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The Circle, September 18, 1997.xml

Media

Part of The Circle: Vol. 50 No. 1 - September 18, 1997

content

News
Computers. upgraded
throughout·.campus
during the summer_
How far
is
too
far?
. Thedel:mtofournew
section focuses
on
the:
tole of the media af-
.
.
ter
Princess Diana's
death.·
,-page5
~ports.
Men's booters can't get
it together; stand at
o.;;3
:-pagel5
TI-IE <3IR<3£E.
Volume 50, Issue I
The
student newspaper
ofMarist_College
September 18, 1997
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Cramped. students read.yto
sleep
on the green
Massive student
overload creates
housing crunch
ority points after that This.year,
the nu~ber of
there are a· greater number of students they
· ''build-ups" ,or temporary
needed to ac-' ·
triples, in first-year areas then
commodate. -
in upper-class residences.
A p. pro x i-
-The housing crunch in fresh-
mately .-• 844
men areas was the result of the
first-year stu-
by AMANDA BRADLEY -
large number of student. s en-
den·ts
were
Asst. NewsEditor
·
rolled at Marist. The Admis- • guaranteed
sions Office was originally re. . housing with
Students; students and more
quested by the college admin-
only
774
students.
.
- .
istration to enrqll 850 new stu-
spaces avail-
An increased number of stu-
dents, but _by ApriL l
Q97.•
that
able; <fhe. re-
dents requesting on~campus
numberhadjrtcreasedto870;
.
suit :was 76
housing .this yiar has. created
By May I, 940 people had de-
tripl~fcreated .
120
temporary build~ups, mostly
cided to attend Marist. Kerit
in
M.arian
i_n freshmen residences.
Rinehart, assistant director of
Hall, Sheahari
"Due to ail increase in appli-
admissions, said the Admis-
Hall, Leo
Several students are living in tripled-up rooms all over campus.
cants and attendants at Mari st,
sions Office did ·not feel this
Hall, and Lower Champagnat.
.
_ _
as well as updated facilities and
would cause a problem.
This is nearly double the tota·I
posit, the more likely that stu-
activities, more students want
''.It
is typical to lose50 to]0
11umber of build-ups found·Iast
dent will be in a triple.
to live ori campus'this year,'.' said _ . students over th~· summer .[for:- yeart:hroughouttheentirecarnpus.
• Susan Eriole,' assistant direc-
Anthony Fusari, assistantto'the
nu111erous. reasons J/anci even ·

-'
·
Housing distributes
all
the resi~
tor
of
Housing and Residential
director of Housing and
·
Resi-
after. losing .70·:students;·we
dentialspac~s available •. to
in-
Life,~
·
.saicrthe·_c:ollege simple
dentialLife,<·
·
· ........ :
.
,
.
·

,:.;-· ... ;-\'.~~Id .have rfa,itt~~;:_o~f:'t~rg~t _
·
\c!9riling ;~f~de11ts, but
wM'n ..
?o,~~--npf:have
'
thetci6m toJiouse
-...... , .. Jlle
<;()H~ge.
gllan1µte.es.:,oif,;
,
,/;n~i:!'lb,C?r/; he sa.id:/
1
'Bt1t
that ex,f.-.••there·;~i_-<!:.s,~udents i.Jeft;;e>yer•{'"·'e~erye>n~.
,.
,
:
,,.::,'.,~.:,:,: (
.
' .. ·. ,:··
To accommodate the overload
ofstudents, residence halls on ·
· campus underwent .major _reno-
vations this summer. The fourth
and sixth floor lounges in Leo
were converted into rooms for
thre·e_ and_ thf ~i_ngl,es lgc;ilt¢d in -
lower
Cnampagnat
were
built-
.
. "
iampu's' ho'usirig(6"a1flirtf
ana·
·.
.
p~cted ·number
of
stud~n'is'
was;'.
thef·m
_
llSt begin _tripliljg.'First- ..
,,
, ';'The.r¢
·
are. rnofe students. on
second year students, butroom
.
· less this year!' • -
.,
-
yean0om ·assignments depend
campus, but the space. to accmri-
ass ignfT!en ts :dep
_
end_ on·.· a
Admissions_ga:vetheOffic:e_of.
o~_w
_
he~astudent submits.their 'modate them hasn'f grnwn," she
student's ac::cumulation ()f pri-
Hotising .. and/R.e'~id.en·tial:
Life· ·
r6oiri -dep()sit. The la.fer a de:-· said.
Please see
ROOM;
page] ...
________ ;...;__
·
-· -· .
-
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·
sG-~:
.
ichlef
Justic
:
e·11einstated after
Wlrining·~~l)eijl,
reSig11s two weeksiater
by BEN AGOES
thti April 30 meeting for "two
News
Editor _
counts of misconduct at recent
SGArrieetings, violation of Ar-
'The ChiefJustice ofMarist's
·
ticleA Section 7, violation of
Student Government Associa~ · Article'4 Section
2,"
according
tion resigned yesterday in a let-
to the meeting's minutes; -
.. .' · ....
;
. -... ·

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< .-
CirclePho1o/MikeFrisch
te(to the-Senate, saying' he
;
_
The:senate charges included
One half of the Indigo Girls~ plucks away at her guitar. . ·-
could not work with a Senate
violation of the judiciai board
. . • . ·.-.. . •
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that was so,~iased against him. _requfrementth~t it meet at least
I_ndi~o __ girl$
,
. S?JJ1tnne ~ctiv1sr11~
.
. -
~:~;eS:tt::ah;~;~~:t~:1~~ -
.
~~::~tg
1
Vi
61:~~~~
6
;t)%;~:
music with Native Amencan tour
of. S(}A,.,''forn1er ChiefJustice, . at past appeal.presentations.
• -
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Jason Sprague wrote.
The Senate voted 6-0 in favor
bySTEPHANIE.MERCURIO
Brown, the. headoftbeEnv,ron-. ·
·
·Th.· S ·
··1·
b
t ··
t ·
-- .
of 1·m-
·
pe·a· chment w·1th- th.ree•·a·b-
-
-
·
· -
-
·
·
. • . · .
-,, ·
-
.
e · ena e urs m o ap-
&
JJLLGIOCONDO
mental Protection Agency she
1
-
ft
SGA p
·ct ·
1
stentions.
·-
.said. '.'They need.tobe aware . PF aukseMa,de~
.d .. th. ··1ret .. ts1 end_
· -·
·
· ·.
ran
a un rea
e e er an
_
Sprague appealed to Gerard
Honor the Earth and Love
that many people are opposed
. .
. .
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-
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·
Your Mother.
·
tothis bill." · __
-
tore _1tllp, throwmg tt m the gar~
Cox, vice president and dean for
A
· d
'
·
E -
1
-
s
-
1
.
R-· -
.d-. h. N ,
A
.
bage can.
-
student. affairs, who· gathered
ccro mg to mty a iers
.
~Y
sai . t e - attve me~-
Commuter Senator Danny
the case's facts and appointed
and Amy Ray,TheindigoGirls,
cap~ are_bemg pushed off their
Keegan, said he was relieved
John Doherty, assistant profes-
their current tour is to draw at-
reservatto_ ns to_ m. ake room for
Sprague res·ign· ed. . "I'm J·ust
f
·
tention to the destruction.done
these toxic waste dumps
·
-
·
sor
O
crimmal juSlice, as inde-
.. Th
1
·
d b
·
-
-·· · · .
·
glad everything is finally over
pendent counsel.
to the planet
by
nucle-aiwaste.
e an
ecomes contam1-
d· ·d n ,, h-
•ct
c.
f ·
·
'Th · ·
I
b'Il ·
- d • h h · • -
1
.
ti
h
an
o e,
e sat .
A1ter a summer o mvest1ga-
ere ts current
Y
a
1
m
nate wit c em!ca s r~m t e
Maduri said Sprague's resi
0 -
tion, Doherty returned a letter
process, which, if passed, wiH
waste, and seeps mto their bod-
. · . - . ·
·
. .
0
allow the transport of toxic
ies," she said. "his then passed
~atm~ Wt~ give thefiad;:1!.mstra-
to Cox on Aug. 22, 1997, rein-
nuclear waste across I-84 from on to their children through t1on the c _ ance to m
so~eh-
stating Sprague as chief justice.
New York and the surrounding
breast milk."
one t at sees eye to eye wit
.. The appeal was granted be-
us."
cause of lack of due process in
areas to Nevada," Ray said.
Winona Laduke is also aco-
Before. h1·s res1·gnation,
the procedures " Cox sa·1ct
"This will endangerJhe lives of ordinator of the tour.
'
·
millions across the country."
"We are trying to draw atten-
Sprague ·was impeached at an
"How [Jason) was dealt with
S.aliers said the group is try-
tion to the rights of the
ApriJ)O, I 997, Senate meeting,
was in question."
but the impeachment. was over-
Cox said Doherty had also
ing to get the attention of the
grassroots communities," she
turned early September by an an
found instances in which the
government through non-vio-
said. "The EPA needs to pro-
lent action.
tect the rights of the poor as
indepe_ndentcounsel that ruled
Senate failed to accurately
the Senate failed to follow
record meeting minutes.
"We are handing out action
well."
·
proper procedures.Resident
Sprague was contacted by stu-
cards at every concert, one to
Senator, Charles Leone, mo-
d t
ff: ·
S
t
I
t·f ·
h.
Bill Clinton and one to Carol
en a airs ep · no 1 ymg tm
Please see INDIGO, page 4...
tioned to impeach Sprague at
of his reinstatement.
He said he felt injured by the
impeachment case against him.
"I
feel thatl have been injured
by [the Senate's] vote of no con-
fidence, OJ impeachment,"
sifi'.ague said. "l'ye
0
w9rked hard
for SGA and
I
feel t,ad that they
brought such hearings against
me. I feel personally: hurt in that
I've done nothing. There's no
time to play political games."
He said he received official
word of his impeachment a full
five days after the Senate meet-
ing, and was shocked by the
·
·charges against him.
"I get
.
this memo that says
you've been impeached for this,
that and the next thing," he said.
"It didn't make any sense to me.
They said I was impeached for
Please see
SENATE, page 4 ... ·
THE CIRCLE POLL
Do you think
the media
is too intrusive into
people's lives?
. Yes--146
No--28
See related story, page 5


















































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.THE
CIRCLE
September! 8,
J
997 .
Wh~{~·:s· ·co
1
ol;
()fl
Campus ,
oet
Maya Angelou
in the Jame
. Mc Cann· Recreation Center a
:30.
ay: futemational Education Aroun
he World
Party
ight: El Arco Iris Latino Welcom
ackJain
ight:
Rocky Horror Pich.Ir
how
on the Green
ight
ComedyOubwithPaul Venie
ay:·CD and Cassette. Vendor
ring lots of money!
ight: El Arco Iris Latino lectur
ith Iris Morales
hat's down i
utchess Coun
tBard'_College:
tarting Sunday September 21
'Tunga: 1977-1997" a survey of
th
orks of the contemporary Bi:azil
an artist. Museum hours ar
ednesday through Sunday
fr9
:OOto
5:00.
ednesday Septen1ber24: Joe
erlmann lectures on "Mixing o
eoples: lntennarriage and the
mak
ng of Americans-History, Pros
ects, .Policy." Lecture begins a
:00
pmin
Blithewood.
tSUNY New Paltz:
ednesday September 23: Open
ng reception of Faculty Art in th
Gallery from 7:00 to 9:00.
ednesday September 23: A con
ert by the Colorado Quartet i
cKenna at 8:00.
lsewhere:
Friday September 26: New Paltz
Jazz Festival "From Latin to Bop"
tJoe's East/West starting at 8:00.
··.Sillden1s·fel:tr':S'afetyliViJ1gbff:C'ii.:tri'Pils·· ·
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by STEPHANIE MERCURIO ·
;,I
have two .other room mates, ~ut
I
"While my ro;in mate an~ffwere lobk-· ·
was alone all summer," she said. "It was
ing for a house, we stayed away fromthe
Managing Editor
pretty freaky then. The police do patrol,
city," he said. "The .whole area:around
A
security system was on the back-to-
but you never know who is going to be
here1s nice, even though the people liv-
school list for some Mari st students.
out in the neighborhood."
ing in the apartment project are a little bit
Many students, such as junior Kelly
Kenefick said that is the reason her
shady."
Kenefick, are forced to live off-campus
house put in a security system.
Rosiek said she feels her car is secure_
in the city of Poughkeepsie because. of
· "We make sure we lock everything at
at Kaai-Rock.·
the lack of upper-cl~ss h()using. . night,'' she said. "We aH;o·put in a secu-
"I
have not really seen anyone trying
Kenefick said, however, this is not the
rity systemthat we make sure.we set'' . to break into any of the cars," she said.
safest alternative.
.
·
.
.
SeniorJane Rosiek said she feels very
"The lighting is excellent, so that helps."
"I
feel very unsafe, living on Union/'
safe Jiving in the Kaai-Rock apartment
Kenefick said she worries about the
Kenefick said. "We had to call the police
complex. . . . _
_

_ .
people in her neighborhood. .
·
the other night because we thought . .
"At night there are security guards
"I
heard that a girl was mugged down
someone was trespassing!'
patrolling the area on foot,''. she said.
the street and thatthe man who did it did
Kenefick said Poughkeepsie residents
"We live right next to a housing project,
riot get caught," she said.
"A
man also
constantly harass· her and her four fe-
but there have never been any prob-
came to our door, begging for food."
male housemates,
·
!ems."
·
Keneficksaid·that Marist needs more
"Every time we go outside, the people
Rosiek said living on the outskirts of housing.
.
who live here who are not students al-
Poughkeepsie has many benefits.
"There is nothing Marist can do about ·
ways make comments)ike 'Hey baby,"'
"We do not live in the city, so we do . our safety off-campus, butthe'whole rea-
she said. "Many of them are harmless,
not have to deal with all of the people,"
son we live here is because we could not
but it is still scary."
she said. "We also five in a community," live on:campus,'' she said. "Marist needs
Junior Trisha Sears lives on South
which _adds to security."
to create more housing."
White Street. ·
· ·
·
·
.
Ron Lyp, a senior, also lives in Kaai-
Lyp said he feels the same.
"I
live a block away from
a
bad neigh-
Rock.
"I
was forced to move off, even thofiugh
borhood, and
a
block away from a good
"I
have not yet fc:c:lt threatened at all,
I
really did not want to," he said.
"I
eel
···neighborhood,'' she said. "There are cer-
because there are so many_students
liv- ·
safe so far, but
I
still would like to be·on-
tain hours when
I
feel safe, however it
ing there," he said. · _
_ .
_
.. campus."
depends on the time of day."
Lyp also said he liked,not
Ii
ving in the
Sears said she lived by herself in her
city.
apartment for the summer.
In
Your Opinion
How importctnt a part does th~'Illedia play in your life?
KATIIYGAZZILLO
Junior
'At school, the media does not play
n important
part.
I don
',t
really
sit
own and watch the news, and I
on't have access to a newspaper
I would at home."
CORRYDURDOVIC
Junior
"I think that as an Advertising ma..c
jor, I have to be aware of
the
dif:•
ferent med.las.
If
an important event
happens, I think itis imperative to
watch the news."
SECURITY BRIEFS
-Sept
I 4, 2:00
a.m.: Two males in Midrise
were stopped when the entry officer on
duty heard clinking and noticed "two
large bulges in the front crotch area of
the students." The bulges were Rolling
Rock beers, which were confiscated .
-Sept
14, 12:45p.m.:
TheFireAlarmwas
· sounded in Dyson while Alpha Sigma
Tau sorority was blowing up balloons
with a helium tank for their Preference
Party.
- Sept.
13,
I :55 a.m.: Two students and
their guests had alcohol confiscated
when they walked into Leo with six
bottles and
14
cans of beer clinking in
their backpacks. The visitors were made
to· stay the night in order to sober up,
and sent hom·e the next morning.
- Sept.
13
and
14:
There were two inci-
dents of unhealthy alcohol consump-
tion. Both male students were sent to
the hospital to be treated.
- Sept.
12, 2: l l
a.m.: The fire alarm in
Champagnat was sounded after
40
one
inch fire crackers went off in the fourth
floor stairwell. The perpetrator was not
caught.
- Several obscene phone calls have been
made to numerous rooms from both on
and off campus. Head of Security, Joe
Leary stated that off campus calls are
hard to trace but they will call the police
. and phone companies. If_made from an.
campus, the call can be traced.
.
· MIKEEsERNIA·
sophomore
"In
~eneral, I
think
it is important
t
keep in touch with currentev_ents
because they may play a part
in
you
life." -
"How's the
weather?"
Thursday: Breezy, sun mixed with
clouds. 52~.
74":
Friday: Breezy, mainly cloudy," a
few storms. 52":..75~
Saturday: Breezy, sun mixed with
clouds.49~.71.
0
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. THE CIRCLE
Ne
Ws
S~ptember; 18, 1997
3
Moisture in cement flooring
:
holds up
.
opening o( McCann Center addition
·
\
Js.dministrators on edge
as dedication date r,,ears
byBENAGOES
News Editor
The doors to the new James J.
Mccann Recreational Center
remain closed because of a
string of complications that

