
.
to inclement weather, the
Red Foxes only practiced the
new system twice before Satur-
day, and it showed in the early
stages
·
against Siena.
·
"It took us a while to adjust to
the new defense, but it worked
out
·
in the end," Cameron ex-
plained. The Red Foxes' four
game homestand ended with the
Stena game.
.
·
go~l
'
at
7 :35
of
the fourth
quar-
.
,
As
the
S~ints
prepaf
~
1ito
maki!
.
.
.
;
:
.
,
;
S
_
i~nji
managed
,
io
:.
~cprt!
tw.o
<
·

.
hincl
~,i~,''
.
co
.
~
'
captain
,
Tim Yates
ter.
a final rush
,
Schneider slipped
mor~goalsin the final
,_
mini.ttes,
.
said.
>
''.
Probably the best I'
_
ve
-
Marist takes to the road for the
next two weeks before returning
home to host the Manhattan Jas-
pers
Oil
April
20.
Women's lacrosse
·
teaffi wins
..
first home game
in
Division
l
.
.
_-
.
. .
·
·'·
.
.
.
.
by
RACHAEL VoiLARO
.
Staff Writer
.
scoring
-
2 goals in 30
.
Secori'ds
,
·
but Hoey answered; scoring her
third goal of-the game.
. .
.
.
. .
·
.
. Piechocki was also
.
happywith
:
After losing
:
to A.lbai1y last Fri-
the team
'
s play on
the
other end
day
,
14
,.
6
,
the
Mansf
womeri
;
s
.
·
·
of the field.
-~
.
-
.
lacrosse team
.
defeated
.
-
d
val;
..
''Our
.
defense
-
had
.
a
·-
strong
\1/a~ner
.
11-9 onSundayfor
'
the
game todaf I was reaily happy
team's first home win as·a
-
Divi-
.
with the pirformance
;.
of
.
every·
_
sipn_I progratn
'.
..
_
_ .
,
single play¢r
hn
ttie defe
:
nsive
..
:
Coach Marfa Piechocki
.
was
.
.
erid, Melanie gave us soine big
';
··
ple~sed with
_
h~r
'
team's
\
vin
:
.
slives. towards the
·
end of the
.
·
·
.
"Overall, team
~
wise \\lepl11Ye
,
d
·
game, which helped us stay in
.
·
.
·
a:
re.isonably strorig game.
_:
Our
it,''.
.
Piechocki said: "It was a nice
offense is startj11g t_odick a little
win today.
?
>
.
better and our
'.
defense is play~
.
Finishing the scoring
for
the
.
ing a little bit
.~
tougher,"
Red f<qxes
:
was'Benntfwitli her
Piechocki said.
·
second o.f: the game,
and
·
Hqey
.
.
.
Down
_
3-0 early in the game
;
with
.
h«!r.fourth.
.
__
·
sophomore
.
Lindsay Bennet
With the
.
win, the
.
.
RedFoxes
started the comebackfor the Red
are currin~ly 2.:.2 in th~ir inau-
Fo,ces. Following herlead \Jlas
gurarseaso11
~
·,
.
.
.
·
captain Amy Hoey with 2 goals
Next up artt
the
Saints of Siena
and Collee11
.
McMahon whose
on April 9 and
_
Niagara on April
goal, assisted by Hoey, put the
l 6, both at home.
Red Foxes up 4-3.
· When thinking about the up-
Hoey commented on her coming games, Piechocki looks
teain's play
,
_
to the offense.
·
"We were a little nervous
"We need to keep building on
when we came out today, but we
making our attack work better
settled down, focused and pulled
and giving ourselves better qual-
together as a team."
ity shooting opportunities," she
The
-
riext four goals of t~e
·
said.
·
game came from the Red Foxes.
Hoey kept things in perspec-
Freshman Allison Occhicone
tive.
scored three and McMahon
pitched in with one. At the half,
Marist led 8-3.
Wagner came
.
on strong in the
beginning of the sec_ond half,
''We don't want to come out
with a big head, we need to come
out just as hard as we played
against Wagner", Hoey said.
Men's
trackteanlruns
too far
by
CHRIS
()'DONNELL .
·
Staff
Writer
·
_
The
.
men's outdoor track team
had
,
their first "real'' meet yes-
.
terday at the Trinity invitational
in Hartford,
.
CT.
Yesterday was the first of four
··
meets in a short season where the
League Championships are less
than a month away.
Junior Mike Melfi said the
Trinity Invitational was the first
real meet for various reasons.
"The first race was a very low
key race that got the team's feet
wet," he said. "And the Army
Invitational was a local race for
the local runners in the Mid
Hudson Area, while the rest of
the team was home for Easter
vacation."
·
.
.
·
·
.
·
Seniorco-captain,John Lasker
,
said he had mix
_
ed reeling about
yesterday's meet.
.
·
"We ran a decent meet, but the
'
meet showed we still have a lot
of work to do,'.' Lasker said.
·
The Red
.
Foxes' top perform-
ers were
.
sophomore Ben
Hefferon and senior Pat Casey,
who finished second in the 1,500
.
run and the 3000 steeplechase re-
spectively.
·
~e team's problems this year
wdl
be
the short distance running
since the Red Foxes are a cross
country, long distance oriented
team. Plus the school does not
provide the proper facilities for
short distance track events like
the l00 meter dash or a field
event like the pole vault.
However, the team strength
will stem from the long distance
events which revert back
to cross country. Lasker also
said Coach Pete
.
Collaizzo only
recruits long distance runners in
the first place.
The Red Foxes will also be
without the services of Junior
Mike Melfi, who has tendonitis
in both of his knees
.
Last year
Melfi was a major point con-
tributor to the team.
Regardless of Melfi's loss,
sophomore Chuck Williams said
he had positive expectations for
Please see Track on
p.
I 5 ...


49.18.1
49.18.2
49.18.3
49.18.4
49.18.5
49.18.6
49.18.7
49.18.8
49.18.9
49.18.10
49.18.11
49.18.12
49.18.13
49.18.14
49.18.15
49.18.16