The Circle, October 2, 1997.pdf
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 50 No. 3 - October 2, 1997
content
Marist:is-appiying:
for
an
.
$800,000
grant-
to
refurbish the riverfront··.
-
,
~·, .
;
~
:'
•·
,.· , .... ,;·: .. -:•w:•\r.:·
·coll,e,g'e
st.u,. de,rtts,:
bxpfess ... ' ::: ...
.
;
..
:
~-.·
~oncefll aboµt .sexually
it:·
transmitted
di.seases
~'1'~
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.,
..
. ·· . >•page3
~page_S
' - - - ~ - - - _ _ , ; _ - - '
Volume50,Jssue
:f.
The student newspaper of Marist. College
NorthEnd]aµndfY
swi.tch to
Marist
Moriey_irl,(~
studeµts
bySCO'.fTJ'%\TILLE _:
day.''.
.
.
.
Staff Writer
·
Sansola. said students·. were
. . . . .
; ·. , ..
· ··supposed to beJnformed
of
the
. · North. Eng residents withi:mt
conversion, but he was not sure ·
Marist Money accounts were ··how successful it-was.
recently)eft with a basket fullof
.
''There were suppo~ed to be
.
.
dirty lmmdry. _ ..
.
.signs up," he said. "rm not sure
.
~
Washing_~ddryingmachines ·• if.they happened or not."
.
at Gartlana C~mmons and. the
. Marist .has be~n integrating
New . Towh~hous·es were
the Marist Money·system for
switched froin coin operation tq . · the past three ·years·. all over
debit ~ard: Many residents were . · caippus, so stµdents can pur:..
never mformed.
.
.chase anything_ from candy bars -..
. Students were also-confused · .to books' ()J:Jaundry :with just the ·
becau,se the laundry · machines ·,swipe of their ID card.
.
.
.
used.coi~~ for.the, first two . The Office of College Activi- .
weeks of school, but were then . ties' and the Office of Student
unexpettedlt changed::fo :· ;\~counts hav~ heen working
1".]:ai;ist ·co~unity ..... page~
opihl~n~.::, ... ~~;-.. :~-~ ....
~.~page
6
F~&tllre~~-~ .•....
~!.;···~··~~page
.s
A&E ... ; ...
~~~~~~
.............. page ·11
. Sports ...............
~.~
........ page 14
October 2,
i
997
M~st 'Money .. · .· ; ... · : ~---~ - J<>,gether conyeiting:•macnines •
~-stud~~t-swl~:-~,}\i~f~rd lnth~ Gartland ~n1rllons:iaundromat. Washl~~ and ";~1°~; .
Steve Sarisol~, as_sist~nf dian':.
<
..
~tajhig at the:So.utll pndof
gim'- •
machines ... ~n:t~ti~~~h-,.1§.nd ,~ere. rece~tly_converted • over -to .the. Marlst Money system.
1 •.
·fo~c~~r.er~~ces !lnd~cHv}ti~~;c:,p,ijs~~~~Iqwlyhe~.cling.no[lh.·.
-- _:. ·
.
:., ...
~·:s:J:·r::·:c,:/'.",. . . . . ·.
. .
.
. .
,!
sa1d'.~mng and soft\yare prob- . , Semor)aJU~s,Rigdon s~ud·,he . forced t5> do ey_efY~Ing W!~,
~~
..
"Y•~~ed the i:na~hme~ V(ere still
But not all students are un-
}
_ lems pushecLth~·. !nstaHatiqn • ·· always·• tised,Goins · to dt.!, lauti- · cards> They -just~-shoiild~liave · ·. coin·'.op~rated.- ': ; ·
·
.
_
happy with. the, conversion · to
:! ...
date behind schedule;~'::.
. . dry in the past; and:.w.~s.aQ.~
told us.!' .
~
.<\'.d:..,:
._··,·c_· .. ~:·_
.
.
"I just w.ent t!) go laundry and
Marist Money. )u~iqrDomin-
-11
: . ''In te~s ct~me, 1!1~/ll,ll~hin~s :n.oy~9: t~a,t:~e;,\Y~~:pev~rzi~~: :,;::::·gdT~~~0.~~1~~-?§,,_s,.en,h>ri'i~P?l~n~t:b~f~~sttct~d~'~: h~ye· . ~q:4~lif1:0~S1lid_ s~~th~~l(ss_\Vip-.
.
l ..
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.c9:qldn
t.~~:-!n_st~H~d·_gQt11:la$.t :-·~fonned,;of:_th~~Cl!!}?8't:fi"er.·to -:,:'~~1~~~~.s9Jan•~~~Ji:,~~mpp~.,} ~~~tM~?Ycdi1r;~a1d'. ,,It
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tng•W}llll,~l! bf~~er,~an ~mns; .... :
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goal [of mstalJ~tlo~]J5y the first :choice? ·Rigdond;·aio:?'Wetre
-'.~~tile
t<>Jlo _la~ndzy.
·Ji~;~~4:!i~.::
/e.as1er:w1th quarters/':., "· · · .
qf.lookmg for quarters."
·
-
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!1i1!1e<tfot~t~.~~~!! ...
il:dvancesto:finals
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NewsEdiiof.- . ·. . ;'.. '.
:R*sident .Senator Kevin
·
i\"':~:?\:
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·-Lundy said at.~ Sept.
17
Senate
•· byTIMSORENSEN
..
: · ..
·
< \:
.
.
.
J~,e:~i~Iet!~~ :departmin,t . meepng heunde,rstood whyath-.
. ''. :: L~tfilifrffr}?,
:c· ' ·. ·
,
-·.•,
,:
·
le~~r1
~•1:i~
.~P<>~[e~~nt,l)'_With . !~tic~ cr.e;it~d the p_olicy; but he .
L
·
a.
new pohcy..for.p1cid1ng: them
·
d1d'not agi:eetllat
tt
should ap-
: Who kri¢W_that a:pair of eyes ,
arid ~five'.liarids 'could do so
much?,··
..
.. : · .. · ...
·
.. ···
· Senior, Autumn Gates' plioto> .
. graph ~ooffirstpla.cejn a re~
; gionar c:ompetiti.ofri-eceridyajid_
·-weJ,1t'oll to.i~~•fina1s .o{_tge · ·
Kodak Inteinational,Newspaper
:,
Snap~hot
.
Awards ·(KINSA)
contest.
·
Gates, who is fronf Syracuse',
NY, said slteJ1eard about the.
contestthroµghlier local hews-,.
.. Paper The. Syracuse Herald
American. She decided to enter
after encouragem~ntfrom·· her
mother>.
.
;,Mymommademeenier,''she. -
said, "b1.1t really, I haye-a huge
p9rtfolio full of pictures and I
figured it was worth a shot."
Gates said that even with a
large selection of photos in her
portfoli, the process of choos~
ing one was not hard.
. . ·fr1:>m traveling ~ith69t'an official
• ·
ply to. allof{~cainpus trips,
~ollege representative:. .
. He said it should .only, apply
Senior Autumn
Gates
recently
won
flnit
p
o<o
inG
reglonai
Kodak International
Newspaper
Snapshot Awards
with this
photo.
10. Thenewspaperchoseafirst
The pictures Gates included
place and.an honorable mention -were se11t to Kodak for the in-
for color and black and white , temational contest that will be
·, .• ::;Athletics a~~pted. theJiolicy
to ·ov~m.igh,t trips .where ~itua-
.
.early this year, bu,t lack ofcom.: .• tjons ,could occur .. ' ', . .
. munis:ation.betwee.nthe
d~part~ '
Je~te said a club's faculty ad-
. 'ment, SGAµridclub sport teams
-
.. vis'er can serve as a lead college
hav~ left some· students
,co~sed.
·. · repn~sentative, l'lut if the adviser
'.·Chris Jette,'vice presideiitfor
·
cannot travel, any faculty or
.. club affairs, s·aid the new policy
administrator can be recruited
· • :ineans that club sport teaf!lS must · for .the job~·
If
theclub cannot
now find· someone wh<> ·can . find
a
separate person to travel
trayel with.them as the college's
·
.·. with them, athletics is establish-
. representative.
.. ,
:
ing a poolto pick from:
''Every club from S.GA-is. re-
. Colin• SuUivan, assistant ath-
qiiired to hav.e a faculty adviser,. Jetic director, and Steve Sanso la,
. and au cl\l~S when tlley
gq
on
assistant dean·for conferences
·.any away trip;:hav.e to'have.a
and activities, wereunavailable
·1ead collegerepresentative~" he
said. "It must be a faculty'mem-
Please see
CLUB,
page 4 ...
her or· administrator, but not
somebody from the club."
C.Iub sports were allowed to
travel _by themselves· in Marist
• vans· on overnight or day trips
in the past; bufbecause of past
·incidences involving disorderly
. students, Jette said athletics felt
THE CIRCLE POLL
Do you think college
students are concerned
about obtaining an
STD?
"I had a whole bunch of [pic-
tures] out in front of me," she
said. "But that one always
seemed to stick out."
.
· photographs each week.
.
held Oct. 9 to 10.
the.n_eed to step in.
"Whenever any dub damages
the school's reputation, the
admi_nistration's going to act,"
he said. "Athletics _said our
sports teams are getting in a
mess on the road, and they ex-
amined why, and came to the
conclusion that nobody is there
She took the photo in her dorm
room sophomore year as part of
assignment on . hands for her
photography class.
The 6-week regional KINSA
contest started in Syracuse on
June 28 and lasted through Aug.
Gates' picture won first place
Kodak uses the winning pi~-
out of 23 black and whtte pho-
tures. for photography publica- ·
tos on the fifth week of the com-
tions, KINSA promotional ma-
petition. .
.
terial and advertistng displays.
At the end of the contest,
Kodak also gives out. over
newspapers selected finalists
$50,000 in cash prizes to more
from the weekly first place and
than 250 winners in the interna-
honorable •mention· winners.
tional competition.
Yes
No
Undecided
'
: l
2
THE
CIRCLE
.
.
October2/1997
.
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,
·
Mari
st
ill\i
oiveih&iitd1ffiCUlf
rof-(")ff
i
caitipus
·
§tiidehts
..
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01,i
·
.
byALLYSONTRAVIS
·.
"ldid
,
n'tg~tpriority;~r~l~
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why · inclub pki~ipaH~n .
..
'
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.
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Staff Writer
I'm off campus. They
·
'do.rt't give you
~·r
onlyhave tinie to participate in cme .
It'sPAREN'I?S
.
WEEKEND!!
'
.
·.
priority pointsjust for'trying.';.
. .
·.
·
:
.
·.·.
:
.
·
campus organ
.
ization/' she said. ~Tm
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Day:OutbackClu~
·
White
·
,Water;:
.
·
campus acti~ities.
.
.
·
.
"It's harder to ke~p in
.
touch with'people . managed to remain just as active on cam-
ti#twf
/:
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Ir( mosf cases st~dents;such as junior
when you have to plari t.o
·
go see
.
them . pus as
she
was the
.
past three years even
Night_ Cc:>inedy
Oubwi,th
Rofiqelh
.
Laura Hess
/
feel that because
,
they live
.
instead of just ~al king next door or
though she is nor living
.on
·
campus.
Sheri&n.
.
,; :,
.
/
.
;
·:
.,:
.\::::,_
:;.;t)', ..
off carripu~,
:
the'ir p~t~ipati(?n in clubs
across the hall,", she said
.
.
·.
"I
feel as ifI'ni on campus more than
.
'
·
• ·
and activitiesis limited.
·
Dan Henn, a senior;saidfoels he issfill. I;m in my houset she said.
. ·
.
.
.'
, '
,,
.
·.
"It
.
~aie~sierwhenIJtiuldwalktoprac-
a part
.
of the Marist community even
SmithisactiveinHIVPeerEducators,
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Night:
Ma.rlst
Sfugers'<26nc~i-t
:''.:
.
·,
for
the past two
'
years,
b~t
felt she did
·
.
clubs) if you can get involved socially
.
"The on,y difference to me is the time it
Night
..
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.
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o
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e
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with
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11
.
•
'e
:.
•
not wantto continue when she moved
.
·
and otherwise.'-' Henn said. "Time be~
takes
·
to get to classes·and activities,"
·
·
·
·
·
··
·
off campus.
comes more restricting as you become
.
she said:
"It
takes me the
.
same amount
·
Poweil
Band''
,'
and
;
~~N~\V
bi..:
"I.have towork on campus in order to
an upperclassmen.·~
-
.
.
of time to get there asit did togetfrom
leans.''
·
:
·
pay to live off and this causes problems
Henn said he played intramurals when
my house
.
to my JI.igh School."
· .
Sunday:
Tuesclay:
Day:
Vericlqr
'
~ith
:·
s}61tets,
gloves,
.•
glov~s,
·
iinp9ft
,
edl~41¢.s
·
'
clothing.
BruigJotsqf~qiiey!l?
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when it comes to finding time to do any-
he lived on campus.
Smith said being involved in on cam-
thing extracurricularly," she said.
"I
·
played basketball freshmen and
pus activities becomes an individual ef-
Donna F?cilla, a junior, saiq she feels
,
•
sophomore year," he said. "fyly junior ·
fort.
as
'
if her chance of living o~ campus
·
year I didn't, because I didn't have
"Ifyou maky yourself an outsider, then
were-taken away from them because of
.
enough time, arid I lived on campus."
you \Viii be, butjustb.ecauseyou don't
how they chose their priorities
.
•
.
·
.·
·
Resident students, such as Donna
.
live ori [campus] doesn't mean you can't
"I
just worry about grades,'7she said.
·
Nastasi, share a different point' of view
participate,., Smith said.
·
·.
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"I
had a friend teH me she thoughi
she might have one, sol do think itis
preval~nt. Ii is definit~lyposs1ble; be-
.
cause there ar
.
e so many
·
peopie.here
-
from across.the country.
·
Everyone
should definitely use protection/'
···
Sl'laron
.
Dickinson
··
.
. .
-
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it hasn't affected
me
or any of my
~. ' ,
they woufo
be
prevalent However,
r
.
·
frienps."
·
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.
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::perso~ally hav~ not
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any)or~
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:
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.
SEC
.
(Jl{ITY
.
B
'
RIEFS
.·
.
- Sept~mber 24th, l :25an1:
A
foot
.
'
pa~
·
role officerobserved a male individual
···
in upper Champagnat throwing an uni~
dentified object out a wiridow, while
.
:
on bystanders cried "don'f throw it."
.
It \llaS thrown from the seventh floor
out to the parking lot by the mail room.
The object was discovered to be a di-
vider tfiat had beer:i ripped out of the
rest room.
"You
can
imagine
the dam-
age it would
·
have done if it hit some-
one," stated Joe Leary, head of secu-
rity. A search was condl,!cted and the
iridtvidual was caught and dealt with •
appropriately. The reason for com-
..
.
mitting thi
·
s act - a fight with his girl- .
friend.
.
·
·· ·
·
-September 27th: A theft was com-
.
. ·
mitt~d
iri
·
one o(the
:
oiltowrihoilses.
:
The
'
residents
"
weiit
to
sleep a{ap
.
prnxi-
mately 4:30 am, k\!epingJ~eir front
door unlocked: When th
_
ey awoke at
·
11
:OQ
am theyfoµnd theirJ 9 inch color
TV, Sony booml>ox, and a couple of
compact disks missing. Total value
$440.00. There are no leads in this
case.
The police arrived this week to coilect
the alcohol from the liquor locker in
security. The locker contained 451
.
cans of alcoholic biv~rages confis-
cated fro_m studenqihce the
.
begin-
ning of the semester.
_
Security Briefs obtained
by
Dmv,i
Lorenz.
;:>
.
.
. .
·.
'
..
.
·
,
~'How'-s the
weather?'
-
'
Thursday:
Mild,
·
sun
mixed
with
clouds. 48~.63~
Friday: Breezy, sun mixed with
clouds. 50~.70.
0
Saturday: Breezy,
sun
mixed with
·
clouds. 47~: 70.
0
-
·
·
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.
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•
Ma'.rist applying for grants to refurbjsh six acres of riverfront area
.
byMICl:IAELGOOT
. Editor~in-chief
non~motorized boating.
September .
"We also feehhat non-motor-
Brown said if the grant is not
.
ized boating:is more in keeping
approved, the college will make
·
.
.
fy:lanst ~fo~ents ma{soon be
·
with the intentions of the bond
.
.
.
another attempt next year.
·
c!b.Ifto
·
go hiking without leav-
act which is after all, a clean air/
·
· "This is multi-year bond fund-
ing campus.
.
clean water bond act," she said.
ing so if we are not successful
.
.
Marist is c~rrently applying
.
.
·•.
Other parts of the project in-
this time around, we will cer-
for two grants to refurbish
·
six
elude an observation lookout
tainly re-submit," she said.
acreS-alongthe East bank of the
•
toweflocated at the grassy knoll
Brown said upon completion,
Hudson River .
•
·
.
that currently holds the Marist
the project would be a valuable
.
· .
..
According to Susan Roeller CoUege sign. Brown said that
asset to the college.
·
Brc1wn; executive
·
assistant to
possibly this site would have
"Ii'
II be a showcase spot for
. PresidentDennfo J. Murray, the
information about the history of
admissions, having a beautiful
·
proj~Ct\Vill ben~fitboth Marist
the spot along the Hudson
waterfront park on campus," she
·
·
and the community.
River.
·
said. "It' II provide a setting for
··
"The. overall project is to im-
Marist will make infrastructure
increased research and educa-
prove the waterfront both for
improvements such as repaving
tional activities
.
"
Marist use and we'll be also
·
the road to the river and re-rout-
.
Brown said this project will not
welcoming the public, who al-
ing part of it to free up room for
interfere with work on the new
ready have access to our water-
trails, making additional parking
library.
front," she said.
lots, and installing a traffic sig~
Circle Photo/Mike Fri>Ch
"This project is not going to
The project will consist of two
nal to regulate traffic under the
MarlaHs currently applying for $800,000
In
grant money to
have any negative impact on
new floating docks in frorit of access tunnel. It would also
spruce up the riverfront area
wi
th hiking and bike trails.
either the funding or construe-
each
·
boat house,
·
a new boat
upgrade water and sewer links.
tion schedule for our new Ii-
hoe funds for the grants would
The project also inciudes up-
·
·
currently exists in Cornell Boat-
The planning for this began
brary
,
" she said. "This will in
come from theNew York Clean
grades to the boathouses.
house," she said.
last February as President
no way take dollars way from or
_ Water/Clean Air, passed by·
_
Brown said the Cornell boat
Brown said there were really
Murray put together a commit
-
sJow up the schedule."
voters in November 1996.
house has
•
particular historic
two impetuses for
·
developing
tee to develop a concept for the
.
Tom Lynch, acting dean of the
.
Maristisapplyingfor$500,000
significance.
this project at this particular riverfront.
division of science, said the
. from the Office of Parks, Recre-
"It's the !ast remaining boat
time.
The application deadlines are
project would be a tremendous
. ation and Historic Preservation
·
house from when Poughkeepsie
"We knew for some time that
Oct. 2 for Greenway and Oct.
15
asset to the campus.
and $300,000 from Greenway. If hosted the Inter-collegiate Row-
we had to invest some money
for the Office of Parks and His-
"It
'
II make it a very attractive
.
· ··
funded, Marist would match the
ing Association," she said.
·
down there to preserve the wa-
toric Preservation. The appli-
place for people to hang out, to
fundsfora total of$1.6 million.
In
addition to being used by
terfront and protect the safety
cation process consiSts of sub-
use the river," he said.
"
If ev-
·
,.,.
_
_
Pao, of the project would be
the crew te~ms; the boathouses
~!i~~e people who use it," she
mitting a narrative overview of erything gets funded, there'll be
. ·pfou~ldi!)gthesea'wall,orbulk-
housesprojectsfortheenviron-
the proposed project
,
the bud-
hiking trails, bike paths
,
im-
'
head, which is about
450
feet
mental science department.
Brown said it was the passing
get for the project, a schedule
proved access to the river it-
'.-
- .. -along
.
the-river's edge.
·
.
Brown said that eventually, the
of the bond grant that stimulated
for implementation, and design
self."
·
.
Brown said the area is in bad
college would also like to make
discussion on what to do about
·
sketch inc1uding maps and photos.
Jennifer Wheeler, a junior b~si-
shape.
·
a small research center neaT the
the riverfront.
·
Brown said the application
ness major said the proiect was
"Thatre~lly ser
.
vel
.
as
.
an ,·m-
l
·
·
1 d d I
tt
d t
·1·
J
"It's deteriorated to the point
river.
a
.
so me u e
e ers e a1 mg
a good idea.
wherdt'sreallythreateningthe
"Ourhope
.
isthatsqmetime1n
petustoreallySlarttogive_some
supportfrompotential users of
"I think it would bring in the
continued use of the waterfront
the nearfuhire,wewill be able
· ·
se_rious thought'
"
to how we
the fac
.
ilities as well as letters
~f
community outside of Mari st
in front of the boathouses/' he
to identify fon
:
ds to
~
put up a
.
mt~~t ~ke/dvanta~d of sr~: s~~port,froin
.
th~ town auth0n-
and I think it would maybe make
,
·.
.)~~ct,
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proved, co~
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Marist more aware of
the
water-
!
··.·
.•.
,
=Brown
.
said Manst 1s
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g01pg tO
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pand the
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she said
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·
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Circle Photo.'Susan Goulet •
Newi
media
1a,b
iir'.[>Yson Center . to
tos
ter
ent'r'epi-eneririai
·
spirit
in
Huµson YAlley
by'.MEGHAN
O'SHAUGHNFSSY
Staff Writer
Once. again, . Marist College
has
.
found itself
cm
,the cut-
ting edge of technology.
·,the·new.lab·.will,be:,10cated
on.
·entreptenuer~hip··in :. product/·
the.,;
fii-sf
floor
oC
the Dyson
service develop~ent an.d
mai-
. Center and
will ·
open .. in the . keting',. to educate and inform
fall o(I 997.
··
regional busjness_es of emerg-
Student Body President Frank Madurl Is all smiles
as
he
pre-
pares to
start
another day
at
Marlst.
. Marist Coll~ge received a
·$75,000 - grant . for the new
Mari st. Coll~ge Media. Lab· for
Busines~; Development: The
grant >includes ~he . purchase
of computer·· equipment . to
enhance the development of
rnulti111edia . and . technology
This rtew media Jab.
will
en-
ing techn_ologies and to -pro-
tourage and supp.Ort ,the de-; vide training and internship
velopment of technological
opportunities for those pursu-
enteprenuership. in· the Hudson
ing care(?rs · in. multjrnedia ..
Valley.
It • .
will. help· student.
Under
·
die direction of the
eqtrepreneurs develop_ . web. Marist . Center
:for .
Corporate
sites, CD's, computer games
and·· Professional Education,
and other new media prod-
the lab serves as a ~~tal link
ucts;
between · the Marist commu-
Saland said that this new· lab · nity and the Hudson· Valley
wiH make heavy use of multime-
business community.
Maduri Administr·ation
. · entrepreriuership at· Marist and
10 ··
the Hudson Valley.
dia: technology.
·
Dennis J ..• Murray, president
tackles campus
·
security·,
cafeteria food and lighting
State Senator Steve Saland
said this project is an example
of making use of information
technology to boost the
"Drawing on Marist's al-
of Marist College, said this is a
ready highly skilled faculty
good example of educa!ional
and advanced technology in-
institutions and business work-
frastructure, the lab will assist
ing together.
new multimedia enterprises in
"We are very grateful to Sen .
.
product design and develop-
Saland for his efforts to. se-
ment, training and business/
cure the funding that will make
academic collaboration," he
this new media lab for busi- · ·
said.
ness · development a reality,"
The lab will have advanced
he said. «This project · is a
multimedia computers and pre-
prime example of a business-
sentation capabilities. It will .education partnership. that will
also include satellite downlink
enhance the economic devel-
and· videoconferencing.
opment efforts -•of .. Dutchess
byBENAGOES
News Editor '--
Everyone told him he would
soon be home pumping gas, but
this self-admitted underdog
came to Marist with high expec-
tations and
a
resolve to show
up the skeptics.
Senior Frank Maduri never got
that job pumping gas. Instead
he made it to the top ofMarist's
political pyramid by winning last
year's election for student body
president. Now he is trying to
sort out what to accomplish
during his one-year term.
Maduri, · a political science
major, said he finds the job diffi-
cult, but is confident his admin-
istration and the Senate canfix
many of the problems with.the.
status
'quo. . .,: . . - . '
.,, ;
. '· ''I'see a•iof of obstacles, but if
there's any clas~ or year that can
overcome them, it will be this
SGA," he said. "There are seri-
ous issues on thiscampus. This
year we are starting. to see re-
sults because there are. people
that know what they're doing."
He said one of the more seri-
ous issues facing ·students .. is
campus security and the recent
robberies on North End.
Maduri's tow.nhousewas one
of those broken into recently.
"That is something] am go:-
ing to address ASAP," he said;
"Lock your doe>rs, protect your-
self. This is getting outof han~
with three [robberies]
in
a
three
week
period"
.
He said some students have
told him they do. QOt feel safe in .
their own houses anymore. He
. said he will meet with Joe
Leary,
director of safety and security,
soon to discuss .the situation.
'Tll let him know this has
sparkedthe concern of the stu-
dents," Maduri said. "Instead
of checking parking pas.ses, start
getting more people on the beat''
economy.
"We have said · time and
again that in order for New
York, and the mid-Hudson. Val-
ley in particular, to actively ·
compete in our economy, we
must adjust to· changes in the
marketplace · to enable us to
· The administration is also
looking into installing more
lights on campus such as be-
hind Leo HaH, near Byrne
House, and behind theold
towrihouses. Maduri said he is
also pushing for a foot path
from the Hoo Lot and
u
the
~espond ~o the next wave of
--11 ··
·
p ·.
· p
mformat10n technology,'' he
h1 to the townhouses.
.·
.• •
.d
"Th' M d"
.
L b
.
11
d
M d · ·
1·
·
kl' · ·
h " ·
sai .
1s
e
ia
a w1
o
a un 1s a so tac mgJ e , .... : · ,,
. long-criticized food
in
the caf-
JUS
t
s
th
at.
s
I d
eteria with help from Resident
.
en.
a an
-:vas respon-
Senator KevinLuridy. Maduri
s1ble ~or developing and an-
said the criticism has· wrongly
nou~cmg a number of eco-
been directed towards Joe
nom1c dev~Iopment programs
Binotto d'rector of dining ser-
· for tlle. mid-Hudson Valley.
·ces · ' th
1
.. p t·
,
· ·
Part of the Senator's "Hudson
v1
,
m e
as_.
V:
II
J·b C
.
I . . .
,,
"It's not tlie quality, that's not
a ey
,
.o
. reation mtiative,
the issue. It's the preparation."
Computer science major Ron
County, the Hudson · Valley
Jonessaidhelikedwhatthenew
and New York State.''. .;:
r,,
lab has to offer.
Saland's economic develop-
"!
think it's a really good idea,"
ment program. also·. includes
he said. "Not only will it help
grants ·for a· number,:of :other
· students here, but it will also
important·programs.-here,in the
help Marist prosper from busi-
.Hudson Valley; ... Amortg;:such
ness and economic connec-
proposed projects -is .a •_Small
tions in the local area.''.
Business Development :Cen-
. ·This media lab has three main
ter,. in wh~ch . Marist is-: also
goals: to support regional
participating:in.
'
hi~~!~~!~~!ti~~~!~:ii~i
.
:llabitat(o:r Hunianitycome~to M_~n~ist as branch of SGA
hand thatth~'8oHegi·'on1y
.
·-.,o .. ,- , :.:_:: '.'
:.'.
:_·• · ..
,
. ·
L .. ·_ ..
.
,.,,
fiharite'HabitaUor'Httrftit'~ity
serves· quality'
:foods'.:
Binotto
byIA.UREN
GUERRffiRo -
.
'. .
-·
with ·theit smali budget;
resort-
assured. thatlhefo'is
.
;
a:
better
-
· · Stqdent Body President; Frank -ing to fundraisihg to: cover the
staff at the cafetenaihis year.
StaffWriter
J. Maduri introduced the bill this
costs of donations . to 'the
Some of Maduri
7
s
early sue-
month· He has experienced first-
houses and traveling"expenses.
cesses indude working on
·
.re-
Habitat for Humanity has
hand the rewards .of working
Butnow the pr9jectlias a$500 .
visingthe
,
SGAConstituti6n.·.
found a home of its own at
with HabitatforHumanity.
bucigetbecause_ofth~SGApilJ.
_
. Madur_i. s
_
aid h~ .wantsto pose
·
Maris.t College.-
·
· ··•· LaS'tyear du9ng sprjng J;rea,k,
::J
u_li~fi<!dfl.rQWS.Is.yJ
c.h:.air,gf_
tli¢
referendums to the student
The Student·Goveminent As-
Mad!Jri. ilnd
.
eleven
°
ther·
st11-
Habitatfor Humanity committee.-
body. this.year
·cm
iss.ues rang~
sociationpassed
a
bill Sept. 10
dell ts,- ·· tqok. · part in the
said she plans to conti.nue
ing from a battle of the· bands . . to adopt. Habitat for Humanity
orgaqization ;s Collegiate Chai~
fundraising,-'ih1tCis
l
giateful: for
between Mar1st and area col-
as its newest community service
Ieng~
-
in Bridgeport, Con_n.
what has been done-for them.
Jeges to the idea of a diversity
project,
They worked
,
with low _in~ome .
•~An
of the members ofthe
.day_on campus.
According to the mission
families. buildiJ1g new houses;
committt:e thank=alloUhtfstu-
0
·
·
installing aluminu. m
... sidin_g and
1_1e campaign promise was to
statement; Habitat for Human-
dent~ and the' SGA for their
d · ·
C
b
d b
k
. pai.ntin. gin bitter coldt. emp· e. ra_ -
·
·
- ecrease
a aret an
oo -
ity Intemationalis ''a nonprofit, .
.
growing support,'\she saig ..
stor~ pii.c~s.· But Maduri said
ecumenicalChrisd.au- housing
tures. '
.
.
-
.For the first tinie ever;Habitat
there is little he
can
do about the
ministry dedicated to eliminat.:
Maduri said the experience forHunmnitytookpartin theac'.' -
Cabaret
ing poverty housing;" The
was invaluable.
. ···.
·
.
' ti vi ties fair which sparked
in-
"Joe [Binotto] said the Caba-
ret prices are the lowest on the
eastern seaboard,'.' Maduri said.
"I'm
concerned about pricing,
but as far as that's concerned,
it's a dead issue. Prices can't
go down anymore."
He said he is still waiting to
·
talk to administrators at the
. bookstore.
p roiect has met the SONs
· ''It was the beSt experie
·
1_1ceOI
c
.... r
.
eased iri.te.r,e.
s.t.· .....
a.mong .s. t_u-
J
think I ever had as an under- ·
·.
· ·
~
search forayear-roundcommu-
·
· ·
·
·
· · · - · dents. Qadarowsky said she
gra.du.a.te,. bar no· .. ne,·"· h. iiaid: · ·
· · ·
·
· ··
· · ·
nity service project.
He·s_aid his experience was the ·.· hopes tOwork\Vith the students
Bob Lynch, director of student
imp'et. u. s
i:o
bringing .t.he or. gani-
that expressed interest.
·activities, said this bill helps
"We liope'to serve them bet-
.SGA meet one of Marist's core . zation to Mari St
- .
terjn the future," she saici.
objectiv~s: .
.
. .
".I
feel such a dedicatio.n}o
With the anticipated growth,
"SGA is fulfilling one of the
see. this ~rganization ·grow at
Qadaro\Vsky plans to apply for
college's missions, which is a
Marist•" he sa!cl. HHere at SGA
another Collegiate .Challenge,
commitment to communtty ser-
we felt it
\V~S necessary.''. . .
improve relations w
.
ith the local
· vice," he-said.-
"It
is a great-job
The affiliation atNiariSt grew
comm.unities
.
and continue to
Club
of the story or lyingto adminis-
... conrinuedfrom page I
tration, which doesn't help any-
that they are doing."
.
oufof.tlle ~ocial Work Commit-
work for club charter status.
tee. They' could not affordto
·was
in
the hoteland she com-
plained about the kids· on the -
floor being noisy and that ap-
plied to us," Poirier said. "We
were not out of control or
rowdy.".
"I think they h~d an incident
where hotel damage occurred as
a result of a party," he said.
"There was documentation of
alcohol," he said.
sa~d. "This stuff happened but
it didn't get out."
forcomment before press time.
body."
. Jette said the policy was en- ·
He said there have always
acted primarily for
liability
pur- · been instances of club sports
poses.
getting into trouble on the road,
"[The administration doesn't]
but the most recent instances
want a student handling emer-
involved the ski
team
and rugby
gencies," he said. "They'd
team.
rather have the adult faculty
Junior Chantal Poirier, presi-
adviser handling the emer-
dent of the woman's rugby team,
gency. I agree that there should
saiq the incident happened last
be somebody on the road that
semester while the men's and
is a contact with the school.
woman's team were away com-
This way it saves the students
peting in a tournament.
from having to cover up facts
"There was this woman who
Poirier said the woman blamed
numerous things on them, in-
cluding a 4 a.m. fire alann.
Jette said the rugby incident
was never documented, and
. there was debate on exactly
what happened. He also said
the other incident thatis fre-
quently cited is an incident in-
volving the ski team.
But Jette said that some people
are saying the club sport rule
happened because of the ski
team or rugby team. However,
he said other abuses off cam-
pus were becoming too common.
"There's been a lot of in-
stances like people not handing
in hotel r~ceipts, money abuse
on the road, to alcohol use on
the road, to hotel damages," he
Top administrators and SGA
members met Sept. 22 to.discuss
the policy. 'Jette said he wished
the administration had commu-
nicated earlier with SGA, which
shares jurisdiction over club
sports.
with
the athletics department
"I was a little upsetthat it re
0
ally wasn't consulted through
the clubs and student govern~
ment, and that was where some
of the· controversy might have
laid. But now everything's
settled."
'fHECIRCLE
1997
5
Sexually transmitted diseases affect at least 55 million Ameri-
caf2s . . Two~thirds of new infections occur in people under age
25. College students are morl likely to experiment with sexual
behavior. This week's fo"c(US section deals with sexually trans-
mitted diseases and how it is an important issue on college
campuses.
College students have many options available for treating STDs
bySI'EPHANIEMERCURIO
· Managing Editor
Students who feel they may
have a Sexually Transmitted
Disease have a place to go.
According to Jane O'Brien, di-
rector of Health Services, stu-
dents· can be tested at Mari st,
Dutchess County Health De-
partment ·or St Francis.
"We can test for a number of
diseases here, or the· student
can go to St. Francis," she said.
· "The Dutchess County Health
Department also has a clinic that
conducts tests."
.. ·,.o•Brien.said the ~tudent can
come down or make an appoint-
.
.
.
ment
v.
1
ith Health Services. .
tients have
full
exams."
of an STD," she said. "There are
',,·'>'The
student qm,request test-
Salisbury said the patient must
also students who are con~
,ing;ifshe,orhe thinks there is a
call for an appointment.
cerned because · they know
:problem/\ she said.··
.
"We do not accept walk-ins;
someone or had a partner who
., Marie Salisbury, manager of it is by appointment only," she
has an STD."
.
the Po·ughkeepsie Planned Par-
said. "It is. usually a week wait
Salisbury said not many col-
enthood, said the clinic offers
for a
full
exam, butwe can usu-
lege students utilize Planned
partial testing for STD's, as well
ally take emergencies. right Parenthood.
as
full
exams.
, .
away.)'
·
.
. _
; . .
.
.: _ ., 'Y".'l)~n ~he word
g~!~
out
·pkJ,~.W:\trt1~*s,.~m~t?t:·· ~f
J!T~ttit%~~!ll~if!i~ · ·
,
·6flli~/;~h~t~'}i:
2
tli;fifad{:;
·
for
a
partial testing and evalua-
. tested.
not get out easily,. thougjj.'
1
·
tion and treatment, but then
"Studentscome in with com-
O'Brien said that chlamydia is
they must come back for a fuil
plaints, :and testing needs ·to be
a big problem for college students.
.e_xarri/' she said. "All of our pa-
done to rule out the possibility
."Marist does not necessarily
Marist stuq.epts ~xpress awareness of STDs _on campus
_:·/J~,ld';';°;i,:',:;
;_·:i'•
·:·-.