have pushed the addition's
opening date nearly eight
months behind schedule.
Tom Daly, director of Physical
Plant, said in a Sept. 19, 1996,
Circle edition that the building
was expected to be completed
in Jan. 1997, but recent problems
with the moisture content in the
cement floor has pushed back
that target to this October, or
even beyond.
"I was expecting to come back
and it would be all done," he
said.
"I
think the students are
·
getting the short end of the stick.
We pay an activities fee and we
can't even work out!"
He said he wants the college
to wait and put the floor in cor-
rectly, but it has taken too long.
"It's good that they are going
to do it right, but they should
have thought about this whole
process and done it right in the
first place," Casperson said.
Sullivan said the building is
going to be dedicated during
homecoming weekend, Oct. 25
and 26, and the college hopes
to have the floor done by then.
But if moisture levels are still
too high. he said, administrators
have been looking into a con-
tingency plan that could include
either opening small parts of the
The trouble areas are the free-
weight room, cardio-vascular
room and gym room
floors
which
are to be overlaid with Mondo
Sport iqipact flooring, a rubber
Circle Pholo/Charlcs May
building or pulling down tem-
The exterior structure of the Mccann Center Annex is completed. Work on the inside is continuing
but being delaying
by
excessive moisture in the concrete.
flooring known for its durabil-
three pounds. But the cement
lating the heat and air condition-
was too humid on the day the
ity and shock absorption.
in McCann is at five pounds o'f
ing systems, but that has met
floor was poured or that an un-
Colin Sullivan,assistantdirec-
vapor emission which could
with little success.
derground spring is seeping
tor of athletics, said Mondo is
destroy the floor if it was laid
The college has even
·
con-
through.
one of the.world's best known
down.
suited with a variety of concrete
But Murray said the likely
flooring and it was used during
"If
we install Mondo above
experts, which Murray said, are
cause is the college's proximity
the 1996 Atlantic Olympics.
three pounds per square inch, it
just as baffled as Marist admin-
to the Hudson River and this
He said. the high quality floor
would bubble the floor, creating
istrators.
summer's unusual weather.
requires that there be only a lim-
seam problems, and basically
''It's frustrating and everyone
"What
we're dealing with is
ited amount of moisture in the
,
ruining the floor," he said.
is scratching their head on this
that the college is next to the
cement base.
.
Murray said the building is
one," Murray said.
"It's
a situ-
·
river and we had a very humid
."There are very high stan-
complete, but cannot be opened
ation that no one had antici-
summer, and the cement just
dards for putting this in,"
to students because that could
pated."
.
.
.
isn't drying," he said:
Sullivan said
.
.
"We are not go-
exacerbate the moisture prob~
Marist officials and the con-
·
But even that doesn't explain
ing
to
putciowri the floor until
fem.
.
_
crete specialists cannot seemto
why the gym floor, wliich was
"the
instaHer can guarantee it's
"I
wouldn'trnind having it
.
. i,inpoinf.exactly what
_
created
poured one year ago, still has a
ok.''
·
·.. .
.
·.
.
·. .
open," he said,
_
.. but whatwe are
so much
.
moisture to be trapped
high moisture reading.
Jim Murray
direct<>rofathlet~
i
.
.
trying
to
do
.
i(~eep \h
.
e
:
doors
.
inside ihe cement.
r
,
'
Timothy. Casperson, junior,
ics
·:
:
:
s"~ici

mo'isttir~
/
con.teni

~
is
/
-
dosed
'
and d_ry:it'.01,1L't
/
:
>_.
..
.
,
,
;
,
The
:
problem clii.ild haVe
~-
said
h~ was
·
di~ap
'
pqinted when
me~s~red in pound~ of vapor
·.
Sullivan
-
said
..
t!Je c9ilege ha~
.

stein
med from a xariety of
·
.
he
.
retum~d
in
.
September and
emission; and the idealemissi9n
.
been trying to keep ~stead)'.cli-
·
sources, including
foci
much
the
~
McCann addition was not
for
..
laying
·
Mondo floorin·g is

mate in the b11ilding by rrianipu-
_,water in the cement mix or that it
complete.
porary carpeting.
Sullivan said he was disap-
pointed the building was not
completed by September, but
that will all be forgotten when it
opens.
"I
am disappointed because I
would have liked it at the begin-
ni
.
ng of the year, but that won't
take away from it when it finally
does open," Sullivan said. 'This
is going to be the most ad-
vanced facility in the northeast.
In just a recruiting standpoint,
it is going to be fantastic. Rome
wasn't built in a day, and
·nei-
ther was the Mccann Center."
Casperson said he is worried
about future Marist construc-
tion projects. A year and a half
to build McCann was too long,
he said.
"You
have to think, if
it
took
them this longfor McCann. how
long will it take them to finish
·
the library?" he said.
Canipus
computer labs
-
r~eive upgrade

oyer
:
·
suin:meras
.
testilt
of new IBMl~asmg progi;am
Room shortage causestightsituation
'
··,
,

·.
.
:
-
·
·-
:
:
~
.
'
'
.
.
.
.
'
by
JENFEMMINELLA
.
Staff Writer
_
tor of Academic Computing,
said this leasing program will
·
diminate
'
the prciblem,o,f com-
Marist is now moving <_1t a
j:mters·becoming obsolete
a
few
·
cool 200 mega-hertz thanks
years after.they are bo!,lght.
:
toanewleasingprogramthat
'
.
"It
is
.
harder to upgrade
upgraded
.
many
~
of
"
the
.

bought computers because of
college's conwuters to
allthe money
·
spent on each
P
.
·

m
proce
··
·
s
·
s
·
o
··
rs
machine," she said. "Theleas-
en
m

..
.
.
•··
·
-
.
·
•·
The new lease with. IBM
· . ·
·
ing program is designed to run .'
..
has allowed Pentium proces-
out, and encourage upgrading.''
.
sors to be installed in Dyson
.
.
Wendy Duncan, director of
303, Lowell Thomas 211 , half
Infonnaticin Services, said the
.
of the Donnelley Lab and at
.
new leasing program will keep
the Fishkill and Goshen cam-
the latest technology assess-
able to students.
pµses.
"Computer technology
·
is a
In
the past; Marist simply
tricky m~rket," she said,
'.'Some-
boug~ t new
.
computers
whenever their
'
machines be-
times less than a year after you
came outdated.
With the

have· bought an upgrade, it is
outdated. This will enable
leasing program,
·
Marist can
Marist to keep new technology
update a different lab every
all of the time."
·
summer. These leased com-
The new machines are Pentium
puters will then be replaced
Processors that run at faster
every three years.
d
speeds, have more memory an
No computer lab on cam-
a larger hard drive than the old
pus will have computers
.
486 models used on campus.
with technology more than
The machines are preloaded
three years old. All the new
with Windows 95 and Office 97
computers are accessible
.
to
II
software.
students, except the Lowe
McMullen said this is an im-
Thomas computers, which
·
.
were installed for.me School
portant upgrade because ''.these
of Communications arid the
same programs are used m the
business world. Students need
A~!rt>ara McMullen, direc-
experience with the programs
now to prepare themselves."
The
'
new computers a~so offer
foultfrnedia capabilities. Marist
students will be able to edit
video, write script and design
graphics with new software ob-
.
tained through the lease.
Ftmding for the leasing pro-
gram
_
came from different divi-
sions
·
using funds
from
their
own operating budgets. This
lease is not connected to the
.Marist/IBM Joint Study, or the
proposed Digital Library .
Tim Massie, director of col-
lege"relations, said the lease will
put :Marist
_
above other colleges
in terms of technology.
"These computer lab up-
grades were vital to maintain
Marist's leadership position as
a technologically advanced ~ol-
lege," he said.
·
Massie also said it is hard to
keep up with the changes.
"One of the difficulties with
technology is rapid change. It
is nearly impossible to upgrade
equipment as continuously as
we would like. However, we are
fortunate we can do entire labs
at one time, and we will continue
to look at
.
this each year to meet
the ever-changing demands of
technology."

:
:
cm11i11ued
fro,'! page I
·
p to doubles.
For Leo Hall freshman,
eather Clarke, adjusting to
arist was hard because of
uild-ups.
"When
you're used to hav-.
ng your own space, one room-
ate is hard enough
to
adjust
o in a small room
_
. This room
s too small
for
three,"
Clarke
aid.
·
"My roommates and I
eed to unpack more stuff, but
e
_
don't have any room to put
t.
Space is a big problem."

The Admissions Office said
t realizes this is an unusual cir-
umstance.
"This is not an ideal situa-
ion," Rinehart said.
"We
don't
ry
to over-enroll, we just try
o hit our key number of stu-
ents. Sometimes we go too
igh, sometimes
·
we go low.
his year we are high, but it
as nothing intentional."
The recent change in the pri-
rity points system, associated
ith the unexpectedly large re-
uest for on-campus housing,
really affected room assign-
ents 'for upper-class stu-
ents this year.
The averages needed for on-
ampus housing was changed
s a result of the in
.
creased al-
otment of priority points for
PA, and"the Housing office
as unable to predict how
many students to expect
this
year because there was no prior
standard.
The cut-off was set at
27 pri-
ority points which denied
housing to 150 upper-class
students.
There were still too
many people to accommodate
. for even after the cut-off was
determined
.
Some upper-class students
were angered by their unex-
pected arrangements.
"I
think it's ridiculous in
Gartland where there's no room
.
to sufficiently fit two," said
Mike Milby.junior.
"There's
not enough room for the furni-
ture and
I can't even unpack
everything because there is no
room."
Originally 142 build-ups were
assigned, but 22 have already
been broken down in the past
two weeks because of hous-
ing no-shows and withdrawals.
A $400 refund will be granted
to all those students still in a
triple after Sept. 22.
The Housing office will con-
tinue to breakdown the triples
based on the dates of deposit
for first-year students and pri-
ority points for upper-class
students even after that date.
Eriole said the Housing of-
fice is doing its best to break
up all build-ups by the end of
the year.
I
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·
:,
THE
_
Cui~LE,Septembe1
\
18, 1997
'
'/.,:
·/
c..
·
.:,
~:..:
~ ;,·. ·
·
:
;
.:
·
:,:/~:
senate
.
,,
.
·
;
·
,
·
,Th~
-
~
-
,d
-
:
S~n~te

h;d
·
eei~~;~
·
,
;
·
--
1~4.tgJ(s)I:~h~r
-.
-
_
the
.:'
E;fa-t
~
id~i-tocI<~
¥c(~-ahri.
:-_
~erit¢r
:
·
."
· .
.
misconduct which I say I've
reasons agamst
.
John, Jowdy
.•
,
<

·
<
·,'---
U'
.
.
.
.
.
:
·
~
·
-,:
,
:
.
.
.
.
-
.
... :
,::-'
.
.
. :
done
.
no misconduct.''._
_
_
_
_
·
said_, "and they t?,ed to influence
...
coirti~;iif}flA(f/age:
!
·
.
.the_routes th~
f.
wi~I
pe
·
used to
one
of
_riltfovortt7~roup~:'.::> .
Sprague said he
'NUS
annoyed
the new ~en?te.
. .
.
·.
'
Laduklsa1cf°d
·
eneral Motors
transport the mater1a! to e1Upha-
·
. Hen~nXSOll
·
said tl,te speech
that the Senate charged him with
·
·
.Madun satd ma_ny of th:
;91?
:
,
_
is\i. riiajor~~o-~tributer to the
size)he
_
point !hat this will ef- · that LaPuk~ gaye
,-,
~v~s
.
~~:al.Jy
: -.
violating the bi-weekly judicial
S~nate mfm~ers_did not sup~ort
.
_
waste problerri.
_
..
:
_ .
fect~".'.eryone 1
,
n the country.
_
.
.
pow~rful. Shf a.ts
_
osaid s~eli!<~d
'.
board requirements.
h!s nom1
_
nat1on for executive
·
.
''They have been dumping at
.
_
Wmona_I,,aduKe,
_
who rnn for
the
_
11;1terac_t?~
-
nature o~ the
"How aml supposed to hold
·
vi~,e president.
. _
India
.
n Pointforyears
;
and can-
__
v1cey
.
.
r
.
e~
_
1d_en.t on the
·
G~een

