The Circle, November 20, 1997.xml
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 50 No. 8 - November 20, 1997
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page 16
Hickock.
,
. ·
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\Tqlume50.
Issue
8
..
The
student newspaper
:
of
Mari st
College
.
November 20, 1997
Brother'
,
.Ambrose
honorec1
lJY
Pope
.
.
.
,
.
_
.
_.
-
.,-,.,
_
_
by T.J. BEAURY
StaffWriter
•'
..
help in
.
receiving the
.
PA~ate
audience, arranged the trip. to
Rome; Italy.
.
. . .
_
Asman group fromMarist
_
"We had been hoping for
.
·
/i
was able to receive ar'iaudience
quite some time
,
to arrange a
J
1,v
;
·
.
i
and
-
celebrate mass with
.
Pope
papal meeting with the Pope
·
·
~
-"'"~
,
:
:
·:,t
·
·
i
John Paul II
.
recently.
and Brother Paui as pait of re-
.
"
·
-
. •' :
-
.
-
,•.'
..
_
»./
j_
.
·
This pastspring, Br~ther Pc!.ul
ceiving his medal,,, Murray
i
·
Ambrose received the "Cross
said.
.
.
.
. • .
•
.
·
,
.
. . . .
. ,
Brother Amt>rc,se and Preslde~-;--Cktiml~ Murray pr~sented Pope John Paul
II
with
h;•b~kra•b~~'itte
~r
.
o
.
Ehc
.
cclehs
.
ia eh
•
t
·.
P
.
odnthificR"
.
(Ct~off)
·
s
.
s
.
_Another.
_purpo
_
se
·
of
.
thefvisjt
.
Hudson River
_
Valley during
'
their recent visit to the Vatican.
·
iort
_
e
.
urc
.
an
~
.
,.
on
1
,
was to obtam documents rom
·
.
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
:
·
.
.
.
..
·
,
·
·
,
.
.
·
.
. fqd1is ~a~y_
'a,ccomplisliments
the Vatican Archives.for a con-
.
an hour.
_
_
.
.
.
skul
·
l~~p- 'the
-
~ope
-
~ears>· he
"With his eyes, his spirit and
f<;>r the benefit of the Church
ference to, be held on ca~p~s
During their private audierice,
said. "After
-
we
·
presented that
his warmth you can still see the
and the Pope.
B_rother
next fall_. The _conference is !n
the group was able to exchange
to the Holy
.
Father, he blessed-
qual!ties that make him a great
Ambrose ~ou~de~ M:,m
st
as a
connection :,v1th the Franklin
gifts with the P(?pe. Murray and
it and putit
011
his head. He then
Pope
"
and a great world leader,"
fo~r-y~~
1
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t
itl.!~
1
.
0
~
.
1
~
1946
-
Roosevelt L1br~ry and
_
focus~s
Ambrose presented a book on
exchanged his skull cap with
.
Murray said
.
.
.
~es1des
__
t_h_e c~anta_ble w~r
.
k
on Roosevelt~ relat1onsh1p
the Hudson Valley that was in-
us."
·
With the conference on
he has done for
th
e Man
st
with the Catholic Church
.
scribed to him from the people
.
In addition each person in the
Roosevelt's relationship with
Brothers
,
Ambrose was the
-
-
Murray his wife Chief Re-
in the deleoation
·
·
·
·
'd
·
·
"ft
the Catholic Church starting in
p
'
I
·
f
.
ffi,
T"
M,
•
.
d
o
·
•
.
group receive rosanes as g1 s.
ope _s persona ..
~ouner ~r
lat1ons O 1cer 1m
asste an
Massie said the gift exchange
Murray said that although one
October, talks with Vatican of-
matenal
_
too sen~Jtive for ma~!.
trus_tee John Gartl~nd a~com-
that he and
_
Murray shared with
can see thai'
'
till)e
and
the Pope's
ficials were begun.
Man s
t
PresidentCD~~m~
pan:1ed Brother Ambrose
.
to t
_
he
the Pop~ was incredible.
·
.
tiring schedule
·
has taken its
Massie said that the director
Murray,- who wrote ar ina
Vatican. They had the ch~nce to
"We both presented the pope - toll · the p
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bYGYNASLOMCiN~KY
·.
·.
was
.
~aiti~g
·
for l
.
he national
arereally serious about," he
.:
:
Mamigii!g Edz
.
·
tor
_ · ·
board to
revoke
Sigma Phi
Ep-
·
said.
.
-
sHo'n before they
.
took action.
Mike Lombardy, senior and a
This ha,s not be¢n
a
good se~
·
When
the,
natibnal b6ard acted,
.
member of Alpha Phi Delta,
mester fodhe Greek side of
'
SGA followed suit;;
-
said the school treated them
.
Mari st,
.
.·
The
·
two remaining
_
fraterni-
unfairly.
:
Two of the
·
remaining four· ties are in
.
trouble and trying to. .
"It
wasn't like
a
party," he said,
fraternities were
given
letters
·
stay on campus for the upcom-
"It was more like a gathering of.
explaining the reypc;ation of inf semesters.
·
.
•
···
..
. .
•
friends anct
·
most of the people
their charters atMarist Col-'
.
Madtiri. said some members
there
·
w~re of age."
iege this
_
\Veek.
.
.
.
.
.
ofA.Jptia,
.
Phj
~
Pelta were
·
ar-
According to MaristCollege,
·
Tau Epsilon Phi; was one of rested fof~ri'incidenl that hap~
·
·
any off .. campus disturbance
·
ttiese°
·
fratemities: Their situ-
pened off-campus.
. .
.
.
.
.
warrants community ~ervice.
ation had been an on going pro-
.
..
"Six to eight !llembers were
.
With
'
this incident, the college
ces
_
sJ<>oking
for.
a
.
solution.
.
arrested for: viqlation _of.the
.
did
·
not ha~e any concrete evi-
However, the decision
-
~is
.
no~
city ordinance 13.5-5,
-
wh
.
icJi. is.
•
dence
;'
such
as
:
serving under-
eritirely°up
·
10 the
·.
coll~g~.
-
. ·
·
·
. unreaso~able
_
11oise,"
·
he
·
.
s
.
aid.
•
·
age
.
peopie, so it was forced to
FrankMaduri, student body
"They were also
.
i
.
n violation of fall pack on
.
the city
.
ordinance
Th•
.
.
Huds
.
.
0
.
n vane
.
y expe
..
rlenced an early snowfall of
.
nlne lnches
pre~ide_nt, said the
:
scho?I was .the good neighborpolicy." .
about unreasonable noise.
last week;
.
Temperatures continue to remain cold
88
winter
.
ap-
.
actm~3n ~ccor?~nc
1
ew1th the
.
However, Carlos Beltran, se-
·
Bel~ran said
·
they were still
· .··
·
·
.
·
.
·
·
·
.
'
fratem1tys
-:
nauona s.
.
..
.
·
nior and a
_
member of the Al-
treated unfairly.
.
.
· .
"Once and for all, it's a
'
done
·
_
pha Phi Delta fraternity said this
"There were of other parties
ClasSsChedllle
·
teVlsed
.
.
bySTEPIIANIEMERCURIO
Editor-in-Chief
.
·
.
time an
.
argument\\'.aS brnught
up against starting on A~g. 3 I,
SGA had a reason why it
Students can sleep in a
little,
wouldn't work.''
·
.
classes will not begin at 7:30
According to Kevin M.
a.m. n~xtyear.
Lundy, senate speaker,
.
the
The class schedule for the
schedule had tp be changed to
1998-1999 academic year has
meet state
·
requirements for the
finally
.
been de
_
cided on
;
amount
of
time college su:1-
Classes will commence a week
·
dents have to attend class.
earlier than usual on Aug. 31.
"The classes were either go-
According to John T. Williams,
ing to start earlier, or the dura-
student body vice president,
tion of the classes would run
this was due in large part to
.
in-
longer," he said. "We felt
put from the students and the
longer classes and shorter
Student Government Associa-
times in between classes would
tion (SGA).
be unfair to commuters and
"The faculty and administra-
students with disabilities.
tion referred to a lot of what
SGA had to
say,"
he said. "Any-
Please see
CLASSES
,
page
J...
·
deal, their charter has been ~e--
was not true .
.
.
,
..
.
broken
up
that night and issued
voked because their national
·
.
!
'No ~ne was arrested,'.' he
city ordinances, but Marist
revoked
_
them and
·
we~re just
·
said.
"The
seven guys who live
hasn't done anything to them,"
foHowing suit," he said.
--
in the house were taken down
he said.
·
-·some
members of the fra-
.
to the si~tiori, but \Vereonly
The other fraternity left on
temity said they
thought
the
given cita_tions for the noise."
campus is Phi Iota Alpha: As
situation was not treated fairly.
After much investigation by
of Nov.
-
18, the grace period
· Andrew Cosentino~ junior Chris
J.
-tte,
vice-president for
was declared over and it must
and memb.er of Tau Epsilo_n
.
club affairs; Alpha Phi Delta
bedeterminedifthefrathasthe
Phi, who has been a member
was given IO hours of commu-
required IO members.
_
since the second semester of nity service for the incident, but
According to SGA guide-
his freshman year, said he felt
their charter was not revoked
,
Jines, clubs at Marist need to
they were not given enough
Beltran said some members
have
a
constant amount of
time.
-
.
.
·
received
.
additional hours.
members to stay at club status.
"I think it's unfair in a way,"
"The seven people who live in
"If
we don't hear from Phi
he said. "Even though we owe
the house received an addi
_
tional
Iota Alpha's leaders, we auto-
money to nationals, we should
25 hours
·
of community ser-
ma~ically have to rescind their
have been given time to try to
vice,".he said.
charter because if you fall be-
catch up. I felt like we didn't
Maduri said he hopes this will
low
t O
members you loose
get to see our money in the
prevent any future mishaps.
your charter automatically," he
things we did."
"We feel that they
will
learn
said.
Sigma Phi Epsilon was the
their lesson
·
with that and that
other fraternity that received
we've really sent a strong mes-
Please see
FRAT,
page 3 ...
a letter of revocation. SGA sage that this is something we
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· THE
CiRCLE ·
·:: /-November
20, 1997 :-.
seor.
.;;.;
~Xgic>~P,
_
\Vitl{
an schedule a
·
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by SCOTTNEVILLE
.
S(affWriter
On-campus facilities·are not easily ac-
cessible to all . Mari st students .. ·
Some of the
i
,200 commuters, inc}ud- ·
ing Junio~ Kate Bowdren, said they are
unsatisfied ·with the efforts of Marist's
activities to include them. Others are con-
.
'
.
tent with the facilities and theiropportu-
nities to use them.
·
.. Bowdren said.she uses many of the
. facilities, such as the Ii~rary, the Caba>
ret, and the computer labs.
"I'm in two clubs. The first one meets
in the Writing Ceriter, so there's no mem-
ber charge-: it's a poetry group,''. she said.
"The seco'nd one _is the Bard and Ballad
Prpject. I do that jn 'l"!ly'free tirrie."
... ' Bow4reri Jjloved off camptis. this year.
du
·
e to· increase in freshmen enroll merit.
She -h~d 'a
.
suffi~ie~t number of priority
points by the stand~rds.set in the spring,
btH
tq~
staridards were changed. over the
summer, so Bowdren ·was forced to look
elsewhere. -•·
Bowdren said this has been a blessi9g.
''Now I come on campus amf have a
purpose to be here. I do more work now,"
~e said. "Since the library was so close,
I
'?\'OU
Id put it off completely. Now, I need
to make a set time to do this, so it _actu~ ·
ally organizes me more. When I come on
campus, I use the activities and they have
more value to me than when I lived here."
Jeremy Doran, a commuting student,
. said he participates in the basketballand
volleyball intramural programs and does
not see what other· people· are upset
about and feels fortunate to be commut-
_ing.
· "Idon'.t feel cheated. I hear some people
complaining; saying·that they miss out
on things," he said. "I talk to on-campus
In
Your Opinion
people and they that they tniss their fami-
lies <lildmiss living a~ ho!Ue, and I don't
have that problem." .
.
.
. Other comrriu.ter students, such as
Felisha Zammit said she has used the
cafeteria and library and even tried to do
some activities, but have
run
into prob-
. lems with times.
. .
"I did sign up for afew, but the meet-
ings are at night. I don't want tocome
back here that late," she ·said. "Marist
keeps everything pretty open, it's just ·
up to the person."· .
·
Jennifer Simmons, Vice President of
Commuter Council, said she tries to help
get the commuter students involved,
makingtheni. aware of events and build-
. ing a sense of community.
. · 'The ·prograi:i:i is just like R~C,"· she:
said. "We try· to involve different groups;
··doing luncheons _to integnite tije off pm-
pus people witl). thefaculty and the.other
stude.nts. It ha e s once a week."
I>.o.;y:ou ·use
the
new
gym
down
at-M~c,~4pn·?
_.,,·_ :• :·· .. <-: _._ ·.. ' ·'
-
.
:
. . .
.
.
'
,
.
.
-
~riaill
Nethercott
Freshman
«l use_ all the facilities, especially the
ew gym at McCann: It is a great place
o workout and
it
is free."
Freshman·
·-
·,
':...•-·.
"I like the McCann gym.
It
is so mu:ch -
more advanced than other gyms.
_It
is big·
enough ·so you don't have to wait-for
long even if there are teams working out"
SECURITY BRIEFS
- November I-I, 2:45 a.m. - A patrol officer
doing his rounds observed t~o individuals
acting suspiciously in the Beck parking lot.
He called for backup ~nd security i~medi-
ately apprehended one individual for ques-
-
tioning. While searching the lot, security
found the second individual hiding under a
car. The two men, ages 18 and 19, were in-
terviewed and identified the vehicle they were
using. Found in the front seat of the car were
·numerous goods stolen from other vehicles,
such~~- a wallet, and car stereo. In the back
seat were two young women ages
I
5
and
I
6.
The owner of the wallet, along with another
victim, identified the belongings in the car.
The suspects are charged with third degree
criminal possession, and were held at
Dutchess County Jail each with a $5,000 bail.
November 16, 5:30 a.m. - What presum-
ably started as a joke ended up not
to be a
laughing matter for some students in
Champagnat Hall. Someone thought it funny
to plug up the showers on the ·second floor
of the women's bathroom with toilet paper,
and let them run. Someone called security on
the first floor that saw water trickling down
from the ceiling. The water caused ·dainage
to several rooms on both the second and
third floors. No suspect was found.
November 15, 4:15 p.m. - A male from
Siena College. viciously attacked our very
own mascot, the Red Fox rig~t after the foot~
ball game.
A
cop chased _down the boy, Ray
Clark. He was not charged, but Marist se~
curity has notified Siena security. We hope
you are OK, Mr. Red Fox man!
Head of securi.ty, Joe Leary, received a
phone call from <;:hief Dorneyer.of the
Fairview Fire Department. The fire chief
expressed his concerns regarding the use of
halogen lights particularly in our living ar-
eas.· Security urges that the use of halogen
lights be discontinued. As of now, they are
not a fire code violation, but Security is
· checking on this issue. If found by the fire
department to be a violation, "cooperation
with the request of their discontinuance will
not
be voluntary," stated Leary ·
The was a mistake in last .._,.eeks secu-
rity briefs. There was no one arrested in
Sheahan Hall for fake IDs.
. ·. Billy
Stanton
Freshman ·
>:
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."I li_ke tousy_JQe,M_cGan.ngym!f?eqt4s
ifs reallys6nvi~iient artct\{ctva-;.ced: Thi
. one is a lot better. than the gym I belon
fo
at home."
"How's the
weather?"
Thursday: Chilly, Sun with Clouds
.,
42°
45°
Friday: Cool, Mostly Cloudy
37° 51
°
Saturday: Chilly, Light Rain
32°
49'"
THE CIRCLE
NeWS
November 20, 1997
3
North End burglarized yet again
Lorena Hickock and
.
Eleanor Roo99valt: A Love
Story
;as pr•
sented In the Performing Arts Room Nov. 11. The play profiled
the l)rlvate love affair between Hickock and Roosevelt.
Secret love affair revealed
in the Student Center PAR
,
by JILL
.
GIOCONDO
read from the numerous letters
by JEN FE~INELLA
Staff Write,:
·
WhenTownhouse A-4 called
.
about a burglary in their house,
they found security already out-
side their front door.
Old Townhouse A4 was bur-
glarized late Sunday night, Nov.
2. Sometime between 2:30
a.m. and
7:30
a.m.,
a teievision
was stolen. When the residents
called to alert security, they
noticed Marist security offic-
ers issuing parking tickets in
the lot outside their townhouse.
Junior Stacey Spina
,
a resi-
dent in TH A-4, said she was
mad when she saw the parking
tickets the next morning.
"Why were they so intent on
issuing tickets instead of
watching our house?" Spina
said.
"My
concern is that there
are other problems on campus
besides illegal parking
."
There is some question as to
whether the front door was
locked or not
.
Housemate Jes-
sica Hickey said the front door
may have been locked, but she
is unsure.
"We made a point of locking
the front door constantly after
the first burglary," Hickey said.
"We figure it must have been
locked."
Hickey
said
the house began
to have trouble with their lock
the day after the burglary. Se-
curity was called in to fix it. and
this led her to believe the lock
was tampered with
:
"We hadn't had any problems
with the lock the day before,"
Hickey said.
Joe Leary, director of
safety
and security, on the other hand,
said the lock was not tampered
with.
"Our
.
assistant locksmith
checked out the lock, and it was
just dried up," Leary said. "It
was re-lubricated and it works
now."
With all the recent burglaries
in the Old Townhouses
,
it has
been decided that new locks
will be placed in these doors.
Leary said the new locks have
been contracted, and installa-
tion will begin by the end of the
month
.
These locks will secure the
door every time it is closed.
Students will have to carry their
keys at all
times
unless they
prop the door open. Funding for
the new locks came out of the
physical plant budget.
Leary
said
the college will
start by replacing locks in the
Old Townhouses where the bulk
of the burglaries have occurred
and then move on to the rest of
campus. But despite the chang-
ing of the locks, Leary said he
still believes these burglaries
are
crimes of opportunity.
"The only way replacing
these locks will work is be-
cause of the automatic closer,"
he said.
Leary said if the locks were
simply changed without adding
the automatic closer, the human
element involved would still
make the locks unreliable.
"Students
must learn to bring
their keys with them, and lock
their doors," he said.
"They
can't have it both ways."
l ,
.
•
.
!
. ,
;
.
:StaffWrit~r
·
.
-
-
.
.
that Roosevelt wrote her.
,
.
John Svare, president of the
The play
Lorena Hickock and political science dub, said his
Eleanor Roosevelt:
.
A Love club was interested in co-spon-
Story presents a
.
side of Ameri-
soring the event because it
can history f~w
-
people have
would introduce a new view-
heard about or
stiiqied:
point of a historical figure to
Alumnus publishes first book
by MICHAEL GOOT
Staff Writer
BiGALA, the Political Sci-
Marist students.
ence Club, Woinen's Studies,
"I
thought it was an important
One Marist graduate has
The Division of the Humani-
event for students at Maristsee
turned his one-time hobby into
ties, and the Gender Equality
different perspectives about
a book.
.
.
Club all played a
·
role in co-
Eleanor Roosevelt,"
li:e
said.
·
Myles C. Pmkney, a Manst
sponsoring this event in the
·
The play was originally
.
writ- · gr~duate and Po_ughkeepsie
Performing
.
Arts
:
Room
-
,·
Nov.
.
'
ten and
performed
liy
:
PafBoi"ici;
-;,
},
~S~~~~~
.
ha~
P!-Jb.h~~
.
e
.
d
a
book
11.
.
,
and is based ori
..
the
o~e
r-'
i"3oo
.
_
·
-
entJtled
-
Jts
Raii1ing Laeigluer.
·
JoAnne Myers
;
assistanrpo-
·
love letters from
·
Roos;velt
.
T~e boo
_
k is a collection ofpho-
litical
'
scienc~ professor, said
..
.
which Hickock left to the FDR
tographs of African-An:ierican
that this coalition of clubs
·
library in Hyde Park after her
children with ~oetry alongside
br~ught the play to Marist t,e-
death. The letters are still avail-
the photos. Pmkney
shot
the
cause
<
it dealt with the various
··
able at the library.
p~ot~grap~s and journalist
issueijtie dubs represent.
•
:
Hickock also left photo-
Nikki Gnmes comppsed
''The
:
play is about
•
two
·
very
·
grapbs and other momentous of twel~e poems
:
stronfwomen in history which
her relationship with Eleanor to
Pmkney said he has always
interested the women's studies
the library.
be~? i~terested in. photography.
department," Myers said. "It
The play is put on by Great
I hke cap_tunng p~ople
.
as
deals
.
with a
·
lesbian issue
·
be-
Dame productions and has been
·
the~ a~e, tel,l,mg st?nes wJth
fw
'
e~ri
:
i-f~ckock
"
and Roosevelt
preformed for the past four
thelf picture: he. sa1~.
.
that is not
.
often talked about
·
years. It started its national
Th: book is pnmanly aimed
which was an issue
·
with
tour this past weekend.
at children, a~d has abou~ 50
.
Bi GALA.
·
Political Science
Myers helped coordinate the
.
phot~s of c~ildren. playmg,
was interested because it was
event and said she hoped the
lau~hmg ang _mteract_mg
.
developed
_
using primary re-
students who attended took
Pmkney said the pictures try
search from the library and
with them three thinos.
·
-
to capture the different things
Hickock played an important
"[I
hope] that tp;y learned
~ha~ children have t~ deal
;
with
.
·
role in recording the events
.
·
of about primary research and the
m hfe, such as.weanng glass
_
es.
·
the Depression."
role it plays; that they learn
a
Althou
.
gh he has been takm~
The play is the story of the
sense of history, and realize that
photos Sm
_
ce he was young, it
les
_
bian love affair between
what we are taught
about
people
was only m the last cou~le
~f
Eleanor Roosevelt and Lorena
is not
•
always the who
.
le picture;
·
years tha! he
started
ta~mg It
Hickock, a top journalist of her
and t)Jat gender orientation does
more s:n_ously. He
said
the
day.
_
.
.
·
Marjo
not effect whether a person is
book ongmally stai:ied out as a
rie Conn played
·
Hickock and
a good or bad person
,"
she said.
more personal proJect.
·
"A couple of years ago, [my
TwQ
frats
kicked
off
campus
'
wife and I] wanted
to
put to-
... Collli11ued
Jroi,i
page
I.
past semester was that most of gether a book
,"
he said'. "First,
we just started with our own
lecturer of communications
children."
and one of Pinkney's former
Pinkney took the photos of professors
,
said Pinkney was a
his
children
to Dial Publishing.
very
enthusiastic
student.
Although Dial liked them, it
"I
remember him primarily
wanted to use them in a differ-
from advanced TV production,
ent way. That is when poet
and
which is a class where people
journalist Nikki Grimes saw the
can either hang back or get in
pictures and
.
approached
the middle of everything that's
finknex
-
with the i<!e~ of attach-
going on
,"
he
said.
"Myles was
-·
irig
·
poems
·
tcfthem
:-
~,
..
.
.
alway!nn
·
che
middle
of
every~
After that first meeting,
thing."
Grimes would give Pinkney an
Cole
said
Pinkney had a good
idea of a topic she was inter-
aesthetic sense. He said also
ested in writing about and then
has a good sense of humor,
he would try to shoot pictures
which is beneficial in commu-
tha
.
t went
along
with it.
nications.
He would take several chil-
"It helps working with people
dren out
and
let them do what
in the media," he said.
"I
think
they wanted, but no matter how
it just helps coping with the
much preparation he did, often
world."
some of the best
shots
were
Cole said people have to be
when he was getting ready to
hard working in order to survive
pack up and go home.
in the field
.
Pinkney
said
children are of-
"I
think that Myles is a guy
ten unpredictable.
who is driven and the people
"With
children, you have to be
who tend to make it in televi-
ready," he said.
sion or any 9ther aspect of
The hardest part of creating
commu
'
nications
,
are people
the boo~. he
said,
was getting
·
who are driven
;''
he
said.
:
the cover
shot.
The
·
publishers
When Pinkney is not doing
wanted
something
different for
free-lance photography for
the cover and he had to re-do
books
a
.
nd jo
'
umals, he works
it.
full-time at the Poughkeepsie
Pinkney graduated from
television
studio,
WTDY, doing
Marist in
1993
as
an
adult
edu-
camera work
.
.
.
.
cation
student.
He said his col-
Pinkney said he
is
planning to
lege education helped him learn
produce another book
-
of
to be organized and a:s creative
children
's
photographs but he
as possible in his work.
currently does not know what
Douglas Cole, professional
form it
_
. will take
.
Felix Tapia, president of the the guys interested in pledging
Phi Iota Alpha fraternity
,
said
were either transfers or first
there have been a few problems
semester freshmen. We, as
a
from the beginning.
chapter, have agreed to not al-
Class schedule decided upon for 1998-1999
.
"The problem exists because
low transfers and first semes-
the person who brought the
ter freshmen to pledge."
chapter to Marist, Raul
Tapiasaidthechapterwillstay
Delarofa, graduated that semes-
on campus.
ter, so our chapter wasn't fully
"The plan for next semester's
developed," he said.
rush is of the wall," he said.
"At
Tapia said there is still hope
least one alumni comes up each
with the existing· members.
weekend, and other chapters
"The remaining members
around the area, and our nation-
have definite ideas and want to
als and they have all agreed to
gain pledges next semester," he
help us out with whatever we
said. "The problem we had this
need."
... continued from page
I.
·
would be for one year only, and
.
had to say.
.
These students might not be
with the understanding that
"The teachers don't have to
able to make it to class on
more classrooms would be
start early
,
but they really lis-
time."
built to accommodate the
tened to what the students
Jim Kent, assistant professor
teachers' needs," he said.
wanted," he
said. "I'm
just
in the school of management
Kent said only about six new
happy that SGA did something
and faculty advisor to the stu-
classrooms are needed.
that the students wanted."
dent senate, said under the per-
"The administration has said
Williams said nothing else in
manent version of the faculty
they will try to provide the
the schedule will change be-
handbook, the faculty does not
classrooms, so a change in
sides starting early.
have to come back to school
schedule will not be necessary,"
"All of the vacations will re-
before Labor Day.
he said.
main the same length," he said.
"The faculty agreed to this
Lundy said the faculty took
"They will all fall around the
under the condition that it
into account what the students
same times, as well."
•
-
4
SGA ·.net"Yo~ks up~tate
by BEN AGOES
point of the conference was to
News Editor .
compare and contrast each
A few Student Government
school's form of studeritgo·v-
Association members traveled
ernment.
to Rochester; N.Y. recently,
Kristen Weber, elections.
hoping to make things better at
corrimissiorier for the SGA, at"'
· Mari st. ·
tended the conference and said
Five SGA members, includ-
it was interesting to see how
ing Student Body President,
Marist's SGA compared to
Frank Maduri, attended the As-
other coileges.
soci.ated College Unions Inter-
"I gained a Jot of appreciation
national conference in Roches-
for our own SGA," she said. "A .
ter, Nov. 7-9. ·.
.
lot of schools don't have rep-
Monroe Comrriuriity College
resentation in clubs."
.
hosted the conference, which
She said one persorifrom an-
Maduri said was
a
chance for
other college said most of their
Members of the Student Goverment Association recently attended the Associated College nlons
students involved in student
decisions are made by
the stu-
International. The conference
will
be held atMarlst next .year. Pictured here from.left to right Heather
government at area
·
colleges to
dent body president and· vice
Suydam, Steve Coogan, Colleen McCulloch, Frank Madurl and Kristen Weber..
·
meet and share ideas.
president and the six people on
some of the other ones,'! he ' all of a. sudden it wa"s done,"
But SGA doesn't do that qur-
"A lot of colleges don't haYe
0
the board.· ·This surprised her,· said. "Some· schools are so
Maduri said. "We as students
selves necessarily, and I think .
RSCs;'their'ht:>usini(and.'resi-
she;said,'because most of the
grossly apathetic .that they've
havemorepowerthanwecould
that is a bit of hypocrisy."
dehtiai
'iife
do.es
'.a'
lot ·of the· deds16n here are made by ·th~
stopped electing positions and
ever possibly imagine." ·
.
He said the goaUs to make
stuff, a'nd 'the
student·
'govern..:
o'vei
20
people in. SGA. ·
they just• do majority. by ap-
Maduri said he came from the
the most efficient and student-
ment doesn't have anything
to
"Some said that they have a
pointment' because only three
conference realizing SGA has
oriented SGA possible ..
do with what happ.ens in the
hard time getting people in-
'
percent of the people vote."
to start following its own regu-
Maduri also said a lot of
dorms/ he said. "They t~ought · volved on their campus,'' yve-
At Marist, a full 25 percent
lations and filing out more out-
· other colleges tum to campus-
it was·a novel concept tha_t
I
ber said.
· · ·
of the student body votes dur-
come assessments.
wide referendums to formulate
have'.student life and RSCs as a
<Maduri said in relation to
ing elections. Maduri said
"We don't do enough out~
policy,' which is something" he
kind of middleman that con-
other colleges, Mariststude'nts
Marist students- have a ·great
come assessments in student
would like to see more of at
trols a lot of what happens
are concerned with what hap-
deal of power over policies
g·overnment," he sai.d. · "We
Marist The priority points sys- ·
there. They're going back to
pens on campus.
compared to other schools.
make the clubs do
it by submit-
tern and SGA constitution are
their colleges and saying, 'Hey,
"As compared to other
"When the students got upset,
ting .event evaluation forms
just some of the ,issues· that
Mari st has this, let's try if out."'
schools;
I
think Marist campus
the few students that did, about
three days after the event. Th~µ · col!l_g.
~r.
l?~o~ght.f?
~~
~t~df!f1ls [
According to Maduri, the
is a lot more involved than
theADAcomplianceissueand
weevaluatehowtheeventwas.
ditectlyiif:arefererii:lum:.' ·
1
· ' :
Student Goverment Association to hold Joint Power Meeting
Sunday', '.
by CHRIS GROGAN
Staff Writer
This weekend, while many
students are still sleeping off
the weekend's activities, mem-
bers of the Student Govern-
ment Association will be hard
at work. passing new \egis\a-
tion.
.
... . .
. .
~
; The'SGKwil(hold
1
its
annual.
Joint..:Power Meeting ·on Sun-
day where the Semiie and Ex-
ecutive board meet together
and try to pass as many bills as
they can5!1 o~e day.
. . . . .
The most significant point
Student Body President, Frank
Maduri, said he hopes to tackle
to produce a viable survey.
safety awareness and the library
plished as. we. ,91,n/:: he .sai.d. :
is the continued revamping of
"We have worked closely with
transition period.
'The sec:on<! semes_t<:r.i~
ilJt~Jl :
the SGA constitution.
President Dennis Murray to
Maduri said he is h'opeful a
we will be tackling ·e·asiei-'
is- \
"We hope to pass the whole
create a digital suggestion box
proposal recommending free .. sues."
·
thing by Sunday," he said: "Fi-
to be placed either outside of copies for media materials, a
Katherine Jowdy, director of ·
nally it will.be a plausible work-
the cafeteria or the SGA offices
shuttle bus to the Poughkeepsie
public relations, said she is
ing document. We've donethe
and also an online program
library and free token ring ac-
proud
of
what the SGAhas ac-
whole process diplomaticaHy
where students could voice
cess in donn rooms during the
complished so far and is look-
and ht}hree tnoriths rath~r than
their opinions
~n
the quality of transition wi\l be implemented.
ing forward to the Joint-Power
qv~rJj1ecourse·ofaY,ear:which . food
arid
dining.·in
the cafe~e~ -
."The
administration has been
Meeting.
had. ha'p'p'en·e·o -
Hf
ptev'io'u·s·, ria;"'he ·said: ' ·
. . -
.
much more cooperative than we
"This is a good opportunity to
years."
·
The power meeting will also
had expected," he said.
vote on and get things passed,
Other issues of interest to the
review the CORE Liberal Stud'- ·
· Maduri said this is the time
and bring up any concerns and '.
student body include
a cafete-
ies Program, and what changes· to get things done;
put plans into action," she said ..
ria survey to evaluate the food
SGA will recommend to the
~'.Because elections for next . "The achievements produced.
sen:ice
7
Senate Speaker, Keyin
faculty based upon• student year's positions take plac;e next
will help everyone here
·a:c·
Lundy has worked closely with
feedback.
semester, this is a time .when
Marist."
Sodexho and the administration
It will aJso address campus
we have to get as much accom- ·
·
-Visit with Pope
... continued from page 1
of the archive offered to
come
to;
the conference
·
and .
present a paper on the
Vatican's view of Roosevelt.
He also said this would add .
important credibility to the
conference.
"This Confrence will raise
the academic stature of
Marist College. We're very
fortunate that we have that
close affiliation with the
Franklin Roosevelt library
this is the type of event that
will bring world attention to
Marist next October,"
Massie said.
He said Brother Ambrose
was important
to
the growth
of Marist.
"He is the link between the
early years of the school and
the present," he said.
Murray said the meeting
was inspiring.
"To have met a man I greatly
admire and to participate in
an opportunity to honor
Brother Paul, was a plea-
sure," he said. "Seeing these
two men together that de-
voted their lives to working
on behalf of the church, as
well as making impacts all
around the world, was re-
markable."
November
is
Hunger
Awareness MONTH
at Marist
.
. . . . .
.
. .
. .
.
.
. .
.
.-
.
.
.
..
. . . .
..... .