·
-
.
~;.~_~.
·
,._·:;~;_,:_;
i_
~
:: • l>yTHEA
CIMMINO
"
:->'.
:
StaffiWriter
Marisrstudents beware, sexu-
·ally
transmitted diseases go to
. college too.
.
Sexually transmitted diseases
are diseases such as AIDS, gon-
orrhea, syphilis and hepatitis.
These can be contracted
through sexual encounters such
as intercourse and oral sex;
Senior Sonny Sunderland said
he feelsSTDs are ·a problem on
college campuses.
."Anything you don't know
that is hannful is a problem," he
said.
Freshman Louis Totino· also
said STDs are a problem.
"Not everyone is responsible
enough," he said.
·
Totino said he has offered ad-
vice to friends about protection
against STDs.
"I know one guy didn't take
my advice. I was disappointed
in him, but there's not much I
could do about it, I guess," he
said.
Five out of the seven stu-
dents interviewed said they
. knew
at
least one individual with
a sexually transmitted disease ..
Four of these students also said
they have worried about con-
tracting STDs at one time or
another.
·
Junior Kerry said she often
discusses such matters as
STDs.
"I
have two younger sisters.
They have always taken my ad-
vice,". Unflat said.
Senior Joseph DeBona said
STI)s are definitely
a
problem .
"Some kids are responsible,
but a lot of times alcohol plays·
a factor and judgment is im-
paired and protection isn?t al-
ways used," he said.
·
De Bona also said that he tries,
not to be overbearing about the
issue.
"I don't feel it is my place· to
preach, but ifldo, it's to a close
friend that I care.about. I hope
they' take my advice.
I guess.
they. do," DeBona said.
Totino feels that there is
plenty of information out there
on how to protect· oneself
against STDs.
. "What's being done is
enough, but it's up to the indi-
vidual to take the advice
or
not,"
Totino said.
Sunderland said he thinks more
could be done to infonn the stu-
dent body on the topic.
"We
have lectures on culture, reli-
gion, diversity etc., not to say
we've never had a lecture on
STDs. Those topics are dis-
cussed more often than STDs
are," he said. "STDs should be
mentioned in orientation pro-
grams as well as optional lec-
tures during the year for the
entire student body."
Freshman Nancy DeBiasi said
that it is not easy being a col-
lege student.
"Coming to college is a scary
experience in itself," she said.
Worrying about STDs is just
another burden," she said.
DeBiasi also said that knowl-
edge is the key to preventing
sexually transmitted diseases.
"As a freshmen coming into
college you don't even know
people's last names let alone
their sexual background. · I think
the best way to avoid contract-
ing an STD is to get to know
your partner well enough where
you can discuss your sexual
background," DeBiasi said.
Junior Rebecca Brown said
she probably doesn't know ev-
erything she needs to know
about STDs, and that Marist
should do more to increase the
student body's knowledge.
"The college could hand out
flyers and offer workshops,"
she said.
Freshman Lindsay Tucker also
said that more could be done.
"Especially for freshmen,
maybe RA's should mention
protection against STDs in floor
meeting discussions," she said.
Sunderland also said that talk-
ing over these issues could be
a big help.
"Engaging in the discussion
can be an eye-opener for many
people," sh'e said.
have a problem with the disease,
but according to statistics it is a
problem," she said.
Salisbury said Planned P£rent-
hood treats a variety of diseases.
"We see .a ·lot of herpes out-
breaks, as ~ell as chlamydia,"
she .~~id. ;:w,e do see other dis-
eases, but those. two are the
•··. .
:
,
. ·.
"."· . •
. . .
' -
.
·- •
•
~
• • . !
inostso1;wJ10f.!·~·, . : , . . ·
,.
· ·• Sa/jsbiil)'.
said the most com:
mon .· forms
pf
trt?ating the dis-
eases are by pills or creams.
"We prescribe anitbiptics,
pills o·r creams to be topically
· applied,'' she said.
O'Brien said the testing is ba-
sically free through Marist.
"If
the student has the Marist
health plan, they generally do
not have to pay,".she said. "I'm
not sure about the Dutchess
County Health Department, but
I think most services are free or
on a sliding scale."
Salisbury said a full exam is
based on a sliding scale.
"If
the patient is a student, the
exam usually costs around $40,"
she said.
Salisbury said the clinic also
offers AIDS tests .
"We have confidential AIDS
tests for our patients, which are
free," she said.
"If
the person is
not a patient, the cost is $15."
O'Brien said AIDS test are
available at the Dutchess
County Health Department.
"There is no charge, and the
tests can either be anonymous
or confidential," she said.
. Salisbury said the most ,mpor-
tant issue is prevention.
. . ·' 'The use of corido'ms keeps
. 'the outbreaks of diseases down
at all costs," she said. "Students
need to have condoms easily ac-
cessible."
Career
&
Employe
EXPO
Thursday,
October
30, 1997
4:00 - 7:00
pm
Mccann Center
GRADUATING STUDE!ffS
and
ALUMNI •
A
chance lo discuss your quahlicalio'1s with a variety
of employers. Find out aboul the
job market, full-time
job
poss,bihties. lips about
job
hunling. and
more.
if
you're
job hunting. bring resumes and dress proressrorn.lly
JUNIORS· lnformalion about internships. part-lime. and summer
job
opportunilies. Learn about
dilrercnt organi>.alions and
job
opportunities. and to make contacts'lor yoor ,er,ior year
.iob
search.
Resumes
are helpful
FRESHMAN
and
SOPHOMORES·
Mice on choosmg
1/Q\lf
l'Tk'lior and career drrection from
emplowrs. Explore different career,. part lime. all<! summer
,ob
op;:,ortunili<,,; Resumes are nol
necessary
!Of
more111form..1t,oncon,.J<t
the
Ct?ntl'f
1£.•
(dit,.,
.~.,,,ct;.' .,,
.15-17
6
Editorial
Late nightcomputer craziness reveals
chinks inMarist'stechnologicalannor
Marist has a very technologically
1 :30
a.m. and~e did ha~e a saved copy
advanced campus.
H
has broken .. ofourworkondisk;wedecidedtocallit
incredibe ground in using technology in
quits and try again tomorrow.
education
.
It was even rated as one of
The next morning; we asked the stu-
the top schools in the country in terms· dent aids to figure out why the docu-
of technology. However, it is farfroma
ment was not'printing but they were
.
be-
technological utopia. There are several
fuddled. We then went to four other labs
issues that I feel have been neglected
which were all being used. Finally, ~fter
over the years.
waiting an hour and a half, we gained
To illustrate this point, let me tell a story.
access to the Da Vinci lab and printed out
A couple of weeks ago, a very good
ourflier.
.
friend
.
of mine and
I
were trying to de-
Reflecting on this ordeal,
I
noticed se
.
v-
sign a flier for our club.
I
thought this
eral things that
l
wished would change.
would take no more than an hour. How-
First
,
more computers should be made
ever, thus began a journey, which I lov-
available for student use: The students
ingly refer to as
"The
Odyssey of the
should receive a copy of the computer
Flier.
'.'
·
labs' schedule at the beginning of the
W.e used the computers in the Da Vinci
semester. That way, students would
Lab which normally require password ac-
know which labs were available without
cess
.
However, since it was
10:30
p.m.
having to trek-across campus.
.
The
•
view frbrtrSue; ..
.
by Sue G~cidwin
.
1-rED
So
LoN<i
-r
1..,M.ll>R'-j i1111:
.
,
LY CU:AN il¼1N(:, I
1
R1tu.oweetJ
_
Cos
is SHovr..bt.J'T
NI,
•••
I
'IA..
Dear
Fmtor:
Letter to the Editor
and there were no classes at that time,
Also, several computers are being used
we had no trouble gaining access to the
by
·people
just to do e-mail
·
or surf the
system. Somehow the computers knew
Net.
i
think~ special mini-lab should be
that we were not arriong the "authorized"
set up for Internet and e-mail access. This
users and as revenge, developed ttie
would free up more computers to be used
nasty little habit of freezing every
30
min-
for dasswork.
utes or so and shutting down.
Perhaps the biggest problem is com-
Many thanks for StephanieMei:curio'sfine articl~ on Mother Teresa.
,
.
After a few misguided attempts, my
munication. After a computer technician
Actually, there
are
fairly recent pr~cedents for quick canonizations.Two
·
:
:
:
,
.
friend and
I decided to move co the
has been informed of
a
computer prob-
that came to mind are Maximilian Kolbe and Teresa ofLisieux.
.,
;
.
·
Donnelly Lab next door. We managed to
Iem,
·
tie or she should e'-mail the person
Kolbe
.
was a Franciscan priest whogavehis life on August 14, l94I;in
_,_
.
:
·
·
.
,
.
find a computer. However, the com put-
back to let them know that the message
.
exchange for a Jewish fellow conce~tration c~p pri
_
~~re~
.
'!Vi_~
f~.'!'!}Y
-
~P,H
J,~
-
s:
;
:;-_.~
ers in that lab have PageMaker 5, not
was received and
.
what steps
i
are being
wastobeexecuted. Matryrdomreqmresno
_
m1raclesfqr-c1lllOll1,~tI01!.
~
I<.1:>lb§
..
t:
;;"%
PageMaker 6,
_
as we
_
were using in
taken to
·
address the problem.
·
·
·
·
·
.
was beatified in 1971 and canonized shortly therea'.ft~r.
\
IfRcmie
;
exir~po::
?
;
:
~ti~
Da Vinci. After doing our work again we
Technology has a place in education.
lates;~
1
fother Teresa's life could be considered a martyrdbtil;
;'.
Qth1twise;~°W~
,4~~:,i3j
decided to print it out
The goat is to make the technology
,
so
will have to wait for miracles;
.
. .
. .
.
.
·
When I issued the com1I1and to print, a
flawl
_
ess th~t iUs lea~t disruptive
.
to
.
tlte
:
Miracleshav~Jo
,
be permailentphysic~t' cures scientifically investigated
:
system error occurred
and
we lostall our
.
learning process. Only this waywiHt¢d(
,
.
and declared beyond the power ofmfidical
.
science.
·
·
·
;
·
·
·
'
'
'
work. We moved to another computer,
.
no logy
.
be fully integrated iri~o educa~
.
St. Terese ofLisie
_
ux died of
wrac}dng
tuberculosis on September
30,
1897,
re-did
.
our work, but still could not print.
-
tion. ~farist sh9uld
,
y.,ork toward achi~Yc:
."
..•
. .
.
·•at
.
the young age
~f
24,:
and waS:can
.
onized in
·
1945
;
a
very short:
28
years!
.
.
At
thi,s pojnt, ~y Jnistrat~d fnen~
and . .
ingthat goal,.
r:
,.. ,
:
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.
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dreds ofletters; dozens
·
of poems
'
and fou{pliiy~!
·
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'
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·
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L
.
-
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that she was dedared a:siiin(in
}
ec9rd
·
time. Most of the
.
hundreds of
·
.
.
Cat~~lic churches iri China pfo1hineritlY:dtspJay her statue
br
image;
.
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b!en~;;;;;~~;;;~;:;i;;:;~~;~~;;;~~::~8~~
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The coverage
will
always
befair
and impartial.
-
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:
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.
'
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1\vas gazing
'
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the right
::
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-
+
:
:'
'the Circle
'
Staff
Michael Goot
Stephanie Me~curio.
,
BenAgoes
·
.
.
Amand~ Bradfoy
Christopher Thorne
Gyna Sloincinsky
Emily :Kucharczyk
TimMans~m
· Jim
·
Dziezynski
•
Steve Wanc~y~
:
'
.
Michael Frisch
:
_
··
.
.
Chris Hogan
.. Editor-in-chief
.
'
Managing Editor
·
·
News Editor
AssistantNews Editor
.
Focus Editor
.
,
Feature Editor
Assistant Feature.Editor -
Opinion Editor
.
Arts & Entertainment Editor
Spo'rts Editor
Photography Editor
.
Business Manager
G. Modele Clarke
·' :
Faculty Adviser
.
.
We welco~e your responses to anyfhing on the Opinion--:
.
Editorial page, as well as any other issues.
Letters
to the Editor
may be sent to
The Circle
via e-mail at
HZAL or dropped in
·
·
campus mail addressed.to
The Circle.
We reserve
the
right to
edit letters for spacial reasons or otherwise.
·
How to Contact
Us:
If you
are
interested in advertising in
The Circle,
please .
leave a message for Chris Hogan at
575-3000
ext.
2429
If you have a story idea or would like to publicize a club event;
e-mail
The Circle
at HZAL.
.
-
s111all z:ed dt1ffefbag tti#~gen
_
t1emall~ll9
.
i
-
~
_
as startiI1g to
.'
guesiion
>
_
\Yheth~r
'
that
.;;
,
.
..
l
_
etf~t
_
rny feet. fwa~
·
faifi~g
f9r
th~pus
'.-
·
)
!tt!ete4
_
:
~uffelbag\y!15
'
a tiofub
'
or
_
in'ay~
,
:
,
,
_
sothatl
.
coulcl go home
_
apd,free.mys~~f
-
ju~ta little red duffel bag
;
'
',:•?
0
l ,
:,
:;-
:·'
:,, :
·:
from the
'
gosh-forsaken
·
Port Authorit;<
.
-
.
so;lw~nt for a
·
wall:C There\v_as a
gdod
'
,
. :
BusTerminal.
.
.
.
.
.
.
·
:-
deal to belearned aboutthis
'
episo
·
de\,f
·' ·
I tried to rationalize with myself. "Well,
.•
panic, aside from that
the
little red
duffd
:
.
'
:
.
the gentleman could have just left
:
ii
to ·bag turned
o~tto
~JUSt
t6at
'
and'.11oth-
,
·
hold his place while hewandered
_
Qffthe
•
fag
more
.
.
\Vh<,1raborit
;
alVofthefa'ces
line,
·
Does he really believe that such a>
·
that werewatting for tlie bus?
·•
. Jhadq't
•
small bagwould actually hold
.
his place?
given them
.·
a second
.
thought
.
as I took
·" Oh; bu~ really now, itcouldn't be
.
a
·
·
cover from whatJthought
fo
be our bit-
.
·
·
•
-
0
.
bomb
.
·
That's just silly
."
Hooked around
ter end.
· ~
Running out
.
of thl terminal
...
atthe other faces in line'f or the
_
bus. Som~
wasri
'
_
tthe ilobieslof g~stures
:
• '.
.
.
:
· ,
.
were placid, others impati~nt, but all were
.
·
I eventually madejt home physically
.
oblivio!)s to what I was
·
lJeginning
.
to
unscathed.,Itlien consulted my cousiri
believewaso·urimpendingdoom:
.-
·
from Erigland,
.•
whowas
•
staying atiny
.
"You probablY. are being horribly irra~
·
house at the time. As the rest of my
tional,'' I consoled myself, and my "that's
·
·
family ridicu,led m~, sh~ saw rriyaciions
just ~illy" rationale began to fade rather
·
as perfectly logical. She cited aninstance
quickly as time (and presumably the little
in an English tenninal in which she had
red duffel bag) ticked away.
accidentally !eft·a bag on the ground.
''But then again, if it was a bomb, you'd
·
Som~one reported it to the bomb ·squad
;
'
be the first to know
...
"
My cousin's story reminded me of how
With that thought,
l
darted out of the
distant terrorism seems from America.
terminal cinto the street. I sought she!~
·
Over the summer, a tourist complained
ter behind a big red double-decker tour
to me about the subway system (Not as
bus with the steering wheel on the right-
surprisingly, he also complained ab
_
out
hand side. I winced, anticipating a blast
Andrew Lloyd Webber's
"Cats").
He was
that would put any Stallone film to shame.
disgusted
by
a beer can that he watched
Then ..
.
Nothing.
roll
.
back and forth on the subway car
I looked around.• A couple of bummy
floor, all the way out to Queens. He then
guys were complimenting the rush hour
explained that he was from Israel. I nod-
career women as they hurried by. Two
ded and thought about the little red duf-
.
other men were pushing shoe shines to
fel bag. As terrorizing .as the occasional
the businessmen in Reeboks. A few more
rattling beer may be, I dared not suggest
were passing out tour brochures. And
that it could have been worse.
me? Well, 1 was cowering behind tbe big
'Tara Quinn
is
the Humor Columnist
red double-decker tour bus with the
-
i
,
.
THE.CIRCLE·QPINI
ON
OctQ~er 2, 1997
7
.
.
Little
·
intrigue in ·rundraising hearings leads
to
·little interest
.
·
Pop.
However, you need to under-
emphasized· to show how
·
·
In fact, in a recent sna:p poJJ of
·
one, I 00% of those surveyed
said that they could not ~are
less about these proceedings .
.
,
Eor one thing it lacks intrigue,
exciting events, and unsavory
characters for people to rally
their hatred behind.
·
stand that the bigg·est scandal
.
greedy the Democrats were in
would simply pass the baton
onto his second in chief. It was
such an eventuality, you would
h
_
ave figured that Gore had been
in charge of Operation Desert
Sfonn.
that had ever plagued Gore be-
the last election.
fore this was the time that his
Personally, I wonder what the
hair was parted on .the left side
differences are in money taken
instead of the right side.
If
from Buddhist nuns and R.J.R.
· there has ever been a squeaky-
Nabisco, but, apparently, I am
. Gore has already taken steps
to make sure that this docs not
become the major scandal the
GOP hopes it will be. He has
allied himself with a group of
people who know how to deal
with this sort of thing: President
Clinton's advisors and spin
doctors.
If
they
continue
doing
the high quality kind of work we
all know that they are capable
of, things should turn out all
right for the Vice President
People are enraged over the
In short, this is no Watergate,
recent allegations against Vice-
!
·
it is not Iran-Contra, and it is
PresidentG?reoverfundraising
certainly not the Teapot Dome
misconduct.
Scandal.
Well;
no, actually; they are not,
So why is Janet Reno consid-
but if Sen. Fred
·
"Red October"
ering the possibility of perhaps
Thompson had his way, they
maybe sometime appointing
would be.
·
some kin
_
d ofspecial prosecu-
But, if the \\ford on the street
toror another to possibly look
is to be tru~ted; people
_
atross
-
more
.
deeply into this?
.
.
America could not care less.
Do hot look to ine for the an~
Perhaps Americans would be
swer,
I
was asking all of you out
more interested if members
of there. To be quite honest,Jdo
the Democratic National Com-
not even understand.
mittee
.
had been wearing
The worst part of aUof this is
women's undergarments. and
that
·
Vice~President Gore has
biting those prnspecdve donors
' .
beellbrought into an of this,
·
·
if they did not cough up at least
.
Now, to many of you, a politi-
$20,<XX>.
,
·
.
. ·
. .
.
.
.
cal scandal involving a member
As itturos
<>lit;
people are
_
a~~
of the Clinton administration
tually more
-
hlterested
•
in o
·
nce . probably sounds about as stun~
and for allg~ttingto ihe
·
bottom
·
·>
~ing a~ the revelati_oll that Gin-
•
·
of how mapy licks frDOES ta:ke
..
ger, Spic~ does not-do her own
to
.
get the._center
.
of
•
a
Tootsie
chore~graphy
.
clean person to hold this of-
the only one. These are the kind
flee; it is Al Gore. Afterall, this
of things that
fall
l;Jetween the
isamanwhosewifedemanded
cracks. of the Fox News
that subversive material like
Chann'el's fair and accurate "re-
Warrant albums be given Pa-
porting".
rental Advisory stickers.
At the center of it. all is both
Poor Al Gore was simply do-
Clinton and Gore's usage of
ing his job by raising campaign
White House phones to solicit
funds. That is the sort of thing
donations.
that the Vice President do_es.
First of all, every incumbent
Iii
1984,
.
GebrgeBushgothis
has always used his office
go(?d buddy Manuel Noriega
phones, and second, what are
to coHect donations from some
they supposed to do, use the
of his Columbian friends in the
pay phones across the street?
"import/export business".
Imagine the bigger scandal
· Four years later, then-VP Dan
that would ei:upt
if
President
Quayle \vent door to door sell-
Clinto11 rented Hotel rooms to
ing.Grit magazine.
make these calls. The more time
Vice Presiderit Gore's prob-
he spends at home, the better it
·
Iem
was that
_
he didhis job too·
is. for hi!.> image.
.
well.
If
he had to go out .and
.
Whatever the case, these al-
get
$
Ll
Million;hewouldcome
legations are the nrst bumps in
.
back with$L3 Million.
.
Oore's road
.to
the Presidency
Jsthis
·
r~any acrim~? A,ctu~
in 2000.
·
·
ally,·
_
it
is
not, and this is the
_
: .
.
;
Until
.
ea~lier this year, there
sort of thing that' is just bi:!ing
_
.
.. was a lot of '.talk that Clinton
But, Americans being as fickle
as they are, we are likely to for-
get all about this in the next few
years. After all, if President
Clinton got re-elected amidst
scandals, Al Gore should be able
to get in for at least
_one
term if
he has all of his scandals be-
hind him.
.
Christia11 Bladt is The Circle's
Se11ior Political Commentator,
a11d, as always, to11ight he's
going to party like it's 1999.
READ
:
_
:
·:
]Ylarv m~kes headlfne$ _with
guilty
plea
,
and a whole new wardrobe
-
·
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
--
.
·
.
.
. .
·-·
.
.
·
-
Ustially.i Jike
to\vrite
·about
.
..
•
·
things
·
·oh
campu~
·
and J~ke
.
;
shotsatthirigs pe
·
op
_
le seem tg
.,;
think sacred around here.
{But;;.
·
this past wee~,
~stuallyJ
~~~f
,~
agq
_
tqdaY,i3:IJ11,i9
;
l;gr:e.w,up
!
li$
{;,.,
.
tening
,·
to on
'.
Sa~iiidays
.:
anq
/
·
.
;
sui:iday~ adrnitt~d
·
guiltto
'
as
::.
•
•
/
.
.
sault arid batterx
:
in Arlingto~
,
·
··
Vi
.
rginia,
'so
I
decided.Jo
:
write
:
.
·
oil.
_
a national issue, rather thah
.
-
·
a locafone.
.
.
.
...
·
-
.
In
.
case
·
you someliowman-
.
ageci' to tum off your television
.
.
.
sets f9r¾the
:Pf!St
YJ,!;!tk; ;Marv
·\
-
,
.
·
Albert;longt1meannoi.incerfor
.,
major.:)t;~gue,
;
sp
_
oi:ts, \v'as the
:
recjpj~nto(qri~ of.the S\Yeet-
:,
·
est.p,~a
,
!
b~gain deals
.
l
have
•
ever heard of.
--
Albert wentfrom
.
·
possi,bly: being sente.~ced to
~arv: Albert (left), with Matt Goukas (atan~Jng) and BIii Walton
(sitting), In one
of
his many .. ; outfits~
·
•
.,
.
.
·
.
-
anywherefromfiveyearstolife
.
I know what you're thinking:
in prison for forcible sodomy,
'
t
l've always known that Albert
to now pos~ibly ~eing sen-
had a hairpiece!
,
His head looks
tenced
.
to a maximum of 12
like
.
a beaver crawled
,
up on it
months. in jail and an .over-
and never left!" (No disgusting
whelming $1,200 fine for as-
·,
puns inte.rided.) 1'his is a major
sault and battery. Albert also
breakthrough peo.ple. Obvi-
won the New York State Lot-
ously we all knew that he either
teryfor$89nullion,smokedCarl
had a hairpiece orhe had the
Lewis in the one hundred .most detached
.
hair-to ever sit
.
meter, and defeated Christo-
atop a human
:
head, but there
pherWalken in an intense game
was·never any proof .
.
of Russian roulette (in case
•
This,forme,.was tlie mosi en-
you didn't kno
_
w, that was
a
·
tertaining infonnation about the
refere.nce to the movie
_The
·
trial. But somehow certain
Deerhimter
which everyone
people felt that therewere other
with a VCR should see). Need-
things that occurred that day
less to say, Albert .was pretty
which were much more interest-
lucky ~o settle, especially after
ing. Let me see ifl can re-enact
the incredibly interesting tes-
the events of Albert's meeting
timony of a woman named
,
with Madsen in
-
I 994. Albert
Patricia Madsen.
asked Madsen to come to his
Madsen worked with Albert
room and help him with the prob-
on numerous occasions as the
lem he was having sending a fax.
VIP liason for Hyatt Hotels. On
But it turned out that Albert was
one beautiful day in
J
994 one
having a problem with some-
of the biggest questions of the
thing else. I can't tell anymore
Ameri
.
can sports fan was an-
of this story without throwing
swered once and for all. The
in little tidbits of
-
perversion, •
only
.
thing was that all those
because it's just so easy to do,
fans would never learn the true
so I am going to let Patricia
answer to their question until
Madsen tell the story. These
last Wednesday when Patricia
quotes are from CNN News
Madsen testified that MARV
Online. Madsen walked into
ALBERT HAS A HAIRPIECE!
Albert room and:
"I turned around and saw him
standing there. I saw him stand-
ing there in white panties and a
garter belt. He was exposed and
he was aroused," she said. Just
wait, it gets better. Albert ap-
proached her and began to rub·
up against her .
.
"He told me he was tense and
he needed some relief. Then he
bit the back of my neck and he
pushed me. He tried to push
my head down to his crotch
area. I went to grab his hair and
his hair lifted off. He immedi-
ately put his hands on his hair
and I ran out of the room," said
Madsen.
Before I address these state-
ments I want to make a few
things clear. First, it is not funny
that Albert
will
never work again
as a sportscaster, and although
I said he was lucky for the deal
he got, he was not exactly lucky
that this ordeal happened, nor
was his family. On the same to-
ken, Patricia Madsen's story is
not funny because of what hap-
pened to her. I'm sure it was a
terrible experience for her and I
completely sympathize with her.
She was a room with a sick man
that day and nothing will ~v~r
change that.
Thitt'being said, lwould like
tricity of yours? And what were
o retain· some of the comedy
·
you thinking of all those times
'rom
·
ttii's riasty situation by eX:-
you screamed out
~
'Facial" to
ilainingjustwhy this is funny.
the American public? Theie are
usLstiut'
your eyes for a.
sec~ questfons
which
.
will probably
ind and
pictufe
short;
\itt\e
•
never
be answered. But
there
:
,
.1arv-Albert standing next
to
·
Ure
three things
we
~.in
·
be
sure
.
·,
vlatt
;
Go~kas· on NBC every
· ·
or:' Marv has a hairpiece, Marv
<
;unday before the week's NBA
likes girls' clothes, and Marv
:af!le: hairpiece in plU:ce, thou~
'
needs a
neii
job. Maybe he'
II
and
.
dollar Armani suifon his
.
getlucky and
a
jeweler will hire
1ack, he looks
a
lot like a nor-
him
.
to sit around and bite gold
riai'p~rson>No~ picture little
•
1!11
day;
'to
make sure it's
'
real.
Jarv in the comer
as
ye>u walk
.
Otherwise, we'
JI
see you on
nto his hotel room with him in
"Spice» Marv, right beside John
·
..
__
_
vhite panties, a garter belt and,
Wayne Bobbit and Ponch from
1h,
·
an
erection. Marv, what
"Chips."
vere you thinking?
.
Did you
eally think that no one would
Til~ Manson is tl~e Opinion
.
ever find out about this eccen-
.
Editor for The Circle
What's the big hurry?
•
This is the scenario: there's
oneminute left of class. You're
•
ready to call it quits. The ten-
sion is building. You start to
feel pressured and wonder to
yourself if your professor is
going to end class on time to-
day. Then the last minute is
up, time to go right? All around
you people start packing up
their book bags. The sound of
.
zippers and velcro and the clos-
ing of books upstages the
voice of your professor who is
trying desperately to get a last
word in. Butyou'renotinany
hurry and have become dis-
tracted by your peers who have
undergone a strange transfor-
mation in the past minute and
realize that you have missed
you professor's final com-
ments about today's lecture on
"Romantic Theory." Today
this makes you especially per-
turbed because you have come
to realize a pattern in your
classmates' fidgety behavior at
the conclusion of each ses-
sion, not only of this class, but
in fact of all your classes.
So, what's the big hurry? Do
you have another class that
mee~s after this one? Do you
really? Is it that you MUST
get there at least five minutes
ahead of time so you can cram
for a
•
quiz you neglected to
study for? Or is an hour and
fifteen minutes
·
absolutely all
·
you can stand of this particu-
lar professor?
It seems to
··
me that some
Marist students can be rude
about interrupting professors
when the clock hits the 75th
miunte of class. There are stu-
dents who simply assume that
their instructor is clue-less as
to what tiine it is. Maybe they
see that the latter is not
equipped with a watch today,
so they feel the need to step in
and take on the role of the
hands. Well, guess what? Did
you ever stop and look up at
the clock hanging in 97 percent
of the classrooms on com pus?
Or have you considered the
fact that professors get tired
too and are usually ready to
leave at the same time you are
ready?
If
you haven't consid-
ered either one of these things,
then this article will hopefully
help you refonn your disrup-
tive behavior in the future.
Alisa Nuzum writes what size
wants for The Circle
8
THECiRCLE
Fea.t.uresc)cto~r2,1997
Two seniorsreceive'awards
for· outstanding int~mships
boe>k projects; I did promotions
sociates because l was being . ' '. : "I(has been
-
in
thfl~~(
t#,o:
in the departments. I looked at ··their.managementbefofograduat~ . yearithat fy{<:1flsthas_reallf par:-··
sale gains:"·
ingcollege." ·•.·
.·.
>, _ ·
ticipated, ,vitll JCiPe11riey_
Aliano said the work was hard
Fischer saidJhe. experience
heavHy,''. he.said: ''We. have_ti:ve.
attimes.
was similar to a pfogram.
,..
.
or ~ix Marist ~tuclc:mtsinteming ·
GYNASLOMCINSKY
Feature Editor
Two fashion majors received
$500 each for their efforts at their
summer internships.
Kendra Aliano, senior fashion
merchandise major, interned for
JC Penney for the summer.
Aliano said she was given
more responsibility than other
internships she has had in the
past.
"It wasn't like other intern-
ships,". she said. "First of all, I
was paid. I was not a gopher. I
was given a lot of responsibil-
ity. I was a part ofit all."
Along with Aliano, Lora
Fischer, also senior fashion mer-
chandise major, interned for JC
Penney in the Galleria Mal( for
the summer.
Fischer said she received~ lot
of experience during her intern.
"I had up to 40 hours a week,"
she said. "It was good experience."
There are 18 stores in the dis-
trict.
Aliano won first place in the
district for her efforts, while
Fischer received second place
for her efforts.
Milo Bunyi, manager of JC
Penney in Poughkeepsie, NY,
said the girls went through a
tense I 0-week period.
"It was a combination actual
on hands working 9n the floor
with sales people or ~ith c1.1~-
tamers," he said. "Plus complet-
ing a ten week, week by week
actual book project that relates
to retail."
Bunyi said there was a pro-
cess the judges of how to
choose the winners.
."What it comes down
to,
for
them to win, they scored the
highest in sales," he said. "They
scored the highest in the book
preparation, they scored high-
est in their projects."
Bunyi said the competition
is
intense.
"They competed against
about 25 interns within the dis-
trict."
Aliano said there were certain·
specific projects she had to do.
"For 20 hours, I would man-
age a department while being a
sales associate," she said. "The
projects in the book dealt more
with the other side
of
retail." -
Aliano said she learned how
to plan out sales and certain
events within the store.
·
"One of my projects was that
I had to find something that was
selling wen in the catalog, but
not in the· store," she said. "I
then had to take that item and
find out why it was not seUing
on the floor and try to change
that."
.
Fischer said she learned a iot.
_
"I was as~igne~ '~ µie~clmn.-
diser who showed me the ropes
for l
O
weeks," she .saicL "For
-
' : ' ! :
... ;,:.
;,.: ,
. •"It
was tough," she said.
"I
"The internship was more like
for,us t~is year.'-' .... · ... ·. · . ·.. . ..
learned the whole side of retail."
a training progrnm," she said.
Because }\}iano won fi,rst place ·
Aliano said it was hard to re-
"We did everything.''
.
_
in the district; hel' book
will
go
ceive the respect from some
·
Fischer said the college aid~d
on
.
to
t~e
:national compefition ..
fellow employees.
. her to finding the internship..
If
she wins, Aliano
·
~ill go' to .
"While I was working on the·
''I
found this intern~hip Chicago and win another $50_0.
floor
I
was taking control over
through the Career Center and
After that, ~he has the chance
sales associates that have
Fashion Department," she said.
of winning thetop prize.
If
this
been thete for over
IO years,"·
Bunyi said each year the num-
happens, Alfa~o will.go to Dal"'.
she said. "It was hard to gain
ber of Marist students intern::
las '(JCPenney's headquarters)
the respect of other sales as-
ingfor hirµ become larger.
and receive $1,000.
·
The Derby
provides,:a:
cllf~\f
~f
''.f1l¢Jtll0,lde~11}¢~~0~CP(?k
bifies
TOMNARDI
Food Dude
As the semester continues,
the desire for a good home-
cooked meal increases. The
thought of having continually
to eat in the cafeteria makes
many underclassmen cringe
with nausea .. - For upperclass-
men, the thrill of being able to
cook, has probably bean re-
placed with the dread of having
to_. actually cook and wash
dishes.
There is always the option of
ordering pizza, but pizza five
nights a weeks? While accept-
able.for a week or two, is really
noway to make it through a se-
mester.
One
·
of the only viable options
· left is to go out to eat But where?
Hop_efully this column will be
able to answer that question.
Over the next couple of weeks
I'll be reviewing various restau-
rants in the Poughkeep!iie area.
I wiU rate restaurants based, on
food quality, service, ambiance,
proximity to campus, and of
course price.
I wot1ld also love to hear from
you. If there is a place that you
eaten that you feel everyone
should know about, or if your
curious about a certain restau-
rant-write to me in care of The
Circle.
The Derby, formerly Trolley's,
is a restaurant that I have been
meaning to try since they
opened earlier this summer.
Lo-
cated at 96 Main Street, in
Poughkeepsie, it is extremely
convenient to get to. I was
pleasantly surprised to find that
the restaurant was much nicer
than when it was Trolley's.~·The
delidous<·The chili peppers _ dayfroml 1539 ~.tri.to 3:@p.m. · itient on Friday ·and 'Saturday •
non-smoking section 'Yas;Io- _ adde~ just the right amoµni of Dinned~$ervedfr()m4~oop:m.
·
nights.
If you goJ would defi-
cated away from the b~r;: which: : · spic(9ess/,lhighly recommend . - tq J0:00 pjn" Happyhollf isfrom-
nitel)' suggest-.taking . a cab, :
is nice for those 16okihffc5ra, . spj{uing:~h~pftheirmanysp~-'--· 4:00/6:00;Moridays.through since .. parking is limited and
j
quiet, more roman,ti_c dinner.
cialtypizzas as·an;appeti~fr
F.r,idays; Tliejejsliveentertain- (cramped. ·•
.
1
The brightly colored room, was . The desserts were.all home-. ;------·
__
··- ____
.
·.
_
---;,-_--------------------,
decorated with many watercolor· made. ~DesserisJncluded:
~tY. .
__ ·.
-s.,c
·
prints.
.
-
style cheesecake ($3.25),' Creapi ·•
· .
For my visit to The Derby I
brule ($3.25), and~anan.a:br~a~
'>fr§F'.RING
B~~((yi~fA1<f}ff
orga~iz~ group! Sell
15 ...
Take
went during lunchtime. I feel
pudding ($3.50).,_.T.4ec~~~4JoC,/
·
,2:F=r~e:
·
.1amai¢a;cancilr:i,BallarJ1as, Key.West, Daytona,
that it is better to go out to eat
go with my wajtr~ss recom.i:rie1j:-.
J
P.anama
GitY,.
!3~rl:l~~9s.
padre
8-:
More -~-Free Parties, Eats
&
forlunch. Lunch menus being
dation,
_
the.·. Strawbe_rrie_·_··;,
:
pnnks.f_ree infci
'
pa"cket.Sun Splash
1~800-426-7710
··.
I
· d h
d.
k
R
($3 75)- Th" d·.
-
·
. /wW'N:sunsplasht~urs'.com
ower- pnce . t an mner ma e
amanov
. _ .
> • _
1s .essert
•
excellent values for·college stu- · consisted of fresh sliced straw:.. •
..
dents.· The lunch menu was di-
berries marinated in brClwn ·
verse.