concert.
-
.
--
.
-
.
·
,
.
·
,
-
·
h
There was a lot of personal
p
·
k
1996
J
"It
was inore then--a concert,''
·
meetmgsw en th~re's nothing
-
.
.
.
_ .
.
_
not clean it up because they
arty tic
_
~t m
,
~
so gav
_
e a
·
·
-
·
to meet o:n? I am not going to
feelings m the room and a
.
lot
claim itw
·
ou)dcost too much
. ·
Sp~ech
;
aboutprotectmg Native
she said
. "
You felt like you were
convene the meeting when there
[of them!, want~d to see some
-.
money," she said
/.
.
.
.
- . .
.
Amen.,ca
_
~
_
land,s. .
.
.
.
participating irl :Som~thing/
'.
·,
.
is nothing to do," he said
.
one else, he said.
.
..
,
·
·
Saliers said there is a connec-
, .
.
Tb~
lpdigo Girls then per~
.
According toBob Ly
·
nch,
&-
>
·
Minutes for the April 30 meet-
.
!-,~st
year's Senate did deny
tiOri
''
between th'ei
f
rnusic
'
'
arid
.
Tormed
for
over two hours.
.
rector
of
college act~".ities, the
ing read that the Senate im-
Wil~iams confirmati?n during 9
tlieitfudssage.
·_.-,:
!
7:
· ..
'.:
,
:-:-.;:<
-
-: .
:
~ophorriore Amy ~per~ said
concert itself had almost all of
peached Sprague ?ecause of h!s
Apnl 6, 1997; m_eet~n~, but
_
he
.
·.:
'When you are p;~~ioifiitely
.
-t~e
~~ow
waf b~
_
th
,
entertaining
the estimated two
:
thousand
"gross and continued negh-
_
ap~ealed to th.e
.
Jud1cml board
involved in
.
an issue,
j
tshows
andmforrriat1ve
.
_
_
fansontheirfeetfromtheopen-
gence and personal misuse of.
-
-
wh1c~
~a~
headed ~y ~prague.
·
thro"ugh in your
·
mus1~
,'
' l:ihe
.
. -
.
..
.. I t~ough( the con~ert was
_
ing act to the last song
'
of.the
power." Kevin Lundy, Senate
The Judicial b
0
?rd decided t~e
said. "The folk song tradition is
really go~, a nice mi
,x
of old and
Girls' e
·
ncore.
-
·
-
·
speaker, said the Senate is not
Sen~te
.
hadJatled
}O
_follow
honest music with
"
a lotof emo-
ne~ S~>ngs
,
_
"
:.
she
.
s
.
aid.
/
·
~
1
"It was
a
historical a
_
nd well
embarrassed by the impeach-
proper prncedur~ ~nd It
_
o~er-
tion
,'
so o
u
r music doe
s
involve
.
t~ohght it
~
-
a~
good
_
to have
:
a
.
.
run concert.
_
The Student Pro~
.
ment and subsequent overturning.
turn~d
_
th~ ~enate s d~c1s1~n
,
.
these issues.
"
.
purpose
}
o
_
the tot_1
_
r, qufit »'as
_
gramming Council dicfa great
"We voted our conscience
mak~ngW1Ihamsexecuttvev1ce
:
keith Secola abd the Wild
alsoI1ardiob~bom1?ardedwith
·
jobhelpingioorganizethecon-
and we voted on what we .be-
president.
-
._ .
.
. ..
_
'
Band of Indians 6pened the
.
aJithe
'
in.f~rm~Hon
'
when you
cert,'' he
s
aid.
·.
·
·
·
lieved,
"
Lundy said. "[Jason]
.
~undy would not go
_
mto
:
~e-
concert. ·A sc"reen
-
was
.
·
then
were there to
,
see
.
theconcert." .
.
JuniorHeather Deery,one of
was entitled to his appeal and
·
tatl as, to ~het?er_ the Judicial
brought out and
a
film was
_ _ Many concert~goers· filled
the ushers f9r
.
the event, said
the administration rendered a
.
B~ar_d s rulmgm fav?r of John
shown that highlighte
_
dhow
_
Na-
.
out the activ
_
i~m
·
cards that the
she enjoyed the concert.
decision. My concern is
to
~tlhams had, a~Y thing to do
tive American reservation~ have
Indigo Girls later collected.
"It
was a
:
great corcert, very
move on and get to all the is-
with Sp~ague s
,
impeachment,
been used for many years for
.
.
1:,ongtime fan Meg~n
earthyand peace loving," she
sues we want."
.
.
but he did not rule it out.
nuclear testing sites and ura-
.
H~ndnxson, a sophomo
_
re
,
said
said
.
"It
was educational and
ColleenMcCulloch
,
SGApar
~
'Tm
not going to say it's not
nium mining, and
·
how the
s
he loved th
_
e sh
_
ow
'.
entertaining aqhe sameti111e
liamentarian
,
refused comment
,
a part of it
,"
he said.
·
people themselves have been
"I was really
:
ex.cited when I
_
which
1
thought
-
\
yas cool.
·
It_
referring
all
·
questions to
.
Sprague said he was nolthe
used for test
d
Ori how radiation
foung out t
J
iey were c
_
oming,U
·
was also coolthrit the
.
Girls cam.e
Katherine Jowdy, SGA director
·
·
.
one
·
that overturned
·
the
-
effects the body
:
It also
s
how
~
d
she said.
·
"They are, definitt:IY
_
around and colledted the activ
-:-
of public relations.
Senate's decision on Wiiliams
.
. - - - - - - -
·
- - - - - - - - - - . . . ; _
_ _ _
-'-...;_--'-...;__--1~u..a.u..i.::._
_ _ _ _ _
;.;._ _ _
Senate members are elected
because under the SGA
c
ons ti
~
.
·
_· ·
. ·
_

. ·
-
·
each year, and Jowdy ~aid the
tution, he does not even have
.
a.
SGA· BRIEFS
-
·
former Senate, which was leav-
vote on the board.
..
; ..
ing just as the present'Setiate
"[The Senate]~aid I rein
s
tated
was entering, tried their best to
John Williams," he said. "It says
influence policy one finaltim
e.
in the constitution. I have
the
·
"It ,vas like [tl}e old
:
S
.
enate]
least amount ofpowers. I am a
wanted to go out
\v
ith a p
a
ng
reactive
·
board
.
I react tci any
.
.
A_t the Wedne
s
d
a
y
,
Sept
.'
IQ
Senate meeting
/
i~
i'
Sen~te passed a·-bill whi~h
.
wili continue t~\mprov
communication between Sodexho and Marist st~dents
:
.
The biH alsostated
_
that SGA: wo
_
uldlookin~o th
possibility
.
of having studenis swipe
_
!]leals off their
~
ard for friei1ds
,
Als9,
·
Sept. 17, Sen. Kevin Lundy an
_
his committee on improving food services met with
a
regionahepreseiltative froin Sodexho todiscuss studen
.

dining is
s
ues
.
·
·
·
·
.
·
·
_
.
·
· .
·
·
_
,
:
_
:
.
-
·
·
_
· .
·
.
:
..
•.
beca!Jse they wanted to get re-
.
appeal given to me."
verige," she said.
:.
"I hope that if impeachment
At the Sept. 9
/
Executive Board meeting, President Madu
!
f discussed the possibility of e
s
tablishing Habifa
for Humanity at Marist
-
by bringing in under the co~n:iu~1ity service wing ofstudent government.
·
.

.
_ ·
.
·
That revenge she said was
heari
_
ngs are ever" brought
,, .
a
imed at Maduri's nomination
.
against anyone, that they would
/;
}
for executive vice president,John
.
be done correctly
,"
sp
·
rague

~•

"".
'
'
,
r
·
The officiai therrie
.
o
f
thi
{
~dmi~istration is "Th~
.:
,y
;di-
.-
~
f
A.cti~n;'.;
\6'
c<>indde
:
iith ~his
~
Executive ;;c
Preside11t fohnWiiliani:
{
is
:
working on putting up a
·-
'
~U
gg~st
.
ion
box
outside the
SGA
office'.
..
.
:
-
·
'
W~liams.
·
·
said.
·
.
.
.
.
'
',
.
.
-.
.
.
.
.
'
.
.~
.
.
.
·.
. .
.
.
,
·
-
~
.
'
'.
. .
'
.
INSTANT CREDIT
~
.
~-
. .
~a
f '
-
···
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CREDIT,
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JOI.',
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-
fARENT-~IGNE~, No
-
SECURITY
DEPOSI'Il
..
no credit
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_
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·
S '·
I
wantCredit Cards
.
immediately._
.
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.
.
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..
--





































































"
·
,'•
TuECIRCLE
·
he "Press"ure
()f
eing a Celebr_ity
:
Editor's Note:
This is the first of many topics to be chronicled in the
bi-weekly Focus Section: This section is devoted to
.
in-depth stories
on current
·
issues; both world and campus related.
Princess Diana's d_eath questions the media's role in celebrities'
lives. Some people say the media is too intrusive in__ the lives of
the famous. Journalists say they are simply trying to get the
information
-
the public wants. We will let you decide.
s
Public demand for celebrity gossip to blame for media crossing the line
by CHRISTOPHER THORNE
Focus Editor
When is too
_
much Just too
much?
·
·
.
..
Some newspapers and maga-
zines go all out to repornhe
good arid bad
.
things that hap~
pen to famous
:
people. Why
·
does the
.
media go to such ex-
--
tremes, and more importantly,
should they?
According
to
Douglas Cole,
professional lectu
-
rer of adver-
tising, the
-media
has the right
to get this information; but is not
mandatory that they do get it.
"Just because they have the
-
-
-
right to do it, doesn't mean that
it is always right to do it," Cole
,
said.
·
Cole said that celebrities
should riot have to sacrifice their
privacy just
·
because- their
fa-
aren't needed," she said,«[and]
mous.
they need to have their private
-
"They
[celebnties] should be
lives just like we do."
. _
·
able to getin and out of their
Sophomore James Lieto said
homes without having to liter-
that. c€!
.
lebrities hav(a gre~ter
ally_fighttheirway,?Colesaid:
·~1
b
·
h
Id
.
·11
.- .
.
.
.
.
..
.
.
. .
.
.
.
.
. .
..
.
h1esty e, i.lt pnvacy s ou stt
.
1~an~a
:
~rn~ld~;U,
.
!r~s~m
.
an
_
__ _',
be
;
part of it; arid the media
cnm
.
maJ
.
·

Justice
mauor,-also
be~
.
·
sho
'· .
1d
.
n

t
:
·
·
t
.
=
.
.
.
.
.
·
·
.
_
.
.
· ·
:
·
·
u
o m
euere.
.
·.
_
heves that the media should not
.:

-
<'They
.
shoulc(I~aye

them
iritr
_
ude on
·
celebrities private
·
· ·
·
-
-
al one.'' he said,. 'They [ ceiebri-
l i ves: _
,
-
)?>
::
· . .
·
ties] lia~eJhighetiif~, bllt ihey
:'It
[the media]
.
could cause
-
should also have a private life."
pro~lems in
.
thefr liveS: that
According to Cole, it is the
public who are to blame in all of
this, and not the media.
'Tthink that we, the public,
are the bad guys rather than the
media;'' Cole said.
.
·
Cole
said
that it is the public's
·
incurable desire to hear and read
about
celebrity gossip that
pushes the media
.
oyer the line.
·
"It's
our insatJa_ble appetite for
titilating images and our willing-
,
_
.
I
ttte
:.
iea

..
·
-
;
\
love
at
.
11.111
··
_
j
'
-atmo~ed
.
.
Cin.:lc Phn10/Mikc Fri~d1
ness to pay to
see
them, that
drives the media to these ex-
cesses." he said
,
"Otherwise,
it
would be a waste of time and
effort."
_
According
.
to
.
Linda Dunlap,
professor of psychology, the
public
sees
celebriiies
as
people
they would like to be.
"People
align with the rich and
beautiful so to live vicariously
through them," Dunlap said.
Dunlap said that this desire to
be them is
simultaneously con-
flicted with jealousy toward
theni as well.
·•we are
also
envious
at
the
same time."
she
said.
'It
[celeb-
rity gossip] brings them down
to earth.''
According to Cole, the amount
of and necessity for medit1
scru-
tiny is dependent upon the ce-
lebrity.
"It
depends on the celebrity
and why they are being
hounded
,"
Cole said.
Cole also said that a celebrity
does not buy into the media
scrutiny just because he or
she
became well known.
"It depends on how they be-
came a celebrity.
"
he
said.
"Chelsea Clinton is a celebrity,
but she didn't buy into it."
Arnold said that she will read
about celebrity gossip only
_
when they arc exclusive
stories,
whereas Lieto said he does not
read any of it at all.
"Once in awhile, but not when
it's overly talked about," Arnold
said.
Cole also
said
1hat 1he media
cannot cross over lines when-
ever it feels necessary.
"No one ever agreed that
any-
thing goes.
"
Journalists re~~valuating theirreportjJ.?.g ethics in wake of Princess Diana tragedy
by MICHAELGOOT
Editor~in-chief
··
()nee againjourrialists are
un:
dedire for theirreporting ethics
and standards.
.
_
.
-
_
~1argot Hardenbergh, assis:-
.
fantpmfessor of media ~rts
.
at
Marist College; said Diana's
·
death has forced them tore~ex_;
amine their values;
"It already has had an impact
-
and that has been allowing the
media to criticize themselves,"
she said.
Hardenbergh. said sh·e does
noi thinkthis tragedy will seri-
·
ously affect the press from
~arrying out its day to day op-
erations.
Hardenbergh said she does
not favor legislation to correct
this problem.
"The public may call for leg-
islation," she said.
"I
think it's
up
:
to professional organizations
to convince the public that
th~t's not the right to go about
doing it."
She also said more should be
done to work within existing
systems.
"It seems as if there is a lot
already there to protect indi-
vidualsand we still need to pro-
tect our First Amendment," she
said.
Carol Pauli, assistant profes-
sor
.
of bro~dca
_
st journalism,
'
said ~he thinks there will be a
backlash against tabloid
.
i:iews-
paperslike
':
Th_e Gl(?be
.
and Jhe
National Bnquirer, who are
known for

relentlessly going
aftercelebrities;
.
Pauli said she saw in the news
-
that a
.
photographer had at~
tempted
io
,
sell photographs of
the injured princess to one of
the tabloids .
.
"The
editor said no," she said.
·
"That
'
s blood money.'
'
Pauli said there probably
.
not
be much
.
of a change
in
the way
journalists gather informatio~.
New legislation may be enacted
or courts may
_
be more sympa-
thetic to plaintiffs who claim that
they_ are being harassed.
Pauli, who teaches a class at
Marist about mass communica-
tions law, said it is hard to re-
strain the media from covering
public officials and figures.
"If
you're on a public street,
you have no reasonable expec-
tation of privacy," she said.
She said, however, there can
be
a point were journalist goes
too
far .
.
"To target a person and fol-
low them around relentlessly,
that begins to qualify as harass-
ment," he said.
Pauli cited an example of Jackie
Kennedy Onasis, who got a
.
court order agai
.
nSt a photogra-
pher that required him fo stand
_
a certain distance
.
a'!VaY,
from
her.
·

··
·
·
- -
.
·.
..
Like Hardenbergh, Pauli said
she
.
would prefer ifthe regulat-
ing came from within the media,
rather than it
be
imposed externally.
"They Uournal ists] can adopt
their own ethics or codes that
give some breathing
·
space to
people
father
than have it legis-
lated,''. she ~aid,
However, Pauli said she is not
sure that such
a
policy could
totally change the state of jour-
nalism in this country.
Randy Hayman, assistant pro-
fessor of journalism, said that
although there will be a lot of
reaction to this tragedy initially,
there will be little done over the
longterm.
"I
think they'
II
be a lot of mia
culpa, chest beating, 'We were
wrong,' and that will maybe last
a few weeks, a few months, but
then it will probably go back to
things as usual."
Hayman said there are numer-
ous other examples to support
his theory. ·
"Look at coverage of the O.J.
Simpson trial, coverage of
Wa
_
co, and coverage of Richard
Jewellt he said. "Did anything
change after that? No."
Hayman said the current con-
servative Supreme Court has
protected the First Amendment
concerns on numerous occa
~
sions. He said they would proq-
ably strike down any attempt to
regulate the press.
Rather than legislation,
.
Hayman said he supports the
creation of a press council. This
idea is something that journal-
ist Mike Wallace has pushed
for. Newspapers on the council
would follow common guide-
lines. Any papers on the coun-
cil that did not follow these
guidelines would be ostracized.
Hayman said the role of the
media in the lives of these
people is parl of a disturbing
trend. He said in journalism
schools today, professors teach
ethics, but they do not reflect
what is actually going on in the
real world
.
·
"They're trying to impart in
students' minds to stick with
their value systems," he said.
"But when they go out in the
real world, they find that the
media owners and editors have
a different set of values."
Hayman, who teaches a course
called Press in America, said
journalistic sensationalism goes
back as far as
1835
with James
Gordon Bennett and his paper
The Herald. He said things
seem to have gotten worse to-
day. Hayman said this is a prob-
lem with large media corporations.
Another point is that celebri-
.
ties themselves are somewhat
creatures of the media.
Hardenbergh said the same was
true of Diana.
"People do realize
·
that Prin-
cess Diana needed the mediat
she said.
"
She was very good
at using the media."
Pa.uli also said that celebrities
cannot have it both ways by
using the media to promote
themselves and then complain-
ing if the media is constantly
hounding them.
Melissa Manzella
,
a sopho-
more fashion major, said the
media should not hound celebrities.
"They should not follow the
celebrities
·
or whomever they
'
re
following so closely," she said.
She also
said
there should be
a law that the press has to be a
certain amount of feet away.
Matthew Halicy, a senior crimi-
nal justice major, said he does
not like the fact that Princess
Diana's death has overshad-
owed Mother Teresa's passing.
"Stop putting
it
on TV and
recognize Mother Teresa," he
said. "[The media] make the roy-
als to be something they're not.
They don't recognize other
things. Mother Teresa is on
page 8 of the business section."

























































