Nov. 6-7
Nov.10
Nov.12
Nov.13
"Buck" Hunger
Days
{Donate a buck to fight hunger}
OXFAM Hunger Fast Sign Up
{For meal ticket holders}
Hunger Run / Walk
OXFAM FAST DAY
Nov. 17-21 .. ALL CAMPUS FOOD COLLECTION
Nov.19
Hunger Banquet
Campus Ministry
THE'CIRCLE
F
ea tu res
November 20, 1997
5
Emily's Recipe
of the Week
-Stud~nts getpaid for tutoring area children
..
Cheese and Apple Stuffed
Chicken
2 boneless, skinless chicken breast halves
Small apple
1/4 cup shredded cheddar cheese
1/4 cup apple juice or oj
1 tsp. cornstarch
2 tbsp. sliced green onion
1 tsp. chicken bouillon
Pound chicken to 1/4 in. thickness. Chop half
of apple and slice other half. Divide chopped
apple and cheese evenly between chicken
pieces. Roll up, folding in sides, and secure
with toothpicks. Arrange rolls, seam side
'doWJlJtjJ~~hg'cti~h.
Add 2tbsp. of fruit juice
and
cover
with plastic wrap and .cook in mi-
crowave
.
for 2 minutes. Rearrange chicken,
·acid sHcedapple, cover, and cook for 2-4 more
~bHD.µtl~('(:'Fot.
sauce
combine cornstarch, re-
maining
frufr
juice, green onion, and bouil-
lon. Cook, uncovered, for'2-3 minutes, stit-
ringevery 30. seconds.
.
-
.
.
CARISA KEANE
Sta.ff Writer
Marist students will soon have
. the opportunity to make some
money:
There is one catch. · This of-
fer only applies to English or
Education majors with a Fed-
eral Work Study (FWS) alloca-
tion.
As part of'the America Reads
program, President Clinton has
propose9 l 00,000 FWS stu-
dents to serve as tutors and
homework aides to help all
children read well by the end of
third grade. He is asking col-
leges to invest a significant
number of their new FWS po-
sitions for the I 997
/l
998 aca-
demic year.
Generally, the government
provides
75
percent of FWS
funding, while employers con-
tribute at least a 25 percent
match. To help institutions with
this challenge, Clinton has al-
lowed them to waive the em-
ployer matching. requirement
for FWS students tutoring pre-
school and elementary school
children. With I 00 percent
federal funding of FWS read-
ing tutors, all institutions have
the chance to participate. In-
stitutions meeting the goal of
50
percent of their increase in
FWS.funds will be listed on the
America Reads Honor Roll.
.More than 160 co_lleges and
. universities have. taken on this
ch_alJenge,.ins!u_9:\rn~M~~i~t.
. Carol Mulqueen, a~sistant'di-•
rector of financial aid; said
Marist is participating to pro-
mote community service in.
Top 10 Excuses for Skipping Class
:,t _
.19.1
overslept
9. If
orgof
to do my_ homework.
8.', I had an appointment withi?Jy advisor.
. '..;?':{
My
,peffish
died ..
6. I
have the Marist
flu.
5. I
had-.s6 rnu:chfu'f{
th~
night before that
I
couldn't rµi,p.jt:PY going to
·.
. ... , class.
4. ffost
ihy
·only
perL
3. Desks,are-too·uncomfortable·to sleep on.
2. I forgot where
I
was going.
1. Oh, I had class today?
Dutche_ss County.
"Marist has prided itself for
years in community· service,"
she said .
.
"And this is a real vis-
ible way of doing it."
The. committee consists of
Mulqueen, Deborah DiCaprio,
assistant dean for student ser- •
vices, Brother Frank Kelly, di-
rector of campus ministry.
Brother Michael Williams, as-
sistant director of campus min-
/istry, Marti Sherman, an educa~
tion professor and Gerard Cox,
vice president/dean for student
affairs.
The comittee is currently
making preparations to work
with local school districts and
libraries starting in 1998.
Preparations include training
and transporting the students,
developing contracts and set-
ting up payroll procedures.
The committee will be.
choosing students through
background checks and overall
skills in this area. Mulqueen
said background checks are par-
ticularly important.
"They are necessary because
we are placing students in a pub-
lic arena with children." she
said.
Participating students will be
earning
$6
an hour. They also
have the opportunity to expand
their community service hours,
work experience and self-ful-
fillment.
Mulqueen said this is a won-
derful chance for students to
work one-on-one with children.
"St~ct~his
can··~i-eate bonds
wiifi
these
kfds;''sheisaid.
0
1'And:
it gi°ves the kids
a
chance to
have one-on-one contact with
someone other than
.
their
teacher."
Out of the 200 invitations
sent out, Mulqueen said she re-
ceived 60 invitations from stu-
dents ready to participate .
"As long as we have willing
students, there is definitely
hope for this program," she
said.
Deborah DiCaprio, assistant
dean for student affairs, also
said she has hope for the pro-
gram.
"I feel it has great potential
for success," she said.
Non-majors are still encour-
aged to take part in the pro-
gram.
Mulqueen said the committee
is willing to train students who
are non-English or non-Educa-
tion majors.
"We will still provide these
students with training," she said.
"But they will be volunteering
and not getting paid for their
services."
Christopher Jette, senior cur-
rently on work-study, said he
has mixed feelings about the
program.
"Although it is a very noble
idea," he said, "most people on
work-study have academic
problems of their own and
should worry about furthering
their own education before oth-
ers."
The committee intends to be-
gin the program in January,
1998. Interested students can
contact Carol Mulqueen, ext.
243
l. Students already work-
ing on campus may sti\\
be
_in-
volved.in.this projeclas.fong as
they do not work more than 20
hours per week total in all their
jobs.
Career Quest. ... The benefits of interning
HILARY NELOMS
. ~peciaf
I<!
The Circle
First of all, we at the Center
of Career Services would like
to thank all of the students who
attended the Career Expo in
October. The turnout was great
and the employers said they
were:very impressed by many.
of the students they talked to. ·
Just a word on internships·
this week. They are important,
plairi and simple. You cari only
learn so much in a classroom,
and an internship is a great way
to learn more.
When an employer· looks at
your resume, grades are not al .. ,
ways the rnost important factor. ·
They like to see what kind of
experience that you have in the
work field, and internships are
just an added bonus.
If
you have
one or two internships under
your belt, employers may be
moreinclined to hire you.
Now' do not misunderstand
me. I am nottrying to say that
you can just get bad grades, get.
a good internship, and get a job.
It does not work like that. You
still need to do well in school.
Without decent grades, you
will not.even be considered
for
an internship.
Some people-may think ofin-·
terns hips as some job where all
you do is file, get some guy cof-
fee, and answer phones all day.
While a couple of jobs may do
that, most of the. others will
give you a lot of experience. It
can also help yo~ to decide
whether or not this is the field
(whatever it may be) that you
really want to go into.
Internships .tre il)1portant and
wort~\\'hile. , Go down to the
Center of Career Services to
fi·nd
out
more information on
internship requirements and
av~i,lability. That is it for now,
until next time.
, The,,Peer :support
Lfrte·-would like
,to
announce their new
e-mail · · address:
HZPL.
Students can
.
.
.
.
.
.
''
..
;
.
.
.
.
,.
··,
;
~
send confidential e-
mail to be answered
by tl}e Peer Support
Line. The group can
also be· reached by
phone at x3350, any-
time between the
hour_s
of
10
p.m. to
12
a.m., Sunday
through Thrusday.
6
.
THE
CIRCLE,
November 20; 1997
Food Dllde.
·
kribWS
whathe
·
·
·
wants··in PQttghket;l)Sie
.
\
·
·
.
'
'
,,
.
.
, , ,
.
:
.
•
.,•··
,
,
·
,'
TOMNARDI
.
.
Food Dude
·
Last week
I
spoke about the
lack of fast food places here
arourid Poughkeepsie.
I
also
commented that the ones we
had are not that good. This week
I am going to talk about some
of the different fast food places
that we should have here in the
Poughkeepsie area.
do not have
.
enough:
·
1 \1/~nt a
soriedtoo
.
heavilywilhsalt,pep-
·
place where yoi.lcan get shakes,
per and gai-Hc powder.
, ..
malteds, banana splits, an
.
d
.
Steak 'n Shake is another
made
·
to order sundaes.
I
also
chain that is extremely popular
.
want gourmet flavors.
in
othei- parts
.
of the country:
What we need is a Ben and
Founded in Illinois back in
Jerry's. Now, someone might
I
934, Steak '
.
n Shake is ex-
argue by saying that we have a
tremely popular out in Indiana
Dairy Queen right up the road.
and Missouri. It is a shame that
True, but Dairy Queen is like an
it
is not better know in our part
old coilserva·tive republican.
of the country.
.
.
Outdated and out of touch. Ben
-
·
They
.
are modeled
.
!}fter a
and Jerry's is more like a hip
J
950's style diner. They are a
generation X'er.
combinatiori
·
-
fastfood sit down
·
--
·
.,,
·.'
•
•
they are loc;tb~
i~
:
·
:
JMii&nr
·
·
.
·
J~
,
cif~~i:
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6ut if
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Wl)~ld
~
~ice
•
geographic regioris
of
the coun•
-
-
t~
·
see
.
i:nqr~Jast food e.stabl1sh-
try
.
the prices would
·
not apply
ments m the area
<
But I should
here.
..
.
be
·
grateful for the ones 'Ye do
Another ~rie of my favorite
.
have .
.
Jr
·
could be worst. We
fast fool
/
chains is Kenny
could be victims of havi~g a
Rodgers Roasters. Picture
Hardees across the street.
·
Till
Boston MarkeCwith food that
next time.
. ,
actually tastes good. Boston
(Disdaim
7
r: The s~ateme~t
Market's food is very bland.
made regardmg the hbrary 1s
·
Their chicken is grizzly
.·
arid
my opinion
.
and
m~
.
o~i~io_n
·
their side dishes are flavorless.
only
.
In fact everythmg m this
Kenny Rogers .Roasters had
article
·
is my opinio?;
.
~~t
i~
unbelievable chicken and even
the purpose of an
.
opm1on
But before
I
do that a couple
of loyal readers brought a
couple of items to my attention.
The first is that there are no
good Chinese take-outs around
here.
I
have to agree with that.
Fortune Cooky has a great
name, and
I
wish I could say the
same about the food but I can-
not.
Another fast food eatery,
restaurant. Their burgers, or
which is popular in other parts
steak.burgers as they can them,
of the country, that I would love
are
·
some
of the best around.
to see open up close to cam-
They are served a variety of
pus, is Miami Subs. Miami
ways. My favorite is The
Subs is one of my favorite fast
Frisco, which contains two
food establishments. Original-
steak burgers, melted American
ing in Florida, th
.
is chain is
and Swiss cheese, arid lettuce
slowly moving north. Miami
and tomato. It is served with a
Subs has the standard burgers
tangy sauce
.
on a sourdough
and cold cut hero's. But their
roll. For breakfast, you can get
real specialties are their cheese
a steakburger topped with an
steaks and chicken cheese
egg and cheese.
better side dishes.
column. I have been working
So as I said (or tried to),Jast
in the restaurant business for
week we need more
·
fast food
over six years, and1have been
places on campus, or within the
cooki~g my whcile life.
I
fe:I
vacinity of campus. Now be-
that this enables me to_be a
fair
fore you read the next paragraph
and knowledgeable Judg~ of
please read the disclaimer at the
.
foo~. But yo? have every_ nght
bottom of the article.
to disagree with me ... that 1s one
.
Last week I wrote (in jest)
of the freedoms we enjoy as
I have not had their food
·
since my freshman year, so
maybe it has gotten better. The
only accurate way to describe
their food is by saying that it
tastes like an amateur chef
cooked it. The entrees I had all
seemed off. One was too salty,
another was flavorless, and
some of the vegetables in one
dish were anything but fresh. If
anyone knows of any good
Asian food around here, please
let me know.
The second item brought up
by one of my readers, is one in
which I agree wholeheartedly
with. We really need an ice-
cream parlor
.
on campus or
nearby. I am aware that the caba-
ret does have ice
cream
;
but they
steaks;
In addition to the steak
These
·
sandwiches are deli-
burgers, they also have famous
cious. The tender meat is thinly
chili. Most people serve chili
sliced, mixed with melted pro-
with rice, but instead of serv-
volone and mozzarella cheese
ing it over rice, Steak n' Shake
and served on a warm roll. They
serves it over spaghetti
.
Chili
also come with a variety of top-
5-Way consists of spaghetti
pings including sauteed onions
topped with chili, extra beef,
and mushrooms. Outside of onions and cheese. This is a
Philly, these are probably some
nice alternative to the typical
of the best cheese steaks
accompaniment of chili. For
around.
those who are looking for
.
All the sandwiches are avail-
something a little healthier,
able on a six-inch roll or on a
·
they also have various salads
12-inch roll. Another plus to
·
and a couple qfdifferent grilled
Miami Subs is that most loca-
.
ch\.ckeli)andwiches,
.·
.
.
t.ion~ serveb,eer.
:
Myqhly
com~
. _
:
1
~
wasgoin1/i~put in
.
the prices
plaint is that their fries are sea-
for both those chains but since
about how Marist should build
Americans.
a food court before they build
a new library. The more I think
about the issue the more I think
that I am right. Yes, arguably a
good library is more important
·
than a food court, but I feel that
a food court will attract more
potential students than
_
the new
library will. Someone might
counter by saying that people
will leave the school if they are
not happy with the library. In
my opinion nobody is going to
leave Marist just because they
.
are unhappy with the library.
.
Even if people did leave, who
cares? We have more than
,
enough students here.just look
·
at the housirig problem.
I
understand
that it i& notfoa-'-
'
sible
to
build a food court here
INSTANT CREDIT
•a.•.aa~
.
· .
...
~
Guamn~TOCr~=~i::
~~-=tl.imits
•··
.··
·
·
~
No
CREDITiNO,JOBt:NP
PARBNT~SIGNER.-NO SECUR,l'l'YQt:PQij~t
•
no
cretlit •
;bad
credit
·
•
n:o inCOJlle?
'
-
·
.
.
-
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.
_
-
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.:•you.:€a11
:QuaJ.U1f
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TwotOf
thedWo-·
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Wldely
Used
Credlt
·
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In
The-.:Werld
,
4bdayl
Wa11t
1
7
/SA
&
A1cl.5tcrl'clrd Credit Ca1~ds?
'
-
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ORDER FORM
- .
-----:,
YES!
·lwant
'
Credit'..Ccltds
immediately.
CM~
·PQ
_
-i,ox
1-06.62.,. ATLANTA, GA
30321
.
.
.
.
.
GUARANTEED APPROVAL
Address ...... , ________
,,.
.....
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.. _, .....
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• • ~ -
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.......... .., .. _
.. _, _, ,_ .. __ ,_, ........ " .................
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I
THE CIRCLE,
November 20, 1997
'·TOTS teaches students
·
to
car~
·qbout
theii;
:
OOm~
:
unity
;
.
;
_
..
.
.
'
.
'
.
'
_
.
.
.
.
,
·
M~TTHEW COUMBES
"We spend a Sunday afternoon
.·
.
:
:
.
StcifIWriter
. .
:
.
.
.
"
interacting with underprivile
·
ged
!
..
,Altholig~ the n~meTOTS_may
children;" she ·said
.c.
'.':
·
•
.
,
not ~ound familiar,'iris becom-
Members of TOTS also partici-
·
.
:)ng
a
popular club at Marist.
·
pate in various one-day events
:
TOTS;Teachers of Tom~r-
througho'tit the community.
_
;row;
·is
a
club designed for psy-
.
One of the events TOTS volun-
ch~logy and special education
:·
teers for is One-to-One
•bay
in
:,
ma.iors,
_
but open to the entire
·
correlation with
·
the psychology
·
. ~arist Community. The club
·
club:According to Areneo,
_
this
, meets
·
every other J:uesday at
is a day of fun and games for un-
·
9:30
p.m. in student center
derprivileged children. The event
room 348.
·
is held at' Mari st in April and is
The main purpose of TOTS;
open to anyone who would like
.
according
to senior Michele · to get involveµ.
··
Araneo, president of the club,
Another program is the Book
7
is helping the community.
Fair that is held annually, usually
•~Basically
our goal is to use
in December. Areneo said the
·
our education, that we are get-
fair is helpful for the club and
ting at Marist College, to help
special education majors.
The Teachers of Tomorrow bann
_
er was made by children participating in the On;~t~-o'~~-)d~;~
One-to-One· ~ay Is held each year for underprlvelaged children.
_the community," she said.
"It is basically a fundraiser for
able to the community, in-
cluding the faculty," she said
secretaries in the club, said the
club has helped her as well.
better prepared for the future.
'Teachers of Tomorrow is a
good
support
system for the
members to use to go out into
their field of
education."
she
said.
Araneo said the club partici-
the club," she said. "We sell
.
pates in various programs at
children's books that are helpful
Poughkeepsie
·
schools.
to special education majors."
TOTS offers special educa-
tion and psychology majors a
chance to improve their se-
lection process of courses.
"I found this year to be ben-
efic_ial
,"
she said.
"We
had
workshops on technology and
education. We used the internet
·
and power point to improve our
knowledge iil
education."
One of the programs involves
.
In addition to these events,
:
Tubman Terrace; an elementary
-
Teachers of Tomorrow will be
-
·
school in
·
Poughkeepsie. On
making food baskets during Hun-
;
Tuesday, Wednesday and Thurs-
ger Week.
' dar afternoons members go
TOTS fonned in the Fall 1996
;
there and tutor and read with the
semester and has
·
grown ever
r
children,
..
since. Araneo said growth
·
has
~;"'X
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-
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.
!
'
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•••
·
.,
t
r·:
•
·
·
C
~
,
.
.
-~
Junior Jill Salvucci said the
club has helped her choose
which courses to take.
"I
j1,1st joined this
semes-
ter," she said. "It's very infor-
.
mative.
It is very helpful for
picking courses."
TOTS also offers
a
question
.
and
answer panel. This enables
students
to ask
student
teach-
ers for advice or discuss prob-
lems they may have.
According to Araneo. another
advantage of the club is to help
its members improve their own
learning experience.
"We are trying to enrich our
own selves."
she
said. "Not
only do we help the commu-
ni1y. but
we
help
ourselves."
\':.:~
?,_AtiPt~Ji'_roje<;(
is' the
··
Bard
made the club an asset to the com-
\ "·and Ballad Project. Araneo said
munity.
.
the i>:u"rpose of the project is to
"We
have grown to about
.
150
,
help underprivileged children.
members and made the club avail~
Sophomore Meghan
Nelson, one of the multiple
Junior Jennifer Canonico
said the panel will help her be
Plan Ahead
0
•
Winter Intersession - Schedule of Courses
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.
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ART
·
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ii
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Basic Drawing
·
·
·
·
·
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· ·
Swann
ART
292L-l
11
ST: Research Art History (indep. study - Internet). Marquardt
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COM
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11
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Ngoh
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COM
..
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pdL.:.111
The AJ1 of.the Film
(9:40
a.m.
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l:oo
Jl.lll.)
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C:OM
255L~l
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Comnmnicating on the Internet
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Criminology
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Lavin
ENG
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American Short Fiction
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Timm
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31:7L
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ChJld Development
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145N-112
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355L~ 112
Applicatiqns
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Winter
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·
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ENG
28
_
0L-l 12
Creative Writing·
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_
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Writing for
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RE~IStiU)]:C.l~:
}l~gist~tion#or ~farist_Coi~~ge
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HIST
312L-112 ·
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American Presidency (dual listed)
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Sh~ffer
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MATH
Z30L-ll2
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Operati?naUv1odels
,_
(prerequisite)
Rancourt
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·
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December
-
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312L~l l2
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202L-l12
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del Rosario
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R
THE
CiRCLEEDITQRIALN~~emb~
·
r
20,1997-
Editorials
·
-
The
View
from Sue:.)
by
sJe
do~ct\1/in
Editor
looks
.
to m~e
most
offinatyear·atMarist
i
.
.
'
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a11ks
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A-e
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·
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I have been realizing lately that I am
graduating in May. Now,
·
this might
sound like a ridiculous s~atement, but
it really is not.
.
.
.
.
_
-
When
I
first came to Mari
st,
the Real
World seemed so far
_away,
I could not
even begin to grasp it. Internships.jobs;
these meant nothing to me at all.
I
was
concerned with making new friends,
going out and getting work done.
By sophomore ye_ar,
l
had declared ·
my major, which is English, and sort-
of had an idea about
:
what I wanted to
do, but everything seemed so far way,
that
I
still did not give it much thought:'
Then, junior
-
year it started to hit me.
I
had to get an internship overthe sum-
mer.
I
knew
l
wanted to go into pub-
lishing. but I still did notface the real-
ity of graduating.
·
All of this rambling leads me to now.
I
am just about a semester away from
leaving Marist and
I
cannot believe it.
I
am-about
to enter the
.
Real World.
What exactly is the Real World and
how much different is it than Marist?
When all of my alumni friends came
back on alumni weekend, they all had
the
same
advice; live up my senior year,
because it is all downhill from there.
When
I
think about this,
I
have to ad-
mit that a paralyzing fear grips me, and
I
have a little trouble breathing. What
happens when the safety of the Marist
wall (which, incidentally, is strictly en-
forced by Security) crumbles, and all
of us seniors are left on our own?
I
know the insignificant things like
cabs for a dollar and nickel drafts prob-
.
ably will not be a part of my life when
I
graduate, but what happens to the friend-
ships
I have made here?
I
feel so close and so comfortable to
the friends
I
have
·
made here; that it
would be terrible to Jose touch with any
of them, but when. I look back at my-.
high school friends
_
,
'
ihive
to admit that
I probab
_
ly will lose
_
touch with- some
of them.·
,
..
so
>
ori the
advice
o(my 3tu111n(
·
friends;
.
I amOtrying tc)seize every
:
rno-
·
ment and do as rrian{things as I canJo
'
..
·:
.·
. .
.
··
•
·
rnake
'
ihis year
,
grea~ ..•. wait, who am I
kidding? Senior
·
. ye
'
ar means capping,
·
hard classes and more work than ever.
·
So when does this leave time to do
.
all
of those great things?
·
·.
When cio we all have time to spend to~
gether except fate at night, wheri_
all
of
.
'qui.<rneetings
and all of our work is.
done? Is this.last
·
year spent with rny
friends, in our final bonding moments,
going
_
to be
.
a successionof drunken
memories? Not thanhe whole "scene'!
is not fun, but I do
-
not want the memo
·
ry
of which bars had what specials on what
·
nights with ine a:s my memory ofMarisi.
I had a wonderful three and a half
years at Marist so far, and I can defi-
nitely say that I have grown a lot, and
gone through a lot. I would love to end
senior year with a_huge bang; but I think
there is more to it thari that. !think that
we all should realize that we will never
have these years again and that we have
·to
make the most of them starting now.
·
My friends and I might not have all the
Dear Editor,
.
time in the world to spend together, but
Letter to the Editor
we have all gone through so much that I
.
I
am writing regarding an incident occurring on Saturday, Qctober
26,
.1991.-
.
have to hope that we will always be
during Marist College's Alumni Weekend. Th_e incident occurred ~s. _rr,iysel( _an_d
.
there for each other, and that the bonds
two of my friends, both fellow alumni were visiting a friend on campus who
is
still
we hav.e formed here will not break. I
·
currently attending MaristCollege. This student, who will remain nameless, lives
would love it if we all looked past some
·
in Gartland Commons. I was carrying an unopened twelve-pack of beer aci-ossthe
of the petty things that we fight about,
lawn approaching Gartland when I was stopped by secl}rity guard, Mr.
_
Mark Lakin.
·
_
and conc~ntrate on the good times we
Mr. Lakin asked what I was doing running across campus with beer. Jwas
.
run11ing
.
have had, and the good times that are left.
in an attempt to catch up to one of my friends, and for no other reason.
, .
_
.
I guess
.
the moral of this senseless
ram-
With nothing to hide, I was fully cooperative. I politely
·supplied
h,rn
·
with the
bling is that we should live up our time
information he requested, including two forms of identificaticm (both a.valid New
here.That does not mean partying like a
York State driver license and my old Marist
ID). I
was informed by Mr.Lakin that
maniac every night, but taking time
.
·
to Iwas required to leave campus. At this poi~t, my two othe
_
r
friends (who had not
• cl;lerish
.
the friendships that have been
_
:
_
been
·
running) can1e upon the scene. When they· stopped to see what was happen"'.
.
formed; arid
.
making the m.o~t2f.ey~JY::.
/ )
rig
/
they,
.:
~er.e,als9
__
stopp~d~~.11d
,
qlles.tiQJ)~g .. _, \Jpon
.
•
produ~ing
•
·
i<l,entific~tion,_.1,ut
-.
thing Marist has
i
to
offer.
,_,_\._·\a.:.:
·
:;
'.,
'.1
;e:-sc
fnot-
:
current,validatedMarist-
~
lD}ttiey
'
0
wetefaJs&told
thai"thejifrnusfflc:~'ie{;affipus"1r~
·
.·
.
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.
·
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..
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;
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.
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·};W:
,
,/~
_
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Min~i'ihe en·d of any fun
Ji
y,;ere
:
0
ha,yi#g;;.we had'severarpfh~i-
-
irt>blen,is"':,vith
:- .
Stephame
_Mercurio
ts
the Ed1tor:1g._-
:
:
;
.
thj's
·
idea ofJeaving campus
:
One'in:ajor pr9bletj:i w~ had
,vas
~tiatwe:trad
no
\\'her¢
):
.
Chief for
The Circle
.
.
~:·
.
.
;
·
,_,
to
go. There were no
.
hotel
,
rooqis~v~ifable)rtthe are~; ther~
\Vere
_
no
"
mordrafos
.
··
running back to New York QitYJor
?!:>out
(ivfti8urs;
·
and
~9
top 1,talloff
t
all
.
three
.
_
.
.
_
_
.
.
,
:
.
_
··:.
·.·
.
.
,, _ ,
..
·.
•
of:us
·
_
hacl:been d
_
rinking so
:
V{f disf~~nl:iiri
_
~
~
it
,
wou}d be very
_
pl'.Uden(to driyC!. Qne
Administrator
.
commends students
.
for poise,
corrippsQte
·
.
C
•
S:Cli'rityguard actually to~d
'
~s
'
th~i
_;
'.Ye
'.
pip,#}tse,e~.
-
d~nlc
,
t~;
-
htm:
-
~l\h"P,t(~~:
r
th,Jrj
,
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_.·_
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,
•·
·
:
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_
.
anyone would agree, that 1twas·good
_
for 1!,Jl'part1es th
.
at.we
_
d_1dn'J.follow ij1sJudge-
.
Dear Editor:
.
.
. . .
.
.
eventsrests on the students themselves.
:
·
ment.
.
·.·
.
•
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.
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. ,·
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-
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...
,
'
I would like to publicly c1cknowl~dge., After all, when employers com~ to
.
earn"
. ·• .-
.
~ectirity had.the_ grand idea that
W,~
·
c'ouiclgo to
.
tile I?alace
:
Di11fr ) g~ess
we
Marist students for.their fine represen-
pus, their aim is to interact with as many
"
.
cb
_
uld have, but was
_
it reason
'
abl~ to ~_it inJtie"c:finer
·
for fi\'.~
_
or_six hours UJJtjl we
.
tation auhe recent Career arid Employer
well qualified
'
and
-
prepared st:tiderits as
·
.
w~re
sober enough to legally drive, or theMwas·atrain back to ~fow)'.'oik~ityJ,
f.
Expo. There were ~o
.
many employers
possible.
·.
.
.
.
.
·
_
·.
.
. ·.
>;_
··'; .
.
·
,
don't think that the manageme11tpf
~~e
·
P,~I~ce \iiould
p~v~
~ppfe'~1a.(~q}~µ,r
;
us,~
q(
who made a special effort to tell me how
' ·
<
Well, Mari st students, you
,
were,Jru
.
l_Y'
.
.
their eateryas a holding tailk Jor
:
int~x
_
i~i~_d)y1aii~t
~luaj~i:
'/.;c"{.:;
,t
·
_
_.:,:·
•
{i:
<
.
.
impressive our students }Vere- weB spo-
,
a credit to yourselves an~ t_llis institu~
·
.
·•
•
After a long argument b~tw~en
,
tis;
:·
I\lft,.
:_.
µ¥-i11,
:
two
ci.Jh~(s
_
ecllrjty guards, arid ari
ken, well dressed, prepared, outgoing
tion
!
.
.
·
on duty resident director, who
·
had recendy:been called
,
ori
_
the scene, we realized
.
and confidenL And they
·
were amazed
·.
·
that Marist
_
wasn't budging oil:
•
their blessed policy.
_
As
~
opposed to getting ar-
.·
.
at the number of students attending the
Sincerely,
.
rested, we gathered our b
_
~longings and Jen campus
:
.
_
.
. ;
:
..
.
.
.
·.
_
·
_-
-
_
.
.
event.
.
•.
.
. .
Deidre Sepp, Direct~r
-
.
lhave never been treated as badly at others.chools which Thav~
_
visit~cl as I was
'
Let's face it, the success o{ career
Center for C:areer Services
at I\lfari
_
st College/The a~sµrditfofthis, especiaHyas ~n altirimi is infuriating. I
·
.
'
_
think that the guest policy at ~arjst is ridiculous,but tl)atis
.
not the.issue athand
Student says tree shhhtd be saved,
ot
at least respected
and
.
another story altogether
/
n~~lieve that Marist Security
'
should follow
0
proce-
d1,1re, but certain members
·
ne·~_dlobe a littleJess zealou~ a!}d a I~tt}eJessegotisti-
Ti
h Ed"
.·
cal in their
>
ways.
I
also think that it would do Marisf well
to
reevaluate their
~
~ta:
w~~~g
in response to the article, "Ginkgo tre~ slated for destruction,'; ex-
policy, especially <>n Alumni)Yeek
.
end.
.
:
.
.· .
.
.
·
:
.
:
.
·_ ..
. ·-·
__
_
.
_
_
_
.
_
·
__ .
·
·
pressing my concern for .this issue. In particular, I would like to aMre~s th_e com-
·
I know the incident in which we
·
were involved in alienated aileastthree former.
ments made by the library director, ~ohn McGinty
.
.
In my opinion, McGinty is not
. ·
students and one current studeht, not
-
to mention others that have been
·
told of our
being sensitive to the fact that this i~ a very special and unique tree, and is not one
.
story, Ireally don't
know
how ~uch Mari
st
relies on dona~ions, biit I
.
do know it is
•
.
to just destroy because it "is totally in the way,'
,
' as he st~ted in the article. This is an
an important .aspectof
prom◊tion,
includingachieving rankings
.
tn
such publica-
extremely selfish and narrow-minded comment because in reality, the new library wm
tions at
.
US Ne_ws and Worfd Report~ America
'
s Best Collegrs .
.
It'also seems to
be in the way of the tree.
·
After all, the Ginkgo has occupied that spot longer than we
me that angering prospective qonors who have approximately sixty m<>re years io
have been here.
live and give, not
·
only inoney, b
·
ut commentsof ad_vice
·
to prospective students of
I feel it isimportantthat
_
we make a change, as a whole, in our way ofthirtking, and
the future, isn't the best busi11ess
.
option for any
_college
.
. ·
I don't mean.this as a
realize that we are.not the only living beings on this planet. We have to appreciate
threat
.
I simply want to poit1t out th~ truth of the matt~r ,in hopes
.
that it won't
and respect nature, as well as share the earth with each other and eliminate such an
happen again, or will at least open someone's eyes to the matter.-
.
egocentric point of view.
·
I hope that this letter has
_
not been written in vain. I have never before felt com-
This issue is close to my heart because a few days before I read this article, it was
pelled to write a letter such
_
as this, but I 'felt
·
this incident was something that
_evening
and I noticed that the sun was setting over campus, casting a soft yellow
could not be ignored. l do realize,, as with all things, change does not come over-
glow on the tree in particular. The tree looked.beautiful and magnificent, and its
night. Change, however, will not come at an if it seems unnecessary. After our
.
Jeav~
.
seemed
·
golden. I watched the tree uRtil the sun set over the river. Just
experience at Alumni Weekend, I would say
.
that change 1s necessary. I thank you
because people do not sit underneath the Ginkgo, as McGinty pointed out, does not
for your time in reading this, but I do not thank Mari st College for the way my
mean that people do not appreciate it.
friends and I were treated this past Alumni Weekend.
·
I realize that preserving this tree is a difficult and expensive task. To build the new
library around the tree would be a compromise, but if it cannot be done, the least we
can do is recognize how special the Ginkgo really is, and not treat it as ari obstacle
that shou~d just be disposed of to make way for our new library.
Sincerely,
Julie Morin
Sincerely,
William J. Rickman-Class of
1995
THE
CIRCLE
QPINIQ N
November 20, 19-97
9
·
Sadam Shallle about Sadam Hussein
.
'
'
'
'
'
.
.
'
.
'
'·
'
'
.
.
.
-
.
·
Efery
few
years, a swarthy
.
Middle
.
Eastern dictator
•
p6ps
his head out of a deep hole
,
sees
·
how things are out there
,
arid
··
gets chased back underground
as soori as he sees his shadow,
-
ensuring that we have ar least
six i:nore years of tyranny. Yes,
it
.
would
-
appear that
.
itis ~nee
··
again time for Sadam-hogDay
.
Apparently, Sadam is as resil
-
ient as Jason Vorhees from the
Friday the 13th films.
-
Just
when you though~ that he had
finally been gotten rid of, he
-
pops back up.