·
It included a couple. of sugar, orangejuice and Grand .
pasta dishes_ as well as many
Mamier (an onmge-flavoredli-
specialty sandwiches.
·
There
queur). The strawberries were
was a grilled Sahnon sandwich · then mix:ed with a whipped
cream
served with baccm, lettuce and
and sour cream.
. tomato, whicQ sounded tempting.
While the thought_ of straw- ·
Forthose who love pizza, buf berries and sour ·cream might
are looking for a little more vari-"
not sound appealing, they were
ety, The Derby offers ten differ-
excellent. The cream mixture,
ept types of brick~oven pizzas.
coupled with the citrus flavor-
Including one topped with
ing;helped to accent the taste
shrimp, spinach and pesto
of the.strawberries, withoutbe-
sauce.
ing overpoweringly sweet,
I started my meal off with a cup
My server, Babbette, was ex-
of Tomato Pannesan soup, with
tremely polite and friendly. She
roasted garlic. ($2.50) The
was· extremely knowledgeable
soup, served quickly and pip-
about the food. The food was
ing hot, was a thick tomato
all_ served promptly, which
bisque soup, with delicate hints
makes the Derby a good choice
of garlic and Parmesan cheese.
for those between classes or on
The soup was good, albeit for
a lurich break.
the portion size it was not the
I would also recommend The
best value. I probably should
Derby for those looking for a
have tried another soup, such
place to watch Monday night
as the French Onion.
football. They have an exteil-
For my main course, I ordered
sive beer list as well as a full bar.
the Santa Fe brick oven pizza
Appetizers, including: chicken
($6.75). This thin-crust pizza
tenders ($4.50), fried calamari ·
(approximately 9 - 10 inches in
($6.50), Buffalo wings ($4.95)
diameter) was topped with ched-
and one I definitely want to
try,
dar cheese, sliced chili peppers,
fried provolone ($4.50) are also
black beans, chunks of ripe avo-
available.
cado and plum tomatoes. It was
The Derby is serves lunch each
M
l\a1ot
. '"\HT~!
~TUO
NeOdshlrts
.
.
_ .with your orga,:iization,.
I
do_ rm;
te
__
am.
Qr_,club's-·log_
o
.
·scr.een-erinted
ori
them?
COMESEE:US!.
_
... 1'.a'filD
(1~□0
,-,.:~~IIIR'l!F~w:ffi,IT
1111!1(01,e·l>lodcc1 ......
~-;:;..~~&l\lrlll)
. . .
. 454-~25~-
.
Serving·The Marist
Community Since
1978
FAST; EASY DIRECTIONS FROM MARJST:
Take
Row
9
South
To Routes
4-4/55
EAST
(Die
Arterial)
~ e
Ori
The
Arletfal •
we ne
One
Bloc!(
Past
Raymond
Avenue. ·
THE
CIRCL~,
October 2, 1997
Student Profile
teve Coogan entertains, influences
thers with his humor· and frankness
CARISAKEANE
Staff
Writer
,
.
,·
.•
. . .
_ ,
'
'
.
,•
Fidg~ting in his chair,
· many ,people's Hves at Marist.
"lused to'weigh
230
lbs. when
"As a frieµd, I definitely think
I was 14 years· old," Coogan
I've made a positive impact," he
said. "Although I'm down to
said.
·
180
lbs. now,
I
still don't like my
John
i.
Williams, a senior.fi-
physical appearance."
nance major, also said Coogan · Originally from Newburyport,
has influenced many·people.
Mass., Coogan is often asked
"Steve Coogan is everything · why he did not choos~ a school
to everybody," Williams said.
in Boston. He said he needed
"He's a good guy,·a good resi-
to get away.
dent assistant, and most impor-
. «Ac~ually my fii:st choice• was
tantly, a good friend."
Emerson but
I would've been
Coogan. has been a resident
only
45 minutes from home/ he
assistant since sophomore year. · said.
''I
need to feel independent"
Last year he was a RA for
Coogan is also a member of
... I'ni
very outspok,en,"
Marian Hall. He currently re-
SGA (Student Government As-
.. Coogan ~aid. "And I think •sides in Gartland Commons.
. sociation).
·
Steve Coogan, ~junior ra-
.
dioffV/filin .• and political
science
.
major, frequently
scratched . his . freshly
shaven head. As he pon-
dered the . questions,
c·oogan .· popped . Teady
Grahamsinto
his
mouth .. ·
'Happya.Iou<:i' is aword he
created to describe himself.
9
it's really important to stay
"I thoughtbeing
an
RA would
· ''This is my first.year involved
positive."
·
be interesting," he said. "My
in school politics," he said. "I'm
This. optimistic guy· al-
freshman year RA, Todd Lang,
the chief finance officer."
Cin:le Photo/Michael Frisc
Steve Coogan. is a senior radioffV /film and political science majo
ways has a smile· on his
gave nie the extra edge when he
Christopher Jette, vice presi-
. ,fac;e~.
.· .. ·.
. .
·· .
recommended me for the job."
dent of club affairs for SGA, said
good father," he said. "But now
·.· ''I.hate being· negative,"
A lover of classic rock,
Coogan .contributes .in a posi-
I'm all for it."
· he
·-
said,
·
''I look at· every
Coogari's voic.e can be hear.ct on
tive way.
·
Coogan said he has a few bad
~½ttiJ@
.
n.,~s a· learning ex~ · Marist's radio waves Sunday
"Steve brings a humorous yet
habits.
·
,pe,!1,ence. , • · . . , '
nights from· 12 a.m. to 2 a.m.
serious work ethic to the asso-
,
"I can't control my voice-I'm
\i{(::9qgan.s
11
idthe students
''I like to call my show the
ciation," Jette said.
·
too loud at inappropriate times,"
·:h~tw.orked)vith during the
'more than one rock' show," he
Plans for his senior year in-
he said.· "But
I
did quit biting
d996
~reshrnen Orienfation
said.. ''I· play .blocks of The
elude an internship communica-
my nails cold turkey."
ttii!~~th,m(~_e's?zil;e.th~~irc_· Doors,
Floyd,
Hendrix,
tfons internship.
..
His biggest fear involves
rsoifhe/is:tod~y:\
·
0
,
A.erosmithandThe Who;''
"I
hope to intern i11 Disney
death.
sleeve,''he said. "I'm blunt
. and let it all out."
After graduation, Coogan
sees himself broadcasting in
New York City.
"I want to be famous,'' he
said. "I'm not sure how I'm
going to achieve my star-
dom but it'll definitely be in
a positive way." -
·
f{'..fui~x)tiJpa¢te~h~iiife ' Coogan ismosically inclined
World or the West Coast;pos-
'Tm afraid of dying a long,
)i~m~iidotislyiancl ,en~oui:-;
himself · .
sibly S~n Francisco," Coogan
painf~i death," Coogan• said.
If Coogan is not in the SGA
'.·ag~d'~e to ~o~e out of
1PY~ '
"'
,
"J,
pi_ayed th~' dfums
"
for
'i
'
said. '
.
'
.
'
'
"I've see.ri someone close to me
office or playing classic rock
§h~ll,-
_
h
.
es~
1
_d. )Theym~~~ while,"hesaid.-
·
. .
.
·
Hisfoture plans'also involve
suffer."
on
WMCR, he may be run-
me
who I am_no\\'.·l> .
r
.Although Coogan: is ,a posi-
a family,
This extrovert is not afraid to
ning around the football field
C()oga
11
said ~e believ~s · tive_person!there is one
,
thing . ...
''I
was apprehensive a.t first . speakhismind_.
as Marist's mascot, the Red
2
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AT&T
-
THE
CIRCLE
October 2, 1997
11
•
-
- ,
•
.
I
. Taking-a Closer Look at
..
.
.
Plus
News and Reviews
Marist·expedition gets flawless day to Summit Mount Washington
by.JIMI>~Z\'NSKI
A&E Editor
including one that blazed across
the whole sky. John Raggozine
said he counted
12. Though it
was near 30 degrees, many of
Mount Washington is the
us choose to spend the night
highest peak of the Presidential
outside under the stars.
· Range at 6,288 feetand lies in .
I had been asleep a mere three
the wild and, remote \Vhite
hours when the morning sun
Mountain• National Forest in
woke me. Judging from the lack
Northern New Hampshire. Al-
of clouds in the sky, it seemed
though not
a
high peak by seri-
as though we were going to
ous·mountaineering standards,
have a flawless day to reach the
MountWashington has .. the dis:
summit. We gathered our gear,
tinc_t .h6nor of _having the
had breakfast, roused the
'
World's Worst We.ather.
troops, and set off for the trails.
Wea~herpattems are extreme
All told, our group reached the
arid_ dangerous; a fla"'.less day_
summit four different ways: The
cai;i tum-into·aviolen(stormin ·
AutoRoad, The.Lion's Head
a fe": short minutes .. The high-
Trail, Huntington Ravine to
es·t ·wind ever recorded· on
Auto Road, and Huntington Ra-
·ptanet_ Earth. was measured at
vine to Alpine Garden to sum-
the weather station on the sum-
mit
mitonAprii'l2,
193~231 MPH. .
. I can see how one can find the
Average winds on the peak are
Auto Road more unnerving than
_aroµj1dA5_mphwhiletheriiean
-========= --=====,......;;~=-_;..._,;;;.;;,...; _________ ..;.... ___ __,
the.actual hike. At times the
J~mife.i~tµ,{e
is 27degrees.
..
.
_
.
. . _
_
.
.
•.
. . .._· _
Photo courtesy of Jim Dziezynski
road drops off hundreds of feet
;t.£arlie'r:;ihis'yeai
I had
the ex-
Standing from left to rig~ Bridget Lanigan, Kim Felri111an, Kate:Bowdrin, Alex Rucko, Dave
down the side of the mountain,
. ~tre'ffiti<X>d-:Corttine
to blimb up
Etzold, Tom Clapper._ Sitting from left to ri~ht, Jen Anto~elH, Robin Arnold, Paul Lenhart, John
and yes, it is two way traffic.
·;i?'l[~~§'Hffimt9&~'TT~#Iy_.i:Iear
- _
Raggozzlne, Jim Dzlezyns~, and Andy Orefice stand atop the summit of Mount_ Washington.
Still, Andy took his regiment,
;~~Y.{M.r}~s9figJr:ip.~~(~5lf~1;-.:.saturgay, Sept
27.
_Ifon time, I
I'm not sure if they have thei:n~ . going on!".
which included Jen Antonelli,
@;5!Jof§¢plg~f:t\!;~ilg;fort,\V<,\ ': .would reach Pinkham Notch (
security there (elves wi'thflish-
We also passed them a third
Robin Arno Id, and Kate.
tP~)t1ft?~Y-~~W:~}}~'iJ9J;;p~{J!i~::.
:,the Jodg~
a:i
t!te b_ase of Wash-
lights?folly fat men with uzis7) . time
as
they tried to signal us to
Bowdrin up the winding road.
rf
<?,~~~~A
$iP-J~-1{o~_clear
~~e~ _sq._ ing!or)"_ around
2
a.~: Waiting
QUt. it wasn't my pro_bl~m
!
1 · ·
pull o·yer. ~o explore ac9m field
Those of us on foot would meet
·f!l.Y)i9pes·_,y~re high for a good-- for-me were twocarloadsofhik:. don't go within a hundred feet
but
I couldn't'quite make them. 'them at the top when we got
/..~!iiiiJf_:~;~:- -_.\:' .•
. ..
.
.
~
. ':·
ers~idriveri by -Marist· students? ~of that place!My ride
up
wasn'(' ·'out in;'the darkiYess.
·pfo~
tffey.~
there::Eight of us were to climb
Tiie'OffiptaI Marist Expediti~~-.
~
·Andy
Orefici{afid
Dave Etzoid:·· _, spooky.·but I did 'get to_;-l:1.ave •
.. · look¢d _ nut~LWe
•·
arrived one· the __ :ID"9UT1tain via Qne of the
to M~~%~tsh~ngton_fe_a.tu~~d:; ::Taking'sweepon.~riv!ng_duti_es . :some wonderfuf philos~phical .. behi~\f tfi~'oi~~t;~t_.Pin~h_am. -11}~!1-Y:~ath_s to the top. _ _ .
11 chJ:l!~~~~ ~o/-9~-9a~ 11_9ve_r~ee~·,_"\wa§ jµ_njo_rl~~!
J ..
~llh~. ,/:;'.:; ,· ~:c_!:m".,\?_f~~~i~rj~; '!Viti).
my,
~.~~lot ..• •
1"1<;:>tcn~aro~ll?
t~rJ~
1!'~
:tii~rti~\ '.
5
i.~!l!f
,/t°.m!
B
ri<!g~t_; ll.nd
Kim '.
an
1?te.11se,-.h1ke. 'Yas ~~1J~tt!lg{?(hike ,itse.IL The first group-left
Paul-Lenhart left Marist Cot::>· than-~IZ'<iicfllfat nigl).t: :The sky
route.·_·I climbed Lion's Head in
On •tg<l.~~H,~~y, ~OTl~-- doe.s
llC?~<\fyf
~Ii~t ar9~n4 n?p11/·AJ1dy and . leg~
a
~alf hqut afte~
IJ_!,~·•.
~pi_c,~;f ~as.Ji2tn1t{~yt!ry'_"star
!ft
t_h
0
~ , :
_Aug:~st
and can say th_at i
~
is
re~lly .nl?ed••. a~u1ge,but:_~f the -c'_,Dave,traveled,-in.tandem-•·and
was -strange becaQseJ;~~w,htm2/ sky,w~s:1Hum.1.nated 1n_the. dome.;; one._of the more._ challengrng
i:Y:e~~~ris_ bad_('N.hi5p_it._is
,8_5;_)
.foC>k
tl!e tiitle·to'not•only'pick . ge~_-_pu!Ied. o.v~r·}f~};{~ijf~-
~9f ..
if
f\iHifot::-i;!)e Milky_"'\\fay:·:: •. tnills. ~teep scrambl~s
?n!l
~B~[ffI1\gf..t.~~ timeD
~1\f~P.~t:ic:_:
~
up_ aJilt,hy {but handsome?!) . tw1ce!-once
m
V,er1:1_19T1t;_~na.:: 'sh9nca IJ~~:~:~h!te phosphoroys / abrupt chffs make the trail d1ffi-
~.~.S~9-*.u!ds f13nbf a yfe S~Y~IIg
>'
hitfhhikernamed Gabe but also '.¢nee in NewHampshir~;T:~iic:I,{.:· · bmid;·ac::_r<>ss:that.spanned the
cult_ though very scenic.
From
}i!1${;{-:°;{f:;Uf\}f ,·.-;
'
;.
rh~ ..
-
:
to
c:h¢ckout- the slides in the ,ily neither indde_nt resu!tifip
a. .
sky. fr,qif.horizon to horizo11.
what they reported, the trail was
:tI})~,~-PA!"-r~1ll:()"OI9e~ ho"'.\i.~_~giant\VonderJ_aridthatisSanta's
ticket. -Tom Clapper :sa(cUli_e_y
Event~otigh \\'.e sorely needed
in excellent shape. Alex climbed
.e.y~I)fle~~-h;;icl
3:
Vlo_Ithy.crew.
·.
J~a n4;:ipJace. iihicfrpe_rsonaliy
_were able to talk their
way
_o~L ___ sleep, Tom, Pau
I,
Bridget
it with such vigor he earned the
Y:f.~~r.hQ.~rtnl~'f.Srparat~
Yt. :
scaref mh·to deat~:}h_e''·plac~
?!
a:
ticket by c:hanging th,:~$-~bi,'._,L_anigan,:_Kim r,einman_, and my-
n!c~name "Spiderman" from his
JJ~fJ~$:~t!!Jft'er~nt trmes because
.was closed, so ,when they· 3ect; "We told the cops we Just-·· self took the time to he on our
h1kmg mates.·
of schedule conflicts. My. van
romped in the playground they _
wanted to see a moose-I think
backs in the parking lot and gaze
lert Marist around 6:30 p.m. on
set off the "Kris Kringle Alarm".
that made them forget what was~_· up at the stars. I counted six,;:,
P!ease.,see TRIP,page 14
·Jenny McCarthy'has:yetto prove that ·she deserves her own sitcom
byCARLITO
Staff Writer
I'm a guy, so naturally the tes-
_tosterone pumping through my
veins has an influence on all
sensory input. But w{len I say
thai Jenny McCarthy has no
. . business in front of a
TV
cam- ·
era unless she's naked, the rea-
son is her lack of talent and not
my raging honno~es.
Junior Monica Barratia grudg-
ingly sat through the prime time
debut of "Jenny" Sunday night
and said that, ''There is no way
that show should be on NBC
during prime time."
I'd like to take that a step fur-
ther by saying she has no busi-
ness on anfchannel at any time.
Actually/9isregard that last
statement. UPN 9 could use a
powerhouse likeJ~nny to fill the
slot between the Wayans Broth-
ers and Homeboys in Outer
Space.
Jenny McCarthy made her
clothed debut as the obnoxious
co-host on MTV's "Singled
Out." After a two-year stint on
"Singled Out'\ somehow ;h;
got· "The Jenny McCar_thy
Show" to air on MTV in
1996.
This program made the _
most
feeble attempt ~t s~etch comedy
that I've ever witnessed. , But
then again MTV doesn't have
an impeccable reput_ati_og for
delivering quality humor. I'd like
to enter for the record exhibit A-
"Joe's Apartment." Yeah; the
movie with the cockroaches ..
After two. months and too
many disgraceful skits to even
want to count, "The Jenny
McCarthy Show" was removed
from the Sunday night line-up
and later replaced with the
"Dennis Rodman World Tour.:'
Don't even try to rationalize
MTV's decision here, the human
mind just isn't capable.
Apparently her brief display
on MTV caught the eye of some-
one at NBC that thought Jenny
McCarthy was prime time mate-
. rial. I think that certain some-
one got slipped a "rufy'' when
he authorized the green light to
air the Jenny pilot. (For the
chemically ignorant, "rufy" is a
street name for rohipnol, other-
.
wise -known as the- "date rape
drug")
That is the only logical expla-
nation I can fathom because if
it
· were not for the motivation to
write this piece, I would. have
turned off the television after
three miriutes .. -
It would not have taken that
long, but the opening scene
only featured two cute little
school girls and I thought I
would give Jenny a chance.
Well, I did, but I still found the
program to be thoroughly nau-
seating. Jenny is not totally to
blame however.
Though I am sure the writers
· for the show have mastered ba-
sic skills like reading and toilet
training, they do not harness
the ability to write a script that
is· even remotely humorous.
Sitcoms are designed to make a
person laugh, but I grew more
and more agitated as the show
progressed. The dialogue was
thin and every predictable joke
was milked until the cows bled
from the utters.·
.. ..
even the slightest chuckle. Or
One scene featured J~n_ny -. at least show me something to
wajting for a lawyer to read her,_ contrast my belief that a pretty
her father's will. She is sud-
face is all that it takes to get
denly overcome with an ear-· · ahead in the world of television.
wrenching case of the hiccups
O.K. her body's not bad either.
and although she can be pho-
Being a radioffV/film major, I
tographed while having a bowel
aspire to write, direct and
movement,
(I
am referring to the
maybe even act in my own show .
Candi Shoes ad that so eroti-
But do I have get breast implants
cally captured her on the bowl),
and then get naked to accom-
she cannot rid herselfof the hic-
plish that goal? Granted "Play-
cups.
boy" probably would not be in-
So, her annoying and equally
moronic friend gets her in some
sort of a full nelson/sleeper hold
hybrid in an attempt to cure her,
and wouldn't you know it, in
walks the lawyer to catch them
in their goofy antics. Golly gee,
I did not see that coming. Per-
haps a society of Lisa Kudrow's
might have actually found this
amusing, but it made me gag.
Throughout this ordeal, I tried
hard to keep my dinner secured
in my belly and my eyes glued
to the screen in hope of seeing
something that might evoke
terested in me anyway, but will
my big nose, scrawny face and
crackhead physique drown my
career before it gets a chance to
swim?
In her three years on MTV,
Jenny McCarthy has proved to
the world that she is more than
just a sex symbol. She has
provedthatsheisloud,annoy-
ing, disgusting and unfeminine.
But she is yet to prove that she
is worthy of her own prime time
sitcom. But then again, if
"Homeboys in Outer Space"
has what it takes ..
.!
could be
wrong.
I-
....
/
0.
12
Ne·w
.
Ten
Yard. Fig
-
ht
Cq·
cdmhiri_~
·
:s
positive IDt?SSage
with
hardco~e
souiid
-
'IsTelevisionBecomingReality?
·
.
•
:
··
,.
✓
•
,
.r:
'
·
.
.
:
bySIBPHENMER~
·
Staff Writer
_
to shop in the television.
Many want to learn
·
abq~qh~
·
·
news
.
in
:
the television rather
.
CDReview.
Ten Yard Fight
"Back onTrack"
Equal Vision Record~
by PATRICK
WHITILE
Staff Writer
Ten Yard Fight is a straight-
edge hardcore band from Bos-
ton. They owe their name to the
Nintendo video game of the
same name, but do not let that
mislead you. There is nothing
trite about this band once you
get past their narrie.
In the past, the band incorpo-
rated football imagery irito their
songs, which resulted in their
being labeled jocks by ·some.
No longer do they write
s
ongs
entitled "Line of S
c
rimmage",
but the new CD "Back on
Track" (Equal Vision Records)
hits as hard as a Marist line-
backer.
The band's message is clear
,
if
.
not derivative at times--drugs
and alcohol won't save you.
They follow up on this by at-
tacking companies who market
· to the youth. The
·
band does
not provide concrete examples
to
back this ut,, bufthe einotiori
in singer Arithony
/
Moreschi's
voice is convincing enough.·
Ten Yard Fight pl
a
y what
is
called "Spi
r
it of
'
88" style
hardcore, takirig influences
from bands like Youth ofToday.
This sound i
s
played by a lot of
hardcore
bands
today
(Floorpunch, Fastbreak), but
what keeps Ten Yard Fight origi-
nal is their emotion. It would
7
I
I
I
!
Ten
-
Yard Fight rocks to their latest CD "Back
on
Track."
While walking
my
dog
-
one
·
than reading
.
it, and many even
·
night during the summer this
want
·
to find out about their
:
year, something just hit me.
.
COmlJlunity in
'
the tdevisior
:
No, not a baseball or a Frisbee,
Rather than getting
'
involved
but an idea hit me. Whatcame
in thei
_
r neighborhood, sorrie
to me
.
was that my dog; Cody
people would rather hear about
and Lwerethe only ones:out-
-
it from a veryunnatuml look-
side,
It
was not that it was late
-
irig and somewhat robotic-like
·
or
-
.that it was cold because it
.
anchorperson.
was
,
about
8:00 p.m. and it was
.
Some businesses are even
reaUy nice
OUL
trying to makeTV's that
ate
to-
. -
The reason why no person
tally interactive "into homes
,
or
.
d9g was in sight was be-
While watching the game on
cause mostly every person on
television, -the
·
loyal fan does
.
the street where
I
was at the
:
not even need to .go to the
time, wasrightipfrontofiTV'.
phoneanymore to order a
It is not thaffwas peeping into
pizza. He o_r she can just or~er
people's homes, ~ut it was not
iton the TV during the com-:
·
diffic1,1luo spot out the very
.
mercial and not even have to
fainilfar images and colors
_
that
move at all.
come from televisions.
.
.
Now,
I am not blaming any~
.
It's
:
notthatrtiridTVevilor
one and
I
am also
_
notsaying
:
that I.do not ever watch it;but
..
that every single
.
person in
(just
.
dislike
:
the iciea
'
that a
.
America is obsessed with TV
,
large number of people \1/ho
All I am saying is that we
watch television are living the
should start thinking about
.
lives of
Jerry
Seinfeld and Tim
what the television is doing to
Allen rather than their own.
us:
In
a world where people
· ·
When people focus tiJeir
are
.
becoming more and .inore
:
lives on .television
·
when
.
they
distant from each oth°er, some-'
•
are outside of either work or
-
thing needs to be done.,
,:
,
·
:
·
i
.
·
·
school,
-
something
_
is wrorig.
We caririot keep on allowing
.
have been easy to write a paint-
vious effort, 199S's "Hardcore
w
·
h
-
.
1 d
.
·
·
h
thi·s m
·
a
·
c
·
ht"ne
.
to
·.
·
•
teliu
·
s
·
•
how
.
,
to
;,
by~the-numbers CD with
:
no real
Pride" (Big Wheel Rec:'reation.)
at is a so epressmg is t at
message .
.
I
_
nstead, Ten Ya
_
rd
_
-
Te
_
nYard F
_
ight's accelerat
_
ion
if you do try
_
to
actually_ do
look like and
,
-ivhat
,
to
'
act;Iike
r
something physicallike work
anci
whafto bu'y. That is why
,
.Fightcaniestheirmessagewith
tcitheforefrontofhardcor~may
.
·
·
·
h
-
-
-11
·
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bbl b-
·
mo
_
derati
·
o
·
n
-
ha
·
stobestartbe
-;
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pride
·
without merely waving a
have been hindered in the past
}l)g
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a
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aTVrighttherewaitingforyou
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Expeditionto Mount Washington
proves challenging and rewarding
'
Bridget, Kim, John, Tom'a.nd
myself made the long trek back
to the parking lot as afternoon
fused into twilight.
.
-
-
·
Tfie
Ci,rcleis goingio be starting an advi,s~
:
·
colu
·
mn'. If
you
have
.
a
problem
oF
:
cbn~
cerri,sendan e-mailto The
-
Circle entitled
·
co11ti1111ed from page
I I
Paul; Da~e; John, and myself
opted to take the h
a
rdest. and
most challenging fOute up the
mountain, known as the Hun~
tington Ravine Trail. Hunting-
ton is about a mile longer than
the other trails and requires ex-
treme caution and courage.
_
Though no ropes are neces-
sary
,
ther~ are some very steep
spots where one must rock climb
on cliffs over six hundred feet
straight down. The path pushes
the limit of non-technical climb-
ing; in the past authorities.con-
sidered making it a trail exctu~
sively for rock climbers with
equipment. Dozens of hikers
(arid ice climbers) have died
from falls on this trail. The trail
is difficult but very rewarding.
I broke off from the group at a
spot called "The Pinnacle"
where a smooth, nearly hold-
less rock initiates the area of
hard climbing. Since
I
had a little
more experience,
I
waited until
further on the path to refuel.
It
was the last
I
saw of them until
I
reached the summit. After a se-
ries of tricky scrambles
,
I made
it to the top of Huntington
_
Ra-
vine, some 5,000 feet in eleva-
tion. Though the most direct
route to the
s
ummit was to meet
up with the Auto Road,
l
de-
cided to cross a vast plain that .
connected Huntington and
Tuckerman's ravine (a path on
the other side of Washington)
known asthe Alpine Garden.
.
The experience
·
was very Zen;
I
was the only
.
person in sight
-
on a rare, flawless day. Hazy
mount~ins looked l1keday in
the distance.
-
The land spread
out infinitely
;
on the horizon
I
could
·
see the
.
tops of clouds.
The wi
_
nd blew ~oftly and the
sun shone brightly. The walk
from Huntington to Lion's Head
is a highly suggested path to
check out if you ever go.
·
I
got to the summit less than
five minutes after the Lion's
Head group. The Huntington
Group got there about ten min-
utes after me. There to greet us
was
·
Andy and his car
full
of
friends; The day was truly a
blessing; clarity as far as
-
the eye
could see, warm weather
(around
55 degrees) and all
twelve of us made it to the top. ·
After a nice meal and some
celebratory pictures, we headed
back. Six drove back down with
Andy while six ofus descended
via Tuckennan's Ravine.' Alex,
We laughed
,
scre!1nied, sang
.
songs, and spc;ike of gre~t
·
things as
.
we made our way
down. We passed the headwall
ofTuckerman's Ravine'swater-
fall,
where less
:
thaw24_hours
earlier a young man had fallen
to his death; it was a very so-
bering experience. On the rocks
where the water slid down, a pair
of n1etai walking sticks lay at dif-
ferent levels
.
. John and
I
had a
moment of silence.
It is impor-
tant to
re
.
member
how
grave the
consequences of one wrong
step can be.
We
got
back to the parking lot
before nightfall. We were all
tired but
:
satisfied
,
except Tom
since he never did get to see a
moose
.
Thanks to
.
everyone
who came
with
me: Alex Rucko
,
Bridget Lanigan, Andy Orefice,
Kate Bowdrin, Tom Oapper,
Kim
Feinman, Robin Arnold, Jen
Antonelli, John Raggozzine,
Paul Lenhart, and Dave Etzold;
you guys did great! Extra thanks
to Kim and Bridget
for
buying
me
food
to keep me alive.
Next Week: Mount Mansfield,
the Highest Point in Vennont.
"Advice
..
Column';
_
at HZAL or sine( it
,
.
throtigli campus
mail
in
'
a
·
sealed
,
envelope
.
_
addressed to The Circle
.
Please do not .
.
'
:
tjse
"
Ydur na~~' but
-
~
··
c1ever pseudonym.
-
The Circle 'reserves the right' to decide
which responses will be replied
to
and
printed.
&
Go
_
Free!!! Student T~av~I Services
is.now
hiring
campus-
reps.
Lowest r~tes to
Jamaica,
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·
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&
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Call 800-648-4849.
SPRING BREAK 98'
Larg~
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Spring Break Destinati~
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Cruises!
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Toan
1-300-231~
r
I
I
I
i
i
I
I
I
\
;
i
THE CIRCLE, October 2, .1997
13
.
.
CirclereyiewercloSe§the
"B'i"g Budget
Movie Disaster
Summer
1997"
file
b
JOHNSULiIVAN: .
dieci'do\yn,'youcan watch·his·: ,usednot C>,nce, but twice. 'trol."-a film titled "Psycho
Idonotknowwhylwenttosee
·
Y .·- ·. · · . • · .
·
interpretationoftheDru:kKµight
"Batmari arid Robin" was a
Sushi.'': The movie was long,
it though.
SlaffV(me,: ·
and realize that Kilmer's Batman
bomb in· theaters mainly be-
boring and the only thing worth
"Picture Perfect" was like a re-
S~mineris athriewher~ matiy. isthemostnuaricedoneoutof causeofrottenword-of-mouth
any note was Sandy's toned,
ally bad episode of NBC's
major movie studios roll out their -· all three.
and reviews such as
·
these. ,
tanned stomach. Patric was
"Must See TV.'' My girlfriend
big budget blockbusters. It is a
Anyway, "Batman and Robin"
' It was
a
bad summer for se-
deadly. He delivered every line
and I went to see it. Here's a
time of competition for most
was/not only the worst Batman
quels.
I
had been looking for-
as ifhe was saying to himself
little tip: don't go to any movie
companies and a time of guilty
movieevermade,btitmaybeone
ward to the ~•speed" sequel for· "Yeah, .this sucks, but at least
with Jennifer Aniston in sheer
pleasure inducing entertainment
ofthew9rsi movies of all time.
a few years. I thought "Speed"
I'm in show biz.''
.
.
dresses with your girlfriend.
for the audiences. Past summers
George Clooney is a decent ac-
was a well-written, thrilling ac-
The movie never. picked up
You 're just asking for trouble.
have given us such landmark
tor. He can charm his way out
tion movie staring actors who
pace. The first ''Speed' was
"Cop Land" was not bad, but
such · as · "Terminator 2,"
of any poorly structured melo-
were not really known for their
good because of the tension
the fact that they had so many
"Batman," ''Who Framed Roger
drama any day. So I am not
action credentials. It was easily
betw_een Reeves and Bullock.
well-respected actors in it, dis-
R~bbit?," and three different in- . blaming.ciooneyfor this flac-
Keanu Reeves' best role and
They did not know each other,. tracted from the actual plot. I
stallments.of''Die Hard." This
cid entry into the series.
turned me onto Sandra . but they feef in love over the
kept on staring at DeNiro and
past summer, I saw EVERY single
·Iain blaming Chris O'Donnell
Bullock's cutie~pie repressed
course of the action; In "Speed
looking at fat Sly that I never
movie that carµe out. Yes, even
for apparently ignoring any act-
sexuality. If you do not b.elieve
2, Patrick is Bullock's boyfriend,
really caught on with the movie.
"Kull The Conqueror.'' To say
ing advice givento him over the . me, check out my dorm devoted;
so there is no sexual tension
It needed a subtle cast.
the least though, this past sum--
course of his five-year-long ca-
to the shrine of Sandra.
whatsoever.
A few films tickled my fancy
mer was one $100 million dollar
reer. I am blaming Alicia
When !first read that "Speed
"Speed 2" sunk at the box of-
though. "Con Air" was dumb
budget disappointment- after
Silverstone for her lazy, unnec-
2" was coming out in the sum-
flee mainly because its budget
fun with Nicholas Cage. "Face/
another. There were a few bright
essary, and annoying role as
mer of 1997, I couid barely con-
was higher than the original
Off' was smart fun with Nicolas
:spots, and I will getto those,
Batgirl. And I am blaming
trol myself. My mind raced with
movie's big gross. I want to
Cage. "Event Horizon" gave me
but let's face it. It is fun to cut
Arnold Schwarzenegger for be-
all kinds of ideas of what the
know. who· green lights these
nightmares for weeks. "The
onthereallycrappymoviesfirst.
ing Arnold Scwarzenegger plot might be. An ambulance?
obscene budgets: Each one al-
Lost World" is the only $230
I have been a Batman
fan
when he should be playing Mr.
A helicopter? Another bus?
most guarantees the lack of million dollar grossing movie
s.ince I saw the first one a good
Freeze.
Two buses? A trolley. Well, a
profit for the movie.
that no one has anything nice
eight years ago. I love Batman.
We don't want to see The Ter-
few weeks later, I read that the
Trust me, there were other bad
to say about. I liked it. It was
Where else can you get the
minator. We want i:o see the
sequel to .. Speed" will take place
movies· but I just do not have
kind of thrilling. Does anybody
gritty realism of film noir com-
newest Batman villain. Arnold
on a .. ( drum
rnll) ..
Cruise ship.
the space to assail them here.
remember that there were AC-
bined with a square jawed hero
does not understand that. His
Cruise ship?! How in the world
Here's a cautionary list, though.
TORS in it, though? "Kull The
dressed·outin black rubber·and
one liners fell flatter than ama-
can a cruise ship be considered
"Air Force One" bored me. A
Conqueror" is another one of
tricked out with all kinds of gad-
teur night on "Full House.''
speedy.
It
can't.
lot of people like this, so I am
those movies that you should
gets?
What the Batman series needs
Keanu Reeves dropped out of probably going to get a few
not take a girl to see. That was
The-attraction with Batman
is not MORE humor, but LESS
production right away. He was
nasty letters about it. The fact
a fun movie though.
It
was in-
_ with me cam from the revolving
humor. Let's see a tortured,
replaced with The Mannequin
is that the ~arrison Ford Die
credibly stupid and poorly
door of actors playing the role.
complex Batman, not the smirk- ,_ Who Can Act, Jason Patric. I
Hard-in-a-plane is nothing new
acted, but for some reason I was
I was always a cheerleader'for
ing · cartoon character that 'thought, 'Well, okay, if they get
to me. "Conspiracy Theory"
entertained by its sword and
MichaeLKeaton'.s,two efforts,
Clooney creates.
the same screenwriter and
was just plain annoying. I
sorcery foolishness.
but-the variety of actors that fol~
Also, Akive Goldsmith's script
Patrick is a little more animated
wanted to slap Mel. That film
I know summer has past and
\owet:I:afterward kept me inter-
sounded like it was written dur-
than usual, i.t can still be good.'
was the worst overacting of his
you' re in no danger of seeing
ested as welL My advice is to
ing snack break in a pre-school
It was not. It was horrible. The
career
and
the.
most
any of these movies in the the-
6heck out ·"Batman Forever"
class: Myjaw· dropped wh_en
screenwriter, Jeff Nathanson,
UNDERacting ofJulia Roberts'
ater, but keep this review in
and watch Val Kilrrier's Bruce
an insipid one liner playing on
had only written one treatment
ste_liar resume. ':My Best
mind when the real stinkers
Wayne. Now that thehypefo~s
the term "hanging out" was
before "Speed 2: Cruise Con-
Friend's Wedding" was ... okay.
come out on video. Avoid them.
~
.
.
-
SGA SPOTLIGHT
::fyf~jor~
-Aico_unting
Howetown: Bridgeport, Ct.