r
I
l
·".
\.
THE
,
CIR~LE
EDITO
R I A L
·
september,
·
l
·
S.:i9~7
·
.'
Editorial
Plunge be~d firstinto .enriching classes
.
.
.
'
.
'
.
..
As previously mentionedin
,
durse-
mester preview issue two weeks
ago
and our
.
first regular)ssue ttiday, the
freshmen class have indeed taken the
campus by storm. They are
:
very
easy to spo~. A few have come
·
up
to be asking questions abquthow to
use e-mail or find
·
a certain location
on campus. It will not take them long
to get into the swing of things. Also,
as a friend of mine pointed out, many
of them have an identifying charac-
teristic: the combination ID card'-
key chain hanging around their neck.
I never really understood this con-
cept. This
:
seems to get phased out
as the freshmen progress through the
system. I never wore one my fresh-
men year. I do a lot of walking
around campus. To have had that
thing flopping around my neck would
have become annoying anq bother-
some. In
.
addition, I arn a very clumsy
person. I am afraid I would have
done something like get it caught in
the door of a mqving car, and . and
strangle myself. Or less morbid, I
would simply lose it.
·
·
Yet as I look at these new students,
I remember how disappointed I was,
academically, with my freshmen ye·ar.
lwas doing okay in my classes, but I
did not feel they were
·
challenging
enough. I was very frustrated by my
freshmen year classes. I thought they
.
were
.
not very cha
_
n
:
enging,
_
were
.
somewhat
·
unfocused; and
·
some felt
pointless. This semester,
.I
ain talk-
.
ing what I considerto
be
some of the
m~st interesting and challenging
classes
of
my

college
.
career. These
include two spedal topics· classes
dealing with the reforrn movements
.
.
.
of-the
"
1960s
_
and
.
.
the controversy
·
,
·
over whether President Harry
Truman should
·
have dropped
·
the
atomic bombs on Japan. In some
.
ways, it was frustrating for me
·
to
have had to wait so long before tak-
ing classes like these
·
, Don't get me wrong, I am not bas-
·1ng
the concept of having a Core cur-
.
riculum. I think
.
a Core curriculum is
essential to ensure that our students
are more well-rounded. I think, h<>w-
ever, that the curriculum .should be
.
more focus~d. More courses should
be created especially for the Core
program, like Origins of Modern
Times. Perhaps there should be more
courses fulfilling Core that are tied
to a student's particular major.
:
. ·
But most importantly, I am saying
.
that the freshmen should be facing
.
challenge
.
right from the get.:.go. I
realize that takes
them
some time to
the college setting, but there is no
· reason why they can't plunge into the
academic waters
·
head first.
Those of you who know me well,
know that I have talked about. this
topic before (even inThe Cirde), so
·
I will stop beating it to death.
In
short,
my advice to freshmen: Get the most
you can out of your first-year cla~ses.
·
Don
'
t blow them off. And most im;.
·
portantly, stretch your mind.
Michael Goot,'~itor~in-chief ·
The student newspaper of Mari
.
st College
.
The Circle is published·every Thursday. Its purpose is to repc>rt
:
·
·
both news on campus and off th~Us relevant to the student bocly.-
.
The coverage will always
be
fair
and impartial.

·
.The
:
.CircleStaff
·
Circle file photo
tetter to the Editor
Students should participate in the tenure process
D~Editor:
,
Two years ago the students of Marist gathered outside of the Rotunda to
protest the tenure denial of Even Rivers, assistant professor of English. It
was obvious from the turnout that day that Prof. Rivers was valued by the
student body as a member of the faculty. There were
-
various stories that
circulated around campus to explain why ProLRivers
-
was denied. But basi-
cally everyone knew thi!t was at issue was that Prof. Rivers had never pub-
.
iished-even though his other achievements (including being named J:<aculty
·
·
of the Ye
·
ar the same year he leftMarist)made him, in many students' opinion,-
.
.
more than qualified to be granted tenure;
·
.
The day of,the protest,
·
President Murray appeared

ancl
,
_
pn;>mised
.
us,
·
the
·
students; to review the situation
.,
However, the whole protest of Prof. Rivers
1
.
.
:
:
,dismissal.from
Marist took
:
place just before finals. We
all
t<>O~ our exams,'•<
·
: .
went liomeforthe summer; and Prof:
:
Rivers
,
wasalso packed
off
by
the
'
colleg<f
s' ;, ;
:
,
:I/
':
. .
\'
administratio~, since no orle
;
wa:s around to voice t~eir coricerris
:
j
.
.
·-::.
:.,,
,:'.
·
.
.

·
.
This 1s all ancient history, as many
.
of the upperclass
_
men are aware.-
·
How~
.
-
.
ever
;
Iani very alanned;' and
'
would like to)et the students of this colleg~ know
•:
:
'
:

·
·
·
··,
.
·
that this
·:
sort of thing is still going on
:
In its t~nure review process
;.
Madst is
,.
·
.
turning
·
away some of- its bes~ and brightest faculty, while the student body
_
rerrfa:
j
ns
'in
'
the dark about wh~tis happening
:
Lastyear, s_evehJac!,llty mem-
b~rs wi!nt up for tenure, one was granted, and later two
.
denials were over-
,-
tlinied
,;
so three professors were grl:lnted tenureJast year! fyiost students are
.
unawar~thatailyofthiswentcm.
:
,
..
·:·
.
.
. '·
·•·
.
.
. .
•:
·
.
· .
· • ·: •.
This
.
year, I know·of a couple
_
ofthe
_
best professors I've eyerhad are
·
up for
.
reviey,,
J
We are all paying a lot ofmoriey for the knowledge our.teachers are
.
-
· suppos~dly instilling on us. What ourAdministration is doing by getting rid
Michael

Goot
s·tephani~
_
Merc
_
urfo
_
,
,
BenAgoes
Editor:.in-
-
chief
M.anangil;g Editpr
_
.
_
NewsBditor
·
'
'.
ofsuch profes~ors as Evart Rtvers
is
·
only
·
damagirig the academic reputation
Marlst has been striving for so long to
~
improve.
·
·
1
feel that the
·
administration
•,
:
.
.
.
11eed} to
'
b~ heid rriore accountable
fo
tile student body ~bout'what is going
·._
-
.
on
with our
'
teachers.
·
.
·
.
..
.
.
· .
.
·
·
.
So,
I encourage all students who have ever had a profes
·
~orthat
~
th¢yJeel
_
.
·
they hav~ reaHy learned from
fo
~old
'
the college's ad11Jinistraticin
~
~nd the
Amanda Br~dley
.
Christopher Thorne
Gyna Slomcinsky
Emily Kucharczyk
Tim Manson
Jim Dziezynski
Steve Wanczyk
Diane Kolod
Chris Hogan
G. Modele Clarke
.
AssistantNews Editor
..
Foc·us Editor
Feature Editor
Assistant Feature Editor .
Opinion Editor
Arts
&
Entertainment Editor
Sports Editor
Photography Editor
Business Manager
Faculty Adviser
-
_
We welcome your responses to anything 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
campµs 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 }1ogan 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.
·•·
Rank and Tenure committe~ accountable. Please, call I)eari
of
Facuity, Artin
Arslanian,_ at ext.
2626 ..
Let him know that you feel thatadrili°nisttation_and ·•
Rank and Tenure should
·
be accountable to the students with what they are
doing with our faculty.
.
CraigMurray
Junior
UOTE
OF
THE WEEK
"The only thing we have to fear
is fear itself."
-Franklin D. Roosevelt
·--
--
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-
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-
·
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-
·
-
~
-
-
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-
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_
...
.....
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.
..
.
.
-
.
.
---
-
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-
·
..
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....
THECIRCLEOPINIQN
September, 18, 1997
7
·
·
.
.
.
Columnist collects. cans
'
·
an.d
_., .
.
·
peace
.
o{rnirid
While
but
fufihlrig
.
.
.
.
·.
,
You kno~
.
ybt{re
·- '
in
the C(?Urse went
t)f~Hl.
My
·
·
.
Poughkeepsie

when

the New
·
stamina and my psyche on the
·
York Jimes has the comics.Yes
··
th b
d
.
· .
.
·
last.Sunday.
,
asl lugged
:
an ex~
-
0
1:~
·
i;;s~herii
.
db~
~
t Ii~e up
cep~ionally v~Iu.rnin9us Sunday
to
\
my perso
_
11al expectations
I
·
Edition back
.
to the Mid-Rise; a
have a ten
·
daricY:to
_
dwelf.on my
·
section graced
bf
the likes of faults. For instatjce~ today, as I
.
CharlieBrownandDilbeitfeilon
·
.
·struggled
through the final
to the pavement.
·
.. ·.
·
·
.
stretch of my race, Jbegan to
.
At
first, I deemed this
;
to.be·a
think to myself,
"Why
am I
really fun and radical change.
here? Why do
Imn?
Why am I
·
Perhaps it was an attempt
.
to .in co11ege?
.
" Then, asJ dug
accomodate Marist's vast popu-
deepernng deeper iri the realms
IatiOn of Long Islander~. who
of_c()mpletecynicism,
I
thought,
.
may be somewhat wistful for the
.
"Do I really deserv_e to be here?
"Truth,
Justice, and the Comics"
·.
Whatarn1
·gairiing
~y' being
·
of their beloved ''New York
here? What am I contributing?
Newsday."

Why don't I just can it In fact,
I
dismissed this notion when
I
why don'tltake up a more Ju-
opened the .section and Jound a
crative enterprise like collecting
full color ad for "Dick's Sport-
cans? -Tm guaranteed a nickel
ing Goods." It was boasting
.
for every single can (ProvJded
the latest in hunting apparel in
it
is properl:fmarked
for
de:,
exquisite tree-bark hues.
posit). What does being in col-
Clearly, the folks a
.
t the local
lege guarantee?
_
Qutrageous
bagel shop jammed the· debt? Fouryears
.
offofmylife?"
Poughkeepsie Journal's comics
Luckily, those feelings of ri-
into my paper.
diculous angst were left on the
I really didn't need a displaced
course. Everyone has their own
comic section to
.
know that I'm ·little fiasco now and then, no
in Poughkeepsie: All
.
I !'~ally
matter what they do
;
.
Everyone
needed to do was inhale.
I
am
feels defeated sometimes, even
glad to be back, though I have
those flashy runway models.
seen far better days than today.
Have you ever looked at the
Granted, everyone has a bad
·
shoes they have to wear? Well,
·
day here and there. I sometimes
maybe I'm thinking of the agony
wonder
if
maybe I'm just hav-
of
"de
feet"
ing a bad life and some days are
There's always a guarantee of
just worse than others.
success if one concentrates on
·
You may be looking at my.little
the positive thoughts and
.
byline at the end of this column
goals-· the mental "cans," as
and thinking to yourself, "Well,
opposed to '4can'ts,"
:
are price-
,
thisis suppo~~,:U()
,
p_e
a
'.
hunior Jess- compared
,
to
.
aluminum.

colurhri.'. - Isn't it supposeq
to
Arid
every so often; a little nice·
be funny?
·
What's so funny
·
free-bee pops up- especially if
about a bad day?" Earlier,
I
was
you buy the Times
at
the Bagel
wondering the same thirig my
s
·
Shop.
·
self. hvas pressed for ideas.
Okay, s
·
o that
-
was the sappi-
The only thing
'
humorous that
-
est, cheesiest,
.
gloppy-gushiest
came to mind was my humerus-

column I have ever written.
·
Per-
·
that and every other aching
haps the cafeteria food is finally
bone in my body. I was running
going to my brain. Scalloped
a cross country race aptly
.
titled
potatoes anyone?
"The Fordham Fiasco."
·
.
·
' ·
·
The first mile of the course
went smoothly and then it
-
was
·
downhill from there. Actually,
Tara Quin
.
n
is
the Humor
Columnist/or The Circle
.
News Flash: It's Okay To Walk On The Grass
·
It's 9:20 on a Monday morn-
ing. You're walking to a class
over in Dyson, struggling
through crowds
'
of people, some
coming out of their 8:00 classes,
others heading to their 9:00
classes. As you hurry on your
way, dodging people along the
narrow concrete walkways, you
begin to notice something pe-
culiar, something that's been
bothering you ever since
you've been going to Marist;
people just don't walk on the
grass!
What is it about Marist stu-
dents that make us feel like our
beautiful lawns are offlimits for
walking? Maybe it's guilt. Ev-
ery other
'
day (it seems)
somebody's out mowing the
grass or fertilizing, or the sprin-
klers are ori. Why should we
step all over it when so much
money is spent on keeping the
"green" in perfect viewing con-
dition?
Is it laziness that keeps the
average student from walking
on the green? That hardly
seems to be the case. Many
times it is shorter to simply walk
across the lawn to get where you
want to be. So, what is it then?
Is
it that people just don't like
to get morning dew on their
shoes?
·
We are lucky as Marist students
to have our campus located in
such an open, natural and pic-
turesque setting (as opposed to
being caged in on all sides by a
stone wall like some other col-
lege we know around here). It
seems
·ironic
that the ilatu.ral
aspects of the campus are not
more openly enjoyed by stu-
dents.
It
is a puzzling issue, re-
ally. Are students being more
respectful of the grass by not
trampling all over it, or have we
become concrete ourselves by
forgetting the great feel of grass
under our shoes?
Everyone is entitled to walk
where they wish. Hey,
I
don't
ALWAYS
walk on the grass.
Sometimes the dew gets to me
too, but
I
always notice the
people who do.
I
think to my-
self,
that person is pretty neat
to break out of the mold of walk-
ing along the common path. So,
this message is for everyone:
IT'S
OKAY TO WALK ON THE
GRASS! Even if you try it once,
you'll be all the more rich for
having had_the experience.
Alisa Nuzum is a
11ew
and
exciting writer for The Circle
SPRING BREAK ,gg - Sell Trips
7
Ean1
Cash
& Go Free!!! Student
Travel
Services is now
hiring campus reps. Lowest rates to Jamaica
7
Mexico
&
Florida.
Call 800-648-4849.
READ
To My Dear Frosh: Can You Change The World?
Just when you think you
couldn't possibly read another
article dealing with the fresh-
men, here's one more. The dif-
ference is that this is not some
worrisome article about how the
freshmen are dealing with being
away from home or if they are
eating enough food or whether
or not they get along with their
new roommates. This is essen-
tially a challenge.
For those of you who have
Jived in a cave for the past year,
the freshman class is the smart-
es
·
statistical class ever at
Marist. So
I
would like to ex-
plain, as one of the dumb se-
niors, that there is more to col-
lege than SAT scores.
College, more than anything,
is about learning. That is the
obvious answer and it is the
truth. But that is not the end all
be all of the college experience.
I am not necessarily saying that
you have to go out and join
some club that you won't enjoy
at all to try to fit in. I am also not
saying that partying is the best
answer either.
But whether you want the club
scene or the bar scene or even
the sit around the dorm scene,
do what is going to ensure that
you have a good time. Do not
hold anything back. Spend
money without thinking about
it. Money controls too much of
what we do anyway, so just for-
get about it and go nuts.
If
you
run out of money, there are al-
ways your parents to fall back
on.
I'm going to give you an ex-
ample of what
I
mean. Currently
my housemates from this sum-
mer and
I
are being sued by our
landlord for just over $4,400.
Needless to say
I
am strapped
for cash. So when a Pink Floyd
cover band called The Machine
came to The Chance last Friday
I really did not have the money
to pay twelve dollars for a ticket
plus the always exhorbant
amount it costs at The Chance
for a drink. But
I
decided to go
anyway. I took a chance and it
paid off. Friday was one of the
best nights I have had at Marist.
As
I
looked around the room,
I
saw so many of my peers hav-
ing just as good a time as
I
was.
Many of these students I do not
even know personally, but it did
not matter. We would nod at
each other, or say "what's up."
(It is my opinion that a writer
should not know too many
people anyway or be too popu-
lar because
it
will
change his/
her outlook on society. A writer
should be anonymous, which is
why
I
do not want my picture to
ever go into this paper. Popu-
larity changes quality, just look
at David Letterman.)
Aside from
my
little rant, what
I am trying to say is "What are
you going to do here?" The
paperwork says you are pretty
smart, but what are you going
to do with it?
I
have stressed
the point of having fun at col-
lege and now
I
want to know
how you are going to create an
identity. We
elders
{seniors) are
a generation lost, clinging to the
60's and the 70's or to useless
pop or alternative music with no
meaning. We were left out by
those known as Generation
X,
even though MTV and Pepsi are
still trying to convince us that
we're a part of it.
I
am not too
upset about being left out of a
generation created by the me-
dia and whose only existence
was in the movie
Reality Bites.
The question is: can YOU be
satisfied with being nameless
and faceless?
So what are you going to do,
frosh? It has been about thirty
years since the last revolution
in this country and
I
think it is
about time for another. So get
your smart little brains working
and do something with your-
selves that might someday mean
something.
Nothing personal against
those of you out there who are
broadcast majors, but broad-
casting is not going to change
the world. Neither are most of
the majors at this school.
I
know
this
sounds
ridiculous but in
four years when you get thrust
into the world with an account-
ing major because you did not
have enough time to change
your major without paying an
extra twenty thousand dollars,
you might not be so happy. Do
something that is going to re-
ward you for the rest of your
life.
Sorry about sounding sappy
but the bottom line in life is hap-
piness. So be smart, frosh, and
be different, unless you are
happy being a cog in some larger
machine you'll have nothing to
do with.
Tim Matlson
is
the Opi11io11
Editor for Tire Circle






































































"·
.
8
THECIRCl,E
Features
Students find advernture
in
sul11II1erbreaks
··
wiih.them, I became
.
ver inter-
GYNASLOMCINSKY
guy my age, and I didn't know
ested," she sail
·
>
\
. •
•·
·
Feature Ediu1r
hini at all in
'
the beginning. It was·
Allthrei said
diei'r
summero
hard being away from every~
·
1997weregreatexperientes .
.