·
·
·
-·
Whether
it
is to cause some
trouble for some
.
camp
.
coun-
selors, or to tell UN weapons
inspectors to get out of his
country, we really should never
consider Sadam to be out
.
for
the count. Something tells me
that even if Sadam were placed
at the bottom of a lake, all
chained up and his feet in con-
crete, he would still manage to
find his way out in time for the
sequel.
The biggest problem most
people have with Sadain is that
there seems to be an
·
over-
whelming belief that Sadam had
·
been taken care
.
of seven years
ago. Many believe th
.
at Big Bad
Bush made sure that Sadam had
been so thoroughly trounced
and his
·
autliority was so
·
se-
verely in
.
question
·
; that he
·
would have difficulty getting a
job as Assistant Manager of a
Wal Mart, much less manage to
keep his job as a tyrannical des
0
poL
.
READ
.
.
.
.
.
.
·
.
.
.
It
is Nov. 20,
.
·
d~
.
you know
wheri your dgarettes
·
are?
·
If
yoifoo
'
nofyotd,ettel-'-go
get
a
.
··
pack and Hght one up becaus~
,
today is The Great Ain
:
etican
·
Sm()ke
•
Out .. Wait a s
.
ecorid,
maybe today
is
the day e
'
very-
orie 1s
:
supp
'
osed to
'
stdp smok-
.
ing
,
If lam wrong and we
are
.
all
-
supposed
-
to
-
not smoke
,
to-'
.
day, I have just one question:
why?
.
.
.
I
know, the Surgeon General
says smoking causes Jung can-
-
cer: The General says fr
-
is bad
.
to smoke and if you smol_<e for
a long period of time it can ktll
you. The Gener~l also says that
cigarettes
·
wilL not make you
look cool. But that is not true.
_
Cigarettes
_
make people look
.
very coot
·
Let us
be
horiest, how
.
many times
·
have you looked
across
'
the bar and seeri
·
a girl
•
who looked Hke
·
an European
.
princess taking a drag
off a
cigarette· a13d said to yourself
that she is the··girl of. your
dreams? And ladies, how many
times has the added buzz of a
cigarette after a few
.
beers
made
.
a young man look more
attractive?
_
Even though the
added aspect of alcohol and the
poor lighting of bars take away
from myargument; people still
·
look naturally more rebellious
with a cigarette in their hand or
their mouth.
Cigarettes are also very re-
laxing in times of stress
.
The
usual rebuttal to this is that
people should not need ciga-
\;;
'.~
-
-
.
.
·.
_\·
--4,t:,._~;,::,::~
~ -
·-:
not wholly successful, the UN
could send reinforcements of
Rick James and Jackson
Browne.
If
things got
REALLY
bad, we could always send O.J
.
Sadam would just have to look
at him before meeting any and
all demands made by the UN.
Sadam Hussein sits on his throne,
.
In no danger of being assaslnated
by
the United States.
Perhaps Hussei~ is starting to
realize just how frightening
Americans can be, because, at
press time
,
he had issued a
statement where he was assur-
ing everyone that he would like
to avoid confrontation at all
costs. Or
,
what he really meant
was that he did not want a good
old butt-whooping
.
But, as we have seen time and
again over the
.
past several
years, Sadam was not only alive
and well,. but he was actually
leading a pretty cushy lifestyle.
You may have evenseen him on
t
_
he all-new Pictionary with
Alan Thicke.
So, was Operation Desert
Storm
~
or as I have always
referred. to it: Operation Get
Away From
.
Our Oil -
as suc-
cessful as was initially thought?
Well, one person who would
disagree is former President
Bush. His sky-highapproval rat-
ings after the Gulf War seemed
to guarantee another four-year
continuation for
·
the Reagan
·
Dynasty.
How could Bush have known
that a
·
scant year and a half later
a c~mtinuation of the Bush Ad-
ministration would have been as
likely, to succeed as
,
a resur-
gence of New Coke? Of course,
_ ifhe had, he probably would not
have even bothered in the first
place.
After all, Bush had already
gotten one
_
of his old drug bud-
dies from his CIA days locked
up;
in
the person of Manuel
Noriega
.
It had not been all that
long before the Gulf War that a
good will delegation (including
then-Senator Robert
i
.
Dole of
Kansas) to make sure that the
United States kept the good
fa-
vor of the benevolent Hussein.
As our current president knows
only too well, you cannot put all
of-your old friends in jail. This
is probably why Sadam
's
punish-
ment was more of a slap on the
wr
_
ist than the trouncing that he
so
.
richly deserved.
One person who is probably
satisfied with the outcome of
the Gulf War is Stormin'
.
.
-. _
_
· ·
Photo councsy or Emily H
c
a.,.Jip
EmUy Heaslip amoldng a butt- to see her reaction, go to pg. 10
,
,
rettes to relax them
.
·
We are
'
human beings, though
;
and we
do all sorts of things to try
to
calm dowri when times get a
little ovenvhelming.
·
so a
ciga-
rette may not be the worst op~
tion compared to things like
drugs,
_
alcohol
·
and beating the
hell outof your boss or teacher
.
.
·
Cigarettes also help the curb
the appetites of hungry young
coIJege students who are look-
ing to avoid the infamous fresh-
man fifteen, or twenty for that
matter. Oh,_do not take it per-
sonally, there is no way to avoid
putting on' weight in college
.
I
put on about 30 pounds my
freshman year. But then again
,
I did not smoke too many ciga-
rettes back then
.
But it was not
because the President told me
not to, or because the Surgeon
General came to my house, but
rather because I
·
was only a
freshman, so my mom was not
allowed to know about me
smoking anything.
The President and U.S. Gov-
ernment have decided to crack
dO\vn on cigarettes
.
The ciga-
rette companies are going to
have
to
pay
•
hefty sums to
people who have become ad-
dicted.· Joe Camel is dead and
the Marlboro man is hooked tip
t_o a respirator and life support
system, with little time left.
The government is in the
•
pro-
cess of getting rid of cigarette
vending machines
,
and bill-
boards with cigarette ads.
-
So
my friends and I are waiting with
baited breath for the day a pack
·
of Marlboros will cost
·
us
$5.00. But will that really stop
smoking?
·
The answer is no
.
I realize that
vending machines are bad be-
cause of young kids using them
to get cigarettes. I do not com-
plain when I get carded at a con-
venience store because I look
younger than 26. These laws are
designed make sure the popula-
tion of America all has a chance
to reach five feet in height. A
ten-year old boy or girl should
not smoke cigarettes because it
can have much stronger reper-
cussions than an adult smoking.
Please see
SMOKING
page JO
...
Norman Shwartzkopf. He
made sure that our soldiers
fought the good fight, and
were only exposed to a mini-
mal amount of hazardous
chemicals
.
If anyone got a
good book deal out of this
,
it
was Shwartzkopf.
As well he should, he is
proud lo have led the U.S
.
to
victory over Hussein, even if
he was told not to finish the
job. This i
s
why I think that we
should have sent Ike. No, not
Dwight D. Eisenhower, al-
though he probably would have
been good for morale. But, he
could riot personally have
done as good a job as the other
Ike: Ike Turner
.
Within hours of meeting
Sadam, Ike would have tossed
him around so much, he would
agree to just about anything.
On the off~chance that he was
He has said that he would
agree to American representa-
tives on the teams of UN weap-
ons inspectors, provided that
there was equal representation
by all the other permanent
members of the UN Security
Council. Defense Secretary
Cohen replied that someone on
probation does not get to pick
who their probation officers are.
However
,
Cohen did make it
clear that t'1is sort of decision
should be left to the United Na-
tions. Which is really for the
best, because the less involved
we become with this whole mat-
ter the better.
Christian Bladt is the Senior
Political Correspondent for
The Circle,
and is moving on
up to a deluxe apartment in the
sky.
THE CIRCLE
Stephanie
.
Mercurio
Editor-in-chief
Ben Agoes
News Editor
Christopher Thorne
Focus Editor
Steve Wanczyk
Sports Editor
Joe Scotto
Chris Hogan
G. Modele Clarke
Gyna Slomcinsky
Managing Editor
Emily Kucharczyk
Feature Editor
Tim Manson
Opinion Editor
Jim Dziezynski
Arts
& Entertainment Editor
Photography Editor
Business Manager
Faculty Adviser
If
you have a story idea, would like to publicize a club event
or if you would like to send a letter to the editor, you can e-
mail
The Circle
at HZAL.
If
you are interested in advertising in The Circle, pleas~kave
a message for Chris Hogan at 575-3000 ext. 2429.
I
r
>
C
10
OPINION
~~~"Jh:,t
:
:
:"
c:i:
.
~'.',i::;,:·;;;\c~~;~ti:ad
~ncideiitally, v~va Las Gingk9
.
.
.
-:
: .
-
,
_
_
·.
·
·:
.
:
_'
•
-
·
.
:
·
·:
~ .
..
_
_
·
.
. _.
·
•
,
.
•
.
photo c01:.1rt~Y
-
or
Emily Hea\lip
,.
Wow! Those clg~rettes r~ally
1T1ust
be good, as Heaslip lets out an outpouring of emotion. -
Smoking might
be
bad,
but it
d~
-
keep kids
off
the streets
;
;
.
J\
ij
~
Satt~~hy ri~ht ~np. due·
·
:
:
pr,e_tty neat.
:
:,sin_c
,
~ it w,ar~nly a
·
··::
to"·an extreme·lack
'.
of funds,
quarter;! bought it to adorn my
.
complimented by a mild lack
desk.
.
_
_
of popuiarity,
_I
·
am spending a
I
_
soon filled
·-
th~ yoisi
,of
this
·
quiet evening
·
in the computer
empty "decorath'.e fish bowl"
lab. However nice it is to be
with a little fan-tailed goldfish
"complimented" by anything,
named Kingi;l
_
ey. It
-
wasdater
this i
_
s an odf place to be on a
brought to
_
my attention thatthe
_-. Satur~ay flight The only thing
bowl was not a pow
1,
but a vase .
.
·
· ie~lly worth doing is log into a
This explained a lot:. It was an
.
'_ •
chat room and make people ad-
odd.shape for a gold fish bowl
,
mit that they are only there be-
and
_
I
had to clean a few flower
.
cause they
·
are lonely losers
petals
.
out of it.
who
_
are not nearly as cool as
At breakfast the next inorn-
.
their tag names imply. (Take
ing, I explained
,
why my fish
.
that, "SexyStudGuy#l ").
lived in a
.
vase .
.
In turn, my
·
Along with annoying the hell
friend told
.
me an anecdc:>te
.
out if people, other things just
about the death of her BETA. I
•
come easy t
_
o rrie
..
-
For example,
could not understand what her
I
am in many aspects,vquite the
attachment was to an antiquated
·
idiot.
·
So perhaps it is no sur-
video machine, nor could I un-
-
prise that
I
have no trouble mak.:
derstand !he correlation be-
ing
.
an idiot out of myself.
tween my fish and her appli-
-
Soriietimes
I
feel so idiotic that
ance. After her emotional
I
get an urge to play up on this
story, Irespondedwith the sen-
fact, in
.
the hopes that maybe
sitivity of a truck dfiverwho was
someone, anyone, mind you,
cut off on
I-'84
while suffering
will say,
"Well,
you are riot
from hemorrhoi~s like the Ap-
..
,co11ti1111ed
from page
9
·
something they want to do. No
is better than drugs that can kill
THAT big of an idiot." Little
palachians.
.
If
that boy or girl smokes until
one is saying that we
_
should
'
be
you after a few minutes.
1
do
things like that make
.
my day.
, "We!l,)t
:
was.:9Jd. aJ1yiay,-
they are my age, they will have
.
able to smoke an
·
ywhere, as the
not know about you, but
I
would
·.
Lately,
I
have been stuck with
right?'
\_
Sh~
.
g~vy; me;,a Ju1.1:ny
been smoking for
11 yea
.
rs.
problem of second hand smoke
rather know what I am getting having to explain why there.is a look and
.
said thaL she had
They will also be four and a half
has been noted: It may be an
myself in
.
to than play Russian
large red mark that iss shaped
bought
·
it at the p~t sh~p last
feet tall.
inconvenience to go outside for
roulette with something like
kind of like a partial iron on my
month.
I
·
then realized that
-
a
No
;
children should not be al-
a cigarette, or to have to
'
wait
heroine.
arm. This has not been too dif-
"beta
"
,
wis a fisq:
.
l
_
apolqgiz~d
lowed to smoke, but why should
for one while flying to Florida.
Cigarette smoking may be
ficult, as I just say that
i
burn~d
for
-
:
11_1y
apathy
:
a
.
bqµt
,
,
w,hat
-
J
an adult be looked down upon
But we will wait.
·
wrong ir_1 the long run, but it is
my arm while ironing: I sel-
thought was an
_
,
obsolete
..
tape
for feeling like having a tiga-
We will wait be~ause
·
nothing
fun for a short while. So today,
dom_continued on to say that
I
machine.
•
·
... •
rette? This is still a free coun-
beats a cigarette after a big
as you finish reading this ar-
was wearing the shirt while I
_
Speaking of
-
apathy, it is
try, is it not? No matter how
meal (not to
.
mention its double
ticle, stand tip, go outside and
wasironingii.
.
The day
I
did it,
so
_
mething t
,
hat we are very
·
·
much the price of cigarettes is
_.
use as a laxative) .
.
And
.
nothing , ligpt
.
up
_
a butt
.
(ifyou donot have
I.
was wearing
-
a short sleeved
much in touch with here at
raised; or if the nicotine is :re-
..
~~a\S
a
cig;ire\te after great
.~ex
·
ori.e,
bum
:
on~
:
off
somebody;
shirt and
,
was in too much-pain
i-4ari~t,
.
a~d thu~
i
continujn
·
g
·-moved·or if.cigarettes are
but-
'_
(n
_
o
_
_
t.to
mentio
_
jj
'
it
_
-
.
s
.
iinfo
_
"rtu'
n
·
a
'
te
•.·h··,
.
'
;
.
,
,. '·''
,'
<
•.
(:
:
·
h
·,
•
' '
.
,
::-
:
.·
'
.
.t,.O
,
,\'lear
,
a ~
.
we
_
_
:
ate
_
r
__
,o
_
v.
_
er,it..,
_
A,
.
S;
I
'.
theme
iQThe Cir.de .. On behalf
,
·,}
__
e,re
,
~re,
'.
e
,
h~u_g
_
"
_
i
_
t~
·
g<?
_·
:irq1.111d
_
....
..
·
'
,
......
,.
, ..
--
..
, .. ,
·
lawed, people will
'
smoke.
doubie use as a liixaii~ef
-
Noth-
with all
·
the smokers at this
ventured ou
_
t
.
to
-
class,
,J
:was
of"the
·
mMority
;
ofsiudenii'at
Marijuana was outlawed quite
.•
.
ing'beats a cig~rette
_.
wit~
a
p\nt
-,~cho'olt
And
~s-y6u
bre~the in
greeteq
.
by
_
a
pi-bfessor .who
Mari
_
st
,
College,J would
.
like
.
to
·
some time ago, but i
_
t'S popular-
.
·
.
of Samuel Aqams an~
·
~othing
_
that firs(
~ort¥i-rtjl
slo~ bi:eath
asked if I haq joined
:
the
,Po
_
l~r
bid an apatheticf~re~e1
'
i"io'ihe
ity has been documented
and
beats a cigarette w~~h a c'up
-
~f
of
cold ai6arid
'·
smoke andh.-
·
Bear
.
Clu.b
.
.
llaughed
and
did not
-
~Id Gingko that
:
stands
'
iri
•
the
cannot be denied. Alcohol was
coffee. Nothing beats
a
•
inen-
hale it 'ciut;
·
;
let
the
happiness of explain the tnie
.
irbnY
Qf
tbe
way of the new ltbrary,
as
it goes
outlawed once and people made
thol cigarette on
a
frosty win-
being
able
to snioke
·
a cigarette
situation (Groan if you
\yill-
·
:
I
the way of many an untenured
liquorintheirbathtubs. Oh yes,
terday.
-
at.19 or
'
20 or
21
overcome
hadtomakean''irony"phn,
·
oi:l profes~9r .
.
.
As IllY,
..,
gyei;_~
_
a114 I
cigarettes will be smoked.
.
.
·_
Cigaretie
·
s
,:
may riot
'
b.e
:
our
;
you.
·
You
_
wiil
'.
thank me for it.
.
. \Voulc,l
-
hav'i:~
':
'
to heard'.t
\
fn>m
saple~s!y look
O}e
qther
iaf
all
_:
Cigarettes ai-e'i'iot allowed in
God given right,
'
but ids our, (Just
.
do
·
not
'
thank me twenty
someone
'
else .
. -
Yes
}
jusflike
.
I
,
can ~ay
-
to
'
·
myself is, ''That
0
is
many restaurants anymore. you
right, in
.
terms of life,
.
liberty _ ~~-a_rs
_
_
,frorit no\V,)
:
that frat party last we~kend, I
prngress.'' Or maybe ~•You have
.
cannot
.smoke:in
.
:
a rilovie
'
the-
ahdthe pursuitof happiness; to
!,eat you to t):iepunch.)_.·• ;;,_·
,_
.
got to be cruel
.
to b~_kindling."
ater or ii/the mall or in any
'
gov-
have a cigarette
'
whenever we
Tim
'
Manson
•
is the Opinion
.
If
that incident did not brand
But how 9ften
'
,w661ct you' hear
.
,
emm~n
_
t Q~i~d
_
ing:
·
.
Xe!
_
p~
_
9ple
·
feel like
•
it: 'They inay kill you
'
E<litor for
The Circle
ii'.ie a bona fide idiot, let-me add
such
a
!Jad
haJf.:~itt~d pun from
continue
fo
smoke
·
oecause itis
after years and years, but that
·
:
·
-
~
-
..
that iny gqldfi
-
~ll
.
Jives_in
.i~~se.
me? Al1em,well, excuse me- I
Eai:)ier
-
t
_
h
_
is
.
ye~r,
:
J
,
bought
i
a
liad
.
better go water the fish and
J_:ound
glass co
'
ritaTner that
.
feed my flowers_.
.
-
.
.
.; ·
Hurrica~e
:
~nzy
~tst;tie
mailroo.rri, two
killed
in
stor~
·
·
-
.
look~d
Jind
·.
or
'
like a
'.
decoi:a-
Tara Quinn is the Humor
tive fish bowl.
.
I thought it was
Colwniiist
:
The
-
.remnants of hu~iliat~d
'
dead
'
t~ee~ dressed
'
in
'
th6 c'ol-
ors of red, orang~ or fluores-
cent
"x"
lay
listless ort
the
floor
of the mailroom; the abandoned
'
casualties
:~
Of
_
,
a
·
stuqen_t-pro-
pelled hurricane that hits at
least three times a week. Hun-
-
•
dreds and htind,re
:
ds
/
of :flie:i-s
,
·
you know, the ones that every-
one get, denied the proper
'
burial of a trash can which
stand$. hovering Qyer the nearby
·,
wreckage.
.
,
.
.
More than once
I
have gath-
'
.
ered the littered papers 9ff the
floor and sent them to their fi-
nal resting place, in the end
(eeling my efforts to be cofl_1
-
pletely vain
,
much like Holden
Caufield must have felt when he
-
_·
realized the
'
impossiQility of
being able to accomplish the
task of crossing out all
_
the "f-
you 's" that have ever been writ-
ten and vandalized in public
places.
Why,
in
an
academic en-
vironment that should
be
intel-
ligent and mature enough to
kn~w
.
how
.
to d1spo~e
·
or
·
waste
,
properly do we still
.
find
_
ignorami who
.
lit
.
ter ~ith an at-
titude of ''someone else can
throw this away:
·
After al( I am
paying this school to
.
pick up
after nie right?"
.
.
·
.-
_ .
_
Well, I am here
;
tc>tell'you
"NO"
it is riot all right!
'
Where
-
is
the sense
·
of responsibility 'to
keeping
_
one's environm~nt
clean? I am using the
·
examp_le
of the mailro
_
orri; !
;
mt traces of
st'1def\t's laziness ~nd apathy
•
c~n. be.fouridjust abqutevery-
where: inth~ holo~ai.(si'piles of
cigarette
.
butts that
:
never made
.
it
·fo
their proper disposal or the
toilets that
,
'
do not get flushed.
the ice
.
cream
,
splattered on the
-
wall because someone thin
.
ks it
is furiny. Would you
'
behave
this way in your own-home?
If
the answer is yes, then
·
I must
pose the question: how did this
world get to
be
such an uncar-
ing place?
It is one thing to leave your
clothes on the floor or
be
un-
_
tidy, b
0
ut
it
is anoth~r thing to
leave unnecessary and unpleas-
ant remnants of yourself behind
tllat take
.
away from other
·
people's enjoyment of everyday
living. Sure, ultimately some-
.
one will pick up after you here
if y9
_
u neglect to do so your-
self, but they should not have
~,
.,
.
.
'
•
I know it is frustrating when
tile only mail you get is some
-
flier th~t does not even concern
. you,
.
but
.
do not take it out on
maintenance by creating a huge
mess, ~e
•
creative; try doing
something useful with that flier
like
.
using it for a tissue or as a
,
P,iece ofs~rap paper instead. Or
simply do the responsible thjng,
wJ,ich is to recycle it or throw
it away. Remember that some-
~here off in a distant forest, a
tree has died for you. Think
about it for a minute. Let it be
significant.
Alisa
Nuz.um writes
wlzat
size
wants for The Circle
··
·
.·
The Hudso
.
n
·
Valley's
Premier Unisex Salon
.
Is Steps Away from Marist!
THE CUTIERY
-
WELCOMES
·MARIST!.
Maris/ Students:
.
Haircuts
$18
Mm_.,
ff
'o
mt,r
Pins: 25% off all oth~ servi~es
(Wilh Maris1 I
.
D
.
)
1--lAIRCUTTI;RS
~
I
G , 1 / f r ~ .....
~
.. _;.,, Off<,li,ud
264 NoRIH RCW>, POUGHKEEPSfE 454-9239
}11I1pastA!iSpc,t.~Stmznn,Ho,plrd;
,
.._,WDti<frtr--"3
~~9-&n.m.~Sor.&PS
·
I
l
l
I
■
11
THE CIRCLE
November 20, 1997
·
Taking a Closer
_
Look at
News
and Reviews
.
,
_
A&E
~
Editor·visits Mt. Katahdin, Maine: A Mecca for Thru-Hikers
by
JIM
DZIEZYNSKI
A&E Editor
Foi'those hearty
,
souls who
.
have
.
made the epic trek from
Springer M_ountain in
_
sunny
Georgia, Mount
.
Katahdin. (lo-
cated
in
north
·
central
Maine)know
.
it is a sort of
Valhalla. Mount Katahdin rep-
resents
_
the northern terminus of
the 2000+-mile Appalachian
Trail. Many an elat~d thru-hiker
have framed
.
portraits of them-
selves standing next to the
fa-
mous wooden sign denoting the
summit of the highest point in
the state of Maine.
.
Katahdin is the first place in
America to see sunlight every
day; photographs of the sun-
rise from the summit are some-
what famous. It is located in
Baxter State Park in Millinocket,
Maine. Compared to the other
high peaks of New England,
Katahdin is rather isolated. From
the southern border of Maine,
: it is a six-hour drive to the en-
From left to Right: Jim Dzlezyankl, Ryan Sheeler, and Jody Pratt pose on a stormy day at the
famous sign at the summit of Mount Katahdln, the highest point In Maine (5,320 feet).
trance of Baxter State Park. For
myself, it was the last stop of a
·
weeklong expedition to the high-
.
est peaks in New
·
England.
· Along with me for the ride were
fellow climbers Jody Pratt and
Ryan Sheeler.
juggernaut. We ended up linger-
off. The drive from the entrance
ing good lines of ascent. One
ing in Baxter State Park forthree
to the trail heads is about ten
could say part of the glamourof
days, waiting for a series of miles along pot-holed dirt roads
Katahdin was missing because
storms
.
to pass. Unlike the
that do not allow one
.
to get
we were not offered the littlest
friendly and relaxed atmosphere
above 25 MPH. After gearing
bit of scenery; a thick, impen-
at the other peaks, there is a
up, we· departed around 7 a.m.
etrable fog engulfed the entire
sense of pressure at Katahdin.
A 2.4-mile trail up a gradual in-
mountain and prevented us from
Rangers advise hopeful climb-
cline led to the base camp at the
seeing more than a half mile up
ers to be at the gates of the park
foot of Katahdin. Because of the
or down. Still, we were climbing
at6 a.m. becauseoflimited park-
fickle weather
,
we were advised
for the sake of the climb and we
ing. Time was running out for
to wait another day by the sta-
were not about to turn around
us and things still had not
tion ranger. Nonetheless, we
because of a little bad weather .
cleared up, so we had to take
took our chances, deciding to
We reached the summit as the
our chances with the weather
ascent via the Cathedral, an ex
-
storm reached a new level ofin-
and the parking.
·
tremely steep scramble whose
tensity. We snapped a few pho-
The morning we decided to
difficulty was compounded by
tos, ate a quick lunch, and be
-
climb, rain was driftino down in
the heavy rain. All of us had a
gan to descend via the Knife
drizzle-sheets and
·
th; weather
hard time trying to get purchase
Edge, a perilous trai I about six
reportwasbad,
_
But,Hke tr9op-
,
?".~~~
,
~et_
.
g_rll!}~t~. ~:yllnc~me
feet wide, with thousand
.
foot
ers with a slight case of moun-
,
close to shdmg off the face of drof'otfsofreiiher
-
side.Wehad
rain madness, we were waiting
the mountain, but continued on
to alter our means of returning
at the gates at
·
5:45 a.m. with
.
unshakenfrom the experience.
because of possible lightening
three other cars. We paid ourad-
Jody (the most experienced of
strikes along the Knife Edge.
mission to the park and we were
ourtrio) did a splendid job find-
When we finally got back, we
In a span of three days, we had
climbed Mount Grey lock in
Massachusetts,
Mount
Mansfield in Vermont, and
_
MountWashingtciri ill New
Hampshire. The drive from New
Hampshire to Maine was a good
eight hours, so we decided to
take a day off before tackling this
25
Ta
::
Life Outshines Biohazard at The Chance
byPATRICKWIDTTLE
.
Asst. A&E Editor
-
were Unbalanced, a splinter
group of the band
·
Inner Dam
from Montgomery, NY. They
played a
-
brand
·
of new-school
Biohazard and 25 Ta Life;s cur-
·
·
hardcore/metal painfully similar
rent East Coast tour saw them
to Earth Crisis. Their singer
coming
-
t,i the Chance: in
looks a lot like Karl Buechner
Poughkeepsi_e on Nov.
9-
Three
_
from E~rth C
_
risis as a matterof
local bands opened up a decent
fact.
·
For the most part, they were
show which was marred cinly by
.
.
unremarkable, although they did
the factthat it was for some rea..: · close their set with a cover of
son scheduled on
a
Monday
.
"Earth
A.D."
by the Misfits.
night.The firsLreal
·
band to hit
·
They have a fi\'.e song CD which
the stage was All Out War.
isavailablefromthem.25TaLife
Another band played
.
before
played next.and were easily the
them but I think they
_
were a joke
best barid of the night. They
of some sort. All Out War are
are a New
,
York hardcore band
very popular with hardcore/
with some distinct
;
metal ele-
metal fans in the upstate NY and
men ts in their
·
music. Their
New York City area. This was
.
singer Rick Healy is one of the
the best show I have seen them
m
'
ost charismatic people in the
put on to date.• ..
·
business, and he always seems
A lot of the kids dancing for
to put on a good show.They
them were obviously friends of opened with some songs from
the band, and they all
·
looked
their
·
new six song CD "The
like they were having the time
Spirit Remains" (Triple Crown
of their lives. Towards the end
Records) and then got into their
of their set it looked like the
older staples,-starting with
whole shaven-headed popula-
"Short Fu
-
se". Some people
tion of Poughkeepsie was in the
think of
25
Ta
Life
as a violent
pit. They played their staples
band, but their were no fights
like "Destined to Bum" along
and no one hurt for their entire
with a Cro-Mags cover, "World
set The highlight of their set
Peace." A-lot of material from
was probably the cover of Iron
theirnew CD "Truth In the Age
Cross' "Crucified" (as made
OfLies" (GainGroundRecords)
popular by Agnostic Front)
was also showcased.Next up
which they dedicated to
Raybeez,
.
the former singer of
the band Warzone .
.
He died of a
viral infection in September and
was a good friend of theirs
.
They
ended their set with their signa-
ture song "Keepin' It Real
"
and
''Inside Knowledge" from the
band's
_
1993demo. Healy passed
the microphone around to
-
the
kids in front of the stage for the
entire show, and there was a lot
of dancing while they were on.
They
.
put
OIJ
one of the best
sh~ws I have seen by any band
at the Chance
.
The headlining
band Biohazard closed out the
show. They had a huge banner
of their symbol hanging from
the back of the stage. That was
about the best thing about their
set. Biohazard play heavy metal
similar to bands like Pantera and
Sepultura, except that they wave
their arms around while singing
a la The Sugar Hill Gang.
If
it
sounds fun
·
ny, it is. Their music
on the other hand makes me
want to cry more than laugh.
They played a lot of new songs
which are reportedly supposed
to sound more hardcore since
they have added double bass
to their drums. A lot of their
"classics" like "Urban Disci-
pline" were also played, but
were not much better. To their
credit, the crowd that came to
seem them seemed to love them.
Most of the 25 Ta Life crowd on
the other hand could be seen
quickly making their way to the
exit door. The one redeeming
quality about Biohazard on this
day was that they treated two
Marist students to dinner at a
Chinese restaurant in New Paltz.
Sophomores Bob Roth and
Sean Dougherty won the din-
ner on an Edge-88.7 FM radio
contest.
'They were kind of dorks,
"
Dougherty said.
Despite the lackluster headlin-
ing band, a good time was had
by all at the Chance.
--~ .-.- ...
~
<·
;
,-
;,
:·
:
··
.
·
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flf
rfi:
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a
,
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•
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htt.:Izot
eqi/qlly.
J'hose
i
1vlio
dreil/nj
by
tJight
i,i
dusij
recesse~
.'
oftheir
minds
-
wt1k~ i~J~e dtlj
'
t<tfind
that
·
~
·
wll§.·
,
•·va11ity;
•·•
but
<!r;e_a111~~
gf
fly!
day
a_re
<!aiigero1's
.
rneti,
·
for
tli~y
-
maj
)
act their
dreanffiwith
open
eyes,
to
make itpossible.--
T.E. Lawrence
had found out ten minutes after
we had left for the Cathedral al I
trails had been closed off. The
icing on the proverbial cake was
the ten-hour drive home to
Wolcott, Connecticut (which we
did that night from 7 p.m. to 5
a
.
m.!!)
There is an undeniable mys-
tique that one feels at the sum-
mit of Katahdin. Our little day
hike is microscopic peanuts to
those thru-hikers that have trav-
eled over two thousand miles for
a chance to stand on top of this
impressive mountain. For us, it
was a nice finale to a great week
of peak bagging across New
England and yes. we did get to
a see a rather large moose
.
The stage is set for the winter
season activities, which means
snowshoeing, winter camping,
skiing, and ice climbing! Upcom-
ing trips include
:
Winter Camp-
ing in the Adirondacks
,
Ice
Climbing Mount Washington
via Huntington Ravine, snow-
shoeing across New England.
and adventures in the Green
Mountains! If you have any
suggestions or places you
would like to go. or perhaps you
want to be part of our little ex-
peditions send me an Email
KINF@MARISIBMARISf.EDU.
One more quick notice--the
months from September to Apri 1
are open-hunting season in
most backcountry places so
.
make
_
_
sure_to have some kind of
bright orange or yellow reflec-
tive marking on your pack or
jacket! You do not want to be
mistaken for a prize kill by some
gun wielding maniac!
ent sectio
ighly value
•
op1n
ons!! Pleas
ontact Ji
ziezynski
&E Editor
t
x2429
•
I
OU
wish t
eport
o
nything ar
istic or en
ertaining.
.L
r
r
--.
THE CIR~LE,
N~~e111b~t
~ci
/:
V,►.t:
.
-
Mystery Science Theater 3O0CJ:~i~! ~elson arid pals per-
haps the single most amusing
ShO\V
Oii
television ever!
by BIG McLARGEHUGE
mark-silhouettes of threi heads
··
agiant spa~~ship i
,
n outet spa~e
·
>
ovei
.
railip~s, t~1e
_
buff guy and '
, :
.
-
After a
.
fiery ekplo~ion
:'
t_:,e-
Sra.ff Hiink
siUingattheb
'
ottomnghtofthe
is floating around carrying a
Calgon crash mto eachother t~een the
..
cheesy goifcart-like
The premise behind
Mystery
movie screen.
bunch of humari:S.
i
think their driving electric golf carts that
vehicles ( which Crow remarks;
Science Theater 3000
is basic:
MST 3000
's humor is aimed
.
goal was to colonize somewhere,
explode and then the buff guy
"Can reach speeds'tip
to
three!")
take a kidnapped moving man,
at a well -infomied audience who
but that is never said
:
-
Anyway,
and the girl make out and the
Mike Nelson comments,
_
"I
wish
a few wisecracking robots, put
can catch as many of the jokes
there are low-budget spacecraft
movie is over. Really! Sound
we had some marshmallows ... so
·
them in orbit on a futuri stic
as possible, though sometimes
dogfights
fo~
no. apparent rea-
confusing?