.
.
Fav9rite Band: ~Dave Matthews
Role Model: her grandmother
that candidates often· fear dis-
As the SGA Elections Com-
qualification," she said.
issioner, Weber is responsible
Weber's fondest SGA
or mnnino both the fall and
memory to date was her first
pring elections. As a first year · summer session. The summer
GA member, she isn't unfamil-
session is a time when all the
ar with 'the responsibilities of SGA members get together for
tudent oovernment.
In
fact,
four days to discuss the work-
ast year ~he was the RSC presi-
ings of the orgai:iization. "I
ent of Leo Hall.
didn't really ·know anyone at
Weber brinos to her position
first, but at the end we were all
numberoflofty goals this year,
just so close. I just had a blast,"
mong them the desire to refonn
said W:ber of the experience.
lection guidelines and to
Hopmg t? make the best ~ut
engthellcampaign time for can-
of her e~~nence h~re at Manst,
idates. "I want to make SGA a
Weber 1s mvolved m a number
etter known club on campus.
of other clubs in addition to
ight now. there are so many
SGA. Among them are the
estrictions in running for office
dance club, The South End So-
SGANEWS
Circle Photo/Mike Frisch
ciety and both intramural vol-
leyball and softball. "I want to
do everything that I possibly
can and meet everyone that I
possibly can," she said of here
desire to be so involved in cam-
pus activities.
Her future plans aren't in
· politics but in the world of ac-
counting where she someday
plans to earn her CPA and work
in one of the "big six firms".
Hoping to make the best of her
next three years here, this aspir-
ing sophomore cites the sense
of togetherness amongst stu-
dents here at Marist as her
fa-
vorite aspect of college life.
Dear Marist Corrununity,
The Marist campus has
been the victim of three
rob-
beries
in
the
last
three weeks,
all three of them occurred on
the North End. The culmi-
nation of these crimes oc-
curred
in
my _ own
townhouse, A2, early Sat-
urday morning.
After experiencing all of
the feelings that come with
being the victim of a crime, I
· am writing to you today, not
as
your Student Body Presi-
dent, but
as
a concerned stu-
dent. We, as your Student
Government leaders are go-
ing to meet with Joe Leary,
the director of safety and
security, and work closely
with them to ensure the
safety of every student on
this
campus.
Until
I
can address you
again with the progress of
those meetings,
I
urge every
single one of you, regardless
of where you live on cam-
pus, to LOCK YOUR
DOORS!
We have to protect our-
selves, and look out for one
and other as a residential
community.
Residents on the Nort
Ena, be sure to lock the slid
ing doors in the
OJ
Townhouses as well, be
cause these people will fin
any way to get inside. Th
titrte for saying "It won't ha
pen to me" is over.
I
said that for three years
and guess what,
i
happenened to me on Sat
urday. It is time for th
Marist student body to re
alize that the city o
Poughkeepsie is gettin
worse, and our campus ha
become their new target
Devise a system with you
roomate, housemates,
o
suitemates on a time whe
you will lock the door.
If
any of you hav
any concerns dealing wit
this matter; please call m
at x 2206. I wish all of yo
the best of luck as we ap
proach mid-tenns.
Sincerely yours,
Frank
J.
Maduri
Student Body President
.1-
1
.
_
,
(
t
,r.;
-
~
,--
f!
}
t
!
'
·
\
14
.
THE C,iRC~E,_Qctober2,J997
.
.
.
Steve on Sports ........ _ ..............
.
.
Hoop Dr~am~ Can Com.e True
I remember it as if it was last
and
-
Saturday nights in
"We're hoping to provide
year.
Poughkeepsie.
·
more o't>por{unhies for the av-
Wait. It was last year. On a
Bowling.
erage
·
Mariststudent," he said.
Friday night...
No, rm kidding .
.
Of course,
Wow. Where was this guy
My friends and I, being the
we
all know what 90%
.
ofMarist
when I was so pi~sed off last
upstanding individuals that we
students· do with their week-
spring?
are, had decided to forgo your ends. J'il plead the fifth.
_
McCormick went on to stress
typical Marist College weekend·
It always seemed odd to me
that the
_
new addition to McCann
pastime in order to spend our
that, at a school that doesn't
is intended
-
to increase the ac-
time doing something a little·
.
even sell gum in ~e bookstore,
cess to athletic facilities for the
more constructive- pickup
a popular (and healthy) alterna-
entire student population
.
basketball.
tive to drinking was prevented
There will be six new basket-
You see, I never miss an op-
after 9:00 on Fri~ay nights.
ball hoops in the new wing (one
portunity to publicly demon-
The most popular answt!r °full-sizecourt,withtwosmaller
strate the legend that is my
-
given by Mccann personnel in
.
side courts) along with a state
three-point shooting. When-
explanation of this peculiar
of the art physical fitness cen-
ever a challenge is issued,
I
grab
policy was, "Well, people don't
ter.
_
.
.
my Nikes and my beloved bas-
come down on weekends."
these sections ofMcCann wiJl
ketball (which, by the way, has
Yeah.
-
Instead, they drown
share the same new weekend
only touched asphalt once in its
.
themselves
in
alcohol.
That's
a
hours that now apply to the ex-
life- it can only be used
inside,
good way
-
co contribute
fo
the
isting areas of the recreation
on sanctioned parquet) and
overall physical fitness of the
center.
_
head down to McCann to prove
student body, huh?
Once the addition opens laier
that no one can outshoot me-
So, I decided that the first col-
this month~ knock on wood-
the second coming of Larry
umn
I
would write when I be-
20,000 square feet and three
Bird- from way downtown.
came sports editor this
fall
hours of availability will have
And sometimes
I'll
actually hit
would attack the administration
been added to the Mccann
a few shots.
and the McCarin Center. staff for
Center's arsenal.
But that's not important.
the
seemingly
irrational ~ecision
-
This should make it possible
What is important
is
that hus-
to close the basketball court so
to improve and enlarge the in-
tiers like myself have the chance
early on weekends.
-
tratntiral
,
program, and give
·
to at least
try
to
show
off; there
Unfortunately, you won't get
peoplewho don't play
a
Divi-
are
athletes at Marist College
the chance to experience
!UY
sion I sport a place to ~aH their.
who don't participate in inter-
wrath
.-
I think what ·happened
own.
collegiate athletics, and need an
.
was that someone got
-
wind of
There aie
>
rio more
~xcuses,
outlet from whichtheircompeti-
-
my_intentions,
and
ordered
.
a
folks.
..
.
.
.
.
.
·
..
.
.
·
tive
juices can flow.
_.
,
'
.
pre~emptive strike
"'
to pr(.)(~ct
·)
It)s
ri.o½'.
,
J?.Ossil).i¢to actually
-.
;
_
This
is
what pickup basketball
-
·
·
th~mse1Ves
from
thepub1~'1ish-
.
Jose
.
fi1t
ce11{instead
of
brain
v
•
is
for.
ing
I
planned to hand out:-
:
~ells
o~
Friday nights
at
M
_
ari.~t
_
Now, the tragedy that
I
faced
See, when I ret4medto cam-
College
:'
l_'ak'e
advantage ofit.
for the first two years of my
pus a month ago,
I
was stunned
Steve Wanczyk
is
.
·
Wllaf's
-
'
()fi
:
;.
T~p?
·.
·
see.·theRed
Fox~s
in 'iictiqn ...
.
: ...
.
:
-
·
.
.
•
··
·
..
:.
_.
;
.
-
.
•
'
.
.
.....
•.•
..
~
.
..........
~
..
,
....
•
.
Footballvs.
Dutjuestje(I0/4);
Yolleyb~ll
-
.
..
,
atlona (10/4), FairfieldO0/5), and S~ena
(10/8);
_
Men's Soccer
vs
'.
Iona (10/8);
Women's
·-
.
Soccer
at the
Stony Brook Toumamentll
0/4-
. ·
I 0/5)
and Iona (
10/8);
Women's
Tennis at
M~attan(
10/2)
and
vs. Wagner (
10/7).
Men's Soccer Leaders:.
(through Sept. 28)
Bryan Thomas
Mike Schilling
Matt Day
Rino Mazzella
Andy Dolan
Gary
Rincini
Rino Mazzella
G A
Pts.
1
I
3
I
0
2
I
0
2
.-
I
0
-2
1
0
2
SV GAA
21 3.10
7 5.33
Women's Soccer Leaders:
(through Sept. -28)
.
G
APts.
Jamie Bierworth
5
I
JI
Nicole Bruno
2
2
6
Bridget Donofrio
2
0 4
Jainie Sampson
A. Swidereck
Beth Zack
I
2
4
I
2
4
SV. GAA
73
.
1.77
Tom~s
Trijecta
.
What
do
Sparky Anderson, Ha~ Lanier, and
·
LarryDierkerhaveincommon?
(Last w~ek's answer: Haqk Wil~on of
the
-r~;
-
.
Philedelphia
.NS':--·
19(JRBis
iri
:
1930}).f
't;
:f
}:
~t
•
•
-
•
•
. • . •
•
•
·_
·
•
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-
- · •
•
, ,
p
•
•
-
.
lo..
••
•
·=-- .
.
~
:'\ ...
:
Tom [?rag is a regular
·
contributor io
The
_
Cirde
::.
·
;
·
r
,'.·
·
_
-
Marist' s Cumniulative
Fall
Record
is ...
·
(h~ough
Septembe'r· 30
_
hoops regime at Mari
st
was that
to find out that the hours had
TheJ~ircle's Sports Editor
this
outlet closed
•
down· after
'
been expanded.
,
At least,
·
on
.
~
....... .;...;.:..;___:.,_ _ _
_:_.-'--------~--:-'--_;_-:-'--_.;.'-----~---,--,--,--,-----,
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I
school tournaments were being
(gasp!) midnight on Fridays and
.
Around this
time
of ye'ar, i
_
t 'rn~nagidto
:
win twe~tyand {eU
:
Phillies is an
'
acct>ITJpli§hhiiA
'
t in
.
held.
Sundays.
·.
Add that to its Mon-
seems as if every newspaper is
-
ju~t n}ne
K_'s
short of 300
.
The
_
_
·
1tself,
and
the ~efiiy
dlrig~ts'~
On
our
campus, in
our
gym.
day through Thursday hours of
.
requirecl to predict whowilltake
Big Unit is
tl1e
most dominating
-.
an added
boilik
:
·
_
\
'.
;
~:
.
:
'. :
:
.
Suffice to say, there were sev-
·
9:00 AM
-
to
J
:00 AM, an~ it
home basebaH's
-
_
.
post-seascm
pitcher:in basebalL.
.
.. ·
. . .
·
\
ldidn
.
't letthe Yankeifat{in
eral
.
nights when I was so frus-. turned out that I ~idn',thav~ too
awards.Thisw~ek;
I
volunteer
.
·_
.
Ji;s
harcho
imagine
.
a
·
non-
. -
rnecomeo~tearlibrc~rlc~rnitig
.
trated with the lack of court time - much to complain about
·
~ny-
to take on thatrei;ponsibility, if
.
BraVep1tcherwinningintheNL,
AL
MVP,
but Joe
Torre.
is iriy
available to me, a tuhion paying
member of the college
-
~ommu-.
· nity, that I fell back on the only
option available to
a
young rn~m
in the prime of his life on Frid<!,y
more.
·
,
oarreri
'
McCbhnick;
.
the new
McCan~
_
Center Facilities Coor-
dinator (who arrived last May)
:
explained the change:
Students Wanted ...
The
-
Cabaret
and
Coffee Shops
are looking
.
for
students to
work
evenings
and
weekends .
.
Good Pay
Meals,
Uniforms.
Please stop
by
our office or Cabaret
for an application
We look ~orward to seeing you!
ftirno other reason than to
'
spark
but
.
things can't stay the same ·mamiger ofthe
·.
year.
:
Torre
led
.
arguments
·•
in dot~
:·
roortis fo~e~er:
;
Denny
~eagle and qteg
-
the defend1ng_Worl~Chiimps to
across campus.
Maddux
:
Kitve
·
had.
:
ou.t~ta11ding
aplayoffi;pot once
again
d~-
Let u
'
s start with th~ league
years, but neither <>ile
c
·
an
touch
spite the loss
.
of John
'
Wetteland.
MVPs: As much as the Yankee
Pedrh!vl:ariinez.
' '
i-Iaving only 17
and Jimmy Key
;
two key
COITI-''
·
_
•
·.
fan in me ~ays TinoMartinez,
i
wins may.hurt him; but the 1.90
ponents of last
year's
squad
.
-
crin'.t go against Junior Griffey
ERA and~05 stri_keouts more
He
.
also had tp de:al.with inju-
inlhe American League. The
than mal<.e
_'
up
;
for that. .The
ries
-
to ace David Cone and
.
56 homers
.
and
147 RBI
speak
Expos may riot have many mar-
Bernie Williams, the ineffective-
.
for themselves.
quee na~es, but they do have
·
ness ofHidekiirabu arid Kenny
The
.
National Leagu~
is
n~t as
the bestpitchedn the Nationar Rogers, and a Jack of right hand.
clear-cut however. Take a quick
League.
'
•
:
power all season Jong:
_
:
Still, th
_
e
look at the stats and Larry
.
As
-
far _as
.
the
·
American
. ·
Yanks are i_n the po~t-season
.
Walker'appears to be the obvi-
League Robkie of the Year is
-
and
-
have to be coiisidered the
ous choice. Nothing against
concerned; there are only two
team to beat.
_'. :
·
'·
· ·
· -
.
_
Walker, but 40 home runs and
words that need to be said:
In the NL, Gene: Lamont has
140 RBI appear to be average
NomarGarciaparra.-Ievencon-
_
done an outstanding-job guid-
numbers for anyone fortunate
sidered him
'
for league MVP.
ing the Pittsburgh Pirates to a
·
enough to play
at
Coors Field.
Thirty homers and 98 knocked
respectable season. Lamont
.
·
Mike Piazza is my choice- .360
in are great numbers for an out-
has absolutely no talerJt to work
arid 40 HRs out of a catcher: is
fielder, but·for a rookie short~
with yet his ballclub'Was in con-
phenomenal.
stop they
·are
shocking. We
tention all seasonlong~ Now if
.
Roger Clemens proved he is
were
'all
amazed at Alex
he could only get some play-
far from washed up, but he
Rodriguez's second season a
ers.
faded sligh~Iy toward the end of year ago. Wha~ can we expect
_
.
In
_
the weeks to co~e the ac-
the season and it may have
cost
out ofNomar in 1998?
tual winners will be announced.
him his fourth Cy Young award.
In the National League, Scott
My predictions inay
be
all cor-
1'
m giving the
.
hardware to
Rolenseemstobetheonlycan-
rect;
they may be
totally
off-
Randy Johnson. Although he
didate. Being able to go through
base. I guess we will just have
battled through injuries, he stiJJ
a full season with the pathetic
to
wait
and see.
I
. TH~-CIRCLE, October 2; 1997
15
Dow"1Ward
spiral ·continues for
disa{)poiriUilg
men's' soccer
SCJ.llad
by CHRIS O,DONNELL
StaffWriter
It certainly was the weel< that
wasn't for tµe Marist College
men's soccer team.
:
, .
The momentum
·
·from· la.st
week's win over St. Peter's dis-
appeared quickly as the Red
Foxes suffered consecuti_v.e
losses to Siena and Monmouth
·university.
Marist(I-5, I-I MAAC), en~
<lured vanous breakdowns· and.
lapses on defense, whfoh re-
sulted in both opponents capi-
talizing with offensive spurts.
As a result, the Red Foxes
yielded. ni_ne goals while only
scori11g two.
Sunday's match against
Monmouth saw the Red Foxes
control play· for most of the
game, but they were conse-
quently·
shutout,
4-0.
Monmouth
(5-3, 0-1
NEC)._:icored
five minutes into the game and
never looked back on its way to
an easy win.
Men's soccer faces off against Monmouth. • Marist lost 4-0.
Head coach Bobby Herodes
said this game was a classic
case of lack.of mental prepara-
tion.
"We controlled the ball in their
end for like 35 minutes,., he
said. "But their counter-attack-
ing proved to be the deciding
factor. We just played in
spurts."
The Red Foxes were never
able to take advantage of poor
passing by the Hawks'
defenseinen in the early going,
and by half-time, Monmouth
had a 3-0 lead.
Senior Michael Kenney said
the loss was a hard one.
"It sure was a tough one to
take ... we should have beat them.
The ball was in their end the
whole game," he said. ·
The second half of play was
highlighted by Ed Portelli's
head ball on a perfectly_placed
cross from the right side, which
beat Marist goalkeeper Gary
Ricini.
Tennis gets back on track; tunes
up·for MAAC: championship
·
.
· ijyl\'1ARK}.
WELLS
.
-'~,
·
StaffWriter"'-
,
. : Coach King was ~ery. im- . otit there," King noted after the
pr~~~eq.~!Jy the,t~am'~ perfqr- .,,Jpatc:~.
,.,,y,.••, .:; :-. ,
r-:11
v, ..
mance last week against St. ·
The other two singl_es,matches
The Marist College ·women's · Peter's.
were not as·difficult for the Red
,, tennis team snapped jts f9ur
"it
~11
s~emed to come together
Foxes; as Kara Olive~
.
and Jen-
•- gamefosingstreakthisweek by
.
:
foz'- us against St:'Peter:'s. The
nifer Armstrong
.
b6th
\\;ori
eas-
-. beatingiheSt. Peter's Peacocks . singles play, along with the
ily at second and fifth _siµgles
f"i-~convincirtgfashi,on:
8-1.
The
doubles play, were both 'very
respectively.
Oliver. and
~-<E-'L&9~~,~£~Q~cUh~irr~_c;grd
good Jo see,''. King stated.
Armstrong both wOn their
at4-4 ori.t~e ~~¥~r,.incJ1J,ding a
Atfirst singles, senior captain
matches with identical scores of
!
2-2 rhark•itftheMAAC. ,
tfolly Robil)so9_won a three set
6- I, 6-2.
,~fhJ.i
·
;y;~;bi;;i~-fo;tll~-Red .· match agairist St. Peter's num-.
The doubles play was also
J!diet~{they
fr~ve,l
to Fairfield . ber one player, Ecda Ruiz,
4-6,
something to write home about.
'bMv~rs1ty.io rn~etup ..Y!tha very
7:-5,
6~2
which.set the ton"e· for
At first doubl~s, ·. Holly
tal~nt~~
-
~tags sqµacf this week,
the rest of thti°team.
Robinson and Kara Olive~ won
in a pivotal conference matchup.
Robinson's vict9ry was the
their match by a score of8A.
CoacI{J~mie Ki~g r~alizes: ihat
first of th~ee th.ree set victories
The second doubles was even
this winbe ari important test for
for the Red Foxe~--
.
more irripressive, as Tracy· Hunt
his team.
"I
was very proud, of the way .. and Claudine Habib ..yon their
''Fairfield is going
fo
be:one of we stuck in there ~rid won those·· match
8-2.
The duo ~on their
.
those matches thatwe can.mea~
three set matches,'' King said.
match despite playing a.pair of
sure ourselves by," King ex-
Tracy Hunt a11d Cl_audine
grueling three set matches !!ar-
plained.
Habib won the other two three . lier in the day.
•.
-
Individual Match Records:
Holly Robinson
Kara Oliver
Tracy
'
Hunt
Claudine Habib
J '.
Annstrong
Devon
Imarisio
Leigh
Golden
5-2
6-2
3-5
3-5
4-3
4-3
1- 1
l}o~bles Match Records:
Robinson/Oliver
Habib/
Armstrong
Golden/Imarisio
Oliver/Hunt
Hunt!
Armstrong
Hunt/Habib ·
6-1
3-2
4-3
0-1
0 - I
0 - l
· setters,
at
The Red Foxes are now gear-
third
and
ing themselves up for matches
· fourth singles
against Fairfield University,
, respectively.
Manhattan College, and, in a
. Hunt won
non-conference tussle, Wagner
her match af-
College.
ter losing the
. King is not letting. his Red
firsJ
set, 3-6,
6-
Foxes look past the upcoming
4, 7-6 (7~5).
opponents, but admits that the
~abib played
MAAC Championship- com-
a marathon
ing up in two weeks-
will
be
match as she
the big one.
also had to
"The whole team is getting
cqrne b~ck af-
excited about the MAAC.Cham-
. ter losing the
first set. She
defeate_d Tif-
fany Miles 5-7,
7-6·(7-5),
7-6
(7-5) ..
.
.
...
'
"Tracy and
Claudine both
· sh.owed a lot
(?f
-~haracier
pionships coming up in early
October," said King.
Everything seems to bl! com-
ing together for the Re~ Foxes
and their first year head ~oach.
The Red Foxes next home match
will
be Tuesday October 7
against Wagner College at
3:30
P.M, at the Dutchess E,acquet
Club.
Freshman Tim Svendsen said
the small lapses on defense hurt
Svendsen said the team was
not overconfident at half-time.
. the·teant '
.
· . "We were not overconfident
,
.
.
''We
'controll~d most of the · goirig iqto the second half. We
game," he said. "But we had.
tim,es whenwe didn't mark up
we Hor got confused and we paid
for it."·
That confusion was the story
line for Hawks' third goal as the
Red Foxes fafled to clear a cen-
tering pass from a comer kick.
Monmouth's John Babula
picked up the loose ball
amongst the chaos and knocked
itin.
Last Wednesday, the Red
Foxes had one slip away against
conference rival, Siena. After
Marist grabbed a 2-0 lead early
in the second half, the Saints
tallied five goals in only nine-
teen minutes to come from be-
hind and win, 5-2.
Marist had its first lead of the
young season going into half-
time thanks
to
a goal by sopho-
more Mike Schilling. The Red
Foxes ad~ed a secpnd tally,
courtesy of senior defenseman
Andy Dolan, but the team's for-
tunes would take a turn for the
worse.
just played not to lose instead
of playing to win, a~d a two goal
lead couldn't hold up against
Siena,''.
On· the other hand, Herodes
said the overconfidence is what
did them in.
"We just got overconfident,
complacent and we rolled over.
Our team has to realize that no
Division
I
team will give up af-
ter being down 2-0," Herodes
said.
To make matters worse, the
upcoming schedule only gets
tougher. The Foxes' next match
will
be against the Big East's
Villanova, followed by dates
with some of the tougher teams
in the
MAAC-
Iona, Fairfield,
and Loyola.
Herodes said Villanova will be
a tough and formidable oppo-
nent.
"They're in the middle of the
pack in the Big East, but that
conference is one of the tough-
est conferences in the nation,"
he said.
Football r o u t - - - - - - - -
. .. continuedfrom page 16
Tray.nor, who had. nobody
wit,hin twenty yards of him, for
a
sixty-five yard tquchdown.
.Traynor's :first collegiate catch
put Marist up
21-0
with three
m_inutes left in the third quarter.
: "fp.e fo"l!rth quarter was more
. , oftbe
smpe for:the Foxes, Daley
scrambled for a twenty-two yard
touchdown early- in the fourth
to finish off his best game of the
year ..
.
Later, backup Bill
Tramaglini found Reed for a six-
teen yard touchdown, and
Mario Wilson returned
a
punt
75 yards for a touchdown, his
second touchdown in two
weeks.
For Daley, who finished the
game 8-of- I
9
for
175
yards, the
key to Marist's second half ex-
plosion was the turnovers.-·
"After that early fumble, we
managed to play nearly mistake
free," Daley said. 'That was as
key as anything else_ we did of-
fensively."
If
the Red Foxes are to beat
Duquesne this week, they'\\
" need to play as well all game as
they played in the second half
against the Peacocks. Accord-
ing to Daley, that shouldn't be a
problem.
"We haven't beaten them
since we were freshmen,·· Daley
said of his fellow seniors. "We
will definitely be fired-up to play
this week."
In the game that will probably
determine the fate of their sea-
son, the Red Foxes play host to
the Duquesne Dukes on Satur-
day at 1:00.
MaristFootball ~- Cummulative Stats
PASSING
ATT CMP
YD
TD INT
Rating
Jim
Daley
50
22
367
2
6
94.86
Bill Tramaglini
5
4
58
I
. 0
243.44
RUSHING
ATT
YIB
AVG.
TDs
,Lovan Rhodes
49
245
4.7
0
J.J. Allen
49
224
4.4
2
Chad Wickliffe
17
67
3.7
0
Jon Reed
1
30
30.0
1
David Spinato
I
28
28.0
0
RECEIVING
NO.
YIB
!ID
TDs
Jon Reed
16
251
47
I
Brian Ladd
4
55
18
0
Brian Traynor
2
83
65
I
Jovan Rhodes
2
9
9
0
Tim Korba
l
29
29
0
Chris Edelstein
l
21
21
1
Chad Wickliffe
1
6
6
0
DEFENSE
Sacks·
Tackles
INT
FumRec.
Reid Ellis
4.5
22
0
l
Dwyne Bates
4.0
16
0
I
Chris Meyer
3.0
20
I
0
Archer Bridgeforth
2.5
15
0
0
I
_..,
QUOTE
_
OF
.
1:HE WEJ?K.
"we'piayeci
n~~
·
to .i~se inste~d
'
...
.
,
·
;_
;
e,',
~
,;
·•·
,:
.
.
• •
,
I
·
..
_
,
:<_
:
,f
, ':.·
.
:
•
.-·.
, ::
,
.
of play~ngt()
W.J.11·
/
·
:'
:
,;
<
...
:
:-
.
·.
·.
.
~-Tirri Svendsin (
Jrie~'s
soccei")_
.-
.
.
.
'
'
"
•
.
.
.
.
,
42-0_
.
_
blow9ut
sets
,up
.-
:
sho~doWll-
this Saturday
-
with·· DQ.quesne
_
_
·
•
e~~llgh
',
for)hl;~c~rici
'
-
lowest
·.
charripiori
:
puquesne
·
conies to
•
<
·
In
.
their
:
three gan1es; Marist
total in schpo}_history:
_
.
Potighkeepsi~;
,
.-
.
·• .
·
·.· _ _
hris
:
~~ly managed
--
to
.
put 14
.
Sophomore Chris Meyer- also
.
On
offense,
the
.
Red
Foxes fol-:
poi~ts' on the bo.ard in tlie first
had
a
huge game for Marist, re- .· lowecf\.Vhat has been an alarm~
.
.
half,mainly because of the mas~
.
Ellis,DJayne Bates,Jerry
cordingnine
,
tac:kles,asack,an
·irig·trend
•.
eatlyiriJhisseas
_
on'.- •
·
s
.
ive a~ou
_
nt of .. turnovers
Gerth, and Archer Bridgeforth interceptio
_
n
,<-
:
.i
:
nd
a
:
forc~d
·
Marist scored only
:
one
fouch;;
·,
they've
:
committed.
--
With a
~h~sed frf!shman
:
·
quarterbac~ .fumble .
.
M<!yer
'
was
playing·ip
do~n
O
iri the
-
firsth~lf,
'
de~piJe
..
rrit.1ffed punt,-a
·
rumbl_e,
.
and an
James Lyver all over the field
pla~e of co
~c
aptairdohn
_
Fox,
tli~
fact tbeirdefertseconstandy
--
-_
interception in theTirst twOquar-
before
:
the Peacocks dec
,
ided
who has missed the l~sL ~wo
-
.
ga~e th~in good field
C
positi<>n.
.
ters
'
on Saru~ciay, fytaiist h<;tS·now
enough w
·
a~ enough, and called
'.
games after getting injµted in the The only score came on sopho~
committed an unreal ten first half
by THOMAS RYAN
Staff Writer
.
The irresistible for~e met the
-
very,
.
very
_
movable object
·
last
Saturday when the Mari st Col-
lege football team hosted St.
only five
.
passing plays the
.
en-
-
se
.
ason
.
opener
:
,
aga
.
ins
·
t
niordack.Reilly's tWoyardrun;
turnovers.
,
.·
·
.
tiresecm1dhalf. TheR,edFoxes - Georgetown.
·
Fox could be after:Meyer'shiterception had
Jhey
:
camed their,tniscues
(2-1, 2-1)
only allowed fifteen
ready to play this week when givenMaristthe ball atthe Pea~
.
into the second haff against St
yards passing irithe game;
'
good
two-time defending MAAC cock12 yard line.
Peter's: as
~
lorig Red
,
Foxes
·
Peter's at Leoni doff Field.
The irresistible forcetook the
form of a talented and experi~
enced Red Fox defensive line;
while the movable
_
object dis-
guised itself as the Peacocks'
helpless offensive Hne
.
:
When
:
the two went head on, the re:
sultwas not pretty.
.
.
_.
_
That result was a
42~0
Red Fox
. blow:out that saw St. Peter's
(0-
3,0-2)
have twice as many sacks
allowed
(8),
than th~y had of-•
fensive yards gained
(4).
Of
those
.
eight sacks, junior
·
Reid
·
EI
_
lis had
-
four, all of them com~
ing in the first half alone.
·
As Marist head coach Jim
Parady pointed
.
out, welcoming
Ellis back after he missed
.
all of
last year with
·
an
.
injury Jtas·
helped histeartl
.
trerrlen'a°ousiy.
_
drive erided at the one-yard line
with
.·
a botched hand-off that
·
was recovered by the Peacocks.
Later in t!ie quarter, senior
Harry
Taylor put a huge hit on
St:
:
£~ter's running back Herb
Gi-Oce, forcing a fumble
1
that
Bates recovered deep
.
in Pea
_
-
cocl< territory. Quarterback Jim
Daley h'it tight end Chris
Edelstein over the middle two
·
plays later, and Marist was up
14-0.
-
The next time Marist gotthe
ball, Parady pulled out his bag
of tricks to ice the game for the
Red Foxes. Using Jon R~ed
·
as
a decoy after his reverse for a
·
.
te>uchdcnvri
'
last week~ Daley
_
faked
a
'
pitch
to Reed,
·which
.
brought the Peacock secondary
way in.
·
,
b'aley then fumed and
.
threw
to freshman wide receiver Brian
.
·
·
..
_
''.l·faving
Reid,
},ack gives u
·
s
·
depth,at the defensive line
.
po~
~itfon
:
iliat we
·
didn; t
•
hav~
,
last
·
.
season,'.' Parndy
:
s~i~
:
.
"He
has
.
really workelhard
to
get
hhn~
self bacf to where was before
·
the
injury/'
~
continued
;
on p.15:..:..,_
.
-
t~e
·
r~t~~i
_·
t~~
-
:
,
~~
€tf
~~
f[~
Ji
:
_~-~i~
;
~fa
/i
da~s~
:
cfu.i~e&"~~
.
;~t~iiJ;_o
~
'~
.
--·:
.
'.
:·
.;._:>
_,-
Women's~e~
"
~liellS
C
i~
·•
·
•
·
MAAC1SCheduie
c
SUCCesmlly
.
.
·:
.· '.
·
.: ·
.
_
.. ,
<
. .
:_.
:-:::
'
:
;_:_
:
·
·
:·'.:
:
·.·
_
.~
·
~-:\
,-,
'''
__
... ·
·
·
.
Wll1S
over
;
Siena
'
and
;;
St
:
Peter's
.
·
s
h
;
·--
;
·
·
·
,\i-
·:
b
'
fii
;
.
.
.
-
.
-_ -
;f
:
<>1t{mr~
-
ril~
\
:!
·
:r1:zins~
·
.
_
lea~e
Fo~es
:
.
und~f;@
·'.
illi~e-
:
SienaandgoalieBethZackwas
·
.
.
·
- -
·
·
·
· ·
·
.
·
' ,
strong in
net
to r~cord the shut-'
.
by,RACHl\EL'70LLAltO
enhancing the ~e~
_
F<>~6s' plai out.
.
:
.-
:
.
.
. .
.
.
.
.
·
Staff Writer
•
·
-
.
''.We
had
a
10
daf br¢ak
in
be~
''Bridg~t·s'~eeifoh fire
,
.
.
She's
tween Lehigh andBie11a thatlet
really stepped up her offense
The Marist Collegewo
,
men's
us work
.
on offensive
:.:
tactics.
·
and
_
has
'
beeO
'
pJ
_
ayfog great up
.
soccer team is how
2
~
0
in the
_
This rea11y helped us st_ep
up
our
·
top," Nichols said:
.
.
MAAC.
_
shooting agains~ ~iena and
St
-
The scoring against St
:
Peter's
:
After defeating Siena l
~
O;
'
the
Peter's: Our
.
defense has just
wa~
:
dt>n
_
e
·
b{Jamie
;
_
$amps()n
·
Red Foxes overcame St. Peter's
been sol_id all year/' Nichols
witha goal
.
and an
assist,Jamie
4"3
for their fir~t h~me win;
said.
Bierwirth with
.
two scores; and
Co-captainJanetOliverfeltthe
''The scoring w~sdefinitely a
Amanda Swidereck, who
team was ready for the game
plus," Sebastian added. "Com-
notchect' her first goal of the
against St Peter's'.
"Confidence really wasn'
_
t
much
-
of an issue. I think we
were really excited and ready to
.
play," Oliver said.
·
.
.
Co-captain Stacey Sebastian
added, "Coming off a win re.ally
helped our confidence.
'Know-
ing
that St. Peter's had lost to
Siena was also a really big
plus."
_
Two factors that have been
·
working for the Red Foxes are
an increase in the intensity by
the offense and solid play by
This year has been
_
awesome. The team is
.
playing really well ...
:
Jamie Bierworth
ing out with four goals against
St: Peter's was really great."·
The win against Siena gave
Marist a positive start in the
MAAC conference.
''The Siena game was a step
for us. It was our first MAAC
year.
Bierwirth, a
·
freshman, leads
thetearri
-
in
goals with five.
"This year h.is been awesome.
The team is playing really well
and starting is just a great feel-
ing," Bierwirth said.
The Red Foxes' next game is
at Hofstra.
-
Working off a two-
game winning streak, Coach
Nichols is confident in her team ..
"Every game that we play is
competitive. (Hofstra is) a good
team with some s~ong players,
but we've been playing strong
on the road," she said.
•.
G~orgeto'?,'n
·
_
_
Du'que
.
sne
.
,
Marist
·
;
canisi~S
.
_
,
Fairfield
.:
1hna
.
s't
Peter's
·
st.John's
LASf\VEEK_
·
September
27
:
2
o
·
-
tcro
·
.
.
J
·
o
--
1.00)
.
2
-
L
-
;
:fJ.57
.
1
-
1
.500
·
·
1 1
.500
o.
t
.cro
0
1
·.
_00)
O
'
2
.
00)
0
0
..
.
00)
2
-
I
2
I
2
l
:
1
l
1
2
2
-
1
0
3
0
3
2
l
·
SIENA
41, Canisius 38
G'TOWN
34, Fairfield
-
9
MARIST42~ St. Peter's O
Pace
26,Iona 0
TIHSWEEK-
Octob~;4
.
.
·
Iona
@
Canisius
Duquesne
@
Marist
.
Siena@ G'town
St. Peter's @St.John's
Central Conn
@
Fairfield
St.' John's·23, St. Brook
19
INSIDE ...
·
Men's soccer . . . . . . . . . . 15
Women's tennis.
. . . .
J
5
:
Hoop Dreams . . . . . . . . . 14
Off Campus . . . . . . . . . .
J
4
Tom's Tri/ecta . . . . . . . .
-
14
50.3.1
50.3.2
50.3.3
50.3.4
50.3.5
50.3.6
50.3.7
50.3.8
50.3.9
50.3.10
50.3.11
50.3.12
50.3.13
50.3.14
50.3.15
50.3.16
for
an
.
$800,000
grant-
to
refurbish the riverfront··.
-
,
~·, .
;
~
:'
•·
,.· , .... ,;·: .. -:•w:•\r.:·
·coll,e,g'e
st.u,. de,rtts,:
bxpfess ... ' ::: ...
.
;
..
:
~-.·
~oncefll aboµt .sexually
it:·
transmitted
di.seases
~'1'~
~~:g-
.,
..
. ·· . >•page3
~page_S
' - - - ~ - - - _ _ , ; _ - - '
Volume50,Jssue
:f.
The student newspaper of Marist. College
NorthEnd]aµndfY
swi.tch to
Marist
Moriey_irl,(~
studeµts
bySCO'.fTJ'%\TILLE _:
day.''.
.
.
.
Staff Writer
·
Sansola. said students·. were
. . . . .
; ·. , ..