Summer 1997, was
.
a time for
one."
·
.


Soucy said he was able
.
tog
some Marist
.
students to
Soucy said
.
that choosing
a
.
toplaces.notwellknownorv!si~.
broaden their horizons.
,
job like this one wasn't the easi~
.
.
.
•··.
"lwenfto so
·
many places I
Three seniors took advantage. est choice.
.
probably would
·
not ever hav
of their summer.
.
"I realized
_
it was
.
a great op-
the chance of going again," h
September, 18,
J
997
Shannon Hirsch, senior Fash-
portunity," he said. "I
.knew
it
said. "I have never been t
ion design major, took a two-
would look great on my resume.
Myrtle Beach. I loved itthere. I
week journey to beautiful En-
I also knew I would see some
also went to Daniel Boone's Na-
1-_...;;;;;;.__;;;:
gland. Ryan Soucy, senior radio,
great parts of the country. I got
tional Forest. It was absolutely
TV, film major, took
·
a job of a
to see places like California, Ten-
gorgeaous,"
lifetime, and Erin McHale, a se-
nessee, Michigan, and parts of
he said.
nior criminal justice had an in-
Toronto."
All
three
describable experience.
Hirsch said that England· said they
Hirsch said England had a lot • could not be compared to New
did not re~
of meaning for her.
York City.
gret what
"I went to England for two
"England
is so much cleaner,"
they did for
weeks at the end of May to early
she said. "The people are nicer
the sum-
June," she said. "There is just
and the tube (subway) is so
mer.
something about the history
much more convenient than the
Hirsch
there that made me want to go,"
subway in New York City."
said that if
she said.
McHale did not do much sight
given the
Hirsch saw several sights
seeing as Hirsch and So_ucy did.
ch an c e,
while over seas. One of her
fa-
McHale spent the summer
one
.
must
vorite was Windsor Castle.
boosting her confidence as well
go
·
io
En-
.
TOP: F~rn
left
.
to
right Jolene Lyons,
Donna
·
Nastasi;
·.
Erika
,
.
.
·
Lecider,
·
Kendra Allano, and
.
i..au~nMurphyJoln
friend Erin Mct-(ale,
(In fatigues) at the
.
Officers' candidate
School
Manne.Corp.
·
grduatlon
In
Quantico,
VA;
·
·
BOTTOM:
.
Ryan
'
.
Soucy
.
stands In
.
·
front of the
.
sign at
'The Windsor Castle was so
as learning combat tactics.
glanq.
beautiful," she said.
"It's
a town
"I went to the Officer's Candi-
"England
'---------------==
that surrounds the castle."
date School Marine Corps in
is really fashionable and so
·
the
.
Profet$alonal
Football
'
Hall of
Fame In
·
Cant
.
on,
Photo courtesy of Ryan
Soucey
.
01:tlO.
Hirsch visited a few people
Quantico, Virginia," she said.
"If
pretty," she said.
from her childhood while there.
l
choose to, after graduation, I
Soucy said traveling across
"When I was growing up, I had
can become a second lieuten-
the Unites States is an experi-
a nanny from England, so I was
ant in the Marines."
.
ence he will not forget.
able to visit her," she said.
"I
While Hirsch and Soucy were
"You learn a lot about your-
.
also got to visit one of my so-
taking in the sights, McHale
self, traveling alone," he said.
rarity sisters there."
·
was doing serious physical
"I was able to see so much of
Soucy traveled around the
training.
the country. So many parts that
country checking up on the
"We
had physical training for
I probably would not even think
lighted world.
about 10 hours every day," she
of visiting."
"I worked for Musco Light-
said. "In. between that, I took
McHale said one could only
ing," he said. "I went around the
classes about how to be a leader,
gain from her experience .
..
country doing quality checks
first aid, the history of the Ma-
"When I startedtraini1w, there
from little league fields all the
rines, and a class about combat
.
wer~54 girl.~;bilttherew~reonly
.
way to racing tracks.''
tactics."
.
26 girls in ri:iygraduatirigclass,"
Soucy spent most of the sum-
McHale's decision came
spon~
she said, '~You just can't explain
mertravelingfromstatetostate.
taneously last March.
.
it, itwas
_
the
-
best experience!
"It
was hard at first," he said.
"The
Marine's were
on
cam-
ever had. I got the pride to say I
"I
was traveling with another
pus last year, and after talking
completed it."
Mentors help students navigate through
problems during their college careers
JAIMEANDERSEN
Staff Writer
Mentors at Marist play a role
not only in the personal lives of
students,
but also in the aca-
demic community.
A mentor's goal is to prnvide
a connection between
students
and the college. Mentors sat-
.
isfy this goal by organizing
workshops, meeting with fresh-
men on an individual basis, and
offering themselves as a refer-
ral service for students in need
of help~
·
:
Marybeth Dohernwend, men-
tor for Sheahan Hall, said watch-
ing students grow is an inspir-
ing process.
"It is inspiring to watch people
empower themselves through
education," she said. "Leam-
ing about freedom and respon-
sibility can be intense
.
I like
knowing that I can help stu-
dents with that."
Several of the workshops pro-
vided by the mentors are cen-
tered on the goal of academic
success. Dohernwend pro-
vides programs dealing with
time management skills and test
taking.
Carolyn Fielder, Leo Hall men-
tor, holds workshops specifi-
cally for assessing learning
skills. She talks to students
about learning and studying
habits. During midterms
;
she
provides hot.meals to the
_
stu-
dents in her building
.
Although this is not a job re,-
..
quirement, Fielder said she
thinks it is important to give stu-
dents a break.
"I like to do this because it
gives them a chance to just re-
lax for a while after studying for
so long," she said.
Fielder also coordinates stu-
dent faculty luncheons, and is
the Greek Council advisor.
Sue Lozinski is the commuter
mentor. Her office is located in
the Mid-Rise Commuter
Lounge~ Lozinski shares many
of the same goals as other men-
tors, but she said, in some ways
she may have more of a chal-
lenge. Because she works pri-
marily with commuter students,
Lozinski said it is her job to "pro-
vide a link between life on cam-
pus, and life off campus." It is
difficult, she said, because many
of the club meetings and activi-
ties are held during evening
hours.
Lozinski is a\so involved in the
theater group.
Mentors usually have a ~ack-
ground in either education or
psychology. They are not con-
sidered counselors, rather they
are more of as a resource for
students. If an individual is
looking for some kind of coun-
seling the 1T1entor can refer him
.
to someone, Mentors are avail-
.
able during office hours ifstu~
dents would like to discuss
problems ihey are having adjust-
ing to the college.
Lozinski said the best part of
her job is being able to help stu-
dents.
"I love this job, I l
_
ove helping
people navigate their 'way
through a system that can
sometimes be frustrating," she
said.
Fielder said the most reward-
ing
.
part for her is helping stu-
dents have a fo_cus.
"I like knowing th
_
at students
walk away from here knowing
how to ask th_e right questions.
If
you don't ask the right ques-
tions you won't get the right
answer," she said. "I think
maybe I've given them some
direction, and
.
then they come
back and say 'This worked'. It
makes it all worth it."
Mentors also meet with stu-
dents on academic probation in
order to help them get their
grades up ..
Sophomore Keri Stevenson
said having a mentor made
freshman year more bearable.
.
"I really loved having a men-
tor as a freshman," she said. "I
always knew that there was
someone I could talk to."
Gyna ·s Recipe or the Weck
op
10 FreshmenStirvivalTips:
·
'
'
EMILYKUCHARCLYK
Asst. Feature Editdr
10. Don't get discouraged by an empty mailbox; get
sedtoh.
·
'
'
.
. Always wear sandals in the shower to keep myste-
. ous fungi off yot1r feet.
~
··
·
·
.
..
'"
.
.
.•.·
.
,'
.
.
:
_,;
..
,
·.
:
.

,.
.,
./
??~
f
·
:
-~

.
·
.
·
~
.
, Practice swiping your ID card
,
bef~te
g~fog
()Ut.
. Have an emergency plan for hidmg allyour ''illegal"
tuff
for when there is
a
fire alann.
·,

"The Palace Diner is a good place
t0
sober up;"
adine Simon,junior.
Itis possible to wake up 10 minutes before class
d get there on time.
. If
your clothes have been on the floor for more then
hre~ weeks, it's a good idea to wash them.
. "You can tell how bad the cafeteria food is by how
any knives are in the peanut butter and jelly contain-
rs," Jeanette Wherry,junior.
. Drink lots of Poughkeepsie water Gust kidding).
I.
When smelling Marist Funk, imagine a field of sweet
melling flowers on a pleasant summer day- okay so it
robably won't work, but hey, it creates a nice image.





































,..
,
,
,
.
...
~-
...
.
~
-
..
...
..
....
.
:
..
...
.
..
..
.
,
'
.
...
,,
,'
THE
CIRCLE;
September, 18, 1997.
.
9
Freshmen Faces
pditor's Note:
1
The Circle
decided ta.profile ~even randomly selected freshmen to help
put"faces" on
the
new pool of freshmen. We will check back with these
students later on in the semester to see how they are fulfilling their goals and
getting what they want to get out of college.
Jade Williams
.
Jason Hiller
From
.
Chestertown, New York
·
Jason said the reason why he
came to Marist is that he liked the
information he sent him and the
mail and was impressed with tlie
campus and the friencjliness of the
people on his tour.
·
~
·
Jason is majoring would like to
be a sports reporter ~ome day. He
became interested in this field be-
cause of a job he worked at a couple
of summers ago.
.
.
.
.
What
is
tl!e
best
part of college:
.
"The best is the overall feeling of
. being
O!I
my own, but at the same
timelrriiss my family and my girl-
friend."
·
Jason
'
is really into computers, so
he can often be found at the com~
puter lab. He also signed up to a
Marist Ambassador. These are
students who go to
.
their former
high schools and pr!)mote Ma!Jst.
"I get to
·
.
spread the word of
Marist by visiting my old schools
and hopefull in a
_
fewyears, I can
give tours of the campus and host
students that have already been ac-
cepted in my ro<;>m."
Michael Jorda
New Jersey
.The principal reasons why he came to
-
Marist is the school, the environment, and
the people, especially the teachers. He re~
ally liked the people he met at orientation.
.
Has
college lived up to your expectations?:
"The work is tough, but it's not
.
that bad.
It's fun.- The people are great.n
In his free time, Michael likes playing
sports. He said he may play intramural soft-
ball and join the outback club.
Interviews by Michael Goot/Photos by Susan Goulet
Kimberly Feinman
From Long Island; NY
.
Kimberly is majoring in radio/TV
I
film and would
-
like to be a
cimenatographer on!! day. She be-
came interested thiswhile making
videos of her friends.
·
The reasons why she came to
Marist is the communications pro-
gram and the appearance of the cam-
. pus. Sh~ also liked the fact _th
'
at it
was a small school.
In her free time, Kimberly likes the
outdoors. She runs, swims, hikes,
and snowboards. When not out-
doors, she spends time indoors ed-
iting videos she makes. Not sur-
prisingly, at the Activities Fair, she
signed up for the Outback Club,
Marist's radio station WMCR, and
Marist College Television,
Adrian
Dussault
Southbury, Connecticut
Lori O'Connell
From Albany, NY
She came to Marist because she
had a cousin who went here and
liked it. Also, she really liked the
campus. Lori has not declared a
major yet. She is leaning toward
advenising.
Lori said she thought she would
meet new people at college and that
has happened. However, she dis-
1 ikes the amount of security at
Marist.
"It's way too strict definitely," she
said.
·
In her free time, Lori, likes tennis
and doing aerobics. So far at
Marist, she has joined the aerobics
sessions offered at Marist and the
Italian-American society.
She came to Marist because she feel in love
with the campus arid the social work program.
She knew she wanted to be a social work major
since high school.
"I just wanted to do something in which I was
helping people. I ran the soup kitchen in my
high
.
school."
·
Adrian hasjoined Circle K, People Educating
Other People in a Leaming Environment, AIDS-
HIV peer educations and her resident student
council.
Lhe reason why she joined RSC. "I thought it
would be a good wy to meet different people
in
my residence hall and help the residence hall.
PARTY, MEET PEOPLE AND GET PAID
Promote KODAK Spring Break trips
Manhauan, New York City, NY
Majoring in psychology
She decided to come to Marist be-
cause of the advanced technology
it offered.
Jade said
.
she always knew she
wanted to be a psychologist."
So far
,
she has been disappointed
by the quality of food at Marist and
her residence hall-Sheahan
Jade said he is not sure what ac-
tiyities she will be involved in but is
interested in the peer support line
and the Black Student Union.
Jade also said she does not like
the priority point system. "People
join things just to get the points .
It's not like you join this because
you want to do that."
She also said having to worry
about priority points is stressful
because you have to worry about
your grades, having a social life and
on top of that you have to worry
about activities and the number of
points you have. She does not think
housing should be determined this
way
.
In her spare time, she sleeps. 'Tm
constantly tired." She also likes talk-
ing on the phone and going back
and forth from room to room chat-
ting with housemates.
Julie Rubinstein
From Woodbury, Conn.
She decided to come to Mari st because she
liked the campus, and the communications
program. Also
,
the people who gave her the
tour seemed really nice.
"I did the radio program for my old high
school for three years. That sort of got me
interested in radio.
She said some of the regulations seem
strict. "I was just surprised you can't have a
party on campus."
Julie really enjoys playing sports, soccer
and softball. She said she will get involved
with intramural softball, MCTV and the ra-
dio station, also possibly the Communica-
tion Arts Society.
WE'ii pay you more than anyone else ... GUARANTEED!
NO RISK ... we handle all the bookkeeping.
.
©
CALL WORLD CLASS VACATIONS
1-800-222-4432
Our 21st year


















































































