It
~as to be_! Only
we could stuff them
in
our eyes
spaceship, subject them to some
the silence of the characters can
son; then
,
.a11
odd
'
group of the worst movies make
1t
on to
and ears and never have to see
of the worst movies ever made
be just as amusing. You have
scantily clad Stevie Nicks look-
MST 3000!
or hear this movie ever again!!!"
and voila, success! Every week
-
not seen most of these movies;
.
a-likes (the Bolarians) get
~m
-
Mike and the robots remark
Yes,
Space Mutiny
is really
onthe Sci-Fi channel, Mike
ifyouhavetheremaybeaprob-
boa
-
rd the ship and dance
thoughout the movie, compar-
bad
but
MST 3000
is really
_
Nelson and his robot compan-
Iem. A few flicks our friends have
.
around
·
those electricity balls
ing ~algon 's assistant to a lob-
funny
.
The show airs
·
every Sat-
ions, Tom Servo (a converted
sat through include
Agent for
·
they sell
-
at Spencer's
;
A
-
rebel-
ster; giving the
·
buff hero ge-
urday night at
I l p.m. on the Sci:
gumball machine)andCrow,sit
Harm,
Jack
Frost
(imported
Jiousguysoinewhereonthebig
neric b-grade namesHke Slab
Fi channel. You can also pick
·-
through some of the most God-
from Denmark),
This Island ship decides to revolt; but once
Hardcheese, Thick McRunfast,
up individual episodes featur-
awful films ever made.Normally,
Earth,
and this week's feature
again we do not know why.
and BuffHardpeck, while mak-
ing both Mike Nelson and ex-
these films would have been
Space Mutiny.
Then,
a
-
buff superhero beams ing running jokes on characters
host Joel Hodgeson at your
fa-
lost in the
.
a,mals of B-grade
After watching
Space Mutiny
on the ship and seduces the
who resemble Ed Grimly, God,
vorite video store.
MST 3000
_
movie archives, but our heroes
a few times, I still have no idea
Captain's daughter {who looks
De.bbie Reynolds, Jocko; and
will have you laughing out loud;
bring new
life
to them by com-
what the plot is. That is the _ like the cap.tain's grandmother!)
Rick Springfield. A particularly
you owe it to yourself to check
menting on the terrible acting,
beauty of
MST 3000;
the more
The buff hero then
.
kills a dis-
funny scene occurs when
out at least one episode! The
sketchy editing, pointless plots,
pathetic movie is the better set-
abled bad guy, the rebel (named
Calgon kills a woman com-
antics of Crow, Tom Servo, Mike
and pitiful directing. If you are
ups are given for our friends to
General Calgoil) points a
·
Iaser
mander on the ship, only to have
Nelson,
-
Gypsy, Pearl, and
all
the
channel flipping, you can rec-
crack on. As far as I can piece it
bea!ll
at
the girl's teeth, a bunch
_
her return to the bridge in the
rest are sure
·
to amuse!!
ognize
MST
3000
by the trade-
together
,
the story is as follows:
of ski-mask wearing villains
fall
very next scene!
. .
..
AFI's
.
Latest Release a
·
hardcore/punk rock
.
work of
·
art
byBOBR()TH
.
Staff Writer
month now! The first thing I
noticed about the new disk was
the guitar Was harder and
I ran to my mailbox when Dave
Dave's voice was Iowerthan
'
on
from AFI told me that I should
previous AFI releases. Just like
have a copy of their new CD
the old disk "Very Proud of Ya"
;
waiting for me. I opened my box
this record proves to be another
and there it was waiting for me!
winnerfrom this
.
hardcore/punk
AFI
's
latest release is called
band. From the first track
,
"Keep
"Shut Your Mouth and Open
Out of Direct Sunlight"to track
Your Eyes" on Nitro Records. I
14
"Triple Zero", this music
ran upstairs to the
.old
dorm
keeps on going harder and bet-
room and popped it in
my
CD · ter as the
·record
progresses.
player~ there it has remained
Mixing punk rock and hardcore
give this album a feeling that you
just want.to dance around and
break
'
something: You_ get
pumped up about the album and
there is no letdown between any
of the sorigs and yoti have to
release the album somewhere.
Mark's continuing guitar riffs
and Adam's drumming keep the
flow with no stoppage in sight.
•
Dave's
·
_•
~cre
·
aming/singing
·VO-
cal~ and I:It.mter's Bass round
.out ~n
.
albti
.
[!
.
:YOU
:
wqI
n9_t for~
geq
-
Oth
'
er
?
ireadfacks are·
"Three Reasons'', "Let it Be sicianship is solid; the ·playing
Broke", and "Today's Lesson."
is tight
,
anc\Jµ~,.ov..,~!~lJ.;sR-und
The best track on the disk is
and feel of.this album is great!
called
"A
Single
·
Second",
;
in
From
.
the opening song to the
which Dave's roommate ·Nick
last note
'
you will be blown away
sings a great harmony that
with this release. Soon enough
,
counters the chorus giving the
you will be dancing and sing-
song
a
great feel.
_
_
ing alo!1g
~i~~
A.PJL __
-
_
_
_.__
__
_
.
,
Do you like punk rock
,
ToleammoreaboutAFlcheck
1
hardcore, or fast melodic music?
_
out their website in which I am
.
;
Well then;
.
AFI's new~st\;ffor(
'
the
:
webiflaste:r!
!Laiet!
!
_:.· _ ~-- .
,,
"Shut Your,Mquth and Open
.
HTTP
'
:Vwww.ge9diic/S:diri1Y
'·
'
·
Your Eyes" is the new.CD.you
Sunsetstrip/:fow~rs/94-18
.
·'
·
-
·
haye been looking
for!
The mu-
Lots of good stuff about AFH!
·
·
SGA SPOTLIGHT
ame:
John T. Williams
·
ear:
.
Senior
ajor:
Finartce/Communica-
ions MinorHometown: Bronx,
avorite Band:
Aerosmith
_
avorite Movie:
"Good
Fellas"
avorite Drink:
Water
ole
Models:
Grandfather,
rank Sanatra, and Ronald
According to John Williams,
he Student Body Vice-Presi-
ent, there is a lot more to Stu-
ent Government (SGA) than
eople think.
:
"We do a lot for the
tudents ... we make a big differ-
nce," said Williams.
:
As the Student Body Vice-
resident, Williams is the Chief
f Staff for the Student Body
resident, Frank Maduri. He
akes sure everything runs
moothly and that everyone
oes their job. In addition to
hese responsibilities, Williams
Jans and organizes the Spring
ransition of the newly elected
fficers.
John is a Senior Finance ma-
or with a Communications mi-
.
I:./_-~~
~~~.;:::
,
--;.
·,
,;: ~
~
'::..
·
-:::
·:·
.-!.:..~-
-·-
<·;_
;
.....
~
-:
·•"·'-·
:
~.-~;~
SGANEWS
:
t
--
_-
_.-----
·--·
-'
I
::
~---
.. -
·.
.
,
~
.
·.
:. 1·
.
oio
,
you
KNOW THERE HAVE BEEN SEVERAL BURGLARIES ON
:
THE NORTH END OF OUR CAMPUS?
YOU CAN HELP TO PREVENT THIS FROM HAPPENING AGAIN: ..
I.
LOCK YOUR DOORS
.
,
■I
2.
CALL SECURITY (X2282) IF YOU SEE SOMETHING OUT OF THE
:
;
OR:DIN ARY.
SUCH AS SOMEONE WHO DOES NOT SEEM TO BE-
LONG ON
,
CAMPUS
-
;
:
_
3.
LOCKYOUR DOORS
<
4.
BE
:
A\1/ARE OF
,
:(.OtjR SURROUNDINGS AT ALL TIMES
5
.
LOCK YOUR DOORS
'..,
JUST-BECAUSE"THAT IS THE BEST WAY
TO PREVENT YOl.i
~:
fROM
.
BEING
THE
NEXT STATISTIC
-
ON OUR
CAMPUS
•,,
'
P·•''·
\)-;
-
'
.
.
CAiwA
v.s
'
cAtG
'.
imchRiTY IF
You
HAve aeE~ vicnMiztD
,f-,
ooN;i
,
Be
_.-
dni'NExf
_
vicTIM...
-
LOCK YCiUR
.'.
DOORS
0
!!!!
.
,
REME¥BE~4~.C~RITY IS HERE TOHELP ... THEY ARE OUR FRIENDS.
SPONSOREO-BY THE STUDENT
LIFE
COUNCIL
•
'i.
.·.'
'.
·
· . ·•
·
·
--.
'
·
.;
,
. A'i:rnNTioN
sPoRTS
CLUBS!!!
-
·+rtiJFi~in~ial board is seeking a representative from one of the
>
·
;
Sports
dubs.
.
::
Applications are available in the Student Government Office
~which
is located
,
in SC
347.
If
there are any questions, contact
Steve Coogan at
nor. In the
·
future,
-
Williams
-
- -
"Everybody came togeih~fand
ext. 286
?:
,,
_
<.:t ..
:.
' .
•
.
would like a career where
,he
. hadf1.m
x
We accomplished
a
lot
could make his O\\'.n hours.-
_.
.
-
wl)ich gqt
_,
the year
:
off
.
right,". . :i:he Stude1;u Aq1demic~Cpu?c,il has been very busy this semester, but
"I would like something fie£ . .'· . said Williams
.
··
•
-
-
-
-
,
.
-
_we·ve j11st gotten start~d! J"he· College Bowl
,
a trivia game, was held on
.
.
: "Wednesday, October 29th; in the Performing Arts Room at 9:30 p.m. This
ible in the business world
_
,'.' said "
.
_One of
•
\\".illiam's fav9rite as:
semester
it
was
held in ·collaboration with the Class Wars and each of the
Williams.
, _
, .
_
. _
.
peels of Mari st is the closene.ss
..
class!!s was represented by -at least one team. The Class of 1999 won with
However, right now
'
he is con~
"ofth~
people.
.
,
,_.. 12?1) points.
and
the ciass of 2001 ran up 285
.
The
senior
class gained 80
centrating on more immediate
"There is a sense offamiliar-
~mnt~. and the.sophomores, although t~ey did not score any points, gave
I
.
"th
b d
Yi
d
t
It their best
shot.
Stay tuned for the b12ges1 College Bowl event of the
go~
S.
.
lly Wt
_every
O
Y·
OU
,?
n?
year-the tournament being held this
s
p'iing-which will need participa-
1 need to be consistent and
get lost
tn
the shuffle here, said
_
tion of both students and faculty!!!
to keep my grades where they
Williams.
.
:
A]sp.
prepare yourselves for the annual SAC social. which will be held
are. I want to get into a good
In addition to Student Govern.:'__ llefore-
_
tl!~-~nd
.
of the semester. Come and join us for some free munchies
graduate school," said Williams.
·
· ment (SGA), Williams is also
in-
_
,
,?n1
find OU~
·
sA
_
~
is all about! We sti(I need
10
•
fill
some
positions. including
Ab
h.
I
W"ll-
I d . h
-
·
I H b:._
repre_s:nt~_uv
:
es
.
m the
.
French. Spanish. Medical Technology. Chemistry,
ove everyt mg e se,
t
vo ve wit mtennura s, a
I_.
.
Mathematics and
·
Psychology/Special Educat·
If
•
d .
·
Id
'
II l"k -
-
•
• ·
·
- .
·
.
-,
_
-:-
ion.
you are mtereste m
tams wou
eventua y
1
e--to
tat for Humamty, and
IS
the
finclmg
:
ou_t
,
!)!ore, call Kem at x4027 or x7143. All you need is a stroni?
own his own Casino/Hotel in
President and General Manager
desire-.to
suppo-1-the
suggestions of the
students
in your major and a voic;
Las Vegas.
ofMCfV.
Jhat will
:
ll,ot
~esitate to spea~ out!
Williams noted Summer Ses-
-
A~tc~t.mn_Ma~11gement Siudies and humanities major!!!! The SAC will
be
.
.
holding "socials (or·the?e
_
Jwo departments sometime before the end of the
s1on as one of his most memo-
semester.
-
Stay tuned for Ilic dates and then come
d
•
•
r
r
.
_
• •
O\'Cr an Jorn us ,or ,rec
rable moments from Student
·
fOQd
and 1~
.
~
ch
.
a11ce to ~~~ess
ideas
about
your
major.
Government.
.
• •
.
-:_
'
·
.;..,
·
•.,
_
-
r
THE
CIRCLE,
November 20, 1997
13
Penri State
.
puts
Red Foxes on ice; Marist loses 6-1
·
.
·
by RACHAELVOLLARO
Kamp also said
.
that the ab-
,
St~jfWriter
.
·
s.ence
of co-cap
,
tai~ Brian
·
:
warzecha,
.
the
.
team's scoring
.
The Marist ice hockey ieriin
leader, reflected the score ofthe
learned the importance of game,-
missed opportunities this past
"We really didn't have a natu-
Friday
.
·
ral goal scorer in that game. The
·
The Red Foxes now have an
game was closer than the score
overall record of
6-4- I
after los-
reflected,'" he said. "The differ-
ing to Penn State, 6-1.
·
ence was that when they had a
·
·
Assistant coach Brad Kamp
·
real good chance to put the
said the Red Foxes knew going
puck in the net they did
:
"
·
into the game against Penn State
Starting
.
in net for the Red
that hard work would be
a
key
Foxes was freshman John
factor.
"OveraH
.
I
think they just
played the more intense game,"
he
said.
"There were times
where we played intense. We
actually had· the better play as a
.
result of that, but we didn't do
it consistently."
Nicolucci.
Junior forward Dan Sullivan
said that, overall, Nicolucci had
·
been doing a great job for the
club and it showed in the game
against Penn State;
"In
the last four or five games
that he
'
s played he
'
s done a re-
ally good job.
,
Against Penn
-
ping. The Lions scored again
State· he
'
saved ~s from
:
3 or 4 · at 12:48
,
making the score 4-1.
goals," he sa
_
id.
.
.
Marist also had its share of
The Nittany Lions started the
·
opportunities in the second pe-
scoring at
9: 16
of the first pe-
riod, but failed to score.
riod.
Sullivan said the team should
They scored their second goal
of the game on a power play at
15:19. Marist's freshman for-
ward Todd Hutton took two
minu·tes in the box after a cross-
checking penalty.
The Red Foxes answered with
their only goal of the game.
scored by junior forward Bill
Persson, at
17: 18
in the first pe-
riod. Sean Powers and Ray
Kenahan received the assist.
Penn State opened the scor-
ing on another power play at
5: I 0,
after freshman defenseman
Pat Donohoe
.
was guilty of trip-
have taken advantage
of
those
opportunities.
"We had a couple five on three,
five on four, one man
,
two man
power plays, and we just
couldn't put it togethert he ex-
plained.
"
We couldn"t
set
up
the zone."
In
the third period, Penn State
scored at 14:02 and 6:39
,
mak-
ing the final score 6-1.
This weekend, the Red Foxes
host Rider at the Mid-Hudson
Civic Center at
9: 15
p.m. on Fri-
day, and travel to Franklin Pierce
on Saturday.
Co-captain Mark Avagliano
said he expects a good game
against Rider.
"I
think we'll do pretty good,"
he
said.
Sullivan confirmed
his
teammate ·s prediction.
"
I
definitely expect a win
against them," he
said.
Kamp is a little more pmgmatic.
"We;re looking to do what
we'.~e been
_
trying to
.
do
all
sea-
son
:
which is put together a
full
team effort. Both
.
are weaker
teams that we should be able to
beat,"
he
said.
According to Kamp, Warzecha
is expected to play
both
garnes.
The
.
following weekend, the
Red Foxes travel to Penn.State
for their Thanksgiving tourna-
ment
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Tnc:s.1:00
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.
Wcd.:l:00·9:30
'Iblft.
·1
.
:00-7:00
---
Fri.
,:00
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·
:c:00
.
.
·· .. •
..
Check
"
out
.
.
.
.
our
holiday
values!
·
·
~
·
~
Mk
have somethingfor everyone
Store Hours
on your list! Your on-campus
bookstore is a great pl(lce to start
your holiday shopping. Right
now, we're featuring special
purchases
for a limited time ...
Monday-Thursday
.
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
9 a.m.-7 p.m.
9 a.in:-5
p.m .
10
a.m.-4 p.m.
Closed
so come
_
down and check it out!
Marist College Bookstore
Located in the Student Center Rotunda
of
the
SEASON!
.
--·----
-
·
·
-
-
--
-
-
-
--
- -
-
.
----
j :
'
.
14
THE CIRCLE;
November
20, 1997
Steve
on
Sports----
·
What's On
Tap?
.
.
Oh, the weather outside is frightful~~-
See the Red
-
Foxes
.
in action: ..
........................
.
......
The transition from fall to win-
ter last weekend was almost
poetic.
Could you ask for a better
bridge between seasons for the
Red Foxes than the events of
Friday and Saturday?
First, the men's basketball
team kicked the bejeezus out of
a barnstorming group of Euro-
peans- a nice way to start the
1997-98 campaign. And it hap-
pened in the middle of a mid-
November blizzard.
Actually, even before that hap-
pened,
I was at the Galleria and
they were playing Christmas
carols. 'Tis the season,
I
guess.
Then, on Saturday, the foot-
ball team closed out its sched-
ule by dominating Siena, 34-9,
on a carefully plowed
I
00-yard
mud bath masquerading as
Leonidoff Field
.
The winter season began with
a
bang, the
fall season ended
with an exclamation point, and
it all happened in less than 24
hours as a nice b\anket ofsnow
provided closure for
Marist's
autumnal athletes.
It has only been a few weeks
since the Florida Marlins cap-
tured their first World Series
-
crown, arid already they have
begun tearing apart the team
that madf it possible.
·
Moises
Alou went to Houston for a pair
of minor league players and it
is
rumored that anyone is avail-
able for the right price.
The situation
in
Florida illus-
trates, in a nutshell
,
why own-
ers must stop overpaying
play-
ers. Mariins owner Wayne
Hui'zenga dished out $89 million
last
.
off-season to build a con:..
tender: won a championship
,
and now is forced to either sell
·
the franchise or dismember it.
Althoiigh he
WO~
the Serie~: he
·
still lost $34
inf
Ilion. · ·
The people that I feel sorry for
arethe Florida fans
.
They went
from following
·
an expansion
team to watching that team blos-
sominto a winner, and now must
sit and watch that winner be
broken up. They
will
probably
still have a competitive ball club
next season, but there is no way
the Marlins
will
repeat as cham-
pions of baseball.
Bernie Williams is asking for
$10 million a year from the Yan-
kees. Now Williams a very good
player, probably the best the
Yanks have, but there is no way
Although
·
the
·
snow
.
beat me
·
to
.
it,
I
think I should also at-
tempt to close the book on fall.
Heeeere we go ...
The football team's uplifting
victory over Siena on Saturday
was the Foxes' fourth consecu-
tive win, and their sixth of the
year.
A
6A
record is not spectacu-
lar, and the near misses versus
Georgetown and Duquesne cer-
tain
I
y still sting, but this
season's defensive excellence
cannot be tainted by
a
few last-
minute miscues.
Marist's overpowering rush
defense challenged Division
I-
AA history all year long, and
eventually established a new
record for dominance against
the ground attack last Saturday
by holding Siena's own record
holder, Reggie Greene, to 80
yards.
And, astonishingly, Marist
returns all four of its starters on
the defensive line next year.
Could the Foxes break their own
record
.
next fall? Stay tuned.
The women's soccer squad
surprised some people by earn-
ing the third spot in the
MAAC
Tournament, but were unable to
move past the semifinals.
Head coach Tara Nichols did
a
solid job leading this team
through its first year in a new
conference
;
asthe Foxes went
6°3
in· regular season MAAC
play.
Freshman forward Jamie
·
Bierworth finished with what
was, by far, a team high 28 points
on
13
goals and two assists.
Second
·
leading scorer Nicole
Bruno had
11
points, and Beth
Zack provided a steadying in-
fluence in the net, allowing only
1.65 goals per game.
_
The men's soccer team's, uh,
"situation" has been, well, docu-
mented.
The Red Foxes finished
2.:.13-
1
after last year's step towards
respectability.
·
They struggled
to score, they struggled to pre-
vent the opposition from scor-
·
ing, and, as a result, they
struggled to win. They do have
several young players who
should not be
.
ruled out quite
yet, but this season was, obvi-
ously, a complete loss.
Since Steve does not want to
ruffle any more feathers, or get
tossed out of any more parties
as retribution,
.
that is all
.
Steve
has to say about the soccer.
team.
Early on, Emily Alquist's
women's volley!Jall teamlooked
like it was headed for a decent
season, winning non-confer-
ence games against Long Island
University and Coppin State
.
But then
·
the MAAC sched-
ule kicked in. After
13
games,
.. the Red
f
o
.
xe~ stood at 5-8, and
still had
\
dhotto foach
'
.500, or
everi
;"
tbp iL Th~\ne;t
of
the
conference
'
schedule putan end
Men's
·
Basketball
at Vermont
(1V23),
ho~ting
.
Marist Pepsi Classic ( 11 /28., 11/29), and
Vs.
Colgate
.
( 12/2);
Women's Basketball
at Boston College
.
( i
1/20), and at Boston University ( 11/22);
Swimming
·
·
&
Diving
vs.
Fairfield (12/3);
Hockey
vs. Rider
.
( 11/21 ), at Franklin Pierce
(11/22), and at
Penn
St.
Tournament ( 11/28-11/29).
Tom's Trivia Corner
A.C. Green is on t.lie verge of breaking the
NBA record for consecutive games played.
Who holds that record?
-
(Last week's answer: David Nied was
selected by the Colorado Rockies in 1993.)
Tom Drag
is
a regular
contributor
to The Circle
to those hopes, however, as
leave Marist and enter the real
Marist tailspinned through the
world.
months of October and Novem-
The cross country teams were
·
ber.
llp and down all sea~on, but
.
An eleven game losing streak
.
showed unmistakable signs of
down the stretch made the
life.
Foxessettle for
a
5-19 overall
Pete Colaizzo and.Phil Kelly
mark. The team's last winofthe
are already
•
fooking ahe~d
,
tJ
season came against LIU on
next year, when the group of
Sept
27
'.
..
young runners they oversee
will
The good news? Sophomore
be ready to chalienge some of
Julee Cerda will lead a strong
the more prestigious programs
returning contingent into 1998
in the
MAAC.
. . :
.
.
;
'
..
withayearofMAACexperience
·
And finally, oneofMarist
;
s
behind them
.
club sports enjoyed unprec-
.
.
The men's and women's ten-
edented success. among its
;
re-
nis teams were active in the fall,
•
··
.
gional peers. The rugby team;
although
:
the bulk oCiheir
.·
Jed by Jeff' Carter, Martin
matches
are
setfoi" spring;.
, . ·
Kappus, andDave Sciascia,
ad~
.
.
Holly Robinson played well at
variced to the quarterfinals of
number
·
one singles for
'
the
the Northeast Rugby Union
:
women,
.
.who w~ri five of the
Playoffs, and fini5.heci th~
.
sea.-
~kven contests they partici-
son as the runner-up in the Di-
p~it~ci
.
in. At first doubles,
vision II Rugby Union.
.
.
.
Robii:isqirpaired up with Kara
Apparentlyrugbyteamsdon't
·
he is worth tha! kind of money.
simply to be polhically correct.
Oliver arid
'
the duo compiled a
form
··
1eagues or conferences;
If he will not sign for less, let
Then it was,
.
believe it or not,
9J
record together.
they form "unions." More
hirri go. I would much rather see
Dennis
.
R6dman, who spoke out
1
(fa
.
the men's· side, Clint
power to them.
that money
'
spent 6n free agent
against
.
theJem
:
~le refs;
.
Vanas
\
vegan
'
captured the
If
you do not count the men
'
s
·
Kenny Lofton, an e.stablislied
·
These
:
w'omenprobably know
Player of the Conf~rence trophy
.
soccer andw.omen'.s volleybaU
superstar, than on a 'very good
the giune ofb~k'.etb
a
li very well
.
at the
·
MAAC Chanipi~nships .
.
.
tefuns)viariit's
t~bintlaii✓e
'
f~I
player with great potentiaL
and are undoubtedly excellent
The team as a whtile tied for sec-
record was 29-23-2.
•
•
Not bad, l
· ·
*
·.
*
*
·
*
*
officials
.
Bun am noLsure if ond
·
1n the tb
\i
rrt.i~ent.c.....:. the
suppose.
·
Last week Kevin
.
Garn~tt;
.
the}'wiU
i,J
accepted
.
Player:s
.
·
besfresuir
"
f
y~
rJor a Red Fox
But when we do account for
Stephon Marbury; Chris Carr,
.
·
find problems with officials wlfo
squad atJhe
.
MAACs.
the redheaded stepchildren
·
of
Clifford Rozier, and Doug West
have been in the league ten
The
:
tea~
werii
5:.
I in'the ab-
the
'
athletic department, the
were'tined $2
.
500 each'and the
years.
:·
How
·
ar~
:
they going·w
bre\
1
1ate4
•'
se~son, and heads
overall mark falls to 36:.55~3.
Timberwolves
'
as
·
a
·
tearri was
vieivwomeni-eferees who have
fofot~~spring~ithachanceto
a
·
ulp.
fined $25,000
. ·
'
The reason?
not even be
'
en around for
a
.
d,osim:ie
damage in·the confer:-
Their shorts \Vere too long.
whole season?
. ·
'
ertce'_:_
-
·
·
with
·
or without
Sr eve
Wqnczyk
is
I almost fell off my diair when
·
Wha{we saw froin WiHiams
'.
:
Vanaswegan, who may opt to
The
Circ(e'ssports editor.
I heard this
'
news
.
You wouid
and Rodman is just the tip
.
of
think the NBA would have more
the iceberg
.
The criticism will
imp_ortant t~i!)gs to worry about
continue
·
to come. I would be
th;n the size.ofplayefs
·
apparel.
greatly surprised if female offi-
What is next, fines for shoe
cials are eyer treated with the
laces tied too
·
loosely? I mean
same res
'
pect as aHue Hollins
come on.
or a Dick Bavetta.
·
.
· Charles Barkley throws a man
· And now, my topfive from the
through a bar window and does
week that was:
not get penalized
.
But when the
I. Indianapolis Colts - at least
league
sees
that
the
they will get one win .
.
Timberwolves shorts are get-
2. Atlanta Hawks - the NB A's
ting pretty long they slap
surprise team so far, at
10-0:
$37,500 in fines on them. Some-
3. College basketball - get
thing does not fit there.
ready for another trip down the
*
* * *
*
The NBA season is only two
weeks old and players are al-
ready having problems with the
new female officiaJs
.
First it was
Piston center Brian Williams
saying that it was a move made
road to the Final Four.
4. New York Jets - they are
back on top of the AFC East
·
s.
Barry Sanders - I know I
put him on last week, but nine
straight 100-yard games de-
serves to be mentioned.
·
Men's ~oops ---.-..
-co-,-m-·n--u-ed-
_
fi_1i_Om_p_a_g_e_l_6_
.
-
"These guys are all pro play-
ers,''
·
said Magarity in his post-
game press conference. "Their
timing and experience was like
night and day
·
c·ompared
:'
i:o
Friday's game."
The All Stars did not run many
set offensive schemes, choos-
ing instead to simply isolate its
best
.
players and lettheir natu-
ral ability take over.
·
"This wasn't a typical game,"
Magarity admitted. "It was
more like a pick-up game."
·
·
"The situation wasn't as real-
istic as the
·
season," agreed se-
nior Bryan Whittle.
There are still serious ques-
tions about the frontcourt as
Marisi begins its regular season
.·.
on Sunday at Vermorit, and
there is still rusfo\1 the Foxes'
•
offensive
·
sets. But the up-
tempo
·
game was effec"tive in
both games, and this team al-
ready seems to have more of an
ide
.
ntity
·
than it did last year
.
·
As
'
time ticked down in the
second half against Belgrade,
a
local broadcaster· shouted to
Mustafa Barksdale fro~ press
row: "Hey Mustafa; why' d they
let you back in this building?"
"Has this ballclub
won
any
rings yet?" Barksdale re-
sponded from the floor.
Not yet, Mustafa
.
Not yet.
The jury is
still
out
THE CIRCLE, November 20, 1997
15
•
CroSS.;COlJ.l1try'teani
.
ruri.s
;
OUtof
gas
~t
NCAA
Regionals
-
·
.
si~tencf
'
thio·uglfo~t the
;
sea~
.
son.
.
.
.
.
.
.
. :
-
~iWe w~
'
re
.
really
tip
ano dpwn
.··
this year;" Colaizzo said.
·
''When
we
·
were good, we were good;
.
But when we \Veren't; we
weren't.
.
"Next year,
the
team
·
must have
more consistency," he contin-
ued. "We have a lot of talent,
and we just have to put it to-
gether.:'
by JAN BfilGHLEY
JR.
Staff Writer
· ·
.
The Marist College men's and
worrien'.s cro~s country teams
seUie~:
,
for i1m~st· idehtical re-
sults· at the NCAA Division
I
Northeast Regional meet on Sat-
urday at Franklin Park i~ Bos-
·
ton.
,
The men wound up in 26th
plac
,
e finish out of 37 schools;
running the
.
ten kilometers in
"the worst conditions
I
have ever
seen," according to Coach Pete
Colaizzo; "There
was
snow, ice
and mud-::: the conditions were
really bad."
The top finisher for Mari st was
freshman Greg Salamone, He fin-
ished
l
08t~ out
.
of the 250
nm-
ners
.
in the event, with a time of
34
.
minutes and
54
seconds.
y
;
:
.::.:~-_;_
,i,l
~
i
u;l.1,
·
i ..
"'-\•
(
:t
•
; .• ,
Ji
,:.
:
,som!rr~!i
_
n}wN.f9r the
.
foxes was
Ben Hefferon, a junior, who fin-
tshed.125th
1n 35:
14 .
.
.
.
•
'
'
.
Other runners who crossed the
fi~ish iinefor'the R~d Fo'xes in-
•
;
'
l;
,
;
.
~'
,
5,
j ,. ,_;
'.
-
•;
'..
•
;
.
..-
.
· ,
~
-
-
_
!; : ,
·
-
.
eluded Pete Startz,
(I
43r~ jn
35:46),
-
Steve Palmer (lq4tli in
36:3
D,
Lou Caporale ( 172nd in
3]:04): a~d Jeff Grady ( I 78th in
37:43).
•.
•
-
.
Colaizzo \~as im'pressed with
Salam~ne'.s,results
i
-
"·'··
·
··
·
'
.
•
;,G;eg
rai~ re·a.11Y~~ll. he h~ci"a
personal best dme,"
,
the
,
coach
said
.
.
.
"It
wris
the
.
first ti me he
W~S
.
()Ur lead
_
runner a\\ year."
.
While tl'\e
_
fi_nishin the regional;
as
.
well.as in.the.MAACCham-
:
~
.
_
l
,-
:
;
<",
:
:. )
!
:
.
:.
."
~
·,
j
,
::;,
'
'
•
i
'
'
•
'
.
'
~
,
•
pior1ship, qisappoint~d
,
Colaizzo,
the season must be termed a suc-
cess.
;
The
.-
Foxes had Si?( f~e~h-
men .and five sophomores,
and
.
.
.
'
..
.
·
-
~
·
-
·
.
.
...
'~
,
.;
.
_.
.
'
.
will return almost
the
entire team
.
next fall.
Colaizzo is relatively content
with his team's perfonnailce this
year, which was-a rebuilding
one. The_ production they-re-.
ceived from the young con tin-
.
gent is one reason to be happy.
·
Salomone, km;>wn to the team
as R:eeses, was, as Colaizzo
phrased it, "a big, big surprise."
He entered ~he Marist program
with only two years of competi-
tive cross-country running un-
WhE:liwe were good,
we
we
good.
But
when
we weren't, we weren't.
-Pete Colaizzo
:derhis
belt, and improved ev-
ery
week.
,
JeffGrady, Joe Scelia, An-
thony Nero, Chris Smith, and
Joe Majkowski also contributed
as freshmen in 1997.
There are also several juniors
.and sophomores who added
scoring punch. for
.
the Red
Foxes,
and
will be
a
part ofnext
year'.~ tean_1.
Ben
.
Hefferon
1
,
the leading
runn~r in every event e;xcept
.
the
Regi<;m
.
als,
.
and Lo1,1 <;:aporale
were two o(the squad's m9st
valuable assets, and.will be se-
r
ni~rs in 1998.
Pete Startz and Steve Palmer,
- both sqphomores; also came up
big this
.
year for Marist. They.
established thems~lve,s as con-
si!;,tent runners
.
on a .team, for
the niost part,- that lac:ked co.n-
The women finished one place
higher the their male counter-
·
parts, coming iti 25th
·
out of a
very competitive field of 31
teams.
They were led through the
snowy course by freshman
Megan Bruno. Marist's top
seven was rounded off by
Heather Perrine, Keni Cleelarid,
·
Jen Glover, Debbie Flanigan,
Kristen Russo, and Karen
Donohue.
Co-captains Beth Cimino and
Kerri Red01ond were pleased
with the team's effort
"The course was dangerous,"
Redmond
said.·
"With every
step we took we sunk deeper
into snow or
.
mud."
.
"It was tough to get a time,"
Cimino added. "It was difficult
for everyone, but since we all
had to run in th~ same condi-
tions, it evened out."
.
This meet was
_
especially
memorable for Redmond, who is
a senior. On Saturday, she ran
.
her last cross-country race for
Marist.
Unfortunately, a f~!low senior,
.