· ··supposed to beJnformed
of
the
. · North. Eng residents withi:mt
conversion, but he was not sure ·
Marist Money accounts were ··how successful it-was.
recently)eft with a basket fullof
.
''There were suppo~ed to be
.
.
dirty lmmdry. _ ..
.
.signs up," he said. "rm not sure
.
~
Washing_~ddryingmachines ·• if.they happened or not."
.
at Gartlana C~mmons and. the
. Marist .has be~n integrating
New . Towh~hous·es were
the Marist Money·system for
switched froin coin operation tq . · the past three ·years·. all over
debit ~ard: Many residents were . · caippus, so stµdents can pur:..
never mformed.
.
.chase anything_ from candy bars -..
. Students were also-confused · .to books' ()J:Jaundry :with just the ·
becau,se the laundry · machines ·,swipe of their ID card.
.
.
.
used.coi~~ for.the, first two . The Office of College Activi- .
weeks of school, but were then . ties' and the Office of Student
unexpettedlt changed::fo :· ;\~counts hav~ heen working
1".]:ai;ist ·co~unity ..... page~
opihl~n~.::, ... ~~;-.. :~-~ ....
~.~page
6
F~&tllre~~-~ .•....
~!.;···~··~~page
.s
A&E ... ; ...
~~~~~~
.............. page ·11
. Sports ...............
~.~
........ page 14
October 2,
i
997
M~st 'Money .. · .· ; ... · : ~---~ - J<>,gether conyeiting:•macnines •
~-stud~~t-swl~:-~,}\i~f~rd lnth~ Gartland ~n1rllons:iaundromat. Washl~~ and ";~1°~; .
Steve Sarisol~, as_sist~nf dian':.
<
..
~tajhig at the:So.utll pndof
gim'- •
machines ... ~n:t~ti~~~h-,.1§.nd ,~ere. rece~tly_converted • over -to .the. Marlst Money system.
1 •.
·fo~c~~r.er~~ces !lnd~cHv}ti~~;c:,p,ijs~~~~Iqwlyhe~.cling.no[lh.·.
-- _:. ·
.
:., ...
~·:s:J:·r::·:c,:/'.",. . . . . ·.
. .
.
. .
,!
sa1d'.~mng and soft\yare prob- . , Semor)aJU~s,Rigdon s~ud·,he . forced t5> do ey_efY~Ing W!~,
~~
..
"Y•~~ed the i:na~hme~ V(ere still
But not all students are un-
}
_ lems pushecLth~·. !nstaHatiqn • ·· always·• tised,Goins · to dt.!, lauti- · cards> They -just~-shoiild~liave · ·. coin·'.op~rated.- ': ; ·
·
.
_
happy with. the, conversion · to
:! ...
date behind schedule;~'::.
. . dry in the past; and:.w.~s.aQ.~
told us.!' .
~
.<\'.d:..,:
._··,·c_· .. ~:·_
.
.
"I just w.ent t!) go laundry and
Marist Money. )u~iqrDomin-
-11
: . ''In te~s ct~me, 1!1~/ll,ll~hin~s :n.oy~9: t~a,t:~e;,\Y~~:pev~rzi~~: :,;::::·gdT~~~0.~~1~~-?§,,_s,.en,h>ri'i~P?l~n~t:b~f~~sttct~d~'~: h~ye· . ~q:4~lif1:0~S1lid_ s~~th~~l(ss_\Vip-.
.
l ..
':..
.c9:qldn
t.~~:-!n_st~H~d·_gQt11:la$.t :-·~fonned,;of:_th~~Cl!!}?8't:fi"er.·to -:,:'~~1~~~~.s9Jan•~~~Ji:,~~mpp~.,} ~~~tM~?Ycdi1r;~a1d'. ,,It
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tng•W}llll,~l! bf~~er,~an ~mns; .... :
.
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.
.
goal [of mstalJ~tlo~]J5y the first :choice? ·Rigdond;·aio:?'Wetre
-'.~~tile
t<>Jlo _la~ndzy.
·Ji~;~~4:!i~.::
/e.as1er:w1th quarters/':., "· · · .
qf.lookmg for quarters."
·
-
~
·s¢ii.i6l~i~:dclak,,:i
· · ·
•·
_
.. ,_ ····" •··.• ··· ·· ..... •· ·· .· · ...
,
...... ,,
,~,j~~~Ji~~tl~&~:rµfgljJ
irJ.p
-policy
·}
·.•·
•
•iifai~t~~nr~~t,
}fi~~!f
!1i1!1e<tfot~t~.~~~!! ...
il:dvancesto:finals
:;
,·< ;.
NewsEdiiof.- . ·. . ;'.. '.
:R*sident .Senator Kevin
·
i\"':~:?\:
0
f1:;;~·:•::::'ft·''.'•~:/.·-::·<-->
.. ·•
·
:.-.,
),.:>
i->: ..
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>,.·.·.
·-Lundy said at.~ Sept.
17
Senate
•· byTIMSORENSEN
..
: · ..
·
< \:
.
.
.
J~,e:~i~Iet!~~ :departmin,t . meepng heunde,rstood whyath-.
. ''. :: L~tfilifrffr}?,
:c· ' ·. ·
,
-·.•,
,:
·
le~~r1
~•1:i~
.~P<>~[e~~nt,l)'_With . !~tic~ cr.e;it~d the p_olicy; but he .
L
·
a.
new pohcy..for.p1cid1ng: them
·
d1d'not agi:eetllat
tt
should ap-
: Who kri¢W_that a:pair of eyes ,
arid ~five'.liarids 'could do so
much?,··
..
.. : · .. · ...
·
.. ···
· Senior, Autumn Gates' plioto> .
. graph ~ooffirstpla.cejn a re~
; gionar c:ompetiti.ofri-eceridyajid_
·-weJ,1t'oll to.i~~•fina1s .o{_tge · ·
Kodak Inteinational,Newspaper
:,
Snap~hot
.
Awards ·(KINSA)
contest.
·
Gates, who is fronf Syracuse',
NY, said slteJ1eard about the.
contestthroµghlier local hews-,.
.. Paper The. Syracuse Herald
American. She decided to enter
after encouragem~ntfrom·· her
mother>.
.
;,Mymommademeenier,''she. -
said, "b1.1t really, I haye-a huge
p9rtfolio full of pictures and I
figured it was worth a shot."
Gates said that even with a
large selection of photos in her
portfoli, the process of choos~
ing one was not hard.
. . ·fr1:>m traveling ~ith69t'an official
• ·
ply to. allof{~cainpus trips,
~ollege representative:. .
. He said it should .only, apply
Senior Autumn
Gates
recently
won
flnit
p
o<o
inG
reglonai
Kodak International
Newspaper
Snapshot Awards
with this
photo.
10. Thenewspaperchoseafirst
The pictures Gates included
place and.an honorable mention -were se11t to Kodak for the in-
for color and black and white , temational contest that will be
·, .• ::;Athletics a~~pted. theJiolicy
to ·ov~m.igh,t trips .where ~itua-
.
.early this year, bu,t lack ofcom.: .• tjons ,could occur .. ' ', . .
. munis:ation.betwee.nthe
d~part~ '
Je~te said a club's faculty ad-
. 'ment, SGAµridclub sport teams
-
.. vis'er can serve as a lead college
hav~ left some· students
,co~sed.
·. · repn~sentative, l'lut if the adviser
'.·Chris Jette,'vice presideiitfor
·
cannot travel, any faculty or
.. club affairs, s·aid the new policy
administrator can be recruited
· • :ineans that club sport teaf!lS must · for .the job~·
If
theclub cannot
now find· someone wh<> ·can . find
a
separate person to travel
trayel with.them as the college's
·
.·. with them, athletics is establish-
. representative.
.. ,
:
ing a poolto pick from:
''Every club from S.GA-is. re-
. Colin• SuUivan, assistant ath-
qiiired to hav.e a faculty adviser,. Jetic director, and Steve Sanso la,
. and au cl\l~S when tlley
gq
on
assistant dean·for conferences
·.any away trip;:hav.e to'have.a
and activities, wereunavailable
·1ead collegerepresentative~" he
said. "It must be a faculty'mem-
Please see
CLUB,
page 4 ...
her or· administrator, but not
somebody from the club."
C.Iub sports were allowed to
travel _by themselves· in Marist
• vans· on overnight or day trips
in the past; bufbecause of past
·incidences involving disorderly
. students, Jette said athletics felt
THE CIRCLE POLL
Do you think college
students are concerned
about obtaining an
STD?
"I had a whole bunch of [pic-
tures] out in front of me," she
said. "But that one always
seemed to stick out."
.
· photographs each week.
.
held Oct. 9 to 10.
the.n_eed to step in.
"Whenever any dub damages
the school's reputation, the
admi_nistration's going to act,"
he said. "Athletics _said our
sports teams are getting in a
mess on the road, and they ex-
amined why, and came to the
conclusion that nobody is there
She took the photo in her dorm
room sophomore year as part of
assignment on . hands for her
photography class.
The 6-week regional KINSA
contest started in Syracuse on
June 28 and lasted through Aug.
Gates' picture won first place
Kodak uses the winning pi~-
out of 23 black and whtte pho-
tures. for photography publica- ·
tos on the fifth week of the com-
tions, KINSA promotional ma-
petition. .
.
terial and advertistng displays.
At the end of the contest,
Kodak also gives out. over
newspapers selected finalists
$50,000 in cash prizes to more
from the weekly first place and
than 250 winners in the interna-
honorable •mention· winners.
tional competition.
Yes
No
Undecided
'
: l
2
THE
CIRCLE
.
.
October2/1997
.
··
.
.
.
.
_
:
_
_
....
..
.
__
.
,
·
Mari
st
ill\i
oiveih&iitd1ffiCUlf
rof-(")ff
i
caitipus
·
§tiidehts
..
J
01,i
·
.
byALLYSONTRAVIS
·.
"ldid
,
n'tg~tpriority;~r~l~
/
t~~i:~
:.
why · inclub pki~ipaH~n .
..
'
'.:
.
..
,
' <
;
',·,
•
'
: :,. .
Staff Writer
I'm off campus. They
·
'do.rt't give you
~·r
onlyhave tinie to participate in cme .
It'sPAREN'I?S
.
WEEKEND!!
'
.
·.
priority pointsjust for'trying.';.
. .
·.
·
:
.
·.·.
:
.
·
campus organ
.
ization/' she said. ~Tm
.
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..
Day:OutbackClu~
·
White
·
,Water;:
.
·
campus acti~ities.
.
.
·
.
"It's harder to ke~p in
.
touch with'people . managed to remain just as active on cam-
ti#twf
/:
·
.
)\:
.:
:~
-
;
.:
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;:;},'.:tf:?
..
·•
Ir( mosf cases st~dents;such as junior
when you have to plari t.o
·
go see
.
them . pus as
she
was the
.
past three years even
Night_ Cc:>inedy
Oubwi,th
Rofiqelh
.
Laura Hess
/
feel that because
,
they live
.
instead of just ~al king next door or
though she is nor living
.on
·
campus.
Sheri&n.
.
,; :,
.
/
.
;
·:
.,:
.\::::,_
:;.;t)', ..
off carripu~,
:
the'ir p~t~ipati(?n in clubs
across the hall,", she said
.
.
·.
"I
feel as ifI'ni on campus more than
.
'
·
• ·
and activitiesis limited.
·
Dan Henn, a senior;saidfoels he issfill. I;m in my houset she said.
. ·
.
.
.'
, '
,,
.
·.
"It
.
~aie~sierwhenIJtiuldwalktoprac-
a part
.
of the Marist community even
SmithisactiveinHIVPeerEducators,
,
ii'l
tL
~;
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:
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:~~=ci:!K::.
:;'P•:~:::::::·
.
~{~l\~;::i~:::i:!,
::~:t
.
Night:
Ma.rlst
Sfugers'<26nc~i-t
:''.:
.
·,
for
the past two
'
years,
b~t
felt she did
·
.
clubs) if you can get involved socially
.
"The on,y difference to me is the time it
Night
..
:
.
c
.
·
.
o
.
·
..
·.
n
.
'
·
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.·
·
e
..
rt
_
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with
.
~'th~
.
•.
;
1
,·.
?
.
11
.
•
'e
:.
•
not wantto continue when she moved
.
·
and otherwise.'-' Henn said. "Time be~
takes
·
to get to classes·and activities,"
·
·
·
·
·
··
·
off campus.
comes more restricting as you become
.
she said:
"It
takes me the
.
same amount
·
Poweil
Band''
,'
and
;
~~N~\V
bi..:
"I.have towork on campus in order to
an upperclassmen.·~
-
.
.
of time to get there asit did togetfrom
leans.''
·
:
·
pay to live off and this causes problems
Henn said he played intramurals when
my house
.
to my JI.igh School."
· .
Sunday:
Tuesclay:
Day:
Vericlqr
'
~ith
:·
s}61tets,
gloves,
.•
glov~s,
·
iinp9ft
,
edl~41¢.s
·
'
clothing.
BruigJotsqf~qiiey!l?
;,
·.··
.
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N{ght.Blatksfila~iitJJhiort'com:c:
·
,
edYS1I
iI
!~
f
~~
:
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T
'
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il
when it comes to finding time to do any-
he lived on campus.
Smith said being involved in on cam-
thing extracurricularly," she said.
"I
·
played basketball freshmen and
pus activities becomes an individual ef-
Donna F?cilla, a junior, saiq she feels
,
•
sophomore year," he said. "fyly junior ·
fort.
as
'
if her chance of living o~ campus
·
year I didn't, because I didn't have
"Ifyou maky yourself an outsider, then
were-taken away from them because of
.
enough time, arid I lived on campus."
you \Viii be, butjustb.ecauseyou don't
how they chose their priorities
.
•
.
·
.·
·
Resident students, such as Donna
.
live ori [campus] doesn't mean you can't
"I
just worry about grades,'7she said.
·
Nastasi, share a different point' of view
participate,., Smith said.
·
·.
T.,....,
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the
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BardavoµSund~y,October
5
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Fotin~reinforinationcfill.
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3
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,•
·
"I
had a friend teH me she thoughi
she might have one, sol do think itis
preval~nt. Ii is definit~lyposs1ble; be-
.
cause there ar
.
e so many
·
peopie.here
-
from across.the country.
·
Everyone
should definitely use protection/'
···
Sl'laron
.
Dickinson
··
.
. .
-
~~p
_
h¢,fore
':
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••
·
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ha;~~!t he~d~j@
p/
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si;H~tfcsj think
.
it hasn't affected
me
or any of my
~. ' ,
they woufo
be
prevalent However,
r
.
·
frienps."
·
.
.
.
·
,
::perso~ally hav~ not
ru~
·into
any)or~
.
rofstories
:
"
.
SEC
.
(Jl{ITY
.
B
'
RIEFS
.·
.
- Sept~mber 24th, l :25an1:
A
foot
.
'
pa~
·
role officerobserved a male individual
···
in upper Champagnat throwing an uni~
dentified object out a wiridow, while
.
:
on bystanders cried "don'f throw it."
.
It \llaS thrown from the seventh floor
out to the parking lot by the mail room.
The object was discovered to be a di-
vider tfiat had beer:i ripped out of the
rest room.
"You
can
imagine
the dam-
age it would
·
have done if it hit some-
one," stated Joe Leary, head of secu-
rity. A search was condl,!cted and the
iridtvidual was caught and dealt with •
appropriately. The reason for com-
..
.
mitting thi
·
s act - a fight with his girl- .
friend.
.
·
·· ·
·
-September 27th: A theft was com-
.
. ·
mitt~d
iri
·
one o(the
:
oiltowrihoilses.
:
The
'
residents
"
weiit
to
sleep a{ap
.
prnxi-
mately 4:30 am, k\!epingJ~eir front
door unlocked: When th
_
ey awoke at
·
11
:OQ
am theyfoµnd theirJ 9 inch color
TV, Sony booml>ox, and a couple of
compact disks missing. Total value
$440.00. There are no leads in this
case.
The police arrived this week to coilect
the alcohol from the liquor locker in
security. The locker contained 451
.
cans of alcoholic biv~rages confis-
cated fro_m studenqihce the
.
begin-
ning of the semester.
_
Security Briefs obtained
by
Dmv,i
Lorenz.
;:>
.
.
. .
·.
'
..
.
·
,
~'How'-s the
weather?'
-
'
Thursday:
Mild,
·
sun
mixed
with
clouds. 48~.63~
Friday: Breezy, sun mixed with
clouds. 50~.70.
0
Saturday: Breezy,
sun
mixed with
·
clouds. 47~: 70.
0
-
·
·
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4
•
Ma'.rist applying for grants to refurbjsh six acres of riverfront area
.
byMICl:IAELGOOT
. Editor~in-chief
non~motorized boating.
September .
"We also feehhat non-motor-
Brown said if the grant is not
.
ized boating:is more in keeping
approved, the college will make
·
.
.
fy:lanst ~fo~ents ma{soon be
·
with the intentions of the bond
.
.
.
another attempt next year.
·
c!b.Ifto
·
go hiking without leav-
act which is after all, a clean air/
·
· "This is multi-year bond fund-
ing campus.
.
clean water bond act," she said.
ing so if we are not successful
.
.
Marist is c~rrently applying
.
.
·•.
Other parts of the project in-
this time around, we will cer-
for two grants to refurbish
·
six
elude an observation lookout
tainly re-submit," she said.
acreS-alongthe East bank of the
•
toweflocated at the grassy knoll
Brown said upon completion,
Hudson River .
•
·
.
that currently holds the Marist
the project would be a valuable
.
· .
..
According to Susan Roeller CoUege sign. Brown said that
asset to the college.
·
Brc1wn; executive
·
assistant to
possibly this site would have
"Ii'
II be a showcase spot for
. PresidentDennfo J. Murray, the
information about the history of
admissions, having a beautiful
·
proj~Ct\Vill ben~fitboth Marist
the spot along the Hudson
waterfront park on campus," she
·
·
and the community.
River.
·
said. "It' II provide a setting for
··
"The. overall project is to im-
Marist will make infrastructure
increased research and educa-
prove the waterfront both for
improvements such as repaving
tional activities
.
"
Marist use and we'll be also
·
the road to the river and re-rout-
.
Brown said this project will not
welcoming the public, who al-
ing part of it to free up room for
interfere with work on the new
ready have access to our water-
trails, making additional parking
library.
front," she said.
lots, and installing a traffic sig~
Circle Photo/Mike Fri>Ch
"This project is not going to
The project will consist of two
nal to regulate traffic under the
MarlaHs currently applying for $800,000
In
grant money to
have any negative impact on
new floating docks in frorit of access tunnel. It would also
spruce up the riverfront area
wi
th hiking and bike trails.
either the funding or construe-
each
·
boat house,
·
a new boat
upgrade water and sewer links.
tion schedule for our new Ii-
hoe funds for the grants would
The project also inciudes up-
·
·
currently exists in Cornell Boat-
The planning for this began
brary
,
" she said. "This will in
come from theNew York Clean
grades to the boathouses.
house," she said.
last February as President
no way take dollars way from or
_ Water/Clean Air, passed by·
_
Brown said the Cornell boat
Brown said there were really
Murray put together a commit
-
sJow up the schedule."
voters in November 1996.
house has
•
particular historic
two impetuses for
·
developing
tee to develop a concept for the
.
Tom Lynch, acting dean of the
.
Maristisapplyingfor$500,000
significance.
this project at this particular riverfront.
division of science, said the
. from the Office of Parks, Recre-
"It's the !ast remaining boat
time.
The application deadlines are
project would be a tremendous
. ation and Historic Preservation
·
house from when Poughkeepsie
"We knew for some time that
Oct. 2 for Greenway and Oct.
15
asset to the campus.
and $300,000 from Greenway. If hosted the Inter-collegiate Row-
we had to invest some money
for the Office of Parks and His-
"It
'
II make it a very attractive
.
· ··
funded, Marist would match the
ing Association," she said.
·
down there to preserve the wa-
toric Preservation. The appli-
place for people to hang out, to
fundsfora total of$1.6 million.
In
addition to being used by
terfront and protect the safety
cation process consiSts of sub-
use the river," he said.
"
If ev-
·
,.,.
_
_
Pao, of the project would be
the crew te~ms; the boathouses
~!i~~e people who use it," she
mitting a narrative overview of erything gets funded, there'll be
. ·pfou~ldi!)gthesea'wall,orbulk-
housesprojectsfortheenviron-
the proposed project
,
the bud-
hiking trails, bike paths
,
im-
'
head, which is about
450
feet
mental science department.
Brown said it was the passing
get for the project, a schedule
proved access to the river it-
'.-
- .. -along
.
the-river's edge.
·
.
Brown said that eventually, the
of the bond grant that stimulated
for implementation, and design
self."
·
.
Brown said the area is in bad
college would also like to make
discussion on what to do about
·
sketch inc1uding maps and photos.
Jennifer Wheeler, a junior b~si-
shape.
·
a small research center neaT the
the riverfront.
·
Brown said the application
ness major said the proiect was
"Thatre~lly ser
.
vel
.
as
.
an ,·m-
l
·
·
1 d d I
tt
d t
·1·
J
"It's deteriorated to the point
river.
a
.
so me u e
e ers e a1 mg
a good idea.
wherdt'sreallythreateningthe
"Ourhope
.
isthatsqmetime1n
petustoreallySlarttogive_some
supportfrompotential users of
"I think it would bring in the
continued use of the waterfront
the nearfuhire,wewill be able
· ·
se_rious thought'
"
to how we
the fac
.
ilities as well as letters
~f
community outside of Mari st
in front of the boathouses/' he
to identify fon
:
ds to
~
put up a
.
mt~~t ~ke/dvanta~d of sr~: s~~port,froin
.
th~ town auth0n-
and I think it would maybe make
,
·.
.)~~ct,
:
~
~
.• .
.. ·
··
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~
.}
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ii8°ih.i ·
-,
~,
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-
~
1
~:a
·
proved, co~
.,
Marist more aware of
the
water-
!
··.·
.•.
,
=Brown
.
said Manst 1s
,
g01pg tO
,,-.-,.-;
Cat10!1~Lre!!.9,l!r.c~-
,
~~
-
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.
t<>
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el(.
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she
said
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.
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_
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_
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,
.
.frqmwe do haye and
how lucky
';'.':?:t
Je
:
strict use
.
bf the
"
rivii-front
'
fo
'
.
pand the
·
:
~irialflab'a'ctivify
.
that
:
.
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"
she said
.
··
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·
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Circle Photo.'Susan Goulet •
Newi
media
1a,b
iir'.[>Yson Center . to
tos
ter
ent'r'epi-eneririai
·
spirit
in
Huµson YAlley
by'.MEGHAN
O'SHAUGHNFSSY
Staff Writer
Once. again, . Marist College
has
.
found itself
cm
,the cut-
ting edge of technology.
·,the·new.lab·.will,be:,10cated
on.
·entreptenuer~hip··in :. product/·
the.,;
fii-sf
floor
oC
the Dyson
service develop~ent an.d
mai-
. Center and
will ·
open .. in the . keting',. to educate and inform
fall o(I 997.
··
regional busjness_es of emerg-
Student Body President Frank Madurl Is all smiles
as
he
pre-
pares to
start
another day
at
Marlst.
. Marist Coll~ge received a
·$75,000 - grant . for the new
Mari st. Coll~ge Media. Lab· for
Busines~; Development: The
grant >includes ~he . purchase
of computer·· equipment . to
enhance the development of
rnulti111edia . and . technology
This rtew media Jab.
will
en-
ing techn_ologies and to -pro-
tourage and supp.Ort ,the de-; vide training and internship
velopment of technological
opportunities for those pursu-
enteprenuership. in· the Hudson
ing care(?rs · in. multjrnedia ..
Valley.
It • .
will. help· student.
Under
·
die direction of the
eqtrepreneurs develop_ . web. Marist . Center
:for .
Corporate
sites, CD's, computer games
and·· Professional Education,
and other new media prod-
the lab serves as a ~~tal link
ucts;
between · the Marist commu-
Saland said that this new· lab · nity and the Hudson· Valley
wiH make heavy use of multime-
business community.
Maduri Administr·ation
. · entrepreriuership at· Marist and
10 ··
the Hudson Valley.
dia: technology.
·
Dennis J ..• Murray, president
tackles campus
·
security·,
cafeteria food and lighting
State Senator Steve Saland
said this project is an example
of making use of information
technology to boost the
"Drawing on Marist's al-
of Marist College, said this is a
ready highly skilled faculty
good example of educa!ional
and advanced technology in-
institutions and business work-
frastructure, the lab will assist
ing together.
new multimedia enterprises in
"We are very grateful to Sen .
.
product design and develop-
Saland for his efforts to. se-
ment, training and business/
cure the funding that will make
academic collaboration," he
this new media lab for busi- · ·
said.
ness · development a reality,"
The lab will have advanced
he said. «This project · is a
multimedia computers and pre-
prime example of a business-
sentation capabilities. It will .education partnership. that will
also include satellite downlink
enhance the economic devel-
and· videoconferencing.
opment efforts -•of .. Dutchess
byBENAGOES
News Editor '--
Everyone told him he would
soon be home pumping gas, but
this self-admitted underdog
came to Marist with high expec-
tations and
a
resolve to show
up the skeptics.
Senior Frank Maduri never got
that job pumping gas. Instead
he made it to the top ofMarist's
political pyramid by winning last
year's election for student body
president. Now he is trying to
sort out what to accomplish
during his one-year term.
Maduri, · a political science
major, said he finds the job diffi-
cult, but is confident his admin-
istration and the Senate canfix
many of the problems with.the.
status
'quo. . .,: . . - . '
.,, ;
. '· ''I'see a•iof of obstacles, but if
there's any clas~ or year that can
overcome them, it will be this
SGA," he said. "There are seri-
ous issues on thiscampus. This
year we are starting. to see re-
sults because there are. people
that know what they're doing."
He said one of the more seri-
ous issues facing ·students .. is
campus security and the recent
robberies on North End.
Maduri's tow.nhousewas one
of those broken into recently.
"That is something] am go:-
ing to address ASAP," he said;
"Lock your doe>rs, protect your-
self. This is getting outof han~
with three [robberies]
in
a
three
week
period"
.
He said some students have
told him they do. QOt feel safe in .
their own houses anymore. He
. said he will meet with Joe
Leary,
director of safety and security,
soon to discuss .the situation.
'Tll let him know this has
sparkedthe concern of the stu-
dents," Maduri said. "Instead
of checking parking pas.ses, start
getting more people on the beat''
economy.
"We have said · time and
again that in order for New
York, and the mid-Hudson. Val-
ley in particular, to actively ·
compete in our economy, we
must adjust to· changes in the
marketplace · to enable us to
· The administration is also
looking into installing more
lights on campus such as be-
hind Leo HaH, near Byrne
House, and behind theold
towrihouses. Maduri said he is
also pushing for a foot path
from the Hoo Lot and
u
the
~espond ~o the next wave of
--11 ··
·
p ·.
· p
mformat10n technology,'' he
h1 to the townhouses.
.·
.• •
.d
"Th' M d"
.
L b
.
11
d
M d · ·
1·
·
kl' · ·
h " ·
sai .
1s
e
ia
a w1
o
a un 1s a so tac mgJ e , .... : · ,,
. long-criticized food
in
the caf-
JUS
t
s
th
at.
s
I d
eteria with help from Resident
.
en.
a an
-:vas respon-
Senator KevinLuridy. Maduri
s1ble ~or developing and an-
said the criticism has· wrongly
nou~cmg a number of eco-
been directed towards Joe
nom1c dev~Iopment programs
Binotto d'rector of dining ser-
· for tlle. mid-Hudson Valley.
·ces · ' th
1
.. p t·
,
· ·
Part of the Senator's "Hudson
v1
,
m e
as_.
V:
II
J·b C
.
I . . .
,,
"It's not tlie quality, that's not
a ey
,
.o
. reation mtiative,
the issue. It's the preparation."
Computer science major Ron
County, the Hudson · Valley
Jonessaidhelikedwhatthenew
and New York State.''. .;:
r,,
lab has to offer.
Saland's economic develop-
"!
think it's a really good idea,"
ment program. also·. includes
he said. "Not only will it help
grants ·for a· number,:of :other
· students here, but it will also
important·programs.-here,in the
help Marist prosper from busi-
.Hudson Valley; ... Amortg;:such
ness and economic connec-
proposed projects -is .a •_Small
tions in the local area.''.
Business Development :Cen-
. ·This media lab has three main
ter,. in wh~ch . Marist is-: also
goals: to support regional
participating:in.
'
hi~~!~~!~~!ti~~~!~:ii~i
.
:llabitat(o:r Hunianitycome~to M_~n~ist as branch of SGA
hand thatth~'8oHegi·'on1y
.
·-.,o .. ,- , :.:_:: '.'
:.'.
:_·• · ..
,
. ·
L .. ·_ ..
.
,.,,
fiharite'HabitaUor'Httrftit'~ity
serves· quality'
:foods'.:
Binotto
byIA.UREN
GUERRffiRo -
.
'. .
-·
with ·theit smali budget;
resort-
assured. thatlhefo'is
.
;
a:
better
-
· · Stqdent Body President; Frank -ing to fundraisihg to: cover the
staff at the cafetenaihis year.
StaffWriter
J. Maduri introduced the bill this
costs of donations . to 'the
Some of Maduri
7
s
early sue-
month· He has experienced first-
houses and traveling"expenses.
cesses indude working on
·
.re-
Habitat for Humanity has
hand the rewards .of working
Butnow the pr9jectlias a$500 .
visingthe
,
SGAConstituti6n.·.
found a home of its own at
with HabitatforHumanity.
bucigetbecause_ofth~SGApilJ.
_
. Madur_i. s
_
aid h~ .wantsto pose
·
Maris.t College.-
·
· ··•· LaS'tyear du9ng sprjng J;rea,k,
::J
u_li~fi<!dfl.rQWS.Is.yJ
c.h:.air,gf_
tli¢
referendums to the student
The Student·Goveminent As-
Mad!Jri. ilnd
.
eleven
°
ther·
st11-
Habitatfor Humanity committee.-
body. this.year
·cm
iss.ues rang~
sociationpassed
a
bill Sept. 10
dell ts,- ·· tqok. · part in the
said she plans to conti.nue
ing from a battle of the· bands . . to adopt. Habitat for Humanity
orgaqization ;s Collegiate Chai~
fundraising,-'ih1tCis
l
giateful: for
between Mar1st and area col-
as its newest community service
Ieng~
-
in Bridgeport, Con_n.
what has been done-for them.
Jeges to the idea of a diversity
project,
They worked
,
with low _in~ome .
•~An
of the members ofthe
.day_on campus.
According to the mission
families. buildiJ1g new houses;
committt:e thank=alloUhtfstu-
0
·
·
installing aluminu. m
... sidin_g and
1_1e campaign promise was to
statement; Habitat for Human-
dent~ and the' SGA for their
d · ·
C
b
d b
k
. pai.ntin. gin bitter coldt. emp· e. ra_ -
·
·
- ecrease
a aret an
oo -
ity Intemationalis ''a nonprofit, .
.
growing support,'\she saig ..
stor~ pii.c~s.· But Maduri said
ecumenicalChrisd.au- housing
tures. '
.
.
-
.For the first tinie ever;Habitat
there is little he
can
do about the
ministry dedicated to eliminat.:
Maduri said the experience forHunmnitytookpartin theac'.' -
Cabaret
ing poverty housing;" The
was invaluable.
. ···.
·
.
' ti vi ties fair which sparked
in-
"Joe [Binotto] said the Caba-
ret prices are the lowest on the
eastern seaboard,'.' Maduri said.
"I'm
concerned about pricing,
but as far as that's concerned,
it's a dead issue. Prices can't
go down anymore."
He said he is still waiting to
·
talk to administrators at the
. bookstore.
p roiect has met the SONs
· ''It was the beSt experie
·
1_1ceOI
c
.... r
.
eased iri.te.r,e.
s.t.· .....
a.mong .s. t_u-
J
think I ever had as an under- ·
·.
· ·
~
search forayear-roundcommu-
·
· ·
·
·
· · · - · dents. Qadarowsky said she
gra.du.a.te,. bar no· .. ne,·"· h. iiaid: · ·
· · ·
·
· ··
· · ·
nity service project.
He·s_aid his experience was the ·.· hopes tOwork\Vith the students
Bob Lynch, director of student
imp'et. u. s
i:o
bringing .t.he or. gani-
that expressed interest.
·activities, said this bill helps
"We liope'to serve them bet-
.SGA meet one of Marist's core . zation to Mari St
- .
terjn the future," she saici.
objectiv~s: .
.
. .
".I
feel such a dedicatio.n}o
With the anticipated growth,
"SGA is fulfilling one of the
see. this ~rganization ·grow at
Qadaro\Vsky plans to apply for
college's missions, which is a
Marist•" he sa!cl. HHere at SGA
another Collegiate .Challenge,
commitment to communtty ser-
we felt it
\V~S necessary.''. . .
improve relations w
.
ith the local
· vice," he-said.-
"It
is a great-job
The affiliation atNiariSt grew
comm.unities
.
and continue to
Club
of the story or lyingto adminis-
... conrinuedfrom page I
tration, which doesn't help any-
that they are doing."
.
oufof.tlle ~ocial Work Commit-
work for club charter status.
tee. They' could not affordto
·was
in
the hoteland she com-
plained about the kids· on the -
floor being noisy and that ap-
plied to us," Poirier said. "We
were not out of control or
rowdy.".
"I think they h~d an incident
where hotel damage occurred as
a result of a party," he said.
"There was documentation of
alcohol," he said.
sa~d. "This stuff happened but
it didn't get out."
forcomment before press time.
body."
. Jette said the policy was en- ·
He said there have always
acted primarily for
liability
pur- · been instances of club sports
poses.
getting into trouble on the road,
"[The administration doesn't]
but the most recent instances
want a student handling emer-
involved the ski
team
and rugby
gencies," he said. "They'd
team.
rather have the adult faculty
Junior Chantal Poirier, presi-
adviser handling the emer-
dent of the woman's rugby team,
gency. I agree that there should
saiq the incident happened last
be somebody on the road that
semester while the men's and
is a contact with the school.
woman's team were away com-
This way it saves the students
peting in a tournament.
from having to cover up facts
"There was this woman who
Poirier said the woman blamed
numerous things on them, in-
cluding a 4 a.m. fire alann.
Jette said the rugby incident
was never documented, and
. there was debate on exactly
what happened. He also said
the other incident thatis fre-
quently cited is an incident in-
volving the ski team.
But Jette said that some people
are saying the club sport rule
happened because of the ski
team or rugby team. However,
he said other abuses off cam-
pus were becoming too common.
"There's been a lot of in-
stances like people not handing
in hotel r~ceipts, money abuse
on the road, to alcohol use on
the road, to hotel damages," he
Top administrators and SGA
members met Sept. 22 to.discuss
the policy. 'Jette said he wished
the administration had commu-
nicated earlier with SGA, which
shares jurisdiction over club
sports.
with
the athletics department
"I was a little upsetthat it re
0
ally wasn't consulted through
the clubs and student govern~
ment, and that was where some
of the· controversy might have
laid. But now everything's
settled."
'fHECIRCLE
1997
5
Sexually transmitted diseases affect at least 55 million Ameri-
caf2s . . Two~thirds of new infections occur in people under age
25. College students are morl likely to experiment with sexual
behavior. This week's fo"c(US section deals with sexually trans-
mitted diseases and how it is an important issue on college
campuses.
College students have many options available for treating STDs
bySI'EPHANIEMERCURIO
· Managing Editor
Students who feel they may
have a Sexually Transmitted
Disease have a place to go.
According to Jane O'Brien, di-
rector of Health Services, stu-
dents· can be tested at Mari st,
Dutchess County Health De-
partment ·or St Francis.
"We can test for a number of
diseases here, or the· student
can go to St. Francis," she said.
· "The Dutchess County Health
Department also has a clinic that
conducts tests."
.. ·,.o•Brien.said the ~tudent can
come down or make an appoint-
.
.
.
ment
v.
1
ith Health Services. .
tients have
full
exams."
of an STD," she said. "There are
',,·'>'The
student qm,request test-
Salisbury said the patient must
also students who are con~
,ing;ifshe,orhe thinks there is a
call for an appointment.
cerned because · they know
:problem/\ she said.··
.
"We do not accept walk-ins;
someone or had a partner who
., Marie Salisbury, manager of it is by appointment only," she
has an STD."