. , \
I
THE CIRCLEi
.
~eptember,
18, 1997
10
SGANEWS
-
··

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Dear Marist. Coilimu·nity,
The Marist¢oll~gi Ctitmcil on
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a~t year, I
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m every
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ptfrpose of the Core andits gClais
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This is a
:
great opport~11jtyJc,fa stu.derit
_
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Welcome back
~6
i
M;ri~t for
_
hard to bring qtialit/ shows to
.
:
the 1997-98 adderiiic
':
year,
our student body
;
,
The MCCTA
:
.
which is one that
fofour
fresh-
has conslst~11tly
.:
produced
;
man, marks the begi°rinlng
'.
oftheir
shows that are
i
excellent in
collegiate expei_-ierice,
-.
Con-
qulaity. Thes·e
.
shows are both
versely, for our seniors,
:
this year
dramatic and comedic
.
in nature.
,
marks the last yeafof bur time
Their next show is '\Moon Over
here at Marist, ancLnow
_
we are . Buffalo"
which
takes place in
faced with having
\ci
finalize
October. Plea
_
se
·
supp<>rt the.
'
plahs for the future
;
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-
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.
..
MCCTA, they do an excellent
.
.
;
This year is ari exciting one for
job of performinf show~ that
·
,
:
the growth of Marist as an in-
entertain and inform the student
· ·
stitution because the
:
ile,v Ii-
body.
.
brary will begin
.
construction
Our sports teams also work
this spring, and the
.
Mccann
hard, and they
"
represent our
·
Center renovation
,
sho
.
uld be
school with pride:
·
I ask the stu'-
.
.
completed as welL
.
The admin-
dent body to piea:se support our
istration is also di!icussing the
sports teams in
.
their pursuit of
possibility of n
·
e\v
.
hoµsing
success. Gotothegames,show
space on campus
·
10
be
com-
some school spirit,
·
and support
pleted as early as ne~t
.
ye~r:
.
our sports tt:11in~ as well.
.
We, as your S
_
tuderit Govern-
.
My message to all
of
·.
_.·
mentrepresentc:1tiv
.
es have been
you as you begin this new year,
.
working tireless
_
ly

o~ issues
is to get invol
_
ved her at Marist.
which effect you· since our ar-
I
ask you to got to the lectilres,
.
rival on campus in l~teAugust
shows, and other
_
programs on
We have formed committees
campus. Get involved, try new
which focus oi/imp~pving the
things, you will like what you
.
cafeteria food, evahi11ting cam-
find,
I
guarantie it
pus safety and security, re-writ-
To the freshman, my advice is
ing the Studenf Government's
simple, get involved now in cam-
Constitution, improying the·
.
pus clubs and activities, don't
...
·
Student Center, and rivamping
let college pass you by. You wjll
the Core Liberal
'
Studies Pro-
grow exponentially as a person,
.
·_
grain. If you are interested
.
in
if you are open:-minded to new
·
anyof these
.
committees
.
please
experiences.
come in and see u
·
s
/ .
.
·
.
..
·
Best ofluck,
.
commitee and voice student op
:
inions about thCCore.
,
out
:
\'~!<=¢
is being hea~d
~y
~tH~f~lty
· ·
.
be'c:ause we now have
a
stucienfon this particular committe~.
/
·::
.
.
.
·..
.
'
:
,
i
_
:\/\ :
.
.
..
·
·
:
:}
fwould like to invite you
J
~Join the Student'CorefLil>¢rar/\rts Committee)vi
_
thjn
_(
to
.
discuss the Core and how it pt!rtains to the mission A(N~is,t ~allege
-
and a
.
Li~~r~l
)
~:fts
•.
·
-
·
Education. Since this would be a com mi tee composed of mamly students
-
~
.
I am·le>qkmg_ for
pe
:
ople who are committed and opinionated about the topic of ih
,
e Core Cirri
_
cult.ini;::o/e
,
~~11
)09kat among other things, theJeasability of a multi-culturah:ourse intergrated iritothe and
.
_i
de
_
al with other issues/ideas that arise within the school year .
.
If-yqtJ have any:questions,
comments or concerns, you can contact me during iny office hours in SGA or at home at
·
extension 4052.
.
.
. .
·
Sincerly,
·
Ryan Hunter
..
.
Resident Senator
'
·
.
·
·
·
.
.
.
~
-
..
-
·

·
Attention Class of 1999
! !
.
.
Written below are the riames
.
of your junior class officers.
..
Pr~sident: Stacey Spina x4865
.
.
Vice-President: Erinn Hergenhan x40
I
8
·
Secretary: Beth Welsh
,
x4018
.
·.
Treasurer: Melissa Backes x4922

·
Get
·
to know tis! Get i~volved
!
:-"
·_··
.
_ _
As all of you
are
weiawa~e; our colleg~ days are flying by! Now is the perfect time
io
get involved and put.some spirit into the dassof 1999
! Your participation now will benefit
. '
_
us,
a_ll
in our senior year wheri it comes
to
senior week a11d gr~duation expenses. Do your part
. ·
·
and we can have a wonderftd experience_during our final two years
:
at
Marist!
{:fpcoming Eve~tsinclude:
.
J~hiorClass Meeting: Monday Septe
'
tnber 29th
.
.
.
.
m11Ioween Great Adventure Trip: Saturday October 25th
.
.
.
Junior Class Lip Synch:

To beannqunced ..
'.sponsored
by Jostens.
Junior Semj:-Formal: coining in February
.
·
.
·
..
.
,.
-
2'~
:'.
.
.
-
- .·

·
.
.
,

.
•.•..
.
,
,

.
••
.
·
.
.
,

_.:-
..
...
'

.
·
.,
:oetinvolved ... Earn pointS;'.,Show
:
)'buca:re:·
·
. :
The Student Life Council has
been busy tryirtg
\
t'o
,:
get the
elected Resident StodentCoun.,.
cil. representativ~s
_
toget~~~
in
:
.
order to discuss
wlfrs
ofJilak-
ing the campuslifebetter
_
forall
of our students,
They
also
are
.
planning their two l~rge events,
Class Wars in the
fall;
and Marist
·Frank
J.
Maduri
Student Body
.
President
'
.

, .
, •
'
.
.
.
.
'
' '
,
'
.
·
·
·
.
·_ .. ,
,0.:-,-
.
::~,
~
j:f
{)~:;_;
~~m.e~o~~.-<:?.!11"1~t~;e)6~
:
i~i~
-
~~}r~
.
~yailaRI6f?t}~9~f
-
?.rNf I~p-~i9fii;i;J
~
i
,.
,_
.
.-\,
.
-
·
?
:
·
,
i
'.::'
~plv~d
,;
§_or1,1n1ttees·sucfifa.ffup4Ja1sp1g,
:
sem1_::foim~l;
'
l1P.::syn,
_
c
.
ll
t
an~
.
'
Pll
.
~}1~ relat19.ns.•t1eed
;
'.".ff
''
·.,
:fy_out
help! Jt'san easy way
to
t~keparfiri major events that'greatly concern
the
dass·on_999!
·
by Moonlight in th~ spring. I
urge you to get invoiyed in RSC,
·
·
you can make a difference!
.
The Student Programming
Council has been

busy
_
execut-
ing such events
·
as
_.
Jhe
-
Casino
.
Night and Block
"
Paity
.
for the
·
freshman, and has
a
busy week
upcoming with the I_ndfgo Girls
and Maya Angel<>u
·
both com-
.
ing to Marist in the same week.
I ask all of you to support SPC,
and get involved wit
_
h them,
they can always use
>
an extra
pair of hands.
·
·
Name:
·
Heather Suydam
-.·
_
'
Year:
·
sophomore
,
._ :
.
\
Jfiou
are i~
.
t~rested pl~ase
,
co#t~~forie of_thecfass officer~
·
listed abpve
/
·
·
.
.
·
,
:
:
}
;
t
J~:1<
-
vo~
::
,
'
""
..
.
_
,
·.
' ,
,
;
·
:.--..
:
.
-
. .
·-.
..
-
· .·
.
•·
,_
·
:
Your Class Officers
The Class of 2000 officers would like to we1Jome
-
b~ck
'
thecl~ss and let e~e~ori
'
e know what is
ahead for the semester.
.
-
On
.
Sunday, September 21,therewill be a WelcomeBack Barbecue._ai .
Burgers; Hot Dogs, Chips.and Lemonadewill be served.
,
,
.
:_.-
...
_
.
..
There will also be drawings
,
. We hope to see everyone in the Class qf2000 i~ere!
Any questions or comments, please call:
Jei)nifer Ferris at X5765
·
·
Becky Valk at X5892
.
or
leave
a
message at X2000
by Corey AmEnde
Heather Suydam 's favoriteas!)ect of Marist is the opportunity for a well rounded education.
And she's making the most of her opportunity.
_
·
"I like that there's more to offer than just academics," said Suydam.
Major:
.
Criminal Justice
;
~nd Pa~a
Besides working towards a criminal justice major Suydam is also the president of the student
programming council, vice president of student programming for SGA, works in Dean Cox's office, and
is also involved iii'.the South End Society which organizes coffeehouses in the Leo Stone Lounge
_
Legal
··
··
Hometown:
Wolcott, Corin.
Favorite Band:
Beatles
:
-
·
Favorite Movie:
"Mary Poppins"
Favorite Food:
McDonald's french
fries
Role Model:
Christa McAuliff
every other Thursday'.
_
.
After graduating Suydam would like to b.e a district attorney and then a judge. While at
Mari st Suydam is going to take some para legal courses to see if she wants to pursue a career in law .
"I want to find out if I really want to be
.
a lawyer," said Suydam.
As President of SPC Suydam would like to bring more events to campus
,
like a major band
every semester.
·
.
This se
_
mester's major band was the Indigo Girls, who played the Mccann Center on Monday
night. All proceeds from that concert are going to charities.
SPC is also responsible for tonight's sold out performance, "An Evening with Maya Angelou."
Angelou's new book, "Even the Stars Look Lonesome", is number one on the New York
Times best seller list.
·
In the l 960's Angelou lived in a commune with her son, and was involved with Civil Rights.
"We wanted to educate the Marist community and the surrounding community about diver-
sity," said Suydam.














































THE CIRCLE,
September, 18,
1997
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,
-
11
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f --'~~
i
~
.
.:..,,
.
.
•.:.
.THE CIRCLE
· September !'8, 1997
Taking
a Clo~r Look at
Spreading the Rage: Hard
cor~:
groiip'.;ro¢ks
i
8,000 r~ging fans'ip Me~dO\~da,n'~s{~ew Jersey
·

.
'
: , • -
,

. .
'

.
~c'.,
.
.
.

.
. . •
byCARLITO
Staff Writer
Jim. And Friends Hit the Road:. On Location at Camel'sHumpjh;Waterbury~ Vermont
by
JIMDZIEZ\'NSKI
A&E Editor
''So you'll really do it?"
"Yeah, for five bucks .. "
"Ok brother, you're on!".
·
With that, Mark slid his hand
under the seat, pulled out a pair
of grimy safety goggles and af-
fixed them to his head. He tight-
ened the strap a liule and looked
at me like a loyal solider await-
ing orders. I nodded my ap-
proval, stepped on the gas of
the van and pushed the speed-
ometer to 70 mph. Mark rolled
down the window, held his
breath and stuck his head out.
Interstate 91 through Vermont.
is one of the most scenic rides
available in the Northeast.
In
early spring it also has enough
giant bugs to paint your car a
completely different color. The
soft sporadic clicking of l;mgs
deflecting off the windshield
sounds like hail. I felt anyone
who could survive the on-
slaught of black fly pellets de-
served my five dollars. Mark
took me up on my offer and ifhe
lasted two minutes the money
was his.
.
Welcome to Jim and Friends .
Hit the Road, a new weekly col-
umn in •the· Circle which . can .
. serve as both a travel guide and
cat box liner! This summer I had
the good fortune to embark on
a series of road trips and travels
to places I've never seen before.
This column comes mostly from
my personal journals. In the next
few weeks, you too can feel the
experience of going on the long
road to nowhere with an eccen-
tric cast of characters ranging
from myself and traveling com~
panions to a hitchhiker we
picked up who made his Hveli-
hood making inflatable weiner
dogs.
A lot happens in the time be-
tween leaving your house and'
reaching the peak of a mountain.
Some of the most interesting
people I've met have been so-
journers pausing a rest stop,
AT hikers looking for a ride to
the next lodge, farmers on the
sides of dirt roads in Northern
Maine. To try to ·condense it all
into a single weekly column is
difficult because so many little
things happen along the way.
Nonetheless,
to
the-best of my
memory here isthe slimmer of
1997 thi:ough the eyes of
a
21 ·
year old boy.
After-two minutes
.
of hearing
my good friend win~e" and
shriek,
I
told him time was tip.
Mark slid his head back in and
rolled up the window. Have you
ever seen that part of Silence of
the Lambs where the bad rips
off some other guy's face? This
is kind of what he looked lik~.
only worse.
A mosaic of green,
yellow, black, red, and white
slime covered his face so that
very little skin was visible. In
between his teeth, two yellow
jacket torsos firmly wedged
themselves. Mark took a~towel
and wiped most of the goop on
his face, which only smeared
it.
He slid off the goggles and held
out his hand. He looked like
a
reverse raccoon, but a very
proud reverse raccoon. Not oniy
did he have my five dollars but
he had my respect as well.
We were on our way to Camel's
Hump in Waterbury,Vermont, a
modest peak of about 4,300 ft.
The drive from Connecticut was
about six hours and we had no
i
\
. functioning radio:F~urkrid half
hours. i_nto the trip we. began
to
get a little 'silly .. Anything to
p~ss the.time! Outside of Mark's
endurance test, the. ride was
father peaceful. The day was
May 30th, a few weeks after
school had gotten out. I figured
Camel's Hump was a nice day
hike so off we went.
' The hike itself was a pleasantly
strenuous 8 mile loop. For the
most part, I'd rather not try to
explain the actual ·feeling of the
event itself; that is something
beyond words that must be ex-
perienced for oneself. I will say
the steep ascent led to a icy,
snow filled path up to summit.
It was neat marching through
four feet of snow with shorts on
in the end of May. It was not
neat having our shins sliced up
by the crusty ice edges that bit
into our legs every time one of ·
us fell through the top layer of
snow. The views were incred-
ible and the isolation was beau-
tiful.
As we were within a hundred
vertical feet of the summit, the
entire mountain was engulfed in
ih:!!k_
cloud cover. The tree line
ended and the rare alpine area
began. As anyone who has
been to any of th~ higher New
England peaks knows, the
up-
per reachesare often covered .
with rare alpine vegetati9n
wllich must be avoid~d by any
hikers. The exposed summit of.
Camel's Hump was void of
snow. High winds pushed us
around but we :bouldered
bravely to the pil}nac)e.
This mountain has a unique
.
story to it, one I couldn't push
out of my mind as I stood on
one of the highest points in Ver-
mont.
In
World War two, an
American bomber flying over
Vermont's skies got lost in thick
cloud cover and smashed into
the side of Camel's Hump, a
mere fifty feet below where I
was. For a minute I shut my eyes
and felt the ghosts of the men
whose lives ended on a rock I
had climbed for pleasure. The
difference was I was on foot and
they were in metal. Of the crew
of twelve men one survived. I
took a rock from the crash site
(long since cleaned up) and
PleaseseeTRIP,page 14





























































~---~----------~~,,,~----._.....--~
.......
- - - , ~ - - - - - - - -
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-
.
.
THE CIRCLE,
September, 18,
_
1997
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.
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_ _ _ _ , -
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f
14
· THE CIRCLE, September 18, 1997
Steve on Sports
··
----......... - -
· Wh*t~s·

·_17ap?
See
th/R~d Foxes
irrdction ... ·
-Hey, hey, we're
a MA.t\C school~··-
.............
:
..........
.-
.... .
....
.
.i·.:,
.
' . . .
1·,•.'.,., • .
,
·
.,
·