ChristineDolan;was unable to
c~mpete due to injuries
,
sus~·
tained in a recent car accident.
As the Red Foxes' fall cam-
paign came to a close, Redmond
was already looking ahead to
the next season. Marist opens
its winter schedule with
a
meet
at West Pointon Tuesday.
.
"We have a young team, and
I'm psyched for indoor track."
·
swifu
·
teamsope.nMAAC_schedule
--
by MARKJ. WELLS
·
·
StdffWriter
.
.
.
·
-
The Marisf College men's
swimn1ing aiilc_living team de-
feated two Metro Atlantic Ath-
letic Conference rivals last
w,
"'·
The Red Foxes won their sec~
ond home meet of the season on
Thursday, against the Jona
Gaels, 138-98. Then
,
on Satur-
day afternoon, the team traveled
to Rider University, where
it
squeal<ed out a
·
128~ 115 vi~tory.
The Red Foxes improved their
overaH record to.4
-
0 on the sea-
son. By beating lona and Rider,
Marist opened up its conference
scheduie with a mark of2-0.
The women's team did not fare·
as well as
.
the men, earning a split
against
.
the sam~ two oppQ-
nents. In their first match o(~he
week they hosted iona as well,
and defeated ihe Gaels, 154-8?.
Saturday's meet was a h~art-
breaker, however, as the Foxes
lost to Rider in the final race of
the afternoon.
Marist's 400 meter freestyle
team ~ame within
.
six seconds of
keeping the women's
.
undefeated
.
season alive. The Foxes have
ca'mpiled·a 3-1 overall record,
talent. The freshmen on both
incl1,1ding a I
-:I
mark in the
teams have been exceptional
MAAC.
·
.
.
thus far.
Overall, both the men's and
"I can't say enough
about
the
women's teams have been
freshman we have," Van
swimmingextremelyw~ll for so
Wagner said. "They have all
early in the season. Larry Van
done a great job for us."
Wagner, the men's head coach,
Freshman freestyle specialist
anticipated these positive re-
David Dobbins has accounted
suits.
for many of his
.team's
points in
'
.
'I had a firm belief that we
the freestyle events, and
would be 4-0 at this point in the
·
•
claimed first place in three dif~
season," Van Wagner said.
ferent races against the Broncs
There
_
have been many key
on Saturday.
contributors for both teams
Along with winning the 100m
thus far, including senior diver
and 200m freestyle races, he wac;
Chris Blackwell, who has not
the anchor on the victorious
lost in either the Im or the 3m
400m medley relay team. Keith
diving events alJ season.
Nichols, Michael Murphy, and
_
;'Chris Blackwell is the most
Craig Chatlos rounded out the
outstanding diver
.
in
:
the
rest of the foursome.
·
MAAC," Van Wagner praised.
"Dobbins has been really im-
,
Blackwell broke two of his
pressive so f~r," Van Wagner
own ~chooLrecords this past
said. "Right now he is the num-
week, both of which were set
ber sprint freestyle swimmer in
on the I-meter board.
the MAAC."
On the womeri 's side, junior
The Red Foxes have some tim
_
e
div~r Me_lanie Addington won
off before they get back in the
all four of the events she com-
pool competitively. They host
peted in this week, by a corn-
the Stags of Fairfield University,
bined total of 172 points.
in another MAAC matchup,
.
on
The swimming and diving
·
Wednesday, Dec. 3 at 7:00
p:m
teams are loaded with young
at the McCann Center.
C'in:k phtlhllfoc Sl·onu
ESPN came to Poughkeepsie last week to tape a segment
that was featured on College GameDay on Nov .. 15. Paul
Deckaj and Dwayne Bates were interviewed during the
three minute piece, which previewed the showdown
between Marlst's smothering rush defense and Siena's
record setting running
,
back, Reggie Greene.
.
Women's basketball
loses exhibitionfinale
by CHRIS O'DONNELL
·
Sta.ff Writer
Thewomen's basketball team
closed out its pre-season last
F:
riday night with a tough 78-
72
loss to the New York Gazelles at
the McCann Center.
Down 41-33 at halftime
,
the
Gazelles (5-4) used two
second
half runs to climb back into the
contest.
ond and third chances or -you
wjll
getburned."
The Red Foxes abandoned the
three pointer in the second half.
and only attempted four treys
after hitting
seven
of 15 in the
iirst half. Juniortri-captain Beth
Shackel
.
led the three point
charge in the first half by hit-
ting five-- she finished with
19
points before the break
,
but did
not score in the second half.
Senior tri-captain Colleen
King said the team executed
King
said
the Gazelles were
its new motion offense well in
s~me....,hat of
,1
mystery.
.
:
1,
the first half.
•
·
:
~'We,<lidn't
know.much
.
about
,
·
"Last,gnme
.
we l
_
rnd some
this team going into the g;:i,ne.
trouble running the new of-
so
.we
dido '.t know their style of
fense," she said. "But this time
play,"
she
said.
we ran it a lot better, which re-
The Gazelles
stormed
irito:the
·
suited
in some
.
easy baskets."
second half with a 16-4 run in
-:.
But
·shackel
said team looked
the first four minutes and took a
49-45 lead. Sandie Propl
.
1et led
th_e way for the Gazelles with 18
points.
The
second
run iced the
game
for
,
the Gazelles, as they
scored
15 unanswered points to go up
72-64.
Marist Lid trouble boxing out,
and the Gazelles grabbed nine
offensive rebounds in the
sec-
ond half.
Sophomore Alex. Stephens
said the problems with boxing
out hurt the team.
'.'That
definitely had an effect
on the outcome of the game,"
she said. "You can'
_
t give the
opposing team too many
sec-
different in
each
half.
"We
were disciplined and ex-
ecuted in the ftrs_t half,'
"
she said.
"But in the second
.
half we
played their style and they got
back in the game."
.
Sophomore Sabrina Vallery
was the leading scorer for the
_
Red
,
Foxes with
.
21 points and
eight rebounds. Alex Stephens
added 11 points and four re-
bounds for Marist.
The Red Foxes start the regu-
lar season with a two game road
trip. They play at Boston Col-
lege on Thursday, and at Bos-
ton University on Saturday be-
fore hosting Army on Dec. 2 at
S:30p.m.
F o o t b a l l - - - - - - - - -
... continuedfrom page 16
tackle on his way
.
to the
.
end
zone.
The touchdowns by. seniors
Godfrey and D
_
eckaj were a fit-
ting way to end the careers of
the Marist class
qf
;98, as the
team won its fourth game
-
in a
row, tying yet another Marist
record.
After the game; the seniors
and their parents
·
were honored
on cold, dark Leonidoff field.
with
·
only the scoreboard and
the passing ca
.
rs providing
light. Marist public address
announcer Dan Henn summed
up
the accomplishments of this
outstanding group with one fi-
nal announcement.
"This class has set or tied 33
·
school and national records,"
Hen,:i said.
"They
are the only
class to have a winning record
in each of their four years."
Not too bad.
Individual Leaders:
Rushing:
Mari st: Allen I 9-120,
Godfrey 12-104, Rhodes 13-49.
Wickliffe 5-6, Daley .4-(-30).
Siena: Greene 25-80, Corvino 2-
6, Lostritto 1,0.
Passing:
Mari
st:
Daley 4-9-1-11.
Siena: Dearstyne 12-27-1-122.
Receiving: Marist: Reed 2-1.
Traynor 1-10, Reilly 1-0. Siena:
Muszynski 5-50, Madigan 3-49.
Hillier 3-18. Smith 1-5.
i:
f;
:
If
t
,
...
,.
· .
. :
·
'The
conditions were tough.
.
.
.
.
.
'
•
•
• • . •
.•
•
." .
..
..
..
·
•
>
....
..
......
.
:· ·
"
·;,
·
,,
.
'
·'
.
•
"
••
·.
Marist's
·
defensewastougher; .
'
'
'
.
.
··
.
_
.-.:
,.
·
.
.
.
-.:
''
_· .
'
·
.
.. ~<.:.
·
_
:
~~Siena
RB
Re~gie (]reene
.
~1~M~
h1
·
:sea~ori.
•
ti1i,1e;
.:
.
.
f1p~stii~
!
.#f
:
§7~
{:}
\:'
:
'
.
Stu
e::~~t~il1ilo~:::
0
:.;:ay
.
'
·
·
·· <-
·. ·
·
<
, ·
· ·
'· -
·.
':
halfback became the all~tiine
Di~
to d~scribethe performance of
j
ltf
iZ~,i
¾
~!
L;'<s
1
t
~l~~!f
~Wfii~J•!tit
;t~j.
C:kt;~:::::~ve
::~!
.
;
:.
:;~
it'
wbuld}1a~e be
.
en:t"un
•
,
:
io
:
.:
-
bestechhe record of \3~§
:
yirds
.
.
·
1es
:
Of!
the day; six of them solo,
~atch
,
Regg'ie
·
Greene
'
-run;
set lastyeclfbyNMI'sThomas
and
.
deflected
.
three passes .
..
Watch him
-
~qufrtthrotigh
•
the
Haskins with a 21 :-yard
run,
with
Deckajalso registered his first
smallest of iioies; cutbi1'ckin
:
the
6:41 lift in the first quarter
:
. .
.
.
career sack in his final
.
game,
.
tip¢n field
/
aiid
ac'c'elerat~
'
past
'.
. :
,
._
When
asked if
the
weath~r
.
-whichfor<:ed a fumble by Siena
:
~e°fehde{~
:
ii:~h]~se:.
The{ best
.
~rti
tti~
:
wet
,
and muddy field
.
quarterback
.
Steve Dearstyne.
Aishing tfofe
_
risefo
·
1~AAhistoty
·
were~ prbblem; Greene did not
He then capped
off
his day with
denied everyone of that oppor-
make any excuses.
.
. .
.
a 70~yard interception return for
tunitf on Saturday.
''.The conditions were tough,"
.
a touchdown late in the fourth
The Red
·
Foxes held Greene to
Greene said .
.
"But
Marist's de-
quarter
.
.
Deckaj's heroics earned
.
80 yards rushing · in their 34-9
fense was to
_
ugher;"
him Defensive
·
Player of
_
the
trouncjng of Siena>arid, th~nks
·
It was a defense that got con-
Week honors iri the
MAACand
to five stops b~hind the line of tributiorisfromeveryoneo~Sat-
ECAC.
.
.
.
.
'
-
.
'
CirclePhoto/JoeScotto
scrimmage; gave up only 36 net
urday.
_
R.eid Ellis, John Fox, and
.
He was not
.
alone, however.
Quarterback Jim Daley helped the Red Foxes destroy Siena
rushing yards to the Saints
:
In
Archer B
.
ridgefort:11 had a sack a
With a career bestl 20 yards and
on Saturday, but the defenH stole the shc,w.
doing so, the
.
Red Foxes broke
piece, while Darren _\!aides and
three touchdowns, junior standing second halfof the sea-
two Division I-AA records~
.
-
Mario
.
Wilson chipped in with
tailback J.J. Allen was named
.
son, as he had his second
GrambJing's thirteen-year
:
old
tackles for losses to help ensure
MAAC Co-Offensive Player of
·.
straight I 00-yard game with
.
I
04
.
markof 44.5 rushing yards al-
Marist's place in the record
the
,
Week .
.
He scored Marist's
yards on only 12 carries.
lowed per game by establishing
book.
·
·
first three touchdowns, on a25~
Godfrey also had what was
an average
·
of 39.8, and Florida
·
It
was fairly obvious immedi-
.
yard run in the first quarter, and
probably the Red Foxes' run of
A&M's 1978 record of2.3 yards
ately after the game that the Red
on runs of 16 and 9 yards in the
the year, going 57 yards in the
allowed per rush was replaced
_Fox pJayers were excited about
third quarter. Allen now has 20
fourth quarterfor a touchdown.
by the Foxes' average of2.2.
their records, despite the con-
career touchdowns,
IO
in each
On 3rd-and-2, Godfrey headed
Greene stole some of Marist's
stant reminders from the coach-
of his first two seasons, and
right, was hit at the line of scrim-
thunder with a record of his own,
ing st~ff that Winning should be
ranks third all-time in Marist his-
mage, hit again at the first down
·
despite having his worst rush-
number one in theii:rninds.
-
tqry.
.
.
.
.
.
.
marker, then somehow bounced
ing performance since his
"All week the coaches told us
Senior'. fullback
·
Samuel
outside and broke one more
sophomore season. The shifty
that winning was the most im-
podfrey continued his out-
:
Please see
F'BALL
011
page. 15
...
·
Men'S basketball SJ)rint:§tbrOUgh pfe:season schedule
by SfEVE W~CZ\'K
.
·
Sports
Editor
.
Mustafa Barksdale keeps find~
ing his way back to th~ NicCann
.
Center. But thistiine, finally;'the
Red Foxes sent hirri home with a
loss
.
Red Star features thirteen bud-
ding European players, and,on
this ttight at least, o~e
_
Ameri-
can:
.·
Mustafa
:
Barksdale, the
hero ofMonmouth'S: 1995 im-
possible comeback
·
against.
.
Marist in
-
the N~Csemifin~ls,
·
reappeared in Poughkeepsie for
•
The
•·
meri
's
hhsketbal I
-
team
the second time since Th~ Shot
opened its biiefexhibiticm sea~
a·sfmemtier'(somehowf of the
SOBOi)
Friday by clubbirigRed - Belgradebun~h . .
Star Belg
.
racle, a travelinlall-star
.
. .·
Last season, Barksaale led his
team from Yugoslavia; 110~68:
.
·
Monmouth Hawks to· an 83s
:
65
-
'!I though
f:
we
'
played
\1/ell
to~
·
regular
.
season ~ictory
·
·
at
'
the
night,"
·
said
.
head coach Dave
McCann Center, and was booed
Magarity
·
•
after the game. "Of unmercifully by the Marist faith-
course;
.
thatwas a young, inex-
ful each time he touched the
perienced team
."
ball.
Sophomore.
Sebastian Beilln boxoa out a Y~goaf~v'fln'"t
fro°
Larragan and
Joe
Taylor look on.
.
This time arnund; everything
·
Manny Oter<?
.
arid Bobby] oe
Corey Williams, who poured in
but the booing had changed.
.
Hatt.on
·
poured in
I
7 and
I
5
33
points:
···
Barksdale led Red Star with 23
points, respectively, and
·
contin
-
With te
_
n
·
seconds remaining,
points,
·
b
_
ut received little help
ued to build reputations as de.,.
the touring semi~pro team held
as the Red Foxes cruised
to
an
pendable scorers, Otero buried
a slim two point lead;
easy win.
fotir
of six three~pointers,. and
A missed free throw opened
Marist sprinted out
'
to
a
quick
Hatton hit all three treys he at-
the doorfor Marist, which could
I 0-2 lead, and never looked back
: .
tempted.
.
.
·..
.
have had
a
chancelo tie or \Vin
Mag~rit/s
i
squad
;
held
'
~'33::13
.
Magarity
:
was ~otcompletely
thegami had:it cont~~ll~d the
advantage with 7:48 remaining
satisfied with the te~m's first
.
loose balL
iri the first half, and waltzed into
•
outing, however •
.
·
·
But the Foxes couldnot grab
th~
'
Ioc~erroom, iip52-29.
..
.
.
'They
goltoo many offensive
a rebound when they needed it
By the time forty
.
full minutes
rebounds;"
:
he
:
~xplained. · n10st, and Converse regained
had passed; the Red Foxes had
-·
''When
·
westarfpiaying teams
possesion ~fter an offensive
put up I
iO
points and show-
with rnqreexpenence,we've got
board. Maris( was
·
forced to
cased
:
its three key newcomers.
to
·
do a
·
better
-
j c>b on
·
the
--
send Duffy Samuels back to the
·
BoLarragari started the gam
.
e
bo'ards/'
charitystripe.
.
at poirit guard~ the role he will
·
·. ·
~ophomore
·
cente~ Seb~~tian
_
.
.. Our problems came down to
be
•
expected to
fi1i
this year-'-
BeJiin echoea
·
Magarity's state-
a piay here
/
and aplay
.
:th
_
ere,"
and
.
immediately
'
looked com-
.
ments.
.
.
.
.·.·.
·
.
explained Magarity. ''Missing
fortable as the team's floor gen~
''We
havefo s
·
tiive to
gef
b~t-
that last rebound was big."
.
era!.
-
The
.
junior transfer from
tert said
Belliri.
«We ne~d
to
·
The
-
Ali Stars converted on
''.
Pro\i
.
idence Cone
·
gejust missed
get more
.
rebounds:.,especially
-
tbeirfinal four free throws in the
a triple,double in his Marist
de-
from thefrontline."
. . .
·
w,ming
·
moin~nts of the game,
but, recording
·
15 points, 9 as-
:
That probiem
'
becainf pain-
and, despite some last~minute
sists;
·
and
9
rebounds.
'
fuHy dear in
;
Marist's second
.
heroics by
:
B6bby Joe H~tton,
Tomasz Cielebak provided of-
e~hibition ga~e, ~gainst the
.
Maristwas up~nded, ~8~85
:
ferisive punch off of the bench;
Converse Alf Stars;
on
Tuesday
·
Hatton finished with 27 points
·
drilling seven of'ttie
'
nine shots
at theMcCann Center.
and 8 assists, while Manny
he
·
took, including several jump-
.
The Foxes were able to hang
.
Otero tossed in 18, buttheir ef-
.
ers fromtheperimeter. The 6'9". with this group of solid college
forts were not enough to over-
sophomore finished with 16
veterans for most of the night,
come a teamful of very talented
~
.
points.
'
_:
•
.
despite the overwhelming pres-
.
and
,
seasoned players .
.
·
·
<
·
Freshman
·
Drew Samuels,
enceofformer Ari~?na Wildcat
Please see
HOOPS
011
page /4 ...
Magarity's
'
most prized recruit,
r--------------------:...;::....:. __
exploded for 14 points in his first
INSIDE ..
~
collegiate game. Three of those
points came when; on the receiv-
ing end of a Larragan pass, he
converted an acrobatic lay-up
that drew a foul and left· the
McCann crowd pleasantly
-
stunned.
Cross-Country . . . . . .
Off Campus.
Fall wrap-up
Hockey . . . . . . . . . . .
15
/4
14
. . . . . 13
... SPORTS
50.8.1
50.8.2
50.8.3
50.8.4
50.8.5
50.8.6
50.8.7
50.8.8
50.8.9
50.8.10
50.8.11
50.8.12
50.8.13
50.8.14
50.8.15
50.8.16
::~: i~t
:i
t~i~~~:t
,
;,
:
,,
.
..
play
;
~1t"tlie.
,
secre~
·
1ove .
·
·
·
affair
·between.
Eleanor
·
·
Roosevelt
and
Lorena
· ·
M~n'~
6ii~(i;,1
•
1
--
·:
,~~1m
·
·•
si>lits:'t,~o exli
_
ibit~~ll
.
:
.
,
games;
•
starts
·
seaso
_
n
()D
.
stinday.
·
·
·
· ·
·
·
:
·
.
:·--:.,
.
_
·
_
~aristcommuriity.~ ...
page
2
Fe~tures.~: ... : ..
~.~~
....
~
.. page
s .
-
•
~page
16
·
Opinirin .........
!.~ .....
~····Page 8
~&E.~ ...
~.~.~~.
'
:;~.~~~~
..
~
..
~.~page
Jl
Sports.~ ..
~.~ ... ~ ... ~~ ..
~°" ...
page 16
Hickock.
,
. ·
•.
.
.
\Tqlume50.
Issue
8
..
The
student newspaper
:
of
Mari st
College
.
November 20, 1997
Brother'
,
.Ambrose
honorec1
lJY
Pope
.
.
.
,
.
_
.
_.
-
.,-,.,
_
_
by T.J. BEAURY
StaffWriter
•'
..
help in
.
receiving the
.
PA~ate
audience, arranged the trip. to
Rome; Italy.
.
. . .
_
Asman group fromMarist
_
"We had been hoping for
.
·
/i
was able to receive ar'iaudience
quite some time
,
to arrange a
J
1,v
;
·
.
i
and
-
celebrate mass with
.
Pope
papal meeting with the Pope
·
·
~
-"'"~
,
:
:
·:,t
·
·
i
John Paul II
.
recently.
and Brother Paui as pait of re-
.
"
·
-
. •' :
-
.
-
,•.'
..
_
»./
j_
.
·
This pastspring, Br~ther Pc!.ul
ceiving his medal,,, Murray
i
·
Ambrose received the "Cross
said.
.
.
.
. • .
•
.
·
,
.
. . . .
. ,
Brother Amt>rc,se and Preslde~-;--Cktiml~ Murray pr~sented Pope John Paul
II
with
h;•b~kra•b~~'itte
~r
.
o
.
Ehc
.
cclehs
.
ia eh
•
t
·.
P
.
odnthificR"
.
(Ct~off)
·
s
.
s
.
_Another.
_purpo
_
se
·
of
.
thefvisjt
.
Hudson River
_
Valley during
'
their recent visit to the Vatican.
·
iort
_
e
.
urc
.
an
~
.
,.
on
1
,
was to obtam documents rom
·
.
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
:
·
.
.
.
..
·
,
·
·
,
.
.
·
.
. fqd1is ~a~y_
'a,ccomplisliments
the Vatican Archives.for a con-
.
an hour.
_
_
.
.
.
skul
·
l~~p- 'the
-
~ope
-
~ears>· he
"With his eyes, his spirit and
f<;>r the benefit of the Church
ference to, be held on ca~p~s
During their private audierice,
said. "After
-
we
·
presented that
his warmth you can still see the
and the Pope.
B_rother
next fall_. The _conference is !n
the group was able to exchange
to the Holy
.
Father, he blessed-
qual!ties that make him a great
Ambrose ~ou~de~ M:,m
st
as a
connection :,v1th the Franklin
gifts with the P(?pe. Murray and
it and putit
011
his head. He then
Pope
"
and a great world leader,"
fo~r-y~~
1
!]S
t
itl.!~
1
.
0
~
.
1
~
1946
-
Roosevelt L1br~ry and
_
focus~s
Ambrose presented a book on
exchanged his skull cap with
.
Murray said
.
.
.
~es1des
__
t_h_e c~anta_ble w~r
.
k
on Roosevelt~ relat1onsh1p
the Hudson Valley that was in-
us."
·
With the conference on
he has done for
th
e Man
st
with the Catholic Church
.
scribed to him from the people
.
In addition each person in the
Roosevelt's relationship with
Brothers
,
Ambrose was the
-
-
Murray his wife Chief Re-
in the deleoation
·
·
·
·
'd
·
·
"ft
the Catholic Church starting in
p
'
I
·
f
.
ffi,
T"
M,
•
.
d
o
·
•
.
group receive rosanes as g1 s.
ope _s persona ..
~ouner ~r
lat1ons O 1cer 1m
asste an
Massie said the gift exchange
Murray said that although one
October, talks with Vatican of-
matenal
_
too sen~Jtive for ma~!.
trus_tee John Gartl~nd a~com-
that he and
_
Murray shared with
can see thai'
'
till)e
and
the Pope's
ficials were begun.
Man s
t
PresidentCD~~m~
pan:1ed Brother Ambrose
.
to t
_
he
the Pop~ was incredible.
·
.
tiring schedule
·
has taken its
Massie said that the director
Murray,- who wrote ar ina
Vatican. They had the ch~nce to
"We both presented the pope - toll · the p
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bYGYNASLOMCiN~KY
·.
·.
was
.
~aiti~g
·
for l
.
he national
arereally serious about," he
.:
:
Mamigii!g Edz
.
·
tor
_ · ·
board to
revoke
Sigma Phi
Ep-
·
said.
.
-
sHo'n before they
.
took action.
Mike Lombardy, senior and a
This ha,s not be¢n
a
good se~
·
When
the,
natibnal b6ard acted,
.
member of Alpha Phi Delta,
mester fodhe Greek side of
'
SGA followed suit;;
-
said the school treated them
.
Mari st,
.
.·
The
·
two remaining
_
fraterni-
unfairly.
:
Two of the
·
remaining four· ties are in
.
trouble and trying to. .
"It
wasn't like
a
party," he said,
fraternities were
given
letters
·
stay on campus for the upcom-
"It was more like a gathering of.
explaining the reypc;ation of inf semesters.
·
.
•
···
..
. .
•
friends anct
·
most of the people
their charters atMarist Col-'
.
Madtiri. said some members
there
·
w~re of age."
iege this
_
\Veek.
.
.
.
.
.
ofA.Jptia,
.
Phj
~
Pelta were
·
ar-
According to MaristCollege,
·
Tau Epsilon Phi; was one of rested fof~ri'incidenl that hap~
·
·
any off .. campus disturbance
·
ttiese°
·
fratemities: Their situ-
pened off-campus.
. .
.
.
.
.
warrants community ~ervice.
ation had been an on going pro-
.
..
"Six to eight !llembers were
.
With
'
this incident, the college
ces
_
sJ<>oking
for.
a
.
solution.
.
arrested for: viqlation _of.the
.
did
·
not ha~e any concrete evi-
However, the decision
-
~is
.
no~
city ordinance 13.5-5,
-
wh
.
icJi. is.
•
dence
;'
such
as
:
serving under-
eritirely°up
·
10 the
·.
coll~g~.
-
. ·
·
·
. unreaso~able
_
11oise,"
·
he
·
.
s
.
aid.
•
·
age
.
peopie, so it was forced to
FrankMaduri, student body
"They were also
.
i
.
n violation of fall pack on
.
the city
.
ordinance
Th•
.
.
Huds
.
.
0
.
n vane
.
y expe
..
rlenced an early snowfall of
.
nlne lnches
pre~ide_nt, said the
:
scho?I was .the good neighborpolicy." .
about unreasonable noise.
last week;
.
Temperatures continue to remain cold
88
winter
.
ap-
.
actm~3n ~ccor?~nc
1
ew1th the
.
However, Carlos Beltran, se-
·
Bel~ran said
·
they were still
· .··
·
·
.
·
.
·
·
·
.
'
fratem1tys
-:
nauona s.
.
..
.
·
nior and a
_
member of the Al-
treated unfairly.
.
.
· .
"Once and for all, it's a
'
done
·
_
pha Phi Delta fraternity said this
"There were of other parties
ClasSsChedllle
·
teVlsed
.
.
bySTEPIIANIEMERCURIO
Editor-in-Chief
.
·
.
time an
.
argument\\'.aS brnught
up against starting on A~g. 3 I,
SGA had a reason why it
Students can sleep in a
little,
wouldn't work.''
·
.
classes will not begin at 7:30
According to Kevin M.
a.m. n~xtyear.
Lundy, senate speaker,
.
the
The class schedule for the
schedule had tp be changed to
1998-1999 academic year has
meet state
·
requirements for the
finally
.
been de
_
cided on
;
amount
of
time college su:1-
Classes will commence a week
·
dents have to attend class.
earlier than usual on Aug. 31.
"The classes were either go-
According to John T. Williams,
ing to start earlier, or the dura-
student body vice president,
tion of the classes would run
this was due in large part to
.
in-
longer," he said. "We felt
put from the students and the
longer classes and shorter
Student Government Associa-
times in between classes would
tion (SGA).
be unfair to commuters and
"The faculty and administra-
students with disabilities.
tion referred to a lot of what
SGA had to
say,"
he said. "Any-
Please see
CLASSES
,
page
J...
·
deal, their charter has been ~e--
was not true .
.
.
,
..
.
broken
up
that night and issued
voked because their national
·
.
!
'No ~ne was arrested,'.' he
city ordinances, but Marist
revoked
_
them and
·
we~re just
·
said.
"The
seven guys who live
hasn't done anything to them,"
foHowing suit," he said.
--
in the house were taken down
he said.
·
-·some
members of the fra-
.
to the si~tiori, but \Vereonly
The other fraternity left on
temity said they
thought
the
given cita_tions for the noise."
campus is Phi Iota Alpha: As
situation was not treated fairly.
After much investigation by
of Nov.
-
18, the grace period
· Andrew Cosentino~ junior Chris
J.
-tte,
vice-president for
was declared over and it must
and memb.er of Tau Epsilo_n
.
club affairs; Alpha Phi Delta
bedeterminedifthefrathasthe
Phi, who has been a member
was given IO hours of commu-
required IO members.
_
since the second semester of nity service for the incident, but
According to SGA guide-
his freshman year, said he felt
their charter was not revoked
,
Jines, clubs at Marist need to
they were not given enough
Beltran said some members
have
a
constant amount of
time.
-
.
.
·
received
.
additional hours.
members to stay at club status.
"I think it's unfair in a way,"
"The seven people who live in
"If
we don't hear from Phi
he said. "Even though we owe
the house received an addi
_
tional
Iota Alpha's leaders, we auto-
money to nationals, we should
25 hours
·
of community ser-
ma~ically have to rescind their
have been given time to try to
vice,".he said.
charter because if you fall be-
catch up. I felt like we didn't
Maduri said he hopes this will
low
t O
members you loose
get to see our money in the
prevent any future mishaps.
your charter automatically," he
things we did."
"We feel that they
will
learn
said.
Sigma Phi Epsilon was the
their lesson
·
with that and that
other fraternity that received
we've really sent a strong mes-
Please see
FRAT,
page 3 ...
a letter of revocation. SGA sage that this is something we
------------·-
-----
-
·
-·
'
-
·
-
--
-
---·.
.
..
-
---
·
---•--
·
··
--··
I
,
I
2
t
· THE
CiRCLE ·
·:: /-November
20, 1997 :-.
seor.
.;;.;
~Xgic>~P,
_
\Vitl{
an schedule a
·
_
-
dtliilt~ : . -
-
••-
.
c~it;
~on;.
~!:!!fJJ!t1
,:y· ,\//:://·
-
~
:
by SCOTTNEVILLE
.
S(affWriter
On-campus facilities·are not easily ac-
cessible to all . Mari st students .. ·
Some of the
i
,200 commuters, inc}ud- ·
ing Junio~ Kate Bowdren, said they are
unsatisfied ·with the efforts of Marist's
activities to include them. Others are con-
.
'
.
tent with the facilities and theiropportu-
nities to use them.
·
.. Bowdren said.she uses many of the
. facilities, such as the Ii~rary, the Caba>
ret, and the computer labs.
"I'm in two clubs. The first one meets
in the Writing Ceriter, so there's no mem-
ber charge-: it's a poetry group,''. she said.
"The seco'nd one _is the Bard and Ballad
Prpject. I do that jn 'l"!ly'free tirrie."
... ' Bow4reri Jjloved off camptis. this year.
du
·
e to· increase in freshmen enroll merit.
She -h~d 'a
.
suffi~ie~t number of priority
points by the stand~rds.set in the spring,
btH
tq~
staridards were changed. over the
summer, so Bowdren ·was forced to look
elsewhere. -•·
Bowdren said this has been a blessi9g.
''Now I come on campus amf have a
purpose to be here. I do more work now,"
~e said. "Since the library was so close,
I
'?\'OU
Id put it off completely. Now, I need
to make a set time to do this, so it _actu~ ·
ally organizes me more. When I come on
campus, I use the activities and they have
more value to me than when I lived here."
Jeremy Doran, a commuting student,
. said he participates in the basketballand
volleyball intramural programs and does
not see what other· people· are upset
about and feels fortunate to be commut-
_ing.
· "Idon'.t feel cheated. I hear some people
complaining; saying·that they miss out
on things," he said. "I talk to on-campus
In
Your Opinion
people and they that they tniss their fami-
lies <lildmiss living a~ ho!Ue, and I don't
have that problem." .
.
.
. Other comrriu.ter students, such as
Felisha Zammit said she has used the
cafeteria and library and even tried to do
some activities, but have
run
into prob-
. lems with times.
. .
"I did sign up for afew, but the meet-
ings are at night. I don't want tocome
back here that late," she ·said. "Marist
keeps everything pretty open, it's just ·
up to the person."· .
·
Jennifer Simmons, Vice President of
Commuter Council, said she tries to help
get the commuter students involved,
makingtheni. aware of events and build-
. ing a sense of community.
. · 'The ·prograi:i:i is just like R~C,"· she:
said. "We try· to involve different groups;
··doing luncheons _to integnite tije off pm-
pus people witl). thefaculty and the.other
stude.nts. It ha e s once a week."
I>.o.;y:ou ·use
the
new
gym
down
at-M~c,~4pn·?
_.,,·_ :• :·· .. <-: _._ ·.. ' ·'
-
.
:
. . .
.
.
'
,
.
.
-
~riaill
Nethercott
Freshman
«l use_ all the facilities, especially the
ew gym at McCann: It is a great place
o workout and
it
is free."
Freshman·
·-
·,
':...•-·.
"I like the McCann gym.
It
is so mu:ch -
more advanced than other gyms.
_It
is big·
enough ·so you don't have to wait-for
long even if there are teams working out"
SECURITY BRIEFS
- November I-I, 2:45 a.m. - A patrol officer
doing his rounds observed t~o individuals
acting suspiciously in the Beck parking lot.
He called for backup ~nd security i~medi-
ately apprehended one individual for ques-
-
tioning. While searching the lot, security
found the second individual hiding under a
car. The two men, ages 18 and 19, were in-
terviewed and identified the vehicle they were
using. Found in the front seat of the car were
·numerous goods stolen from other vehicles,
such~~- a wallet, and car stereo. In the back
seat were two young women ages
I
5
and
I
6.
The owner of the wallet, along with another
victim, identified the belongings in the car.
The suspects are charged with third degree
criminal possession, and were held at
Dutchess County Jail each with a $5,000 bail.