.
the Po·ughkeepsie Planned Par-
said. "It is. usually a week wait
Salisbury said not many col-
enthood, said the clinic offers
for a
full
exam, butwe can usu-
lege students utilize Planned
partial testing for STD's, as well
ally take emergencies. right Parenthood.
as
full
exams.
, .
away.)'
·
.
. _
; . .
.
.: _ ., 'Y".'l)~n ~he word
g~!~
out
·pkJ,~.W:\trt1~*s,.~m~t?t:·· ~f
J!T~ttit%~~!ll~if!i~ · ·
,
·6flli~/;~h~t~'}i:
2
tli;fifad{:;
·
for
a
partial testing and evalua-
. tested.
not get out easily,. thougjj.'
1
·
tion and treatment, but then
"Studentscome in with com-
O'Brien said that chlamydia is
they must come back for a fuil
plaints, :and testing needs ·to be
a big problem for college students.
.e_xarri/' she said. "All of our pa-
done to rule out the possibility
."Marist does not necessarily
Marist stuq.epts ~xpress awareness of STDs _on campus
_:·/J~,ld';';°;i,:',:;
;_·:i'•
·:·-.
·
-
.
~;.~_~.
·
,._·:;~;_,:_;
i_
~
:: • l>yTHEA
CIMMINO
"
:->'.
:
StaffiWriter
Marisrstudents beware, sexu-
·ally
transmitted diseases go to
. college too.
.
Sexually transmitted diseases
are diseases such as AIDS, gon-
orrhea, syphilis and hepatitis.
These can be contracted
through sexual encounters such
as intercourse and oral sex;
Senior Sonny Sunderland said
he feelsSTDs are ·a problem on
college campuses.
."Anything you don't know
that is hannful is a problem," he
said.
Freshman Louis Totino· also
said STDs are a problem.
"Not everyone is responsible
enough," he said.
·
Totino said he has offered ad-
vice to friends about protection
against STDs.
"I know one guy didn't take
my advice. I was disappointed
in him, but there's not much I
could do about it, I guess," he
said.
Five out of the seven stu-
dents interviewed said they
. knew
at
least one individual with
a sexually transmitted disease ..
Four of these students also said
they have worried about con-
tracting STDs at one time or
another.
·
Junior Kerry said she often
discusses such matters as
STDs.
"I
have two younger sisters.
They have always taken my ad-
vice,". Unflat said.
Senior Joseph DeBona said
STI)s are definitely
a
problem .
"Some kids are responsible,
but a lot of times alcohol plays·
a factor and judgment is im-
paired and protection isn?t al-
ways used," he said.
·
De Bona also said that he tries,
not to be overbearing about the
issue.
"I don't feel it is my place· to
preach, but ifldo, it's to a close
friend that I care.about. I hope
they' take my advice.
I guess.
they. do," DeBona said.
Totino feels that there is
plenty of information out there
on how to protect· oneself
against STDs.
. "What's being done is
enough, but it's up to the indi-
vidual to take the advice
or
not,"
Totino said.
Sunderland said he thinks more
could be done to infonn the stu-
dent body on the topic.
"We
have lectures on culture, reli-
gion, diversity etc., not to say
we've never had a lecture on
STDs. Those topics are dis-
cussed more often than STDs
are," he said. "STDs should be
mentioned in orientation pro-
grams as well as optional lec-
tures during the year for the
entire student body."
Freshman Nancy DeBiasi said
that it is not easy being a col-
lege student.
"Coming to college is a scary
experience in itself," she said.
Worrying about STDs is just
another burden," she said.
DeBiasi also said that knowl-
edge is the key to preventing
sexually transmitted diseases.
"As a freshmen coming into
college you don't even know
people's last names let alone
their sexual background. · I think
the best way to avoid contract-
ing an STD is to get to know
your partner well enough where
you can discuss your sexual
background," DeBiasi said.
Junior Rebecca Brown said
she probably doesn't know ev-
erything she needs to know
about STDs, and that Marist
should do more to increase the
student body's knowledge.
"The college could hand out
flyers and offer workshops,"
she said.
Freshman Lindsay Tucker also
said that more could be done.
"Especially for freshmen,
maybe RA's should mention
protection against STDs in floor
meeting discussions," she said.
Sunderland also said that talk-
ing over these issues could be
a big help.
"Engaging in the discussion
can be an eye-opener for many
people," sh'e said.
have a problem with the disease,
but according to statistics it is a
problem," she said.
Salisbury said Planned P£rent-
hood treats a variety of diseases.
"We see .a ·lot of herpes out-
breaks, as ~ell as chlamydia,"
she .~~id. ;:w,e do see other dis-
eases, but those. two are the
•··. .
:
,
. ·.
"."· . •
. . .
' -
.
·- •
•
~
• • . !
inostso1;wJ10f.!·~·, . : , . . ·
,.
· ·• Sa/jsbiil)'.
said the most com:
mon .· forms
pf
trt?ating the dis-
eases are by pills or creams.
"We prescribe anitbiptics,
pills o·r creams to be topically
· applied,'' she said.
O'Brien said the testing is ba-
sically free through Marist.
"If
the student has the Marist
health plan, they generally do
not have to pay,".she said. "I'm
not sure about the Dutchess
County Health Department, but
I think most services are free or
on a sliding scale."
Salisbury said a full exam is
based on a sliding scale.
"If
the patient is a student, the
exam usually costs around $40,"
she said.
Salisbury said the clinic also
offers AIDS tests .
"We have confidential AIDS
tests for our patients, which are
free," she said.
"If
the person is
not a patient, the cost is $15."
O'Brien said AIDS test are
available at the Dutchess
County Health Department.
"There is no charge, and the
tests can either be anonymous
or confidential," she said.
. Salisbury said the most ,mpor-
tant issue is prevention.
. . ·' 'The use of corido'ms keeps
. 'the outbreaks of diseases down
at all costs," she said. "Students
need to have condoms easily ac-
cessible."
Career
&
Employe
EXPO
Thursday,
October
30, 1997
4:00 - 7:00
pm
Mccann Center
GRADUATING STUDE!ffS
and
ALUMNI •
A
chance lo discuss your quahlicalio'1s with a variety
of employers. Find out aboul the
job market, full-time
job
poss,bihties. lips about
job
hunling. and
more.
if
you're
job hunting. bring resumes and dress proressrorn.lly
JUNIORS· lnformalion about internships. part-lime. and summer
job
opportunilies. Learn about
dilrercnt organi>.alions and
job
opportunities. and to make contacts'lor yoor ,er,ior year
.iob
search.
Resumes
are helpful
FRESHMAN
and
SOPHOMORES·
Mice on choosmg
1/Q\lf
l'Tk'lior and career drrection from
emplowrs. Explore different career,. part lime. all<! summer
,ob
op;:,ortunili<,,; Resumes are nol
necessary
!Of
more111form..1t,oncon,.J<t
the
Ct?ntl'f
1£.•
(dit,.,
.~.,,,ct;.' .,,
.15-17
6
Editorial
Late nightcomputer craziness reveals
chinks inMarist'stechnologicalannor
Marist has a very technologically
1 :30
a.m. and~e did ha~e a saved copy
advanced campus.
H
has broken .. ofourworkondisk;wedecidedtocallit
incredibe ground in using technology in
quits and try again tomorrow.
education
.
It was even rated as one of
The next morning; we asked the stu-
the top schools in the country in terms· dent aids to figure out why the docu-
of technology. However, it is farfroma
ment was not'printing but they were
.
be-
technological utopia. There are several
fuddled. We then went to four other labs
issues that I feel have been neglected
which were all being used. Finally, ~fter
over the years.
waiting an hour and a half, we gained
To illustrate this point, let me tell a story.
access to the Da Vinci lab and printed out
A couple of weeks ago, a very good
ourflier.
.
friend
.
of mine and
I
were trying to de-
Reflecting on this ordeal,
I
noticed se
.
v-
sign a flier for our club.
I
thought this
eral things that
l
wished would change.
would take no more than an hour. How-
First
,
more computers should be made
ever, thus began a journey, which I lov-
available for student use: The students
ingly refer to as
"The
Odyssey of the
should receive a copy of the computer
Flier.
'.'
·
labs' schedule at the beginning of the
W.e used the computers in the Da Vinci
semester. That way, students would
Lab which normally require password ac-
know which labs were available without
cess
.
However, since it was
10:30
p.m.
having to trek-across campus.
.
The
•
view frbrtrSue; ..
.
by Sue G~cidwin
.
1-rED
So
LoN<i
-r
1..,M.ll>R'-j i1111:
.
,
LY CU:AN il¼1N(:, I
1
R1tu.oweetJ
_
Cos
is SHovr..bt.J'T
NI,
•••
I
'IA..
Dear
Fmtor:
Letter to the Editor
and there were no classes at that time,
Also, several computers are being used
we had no trouble gaining access to the
by
·people
just to do e-mail
·
or surf the
system. Somehow the computers knew
Net.
i
think~ special mini-lab should be
that we were not arriong the "authorized"
set up for Internet and e-mail access. This
users and as revenge, developed ttie
would free up more computers to be used
nasty little habit of freezing every
30
min-
for dasswork.
utes or so and shutting down.
Perhaps the biggest problem is com-
Many thanks for StephanieMei:curio'sfine articl~ on Mother Teresa.
,
.
After a few misguided attempts, my
munication. After a computer technician
Actually, there
are
fairly recent pr~cedents for quick canonizations.Two
·
:
:
:
,
.
friend and
I decided to move co the
has been informed of
a
computer prob-
that came to mind are Maximilian Kolbe and Teresa ofLisieux.
.,
;
.
·
Donnelly Lab next door. We managed to
Iem,
·
tie or she should e'-mail the person
Kolbe
.
was a Franciscan priest whogavehis life on August 14, l94I;in
_,_
.
:
·
·
.
,
.
find a computer. However, the com put-
back to let them know that the message
.
exchange for a Jewish fellow conce~tration c~p pri
_
~~re~
.
'!Vi_~
f~.'!'!}Y
-
~P,H
J,~
-
s:
;
:;-_.~
ers in that lab have PageMaker 5, not
was received and
.
what steps
i
are being
wastobeexecuted. Matryrdomreqmresno
_
m1raclesfqr-c1lllOll1,~tI01!.
~
I<.1:>lb§
..
t:
;;"%
PageMaker 6,
_
as we
_
were using in
taken to
·
address the problem.
·
·
·
·
·
.
was beatified in 1971 and canonized shortly therea'.ft~r.
\
IfRcmie
;
exir~po::
?
;
:
~ti~
Da Vinci. After doing our work again we
Technology has a place in education.
lates;~
1
fother Teresa's life could be considered a martyrdbtil;
;'.
Qth1twise;~°W~
,4~~:,i3j
decided to print it out
The goat is to make the technology
,
so
will have to wait for miracles;
.
. .
. .
.
.
·
When I issued the com1I1and to print, a
flawl
_
ess th~t iUs lea~t disruptive
.
to
.
tlte
:
Miracleshav~Jo
,
be permailentphysic~t' cures scientifically investigated
:
system error occurred
and
we lostall our
.
learning process. Only this waywiHt¢d(
,
.
and declared beyond the power ofmfidical
.
science.
·
·
·
;
·
·
·
'
'
'
work. We moved to another computer,
.
no logy
.
be fully integrated iri~o educa~
.
St. Terese ofLisie
_
ux died of
wrac}dng
tuberculosis on September
30,
1897,
re-did
.
our work, but still could not print.
-
tion. ~farist sh9uld
,
y.,ork toward achi~Yc:
."
..•
. .
.
·•at
.
the young age
~f
24,:
and waS:can
.
onized in
·
1945
;
a
very short:
28
years!
.
.
At
thi,s pojnt, ~y Jnistrat~d fnen~
and . .
ingthat goal,.
r:
,.. ,
:
/
.
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-
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dreds ofletters; dozens
·
of poems
'
and fou{pliiy~!
·
She was the inajorpin-ilp
'
.
,
.
TH
.
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·.
CIR
.
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girl
:
ofWorld War I ~nd~pr~t:4
.
s,
c(h
i
~ny
'
Afir~cl~~,especia.llffor
·
{lliSSiOnai:-
L
.
-
ies,
that she was dedared a:siiin(in
}
ec9rd
·
time. Most of the
.
hundreds of
·
.
.
Cat~~lic churches iri China pfo1hineritlY:dtspJay her statue
br
image;
.
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b!en~;;;;;~~;;;~;:;i;;:;~~;~~;;;~~::~8~~
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The coverage
will
always
befair
and impartial.
-
,.J
~rr
:
s
~
~~Oi,vfB.'
.
'
<
1\vas gazing
'
at
i
'--
)teering\vheelon
the right
::
hand sidf·
-
+
:
:'
'the Circle
'
Staff
Michael Goot
Stephanie Me~curio.
,
BenAgoes
·
.
.
Amand~ Bradfoy
Christopher Thorne
Gyna Sloincinsky
Emily :Kucharczyk
TimMans~m
· Jim
·
Dziezynski
•
Steve Wanc~y~
:
'
.
Michael Frisch
:
_
··
.
.
Chris Hogan
.. Editor-in-chief
.
'
Managing Editor
·
·
News Editor
AssistantNews Editor
.
Focus Editor
.
,
Feature Editor
Assistant Feature.Editor -
Opinion Editor
.
Arts & Entertainment Editor
Spo'rts Editor
Photography Editor
.
Business Manager
G. Modele Clarke
·' :
Faculty Adviser
.
.
We welco~e your responses to anyfhing on the Opinion--:
.
Editorial page, as well as any other issues.
Letters
to the Editor
may be sent to
The Circle
via e-mail at
HZAL or dropped in
·
·
campus mail addressed.to
The Circle.
We reserve
the
right to
edit letters for spacial reasons or otherwise.
·
How to Contact
Us:
If you
are
interested in advertising in
The Circle,
please .
leave a message for Chris Hogan at
575-3000
ext.
2429
If you have a story idea or would like to publicize a club event;
The Circle
at HZAL.
.
-
s111all z:ed dt1ffefbag tti#~gen
_
t1emall~ll9
.
i
-
~
_
as startiI1g to
.'
guesiion
>
_
\Yheth~r
'
that
.;;
,
.
..
l
_
etf~t
_
rny feet. fwa~
·
faifi~g
f9r
th~pus
'.-
·
)
!tt!ete4
_
:
~uffelbag\y!15
'
a tiofub
'
or
_
in'ay~
,
:
,
,
_
sothatl
.
coulcl go home
_
apd,free.mys~~f
-
ju~ta little red duffel bag
;
'
',:•?
0
l ,
:,
:;-
:·'
:,, :
·:
from the
'
gosh-forsaken
·
Port Authorit;<
.
-
.
so;lw~nt for a
·
wall:C There\v_as a
gdod
'
,
. :
BusTerminal.
.
.
.
.
.
.
·
:-
deal to belearned aboutthis
'
episo
·
de\,f
·' ·
I tried to rationalize with myself. "Well,
.•
panic, aside from that
the
little red
duffd
:
.
'
:
.
the gentleman could have just left
:
ii
to ·bag turned
o~tto
~JUSt
t6at
'
and'.11oth-
,
·
hold his place while hewandered
_
Qffthe
•
fag
more
.
.
\Vh<,1raborit
;
alVofthefa'ces
line,
·
Does he really believe that such a>
·
that werewatting for tlie bus?
·•
. Jhadq't
•
small bagwould actually hold
.
his place?
given them
.·
a second
.
thought
.
as I took
·" Oh; bu~ really now, itcouldn't be
.
a
·
·
cover from whatJthought
fo
be our bit-
.
·
·
•
-
0
.
bomb
.
·
That's just silly
."
Hooked around
ter end.
· ~
Running out
.
of thl terminal
...
atthe other faces in line'f or the
_
bus. Som~
wasri
'
_
tthe ilobieslof g~stures
:
• '.
.
.
:
· ,
.
were placid, others impati~nt, but all were
.
·
I eventually madejt home physically
.
oblivio!)s to what I was
·
lJeginning
.
to
unscathed.,Itlien consulted my cousiri
believewaso·urimpendingdoom:
.-
·
from Erigland,
.•
whowas
•
staying atiny
.
"You probablY. are being horribly irra~
·
house at the time. As the rest of my
tional,'' I consoled myself, and my "that's
·
·
family ridicu,led m~, sh~ saw rriyaciions
just ~illy" rationale began to fade rather
·
as perfectly logical. She cited aninstance
quickly as time (and presumably the little
in an English tenninal in which she had
red duffel bag) ticked away.
accidentally !eft·a bag on the ground.
''But then again, if it was a bomb, you'd
·
Som~one reported it to the bomb ·squad
;
'
be the first to know
...
"
My cousin's story reminded me of how
With that thought,
l
darted out of the
distant terrorism seems from America.
terminal cinto the street. I sought she!~
·
Over the summer, a tourist complained
ter behind a big red double-decker tour
to me about the subway system (Not as
bus with the steering wheel on the right-
surprisingly, he also complained ab
_
out
hand side. I winced, anticipating a blast
Andrew Lloyd Webber's
"Cats").
He was
that would put any Stallone film to shame.
disgusted
by
a beer can that he watched
Then ..
.
Nothing.
roll
.
back and forth on the subway car
I looked around.• A couple of bummy
floor, all the way out to Queens. He then
guys were complimenting the rush hour
explained that he was from Israel. I nod-
career women as they hurried by. Two
ded and thought about the little red duf-
.
other men were pushing shoe shines to
fel bag. As terrorizing .as the occasional
the businessmen in Reeboks. A few more
rattling beer may be, I dared not suggest
were passing out tour brochures. And
that it could have been worse.
me? Well, 1 was cowering behind tbe big
'Tara Quinn
is
the Humor Columnist
red double-decker tour bus with the
-
i
,
.
THE.CIRCLE·QPINI
ON
OctQ~er 2, 1997
7
.
.
Little
·
intrigue in ·rundraising hearings leads
to
·little interest
.
·
Pop.
However, you need to under-
emphasized· to show how
·
·
In fact, in a recent sna:p poJJ of
·
one, I 00% of those surveyed
said that they could not ~are
less about these proceedings .
.
,
Eor one thing it lacks intrigue,
exciting events, and unsavory
characters for people to rally
their hatred behind.
·
stand that the bigg·est scandal
.
greedy the Democrats were in
would simply pass the baton
onto his second in chief. It was
such an eventuality, you would
h
_
ave figured that Gore had been
in charge of Operation Desert
Sfonn.
that had ever plagued Gore be-
the last election.
fore this was the time that his
Personally, I wonder what the
hair was parted on .the left side
differences are in money taken
instead of the right side.
If
from Buddhist nuns and R.J.R.
· there has ever been a squeaky-
Nabisco, but, apparently, I am
. Gore has already taken steps
to make sure that this docs not
become the major scandal the
GOP hopes it will be. He has
allied himself with a group of
people who know how to deal
with this sort of thing: President
Clinton's advisors and spin
doctors.
If
they
continue
doing
the high quality kind of work we
all know that they are capable
of, things should turn out all
right for the Vice President
People are enraged over the
In short, this is no Watergate,
recent allegations against Vice-
!
·
it is not Iran-Contra, and it is
PresidentG?reoverfundraising
certainly not the Teapot Dome
misconduct.
Scandal.
Well;
no, actually; they are not,
So why is Janet Reno consid-
but if Sen. Fred
·
"Red October"
ering the possibility of perhaps
Thompson had his way, they
maybe sometime appointing
would be.
·
some kin
_
d ofspecial prosecu-
But, if the \\ford on the street
toror another to possibly look
is to be tru~ted; people
_
atross
-
more
.
deeply into this?
.
.
America could not care less.
Do hot look to ine for the an~
Perhaps Americans would be
swer,
I
was asking all of you out
more interested if members
of there. To be quite honest,Jdo
the Democratic National Com-
not even understand.
mittee
.
had been wearing
The worst part of aUof this is
women's undergarments. and
that
·
Vice~President Gore has
biting those prnspecdve donors
' .
beellbrought into an of this,
·
·
if they did not cough up at least
.
Now, to many of you, a politi-
$20,<XX>.
,
·
.
. ·
. .
.
.
.
cal scandal involving a member
As itturos
<>lit;
people are
_
a~~
of the Clinton administration
tually more
-
hlterested
•
in o
·
nce . probably sounds about as stun~
and for allg~ttingto ihe
·
bottom
·
·>
~ing a~ the revelati_oll that Gin-
•
·
of how mapy licks frDOES ta:ke
..
ger, Spic~ does not-do her own
to
.
get the._center
.
of
•
a
Tootsie
chore~graphy
.
clean person to hold this of-
the only one. These are the kind
flee; it is Al Gore. Afterall, this
of things that
fall
l;Jetween the
isamanwhosewifedemanded
cracks. of the Fox News
that subversive material like
Chann'el's fair and accurate "re-
Warrant albums be given Pa-
porting".
rental Advisory stickers.
At the center of it. all is both
Poor Al Gore was simply do-
Clinton and Gore's usage of
ing his job by raising campaign
White House phones to solicit
funds. That is the sort of thing
donations.
that the Vice President do_es.
First of all, every incumbent
Iii
1984,
.
GebrgeBushgothis
has always used his office
go(?d buddy Manuel Noriega
phones, and second, what are
to coHect donations from some
they supposed to do, use the
of his Columbian friends in the
pay phones across the street?
"import/export business".
Imagine the bigger scandal
· Four years later, then-VP Dan
that would ei:upt
if
President
Quayle \vent door to door sell-
Clinto11 rented Hotel rooms to
ing.Grit magazine.
make these calls. The more time
Vice Presiderit Gore's prob-
he spends at home, the better it
·
Iem
was that
_
he didhis job too·
is. for hi!.> image.
.
well.
If
he had to go out .and
.
Whatever the case, these al-
get
$
Ll
Million;hewouldcome
legations are the nrst bumps in
.
back with$L3 Million.
.
Oore's road
.to
the Presidency
Jsthis
·
r~any acrim~? A,ctu~
in 2000.
·
·
ally,·
_
it
is
not, and this is the
_
: .
.
;
Until
.
ea~lier this year, there
sort of thing that' is just bi:!ing
_
.
.. was a lot of '.talk that Clinton
But, Americans being as fickle
as they are, we are likely to for-
get all about this in the next few
years. After all, if President
Clinton got re-elected amidst
scandals, Al Gore should be able
to get in for at least
_one
term if
he has all of his scandals be-
hind him.
.
Christia11 Bladt is The Circle's
Se11ior Political Commentator,
a11d, as always, to11ight he's
going to party like it's 1999.
READ
:
_
:
·:
]Ylarv m~kes headlfne$ _with
guilty
plea
,
and a whole new wardrobe
-
·
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
--
.
·
.
.
. .
·-·
.
.
·
-
Ustially.i Jike
to\vrite
·about
.
..
•
·
things
·
·oh
campu~
·
and J~ke
.
;
shotsatthirigs pe
·
op
_
le seem tg
.,;
think sacred around here.
{But;;.
·
this past wee~,
~stuallyJ
~~~f
,~
agq
_
tqdaY,i3:IJ11,i9
;
l;gr:e.w,up
!
li$
{;,.,
.
tening
,·
to on
'.
Sa~iiidays
.:
anq
/
·
.
;
sui:iday~ adrnitt~d
·
guiltto
'
as
::.
•
•
/
.
.
sault arid batterx
:
in Arlingto~
,
·
··
Vi
.
rginia,
'so
I
decided.Jo
:
write
:
.
·
oil.
_
a national issue, rather thah
.
-
·
a locafone.
.
.
.
...
·
-
.
In
.
case
·
you someliowman-
.
ageci' to tum off your television
.
.
.
sets f9r¾the
:Pf!St
YJ,!;!tk; ;Marv
·\
-
,
.
·
Albert;longt1meannoi.incerfor
.,
major.:)t;~gue,
;
sp
_
oi:ts, \v'as the
:
recjpj~nto(qri~ of.the S\Yeet-
:,
·
est.p,~a
,
!
b~gain deals
.
l
have
•
ever heard of.
--
Albert wentfrom
.
·
possi,bly: being sente.~ced to
~arv: Albert (left), with Matt Goukas (atan~Jng) and BIii Walton
(sitting), In one
of
his many .. ; outfits~
·
•
.,
.
.
·
.
-
anywherefromfiveyearstolife
.
I know what you're thinking:
in prison for forcible sodomy,
'
t
l've always known that Albert
to now pos~ibly ~eing sen-
had a hairpiece!
,
His head looks
tenced
.
to a maximum of 12
like
.
a beaver crawled
,
up on it
months. in jail and an .over-
and never left!" (No disgusting
whelming $1,200 fine for as-
·,
puns inte.rided.) 1'his is a major
sault and battery. Albert also
breakthrough peo.ple. Obvi-
won the New York State Lot-
ously we all knew that he either
teryfor$89nullion,smokedCarl
had a hairpiece orhe had the
Lewis in the one hundred .most detached
.
hair-to ever sit
.
meter, and defeated Christo-
atop a human
:
head, but there
pherWalken in an intense game
was·never any proof .
.
of Russian roulette (in case
•
This,forme,.was tlie mosi en-
you didn't kno
_
w, that was
a
·
tertaining infonnation about the
refere.nce to the movie
_The
·
trial. But somehow certain
Deerhimter
which everyone
people felt that therewere other
with a VCR should see). Need-
things that occurred that day
less to say, Albert .was pretty
which were much more interest-
lucky ~o settle, especially after
ing. Let me see ifl can re-enact
the incredibly interesting tes-
the events of Albert's meeting
timony of a woman named
,
with Madsen in
-
I 994. Albert
Patricia Madsen.
asked Madsen to come to his
Madsen worked with Albert
room and help him with the prob-
on numerous occasions as the
lem he was having sending a fax.
VIP liason for Hyatt Hotels. On
But it turned out that Albert was
one beautiful day in
J
994 one
having a problem with some-
of the biggest questions of the
thing else. I can't tell anymore
Ameri
.
can sports fan was an-
of this story without throwing
swered once and for all. The
in little tidbits of
-
perversion, •
only
.
thing was that all those
because it's just so easy to do,
fans would never learn the true
so I am going to let Patricia
answer to their question until
Madsen tell the story. These
last Wednesday when Patricia
quotes are from CNN News
Madsen testified that MARV
Online. Madsen walked into
ALBERT HAS A HAIRPIECE!
Albert room and:
"I turned around and saw him
standing there. I saw him stand-
ing there in white panties and a
garter belt. He was exposed and
he was aroused," she said. Just
wait, it gets better. Albert ap-
proached her and began to rub·
up against her .
.
"He told me he was tense and
he needed some relief. Then he
bit the back of my neck and he
pushed me. He tried to push
my head down to his crotch
area. I went to grab his hair and
his hair lifted off. He immedi-
ately put his hands on his hair
and I ran out of the room," said
Madsen.
Before I address these state-
ments I want to make a few
things clear. First, it is not funny
that Albert
will
never work again
as a sportscaster, and although
I said he was lucky for the deal
he got, he was not exactly lucky
that this ordeal happened, nor
was his family. On the same to-
ken, Patricia Madsen's story is
not funny because of what hap-
pened to her. I'm sure it was a
terrible experience for her and I
completely sympathize with her.
She was a room with a sick man
that day and nothing will ~v~r
change that.
Thitt'being said, lwould like
tricity of yours? And what were
o retain· some of the comedy
·
you thinking of all those times
'rom
·
ttii's riasty situation by eX:-
you screamed out
~
'Facial" to
ilainingjustwhy this is funny.
the American public? Theie are
usLstiut'
your eyes for a.
sec~ questfons
which
.
will probably
ind and
pictufe
short;
\itt\e
•
never
be answered. But
there
:
,
.1arv-Albert standing next
to
·
Ure
three things
we
~.in
·
be
sure
.
·,
vlatt
;
Go~kas· on NBC every
· ·
or:' Marv has a hairpiece, Marv
<
;unday before the week's NBA
likes girls' clothes, and Marv
:af!le: hairpiece in plU:ce, thou~
'
needs a
neii
job. Maybe he'
II
and
.
dollar Armani suifon his
.
getlucky and
a
jeweler will hire
1ack, he looks
a
lot like a nor-
him
.
to sit around and bite gold
riai'p~rson>No~ picture little
•
1!11
day;
'to
make sure it's
'
real.
Jarv in the comer
as
ye>u walk
.
Otherwise, we'
JI
see you on
nto his hotel room with him in
"Spice» Marv, right beside John
·
..
__
_
vhite panties, a garter belt and,
Wayne Bobbit and Ponch from
1h,
·
an
erection. Marv, what
"Chips."
vere you thinking?
.
Did you
eally think that no one would
Til~ Manson is tl~e Opinion
.
ever find out about this eccen-
.
Editor for The Circle
What's the big hurry?
•
This is the scenario: there's
oneminute left of class. You're
•
ready to call it quits. The ten-
sion is building. You start to
feel pressured and wonder to
yourself if your professor is
going to end class on time to-
day. Then the last minute is
up, time to go right? All around
you people start packing up
their book bags. The sound of
.
zippers and velcro and the clos-
ing of books upstages the
voice of your professor who is
trying desperately to get a last
word in. Butyou'renotinany
hurry and have become dis-
tracted by your peers who have
undergone a strange transfor-
mation in the past minute and
realize that you have missed
you professor's final com-
ments about today's lecture on
"Romantic Theory." Today
this makes you especially per-
turbed because you have come
to realize a pattern in your
classmates' fidgety behavior at
the conclusion of each ses-
sion, not only of this class, but
in fact of all your classes.
So, what's the big hurry? Do
you have another class that
mee~s after this one? Do you
really? Is it that you MUST
get there at least five minutes
ahead of time so you can cram
for a
•
quiz you neglected to
study for? Or is an hour and
fifteen minutes
·
absolutely all
·
you can stand of this particu-
lar professor?
It seems to
··
me that some
Marist students can be rude
about interrupting professors
when the clock hits the 75th
miunte of class. There are stu-
dents who simply assume that
their instructor is clue-less as
to what tiine it is. Maybe they
see that the latter is not
equipped with a watch today,
so they feel the need to step in
and take on the role of the
hands. Well, guess what? Did
you ever stop and look up at
the clock hanging in 97 percent
of the classrooms on com pus?
Or have you considered the
fact that professors get tired
too and are usually ready to
leave at the same time you are
ready?
If
you haven't consid-
ered either one of these things,
then this article will hopefully
help you refonn your disrup-
tive behavior in the future.
Alisa Nuzum writes what size
wants for The Circle
8
THECiRCLE
Fea.t.uresc)cto~r2,1997
Two seniorsreceive'awards
for· outstanding int~mships
boe>k projects; I did promotions
sociates because l was being . ' '. : "I(has been
-
in
thfl~~(
t#,o:
in the departments. I looked at ··their.managementbefofograduat~ . yearithat fy{<:1flsthas_reallf par:-··
sale gains:"·
ingcollege." ·•.·
.·.
>, _ ·
ticipated, ,vitll JCiPe11riey_
Aliano said the work was hard
Fischer saidJhe. experience
heavHy,''. he.said: ''We. have_ti:ve.
attimes.
was similar to a pfogram.
,..
.
or ~ix Marist ~tuclc:mtsinteming ·
GYNASLOMCINSKY
Feature Editor
Two fashion majors received
$500 each for their efforts at their
summer internships.
Kendra Aliano, senior fashion
merchandise major, interned for
JC Penney for the summer.
Aliano said she was given
more responsibility than other
internships she has had in the
past.
"It wasn't like other intern-
ships,". she said. "First of all, I
was paid. I was not a gopher. I
was given a lot of responsibil-
ity. I was a part ofit all."
Along with Aliano, Lora
Fischer, also senior fashion mer-
chandise major, interned for JC
Penney in the Galleria Mal( for
the summer.
Fischer said she received~ lot
of experience during her intern.
"I had up to 40 hours a week,"
she said. "It was good experience."
There are 18 stores in the dis-
trict.
Aliano won first place in the
district for her efforts, while
Fischer received second place
for her efforts.
Milo Bunyi, manager of JC
Penney in Poughkeepsie, NY,
said the girls went through a
tense I 0-week period.
"It was a combination actual
on hands working 9n the floor
with sales people or ~ith c1.1~-
tamers," he said. "Plus complet-
ing a ten week, week by week
actual book project that relates
to retail."
Bunyi said there was a pro-
cess the judges of how to
choose the winners.
."What it comes down
to,
for
them to win, they scored the
highest in sales," he said. "They
scored the highest in the book
preparation, they scored high-
est in their projects."
Bunyi said the competition
is
intense.
"They competed against
about 25 interns within the dis-
trict."
Aliano said there were certain·
specific projects she had to do.
"For 20 hours, I would man-
age a department while being a
sales associate," she said. "The
projects in the book dealt more
with the other side
of
retail." -
Aliano said she learned how
to plan out sales and certain
events within the store.
·
"One of my projects was that
I had to find something that was
selling wen in the catalog, but
not in the· store," she said. "I
then had to take that item and
find out why it was not seUing
on the floor and try to change
that."
.
Fischer said she learned a iot.
_
"I was as~igne~ '~ µie~clmn.-
diser who showed me the ropes
for l
O
weeks," she .saicL "For
-
' : ' ! :
... ;,:.
;,.: ,
. •"It
was tough," she said.
"I
"The internship was more like
for,us t~is year.'-' .... · ... ·. · . ·.. . ..
learned the whole side of retail."
a training progrnm," she said.
Because }\}iano won fi,rst place ·
Aliano said it was hard to re-
"We did everything.''
.
_
in the district; hel' book
will
go
ceive the respect from some
·
Fischer said the college aid~d
on
.
to
t~e
:national compefition ..
fellow employees.
. her to finding the internship..
If
she wins, Aliano
·
~ill go' to .
"While I was working on the·
''I
found this intern~hip Chicago and win another $50_0.
floor
I
was taking control over
through the Career Center and
After that, ~he has the chance
sales associates that have
Fashion Department," she said.
of winning thetop prize.
If
this
been thete for over
IO years,"·
Bunyi said each year the num-
happens, Alfa~o will.go to Dal"'.
she said. "It was hard to gain
ber of Marist students intern::
las '(JCPenney's headquarters)
the respect of other sales as-
ingfor hirµ become larger.
and receive $1,000.
·
The Derby
provides,:a:
cllf~\f
~f
''.f1l¢Jtll0,lde~11}¢~~0~CP(?k
bifies
TOMNARDI
Food Dude
As the semester continues,
the desire for a good home-
cooked meal increases. The
thought of having continually
to eat in the cafeteria makes
many underclassmen cringe
with nausea .. - For upperclass-
men, the thrill of being able to
cook, has probably bean re-
placed with the dread of having
to_. actually cook and wash
dishes.
There is always the option of
ordering pizza, but pizza five
nights a weeks? While accept-
able.for a week or two, is really
noway to make it through a se-
mester.
One
·
of the only viable options
· left is to go out to eat But where?
Hop_efully this column will be
able to answer that question.
Over the next couple of weeks
I'll be reviewing various restau-
rants in the Poughkeep!iie area.
I wiU rate restaurants based, on
food quality, service, ambiance,
proximity to campus, and of
course price.
I wot1ld also love to hear from
you. If there is a place that you
eaten that you feel everyone
should know about, or if your
curious about a certain restau-
rant-write to me in care of The
Circle.
The Derby, formerly Trolley's,
is a restaurant that I have been
meaning to try since they
opened earlier this summer.
Lo-
cated at 96 Main Street, in
Poughkeepsie, it is extremely
convenient to get to. I was
pleasantly surprised to find that
the restaurant was much nicer
than when it was Trolley's.~·The
delidous<·The chili peppers _ dayfroml 1539 ~.tri.to 3:@p.m. · itient on Friday ·and 'Saturday •
non-smoking section 'Yas;Io- _ adde~ just the right amoµni of Dinned~$ervedfr()m4~oop:m.
·
nights.
If you goJ would defi-
cated away from the b~r;: which: : · spic(9ess/,lhighly recommend . - tq J0:00 pjn" Happyhollf isfrom-
nitel)' suggest-.taking . a cab, :
is nice for those 16okihffc5ra, . spj{uing:~h~pftheirmanysp~-'--· 4:00/6:00;Moridays.through since .. parking is limited and
j
quiet, more roman,ti_c dinner.
cialtypizzas as·an;appeti~fr
F.r,idays; Tliejejsliveentertain- (cramped. ·•
.