· · FootbaU at Iona
(9,120);
iVolleyballvs.'Canisius
"_(9/20)~Niagara (9/2l),
anc:l
St:
Pete(s0(9i23); .
•l\1en'sBoccer
atSt
Peter's (9/21)andys. Siena ·
.• (9/24 );
Wome11's
Soccer
at
SienR(9/24 );
First things first. Yes,
The
Circle does have a new sports
editor this year. But my name is
not Steve Manczyk. It's actu-
ally Steve Wanczyk~with a W,
as
in
"WaJJa Walla, Washing-
ton." Apparently there was
some confusion in the preview
issue put om two weeks ago.
But that's no~really important
to anyone outside my .immedi-
ate family. My job this semes-
ter is to address issues that ~f-
fect more thanjustrriy personal
mailing label. So, here we go._. .
This time around, it's pretty
. easy. For the first time in the
history of the college, every
single Division I athlete at
Marist College will be compet-
ing in the Metro Atlantic _Ath-
letic Conference. If that's not
· important, I don't know what is.
On July ·1, Marist officially
became the tenth full member of
the MAAC, :ioining Canisius,
Fairfield, Iona,Loyola, Manhat-
tan, Niagara, Rider,
St: Peter's,
and Siena. The Red Foxes will
· fight for the MAAC crown in 22
of the league's 23 sports.
Golf is the lone exception.
Why the move1
•:we• d been trying for years
to move to the
MAAC,"
said
Director of Athletics Tim ·
Murray. "As Marist changed
as an institution, we wanted the
athletic program to mirror the.
· academic progress that had
been made."
.
In the years leading up to the
. big move, Marist's overall repu-
tation had begun to "outgrow"
the Northeast Conference.
It
was considered both appropri-
ate and desirable to join a more
academically and athletically
prestigious group (?f schools.
After a long courting period,
the MAAC formally invited
Marist to join its ranks_ in June
of I 995. The required two year
waiting period is now up, and
Tom's Trivia·
Corner
What NFL player holds the record for most
consecutive games played?_
. (Hint:lt's notJerry Rice ... )
_·;,
_
_;
Tom Drag is a regular contributor to The Circle
· Trip toCamel's_Hump
proves worthy experience
... continued from page 11
_
through it in my pack. I later
,
placed. the. stone in front .. of
a
smallV.F.W. memorial nearthe
mountain. I don't cons(der
rhy"
self
a
die· hard patriot by any
measure, but I felt a peaceful
synbolism in the act;
we-
must
remember mountains move men
in- the strangest ways. ,
That night we stayed in a small ..
cabin in Wolcott, Vermo_nt.J
thought it would be a gopd idea
to take the bed near.
~e
win-
dow while Mark took the hunk.
near the door.
last spring, the Red Foxes said
good-bye to the NEC.
The move is certainly a step
up for the Red Foxes. For start-
. ers, it will increase Marist's vis-
ibility and credibility in the New
York metropolitan area, since
several of the MAAC's schools
are based in or near the city.
The men's basketball team, for
example, willhave at least three
games televised to a New York
City audience.
·
."The increased exposure from
the basketball teams
will
help
get the college's name out
there," said Murray. "It's simi-,
Jar to MIPO (Marist Institute of
PoHing) in that way."
Sp~aking of ~/lsketball; who
remembers Fran Frachilla's
Manhattan -Jaspers? A few
years ago, the Jaspers cruised
through an impressive _regular
season but were upset i,n · the
MAAC post-season conference
tournament.
Most small conferences, in~
· eluding the NEC, only send one
team to _the NCAA Basketball
Tournament-'-,- the winner of the
conference tourney. That team
is·usually a 15 or 16 seed, and
gets spanked by North Carolina-

as the first step QntheTarheels'.
road to ;their, 817th Final Four
Women's Tennisvs.
Rider (9/20), Hofstra '(9/21),
· and
St.
Peter's
(9/24)
·-
.
sparkling record would hav_e
ing March Madness;
been all for naught, because
Marist's administrators aren't
they played one bad game in the·
the
·
<>nly people
exci~ed
about
conference tourney, and lost to
the change. Red Fox coaches
St. Peter's.
and athletes welcome the move
But the NCAA Selection Com-
to the MAAC, a conference that
mittee looked at the Jasper's
benefits from betterfuAding and
impressi".eseason and awarded
mo
.
re energetic leadership than
the team an at-large bid- one
the NEC.
of those spots in the Big Dance
It_
make~ life easier for fans,
usually reserved for the seventh
also. Gone are the days of some
place team in the Big Ten.
-
In
teams (football, swimming,'div-
1995, theMAAC stole one of
ing,crew)beingindifferentcon~
those berths ancf actually had
ferences, competing for differ-
two
teams iri the Field of 64.
ent championships
·
. (N:EC,
Manhattan made the most of
MAAC, ECAC) against differ-:-
. the opportunity, They upset· ent schools.
fourth-seeded
O}dahoma in
the
Now
ifs
very shnple, .. We are
. first round, and ~early beat
Ari- · .
a school. of the MAAC, by the
zona State for a spot in the Sweet
M1A9; and for-the -MAAC.
·. Sixt~n.
·
·
Beginning 'this fall, Mari st
0
An at-large bid would never
College's Red Foxes will stand
have even been talked about in
united and begin the quest for
the NEC,'' admitted Murray.
the Commissioner's Cu'p; given
But it's~ reality in the MAAC.
to the bes_t overall athletic pro-
Which means Mari.st has sud-
gram in the MetroAtlantic Ath-
de11ly become a Jot more re-
letic Conference.
spectabie to
~h~
Di~kVitales
[?on't
woiry~
I'll)<eep
,
tabs
a;n9 __ Billy)>ac,Cers o{th~ world.
on that for- you as we .head
appearai\ce. _
,
.·.·.. . : .
; .. Yo,u IIl,igljt iy~n se~ 11lled Fo~
through the
fall
season.
.__· Had}ylanhaitan been, in._ the., highligh~ .ort\Voon ·ESPNdur,.
_ . _Let thegames begin. :
low profile NEC
in
1995, their
'
,
.
;sieve lVanczykisThe
Circle'sSportsBdi/or
• ' Phoco
courtesy of Jim Dziczynski
Sh¢.ltersti,llcrajiks()ut
unique qrartdqf rock

. ·•
: Shelter
.
Beyo11dPtanetEarth ..
.
Cd
Roadruntierl
SuperriaturalReGords ·
hyBOBROTH
Staff Writer
Mostly, the rest of the CO is po'p
_
· .
mµskwith roots more in punk
than in hardcore. There is also a
ska song thrown .into the mix
c;aU~l"Alone on My Birthday."
qthergood tracks are ,;Revealed
in Reflection';, "Hated
fo
Love'',
and
"In
Praise of Others."
_Shelter is notYouthofTo-
· For some foolish ·reason we
Alf.E Ed~or Jim Dzlezyn~ki braves the mountains of Vermont . .
When
I
first•· glanced ~t
it. It didn't have the same feel-
ing as Mimtra or Attaining the·
Supreme, previous Shelter re-
leases. I was excited ;to hear
"Beyond;u" because I loved
the old reco.rd Mantra and
could Qof w~it for a new re-
lease.
.
day. Ray and Pon,ell do not want.
to _be compared
to
their old band.
"Beyond Planet Earth"· is a good
record but.not a-great one. It
might tum off the nonnal hardcore
kid, but will open Shelter to a
whole new audience. It's a proi ·
gression that you co,.dd see com-
ing throughout Shelter's records .
The eighties were
a
different time
and Youth of Today was trying
to get across a different message.
Here in the nineties; Ray and
Parcell have matured and don't
feel the same hardships that they
- left the window open as
·
we
drifted off into a satisfying-
sleep. Around 4
A.M, l
was
woken up by an odd humming
· sound coming from the.window
. above me. I felt t_he sensation
of water soJ figured it must
have started raining out.
As I wearily stumbled to get
up and shut the window I came·
face to face with a giant black
shadow five· inches from my
face. I did what any brave
mountain man with years of
wilderness experience would
do; I screamed like. a wgman
giving birth to quadruplets. I,
rolled off the bed _and yelled fi;,r
Mark. With ·an the grace and
savvy of a blind sloth, he feil
over to the light switch and
turned it on. Sticking in the win-
dow was one of the largest
moose heads I've ever seen in ·
my life. Due to our screaming
he was now in a panic.
"What do we do?" I screamed
to Mark;
"Open the window, man!!" he
yelled back.
Yeah, right! The moose al-
ready had his head stuck and
was not in the mood ~o
be
trifled
with. You know all that stuff
about moose being gentle moss
eating creatures? Well, I have
to say no creature gets quite
that big eating moss ( as fellow
writer Dave
Barry
has noticed.)
A creat~re that big. must eat
pure, unre,fined diesel gasoline.
Yet,
the panic on his face made
me feel jµst enough pity to
muster the courage to crawl
over and push the window ·
open, The moose dislodged
his mighty head and ran off
· into the da 1 rkness.
"Did that just happen?'' I
askedMark.
.
..
••1 don't think so; let's go back
to sleep."lle said.
To this day I get a little ner- \
vous when I see those moose
heads mounted ori the wall!
Next Week: The Wonderful
World of Puerto Rican Caves!
After listening to it a
'
few times, _I am ·ple~sed but not
overjoyed: Overall it is a· good
record but it has NO similari-
ties with Ray and Porcell's old
band Youth of Today. It has a
different musical direction as
well as Ray preaching the
Krishna religion, not straight
edge and unity. I feel it is good
th~t Ray and PorceH can leave
a famous band like Youth of
Today and
start
another one
that sounds nothing like the old
band.
There are a couple of
tracks that have that old school
flavor. The sound that made
Youth of Today and Shelter
popular can still be heard on
such tracks as "Refusal" and
"Time's Ticking Away."
· felt when they were younger. Go
get ••Beyond PlanetEarth" and
keep an open mind to the changes
in music.
To learn more about Shel-
ter go on the World Wide Web
and check. out their ·website at
www.shelter.net.
Keep up with the
latest happenings. Read
the A&E section every -
Thursday




































































THE
CIRCLE,
'
Septembef 18;
'
1997
--
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·
.•
15
Wolllen'sTeJlDJS<Has
ANeWKing--A.ncl
AJ-1
Record
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,.
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~-
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:,
;

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byMARKJ.
,
W.1~:LLS
./'CoacnKingreallyknows the
trem
'
endous
heart," said
Sophomores Kara Oliver,
t,velve
s
matches this season,.
·
St~./JW~iter
,
.
.
gam
·
~ of: tennis,''
:
said senior
.
·
Robinson.
.
..
Tracy Hunt, ~laudine Habib, Jhe team is 10-2, including a
<
captain and number one singles
Last year the Red Foxes went
·
.
and Devon lmarisio also de
0
.
streak of nine
-
win·s in a row
.
.
The Maiist College fO
-
~e~\
;
'
player Holly Robinson. ~'There . undefeated in the
NEC
and fin:
..
feated their opponents to so- . . ''We're ali having a lot of fun
tennis teanfo'pened up
:
its
:
'
1997 js
i
nothing he wouldn't do for
ished third in the end post-sea-
lidify the program's first ever
right now
,
" said Robinson. "All
seasi:mwiththree,straight
,
vic-,. thegoodoftheteam.''
.
son conference tournament.
MAAC victory.
Jennifer
ofthegirlsgetalongjustgreat.
tories ov:~r Farleigh~ Dickins~n
_
.
·
Marist's first match,
:
against
This season marks the
·
debut
_
of Annstrong suffered her first lost
The Iona win gave us a lot of
University,icinaCollege,andSt
•·•
_:
pou,
·
saw Robin~on's first
.
in-
MaristCollege in the Metro At-
of the year in
a
three set battle
confidence, but teams like
Francis-NY.
.
.
-
-
-
·
dividual wiri
'
of thtfse
·
ason,
·
as
·
1antic Athletic Conference
·
6-1,3-6,7-6(8-6).
Fairfield and Monmouth are
All three wins camein con-
she easily · defeated the
(MAAC).
Armstrong came hack strong . going to be tough."
vincing fashion, as the Red
Knights' first singles player,
The Red Foxes won their con-
in
the team's third match against
The sound beating that the
Foxeswonbyscoresof7~2,6~J,
MaikoKikuchi,6
~
0,6-4. .
ferenceopenerthisweekagainst
St. Francis-NY
,
winning her
Red Foxes handed to Iona
and 7-2.
Robinson is ieading a Red Fox
Iona, 6-1. Good performances
match 6-0, 6-0. to help the Red
bodes well for their debut sea-
The team hit
a,
snagon :s
·
un--
-
squ
_
ad
fuH
o(young talent. With
were turned in by the entire team
,
Foxes win 7-2.
son in the MAAC. Marist"s next
day, losing 6-3 to Mo11mout~; the ~xceptfon of the captain,
in support of Robinson's sec-
Another strong point of the
home contest, another MAAC
but the early
·
season ·success is who
·
is the lone returner from
ond victory of the season,
6-1
,
Mari st squad is their doubles
showdown. is Saturday at 3:00
still encouraging.
_
.
-
.
.last year's Northeast Confer-
6-4
.
play, led by Leigh Goiden.
In
against Rider College.
The Red Fo
_
xes;
-
season operf
·
' .
. ·
ence
·
_regular
:
season
.
champion-
.
ing win agains~FDU gave
·
ne'w
-
ship team, the entire group is
Football Loses Heartbreaker
head coachJarriie King his first , rnade up of"sophomores.
career win atMarist College.
·
The Red Foxes
·
lost four of
. .. continued from p~ge 16
Marist
_
survived a scare when
-
Daley
fell
on a mish
'
andied snap,
but Allen found the end zone
The Red Foxe
·
s ~ave begun to
their
'
statteri
to
graduation as
come together
,
under
:
King, as
well as their i:mmberone singles
their 3
~
1 rec
·
orci indicates: The · player, Nadja Rudkowski, who
new. coaching philosophy has . transferred to NYU.
:
·
on the next play to give Mari st
the teanf in the right
-
frarne of.
"Whatthe team lacksinexpe-
a 6-3 lead. De Vito missed the
mind,
·
rience it makes up for it with its
extra point to the left
;
leaving
Maristup by three
.
.
I .
Men's s
·
occer endures
early disappointments
·
Georgetown showed how
good they are by coming back
the next time they touched the

ball and regaining the lead
:
A'
very efficient Hoya drive (aided
by a 15-yard roughing the
byC~TOPHER
.
O~DONNELL
.
'
_
'staff
Writer
passer penalty)culminated in a
·
first
half
en
route
to
a 6-0
loss.
I
7-yard touchdown pass· from
·
The five first half goals were
quarterback Bill Ward to wide
-
giveri up in the span of 19 min-
out Chris Jordan, putting the
-
The stage curtains
·
were let
·
utes ·and included
'
three by
,
Hoyas bacl<in front,
I0-6;
downfodhe
.
.Marisfmen'ssoc-
Adelphi'sRobinLee.
-<
_'
·
Marist answered the Ho
·
ya
i.
cer teat'rl'to
·
startl997 s
·
e
a
son
·
;
Freshman Tim
'
Svendsen said
.
drive with one
'
of their own
.
but the performance has ~e~n
-
-f
-
Jh,e ga)l1~
,
agai!)st
'
Adelplii ~as
·
.
D
a
_
ley again hi
.
t Reed withafong
shaky one:
.
.
·
Jus
{
one o
f
th6se
'
g
a
mes~
,
:,--
·:
<
..
pass, this time'for38 yafdsori a
Key
injuries and inexperienced
·
''We
'
did11 't show up at all and
third-and~eight to bring the ball
·
underclassmen have resulted in
Adelphi moved
.
the ball really
ali the way down to
·
the Hoya
·
-

consecu~ive losses toHa~wick, we\L
.
They showed us how the
25. Fullback Chad Wickliffe car
-
.
Adelphi
;'
ah~
LongJslandl.Jni-
·
game ~hould ·be
,
played,"
riedthree consecutive times to
versity
:
.
_
Senior defender Josh
-
-
·
Svendsen said.
give Marist a first and goal from
Thomas s~id that having sev-:
·
·
·

The third game against
LIU
the nine. SeniorJovan Rhode
s
era! freshmen in the starting line
saw the Red Foxes down 2-0 in
carried the ball to the one, and
-
up has presented some prob-
the first half, until ~ophomore
Allen dove in from a yard out
lems.
.
Matt Day scored in the 64th
for his second touchdown of the
'
'The level of competition from
-
.
minute to cut into the lead.
__
But
game. Korba
,
who was already
high sch pol to college is a giant
LIU scored three minutes later,
handling the kickoff duties, con
-
step,"Th
_
omas said. "The game
andadded another goal to win
verted the 'PAT, and Marist was
in eollege is
·
also much
.
more
4-1.
_
. _
_
_
.
up
I
3-
IO.
phY,sical ~han high school."
·
Day said the Red Foxes made
:
.
·
It appeared the Hoyas would