November 16, 5:30 a.m. - What presum-
ably started as a joke ended up not
to be a
laughing matter for some students in
Champagnat Hall. Someone thought it funny
to plug up the showers on the ·second floor
of the women's bathroom with toilet paper,
and let them run. Someone called security on
the first floor that saw water trickling down
from the ceiling. The water caused ·dainage
to several rooms on both the second and
third floors. No suspect was found.
November 15, 4:15 p.m. - A male from
Siena College. viciously attacked our very
own mascot, the Red Fox rig~t after the foot~
ball game.
A
cop chased _down the boy, Ray
Clark. He was not charged, but Marist se~
curity has notified Siena security. We hope
you are OK, Mr. Red Fox man!
Head of securi.ty, Joe Leary, received a
phone call from <;:hief Dorneyer.of the
Fairview Fire Department. The fire chief
expressed his concerns regarding the use of
halogen lights particularly in our living ar-
eas.· Security urges that the use of halogen
lights be discontinued. As of now, they are
not a fire code violation, but Security is
· checking on this issue. If found by the fire
department to be a violation, "cooperation
with the request of their discontinuance will
not
be voluntary," stated Leary ·
The was a mistake in last .._,.eeks secu-
rity briefs. There was no one arrested in
Sheahan Hall for fake IDs.
. ·. Billy
Stanton
Freshman ·
>:
·.< :; ·· .
·:·:
;
__ ,--;;
_;._!_·
·~-!:.:.,
:_
:.1~:_:~
:
!:, '-;.; ;; __
,:·:;:-./~:-~:!,~::[
."I li_ke tousy_JQe,M_cGan.ngym!f?eqt4s
ifs reallys6nvi~iient artct\{ctva-;.ced: Thi
. one is a lot better. than the gym I belon
fo
at home."
"How's the
weather?"
Thursday: Chilly, Sun with Clouds
.,
42°
45°
Friday: Cool, Mostly Cloudy
37° 51
°
Saturday: Chilly, Light Rain
32°
49'"
THE CIRCLE
NeWS
November 20, 1997
3
North End burglarized yet again
Lorena Hickock and
.
Eleanor Roo99valt: A Love
Story
;as pr•
sented In the Performing Arts Room Nov. 11. The play profiled
the l)rlvate love affair between Hickock and Roosevelt.
Secret love affair revealed
in the Student Center PAR
,
by JILL
.
GIOCONDO
read from the numerous letters
by JEN FE~INELLA
Staff Write,:
·
WhenTownhouse A-4 called
.
about a burglary in their house,
they found security already out-
side their front door.
Old Townhouse A4 was bur-
glarized late Sunday night, Nov.
2. Sometime between 2:30
a.m. and
7:30
a.m.,
a teievision
was stolen. When the residents
called to alert security, they
noticed Marist security offic-
ers issuing parking tickets in
the lot outside their townhouse.
Junior Stacey Spina
,
a resi-
dent in TH A-4, said she was
mad when she saw the parking
tickets the next morning.
"Why were they so intent on
issuing tickets instead of
watching our house?" Spina
said.
"My
concern is that there
are other problems on campus
besides illegal parking
."
There is some question as to
whether the front door was
locked or not
.
Housemate Jes-
sica Hickey said the front door
may have been locked, but she
is unsure.
"We made a point of locking
the front door constantly after
the first burglary," Hickey said.
"We figure it must have been
locked."
Hickey
said
the house began
to have trouble with their lock
the day after the burglary. Se-
curity was called in to fix it. and
this led her to believe the lock
was tampered with
:
"We hadn't had any problems
with the lock the day before,"
Hickey said.
Joe Leary, director of
safety
and security, on the other hand,
said the lock was not tampered
with.
"Our
.
assistant locksmith
checked out the lock, and it was
just dried up," Leary said. "It
was re-lubricated and it works
now."
With all the recent burglaries
in the Old Townhouses
,
it has
been decided that new locks
will be placed in these doors.
Leary said the new locks have
been contracted, and installa-
tion will begin by the end of the
month
.
These locks will secure the
door every time it is closed.
Students will have to carry their
keys at all
times
unless they
prop the door open. Funding for
the new locks came out of the
physical plant budget.
Leary
said
the college will
start by replacing locks in the
Old Townhouses where the bulk
of the burglaries have occurred
and then move on to the rest of
campus. But despite the chang-
ing of the locks, Leary said he
still believes these burglaries
are
crimes of opportunity.
"The only way replacing
these locks will work is be-
cause of the automatic closer,"
he said.
Leary said if the locks were
simply changed without adding
the automatic closer, the human
element involved would still
make the locks unreliable.
"Students
must learn to bring
their keys with them, and lock
their doors," he said.
"They
can't have it both ways."
l ,
.
•
.
!
. ,
;
.
:StaffWrit~r
·
.
-
-
.
.
that Roosevelt wrote her.
,
.
John Svare, president of the
The play
Lorena Hickock and political science dub, said his
Eleanor Roosevelt:
.
A Love club was interested in co-spon-
Story presents a
.
side of Ameri-
soring the event because it
can history f~w
-
people have
would introduce a new view-
heard about or
stiiqied:
point of a historical figure to
Alumnus publishes first book
by MICHAEL GOOT
Staff Writer
BiGALA, the Political Sci-
Marist students.
ence Club, Woinen's Studies,
"I
thought it was an important
One Marist graduate has
The Division of the Humani-
event for students at Maristsee
turned his one-time hobby into
ties, and the Gender Equality
different perspectives about
a book.
.
.
Club all played a
·
role in co-
Eleanor Roosevelt,"
li:e
said.
·
Myles C. Pmkney, a Manst
sponsoring this event in the
·
The play was originally
.
writ- · gr~duate and Po_ughkeepsie
Performing
.
Arts
:
Room
-
,·
Nov.
.
'
ten and
performed
liy
:
PafBoi"ici;
-;,
},
~S~~~~~
.
ha~
P!-Jb.h~~
.
e
.
d
a
book
11.
.
,
and is based ori
..
the
o~e
r-'
i"3oo
.
_
·
-
entJtled
-
Jts
Raii1ing Laeigluer.
·
JoAnne Myers
;
assistanrpo-
·
love letters from
·
Roos;velt
.
T~e boo
_
k is a collection ofpho-
litical
'
scienc~ professor, said
..
.
which Hickock left to the FDR
tographs of African-An:ierican
that this coalition of clubs
·
library in Hyde Park after her
children with ~oetry alongside
br~ught the play to Marist t,e-
death. The letters are still avail-
the photos. Pmkney
shot
the
cause
<
it dealt with the various
··
able at the library.
p~ot~grap~s and journalist
issueijtie dubs represent.
•
:
Hickock also left photo-
Nikki Gnmes comppsed
''The
:
play is about
•
two
·
very
·
grapbs and other momentous of twel~e poems
:
stronfwomen in history which
her relationship with Eleanor to
Pmkney said he has always
interested the women's studies
the library.
be~? i~terested in. photography.
department," Myers said. "It
The play is put on by Great
I hke cap_tunng p~ople
.
as
deals
.
with a
·
lesbian issue
·
be-
Dame productions and has been
·
the~ a~e, tel,l,mg st?nes wJth
fw
'
e~ri
:
i-f~ckock
"
and Roosevelt
preformed for the past four
thelf picture: he. sa1~.
.
that is not
.
often talked about
·
years. It started its national
Th: book is pnmanly aimed
which was an issue
·
with
tour this past weekend.
at children, a~d has abou~ 50
.
Bi GALA.
·
Political Science
Myers helped coordinate the
.
phot~s of c~ildren. playmg,
was interested because it was
event and said she hoped the
lau~hmg ang _mteract_mg
.
developed
_
using primary re-
students who attended took
Pmkney said the pictures try
search from the library and
with them three thinos.
·
-
to capture the different things
Hickock played an important
"[I
hope] that tp;y learned
~ha~ children have t~ deal
;
with
.
·
role in recording the events
.
·
of about primary research and the
m hfe, such as.weanng glass
_
es.
·
the Depression."
role it plays; that they learn
a
Althou
.
gh he has been takm~
The play is the story of the
sense of history, and realize that
photos Sm
_
ce he was young, it
les
_
bian love affair between
what we are taught
about
people
was only m the last cou~le
~f
Eleanor Roosevelt and Lorena
is not
•
always the who
.
le picture;
·
years tha! he
started
ta~mg It
Hickock, a top journalist of her
and t)Jat gender orientation does
more s:n_ously. He
said
the
day.
_
.
.
·
Marjo
not effect whether a person is
book ongmally stai:ied out as a
rie Conn played
·
Hickock and
a good or bad person
,"
she said.
more personal proJect.
·
"A couple of years ago, [my
TwQ
frats
kicked
off
campus
'
wife and I] wanted
to
put to-
... Collli11ued
Jroi,i
page
I.
past semester was that most of gether a book
,"
he said'. "First,
we just started with our own
lecturer of communications
children."
and one of Pinkney's former
Pinkney took the photos of professors
,
said Pinkney was a
his
children
to Dial Publishing.
very
enthusiastic
student.
Although Dial liked them, it
"I
remember him primarily
wanted to use them in a differ-
from advanced TV production,
ent way. That is when poet
and
which is a class where people
journalist Nikki Grimes saw the
can either hang back or get in
pictures and
.
approached
the middle of everything that's
finknex
-
with the i<!e~ of attach-
going on
,"
he
said.
"Myles was
-·
irig
·
poems
·
tcfthem
:-
~,
..
.
.
alway!nn
·
che
middle
of
every~
After that first meeting,
thing."
Grimes would give Pinkney an
Cole
said
Pinkney had a good
idea of a topic she was inter-
aesthetic sense. He said also
ested in writing about and then
has a good sense of humor,
he would try to shoot pictures
which is beneficial in commu-
tha
.
t went
along
with it.
nications.
He would take several chil-
"It helps working with people
dren out
and
let them do what
in the media," he said.
"I
think
they wanted, but no matter how
it just helps coping with the
much preparation he did, often
world."
some of the best
shots
were
Cole said people have to be
when he was getting ready to
hard working in order to survive
pack up and go home.
in the field
.
Pinkney
said
children are of-
"I
think that Myles is a guy
ten unpredictable.
who is driven and the people
"With
children, you have to be
who tend to make it in televi-
ready," he said.
sion or any 9ther aspect of
The hardest part of creating
commu
'
nications
,
are people
the boo~. he
said,
was getting
·
who are driven
;''
he
said.
:
the cover
shot.
The
·
publishers
When Pinkney is not doing
wanted
something
different for
free-lance photography for
the cover and he had to re-do
books
a
.
nd jo
'
umals, he works
it.
full-time at the Poughkeepsie
Pinkney graduated from
television
studio,
WTDY, doing
Marist in
1993
as
an
adult
edu-
camera work
.
.
.
.
cation
student.
He said his col-
Pinkney said he
is
planning to
lege education helped him learn
produce another book
-
of
to be organized and a:s creative
children
's
photographs but he
as possible in his work.
currently does not know what
Douglas Cole, professional
form it
_
. will take
.
Felix Tapia, president of the the guys interested in pledging
Phi Iota Alpha fraternity
,
said
were either transfers or first
there have been a few problems
semester freshmen. We, as
a
from the beginning.
chapter, have agreed to not al-
Class schedule decided upon for 1998-1999
.
"The problem exists because
low transfers and first semes-
the person who brought the
ter freshmen to pledge."
chapter to Marist, Raul
Tapiasaidthechapterwillstay
Delarofa, graduated that semes-
on campus.
ter, so our chapter wasn't fully
"The plan for next semester's
developed," he said.
rush is of the wall," he said.
"At
Tapia said there is still hope
least one alumni comes up each
with the existing· members.
weekend, and other chapters
"The remaining members
around the area, and our nation-
have definite ideas and want to
als and they have all agreed to
gain pledges next semester," he
help us out with whatever we
said. "The problem we had this
need."
... continued from page
I.
·
would be for one year only, and
.
had to say.
.
These students might not be
with the understanding that
"The teachers don't have to
able to make it to class on
more classrooms would be
start early
,
but they really lis-
time."
built to accommodate the
tened to what the students
Jim Kent, assistant professor
teachers' needs," he said.
wanted," he
said. "I'm
just
in the school of management
Kent said only about six new
happy that SGA did something
and faculty advisor to the stu-
classrooms are needed.
that the students wanted."
dent senate, said under the per-
"The administration has said
Williams said nothing else in
manent version of the faculty
they will try to provide the
the schedule will change be-
handbook, the faculty does not
classrooms, so a change in
sides starting early.
have to come back to school
schedule will not be necessary,"
"All of the vacations will re-
before Labor Day.
he said.
main the same length," he said.
"The faculty agreed to this
Lundy said the faculty took
"They will all fall around the
under the condition that it
into account what the students
same times, as well."
•
-
4
SGA ·.net"Yo~ks up~tate
by BEN AGOES
point of the conference was to
News Editor .
compare and contrast each
A few Student Government
school's form of studeritgo·v-
Association members traveled
ernment.
to Rochester; N.Y. recently,
Kristen Weber, elections.
hoping to make things better at
corrimissiorier for the SGA, at"'
· Mari st. ·
tended the conference and said
Five SGA members, includ-
it was interesting to see how
ing Student Body President,
Marist's SGA compared to
Frank Maduri, attended the As-
other coileges.
soci.ated College Unions Inter-
"I gained a Jot of appreciation
national conference in Roches-
for our own SGA," she said. "A .
ter, Nov. 7-9. ·.
.
lot of schools don't have rep-
Monroe Comrriuriity College
resentation in clubs."
.
hosted the conference, which
She said one persorifrom an-
Maduri said was
a
chance for
other college said most of their
Members of the Student Goverment Association recently attended the Associated College nlons
students involved in student
decisions are made by
the stu-
International. The conference
will
be held atMarlst next .year. Pictured here from.left to right Heather
government at area
·
colleges to
dent body president and· vice
Suydam, Steve Coogan, Colleen McCulloch, Frank Madurl and Kristen Weber..
·
meet and share ideas.
president and the six people on
some of the other ones,'! he ' all of a. sudden it wa"s done,"
But SGA doesn't do that qur-
"A lot of colleges don't haYe
0
the board.· ·This surprised her,· said. "Some· schools are so
Maduri said. "We as students
selves necessarily, and I think .
RSCs;'their'ht:>usini(and.'resi-
she;said,'because most of the
grossly apathetic .that they've
havemorepowerthanwecould
that is a bit of hypocrisy."
dehtiai
'iife
do.es
'.a'
lot ·of the· deds16n here are made by ·th~
stopped electing positions and
ever possibly imagine." ·
.
He said the goaUs to make
stuff, a'nd 'the
student·
'govern..:
o'vei
20
people in. SGA. ·
they just• do majority. by ap-
Maduri said he came from the
the most efficient and student-
ment doesn't have anything
to
"Some said that they have a
pointment' because only three
conference realizing SGA has
oriented SGA possible ..
do with what happ.ens in the
hard time getting people in-
'
percent of the people vote."
to start following its own regu-
Maduri also said a lot of
dorms/ he said. "They t~ought · volved on their campus,'' yve-
At Marist, a full 25 percent
lations and filing out more out-
· other colleges tum to campus-
it was·a novel concept tha_t
I
ber said.
· · ·
of the student body votes dur-
come assessments.
wide referendums to formulate
have'.student life and RSCs as a
<Maduri said in relation to
ing elections. Maduri said
"We don't do enough out~
policy,' which is something" he
kind of middleman that con-
other colleges, Mariststude'nts
Marist students- have a ·great
come assessments in student
would like to see more of at
trols a lot of what happens
are concerned with what hap-
deal of power over policies
g·overnment," he sai.d. · "We
Marist The priority points sys- ·
there. They're going back to
pens on campus.
compared to other schools.
make the clubs do
it by submit-
tern and SGA constitution are
their colleges and saying, 'Hey,
"As compared to other
"When the students got upset,
ting .event evaluation forms
just some of the ,issues· that
Mari st has this, let's try if out."'
schools;
I
think Marist campus
the few students that did, about
three days after the event. Th~µ · col!l_g.
~r.
l?~o~ght.f?
~~
~t~df!f1ls [
According to Maduri, the
is a lot more involved than
theADAcomplianceissueand
weevaluatehowtheeventwas.
ditectlyiif:arefererii:lum:.' ·
1
· ' :
Student Goverment Association to hold Joint Power Meeting
Sunday', '.
by CHRIS GROGAN
Staff Writer
This weekend, while many
students are still sleeping off
the weekend's activities, mem-
bers of the Student Govern-
ment Association will be hard
at work. passing new \egis\a-
tion.
.
... . .
. .
~
; The'SGKwil(hold
1
its
annual.
Joint..:Power Meeting ·on Sun-
day where the Semiie and Ex-
ecutive board meet together
and try to pass as many bills as
they can5!1 o~e day.
. . . . .
The most significant point
Student Body President, Frank
Maduri, said he hopes to tackle
to produce a viable survey.
safety awareness and the library
plished as. we. ,91,n/:: he .sai.d. :
is the continued revamping of
"We have worked closely with
transition period.
'The sec:on<! semes_t<:r.i~
ilJt~Jl :
the SGA constitution.
President Dennis Murray to
Maduri said he is h'opeful a
we will be tackling ·e·asiei-'
is- \
"We hope to pass the whole
create a digital suggestion box
proposal recommending free .. sues."
·
thing by Sunday," he said: "Fi-
to be placed either outside of copies for media materials, a
Katherine Jowdy, director of ·
nally it will.be a plausible work-
the cafeteria or the SGA offices
shuttle bus to the Poughkeepsie
public relations, said she is
ing document. We've donethe
and also an online program
library and free token ring ac-
proud
of
what the SGAhas ac-
whole process diplomaticaHy
where students could voice
cess in donn rooms during the
complished so far and is look-
and ht}hree tnoriths rath~r than
their opinions
~n
the quality of transition wi\l be implemented.
ing forward to the Joint-Power
qv~rJj1ecourse·ofaY,ear:which . food
arid
dining.·in
the cafe~e~ -
."The
administration has been
Meeting.
had. ha'p'p'en·e·o -
Hf
ptev'io'u·s·, ria;"'he ·said: ' ·
. . -
.
much more cooperative than we
"This is a good opportunity to
years."
·
The power meeting will also
had expected," he said.
vote on and get things passed,
Other issues of interest to the
review the CORE Liberal Stud'- ·
· Maduri said this is the time
and bring up any concerns and '.
student body include
a cafete-
ies Program, and what changes· to get things done;
put plans into action," she said ..
ria survey to evaluate the food
SGA will recommend to the
~'.Because elections for next . "The achievements produced.
sen:ice
7
Senate Speaker, Keyin
faculty based upon• student year's positions take plac;e next
will help everyone here
·a:c·
Lundy has worked closely with
feedback.
semester, this is a time .when
Marist."
Sodexho and the administration
It will aJso address campus
we have to get as much accom- ·
·
-Visit with Pope
... continued from page 1
of the archive offered to
come
to;
the conference
·
and .
present a paper on the
Vatican's view of Roosevelt.
He also said this would add .
important credibility to the
conference.
"This Confrence will raise
the academic stature of
Marist College. We're very
fortunate that we have that
close affiliation with the
Franklin Roosevelt library
this is the type of event that
will bring world attention to
Marist next October,"
Massie said.
He said Brother Ambrose
was important
to
the growth
of Marist.
"He is the link between the
early years of the school and
the present," he said.
Murray said the meeting
was inspiring.
"To have met a man I greatly
admire and to participate in
an opportunity to honor
Brother Paul, was a plea-
sure," he said. "Seeing these
two men together that de-
voted their lives to working
on behalf of the church, as
well as making impacts all
around the world, was re-
markable."
November
is
Hunger
Awareness MONTH
at Marist
.
. . . . .
.
. .
. .
.
.
. .
.
.-
.
.
.
..
. . . .
..... .
Nov. 6-7
Nov.10
Nov.12
Nov.13
"Buck" Hunger
Days
{Donate a buck to fight hunger}
OXFAM Hunger Fast Sign Up
{For meal ticket holders}
Hunger Run / Walk
OXFAM FAST DAY
Nov. 17-21 .. ALL CAMPUS FOOD COLLECTION
Nov.19
Hunger Banquet
Campus Ministry
THE'CIRCLE
F
ea tu res
November 20, 1997
5
Emily's Recipe
of the Week
-Stud~nts getpaid for tutoring area children
..
Cheese and Apple Stuffed
Chicken
2 boneless, skinless chicken breast halves
Small apple
1/4 cup shredded cheddar cheese
1/4 cup apple juice or oj
1 tsp. cornstarch
2 tbsp. sliced green onion
1 tsp. chicken bouillon
Pound chicken to 1/4 in. thickness. Chop half
of apple and slice other half. Divide chopped
apple and cheese evenly between chicken
pieces. Roll up, folding in sides, and secure
with toothpicks. Arrange rolls, seam side
'doWJlJtjJ~~hg'cti~h.
Add 2tbsp. of fruit juice
and
cover
with plastic wrap and .cook in mi-
crowave
.
for 2 minutes. Rearrange chicken,
·acid sHcedapple, cover, and cook for 2-4 more
~bHD.µtl~('(:'Fot.
sauce
combine cornstarch, re-
maining
frufr
juice, green onion, and bouil-
lon. Cook, uncovered, for'2-3 minutes, stit-
ringevery 30. seconds.
.
-
.
.
CARISA KEANE
Sta.ff Writer
Marist students will soon have
. the opportunity to make some
money:
There is one catch. · This of-
fer only applies to English or
Education majors with a Fed-
eral Work Study (FWS) alloca-
tion.
As part of'the America Reads
program, President Clinton has
propose9 l 00,000 FWS stu-
dents to serve as tutors and
homework aides to help all
children read well by the end of
third grade. He is asking col-
leges to invest a significant
number of their new FWS po-
sitions for the I 997
/l
998 aca-
demic year.
Generally, the government
provides
75
percent of FWS
funding, while employers con-
tribute at least a 25 percent
match. To help institutions with
this challenge, Clinton has al-
lowed them to waive the em-
ployer matching. requirement
for FWS students tutoring pre-
school and elementary school
children. With I 00 percent
federal funding of FWS read-
ing tutors, all institutions have
the chance to participate. In-
stitutions meeting the goal of
50
percent of their increase in
FWS.funds will be listed on the
America Reads Honor Roll.
.More than 160 co_lleges and
. universities have. taken on this
ch_alJenge,.ins!u_9:\rn~M~~i~t.
. Carol Mulqueen, a~sistant'di-•
rector of financial aid; said
Marist is participating to pro-
mote community service in.
Top 10 Excuses for Skipping Class
:,t _
.19.1
overslept
9. If
orgof
to do my_ homework.
8.', I had an appointment withi?Jy advisor.
. '..;?':{
My
,peffish
died ..
6. I
have the Marist
flu.
5. I
had-.s6 rnu:chfu'f{
th~
night before that
I
couldn't rµi,p.jt:PY going to
·.
. ... , class.
4. ffost
ihy
·only
perL
3. Desks,are-too·uncomfortable·to sleep on.
2. I forgot where
I
was going.
1. Oh, I had class today?
Dutche_ss County.
"Marist has prided itself for
years in community· service,"
she said .
.
"And this is a real vis-
ible way of doing it."
The. committee consists of
Mulqueen, Deborah DiCaprio,
assistant dean for student ser- •
vices, Brother Frank Kelly, di-
rector of campus ministry.
Brother Michael Williams, as-
sistant director of campus min-
/istry, Marti Sherman, an educa~
tion professor and Gerard Cox,
vice president/dean for student
affairs.
The comittee is currently
making preparations to work
with local school districts and
libraries starting in 1998.
Preparations include training
and transporting the students,
developing contracts and set-
ting up payroll procedures.
The committee will be.
choosing students through
background checks and overall
skills in this area. Mulqueen
said background checks are par-
ticularly important.
"They are necessary because
we are placing students in a pub-
lic arena with children." she
said.
Participating students will be
earning
$6
an hour. They also
have the opportunity to expand
their community service hours,
work experience and self-ful-
fillment.
Mulqueen said this is a won-
derful chance for students to
work one-on-one with children.
"St~ct~his
can··~i-eate bonds
wiifi
these
kfds;''sheisaid.
0
1'And:
it gi°ves the kids
a
chance to
have one-on-one contact with
someone other than
.
their
teacher."
Out of the 200 invitations
sent out, Mulqueen said she re-
ceived 60 invitations from stu-
dents ready to participate .
"As long as we have willing
students, there is definitely
hope for this program," she
said.
Deborah DiCaprio, assistant
dean for student affairs, also
said she has hope for the pro-
gram.
"I feel it has great potential
for success," she said.
Non-majors are still encour-
aged to take part in the pro-
gram.
Mulqueen said the committee
is willing to train students who
are non-English or non-Educa-
tion majors.
"We will still provide these
students with training," she said.
"But they will be volunteering
and not getting paid for their
services."
Christopher Jette, senior cur-
rently on work-study, said he
has mixed feelings about the
program.
"Although it is a very noble
idea," he said, "most people on
work-study have academic
problems of their own and
should worry about furthering
their own education before oth-
ers."
The committee intends to be-
gin the program in January,
1998. Interested students can
contact Carol Mulqueen, ext.
243
l. Students already work-
ing on campus may sti\\
be
_in-
volved.in.this projeclas.fong as
they do not work more than 20
hours per week total in all their
jobs.
Career Quest. ... The benefits of interning
HILARY NELOMS
. ~peciaf
I<!
The Circle
First of all, we at the Center
of Career Services would like
to thank all of the students who
attended the Career Expo in
October. The turnout was great
and the employers said they
were:very impressed by many.
of the students they talked to. ·
Just a word on internships·
this week. They are important,
plairi and simple. You cari only
learn so much in a classroom,
and an internship is a great way
to learn more.
When an employer· looks at
your resume, grades are not al .. ,
ways the rnost important factor. ·
They like to see what kind of
experience that you have in the
work field, and internships are
just an added bonus.
If
you have
one or two internships under
your belt, employers may be
moreinclined to hire you.
Now' do not misunderstand
me. I am nottrying to say that
you can just get bad grades, get.
a good internship, and get a job.
It does not work like that. You
still need to do well in school.
Without decent grades, you
will not.even be considered
for
an internship.
Some people-may think ofin-·
terns hips as some job where all
you do is file, get some guy cof-
fee, and answer phones all day.
While a couple of jobs may do
that, most of the. others will
give you a lot of experience. It
can also help yo~ to decide
whether or not this is the field
(whatever it may be) that you
really want to go into.
Internships .tre il)1portant and
wort~\\'hile. , Go down to the
Center of Career Services to
fi·nd
out
more information on
internship requirements and
av~i,lability. That is it for now,
until next time.
, The,,Peer :support
Lfrte·-would like
,to
announce their new
e-mail · · address:
HZPL.
Students can
.
.
.
.
.
.
''
..
;
.
.
.
.
,.
··,
;
~
send confidential e-
mail to be answered
by tl}e Peer Support
Line. The group can
also be· reached by
phone at x3350, any-
time between the
hour_s
of
10
p.m. to
12
a.m., Sunday
through Thrusday.
6
.
THE
CIRCLE,
November 20; 1997
Food Dllde.
·
kribWS
whathe
·
·
·
wants··in PQttghket;l)Sie
.
\
·
·
.
'
'
,,
.
.
, , ,
.
:
.
•
.,•··
,
,
·
,'
TOMNARDI
.
.
Food Dude
·
Last week
I
spoke about the
lack of fast food places here
arourid Poughkeepsie.
I
also
commented that the ones we
had are not that good. This week
I am going to talk about some
of the different fast food places
that we should have here in the
Poughkeepsie area.
do not have
.
enough:
·
1 \1/~nt a
soriedtoo
.
heavilywilhsalt,pep-
·
place where yoi.lcan get shakes,
per and gai-Hc powder.
, ..
malteds, banana splits, an
.
d
.
Steak 'n Shake is another
made
·
to order sundaes.
I
also
chain that is extremely popular
.
want gourmet flavors.
in
othei- parts
.
of the country:
What we need is a Ben and
Founded in Illinois back in
Jerry's. Now, someone might
I
934, Steak '
.
n Shake is ex-
argue by saying that we have a
tremely popular out in Indiana
Dairy Queen right up the road.
and Missouri. It is a shame that
True, but Dairy Queen is like an
it
is not better know in our part
old coilserva·tive republican.
of the country.
.
.
Outdated and out of touch. Ben
-
·
They
.
are modeled
.
!}fter a
and Jerry's is more like a hip
J
950's style diner. They are a
generation X'er.
combinatiori
·
-
fastfood sit down
·
--
·
.,,
·.'
•
•
they are loc;tb~
i~
:
·
:
JMii&nr
·
·
.
·
J~
,
cif~~i:
:.
6ut if
:
Wl)~ld
~
~ice
•
geographic regioris
of
the coun•
-
-
t~
·
see
.
i:nqr~Jast food e.stabl1sh-
try
.
the prices would
·
not apply
ments m the area
<
But I should
here.
..
.
be
·
grateful for the ones 'Ye do
Another ~rie of my favorite
.
have .
.
Jr
·
could be worst. We
fast fool
/
chains is Kenny
could be victims of havi~g a
Rodgers Roasters. Picture
Hardees across the street.
·
Till
Boston MarkeCwith food that
next time.
. ,
actually tastes good. Boston
(Disdaim
7
r: The s~ateme~t
Market's food is very bland.
made regardmg the hbrary 1s
·
Their chicken is grizzly
.·
arid
my opinion
.
and
m~
.
o~i~io_n
·
their side dishes are flavorless.
only
.
In fact everythmg m this
Kenny Rogers .Roasters had
article
·
is my opinio?;
.
~~t
i~
unbelievable chicken and even
the purpose of an
.
opm1on
But before
I
do that a couple
of loyal readers brought a
couple of items to my attention.
The first is that there are no
good Chinese take-outs around
here.
I
have to agree with that.
Fortune Cooky has a great
name, and
I
wish I could say the
same about the food but I can-
not.
Another fast food eatery,
restaurant. Their burgers, or
which is popular in other parts
steak.burgers as they can them,
of the country, that I would love
are
·
some
of the best around.
to see open up close to cam-
They are served a variety of
pus, is Miami Subs. Miami
ways. My favorite is The
Subs is one of my favorite fast
Frisco, which contains two
food establishments. Original-
steak burgers, melted American
ing in Florida, th
.
is chain is
and Swiss cheese, arid lettuce
slowly moving north. Miami
and tomato. It is served with a
Subs has the standard burgers
tangy sauce
.
on a sourdough
and cold cut hero's. But their
roll. For breakfast, you can get
real specialties are their cheese
a steakburger topped with an
steaks and chicken cheese
egg and cheese.
better side dishes.
column. I have been working
So as I said (or tried to),Jast
in the restaurant business for
week we need more
·
fast food
over six years, and1have been
places on campus, or within the
cooki~g my whcile life.
I
fe:I
vacinity of campus. Now be-
that this enables me to_be a
fair
fore you read the next paragraph
and knowledgeable Judg~ of
please read the disclaimer at the
.
foo~. But yo? have every_ nght
bottom of the article.
to disagree with me ... that 1s one
.
Last week I wrote (in jest)
of the freedoms we enjoy as
I have not had their food
·
since my freshman year, so
maybe it has gotten better. The
only accurate way to describe
their food is by saying that it
tastes like an amateur chef
cooked it. The entrees I had all
seemed off. One was too salty,
another was flavorless, and
some of the vegetables in one
dish were anything but fresh. If
anyone knows of any good
Asian food around here, please
let me know.
The second item brought up
by one of my readers, is one in
which I agree wholeheartedly
with. We really need an ice-
cream parlor
.
on campus or
nearby. I am aware that the caba-
ret does have ice
cream
;
but they
steaks;
In addition to the steak
These
·
sandwiches are deli-
burgers, they also have famous
cious. The tender meat is thinly
chili. Most people serve chili
sliced, mixed with melted pro-
with rice, but instead of serv-
volone and mozzarella cheese
ing it over rice, Steak n' Shake
and served on a warm roll. They
serves it over spaghetti
.
Chili
also come with a variety of top-
5-Way consists of spaghetti
pings including sauteed onions
topped with chili, extra beef,
and mushrooms. Outside of onions and cheese. This is a
Philly, these are probably some
nice alternative to the typical
of the best cheese steaks
accompaniment of chili. For
around.
those who are looking for
.
All the sandwiches are avail-
something a little healthier,
able on a six-inch roll or on a
·
they also have various salads
12-inch roll. Another plus to
·
and a couple qfdifferent grilled
Miami Subs is that most loca-
.
ch\.ckeli)andwiches,
.·
.
.
t.ion~ serveb,eer.
:
Myqhly
com~
. _
:
1
~
wasgoin1/i~put in
.
the prices
plaint is that their fries are sea-
for both those chains but since
about how Marist should build
Americans.
a food court before they build
a new library. The more I think
about the issue the more I think
that I am right. Yes, arguably a
good library is more important
·
than a food court, but I feel that
a food court will attract more
potential students than
_
the new
library will. Someone might
counter by saying that people
will leave the school if they are
not happy with the library. In
my opinion nobody is going to
leave Marist just because they
.
are unhappy with the library.
.
Even if people did leave, who
cares? We have more than
,
enough students here.just look
·
at the housirig problem.
I
understand
that it i& notfoa-'-
'
sible
to
build a food court here
INSTANT CREDIT
•a.•.aa~
.
· .
...
~
Guamn~TOCr~=~i::
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•··
.··
·
·
~
No
CREDITiNO,JOBt:NP
PARBNT~SIGNER.-NO SECUR,l'l'YQt:PQij~t
•
no
cretlit •
;bad
credit
·
•
n:o inCOJlle?