1
The brightly colored room, was . The desserts were.all home-. ;------·
__
··- ____
.
·.
_
---;,-_--------------------,
decorated with many watercolor· made. ~DesserisJncluded:
~tY. .
__ ·.
-s.,c
·
prints.
.
-
style cheesecake ($3.25),' Creapi ·•
· .
For my visit to The Derby I
brule ($3.25), and~anan.a:br~a~
'>fr§F'.RING
B~~((yi~fA1<f}ff
orga~iz~ group! Sell
15 ...
Take
went during lunchtime. I feel
pudding ($3.50).,_.T.4ec~~~4JoC,/
·
,2:F=r~e:
·
.1amai¢a;cancilr:i,BallarJ1as, Key.West, Daytona,
that it is better to go out to eat
go with my wajtr~ss recom.i:rie1j:-.
J
P.anama
GitY,.
!3~rl:l~~9s.
padre
8-:
More -~-Free Parties, Eats
&
forlunch. Lunch menus being
dation,
_
the.·. Strawbe_rrie_·_··;,
:
pnnks.f_ree infci
'
pa"cket.Sun Splash
1~800-426-7710
··.
I
· d h
d.
k
R
($3 75)- Th" d·.
-
·
. /wW'N:sunsplasht~urs'.com
ower- pnce . t an mner ma e
amanov
. _ .
> • _
1s .essert
•
excellent values for·college stu- · consisted of fresh sliced straw:.. •
..
dents.· The lunch menu was di-
berries marinated in brClwn ·
verse.
·
It included a couple. of sugar, orangejuice and Grand .
pasta dishes_ as well as many
Mamier (an onmge-flavoredli-
specialty sandwiches.
·
There
queur). The strawberries were
was a grilled Sahnon sandwich · then mix:ed with a whipped
cream
served with baccm, lettuce and
and sour cream.
. tomato, whicQ sounded tempting.
While the thought_ of straw- ·
Forthose who love pizza, buf berries and sour ·cream might
are looking for a little more vari-"
not sound appealing, they were
ety, The Derby offers ten differ-
excellent. The cream mixture,
ept types of brick~oven pizzas.
coupled with the citrus flavor-
Including one topped with
ing;helped to accent the taste
shrimp, spinach and pesto
of the.strawberries, withoutbe-
sauce.
ing overpoweringly sweet,
I started my meal off with a cup
My server, Babbette, was ex-
of Tomato Pannesan soup, with
tremely polite and friendly. She
roasted garlic. ($2.50) The
was· extremely knowledgeable
soup, served quickly and pip-
about the food. The food was
ing hot, was a thick tomato
all_ served promptly, which
bisque soup, with delicate hints
makes the Derby a good choice
of garlic and Parmesan cheese.
for those between classes or on
The soup was good, albeit for
a lurich break.
the portion size it was not the
I would also recommend The
best value. I probably should
Derby for those looking for a
have tried another soup, such
place to watch Monday night
as the French Onion.
football. They have an exteil-
For my main course, I ordered
sive beer list as well as a full bar.
the Santa Fe brick oven pizza
Appetizers, including: chicken
($6.75). This thin-crust pizza
tenders ($4.50), fried calamari ·
(approximately 9 - 10 inches in
($6.50), Buffalo wings ($4.95)
diameter) was topped with ched-
and one I definitely want to
try,
dar cheese, sliced chili peppers,
fried provolone ($4.50) are also
black beans, chunks of ripe avo-
available.
cado and plum tomatoes. It was
The Derby is serves lunch each
M
l\a1ot
. '"\HT~!
~TUO
NeOdshlrts
.
.
_ .with your orga,:iization,.
I
do_ rm;
te
__
am.
Qr_,club's-·log_
o
.
·scr.een-erinted
ori
them?
COMESEE:US!.
_
... 1'.a'filD
(1~□0
,-,.:~~IIIR'l!F~w:ffi,IT
1111!1(01,e·l>lodcc1 ......
~-;:;..~~&l\lrlll)
. . .
. 454-~25~-
.
Serving·The Marist
Community Since
1978
FAST; EASY DIRECTIONS FROM MARJST:
Take
Row
9
South
To Routes
4-4/55
EAST
(Die
Arterial)
~ e
Ori
The
Arletfal •
we ne
One
Bloc!(
Past
Raymond
Avenue. ·
THE
CIRCL~,
October 2, 1997
Student Profile
teve Coogan entertains, influences
thers with his humor· and frankness
CARISAKEANE
Staff
Writer
,
.
,·
.•
. . .
_ ,
'
'
.
,•
Fidg~ting in his chair,
· many ,people's Hves at Marist.
"lused to'weigh
230
lbs. when
"As a frieµd, I definitely think
I was 14 years· old," Coogan
I've made a positive impact," he
said. "Although I'm down to
said.
·
180
lbs. now,
I
still don't like my
John
i.
Williams, a senior.fi-
physical appearance."
nance major, also said Coogan · Originally from Newburyport,
has influenced many·people.
Mass., Coogan is often asked
"Steve Coogan is everything · why he did not choos~ a school
to everybody," Williams said.
in Boston. He said he needed
"He's a good guy,·a good resi-
to get away.
dent assistant, and most impor-
. «Ac~ually my fii:st choice• was
tantly, a good friend."
Emerson but
I would've been
Coogan. has been a resident
only
45 minutes from home/ he
assistant since sophomore year. · said.
''I
need to feel independent"
Last year he was a RA for
Coogan is also a member of
... I'ni
very outspok,en,"
Marian Hall. He currently re-
SGA (Student Government As-
.. Coogan ~aid. "And I think •sides in Gartland Commons.
. sociation).
·
Steve Coogan, ~junior ra-
.
dioffV/filin .• and political
science
.
major, frequently
scratched . his . freshly
shaven head. As he pon-
dered the . questions,
c·oogan .· popped . Teady
Grahamsinto
his
mouth .. ·
'Happya.Iou<:i' is aword he
created to describe himself.
9
it's really important to stay
"I thoughtbeing
an
RA would
· ''This is my first.year involved
positive."
·
be interesting," he said. "My
in school politics," he said. "I'm
This. optimistic guy· al-
freshman year RA, Todd Lang,
the chief finance officer."
Cin:le Photo/Michael Frisc
Steve Coogan. is a senior radioffV /film and political science majo
ways has a smile· on his
gave nie the extra edge when he
Christopher Jette, vice presi-
. ,fac;e~.
.· .. ·.
. .
·· .
recommended me for the job."
dent of club affairs for SGA, said
good father," he said. "But now
·.· ''I.hate being· negative,"
A lover of classic rock,
Coogan .contributes .in a posi-
I'm all for it."
· he
·-
said,
·
''I look at· every
Coogari's voic.e can be hear.ct on
tive way.
·
Coogan said he has a few bad
~½ttiJ@
.
n.,~s a· learning ex~ · Marist's radio waves Sunday
"Steve brings a humorous yet
habits.
·
,pe,!1,ence. , • · . . , '
nights from· 12 a.m. to 2 a.m.
serious work ethic to the asso-
,
"I can't control my voice-I'm
\i{(::9qgan.s
11
idthe students
''I like to call my show the
ciation," Jette said.
·
too loud at inappropriate times,"
·:h~tw.orked)vith during the
'more than one rock' show," he
Plans for his senior year in-
he said.· "But
I
did quit biting
d996
~reshrnen Orienfation
said.. ''I· play .blocks of The
elude an internship communica-
my nails cold turkey."
ttii!~~th,m(~_e's?zil;e.th~~irc_· Doors,
Floyd,
Hendrix,
tfons internship.
..
His biggest fear involves
rsoifhe/is:tod~y:\
·
0
,
A.erosmithandThe Who;''
"I
hope to intern i11 Disney
death.
sleeve,''he said. "I'm blunt
. and let it all out."
After graduation, Coogan
sees himself broadcasting in
New York City.
"I want to be famous,'' he
said. "I'm not sure how I'm
going to achieve my star-
dom but it'll definitely be in
a positive way." -
·
f{'..fui~x)tiJpa¢te~h~iiife ' Coogan ismosically inclined
World or the West Coast;pos-
'Tm afraid of dying a long,
)i~m~iidotislyiancl ,en~oui:-;
himself · .
sibly S~n Francisco," Coogan
painf~i death," Coogan• said.
If Coogan is not in the SGA
'.·ag~d'~e to ~o~e out of
1PY~ '
"'
,
"J,
pi_ayed th~' dfums
"
for
'i
'
said. '
.
'
.
'
'
"I've see.ri someone close to me
office or playing classic rock
§h~ll,-
_
h
.
es~
1
_d. )Theym~~~ while,"hesaid.-
·
. .
.
·
Hisfoture plans'also involve
suffer."
on
WMCR, he may be run-
me
who I am_no\\'.·l> .
r
.Although Coogan: is ,a posi-
a family,
This extrovert is not afraid to
ning around the football field
C()oga
11
said ~e believ~s · tive_person!there is one
,
thing . ...
''I
was apprehensive a.t first . speakhismind_.
as Marist's mascot, the Red
2
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AT&T
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THE
CIRCLE
October 2, 1997
11
•
-
- ,
•
.
I
. Taking-a Closer Look at
..
.
.
Plus
News and Reviews
Marist·expedition gets flawless day to Summit Mount Washington
by.JIMI>~Z\'NSKI
A&E Editor
including one that blazed across
the whole sky. John Raggozine
said he counted
12. Though it
was near 30 degrees, many of
Mount Washington is the
us choose to spend the night
highest peak of the Presidential
outside under the stars.
· Range at 6,288 feetand lies in .
I had been asleep a mere three
the wild and, remote \Vhite
hours when the morning sun
Mountain• National Forest in
woke me. Judging from the lack
Northern New Hampshire. Al-
of clouds in the sky, it seemed
though not
a
high peak by seri-
as though we were going to
ous·mountaineering standards,
have a flawless day to reach the
MountWashington has .. the dis:
summit. We gathered our gear,
tinc_t .h6nor of _having the
had breakfast, roused the
'
World's Worst We.ather.
troops, and set off for the trails.
Wea~herpattems are extreme
All told, our group reached the
arid_ dangerous; a fla"'.less day_
summit four different ways: The
cai;i tum-into·aviolen(stormin ·
AutoRoad, The.Lion's Head
a fe": short minutes .. The high-
Trail, Huntington Ravine to
es·t ·wind ever recorded· on
Auto Road, and Huntington Ra-
·ptanet_ Earth. was measured at
vine to Alpine Garden to sum-
the weather station on the sum-
mit
mitonAprii'l2,
193~231 MPH. .
. I can see how one can find the
Average winds on the peak are
Auto Road more unnerving than
_aroµj1dA5_mphwhiletheriiean
-========= --=====,......;;~=-_;..._,;;;.;;,...; _________ ..;.... ___ __,
the.actual hike. At times the
J~mife.i~tµ,{e
is 27degrees.
..
.
_
.
. . _
_
.
.
•.
. . .._· _
Photo courtesy of Jim Dziezynski
road drops off hundreds of feet
;t.£arlie'r:;ihis'yeai
I had
the ex-
Standing from left to rig~ Bridget Lanigan, Kim Felri111an, Kate:Bowdrin, Alex Rucko, Dave
down the side of the mountain,
. ~tre'ffiti<X>d-:Corttine
to blimb up
Etzold, Tom Clapper._ Sitting from left to ri~ht, Jen Anto~elH, Robin Arnold, Paul Lenhart, John
and yes, it is two way traffic.
·;i?'l[~~§'Hffimt9&~'TT~#Iy_.i:Iear
- _
Raggozzlne, Jim Dzlezyns~, and Andy Orefice stand atop the summit of Mount_ Washington.
Still, Andy took his regiment,
;~~Y.{M.r}~s9figJr:ip.~~(~5lf~1;-.:.saturgay, Sept
27.
_Ifon time, I
I'm not sure if they have thei:n~ . going on!".
which included Jen Antonelli,
@;5!Jof§¢plg~f:t\!;~ilg;fort,\V<,\ ': .would reach Pinkham Notch (
security there (elves wi'thflish-
We also passed them a third
Robin Arno Id, and Kate.
tP~)t1ft?~Y-~~W:~}}~'iJ9J;;p~{J!i~::.
:,the Jodg~
a:i
t!te b_ase of Wash-
lights?folly fat men with uzis7) . time
as
they tried to signal us to
Bowdrin up the winding road.
rf
<?,~~~~A
$iP-J~-1{o~_clear
~~e~ _sq._ ing!or)"_ around
2
a.~: Waiting
QUt. it wasn't my pro_bl~m
!
1 · ·
pull o·yer. ~o explore ac9m field
Those of us on foot would meet
·f!l.Y)i9pes·_,y~re high for a good-- for-me were twocarloadsofhik:. don't go within a hundred feet
but
I couldn't'quite make them. 'them at the top when we got
/..~!iiiiJf_:~;~:- -_.\:' .•
. ..
.
.
~
. ':·
ers~idriveri by -Marist· students? ~of that place!My ride
up
wasn'(' ·'out in;'the darkiYess.
·pfo~
tffey.~
there::Eight of us were to climb
Tiie'OffiptaI Marist Expediti~~-.
~
·Andy
Orefici{afid
Dave Etzoid:·· _, spooky.·but I did 'get to_;-l:1.ave •
.. · look¢d _ nut~LWe
•·
arrived one· the __ :ID"9UT1tain via Qne of the
to M~~%~tsh~ngton_fe_a.tu~~d:; ::Taking'sweepon.~riv!ng_duti_es . :some wonderfuf philos~phical .. behi~\f tfi~'oi~~t;~t_.Pin~h_am. -11}~!1-Y:~ath_s to the top. _ _ .
11 chJ:l!~~~~ ~o/-9~-9a~ 11_9ve_r~ee~·,_"\wa§ jµ_njo_rl~~!
J ..
~llh~. ,/:;'.:; ,· ~:c_!:m".,\?_f~~~i~rj~; '!Viti).
my,
~.~~lot ..• •
1"1<;:>tcn~aro~ll?
t~rJ~
1!'~
:tii~rti~\ '.
5
i.~!l!f
,/t°.m!
B
ri<!g~t_; ll.nd
Kim '.
an
1?te.11se,-.h1ke. 'Yas ~~1J~tt!lg{?(hike ,itse.IL The first group-left
Paul-Lenhart left Marist Cot::>· than-~IZ'<iicfllfat nigl).t: :The sky
route.·_·I climbed Lion's Head in
On •tg<l.~~H,~~y, ~OTl~-- doe.s
llC?~<\fyf
~Ii~t ar9~n4 n?p11/·AJ1dy and . leg~
a
~alf hqut afte~
IJ_!,~·•.
~pi_c,~;f ~as.Ji2tn1t{~yt!ry'_"star
!ft
t_h
0
~ , :
_Aug:~st
and can say th_at i
~
is
re~lly .nl?ed••. a~u1ge,but:_~f the -c'_,Dave,traveled,-in.tandem-•·and
was -strange becaQseJ;~~w,htm2/ sky,w~s:1Hum.1.nated 1n_the. dome.;; one._of the more._ challengrng
i:Y:e~~~ris_ bad_('N.hi5p_it._is
,8_5;_)
.foC>k
tl!e tiitle·to'not•only'pick . ge~_-_pu!Ied. o.v~r·}f~};{~ijf~-
~9f ..
if
f\iHifot::-i;!)e Milky_"'\\fay:·:: •. tnills. ~teep scrambl~s
?n!l
~B~[ffI1\gf..t.~~ timeD
~1\f~P.~t:ic:_:
~
up_ aJilt,hy {but handsome?!) . tw1ce!-once
m
V,er1:1_19T1t;_~na.:: 'sh9nca IJ~~:~:~h!te phosphoroys / abrupt chffs make the trail d1ffi-
~.~.S~9-*.u!ds f13nbf a yfe S~Y~IIg
>'
hitfhhikernamed Gabe but also '.¢nee in NewHampshir~;T:~iic:I,{.:· · bmid;·ac::_r<>ss:that.spanned the
cult_ though very scenic.
From
}i!1${;{-:°;{f:;Uf\}f ,·.-;
'
;.
rh~ ..
-
:
to
c:h¢ckout- the slides in the ,ily neither indde_nt resu!tifip
a. .
sky. fr,qif.horizon to horizo11.
what they reported, the trail was
:tI})~,~-PA!"-r~1ll:()"OI9e~ ho"'.\i.~_~giant\VonderJ_aridthatisSanta's
ticket. -Tom Clapper :sa(cUli_e_y
Event~otigh \\'.e sorely needed
in excellent shape. Alex climbed
.e.y~I)fle~~-h;;icl
3:
Vlo_Ithy.crew.
·.
J~a n4;:ipJace. iihicfrpe_rsonaliy
_were able to talk their
way
_o~L ___ sleep, Tom, Pau
I,
Bridget
it with such vigor he earned the
Y:f.~~r.hQ.~rtnl~'f.Srparat~
Yt. :
scaref mh·to deat~:}h_e''·plac~
?!
a:
ticket by c:hanging th,:~$-~bi,'._,L_anigan,:_Kim r,einman_, and my-
n!c~name "Spiderman" from his
JJ~fJ~$:~t!!Jft'er~nt trmes because
.was closed, so ,when they· 3ect; "We told the cops we Just-·· self took the time to he on our
h1kmg mates.·
of schedule conflicts. My. van
romped in the playground they _
wanted to see a moose-I think
backs in the parking lot and gaze
lert Marist around 6:30 p.m. on
set off the "Kris Kringle Alarm".
that made them forget what was~_· up at the stars. I counted six,;:,
P!ease.,see TRIP,page 14
·Jenny McCarthy'has:yetto prove that ·she deserves her own sitcom
byCARLITO
Staff Writer
I'm a guy, so naturally the tes-
_tosterone pumping through my
veins has an influence on all
sensory input. But w{len I say
thai Jenny McCarthy has no
. . business in front of a
TV
cam- ·
era unless she's naked, the rea-
son is her lack of talent and not
my raging honno~es.
Junior Monica Barratia grudg-
ingly sat through the prime time
debut of "Jenny" Sunday night
and said that, ''There is no way
that show should be on NBC
during prime time."
I'd like to take that a step fur-
ther by saying she has no busi-
ness on anfchannel at any time.
Actually/9isregard that last
statement. UPN 9 could use a
powerhouse likeJ~nny to fill the
slot between the Wayans Broth-
ers and Homeboys in Outer
Space.
Jenny McCarthy made her
clothed debut as the obnoxious
co-host on MTV's "Singled
Out." After a two-year stint on
"Singled Out'\ somehow ;h;
got· "The Jenny McCar_thy
Show" to air on MTV in
1996.
This program made the _
most
feeble attempt ~t s~etch comedy
that I've ever witnessed. , But
then again MTV doesn't have
an impeccable reput_ati_og for
delivering quality humor. I'd like
to enter for the record exhibit A-
"Joe's Apartment." Yeah; the
movie with the cockroaches ..
After two. months and too
many disgraceful skits to even
want to count, "The Jenny
McCarthy Show" was removed
from the Sunday night line-up
and later replaced with the
"Dennis Rodman World Tour.:'
Don't even try to rationalize
MTV's decision here, the human
mind just isn't capable.
Apparently her brief display
on MTV caught the eye of some-
one at NBC that thought Jenny
McCarthy was prime time mate-
. rial. I think that certain some-
one got slipped a "rufy'' when
he authorized the green light to
air the Jenny pilot. (For the
chemically ignorant, "rufy" is a
street name for rohipnol, other-
.
wise -known as the- "date rape
drug")
That is the only logical expla-
nation I can fathom because if
it
· were not for the motivation to
write this piece, I would. have
turned off the television after
three miriutes .. -
It would not have taken that
long, but the opening scene
only featured two cute little
school girls and I thought I
would give Jenny a chance.
Well, I did, but I still found the
program to be thoroughly nau-
seating. Jenny is not totally to
blame however.
Though I am sure the writers
· for the show have mastered ba-
sic skills like reading and toilet
training, they do not harness
the ability to write a script that
is· even remotely humorous.
Sitcoms are designed to make a
person laugh, but I grew more
and more agitated as the show
progressed. The dialogue was
thin and every predictable joke
was milked until the cows bled
from the utters.·
.. ..
even the slightest chuckle. Or
One scene featured J~n_ny -. at least show me something to
wajting for a lawyer to read her,_ contrast my belief that a pretty
her father's will. She is sud-
face is all that it takes to get
denly overcome with an ear-· · ahead in the world of television.
wrenching case of the hiccups
O.K. her body's not bad either.
and although she can be pho-
Being a radioffV/film major, I
tographed while having a bowel
aspire to write, direct and
movement,
(I
am referring to the
maybe even act in my own show .
Candi Shoes ad that so eroti-
But do I have get breast implants
cally captured her on the bowl),
and then get naked to accom-
she cannot rid herselfof the hic-
plish that goal? Granted "Play-
cups.
boy" probably would not be in-
So, her annoying and equally
moronic friend gets her in some
sort of a full nelson/sleeper hold
hybrid in an attempt to cure her,
and wouldn't you know it, in
walks the lawyer to catch them
in their goofy antics. Golly gee,
I did not see that coming. Per-
haps a society of Lisa Kudrow's
might have actually found this
amusing, but it made me gag.
Throughout this ordeal, I tried
hard to keep my dinner secured
in my belly and my eyes glued
to the screen in hope of seeing
something that might evoke
terested in me anyway, but will
my big nose, scrawny face and
crackhead physique drown my
career before it gets a chance to
swim?
In her three years on MTV,
Jenny McCarthy has proved to
the world that she is more than
just a sex symbol. She has
provedthatsheisloud,annoy-
ing, disgusting and unfeminine.
But she is yet to prove that she
is worthy of her own prime time
sitcom. But then again, if
"Homeboys in Outer Space"
has what it takes ..
.!
could be
wrong.
I-
....
/
0.
12
Ne·w
.
Ten
Yard. Fig
-
ht
Cq·
cdmhiri_~
·
:s
positive IDt?SSage
with
hardco~e
souiid
-
'IsTelevisionBecomingReality?
·
.
•
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bySIBPHENMER~
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Staff Writer
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to shop in the television.
Many want to learn
·
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·
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news
.
in
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the television rather
.
CDReview.
Ten Yard Fight
"Back onTrack"
Equal Vision Record~
by PATRICK
WHITILE
Staff Writer
Ten Yard Fight is a straight-
edge hardcore band from Bos-
ton. They owe their name to the
Nintendo video game of the
same name, but do not let that
mislead you. There is nothing
trite about this band once you
get past their narrie.
In the past, the band incorpo-
rated football imagery irito their
songs, which resulted in their
being labeled jocks by ·some.
No longer do they write
s
ongs
entitled "Line of S
c
rimmage",
but the new CD "Back on
Track" (Equal Vision Records)
hits as hard as a Marist line-
backer.
The band's message is clear
,
if
.
not derivative at times--drugs
and alcohol won't save you.
They follow up on this by at-
tacking companies who market
· to the youth. The
·
band does
not provide concrete examples
to
back this ut,, bufthe einotiori
in singer Arithony
/
Moreschi's
voice is convincing enough.·
Ten Yard Fight pl
a
y what
is
called "Spi
r
it of
'
88" style
hardcore, takirig influences
from bands like Youth ofToday.
This sound i
s
played by a lot of
hardcore
bands
today
(Floorpunch, Fastbreak), but
what keeps Ten Yard Fight origi-
nal is their emotion. It would
7
I
I
I
!
Ten
-
Yard Fight rocks to their latest CD "Back
on
Track."
While walking
my
dog
-
one
·
than reading
.
it, and many even
·
night during the summer this
want
·
to find out about their
:
year, something just hit me.
.
COmlJlunity in
'
the tdevisior
:
No, not a baseball or a Frisbee,
Rather than getting
'
involved
but an idea hit me. Whatcame
in thei
_
r neighborhood, sorrie
to me
.
was that my dog; Cody
people would rather hear about
and Lwerethe only ones:out-
-
it from a veryunnatuml look-
side,
It
was not that it was late
-
irig and somewhat robotic-like
·
or
-
.that it was cold because it
.
anchorperson.
was
,
about
8:00 p.m. and it was
.
Some businesses are even
reaUy nice
OUL
trying to makeTV's that
ate
to-
. -
The reason why no person
tally interactive "into homes
,
or
.
d9g was in sight was be-
While watching the game on
cause mostly every person on
television, -the
·
loyal fan does
.
the street where
I
was at the
:
not even need to .go to the
time, wasrightipfrontofiTV'.
phoneanymore to order a
It is not thaffwas peeping into
pizza. He o_r she can just or~er
people's homes, ~ut it was not
iton the TV during the com-:
·
diffic1,1luo spot out the very
.
mercial and not even have to
fainilfar images and colors
_
that
move at all.
come from televisions.
.
.
Now,
I am not blaming any~
.
It's
:
notthatrtiridTVevilor
one and
I
am also
_
notsaying
:
that I.do not ever watch it;but
..
that every single
.
person in
(just
.
dislike
:
the iciea
'
that a
.
America is obsessed with TV
,
large number of people \1/ho
All I am saying is that we
watch television are living the
should start thinking about
.
lives of
Jerry
Seinfeld and Tim
what the television is doing to
Allen rather than their own.
us:
In
a world where people
· ·
When people focus tiJeir
are
.
becoming more and .inore
:
lives on .television
·
when
.
they
distant from each oth°er, some-'
•
are outside of either work or
-
thing needs to be done.,
,:
,
·
:
·
i
.
·
·
school,
-
something
_
is wrorig.
We caririot keep on allowing
.
have been easy to write a paint-
vious effort, 199S's "Hardcore
w
·
h
-
.
1 d
.
·
·
h
thi·s m
·
a
·
c
·
ht"ne
.
to
·.
·
•
teliu
·
s
·
•
how
.
,
to
;,
by~the-numbers CD with
:
no real
Pride" (Big Wheel Rec:'reation.)
at is a so epressmg is t at
message .
.
I
_
nstead, Ten Ya
_
rd
_
-
Te
_
nYard F
_
ight's accelerat
_
ion
if you do try
_
to
actually_ do
look like and
,
-ivhat
,
to
'
act;Iike
r
something physicallike work
anci
whafto bu'y. That is why
,
.Fightcaniestheirmessagewith
tcitheforefrontofhardcor~may
.
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have been hindered in the past
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Expeditionto Mount Washington
proves challenging and rewarding
'
Bridget, Kim, John, Tom'a.nd
myself made the long trek back
to the parking lot as afternoon
fused into twilight.
.
-
-
·
Tfie
Ci,rcleis goingio be starting an advi,s~
:
·
colu
·
mn'. If
you
have
.
a
problem
oF
:
cbn~
cerri,sendan e-mailto The
-
Circle entitled
·
co11ti1111ed from page
I I
Paul; Da~e; John, and myself
opted to take the h
a
rdest. and
most challenging fOute up the
mountain, known as the Hun~
tington Ravine Trail. Hunting-
ton is about a mile longer than
the other trails and requires ex-
treme caution and courage.
_
Though no ropes are neces-
sary
,
ther~ are some very steep
spots where one must rock climb
on cliffs over six hundred feet
straight down. The path pushes
the limit of non-technical climb-
ing; in the past authorities.con-
sidered making it a trail exctu~
sively for rock climbers with
equipment. Dozens of hikers
(arid ice climbers) have died
from falls on this trail. The trail
is difficult but very rewarding.
I broke off from the group at a
spot called "The Pinnacle"
where a smooth, nearly hold-
less rock initiates the area of
hard climbing. Since
I
had a little
more experience,
I
waited until
further on the path to refuel.
It
was the last
I
saw of them until
I
reached the summit. After a se-
ries of tricky scrambles
,
I made
it to the top of Huntington
_
Ra-
vine, some 5,000 feet in eleva-
tion. Though the most direct
route to the
s
ummit was to meet
up with the Auto Road,
l
de-
cided to cross a vast plain that .
connected Huntington and
Tuckerman's ravine (a path on
the other side of Washington)
known asthe Alpine Garden.
.
The experience
·
was very Zen;
I
was the only
.
person in sight
-
on a rare, flawless day. Hazy
mount~ins looked l1keday in
the distance.
-
The land spread
out infinitely
;
on the horizon
I
could
·
see the
.
tops of clouds.
The wi
_
nd blew ~oftly and the
sun shone brightly. The walk
from Huntington to Lion's Head
is a highly suggested path to
check out if you ever go.
·
I
got to the summit less than
five minutes after the Lion's
Head group. The Huntington
Group got there about ten min-
utes after me. There to greet us
was
·
Andy and his car
full
of
friends; The day was truly a
blessing; clarity as far as
-
the eye
could see, warm weather
(around
55 degrees) and all
twelve of us made it to the top. ·
After a nice meal and some
celebratory pictures, we headed
back. Six drove back down with
Andy while six ofus descended
via Tuckennan's Ravine.' Alex,
We laughed
,
scre!1nied, sang
.
songs, and spc;ike of gre~t
·
things as
.
we made our way
down. We passed the headwall
ofTuckerman's Ravine'swater-
fall,
where less
:
thaw24_hours
earlier a young man had fallen
to his death; it was a very so-
bering experience. On the rocks
where the water slid down, a pair
of n1etai walking sticks lay at dif-
ferent levels
.
. John and
I
had a
moment of silence.
It is impor-
tant to
re
.
member
how
grave the
consequences of one wrong
step can be.
We
got
back to the parking lot
before nightfall. We were all
tired but
:
satisfied
,
except Tom
since he never did get to see a
moose
.
Thanks to
.
everyone
who came
with
me: Alex Rucko
,
Bridget Lanigan, Andy Orefice,
Kate Bowdrin, Tom Oapper,
Kim
Feinman, Robin Arnold, Jen
Antonelli, John Raggozzine,
Paul Lenhart, and Dave Etzold;
you guys did great! Extra thanks
to Kim and Bridget
for
buying
me
food
to keep me alive.
Next Week: Mount Mansfield,
the Highest Point in Vennont.
"Advice
..
Column';
_
at HZAL or sine( it
,
.
throtigli campus
in
'
a
·
sealed
,
envelope
.
_
addressed to The Circle
.
Please do not .
.
'
:
tjse
"
Ydur na~~' but
-
~
··
c1ever pseudonym.
-
The Circle 'reserves the right' to decide
which responses will be replied
to
and
printed.
&
Go
_
Free!!! Student T~av~I Services
is.now
hiring
campus-
reps.
Lowest r~tes to
Jamaica,
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·
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Toan
1-300-231~
r
I
I
I
i
i
I
I
I
\
;
i
THE CIRCLE, October 2, .1997
13
.
.
CirclereyiewercloSe§the
"B'i"g Budget
Movie Disaster
Summer
1997"
file
b
JOHNSULiIVAN: .
dieci'do\yn,'youcan watch·his·: ,usednot C>,nce, but twice. 'trol."-a film titled "Psycho
Idonotknowwhylwenttosee
·
Y .·- ·. · · . • · .
·
interpretationoftheDru:kKµight
"Batmari arid Robin" was a
Sushi.'': The movie was long,
it though.
SlaffV(me,: ·
and realize that Kilmer's Batman
bomb in· theaters mainly be-
boring and the only thing worth
"Picture Perfect" was like a re-
S~mineris athriewher~ matiy. isthemostnuaricedoneoutof causeofrottenword-of-mouth
any note was Sandy's toned,
ally bad episode of NBC's
major movie studios roll out their -· all three.
and reviews such as
·
these. ,
tanned stomach. Patric was
"Must See TV.'' My girlfriend
big budget blockbusters. It is a
Anyway, "Batman and Robin"
' It was
a
bad summer for se-
deadly. He delivered every line
and I went to see it. Here's a
time of competition for most
was/not only the worst Batman
quels.
I
had been looking for-
as ifhe was saying to himself
little tip: don't go to any movie
companies and a time of guilty
movieevermade,btitmaybeone
ward to the ~•speed" sequel for· "Yeah, .this sucks, but at least
with Jennifer Aniston in sheer
pleasure inducing entertainment
ofthew9rsi movies of all time.
a few years. I thought "Speed"
I'm in show biz.''
.
.
dresses with your girlfriend.
for the audiences. Past summers
George Clooney is a decent ac-
was a well-written, thrilling ac-
The movie never. picked up
You 're just asking for trouble.
have given us such landmark
tor. He can charm his way out
tion movie staring actors who
pace. The first ''Speed' was
"Cop Land" was not bad, but
such · as · "Terminator 2,"
of any poorly structured melo-
were not really known for their
good because of the tension
the fact that they had so many
"Batman," ''Who Framed Roger
drama any day. So I am not
action credentials. It was easily
betw_een Reeves and Bullock.
well-respected actors in it, dis-
R~bbit?," and three different in- . blaming.ciooneyfor this flac-
Keanu Reeves' best role and
They did not know each other,. tracted from the actual plot. I
stallments.of''Die Hard." This
cid entry into the series.
turned me onto Sandra . but they feef in love over the
kept on staring at DeNiro and
past summer, I saw EVERY single
·Iain blaming Chris O'Donnell
Bullock's cutie~pie repressed
course of the action; In "Speed
looking at fat Sly that I never
movie that carµe out. Yes, even
for apparently ignoring any act-
sexuality. If you do not b.elieve
2, Patrick is Bullock's boyfriend,
really caught on with the movie.
"Kull The Conqueror.'' To say
ing advice givento him over the . me, check out my dorm devoted;
so there is no sexual tension
It needed a subtle cast.
the least though, this past sum--
course of his five-year-long ca-
to the shrine of Sandra.
whatsoever.
A few films tickled my fancy
mer was one $100 million dollar
reer. I am blaming Alicia
When !first read that "Speed
"Speed 2" sunk at the box of-
though. "Con Air" was dumb
budget disappointment- after
Silverstone for her lazy, unnec-
2" was coming out in the sum-
flee mainly because its budget
fun with Nicholas Cage. "Face/
another. There were a few bright
essary, and annoying role as
mer of 1997, I couid barely con-
was higher than the original
Off' was smart fun with Nicolas
:spots, and I will getto those,
Batgirl. And I am blaming
trol myself. My mind raced with
movie's big gross. I want to
Cage. "Event Horizon" gave me
but let's face it. It is fun to cut
Arnold Schwarzenegger for be-
all kinds of ideas of what the
know. who· green lights these
nightmares for weeks. "The
onthereallycrappymoviesfirst.
ing Arnold Scwarzenegger plot might be. An ambulance?
obscene budgets: Each one al-
Lost World" is the only $230
I have been a Batman
fan
when he should be playing Mr.
A helicopter? Another bus?
most guarantees the lack of million dollar grossing movie
s.ince I saw the first one a good
Freeze.
Two buses? A trolley. Well, a
profit for the movie.
that no one has anything nice
eight years ago. I love Batman.
We don't want to see The Ter-
few weeks later, I read that the
Trust me, there were other bad
to say about. I liked it. It was
Where else can you get the
minator. We want i:o see the
sequel to .. Speed" will take place
movies· but I just do not have
kind of thrilling. Does anybody
gritty realism of film noir com-
newest Batman villain. Arnold
on a .. ( drum
rnll) ..
Cruise ship.
the space to assail them here.
remember that there were AC-
bined with a square jawed hero
does not understand that. His
Cruise ship?! How in the world
Here's a cautionary list, though.
TORS in it, though? "Kull The
dressed·outin black rubber·and
one liners fell flatter than ama-
can a cruise ship be considered
"Air Force One" bored me. A
Conqueror" is another one of
tricked out with all kinds of gad-
teur night on "Full House.''
speedy.
It
can't.
lot of people like this, so I am
those movies that you should
gets?
What the Batman series needs
Keanu Reeves dropped out of probably going to get a few
not take a girl to see. That was
The-attraction with Batman
is not MORE humor, but LESS
production right away. He was
nasty letters about it. The fact
a fun movie though.