.
Injury wise, the Red F.oxes
·
various mistakes despite play-
regain the lead early in the fourth
have lost s
:
ophomore goalie . ing pretty well.
quarter when Ward hook¢d up
Chad MacDonald for the year
"We had the ball in their end
withreceiver MauMatt1morefor
with a broken hand, and Tho- -
for
the most part
9(
the
game,
a 22 yard gain, for a
:
f!fst and
mas missed two games from
·
a
but we just couldn't
.
execute."
goal from the Marist rii,w; B.ut
separate'3
_
sh<iulder
:
-
Thomas
Day added that ttie coaching
on second down from the five,
said
he
is itill riot at 100%.
staff gave them a game plan to
Ward fumbled the snap and
The season opener against
_
a
counter
LIU's
offside trap but
Mari st linebacker John Fox
strong Hartwick dub went well
the team
.
did not carry out the
jumped on it.
in the first half, as l'vfarist headed
game plan.
_
The next time Georgetown got
into the break down only
1-0.
_
Despite the three losses, Day
the ~all, however
,
the
Red
Foxes
However,theRedFoxesmissed
saidtheteamhasren:iainedposi-
weren't as lucky. The Hoyas
various opportunities, includ-
tive.
converted key third and fourth
-
-
ing a shot
-
that hit the crossbar,
"The team is still up-beat and
down conversions on tbeir drive
and Hartwick notched two goals
training hard. We are not about
before fullback Charlie Turner
in the second half to put it away
.
to just give up
,
especially when
powered his way into the end
The team's second game,
the league games matter the
zone from a yard out to give
Georgetown a 16-13 lead. Paul
Deckaj blocked the extra point,
but the damage had
·
alre
a
dy
been done
.
Marist took possession with
less than seven minutes to play
at their own 16 due to a mis-
handled kickoff. Three plays
later, the Red Foxes committed
their fifth turnover of the game
when Allen coughed up the ball
al his own 25
~
yard line after tak-
,
ing a solid shot from the Hoya
defense. Georgetown gained
After an
.
incomplet
e
pass on
first down. Daley avoided a sack
and threw a pass on the
run
that
Reed couldn·t corral. On the
play Daley come up limping. and
junior
Bill
Tramaglini was forced
into action
.
Tramaglini got the
ball to Reed at the 35. setting up
another fourth-and
-
one.
Allen got the first down and
more with an eight yard run
which
s
topped
_
the clock with
only three seconds remaining.
The Marist offensive unit hur-
Individual Leaders
.
Rushing
:
Marist: R
_
hodes l
8-60, Allen l 2:-34, Wickliffe 7-
22
,
Tramag\)ni I- (-1 )
,
Daley 4-(
-
8).
Georgetown: Iorio
16
~
22; Todisco7-14
,
Turner 2
(-2),
Ward 6
~
(-18)
.
Pas
:
rii,g
:
Maris
_
t:
Daley 8
-
16-3-96
,
Tramaglini 2-3
-
0-36
.
Georgetown: Ward 19-33
-
1-165.
·
Receiving:Marist:
Reed 7-118, Korba
-
1-29, Ladd
1-8,
Wickliffe 1-7,Rhodes 1-(-1) .
Georgetown: Todisco
4-41
,
Rosenthal 5~36
,
Rutko
s
ke
3-
25, Matti more
1-22
,
Iorio 1-18, Jordan
·
1-17
:
Paltos 4-16.
only two yards on three plays
,
.
but Carbonara nailed a 40
-
yard
field goal with
4: 16 remaining to
increase the
_
lead to six.
Each team was forced to punt
on their subsequent posses-
sions, leaving Marist enough
time for one last drive. The Red
Foxes took over at their own
46
after
a
short.Hoya punt with I :37
left on the clock and only one
time-out at their disposal.
Daley found tight end Brian
Ladd for an eight yard gain on
second dow
·
n to move the ball
to the Hoya 46. Rhodes only
managed a yard on third down,
forcing the Red Foxes to take a
time-out with fifty-nine seconds
remaining and
a
fourth and one
staring at them
.
Daley gained a
yard on
a
quarterback sneak to
keep the drive alive.
ried to the line
,
but the officials
quickly spotted the ball and
r
e-
started the clock. By the time
center Hugh Stanton snapped
the ball
,
the scoreboard showed
nothing butzero
s.
Despite the tough lo
ss
, Parndy
told his t
e
am it isn't time
to
throw in the towel so early in
the season.
"This only counts as one
game.
-
It was an important game
but we still have nine left,"
Parady said. "With the caliber
of teams in the conference, a
team with one loss or even two
can still win the conference.
"
Next week, Marist travels to
Iona to take on the Gaels on
Saturday at noon. The Red
Foxes return to Leonidoff Field
on September 27th to face St.
Peter's
.
against A,delphi, turned out to
most
,
" he said.
be a one sided affair as the Red
"The season is young and
Foxes gave up five goals in the
hopefully we will come together
and win some games," added
Svendsen. "The seniors have
shown leadership for us and
now it is time for us freshmen
to respond
.
"
Renewed optimism----------------
... continued from
p.
I 6
Marist's next game was
Wednesday at Columbia Uni-
versity, followed by
.
their first
conference
·
game, at St.
.
Peter's
on Sunday
.
..
.
right now to see some nice re
-
su Its."
For the 1997 fall season,
Colaizzo admits that the Red
Foxes probably can
'
t keep up
with the MAAC favorite, Iona.
"Our goal is to be the best of
the rest," explained Colaizzo
;
-'~l
don't like shooting for second
place, but, realistically, we don't
have a prayer to beat Iona this
year. So second place is a good
goal for us:·
It's easy to see why Colaizzo
has an eye towards 1998. Pete
Startz, Steve Palmer (both
sophomores)
,
and junior Chuck
Williams will all return, as will
one of last year's stars, Mike
Melfi, who is redshirting this
season
.
"You never know what might
happen between this year and
next, so we can't afford to look
ahead," warned Colaizzo. "We
have to focus on doing our best
this
year
."


























i:
,,
$rATQFTHE WEEK .
QUOTEOFTEIE
WEEK,
.".'..We're.definitely c.ontende.rs
for
the
MAAC."
--:Tara
Nichols,.
16
. The
women's tennis team won
9
tdrisecutite'dbubles matche~ to
strut the 1997season;-
The Circle, September ·18, · 1997
women's soccer coach
F00thallloses.
heartbre3.kerto
Ho
by
THOMASJ.
RYAN
Staff
Writer
Ask any coach .at any level
what the key to winning foot-
ball .. games. is, and inevitably
turnovers and special teams
will
be at the top oftheirHst. Marist
head coach Jim Parady is no dif-
ferent.
Parady watched hi steam tum
the ball over five times and miss
. a short field go~I and an extra
point in a 19-J3 loss to the
Georgetown Hoyas ( 1-0, 1-0).
· For Parady and the Red Fo)5.es·
(0-1,0- I), it was. a case of, mak-
ing mistakes against the wrong
team at the wrong:time.
"Any game you play in you
don't want to have mistakes,"
the sixth-year coach said. "But
you always seem to have more
in that first game because you
haven't been on the field in
about eight months." .
That is why the Hoyas, who
Marist hasn't beaten in four
tries, were such a tough draw
for the Red Foxes
in
the opener.
tearri All-MAAC running back
With 15 starters returning from
Steve Iorio.to.~23 yards on six
last year's 7-3 team,Georgetown
carries; arid missed a 20-yard
is clearly one of the elite teams
field goaL So perhaps the
in' the Metro Atlantic Athletic
Hoyas were the ones· feeling
Conference-~ not a team which
lucky aftertwo quarters.
affords you the :opportunity to
Bates agreed with the latter•
iron out you problems;
.
theory.
.
Those problems started early
"They really couldn't run on
forMarist, as they lostaJumble
us at all in the first half," the jun-
on their opening possession.
for defensive end said. "We re-
After the defense for~ed the
any wanted to stop the ruri early
Hoyas to punt; Red Foxes quar-
and we did.''
.
terback Jim Daley's pass.rico-
The Red Foxes received the
cheted. into the hands of line~
second halfkickof(and almost
· backer Mike Lynn at the Marist
immediately.there was a notice-
3 7 .. Georgetown capitalized on
able difference from the first half.
the mistake, moving the ball to .. Daley quickly completed• two
-the 22 to set up a Peter short passes underneath before
Carbonara 39 yard field goal and
connecting with Reed, who fin-
. a 3-0 Hoya lead.
ished the day with six recep-
. Neither team scored for the rest
tions for 118 yards, on a 26~yard
of the half. Marist was fortu..:
gain to the Hoya 25.
·
nate to be down·by only'three
Twoplayslater,juniorrunning
points, having committed .. four
back J;J. Allen pulledup_ after
first-half turnovers. On the
taking a hand-off and threw a
other hand, the Red Fox defense
pass to junior wide receiver Tim
· allowed only 30 yards of total
Korba at the four yard line.
offense in the half, held second
- -
continued on
p.
J
5---
Renewed
optimism
in
cross-cou11try
camp~
It's been a slow start for the men's soccer team. Its record
stands at 0-3, despite the nifty footwork of starting
defenseman Andy Dolan (above). Story, page 15.
Women'ssoccer.kicks·off ..
'?'tlY(AAC
campaign
Fordham also fi_nished ahead of · produce co,nsistent results,.
Marist.
we;U befirie/'.
by RACHELVOLLARO
''.She's doing a great job .. '. defi-
"bySTEVEWANCZVK.
Sports Editor
~'lt's a real tough· meet," ex-:-
Mari;t's ·male· ninriefs also•
·
·staff
Writer.
nitely a· playmaker. Her distri~
It's been a long time since the plained Kelly.· "You're talking
came home from Brcioklynfeel-
bution is excellent," Nichols
cross.country program at M~rist' ·about' teams·• from,·· the .Ivy
ing' good. about themselves,
-· The Marist College Women's
said.
College has set its goals so high.
League, the J3ig :East, arid the
having :finished• ninth o.ut of Soccer team starts the 1997~1998
The 1997-1998 MAAC Con-
After toiling for years in the. Atlantic··
t
2 .. •. We did about as . seventeen·
·
compe.tingschools
season . as a playoff contender
ference . consists of Siena,. St.
Northeast Conference behind' welra~ lfigurf!d
Wf!'d_dC>.:t
'
on a sweltering day inNewYork
with a new head coach.
]:>eters College, Iona, Fairfield,
the nmning ju'ggernaut
at
The E,edF9xes enjoye<i. S()l11e . City. . _.
· . -.
In her firstyearas head coach,
Rider, Loyola, Manhattan,
Mount. St. Mary's, the. Red iridividualefforts that bode Well ·
.
"The heat had
ari
effect on the
Tara Nichols is enthusiastic
Niagara and Canis us.
.
Foxes find therilseives with a ~or t~if'uture. F'oufo~the, tea~'s
guys;" saict men's qead"co:ach
abouuhe current season.
. · Loyola College is the pre~sea-
newgroup of rivals, some ffosh. : top five finishers were freshmen
Pt:!te C9laiz~oz ·•.•.we -~~d.),~me - . "Things are going very well,,,
son favorite to win the confer-
, faces, and a resurgent sen'se
of ·:
or sophomores.'
. good early·season times, which. the coach said.·. "We'.rereally . ence, with Fairfield. a close sec-
optimism.
: : Megii{~run6;~fi.rst-yearrun-
leaves plentyofroomt9 grow."
knocking the ban around.,: and
oild. Coach Nichols. feels the '
The won1eifrurinersJeel
,
espe'.. .- ner, ·was'' the first
,
<of l(eHy'. s
. ' .• Brown Univ_ersity wontiie
the team has a really hard work
resfof the conference is kind of
cially fortunate, a:fter escaping
'
"charges td cross .the finis~Ji~~· . men's mee(whic:h saw the Red
ethic.'''
'
'
'
l)liX. ''I think most of the games
theshado~ ofthe,Mcmntx ,, ·. .• with)i:tfme of 2(i':05,: good· Foxes fighLad01irably. against
Coach Nichols.brings with her ·could g() eitherway,:~ridwe're
"OveraH; theMAAC is a step enough Jor .. 44th. pfac{ out
·
of . cross.:country pow~rsltke
,
Yale.
experience and
a
fove {or the
definitely conteridersifor the
up fro111 the NEC," said,womf!ri's
.
. .
Ben Hefferon led the, charge
game of soc:cer. ·Asa player for
MAAC\" Nichols said: · ·
coach Phi}Kelly. "But in crqss-
for· Mafist; :1hd junior ouf of the University of.Coimecticut
. In their first g~m
·
e o,n turf the
country, it's not, because there's
"We 've.'gota chance
·.
Ketcham High School'finished
she wentto the NCAA Division
Red. Foxepook on Northeast-
no team as dominating as Mou~t
.
to lvin · this
ihing
'in
18th out of almost 200 runners.
I. Final Four.' She has Coache.d
·
efn University last week. At the
St Mary's. The league
.
is wide·
·
. "Ben's our ieader/nodoubt •up and. do~n the East Coast
end of aroughfirsthalfNorth-
open."
our first year
in
the
about it. And he cramped up
througJ:iou(the nineties; iricfod-
eastern led 1-0 .. Marist.tied the
AndKelly'sRedFoxesbelieve
·
league."
towards. the erid; too,'; said
ing positions in the Olympic
game· in the seco.nd half,
they have a chance to ·waltz in
Phil
Kelly
.
Colaizzo. "HeJiad a real good
Development Program for four
outshootirigN_ortheastem 20-8.
and claim the MAAC title im-
. shot anhe top ten until that
different states;
The score stayed deadlQcked at
mediately. ·
happdned."
Nichols looks to her five se-
1-1 through two sudden death
"We've got a chance to win
over 150 entries. Her fellow
Three freshmen were among
niors to lead the Red Foxes in
overtime periods.
.
the thing in our first year iri the
classmate,· Heather ·Perrine, the Red Foxes top seven finish-
their pursuit for the MAACcon-
According tocoach_Nichols,
league," claimed Kelly.
cruised in a minute later, at2 l :05 ers. Anthony Nero, Joe Scelia,
ference title. They are outside
the team's problem is finishing.
That's a sentiment that was
as the fourth Red Fox finisher.
and Greg Salamone compose a
mid-fielder Christine Willemin,
"Our problem right now is we
reinforced after a strong show-
"Perrine really dominated in
nice nucleus that Colaizzo ex-
forward Desire Treski, goalie
really have to put the ball in the
ing from Marist's women atthe
the pre-season;" said Kelly. pects big things from. ·
BethZack;anddefendersStacey
back of the net. All our games
Fordham Fiasco on Saturday,
"She's kind of in a funk right
"This is the best.freshman
Sebastian and Janet Oliver.
have been close games against
held at Van Cordtland Park in
now. I'm expecting even better class we've ever had," said the
Zack, Sebastian· and Oliver are
beatable teams, but we need to
Brooklyn,
NY.
things from her eventually.''
coach. "And out of our seven-
also the team's tri-captains.
step up our scoring. These next
The Foxes finished eighth out
Sophomo~ Jen Glover (20: 16) teen runners, eleven are either
Five freshmen join the Foxes
few games are essential. We
of seventeen teams, in what
and Erin Minor (21 :23), along freshmen or sophomores. We're
this season- goalie Kathryn
really need some big wins."
Kelly called a "very high qual-
with junior Karen Donahue, really built forthe future.
Crisafi,
forwards
Katie
The Foxes open their confer-
ity meet."
rounded out the point scorers
"I'm focusing on this year, but
O'Connell and Jaimie Bierwirth,
ence season on September 24
Yale University grabbed the
for Marist.
we're a young team and I'm ex-
and defenders Amy Martin and
at Siena. Their first home con-
top spot on Saturday, and
"Our top four runners are real cited about the next few years
Nicole Weaver.
ference game is against St. Pe-
squads from Harvard, Brown,
solid,"saidKelly.i'Ifwecanfind ·also.· We have enough depth
A player to watch is center
tersCollegeonSunday,Septem-
Penn, St. John's, St. Joe's, and
two or three more runners who -
continued
011
p.
J
5 - -
mid-fielder AmandaSwidereck.
ber28 at 12:30.


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