'
-
·
.
.
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.
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.:•you.:€a11
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Credlt
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In
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&
A1cl.5tcrl'clrd Credit Ca1~ds?
'
-
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ORDER FORM
- .
-----:,
YES!
·lwant
'
Credit'..Ccltds
immediately.
CM~
·PQ
_
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30321
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.
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.......... .., .. _
.. _, _, ,_ .. __ ,_, ........ " .................
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M . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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I
THE CIRCLE,
November 20, 1997
'·TOTS teaches students
·
to
car~
·qbout
theii;
:
OOm~
:
unity
;
.
;
_
..
.
.
'
.
'
.
'
_
.
.
.
.
,
·
M~TTHEW COUMBES
"We spend a Sunday afternoon
.·
.
:
:
.
StcifIWriter
. .
:
.
.
.
"
interacting with underprivile
·
ged
!
..
,Altholig~ the n~meTOTS_may
children;" she ·said
.c.
'.':
·
•
.
,
not ~ound familiar,'iris becom-
Members of TOTS also partici-
·
.
:)ng
a
popular club at Marist.
·
pate in various one-day events
:
TOTS;Teachers of Tom~r-
througho'tit the community.
_
;row;
·is
a
club designed for psy-
.
One of the events TOTS volun-
ch~logy and special education
:·
teers for is One-to-One
•bay
in
:,
ma.iors,
_
but open to the entire
·
correlation with
·
the psychology
·
. ~arist Community. The club
·
club:According to Areneo,
_
this
, meets
·
every other J:uesday at
is a day of fun and games for un-
·
9:30
p.m. in student center
derprivileged children. The event
room 348.
·
is held at' Mari st in April and is
The main purpose of TOTS;
open to anyone who would like
.
according
to senior Michele · to get involveµ.
··
Araneo, president of the club,
Another program is the Book
7
is helping the community.
Fair that is held annually, usually
•~Basically
our goal is to use
in December. Areneo said the
·
our education, that we are get-
fair is helpful for the club and
ting at Marist College, to help
special education majors.
The Teachers of Tomorrow bann
_
er was made by children participating in the On;~t~-o'~~-)d~;~
One-to-One· ~ay Is held each year for underprlvelaged children.
_the community," she said.
"It is basically a fundraiser for
able to the community, in-
cluding the faculty," she said
secretaries in the club, said the
club has helped her as well.
better prepared for the future.
'Teachers of Tomorrow is a
good
support
system for the
members to use to go out into
their field of
education."
she
said.
Araneo said the club partici-
the club," she said. "We sell
.
pates in various programs at
children's books that are helpful
Poughkeepsie
·
schools.
to special education majors."
TOTS offers special educa-
tion and psychology majors a
chance to improve their se-
lection process of courses.
"I found this year to be ben-
efic_ial
,"
she said.
"We
had
workshops on technology and
education. We used the internet
·
and power point to improve our
knowledge iil
education."
One of the programs involves
.
In addition to these events,
:
Tubman Terrace; an elementary
-
Teachers of Tomorrow will be
-
·
school in
·
Poughkeepsie. On
making food baskets during Hun-
;
Tuesday, Wednesday and Thurs-
ger Week.
' dar afternoons members go
TOTS fonned in the Fall 1996
;
there and tutor and read with the
semester and has
·
grown ever
r
children,
..
since. Araneo said growth
·
has
~;"'X
:.
-
._
,..
:,, ..
•·•.:
t
.
!
'
_.
•••
·
.,
t
r·:
•
·
·
C
~
,
.
.
-~
Junior Jill Salvucci said the
club has helped her choose
which courses to take.
"I
j1,1st joined this
semes-
ter," she said. "It's very infor-
.
mative.
It is very helpful for
picking courses."
TOTS also offers
a
question
.
and
answer panel. This enables
students
to ask
student
teach-
ers for advice or discuss prob-
lems they may have.
According to Araneo. another
advantage of the club is to help
its members improve their own
learning experience.
"We are trying to enrich our
own selves."
she
said. "Not
only do we help the commu-
ni1y. but
we
help
ourselves."
\':.:~
?,_AtiPt~Ji'_roje<;(
is' the
··
Bard
made the club an asset to the com-
\ "·and Ballad Project. Araneo said
munity.
.
the i>:u"rpose of the project is to
"We
have grown to about
.
150
,
help underprivileged children.
members and made the club avail~
Sophomore Meghan
Nelson, one of the multiple
Junior Jennifer Canonico
said the panel will help her be
Plan Ahead
0
•
Winter Intersession - Schedule of Courses
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.
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ART
·
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Basic Drawing
·
·
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Swann
ART
292L-l
11
ST: Research Art History (indep. study - Internet). Marquardt
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..
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pdL.:.111
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l:oo
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C:OM
255L~l
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Comnmnicating on the Internet
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McKenzie
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·
Criminology
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Lavin
ENG
240L~l 11
American Short Fiction
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Norkeliunas
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MATH
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(prerequisite)
Timm
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31:7L
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145N-112
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289L-112
Writing for the Media (duarlisfed/prerequisite}
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355L~ 112
Applicatiqns
_in
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Pennings .
.
Winter
Intersession
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ENG
28
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Creative Writing·
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·
_
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·
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327L-:-112
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Writing for
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·
RE~IStiU)]:C.l~:
}l~gist~tion#or ~farist_Coi~~ge
·
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HIST
312L-112 ·
.
American Presidency (dual listed)
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Sh~ffer
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MATH
Z30L-ll2
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Operati?naUv1odels
,_
(prerequisite)
Rancourt
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·
day
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December
-
19
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POSC
·
312L~l l2
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202L-l12
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del Rosario
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R
THE
CiRCLEEDITQRIALN~~emb~
·
r
20,1997-
Editorials
·
-
The
View
from Sue:.)
by
sJe
do~ct\1/in
Editor
looks
.
to m~e
most
offinatyear·atMarist
i
.
.
'
.
,•
,·
.
~
.
',
,
,
,I,,'
.
, l
•
~
-
. ,•
; ,
. _.
.
·
· -~
.11
a11ks
i~i . ·
~t,
A-e
. ·
·
-
-
·
_
~
I have been realizing lately that I am
graduating in May. Now,
·
this might
sound like a ridiculous s~atement, but
it really is not.
.
.
.
.
_
-
When
I
first came to Mari
st,
the Real
World seemed so far
_away,
I could not
even begin to grasp it. Internships.jobs;
these meant nothing to me at all.
I
was
concerned with making new friends,
going out and getting work done.
By sophomore ye_ar,
l
had declared ·
my major, which is English, and sort-
of had an idea about
:
what I wanted to
do, but everything seemed so far way,
that
I
still did not give it much thought:'
Then, junior
-
year it started to hit me.
I
had to get an internship overthe sum-
mer.
I
knew
l
wanted to go into pub-
lishing. but I still did notface the real-
ity of graduating.
·
All of this rambling leads me to now.
I
am just about a semester away from
leaving Marist and
I
cannot believe it.
I
am-about
to enter the
.
Real World.
What exactly is the Real World and
how much different is it than Marist?
When all of my alumni friends came
back on alumni weekend, they all had
the
same
advice; live up my senior year,
because it is all downhill from there.
When
I
think about this,
I
have to ad-
mit that a paralyzing fear grips me, and
I
have a little trouble breathing. What
happens when the safety of the Marist
wall (which, incidentally, is strictly en-
forced by Security) crumbles, and all
of us seniors are left on our own?
I
know the insignificant things like
cabs for a dollar and nickel drafts prob-
.
ably will not be a part of my life when
I
graduate, but what happens to the friend-
ships
I have made here?
I
feel so close and so comfortable to
the friends
I
have
·
made here; that it
would be terrible to Jose touch with any
of them, but when. I look back at my-.
high school friends
_
,
'
ihive
to admit that
I probab
_
ly will lose
_
touch with- some
of them.·
,
..
so
>
ori the
advice
o(my 3tu111n(
·
friends;
.
I amOtrying tc)seize every
:
rno-
·
ment and do as rrian{things as I canJo
'
..
·:
.·
. .
.
··
•
·
rnake
'
ihis year
,
grea~ ..•. wait, who am I
kidding? Senior
·
. ye
'
ar means capping,
·
hard classes and more work than ever.
·
So when does this leave time to do
.
all
of those great things?
·
·.
When cio we all have time to spend to~
gether except fate at night, wheri_
all
of
.
'qui.<rneetings
and all of our work is.
done? Is this.last
·
year spent with rny
friends, in our final bonding moments,
going
_
to be
.
a successionof drunken
memories? Not thanhe whole "scene'!
is not fun, but I do
-
not want the memo
·
ry
of which bars had what specials on what
·
nights with ine a:s my memory ofMarisi.
I had a wonderful three and a half
years at Marist so far, and I can defi-
nitely say that I have grown a lot, and
gone through a lot. I would love to end
senior year with a_huge bang; but I think
there is more to it thari that. !think that
we all should realize that we will never
have these years again and that we have
·to
make the most of them starting now.
·
My friends and I might not have all the
Dear Editor,
.
time in the world to spend together, but
Letter to the Editor
we have all gone through so much that I
.
I
am writing regarding an incident occurring on Saturday, Qctober
26,
.1991.-
.
have to hope that we will always be
during Marist College's Alumni Weekend. Th_e incident occurred ~s. _rr,iysel( _an_d
.
there for each other, and that the bonds
two of my friends, both fellow alumni were visiting a friend on campus who
is
still
we hav.e formed here will not break. I
·
currently attending MaristCollege. This student, who will remain nameless, lives
would love it if we all looked past some
·
in Gartland Commons. I was carrying an unopened twelve-pack of beer aci-ossthe
of the petty things that we fight about,
lawn approaching Gartland when I was stopped by secl}rity guard, Mr.
_
Mark Lakin.
·
_
and conc~ntrate on the good times we
Mr. Lakin asked what I was doing running across campus with beer. Jwas
.
run11ing
.
have had, and the good times that are left.
in an attempt to catch up to one of my friends, and for no other reason.
, .
_
.
I guess
.
the moral of this senseless
ram-
With nothing to hide, I was fully cooperative. I politely
·supplied
h,rn
·
with the
bling is that we should live up our time
information he requested, including two forms of identificaticm (both a.valid New
here.That does not mean partying like a
York State driver license and my old Marist
ID). I
was informed by Mr.Lakin that
maniac every night, but taking time
.
·
to Iwas required to leave campus. At this poi~t, my two othe
_
r
friends (who had not
• cl;lerish
.
the friendships that have been
_
:
_
been
·
running) can1e upon the scene. When they· stopped to see what was happen"'.
.
formed; arid
.
making the m.o~t2f.ey~JY::.
/ )
rig
/
they,
.:
~er.e,als9
__
stopp~d~~.11d
,
qlles.tiQJ)~g .. _, \Jpon
.
•
produ~ing
•
·
i<l,entific~tion,_.1,ut
-.
thing Marist has
i
to
offer.
,_,_\._·\a.:.:
·
:;
'.,
'.1
;e:-sc
fnot-
:
current,validatedMarist-
~
lD}ttiey
'
0
wetefaJs&told
thai"thejifrnusfflc:~'ie{;affipus"1r~
·
.·
.
:
~
.
.
·
·
..
;
.
;
:
.
.
.
:' ,_\ · :~
:
·};W:
,
,/~
_
'.
{
Min~i'ihe en·d of any fun
Ji
y,;ere
:
0
ha,yi#g;;.we had'severarpfh~i-
-
irt>blen,is"':,vith
:- .
Stephame
_Mercurio
ts
the Ed1tor:1g._-
:
:
;
.
thj's
·
idea ofJeaving campus
:
One'in:ajor pr9bletj:i w~ had
,vas
~tiatwe:trad
no
\\'her¢
):
.
Chief for
The Circle
.
.
~:·
.
.
;
·
,_,
to
go. There were no
.
hotel
,
rooqis~v~ifable)rtthe are~; ther~
\Vere
_
no
"
mordrafos
.
··
running back to New York QitYJor
?!:>out
(ivfti8urs;
·
and
~9
top 1,talloff
t
all
.
three
.
_
.
.
_
_
.
.
,
:
.
_
··:.
·.·
.
.
,, _ ,
..
·.
•
of:us
·
_
hacl:been d
_
rinking so
:
V{f disf~~nl:iiri
_
~
~
it
,
wou}d be very
_
pl'.Uden(to driyC!. Qne
Administrator
.
commends students
.
for poise,
corrippsQte
·
.
C
•
S:Cli'rityguard actually to~d
'
~s
'
th~i
_;
'.Ye
'.
pip,#}tse,e~.
-
d~nlc
,
t~;
-
htm:
-
~l\h"P,t(~~:
r
th,Jrj
,
I,<
,.
,
_ .
.
_
·
-
.
•
·
_
·
._·_.·
_
· , _
.
.
.
-·
_.·_
.
,
•·
·
:
·
.
_
.
anyone would agree, that 1twas·good
_
for 1!,Jl'part1es th
.
at.we
_
d_1dn'J.follow ij1sJudge-
.
Dear Editor:
.
.
. . .
.
.
eventsrests on the students themselves.
:
·
ment.
.
·.·
.
•
.
.
.
.
. ,·
··
-
s:}
;.ifr':.:.,
:~
.
~
.
-
,
-
,'
'> '//''
\d_;:·
-:
,
_,
,
...
,
'
I would like to publicly c1cknowl~dge., After all, when employers com~ to
.
earn"
. ·• .-
.
~ectirity had.the_ grand idea that
W,~
·
c'ouiclgo to
.
tile I?alace
:
Di11fr ) g~ess
we
Marist students for.their fine represen-
pus, their aim is to interact with as many
"
.
cb
_
uld have, but was
_
it reason
'
abl~ to ~_it inJtie"c:finer
·
for fi\'.~
_
or_six hours UJJtjl we
.
tation auhe recent Career arid Employer
well qualified
'
and
-
prepared st:tiderits as
·
.
w~re
sober enough to legally drive, or theMwas·atrain back to ~fow)'.'oik~ityJ,
f.
Expo. There were ~o
.
many employers
possible.
·.
.
.
.
.
·
_
·.
.
. ·.
>;_
··'; .
.
·
,
don't think that the manageme11tpf
~~e
·
P,~I~ce \iiould
p~v~
~ppfe'~1a.(~q}~µ,r
;
us,~
q(
who made a special effort to tell me how
' ·
<
Well, Mari st students, you
,
were,Jru
.
l_Y'
.
.
their eateryas a holding tailk Jor
:
int~x
_
i~i~_d)y1aii~t
~luaj~i:
'/.;c"{.:;
,t
·
_
_.:,:·
•
{i:
<
.
.
impressive our students }Vere- weB spo-
,
a credit to yourselves an~ t_llis institu~
·
.
·•
•
After a long argument b~tw~en
,
tis;
:·
I\lft,.
:_.
µ¥-i11,
:
two
ci.Jh~(s
_
ecllrjty guards, arid ari
ken, well dressed, prepared, outgoing
tion
!
.
.
·
on duty resident director, who
·
had recendy:been called
,
ori
_
the scene, we realized
.
and confidenL And they
·
were amazed
·.
·
that Marist
_
wasn't budging oil:
•
their blessed policy.
_
As
~
opposed to getting ar-
.·
.
at the number of students attending the
Sincerely,
.
rested, we gathered our b
_
~longings and Jen campus
:
.
_
.
. ;
:
..
.
.
.
·.
_
·
_-
-
_
.
.
event.
.
•.
.
. .
Deidre Sepp, Direct~r
-
.
lhave never been treated as badly at others.chools which Thav~
_
visit~cl as I was
'
Let's face it, the success o{ career
Center for C:areer Services
at I\lfari
_
st College/The a~sµrditfofthis, especiaHyas ~n altirimi is infuriating. I
·
.
'
_
think that the guest policy at ~arjst is ridiculous,but tl)atis
.
not the.issue athand
Student says tree shhhtd be saved,
ot
at least respected
and
.
another story altogether
/
n~~lieve that Marist Security
'
should follow
0
proce-
d1,1re, but certain members
·
ne·~_dlobe a littleJess zealou~ a!}d a I~tt}eJessegotisti-
Ti
h Ed"
.·
cal in their
>
ways.
I
also think that it would do Marisf well
to
reevaluate their
~
~ta:
w~~~g
in response to the article, "Ginkgo tre~ slated for destruction,'; ex-
policy, especially <>n Alumni)Yeek
.
end.
.
:
.
.· .
.
.
·
:
.
:
.
·_ ..
. ·-·
__
_
.
_
_
_
.
_
·
__ .
·
·
pressing my concern for .this issue. In particular, I would like to aMre~s th_e com-
·
I know the incident in which we
·
were involved in alienated aileastthree former.
ments made by the library director, ~ohn McGinty
.
.
In my opinion, McGinty is not
. ·
students and one current studeht, not
-
to mention others that have been
·
told of our
being sensitive to the fact that this i~ a very special and unique tree, and is not one
.
story, Ireally don't
know
how ~uch Mari
st
relies on dona~ions, biit I
.
do know it is
•
.
to just destroy because it "is totally in the way,'
,
' as he st~ted in the article. This is an
an important .aspectof
prom◊tion,
includingachieving rankings
.
tn
such publica-
extremely selfish and narrow-minded comment because in reality, the new library wm
tions at
.
US Ne_ws and Worfd Report~ America
'
s Best Collegrs .
.
It'also seems to
be in the way of the tree.
·
After all, the Ginkgo has occupied that spot longer than we
me that angering prospective qonors who have approximately sixty m<>re years io
have been here.
live and give, not
·
only inoney, b
·
ut commentsof ad_vice
·
to prospective students of
I feel it isimportantthat
_
we make a change, as a whole, in our way ofthirtking, and
the future, isn't the best busi11ess
.
option for any
_college
.
. ·
I don't mean.this as a
realize that we are.not the only living beings on this planet. We have to appreciate
threat
.
I simply want to poit1t out th~ truth of the matt~r ,in hopes
.
that it won't
and respect nature, as well as share the earth with each other and eliminate such an
happen again, or will at least open someone's eyes to the matter.-
.
egocentric point of view.
·
I hope that this letter has
_
not been written in vain. I have never before felt com-
This issue is close to my heart because a few days before I read this article, it was
pelled to write a letter such
_
as this, but I 'felt
·
this incident was something that
_evening
and I noticed that the sun was setting over campus, casting a soft yellow
could not be ignored. l do realize,, as with all things, change does not come over-
glow on the tree in particular. The tree looked.beautiful and magnificent, and its
night. Change, however, will not come at an if it seems unnecessary. After our
.
Jeav~
.
seemed
·
golden. I watched the tree uRtil the sun set over the river. Just
experience at Alumni Weekend, I would say
.
that change 1s necessary. I thank you
because people do not sit underneath the Ginkgo, as McGinty pointed out, does not
for your time in reading this, but I do not thank Mari st College for the way my
mean that people do not appreciate it.
friends and I were treated this past Alumni Weekend.
·
I realize that preserving this tree is a difficult and expensive task. To build the new
library around the tree would be a compromise, but if it cannot be done, the least we
can do is recognize how special the Ginkgo really is, and not treat it as ari obstacle
that shou~d just be disposed of to make way for our new library.
Sincerely,
Julie Morin
Sincerely,
William J. Rickman-Class of
1995
THE
CIRCLE
QPINIQ N
November 20, 19-97
9
·
Sadam Shallle about Sadam Hussein
.
'
'
'
'
'
.
.
'
.
'
'·
'
'
.
.
.
-
.
·
Efery
few
years, a swarthy
.
Middle
.
Eastern dictator
•
p6ps
his head out of a deep hole
,
sees
·
how things are out there
,
arid
··
gets chased back underground
as soori as he sees his shadow,
-
ensuring that we have ar least
six i:nore years of tyranny. Yes,
it
.
would
-
appear that
.
itis ~nee
··
again time for Sadam-hogDay
.
Apparently, Sadam is as resil
-
ient as Jason Vorhees from the
Friday the 13th films.
-
Just
when you though~ that he had
finally been gotten rid of, he
-
pops back up.
·
·
·
-·
Whether
it
is to cause some
trouble for some
.
camp
.
coun-
selors, or to tell UN weapons
inspectors to get out of his
country, we really should never
consider Sadam to be out
.
for
the count. Something tells me
that even if Sadam were placed
at the bottom of a lake, all
chained up and his feet in con-
crete, he would still manage to
find his way out in time for the
sequel.
The biggest problem most
people have with Sadain is that
there seems to be an
·
over-
whelming belief that Sadam had
·
been taken care
.
of seven years
ago. Many believe th
.
at Big Bad
Bush made sure that Sadam had
been so thoroughly trounced
and his
·
autliority was so
·
se-
verely in
.
question
·
; that he
·
would have difficulty getting a
job as Assistant Manager of a
Wal Mart, much less manage to
keep his job as a tyrannical des
0
poL
.
READ
.
.
.
.
.
.
·
.
.
.
It
is Nov. 20,
.
·
d~
.
you know
wheri your dgarettes
·
are?
·
If
yoifoo
'
nofyotd,ettel-'-go
get
a
.
··
pack and Hght one up becaus~
,
today is The Great Ain
:
etican
·
Sm()ke
•
Out .. Wait a s
.
ecorid,
maybe today
is
the day e
'
very-
orie 1s
:
supp
'
osed to
'
stdp smok-
.
ing
,
If lam wrong and we
are
.
all
-
supposed
-
to
-
not smoke
,
to-'
.
day, I have just one question:
why?
.
.
.
I
know, the Surgeon General
says smoking causes Jung can-
-
cer: The General says fr
-
is bad
.
to smoke and if you smol_<e for
a long period of time it can ktll
you. The Gener~l also says that
cigarettes
·
wilL not make you
look cool. But that is not true.
_
Cigarettes
_
make people look
.
very coot
·
Let us
be
horiest, how
.
many times
·
have you looked
across
'
the bar and seeri
·
a girl
•
who looked Hke
·
an European
.
princess taking a drag
off a
cigarette· a13d said to yourself
that she is the··girl of. your
dreams? And ladies, how many
times has the added buzz of a
cigarette after a few
.
beers
made
.
a young man look more
attractive?
_
Even though the
added aspect of alcohol and the
poor lighting of bars take away
from myargument; people still
·
look naturally more rebellious
with a cigarette in their hand or
their mouth.
Cigarettes are also very re-
laxing in times of stress
.
The
usual rebuttal to this is that
people should not need ciga-
\;;
'.~
-
-
.
.
·.
_\·
--4,t:,._~;,::,::~
~ -
·-:
not wholly successful, the UN
could send reinforcements of
Rick James and Jackson
Browne.
If
things got
REALLY
bad, we could always send O.J
.
Sadam would just have to look
at him before meeting any and
all demands made by the UN.
Sadam Hussein sits on his throne,
.
In no danger of being assaslnated
by
the United States.
Perhaps Hussei~ is starting to
realize just how frightening
Americans can be, because, at
press time
,
he had issued a
statement where he was assur-
ing everyone that he would like
to avoid confrontation at all
costs. Or
,
what he really meant
was that he did not want a good
old butt-whooping
.
But, as we have seen time and
again over the
.
past several
years, Sadam was not only alive
and well,. but he was actually
leading a pretty cushy lifestyle.
You may have evenseen him on
t
_
he all-new Pictionary with
Alan Thicke.
So, was Operation Desert
Storm
~
or as I have always
referred. to it: Operation Get
Away From
.
Our Oil -
as suc-
cessful as was initially thought?
Well, one person who would
disagree is former President
Bush. His sky-highapproval rat-
ings after the Gulf War seemed
to guarantee another four-year
continuation for
·
the Reagan
·
Dynasty.
How could Bush have known
that a
·
scant year and a half later
a c~mtinuation of the Bush Ad-
ministration would have been as
likely, to succeed as
,
a resur-
gence of New Coke? Of course,
_ ifhe had, he probably would not
have even bothered in the first
place.
After all, Bush had already
gotten one
_
of his old drug bud-
dies from his CIA days locked
up;
in
the person of Manuel
Noriega
.
It had not been all that
long before the Gulf War that a
good will delegation (including
then-Senator Robert
i
.
Dole of
Kansas) to make sure that the
United States kept the good
fa-
vor of the benevolent Hussein.
As our current president knows
only too well, you cannot put all
of-your old friends in jail. This
is probably why Sadam
's
punish-
ment was more of a slap on the
wr
_
ist than the trouncing that he
so
.
richly deserved.
One person who is probably
satisfied with the outcome of
the Gulf War is Stormin'
.
.
-. _
_
· ·
Photo councsy or Emily H
c
a.,.Jip
EmUy Heaslip amoldng a butt- to see her reaction, go to pg. 10
,
,
rettes to relax them
.
·
We are
'
human beings, though
;
and we
do all sorts of things to try
to
calm dowri when times get a
little ovenvhelming.
·
so a
ciga-
rette may not be the worst op~
tion compared to things like
drugs,
_
alcohol
·
and beating the
hell outof your boss or teacher
.
.
·
Cigarettes also help the curb
the appetites of hungry young
coIJege students who are look-
ing to avoid the infamous fresh-
man fifteen, or twenty for that
matter. Oh,_do not take it per-
sonally, there is no way to avoid
putting on' weight in college
.
I
put on about 30 pounds my
freshman year. But then again
,
I did not smoke too many ciga-
rettes back then
.
But it was not
because the President told me
not to, or because the Surgeon
General came to my house, but
rather because I
·
was only a
freshman, so my mom was not
allowed to know about me
smoking anything.
The President and U.S. Gov-
ernment have decided to crack
dO\vn on cigarettes
.
The ciga-
rette companies are going to
have
to
pay
•
hefty sums to
people who have become ad-
dicted.· Joe Camel is dead and
the Marlboro man is hooked tip
t_o a respirator and life support
system, with little time left.
The government is in the
•
pro-
cess of getting rid of cigarette
vending machines
,
and bill-
boards with cigarette ads.
-
So
my friends and I are waiting with
baited breath for the day a pack
·
of Marlboros will cost
·
us
$5.00. But will that really stop
smoking?
·
The answer is no
.
I realize that
vending machines are bad be-
cause of young kids using them
to get cigarettes. I do not com-
plain when I get carded at a con-
venience store because I look
younger than 26. These laws are
designed make sure the popula-
tion of America all has a chance
to reach five feet in height. A
ten-year old boy or girl should
not smoke cigarettes because it
can have much stronger reper-
cussions than an adult smoking.
Please see
SMOKING
page JO
...
Norman Shwartzkopf. He
made sure that our soldiers
fought the good fight, and
were only exposed to a mini-
mal amount of hazardous
chemicals
.
If anyone got a
good book deal out of this
,
it
was Shwartzkopf.
As well he should, he is
proud lo have led the U.S
.
to
victory over Hussein, even if
he was told not to finish the
job. This i
s
why I think that we
should have sent Ike. No, not
Dwight D. Eisenhower, al-
though he probably would have
been good for morale. But, he
could riot personally have
done as good a job as the other
Ike: Ike Turner
.
Within hours of meeting
Sadam, Ike would have tossed
him around so much, he would
agree to just about anything.
On the off~chance that he was
He has said that he would
agree to American representa-
tives on the teams of UN weap-
ons inspectors, provided that
there was equal representation
by all the other permanent
members of the UN Security
Council. Defense Secretary
Cohen replied that someone on
probation does not get to pick
who their probation officers are.
However
,
Cohen did make it
clear that t'1is sort of decision
should be left to the United Na-
tions. Which is really for the
best, because the less involved
we become with this whole mat-
ter the better.
Christian Bladt is the Senior
Political Correspondent for
The Circle,
and is moving on
up to a deluxe apartment in the
sky.
THE CIRCLE
Stephanie
.
Mercurio
Editor-in-chief
Ben Agoes
News Editor
Christopher Thorne
Focus Editor
Steve Wanczyk
Sports Editor
Joe Scotto
Chris Hogan
G. Modele Clarke
Gyna Slomcinsky
Managing Editor
Emily Kucharczyk
Feature Editor
Tim Manson
Opinion Editor
Jim Dziezynski
Arts
& Entertainment Editor
Photography Editor
Business Manager
Faculty Adviser
If
you have a story idea, would like to publicize a club event
or if you would like to send a letter to the editor, you can e-
The Circle
at HZAL.
If
you are interested in advertising in The Circle, pleas~kave
a message for Chris Hogan at 575-3000 ext. 2429.
I
r
>
C
10
OPINION
~~~"Jh:,t
:
:
:"
c:i:
.
~'.',i::;,:·;;;\c~~;~ti:ad
~ncideiitally, v~va Las Gingk9
.
.
.
-:
: .
-
,
_
_
·.
·
·:
.
:
_'
•
-
·
.
:
·
·:
~ .
..
_
_
·
.
. _.
·
•
,
.
•
.
photo c01:.1rt~Y
-
or
Emily Hea\lip
,.
Wow! Those clg~rettes r~ally
1T1ust
be good, as Heaslip lets out an outpouring of emotion. -
Smoking might
be
bad,
but it
d~
-
keep kids
off
the streets
;
;
.
J\
ij
~
Satt~~hy ri~ht ~np. due·
·
:
:
pr,e_tty neat.
:
:,sin_c
,
~ it w,ar~nly a
·
··::
to"·an extreme·lack
'.
of funds,
quarter;! bought it to adorn my
.
complimented by a mild lack
desk.
.
_
_
of popuiarity,
_I
·
am spending a
I
_
soon filled
·-
th~ yoisi
,of
this
·
quiet evening
·
in the computer
empty "decorath'.e fish bowl"
lab. However nice it is to be
with a little fan-tailed goldfish
"complimented" by anything,
named Kingi;l
_
ey. It
-
wasdater
this i
_
s an odf place to be on a
brought to
_
my attention thatthe
_-. Satur~ay flight The only thing
bowl was not a pow
1,
but a vase .
.
·
· ie~lly worth doing is log into a
This explained a lot:. It was an
.
'_ •
chat room and make people ad-
odd.shape for a gold fish bowl
,
mit that they are only there be-
and
_
I
had to clean a few flower
.
cause they
·
are lonely losers
petals
.
out of it.
who
_
are not nearly as cool as
At breakfast the next inorn-
.
their tag names imply. (Take
ing, I explained
,
why my fish
.
that, "SexyStudGuy#l ").
lived in a
.
vase .
.
In turn, my
·
Along with annoying the hell
friend told
.
me an anecdc:>te
.
out if people, other things just
about the death of her BETA. I
•
come easy t
_
o rrie
..
-
For example,
could not understand what her
I
am in many aspects,vquite the
attachment was to an antiquated
·
idiot.
·
So perhaps it is no sur-
video machine, nor could I un-
-
prise that
I
have no trouble mak.:
derstand !he correlation be-
ing
.
an idiot out of myself.
tween my fish and her appli-
-
Soriietimes
I
feel so idiotic that
ance. After her emotional
I
get an urge to play up on this
story, Irespondedwith the sen-
fact, in
.
the hopes that maybe
sitivity of a truck dfiverwho was
someone, anyone, mind you,
cut off on
I-'84
while suffering
will say,
"Well,
you are riot
from hemorrhoi~s like the Ap-
..
,co11ti1111ed
from page
9
·
something they want to do. No
is better than drugs that can kill
THAT big of an idiot." Little
palachians.
.
If
that boy or girl smokes until
one is saying that we
_
should
'
be
you after a few minutes.
1
do
things like that make
.
my day.
, "We!l,)t
:
was.:9Jd. aJ1yiay,-
they are my age, they will have
.
able to smoke an
·
ywhere, as the
not know about you, but
I
would
·.
Lately,
I
have been stuck with
right?'
\_
Sh~
.
g~vy; me;,a Ju1.1:ny
been smoking for
11 yea
.
rs.
problem of second hand smoke
rather know what I am getting having to explain why there.is a look and
.
said thaL she had
They will also be four and a half
has been noted: It may be an
myself in
.
to than play Russian
large red mark that iss shaped
bought
·
it at the p~t sh~p last
feet tall.
inconvenience to go outside for
roulette with something like
kind of like a partial iron on my
month.
I
·
then realized that
-
a
No
;
children should not be al-
a cigarette, or to have to
'
wait
heroine.
arm. This has not been too dif-
"beta
"
,
wis a fisq:
.
l
_
apolqgiz~d
lowed to smoke, but why should
for one while flying to Florida.
Cigarette smoking may be
ficult, as I just say that
i
burn~d
for
-
:
11_1y
apathy
:
a
.
bqµt
,
,
w,hat
-
J
an adult be looked down upon
But we will wait.
·
wrong ir_1 the long run, but it is
my arm while ironing: I sel-
thought was an
_
,
obsolete
..
tape
for feeling like having a tiga-
We will wait be~ause
·
nothing
fun for a short while. So today,
dom_continued on to say that
I
machine.
•
·
... •
rette? This is still a free coun-
beats a cigarette after a big
as you finish reading this ar-
was wearing the shirt while I
_
Speaking of
-
apathy, it is
try, is it not? No matter how
meal (not to
.
mention its double
ticle, stand tip, go outside and
wasironingii.
.
The day
I
did it,
so
_
mething t
,
hat we are very
·
·
much the price of cigarettes is
_.
use as a laxative) .
.
And
.
nothing , ligpt
.
up
_
a butt
.
(ifyou donot have
I.
was wearing
-
a short sleeved
much in touch with here at
raised; or if the nicotine is :re-
..