It
was in-
_ with me cam from the revolving
humor. Let's see a tortured,
replaced with The Mannequin
is that the ~arrison Ford Die
credibly stupid and poorly
door of actors playing the role.
complex Batman, not the smirk- ,_ Who Can Act, Jason Patric. I
Hard-in-a-plane is nothing new
acted, but for some reason I was
I was always a cheerleader'for
ing · cartoon character that 'thought, 'Well, okay, if they get
to me. "Conspiracy Theory"
entertained by its sword and
MichaeLKeaton'.s,two efforts,
Clooney creates.
the same screenwriter and
was just plain annoying. I
sorcery foolishness.
but-the variety of actors that fol~
Also, Akive Goldsmith's script
Patrick is a little more animated
wanted to slap Mel. That film
I know summer has past and
\owet:I:afterward kept me inter-
sounded like it was written dur-
than usual, i.t can still be good.'
was the worst overacting of his
you' re in no danger of seeing
ested as welL My advice is to
ing snack break in a pre-school
It was not. It was horrible. The
career
and
the.
most
any of these movies in the the-
6heck out ·"Batman Forever"
class: Myjaw· dropped wh_en
screenwriter, Jeff Nathanson,
UNDERacting ofJulia Roberts'
ater, but keep this review in
and watch Val Kilrrier's Bruce
an insipid one liner playing on
had only written one treatment
ste_liar resume. ':My Best
mind when the real stinkers
Wayne. Now that thehypefo~s
the term "hanging out" was
before "Speed 2: Cruise Con-
Friend's Wedding" was ... okay.
come out on video. Avoid them.
~
.
.
-
SGA SPOTLIGHT
::fyf~jor~
-Aico_unting
Howetown: Bridgeport, Ct.
.
.
Fav9rite Band: ~Dave Matthews
Role Model: her grandmother
that candidates often· fear dis-
As the SGA Elections Com-
qualification," she said.
issioner, Weber is responsible
Weber's fondest SGA
or mnnino both the fall and
memory to date was her first
pring elections. As a first year · summer session. The summer
GA member, she isn't unfamil-
session is a time when all the
ar with 'the responsibilities of SGA members get together for
tudent oovernment.
In
fact,
four days to discuss the work-
ast year ~he was the RSC presi-
ings of the orgai:iization. "I
ent of Leo Hall.
didn't really ·know anyone at
Weber brinos to her position
first, but at the end we were all
numberoflofty goals this year,
just so close. I just had a blast,"
mong them the desire to refonn
said W:ber of the experience.
lection guidelines and to
Hopmg t? make the best ~ut
engthellcampaign time for can-
of her e~~nence h~re at Manst,
idates. "I want to make SGA a
Weber 1s mvolved m a number
etter known club on campus.
of other clubs in addition to
ight now. there are so many
SGA. Among them are the
estrictions in running for office
dance club, The South End So-
SGANEWS
Circle Photo/Mike Frisch
ciety and both intramural vol-
leyball and softball. "I want to
do everything that I possibly
can and meet everyone that I
possibly can," she said of here
desire to be so involved in cam-
pus activities.
Her future plans aren't in
· politics but in the world of ac-
counting where she someday
plans to earn her CPA and work
in one of the "big six firms".
Hoping to make the best of her
next three years here, this aspir-
ing sophomore cites the sense
of togetherness amongst stu-
dents here at Marist as her
fa-
vorite aspect of college life.
Dear Marist Corrununity,
The Marist campus has
been the victim of three
rob-
beries
in
the
last
three weeks,
all three of them occurred on
the North End. The culmi-
nation of these crimes oc-
curred
in
my _ own
townhouse, A2, early Sat-
urday morning.
After experiencing all of
the feelings that come with
being the victim of a crime, I
· am writing to you today, not
as
your Student Body Presi-
dent, but
as
a concerned stu-
dent. We, as your Student
Government leaders are go-
ing to meet with Joe Leary,
the director of safety and
security, and work closely
with them to ensure the
safety of every student on
this
campus.
Until
I
can address you
again with the progress of
those meetings,
I
urge every
single one of you, regardless
of where you live on cam-
pus, to LOCK YOUR
DOORS!
We have to protect our-
selves, and look out for one
and other as a residential
community.
Residents on the Nort
Ena, be sure to lock the slid
ing doors in the
OJ
Townhouses as well, be
cause these people will fin
any way to get inside. Th
titrte for saying "It won't ha
pen to me" is over.
I
said that for three years
and guess what,
i
happenened to me on Sat
urday. It is time for th
Marist student body to re
alize that the city o
Poughkeepsie is gettin
worse, and our campus ha
become their new target
Devise a system with you
roomate, housemates,
o
suitemates on a time whe
you will lock the door.
If
any of you hav
any concerns dealing wit
this matter; please call m
at x 2206. I wish all of yo
the best of luck as we ap
proach mid-tenns.
Sincerely yours,
Frank
J.
Maduri
Student Body President
.1-
1
.
_
,
(
t
,r.;
-
~
,--
f!
}
t
!
'
·
\
14
.
THE C,iRC~E,_Qctober2,J997
.
.
.
Steve on Sports ........ _ ..............
.
.
Hoop Dr~am~ Can Com.e True
I remember it as if it was last
and
-
Saturday nights in
"We're hoping to provide
year.
Poughkeepsie.
·
more o't>por{unhies for the av-
Wait. It was last year. On a
Bowling.
erage
·
Mariststudent," he said.
Friday night...
No, rm kidding .
.
Of course,
Wow. Where was this guy
My friends and I, being the
we
all know what 90%
.
ofMarist
when I was so pi~sed off last
upstanding individuals that we
students· do with their week-
spring?
are, had decided to forgo your ends. J'il plead the fifth.
_
McCormick went on to stress
typical Marist College weekend·
It always seemed odd to me
that the
_
new addition to McCann
pastime in order to spend our
that, at a school that doesn't
is intended
-
to increase the ac-
time doing something a little·
.
even sell gum in ~e bookstore,
cess to athletic facilities for the
more constructive- pickup
a popular (and healthy) alterna-
entire student population
.
basketball.
tive to drinking was prevented
There will be six new basket-
You see, I never miss an op-
after 9:00 on Fri~ay nights.
ball hoops in the new wing (one
portunity to publicly demon-
The most popular answt!r °full-sizecourt,withtwosmaller
strate the legend that is my
-
given by Mccann personnel in
.
side courts) along with a state
three-point shooting. When-
explanation of this peculiar
of the art physical fitness cen-
ever a challenge is issued,
I
grab
policy was, "Well, people don't
ter.
_
.
.
my Nikes and my beloved bas-
come down on weekends."
these sections ofMcCann wiJl
ketball (which, by the way, has
Yeah.
-
Instead, they drown
share the same new weekend
only touched asphalt once in its
.
themselves
in
alcohol.
That's
a
hours that now apply to the ex-
life- it can only be used
inside,
good way
-
co contribute
fo
the
isting areas of the recreation
on sanctioned parquet) and
overall physical fitness of the
center.
_
head down to McCann to prove
student body, huh?
Once the addition opens laier
that no one can outshoot me-
So, I decided that the first col-
this month~ knock on wood-
the second coming of Larry
umn
I
would write when I be-
20,000 square feet and three
Bird- from way downtown.
came sports editor this
fall
hours of availability will have
And sometimes
I'll
actually hit
would attack the administration
been added to the Mccann
a few shots.
and the McCarin Center. staff for
Center's arsenal.
But that's not important.
the
seemingly
irrational ~ecision
-
This should make it possible
What is important
is
that hus-
to close the basketball court so
to improve and enlarge the in-
tiers like myself have the chance
early on weekends.
-
tratntiral
,
program, and give
·
to at least
try
to
show
off; there
Unfortunately, you won't get
peoplewho don't play
a
Divi-
are
athletes at Marist College
the chance to experience
!UY
sion I sport a place to ~aH their.
who don't participate in inter-
wrath
.-
I think what ·happened
own.
collegiate athletics, and need an
.
was that someone got
-
wind of
There aie
>
rio more
~xcuses,
outlet from whichtheircompeti-
-
my_intentions,
and
ordered
.
a
folks.
..
.
.
.
.
.
·
..
.
.
·
tive
juices can flow.
_.
,
'
.
pre~emptive strike
"'
to pr(.)(~ct
·)
It)s
ri.o½'.
,
J?.Ossil).i¢to actually
-.
;
_
This
is
what pickup basketball
-
·
·
th~mse1Ves
from
thepub1~'1ish-
.
Jose
.
fi1t
ce11{instead
of
brain
v
•
is
for.
ing
I
planned to hand out:-
:
~ells
o~
Friday nights
at
M
_
ari.~t
_
Now, the tragedy that
I
faced
See, when I ret4medto cam-
College
:'
l_'ak'e
advantage ofit.
for the first two years of my
pus a month ago,
I
was stunned
Steve Wanczyk
is
.
·
Wllaf's
-
'
()fi
:
;.
T~p?
·.
·
see.·theRed
Fox~s
in 'iictiqn ...
.
: ...
.
:
-
·
.
.
•
··
·
..
:.
_.
;
.
-
.
•
'
.
.
.....
•.•
..
~
.
..........
~
..
,
....
•
.
Footballvs.
Dutjuestje(I0/4);
Yolleyb~ll
-
.
..
,
atlona (10/4), FairfieldO0/5), and S~ena
(10/8);
_
Men's Soccer
vs
'.
Iona (10/8);
Women's
·-
.
Soccer
at the
Stony Brook Toumamentll
0/4-
. ·
I 0/5)
and Iona (
10/8);
Women's
Tennis at
M~attan(
10/2)
and
vs. Wagner (
10/7).
Men's Soccer Leaders:.
(through Sept. 28)
Bryan Thomas
Mike Schilling
Matt Day
Rino Mazzella
Andy Dolan
Gary
Rincini
Rino Mazzella
G A
Pts.
1
I
3
I
0
2
I
0
2
.-
I
0
-2
1
0
2
SV GAA
21 3.10
7 5.33
Women's Soccer Leaders:
(through Sept. -28)
.
G
APts.
Jamie Bierworth
5
I
JI
Nicole Bruno
2
2
6
Bridget Donofrio
2
0 4
Jainie Sampson
A. Swidereck
Beth Zack
I
2
4
I
2
4
SV. GAA
73
.
1.77
Tom~s
Trijecta
.
What
do
Sparky Anderson, Ha~ Lanier, and
·
LarryDierkerhaveincommon?
(Last w~ek's answer: Haqk Wil~on of
the
-r~;
-
.
Philedelphia
.NS':--·
19(JRBis
iri
:
1930}).f
't;
:f
}:
~t
•
•
-
•
•
. • . •
•
•
·_
·
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-
- · •
•
, ,
p
•
•
-
.
lo..
••
•
·=-- .
.
~
:'\ ...
:
Tom [?rag is a regular
·
contributor io
The
_
Cirde
::.
·
;
·
r
,'.·
·
_
-
Marist' s Cumniulative
Fall
Record
is ...
·
(h~ough
Septembe'r· 30
_
hoops regime at Mari
st
was that
to find out that the hours had
TheJ~ircle's Sports Editor
this
outlet closed
•
down· after
'
been expanded.
,
At least,
·
on
.
~
....... .;...;.:..;___:.,_ _ _
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I
school tournaments were being
(gasp!) midnight on Fridays and
.
Around this
time
of ye'ar, i
_
t 'rn~nagidto
:
win twe~tyand {eU
:
Phillies is an
'
acct>ITJpli§hhiiA
'
t in
.
held.
Sundays.
·.
Add that to its Mon-
seems as if every newspaper is
-
ju~t n}ne
K_'s
short of 300
.
The
_
_
·
1tself,
and
the ~efiiy
dlrig~ts'~
On
our
campus, in
our
gym.
day through Thursday hours of
.
requirecl to predict whowilltake
Big Unit is
tl1e
most dominating
-.
an added
boilik
:
·
_
\
'.
;
~:
.
:
'. :
:
.
Suffice to say, there were sev-
·
9:00 AM
-
to
J
:00 AM, an~ it
home basebaH's
-
_
.
post-seascm
pitcher:in basebalL.
.
.. ·
. . .
·
\
ldidn
.
't letthe Yankeifat{in
eral
.
nights when I was so frus-. turned out that I ~idn',thav~ too
awards.Thisw~ek;
I
volunteer
.
·_
.
Ji;s
harcho
imagine
.
a
·
non-
. -
rnecomeo~tearlibrc~rlc~rnitig
.
trated with the lack of court time - much to complain about
·
~ny-
to take on thatrei;ponsibility, if
.
BraVep1tcherwinningintheNL,
AL
MVP,
but Joe
Torre.
is iriy
available to me, a tuhion paying
member of the college
-
~ommu-.
· nity, that I fell back on the only
option available to
a
young rn~m
in the prime of his life on Frid<!,y
more.
·
,
oarreri
'
McCbhnick;
.
the new
McCan~
_
Center Facilities Coor-
dinator (who arrived last May)
:
explained the change:
Students Wanted ...
The
-
Cabaret
and
Coffee Shops
are looking
.
for
students to
work
evenings
and
weekends .
.
Good Pay
Meals,
Uniforms.
Please stop
by
our office or Cabaret
for an application
We look ~orward to seeing you!
ftirno other reason than to
'
spark
but
.
things can't stay the same ·mamiger ofthe
·.
year.
:
Torre
led
.
arguments
·•
in dot~
:·
roortis fo~e~er:
;
Denny
~eagle and qteg
-
the defend1ng_Worl~Chiimps to
across campus.
Maddux
:
Kitve
·
had.
:
ou.t~ta11ding
aplayoffi;pot once
again
d~-
Let u
'
s start with th~ league
years, but neither <>ile
c
·
an
touch
spite the loss
.
of John
'
Wetteland.
MVPs: As much as the Yankee
Pedrh!vl:ariinez.
' '
i-Iaving only 17
and Jimmy Key
;
two key
COITI-''
·
_
•
·.
fan in me ~ays TinoMartinez,
i
wins may.hurt him; but the 1.90
ponents of last
year's
squad
.
-
crin'.t go against Junior Griffey
ERA and~05 stri_keouts more
He
.
also had tp de:al.with inju-
inlhe American League. The
than mal<.e
_'
up
;
for that. .The
ries
-
to ace David Cone and
.
56 homers
.
and
147 RBI
speak
Expos may riot have many mar-
Bernie Williams, the ineffective-
.
for themselves.
quee na~es, but they do have
·
ness ofHidekiirabu arid Kenny
The
.
National Leagu~
is
n~t as
the bestpitchedn the Nationar Rogers, and a Jack of right hand.
clear-cut however. Take a quick
League.
'
•
:
power all season Jong:
_
:
Still, th
_
e
look at the stats and Larry
.
As
-
far _as
.
the
·
American
. ·
Yanks are i_n the po~t-season
.
Walker'appears to be the obvi-
League Robkie of the Year is
-
and
-
have to be coiisidered the
ous choice. Nothing against
concerned; there are only two
team to beat.
_'. :
·
'·
· ·
· -
.
_
Walker, but 40 home runs and
words that need to be said:
In the NL, Gene: Lamont has
140 RBI appear to be average
NomarGarciaparra.-Ievencon-
_
done an outstanding-job guid-
numbers for anyone fortunate
sidered him
'
for league MVP.
ing the Pittsburgh Pirates to a
·
enough to play
at
Coors Field.
Thirty homers and 98 knocked
respectable season. Lamont
.
·
Mike Piazza is my choice- .360
in are great numbers for an out-
has absolutely no talerJt to work
arid 40 HRs out of a catcher: is
fielder, but·for a rookie short~
with yet his ballclub'Was in con-
phenomenal.
stop they
·are
shocking. We
tention all seasonlong~ Now if
.
Roger Clemens proved he is
were
'all
amazed at Alex
he could only get some play-
far from washed up, but he
Rodriguez's second season a
ers.
faded sligh~Iy toward the end of year ago. Wha~ can we expect
_
.
In
_
the weeks to co~e the ac-
the season and it may have
cost
out ofNomar in 1998?
tual winners will be announced.
him his fourth Cy Young award.
In the National League, Scott
My predictions inay
be
all cor-
1'
m giving the
.
hardware to
Rolenseemstobetheonlycan-
rect;
they may be
totally
off-
Randy Johnson. Although he
didate. Being able to go through
base. I guess we will just have
battled through injuries, he stiJJ
a full season with the pathetic
to
wait
and see.
I
. TH~-CIRCLE, October 2; 1997
15
Dow"1Ward
spiral ·continues for
disa{)poiriUilg
men's' soccer
SCJ.llad
by CHRIS O,DONNELL
StaffWriter
It certainly was the weel< that
wasn't for tµe Marist College
men's soccer team.
:
, .
The momentum
·
·from· la.st
week's win over St. Peter's dis-
appeared quickly as the Red
Foxes suffered consecuti_v.e
losses to Siena and Monmouth
·university.
Marist(I-5, I-I MAAC), en~
<lured vanous breakdowns· and.
lapses on defense, whfoh re-
sulted in both opponents capi-
talizing with offensive spurts.
As a result, the Red Foxes
yielded. ni_ne goals while only
scori11g two.
Sunday's match against
Monmouth saw the Red Foxes
control play· for most of the
game, but they were conse-
quently·
shutout,
4-0.
Monmouth
(5-3, 0-1
NEC)._:icored
five minutes into the game and
never looked back on its way to
an easy win.
Men's soccer faces off against Monmouth. • Marist lost 4-0.
Head coach Bobby Herodes
said this game was a classic
case of lack.of mental prepara-
tion.
"We controlled the ball in their
end for like 35 minutes,., he
said. "But their counter-attack-
ing proved to be the deciding
factor. We just played in
spurts."
The Red Foxes were never
able to take advantage of poor
passing by the Hawks'
defenseinen in the early going,
and by half-time, Monmouth
had a 3-0 lead.
Senior Michael Kenney said
the loss was a hard one.
"It sure was a tough one to
take ... we should have beat them.
The ball was in their end the
whole game," he said. ·
The second half of play was
highlighted by Ed Portelli's
head ball on a perfectly_placed
cross from the right side, which
beat Marist goalkeeper Gary
Ricini.
Tennis gets back on track; tunes
up·for MAAC: championship
·
.
· ijyl\'1ARK}.
WELLS
.
-'~,
·
StaffWriter"'-
,
. : Coach King was ~ery. im- . otit there," King noted after the
pr~~~eq.~!Jy the,t~am'~ perfqr- .,,Jpatc:~.
,.,,y,.••, .:; :-. ,
r-:11
v, ..
mance last week against St. ·
The other two singl_es,matches
The Marist College ·women's · Peter's.
were not as·difficult for the Red
,, tennis team snapped jts f9ur
"it
~11
s~emed to come together
Foxes; as Kara Olive~
.
and Jen-
•- gamefosingstreakthisweek by
.
:
foz'- us against St:'Peter:'s. The
nifer Armstrong
.
b6th
\\;ori
eas-
-. beatingiheSt. Peter's Peacocks . singles play, along with the
ily at second and fifth _siµgles
f"i-~convincirtgfashi,on:
8-1.
The
doubles play, were both 'very
respectively.
Oliver. and
~-<E-'L&9~~,~£~Q~cUh~irr~_c;grd
good Jo see,''. King stated.
Armstrong both wOn their
at4-4 ori.t~e ~~¥~r,.incJ1J,ding a
Atfirst singles, senior captain
matches with identical scores of
!
2-2 rhark•itftheMAAC. ,
tfolly Robil)so9_won a three set
6- I, 6-2.
,~fhJ.i
·
;y;~;bi;;i~-fo;tll~-Red .· match agairist St. Peter's num-.
The doubles play was also
J!diet~{they
fr~ve,l
to Fairfield . ber one player, Ecda Ruiz,
4-6,
something to write home about.
'bMv~rs1ty.io rn~etup ..Y!tha very
7:-5,
6~2
which.set the ton"e· for
At first doubl~s, ·. Holly
tal~nt~~
-
~tags sqµacf this week,
the rest of thti°team.
Robinson and Kara Olive~ won
in a pivotal conference matchup.
Robinson's vict9ry was the
their match by a score of8A.
CoacI{J~mie Ki~g r~alizes: ihat
first of th~ee th.ree set victories
The second doubles was even
this winbe ari important test for
for the Red Foxe~--
.
more irripressive, as Tracy· Hunt
his team.
"I
was very proud, of the way .. and Claudine Habib ..yon their
''Fairfield is going
fo
be:one of we stuck in there ~rid won those·· match
8-2.
The duo ~on their
.
those matches thatwe can.mea~
three set matches,'' King said.
match despite playing a.pair of
sure ourselves by," King ex-
Tracy Hunt a11d Cl_audine
grueling three set matches !!ar-
plained.
Habib won the other two three . lier in the day.
•.
-
Individual Match Records:
Holly Robinson
Kara Oliver
Tracy
'
Hunt
Claudine Habib
J '.
Annstrong
Devon
Imarisio
Leigh
Golden
5-2
6-2
3-5
3-5
4-3
4-3
1- 1
l}o~bles Match Records:
Robinson/Oliver
Habib/
Armstrong
Golden/Imarisio
Oliver/Hunt
Hunt!
Armstrong
Hunt/Habib ·
6-1
3-2
4-3
0-1
0 - I
0 - l
· setters,
at
The Red Foxes are now gear-
third
and
ing themselves up for matches
· fourth singles
against Fairfield University,
, respectively.
Manhattan College, and, in a
. Hunt won
non-conference tussle, Wagner
her match af-
College.
ter losing the
. King is not letting. his Red
firsJ
set, 3-6,
6-
Foxes look past the upcoming
4, 7-6 (7~5).
opponents, but admits that the
~abib played
MAAC Championship- com-
a marathon
ing up in two weeks-
will
be
match as she
the big one.
also had to
"The whole team is getting
cqrne b~ck af-
excited about the MAAC.Cham-
. ter losing the
first set. She
defeate_d Tif-
fany Miles 5-7,
7-6·(7-5),
7-6
(7-5) ..
.
.
...
'
"Tracy and
Claudine both
· sh.owed a lot
(?f
-~haracier
pionships coming up in early
October," said King.
Everything seems to bl! com-
ing together for the Re~ Foxes
and their first year head ~oach.
The Red Foxes next home match
will
be Tuesday October 7
against Wagner College at
3:30
P.M, at the Dutchess E,acquet
Club.
Freshman Tim Svendsen said
the small lapses on defense hurt
Svendsen said the team was
not overconfident at half-time.
. the·teant '
.
· . "We were not overconfident
,
.
.
''We
'controll~d most of the · goirig iqto the second half. We
game," he said. "But we had.
tim,es whenwe didn't mark up
we Hor got confused and we paid
for it."·
That confusion was the story
line for Hawks' third goal as the
Red Foxes fafled to clear a cen-
tering pass from a comer kick.
Monmouth's John Babula
picked up the loose ball
amongst the chaos and knocked
itin.
Last Wednesday, the Red
Foxes had one slip away against
conference rival, Siena. After
Marist grabbed a 2-0 lead early
in the second half, the Saints
tallied five goals in only nine-
teen minutes to come from be-
hind and win, 5-2.
Marist had its first lead of the
young season going into half-
time thanks
to
a goal by sopho-
more Mike Schilling. The Red
Foxes ad~ed a secpnd tally,
courtesy of senior defenseman
Andy Dolan, but the team's for-
tunes would take a turn for the
worse.
just played not to lose instead
of playing to win, a~d a two goal
lead couldn't hold up against
Siena,''.
On· the other hand, Herodes
said the overconfidence is what
did them in.
"We just got overconfident,
complacent and we rolled over.
Our team has to realize that no
Division
I
team will give up af-
ter being down 2-0," Herodes
said.
To make matters worse, the
upcoming schedule only gets
tougher. The Foxes' next match
will
be against the Big East's
Villanova, followed by dates
with some of the tougher teams
in the
MAAC-
Iona, Fairfield,
and Loyola.
Herodes said Villanova will be
a tough and formidable oppo-
nent.
"They're in the middle of the
pack in the Big East, but that
conference is one of the tough-
est conferences in the nation,"
he said.
Football r o u t - - - - - - - -
. .. continuedfrom page 16
Tray.nor, who had. nobody
wit,hin twenty yards of him, for
a
sixty-five yard tquchdown.
.Traynor's :first collegiate catch
put Marist up
21-0
with three
m_inutes left in the third quarter.
: "fp.e fo"l!rth quarter was more
. , oftbe
smpe for:the Foxes, Daley
scrambled for a twenty-two yard
touchdown early- in the fourth
to finish off his best game of the
year ..
.
Later, backup Bill
Tramaglini found Reed for a six-
teen yard touchdown, and
Mario Wilson returned
a
punt
75 yards for a touchdown, his
second touchdown in two
weeks.
For Daley, who finished the
game 8-of- I
9
for
175
yards, the
key to Marist's second half ex-
plosion was the turnovers.-·
"After that early fumble, we
managed to play nearly mistake
free," Daley said. 'That was as
key as anything else_ we did of-
fensively."
If
the Red Foxes are to beat
Duquesne this week, they'\\
" need to play as well all game as
they played in the second half
against the Peacocks. Accord-
ing to Daley, that shouldn't be a
problem.
"We haven't beaten them
since we were freshmen,·· Daley
said of his fellow seniors. "We
will definitely be fired-up to play
this week."
In the game that will probably
determine the fate of their sea-
son, the Red Foxes play host to
the Duquesne Dukes on Satur-
day at 1:00.
MaristFootball ~- Cummulative Stats
PASSING
ATT CMP
YD
TD INT
Rating
Jim
Daley
50
22
367
2
6
94.86
Bill Tramaglini
5
4
58
I
. 0
243.44
RUSHING
ATT
YIB
AVG.
TDs
,Lovan Rhodes
49
245
4.7
0
J.J. Allen
49
224
4.4
2
Chad Wickliffe
17
67
3.7
0
Jon Reed
1
30
30.0
1
David Spinato
I
28
28.0
0
RECEIVING
NO.
YIB
!ID
TDs
Jon Reed
16
251
47
I
Brian Ladd
4
55
18
0
Brian Traynor
2
83
65
I
Jovan Rhodes
2
9
9
0
Tim Korba
l
29
29
0
Chris Edelstein
l
21
21
1
Chad Wickliffe
1
6
6
0
DEFENSE
Sacks·
Tackles
INT
FumRec.
Reid Ellis
4.5
22
0
l
Dwyne Bates
4.0
16
0
I
Chris Meyer
3.0
20
I
0
Archer Bridgeforth
2.5
15
0
0
I
_..,
QUOTE
_
OF
.
1:HE WEJ?K.
"we'piayeci
n~~
·
to .i~se inste~d
'
...
.
,
·
;_
;
e,',
~
,;
·•·
,:
.
.
• •
,
I
·
..
_
,
:<_
:
,f
, ':.·
.
:
•
.-·.
, ::
,
.
of play~ngt()
W.J.11·
/
·
:'
:
,;
<
...
:
:-
.
·.
·.
.
~-Tirri Svendsin (
Jrie~'s
soccei")_
.-
.
.
.
'
'
"
•
.
.
.
.
,
42-0_
.
_
blow9ut
sets
,up
.-
:
sho~doWll-
this Saturday
-
with·· DQ.quesne
_
_
·
•
e~~llgh
',
for)hl;~c~rici
'
-
lowest
·.
charripiori
:
puquesne
·
conies to
•
<
·
In
.
their
:
three gan1es; Marist
total in schpo}_history:
_
.
Potighkeepsi~;
,
.-
.
·• .
·
·.· _ _
hris
:
~~ly managed
--
to
.
put 14
.
Sophomore Chris Meyer- also
.
On
offense,
the
.
Red
Foxes fol-:
poi~ts' on the bo.ard in tlie first
had
a
huge game for Marist, re- .· lowecf\.Vhat has been an alarm~
.
.
half,mainly because of the mas~
.
Ellis,DJayne Bates,Jerry
cordingnine
,
tac:kles,asack,an
·irig·trend
•.
eatlyiriJhisseas
_
on'.- •
·
s
.
ive a~ou
_
nt of .. turnovers
Gerth, and Archer Bridgeforth interceptio
_
n
,<-
:
.i
:
nd
a
:
forc~d
·
Marist scored only
:
one
fouch;;
·,
they've
:
committed.
--
With a
~h~sed frf!shman
:
·
quarterbac~ .fumble .
.
M<!yer
'
was
playing·ip
do~n
O
iri the
-
firsth~lf,
'
de~piJe
..
rrit.1ffed punt,-a
·
rumbl_e,
.
and an
James Lyver all over the field
pla~e of co
~c
aptairdohn
_
Fox,
tli~
fact tbeirdefertseconstandy
--
-_
interception in theTirst twOquar-
before
:
the Peacocks dec
,
ided
who has missed the l~sL ~wo
-
.
ga~e th~in good field
C
positi<>n.
.
ters
'
on Saru~ciay, fytaiist h<;tS·now
enough w
·
a~ enough, and called
'.
games after getting injµted in the The only score came on sopho~
committed an unreal ten first half
by THOMAS RYAN
Staff Writer
.
The irresistible for~e met the
-
very,
.
very
_
movable object
·
last
Saturday when the Mari st Col-
lege football team hosted St.
only five
.
passing plays the
.
en-
-
se
.
ason
.
opener
:
,
aga
.
ins
·
t
niordack.Reilly's tWoyardrun;
turnovers.
,
.·
·
.
tiresecm1dhalf. TheR,edFoxes - Georgetown.
·
Fox could be after:Meyer'shiterception had
Jhey
:
camed their,tniscues
(2-1, 2-1)
only allowed fifteen
ready to play this week when givenMaristthe ball atthe Pea~
.
into the second haff against St
yards passing irithe game;
'
good
two-time defending MAAC cock12 yard line.
Peter's: as
~
lorig Red
,
Foxes
·
Peter's at Leoni doff Field.
The irresistible forcetook the
form of a talented and experi~
enced Red Fox defensive line;
while the movable
_
object dis-
guised itself as the Peacocks'
helpless offensive Hne
.
:
When
:
the two went head on, the re:
sultwas not pretty.
.
.
_.
_
That result was a
42~0
Red Fox
. blow:out that saw St. Peter's
(0-
3,0-2)
have twice as many sacks
allowed
(8),
than th~y had of-•
fensive yards gained
(4).
Of
those
.
eight sacks, junior
·
Reid
·
EI
_
lis had
-
four, all of them com~
ing in the first half alone.
·
As Marist head coach Jim
Parady pointed
.
out, welcoming
Ellis back after he missed
.
all of
last year with
·
an
.
injury Jtas·
helped histeartl
.
trerrlen'a°ousiy.
_
drive erided at the one-yard line
with
.·
a botched hand-off that
·
was recovered by the Peacocks.
Later in t!ie quarter, senior
Harry
Taylor put a huge hit on
St:
:
£~ter's running back Herb
Gi-Oce, forcing a fumble
1
that
Bates recovered deep
.
in Pea
_
-
cocl< territory. Quarterback Jim
Daley h'it tight end Chris
Edelstein over the middle two
·
plays later, and Marist was up
14-0.
-
The next time Marist gotthe
ball, Parady pulled out his bag
of tricks to ice the game for the
Red Foxes. Using Jon R~ed
·
as
a decoy after his reverse for a
·
.
te>uchdcnvri
'
last week~ Daley
_
faked
a
'
pitch
to Reed,
·which
.
brought the Peacock secondary
way in.
·
,
b'aley then fumed and
.
threw
to freshman wide receiver Brian
.
·
·
..
_
''.l·faving
Reid,
},ack gives u
·
s
·
depth,at the defensive line
.
po~
~itfon
:
iliat we
·
didn; t
•
hav~
,
last
·
.
season,'.' Parndy
:
s~i~
:
.
"He
has
.
really workelhard
to
get
hhn~
self bacf to where was before
·
the
injury/'
~
continued
;
on p.15:..:..,_
.
-
t~e
·
r~t~~i
_·
t~~
-
:
,
~~
€tf
~~
f[~
Ji
:
_~-~i~
;
~fa
/i
da~s~
:
cfu.i~e&"~~
.
;~t~iiJ;_o
~
'~
.
--·:
.
'.
:·
.;._:>
_,-
Women's~e~
"
~liellS
C
i~
·•
·
•
·
MAAC1SCheduie
c
SUCCesmlly
.
.
·:
.· '.
·
.: ·
.
_
.. ,
<
. .
:_.
:-:::
'
:
;_:_
:
·
·
:·'.:
:
·.·
_
.~
·
~-:\
,-,
'''
__
... ·
·
·
.
Wll1S
over
;
Siena
'
and
;;
St
:
Peter's
.
·
s
h
;
·--
;
·
·
·
,\i-
·:
b
'
fii
;
.
.
.
-
.
-_ -
;f
:
<>1t{mr~
-
ril~
\
:!
·
:r1:zins~
·
.
_
lea~e
Fo~es
:
.
und~f;@
·'.
illi~e-
:
SienaandgoalieBethZackwas
·
.
.
·
- -
·
·
·
· ·
·
.
·
' ,
strong in
net
to r~cord the shut-'
.
by,RACHl\EL'70LLAltO
enhancing the ~e~
_
F<>~6s' plai out.
.
:
.-
:
.
.
. .
.
.
.
.
·
Staff Writer
•
·
-
.
''.We
had
a
10
daf br¢ak
in
be~
''Bridg~t·s'~eeifoh fire
,
.
.
She's
tween Lehigh andBie11a thatlet
really stepped up her offense
The Marist Collegewo
,
men's
us work
.
on offensive
:.:
tactics.
·
and
_
has
'
beeO
'
pJ
_
ayfog great up
.
soccer team is how
2
~
0
in the
_
This rea11y helped us st_ep
up
our
·
top," Nichols said:
.
.
MAAC.
_
shooting agains~ ~iena and
St
-
The scoring against St
:
Peter's
:
After defeating Siena l
~
O;
'
the
Peter's: Our
.
defense has just
wa~
:
dt>n
_
e
·
b{Jamie
;
_
$amps()n
·
Red Foxes overcame St. Peter's
been sol_id all year/' Nichols
witha goal
.
and an
assist,Jamie
4"3
for their fir~t h~me win;
said.
Bierwirth with
.
two scores; and
Co-captainJanetOliverfeltthe
''The scoring w~sdefinitely a
Amanda Swidereck, who
team was ready for the game
plus," Sebastian added. "Com-
notchect' her first goal of the
against St Peter's'.
"Confidence really wasn'
_
t
much
-
of an issue. I think we
were really excited and ready to
.
play," Oliver said.
·
.
.
Co-captain Stacey Sebastian
added, "Coming off a win re.ally
helped our confidence.
'Know-
ing
that St. Peter's had lost to
Siena was also a really big
plus."
_
Two factors that have been
·
working for the Red Foxes are
an increase in the intensity by
the offense and solid play by
This year has been
_
awesome. The team is
.
playing really well ...
:
Jamie Bierworth
ing out with four goals against
St: Peter's was really great."·
The win against Siena gave
Marist a positive start in the
MAAC conference.
''The Siena game was a step
for us. It was our first MAAC
year.
Bierwirth, a
·
freshman, leads
thetearri
-
in
goals with five.
"This year h.is been awesome.
The team is playing really well
and starting is just a great feel-
ing," Bierwirth said.
The Red Foxes' next game is
at Hofstra.
-
Working off a two-
game winning streak, Coach
Nichols is confident in her team ..
"Every game that we play is
competitive. (Hofstra is) a good
team with some s~ong players,
but we've been playing strong
on the road," she said.
•.
G~orgeto'?,'n
·
_
_
Du'que
.
sne
.
,
Marist
·
;
canisi~S
.
_
,
Fairfield
.:
1hna
.
s't
Peter's
·
st.John's
LASf\VEEK_
·
September
27
:
2
o
·
-
tcro
·
.
.
J
·
o
--
1.00)
.
2
-
L
-
;
:fJ.57
.
1
-
1
.500
·
·
1 1
.500
o.
t
.cro
0
1
·.
_00)
O
'
2
.
00)
0
0
..
.
00)
2
-
I
2
I
2
l
:
1
l
1
2
2
-
1
0
3
0
3
2
l
·
SIENA
41, Canisius 38
G'TOWN
34, Fairfield
-
9
MARIST42~ St. Peter's O
Pace
26,Iona 0
TIHSWEEK-
Octob~;4
.
.
·
Iona
@
Canisius
Duquesne
@
Marist
.
Siena@ G'town
St. Peter's @St.John's
Central Conn
@
Fairfield
St.' John's·23, St. Brook
19
INSIDE ...
·
Men's soccer . . . . . . . . . . 15
Women's tennis.
. . . .
J
5
:
Hoop Dreams . . . . . . . . . 14
Off Campus . . . . . . . . . .
J
4
Tom's Tri/ecta . . . . . . . .
-
14
50.3.1
50.3.2
50.3.3
50.3.4
50.3.5
50.3.6
50.3.7
50.3.8
50.3.9
50.3.10
50.3.11
50.3.12
50.3.13
50.3.14
50.3.15
50.3.16