~~a\S
a
cig;ire\te after great
.~ex
·
ori.e,
bum
:
on~
:
off
somebody;
shirt and
,
was in too much-pain
i-4ari~t,
.
a~d thu~
i
continujn
·
g
·-moved·or if.cigarettes are
but-
'_
(n
_
o
_
_
t.to
mentio
_
jj
'
it
_
-
.
s
.
iinfo
_
"rtu'
n
·
a
'
te
•.·h··,
.
'
;
.
,
,. '·''
,'
<
•.
(:
:
·
h
·,
•
' '
.
,
::-
:
.·
'
.
.t,.O
,
,\'lear
,
a ~
.
we
_
_
:
ate
_
r
__
,o
_
v.
_
er,it..,
_
A,
.
S;
I
'.
theme
iQThe Cir.de .. On behalf
,
·,}
__
e,re
,
~re,
'.
e
,
h~u_g
_
"
_
i
_
t~
·
g<?
_·
:irq1.111d
_
....
..
·
'
,
......
,.
, ..
--
..
, .. ,
·
lawed, people will
'
smoke.
doubie use as a liixaii~ef
-
Noth-
with all
·
the smokers at this
ventured ou
_
t
.
to
-
class,
,J
:was
of"the
·
mMority
;
ofsiudenii'at
Marijuana was outlawed quite
.•
.
ing'beats a cig~rette
_.
wit~
a
p\nt
-,~cho'olt
And
~s-y6u
bre~the in
greeteq
.
by
_
a
pi-bfessor .who
Mari
_
st
,
College,J would
.
like
.
to
·
some time ago, but i
_
t'S popular-
.
·
.
of Samuel Aqams an~
·
~othing
_
that firs(
~ort¥i-rtjl
slo~ bi:eath
asked if I haq joined
:
the
,Po
_
l~r
bid an apatheticf~re~e1
'
i"io'ihe
ity has been documented
and
beats a cigarette w~~h a c'up
-
~f
of
cold ai6arid
'·
smoke andh.-
·
Bear
.
Clu.b
.
.
llaughed
and
did not
-
~Id Gingko that
:
stands
'
iri
•
the
cannot be denied. Alcohol was
coffee. Nothing beats
a
•
inen-
hale it 'ciut;
·
;
let
the
happiness of explain the tnie
.
irbnY
Qf
tbe
way of the new ltbrary,
as
it goes
outlawed once and people made
thol cigarette on
a
frosty win-
being
able
to snioke
·
a cigarette
situation (Groan if you
\yill-
·
:
I
the way of many an untenured
liquorintheirbathtubs. Oh yes,
terday.
-
at.19 or
'
20 or
21
overcome
hadtomakean''irony"phn,
·
oi:l profes~9r .
.
.
As IllY,
..,
gyei;_~
_
a114 I
cigarettes will be smoked.
.
.
·_
Cigaretie
·
s
,:
may riot
'
b.e
:
our
;
you.
·
You
_
wiil
'.
thank me for it.
.
. \Voulc,l
-
hav'i:~
':
'
to heard'.t
\
fn>m
saple~s!y look
O}e
qther
iaf
all
_:
Cigarettes ai-e'i'iot allowed in
God given right,
'
but ids our, (Just
.
do
·
not
'
thank me twenty
someone
'
else .
. -
Yes
}
jusflike
.
I
,
can ~ay
-
to
'
·
myself is, ''That
0
is
many restaurants anymore. you
right, in
.
terms of life,
.
liberty _ ~~-a_rs
_
_
,frorit no\V,)
:
that frat party last we~kend, I
prngress.'' Or maybe ~•You have
.
cannot
.smoke:in
.
:
a rilovie
'
the-
ahdthe pursuitof happiness; to
!,eat you to t):iepunch.)_.·• ;;,_·
,_
.
got to be cruel
.
to b~_kindling."
ater or ii/the mall or in any
'
gov-
have a cigarette
'
whenever we
Tim
'
Manson
•
is the Opinion
.
If
that incident did not brand
But how 9ften
'
,w661ct you' hear
.
,
emm~n
_
t Q~i~d
_
ing:
·
.
Xe!
_
p~
_
9ple
·
feel like
•
it: 'They inay kill you
'
E<litor for
The Circle
ii'.ie a bona fide idiot, let-me add
such
a
!Jad
haJf.:~itt~d pun from
continue
fo
smoke
·
oecause itis
after years and years, but that
·
:
·
-
~
-
..
that iny gqldfi
-
~ll
.
Jives_in
.i~~se.
me? Al1em,well, excuse me- I
Eai:)ier
-
t
_
h
_
is
.
ye~r,
:
J
,
bought
i
a
liad
.
better go water the fish and
J_:ound
glass co
'
ritaTner that
.
feed my flowers_.
.
-
.
.
.; ·
Hurrica~e
:
~nzy
~tst;tie
mailroo.rri, two
killed
in
stor~
·
·
-
.
look~d
Jind
·.
or
'
like a
'.
decoi:a-
Tara Quinn is the Humor
tive fish bowl.
.
I thought it was
Colwniiist
:
The
-
.remnants of hu~iliat~d
'
dead
'
t~ee~ dressed
'
in
'
th6 c'ol-
ors of red, orang~ or fluores-
cent
"x"
lay
listless ort
the
floor
of the mailroom; the abandoned
'
casualties
:~
Of
_
,
a
·
stuqen_t-pro-
pelled hurricane that hits at
least three times a week. Hun-
-
•
dreds and htind,re
:
ds
/
of :flie:i-s
,
·
you know, the ones that every-
one get, denied the proper
'
burial of a trash can which
stand$. hovering Qyer the nearby
·,
wreckage.
.
,
.
.
More than once
I
have gath-
'
.
ered the littered papers 9ff the
floor and sent them to their fi-
nal resting place, in the end
(eeling my efforts to be cofl_1
-
pletely vain
,
much like Holden
Caufield must have felt when he
-
_·
realized the
'
impossiQility of
being able to accomplish the
task of crossing out all
_
the "f-
you 's" that have ever been writ-
ten and vandalized in public
places.
Why,
in
an
academic en-
vironment that should
be
intel-
ligent and mature enough to
kn~w
.
how
.
to d1spo~e
·
or
·
waste
,
properly do we still
.
find
_
ignorami who
.
lit
.
ter ~ith an at-
titude of ''someone else can
throw this away:
·
After al( I am
paying this school to
.
pick up
after nie right?"
.
.
·
.-
_ .
_
Well, I am here
;
tc>tell'you
"NO"
it is riot all right!
'
Where
-
is
the sense
·
of responsibility 'to
keeping
_
one's environm~nt
clean? I am using the
·
examp_le
of the mailro
_
orri; !
;
mt traces of
st'1def\t's laziness ~nd apathy
•
c~n. be.fouridjust abqutevery-
where: inth~ holo~ai.(si'piles of
cigarette
.
butts that
:
never made
.
it
·fo
their proper disposal or the
toilets that
,
'
do not get flushed.
the ice
.
cream
,
splattered on the
-
wall because someone thin
.
ks it
is furiny. Would you
'
behave
this way in your own-home?
If
the answer is yes, then
·
I must
pose the question: how did this
world get to
be
such an uncar-
ing place?
It is one thing to leave your
clothes on the floor or
be
un-
_
tidy, b
0
ut
it
is anoth~r thing to
leave unnecessary and unpleas-
ant remnants of yourself behind
tllat take
.
away from other
·
people's enjoyment of everyday
living. Sure, ultimately some-
.
one will pick up after you here
if y9
_
u neglect to do so your-
self, but they should not have
~,
.,
.
.
'
•
I know it is frustrating when
tile only mail you get is some
-
flier th~t does not even concern
. you,
.
but
.
do not take it out on
maintenance by creating a huge
mess, ~e
•
creative; try doing
something useful with that flier
like
.
using it for a tissue or as a
,
P,iece ofs~rap paper instead. Or
simply do the responsible thjng,
wJ,ich is to recycle it or throw
it away. Remember that some-
~here off in a distant forest, a
tree has died for you. Think
about it for a minute. Let it be
significant.
Alisa
Nuz.um writes
wlzat
size
wants for The Circle
··
·
.·
The Hudso
.
n
·
Valley's
Premier Unisex Salon
.
Is Steps Away from Marist!
THE CUTIERY
-
WELCOMES
·MARIST!.
Maris/ Students:
.
Haircuts
$18
Mm_.,
ff
'o
mt,r
Pins: 25% off all oth~ servi~es
(Wilh Maris1 I
.
D
.
)
1--lAIRCUTTI;RS
~
I
G , 1 / f r ~ .....
~
.. _;.,, Off<,li,ud
264 NoRIH RCW>, POUGHKEEPSfE 454-9239
}11I1pastA!iSpc,t.~Stmznn,Ho,plrd;
,
.._,WDti<frtr--"3
~~9-&n.m.~Sor.&PS
·
I
l
l
I
■
11
THE CIRCLE
November 20, 1997
·
Taking a Closer
_
Look at
News
and Reviews
.
,
_
A&E
~
Editor·visits Mt. Katahdin, Maine: A Mecca for Thru-Hikers
by
JIM
DZIEZYNSKI
A&E Editor
Foi'those hearty
,
souls who
.
have
.
made the epic trek from
Springer M_ountain in
_
sunny
Georgia, Mount
.
Katahdin. (lo-
cated
in
north
·
central
Maine)know
.
it is a sort of
Valhalla. Mount Katahdin rep-
resents
_
the northern terminus of
the 2000+-mile Appalachian
Trail. Many an elat~d thru-hiker
have framed
.
portraits of them-
selves standing next to the
fa-
mous wooden sign denoting the
summit of the highest point in
the state of Maine.
.
Katahdin is the first place in
America to see sunlight every
day; photographs of the sun-
rise from the summit are some-
what famous. It is located in
Baxter State Park in Millinocket,
Maine. Compared to the other
high peaks of New England,
Katahdin is rather isolated. From
the southern border of Maine,
: it is a six-hour drive to the en-
From left to Right: Jim Dzlezyankl, Ryan Sheeler, and Jody Pratt pose on a stormy day at the
famous sign at the summit of Mount Katahdln, the highest point In Maine (5,320 feet).
trance of Baxter State Park. For
myself, it was the last stop of a
·
weeklong expedition to the high-
.
est peaks in New
·
England.
· Along with me for the ride were
fellow climbers Jody Pratt and
Ryan Sheeler.
juggernaut. We ended up linger-
off. The drive from the entrance
ing good lines of ascent. One
ing in Baxter State Park forthree
to the trail heads is about ten
could say part of the glamourof
days, waiting for a series of miles along pot-holed dirt roads
Katahdin was missing because
storms
.
to pass. Unlike the
that do not allow one
.
to get
we were not offered the littlest
friendly and relaxed atmosphere
above 25 MPH. After gearing
bit of scenery; a thick, impen-
at the other peaks, there is a
up, we· departed around 7 a.m.
etrable fog engulfed the entire
sense of pressure at Katahdin.
A 2.4-mile trail up a gradual in-
mountain and prevented us from
Rangers advise hopeful climb-
cline led to the base camp at the
seeing more than a half mile up
ers to be at the gates of the park
foot of Katahdin. Because of the
or down. Still, we were climbing
at6 a.m. becauseoflimited park-
fickle weather
,
we were advised
for the sake of the climb and we
ing. Time was running out for
to wait another day by the sta-
were not about to turn around
us and things still had not
tion ranger. Nonetheless, we
because of a little bad weather .
cleared up, so we had to take
took our chances, deciding to
We reached the summit as the
our chances with the weather
ascent via the Cathedral, an ex
-
storm reached a new level ofin-
and the parking.
·
tremely steep scramble whose
tensity. We snapped a few pho-
The morning we decided to
difficulty was compounded by
tos, ate a quick lunch, and be
-
climb, rain was driftino down in
the heavy rain. All of us had a
gan to descend via the Knife
drizzle-sheets and
·
th; weather
hard time trying to get purchase
Edge, a perilous trai I about six
reportwasbad,
_
But,Hke tr9op-
,
?".~~~
,
~et_
.
g_rll!}~t~. ~:yllnc~me
feet wide, with thousand
.
foot
ers with a slight case of moun-
,
close to shdmg off the face of drof'otfsofreiiher
-
side.Wehad
rain madness, we were waiting
the mountain, but continued on
to alter our means of returning
at the gates at
·
5:45 a.m. with
.
unshakenfrom the experience.
because of possible lightening
three other cars. We paid ourad-
Jody (the most experienced of
strikes along the Knife Edge.
mission to the park and we were
ourtrio) did a splendid job find-
When we finally got back, we
In a span of three days, we had
climbed Mount Grey lock in
Massachusetts,
Mount
Mansfield in Vermont, and
_
MountWashingtciri ill New
Hampshire. The drive from New
Hampshire to Maine was a good
eight hours, so we decided to
take a day off before tackling this
25
Ta
::
Life Outshines Biohazard at The Chance
byPATRICKWIDTTLE
.
Asst. A&E Editor
-
were Unbalanced, a splinter
group of the band
·
Inner Dam
from Montgomery, NY. They
played a
-
brand
·
of new-school
Biohazard and 25 Ta Life;s cur-
·
·
hardcore/metal painfully similar
rent East Coast tour saw them
to Earth Crisis. Their singer
coming
-
t,i the Chance: in
looks a lot like Karl Buechner
Poughkeepsi_e on Nov.
9-
Three
_
from E~rth C
_
risis as a matterof
local bands opened up a decent
fact.
·
For the most part, they were
show which was marred cinly by
.
.
unremarkable, although they did
the factthat it was for some rea..: · close their set with a cover of
son scheduled on
a
Monday
.
"Earth
A.D."
by the Misfits.
night.The firsLreal
·
band to hit
·
They have a fi\'.e song CD which
the stage was All Out War.
isavailablefromthem.25TaLife
Another band played
.
before
played next.and were easily the
them but I think they
_
were a joke
best barid of the night. They
of some sort. All Out War are
are a New
,
York hardcore band
very popular with hardcore/
with some distinct
;
metal ele-
metal fans in the upstate NY and
men ts in their
·
music. Their
New York City area. This was
.
singer Rick Healy is one of the
the best show I have seen them
m
'
ost charismatic people in the
put on to date.• ..
·
business, and he always seems
A lot of the kids dancing for
to put on a good show.They
them were obviously friends of opened with some songs from
the band, and they all
·
looked
their
·
new six song CD "The
like they were having the time
Spirit Remains" (Triple Crown
of their lives. Towards the end
Records) and then got into their
of their set it looked like the
older staples,-starting with
whole shaven-headed popula-
"Short Fu
-
se". Some people
tion of Poughkeepsie was in the
think of
25
Ta
Life
as a violent
pit. They played their staples
band, but their were no fights
like "Destined to Bum" along
and no one hurt for their entire
with a Cro-Mags cover, "World
set The highlight of their set
Peace." A-lot of material from
was probably the cover of Iron
theirnew CD "Truth In the Age
Cross' "Crucified" (as made
OfLies" (GainGroundRecords)
popular by Agnostic Front)
was also showcased.Next up
which they dedicated to
Raybeez,
.
the former singer of
the band Warzone .
.
He died of a
viral infection in September and
was a good friend of theirs
.
They
ended their set with their signa-
ture song "Keepin' It Real
"
and
''Inside Knowledge" from the
band's
_
1993demo. Healy passed
the microphone around to
-
the
kids in front of the stage for the
entire show, and there was a lot
of dancing while they were on.
They
.
put
OIJ
one of the best
sh~ws I have seen by any band
at the Chance
.
The headlining
band Biohazard closed out the
show. They had a huge banner
of their symbol hanging from
the back of the stage. That was
about the best thing about their
set. Biohazard play heavy metal
similar to bands like Pantera and
Sepultura, except that they wave
their arms around while singing
a la The Sugar Hill Gang.
If
it
sounds fun
·
ny, it is. Their music
on the other hand makes me
want to cry more than laugh.
They played a lot of new songs
which are reportedly supposed
to sound more hardcore since
they have added double bass
to their drums. A lot of their
"classics" like "Urban Disci-
pline" were also played, but
were not much better. To their
credit, the crowd that came to
seem them seemed to love them.
Most of the 25 Ta Life crowd on
the other hand could be seen
quickly making their way to the
exit door. The one redeeming
quality about Biohazard on this
day was that they treated two
Marist students to dinner at a
Chinese restaurant in New Paltz.
Sophomores Bob Roth and
Sean Dougherty won the din-
ner on an Edge-88.7 FM radio
contest.
'They were kind of dorks,
"
Dougherty said.
Despite the lackluster headlin-
ing band, a good time was had
by all at the Chance.
--~ .-.- ...
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tJight
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oftheir
minds
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wt1k~ i~J~e dtlj
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t<tfind
that
·
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•·•
but
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fly!
day
a_re
<!aiigero1's
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rneti,
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for
tli~y
-
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)
act their
dreanffiwith
open
eyes,
to
make itpossible.--
T.E. Lawrence
had found out ten minutes after
we had left for the Cathedral al I
trails had been closed off. The
icing on the proverbial cake was
the ten-hour drive home to
Wolcott, Connecticut (which we
did that night from 7 p.m. to 5
a
.
m.!!)
There is an undeniable mys-
tique that one feels at the sum-
mit of Katahdin. Our little day
hike is microscopic peanuts to
those thru-hikers that have trav-
eled over two thousand miles for
a chance to stand on top of this
impressive mountain. For us, it
was a nice finale to a great week
of peak bagging across New
England and yes. we did get to
a see a rather large moose
.
The stage is set for the winter
season activities, which means
snowshoeing, winter camping,
skiing, and ice climbing! Upcom-
ing trips include
:
Winter Camp-
ing in the Adirondacks
,
Ice
Climbing Mount Washington
via Huntington Ravine, snow-
shoeing across New England.
and adventures in the Green
Mountains! If you have any
suggestions or places you
would like to go. or perhaps you
want to be part of our little ex-
peditions send me an Email
KINF@MARISIBMARISf.EDU.
One more quick notice--the
months from September to Apri 1
are open-hunting season in
most backcountry places so
.
make
_
_
sure_to have some kind of
bright orange or yellow reflec-
tive marking on your pack or
jacket! You do not want to be
mistaken for a prize kill by some
gun wielding maniac!
ent sectio
ighly value
•
op1n
ons!! Pleas
ontact Ji
ziezynski
&E Editor
t
x2429
•
I
OU
wish t
eport
o
nything ar
istic or en
ertaining.
.L
r
r
--.
THE CIR~LE,
N~~e111b~t
~ci
/:
V,►.t:
.
-
Mystery Science Theater 3O0CJ:~i~! ~elson arid pals per-
haps the single most amusing
ShO\V
Oii
television ever!
by BIG McLARGEHUGE
mark-silhouettes of threi heads
··
agiant spa~~ship i
,
n outet spa~e
·
>
ovei
.
railip~s, t~1e
_
buff guy and '
, :
.
-
After a
.
fiery ekplo~ion
:'
t_:,e-
Sra.ff Hiink
siUingattheb
'
ottomnghtofthe
is floating around carrying a
Calgon crash mto eachother t~een the
..
cheesy goifcart-like
The premise behind
Mystery
movie screen.
bunch of humari:S.
i
think their driving electric golf carts that
vehicles ( which Crow remarks;
Science Theater 3000
is basic:
MST 3000
's humor is aimed
.
goal was to colonize somewhere,
explode and then the buff guy
"Can reach speeds'tip
to
three!")
take a kidnapped moving man,
at a well -infomied audience who
but that is never said
:
-
Anyway,
and the girl make out and the
Mike Nelson comments,
_
"I
wish
a few wisecracking robots, put
can catch as many of the jokes
there are low-budget spacecraft
movie is over. Really! Sound
we had some marshmallows ... so
·
them in orbit on a futuri stic
as possible, though sometimes
dogfights
fo~
no. apparent rea-
confusing?
It
~as to be_! Only
we could stuff them
in
our eyes
spaceship, subject them to some
the silence of the characters can
son; then
,
.a11
odd
'
group of the worst movies make
1t
on to
and ears and never have to see
of the worst movies ever made
be just as amusing. You have
scantily clad Stevie Nicks look-
MST 3000!
or hear this movie ever again!!!"
and voila, success! Every week
-
not seen most of these movies;
.
a-likes (the Bolarians) get
~m
-
Mike and the robots remark
Yes,
Space Mutiny
is really
onthe Sci-Fi channel, Mike
ifyouhavetheremaybeaprob-
boa
-
rd the ship and dance
thoughout the movie, compar-
bad
but
MST 3000
is really
_
Nelson and his robot compan-
Iem. A few flicks our friends have
.
around
·
those electricity balls
ing ~algon 's assistant to a lob-
funny
.
The show airs
·
every Sat-
ions, Tom Servo (a converted
sat through include
Agent for
·
they sell
-
at Spencer's
;
A
-
rebel-
ster; giving the
·
buff hero ge-
urday night at
I l p.m. on the Sci:
gumball machine)andCrow,sit
Harm,
Jack
Frost
(imported
Jiousguysoinewhereonthebig
neric b-grade namesHke Slab
Fi channel. You can also pick
·-
through some of the most God-
from Denmark),
This Island ship decides to revolt; but once
Hardcheese, Thick McRunfast,
up individual episodes featur-
awful films ever made.Normally,
Earth,
and this week's feature
again we do not know why.
and BuffHardpeck, while mak-
ing both Mike Nelson and ex-
these films would have been
Space Mutiny.
Then,
a
-
buff superhero beams ing running jokes on characters
host Joel Hodgeson at your
fa-
lost in the
.
a,mals of B-grade
After watching
Space Mutiny
on the ship and seduces the
who resemble Ed Grimly, God,
vorite video store.
MST 3000
_
movie archives, but our heroes
a few times, I still have no idea
Captain's daughter {who looks
De.bbie Reynolds, Jocko; and
will have you laughing out loud;
bring new
life
to them by com-
what the plot is. That is the _ like the cap.tain's grandmother!)
Rick Springfield. A particularly
you owe it to yourself to check
menting on the terrible acting,
beauty of
MST 3000;
the more
The buff hero then
.
kills a dis-
funny scene occurs when
out at least one episode! The
sketchy editing, pointless plots,
pathetic movie is the better set-
abled bad guy, the rebel (named
Calgon kills a woman com-
antics of Crow, Tom Servo, Mike
and pitiful directing. If you are
ups are given for our friends to
General Calgoil) points a
·
Iaser
mander on the ship, only to have
Nelson,
-
Gypsy, Pearl, and
all
the
channel flipping, you can rec-
crack on. As far as I can piece it
bea!ll
at
the girl's teeth, a bunch
_
her return to the bridge in the
rest are sure
·
to amuse!!
ognize
MST
3000
by the trade-
together
,
the story is as follows:
of ski-mask wearing villains
fall
very next scene!
. .
..
AFI's
.
Latest Release a
·
hardcore/punk rock
.
work of
·
art
byBOBR()TH
.
Staff Writer
month now! The first thing I
noticed about the new disk was
the guitar Was harder and
I ran to my mailbox when Dave
Dave's voice was Iowerthan
'
on
from AFI told me that I should
previous AFI releases. Just like
have a copy of their new CD
the old disk "Very Proud of Ya"
;
waiting for me. I opened my box
this record proves to be another
and there it was waiting for me!
winnerfrom this
.
hardcore/punk
AFI
's
latest release is called
band. From the first track
,
"Keep
"Shut Your Mouth and Open
Out of Direct Sunlight"to track
Your Eyes" on Nitro Records. I
14
"Triple Zero", this music
ran upstairs to the
.old
dorm
keeps on going harder and bet-
room and popped it in
my
CD · ter as the
·record
progresses.
player~ there it has remained
Mixing punk rock and hardcore
give this album a feeling that you
just want.to dance around and
break
'
something: You_ get
pumped up about the album and
there is no letdown between any
of the sorigs and yoti have to
release the album somewhere.
Mark's continuing guitar riffs
and Adam's drumming keep the
flow with no stoppage in sight.
•
Dave's
·
_•
~cre
·
aming/singing
·VO-
cal~ and I:It.mter's Bass round
.out ~n
.
albti
.
[!
.
:YOU
:
wqI
n9_t for~
geq
-
Oth
'
er
?
ireadfacks are·
"Three Reasons'', "Let it Be sicianship is solid; the ·playing
Broke", and "Today's Lesson."
is tight
,
anc\Jµ~,.ov..,~!~lJ.;sR-und
The best track on the disk is
and feel of.this album is great!
called
"A
Single
·
Second",
;
in
From
.
the opening song to the
which Dave's roommate ·Nick
last note
'
you will be blown away
sings a great harmony that
with this release. Soon enough
,
counters the chorus giving the
you will be dancing and sing-
song
a
great feel.
_
_
ing alo!1g
~i~~
A.PJL __
-
_
_
_.__
__
_
.
,
Do you like punk rock
,
ToleammoreaboutAFlcheck
1
hardcore, or fast melodic music?
_
out their website in which I am
.
;
Well then;
.
AFI's new~st\;ffor(
'
the
:
webiflaste:r!
!Laiet!
!
_:.· _ ~-- .
,,
"Shut Your,Mquth and Open
.
HTTP
'
:Vwww.ge9diic/S:diri1Y
'·
'
·
Your Eyes" is the new.CD.you
Sunsetstrip/:fow~rs/94-18
.
·'
·
-
·
haye been looking
for!
The mu-
Lots of good stuff about AFH!
·
·
SGA SPOTLIGHT
ame:
John T. Williams
·
ear:
.
Senior
ajor:
Finartce/Communica-
ions MinorHometown: Bronx,
avorite Band:
Aerosmith
_
avorite Movie:
"Good
Fellas"
avorite Drink:
Water
ole
Models:
Grandfather,
rank Sanatra, and Ronald
According to John Williams,
he Student Body Vice-Presi-
ent, there is a lot more to Stu-
ent Government (SGA) than
eople think.
:
"We do a lot for the
tudents ... we make a big differ-
nce," said Williams.
:
As the Student Body Vice-
resident, Williams is the Chief
f Staff for the Student Body
resident, Frank Maduri. He
akes sure everything runs
moothly and that everyone
oes their job. In addition to
hese responsibilities, Williams
Jans and organizes the Spring
ransition of the newly elected
fficers.
John is a Senior Finance ma-
or with a Communications mi-
.
I:./_-~~
~~~.;:::
,
--;.
·,
,;: ~
~
'::..
·
-:::
·:·
.-!.:..~-
-·-
<·;_
;
.....
~
-:
·•"·'-·
:
~.-~;~
SGANEWS
:
t
--
_-
_.-----
·--·
-'
I
::
~---
.. -
·.
.
,
~
.
·.
:. 1·
.
oio
,
you
KNOW THERE HAVE BEEN SEVERAL BURGLARIES ON
:
THE NORTH END OF OUR CAMPUS?
YOU CAN HELP TO PREVENT THIS FROM HAPPENING AGAIN: ..
I.
LOCK YOUR DOORS
.
,
■I
2.
CALL SECURITY (X2282) IF YOU SEE SOMETHING OUT OF THE
:
;
OR:DIN ARY.
SUCH AS SOMEONE WHO DOES NOT SEEM TO BE-
LONG ON
,
CAMPUS
-
;
:
_
3.
LOCKYOUR DOORS
<
4.
BE
:
A\1/ARE OF
,
:(.OtjR SURROUNDINGS AT ALL TIMES
5
.
LOCK YOUR DOORS
'..,
JUST-BECAUSE"THAT IS THE BEST WAY
TO PREVENT YOl.i
~:
fROM
.
BEING
THE
NEXT STATISTIC
-
ON OUR
CAMPUS
•,,
'
P·•''·
\)-;
-
'
.
.
CAiwA
v.s
'
cAtG
'.
imchRiTY IF
You
HAve aeE~ vicnMiztD
,f-,
ooN;i
,
Be
_.-
dni'NExf
_
vicTIM...
-
LOCK YCiUR
.'.
DOORS
0
!!!!
.
,
REME¥BE~4~.C~RITY IS HERE TOHELP ... THEY ARE OUR FRIENDS.
SPONSOREO-BY THE STUDENT
LIFE
COUNCIL
•
'i.
.·.'
'.
·
· . ·•
·
·
--.
'
·
.;
,
. A'i:rnNTioN
sPoRTS
CLUBS!!!
-
·+rtiJFi~in~ial board is seeking a representative from one of the
>
·
;
Sports
dubs.
.
::
Applications are available in the Student Government Office
~which
is located
,
in SC
347.
If
there are any questions, contact
Steve Coogan at
nor. In the
·
future,
-
Williams
-
- -
"Everybody came togeih~fand
ext. 286
?:
,,
_
<.:t ..
:.
' .
•
.
would like a career where
,he
. hadf1.m
x
We accomplished
a
lot
could make his O\\'.n hours.-
_.
.
-
wl)ich gqt
_,
the year
:
off
.
right,". . :i:he Stude1;u Aq1demic~Cpu?c,il has been very busy this semester, but
"I would like something fie£ . .'· . said Williams
.
··
•
-
-
-
-
,
.
-
_we·ve j11st gotten start~d! J"he· College Bowl
,
a trivia game, was held on
.
.
: "Wednesday, October 29th; in the Performing Arts Room at 9:30 p.m. This
ible in the business world
_
,'.' said "
.
_One of
•
\\".illiam's fav9rite as:
semester
it
was
held in ·collaboration with the Class Wars and each of the
Williams.
, _
, .
_
. _
.
peels of Mari st is the closene.ss
..
class!!s was represented by -at least one team. The Class of 1999 won with
However, right now
'
he is con~
"ofth~
people.
.
,
,_.. 12?1) points.
and
the ciass of 2001 ran up 285
.
The
senior
class gained 80
centrating on more immediate
"There is a sense offamiliar-
~mnt~. and the.sophomores, although t~ey did not score any points, gave
I
.
"th
b d
Yi
d
t
It their best
shot.
Stay tuned for the b12ges1 College Bowl event of the
go~
S.
.
lly Wt
_every
O
Y·
OU
,?
n?
year-the tournament being held this
s
p'iing-which will need participa-
1 need to be consistent and
get lost
tn
the shuffle here, said
_
tion of both students and faculty!!!
to keep my grades where they
Williams.
.
:
A]sp.
prepare yourselves for the annual SAC social. which will be held
are. I want to get into a good
In addition to Student Govern.:'__ llefore-
_
tl!~-~nd
.
of the semester. Come and join us for some free munchies
graduate school," said Williams.
·
· ment (SGA), Williams is also
in-
_
,
,?n1
find OU~
·
sA
_
~
is all about! We sti(I need
10
•
fill
some
positions. including
Ab
h.
I
W"ll-
I d . h
-
·
I H b:._
repre_s:nt~_uv
:
es
.
m the
.
French. Spanish. Medical Technology. Chemistry,
ove everyt mg e se,
t
vo ve wit mtennura s, a
I_.
.
Mathematics and
·
Psychology/Special Educat·
If
•
d .
·
Id
'
II l"k -
-
•
• ·
·
- .
·
.
-,
_
-:-
ion.
you are mtereste m
tams wou
eventua y
1
e--to
tat for Humamty, and
IS
the
finclmg
:
ou_t
,
!)!ore, call Kem at x4027 or x7143. All you need is a stroni?
own his own Casino/Hotel in
President and General Manager
desire-.to
suppo-1-the
suggestions of the
students
in your major and a voic;
Las Vegas.
ofMCfV.
Jhat will
:
ll,ot
~esitate to spea~ out!
Williams noted Summer Ses-
-
A~tc~t.mn_Ma~11gement Siudies and humanities major!!!! The SAC will
be
.
.
holding "socials (or·the?e
_
Jwo departments sometime before the end of the
s1on as one of his most memo-
semester.
-
Stay tuned for Ilic dates and then come
d
•
•
r
r
.
_
• •
O\'Cr an Jorn us ,or ,rec
rable moments from Student
·
fOQd
and 1~
.
~
ch
.
a11ce to ~~~ess
ideas
about
your
major.
Government.
.
• •
.
-:_
'
·
.;..,
·
•.,
_
-
r
THE
CIRCLE,
November 20, 1997
13
Penri State
.
puts
Red Foxes on ice; Marist loses 6-1
·
.
·
by RACHAELVOLLARO
Kamp also said
.
that the ab-
,
St~jfWriter
.
·
s.ence
of co-cap
,
tai~ Brian
·
:
warzecha,
.
the
.
team's scoring
.
The Marist ice hockey ieriin
leader, reflected the score ofthe
learned the importance of game,-
missed opportunities this past
"We really didn't have a natu-
Friday
.
·
ral goal scorer in that game. The
·
The Red Foxes now have an
game was closer than the score
overall record of
6-4- I
after los-
reflected,'" he said. "The differ-
ing to Penn State, 6-1.
·
ence was that when they had a
·
·
Assistant coach Brad Kamp
·
real good chance to put the
said the Red Foxes knew going
puck in the net they did
:
"
·
into the game against Penn State
Starting
.
in net for the Red
that hard work would be
a
key
Foxes was freshman John
factor.
"OveraH
.
I
think they just
played the more intense game,"
he
said.
"There were times
where we played intense. We
actually had· the better play as a
.
result of that, but we didn't do
it consistently."
Nicolucci.
Junior forward Dan Sullivan
said that, overall, Nicolucci had
·
been doing a great job for the
club and it showed in the game
against Penn State;
"In
the last four or five games
that he
'
s played he
'
s done a re-
ally good job.
,
Against Penn
-
ping. The Lions scored again
State· he
'
saved ~s from
:
3 or 4 · at 12:48
,
making the score 4-1.
goals," he sa
_
id.
.
.
Marist also had its share of
The Nittany Lions started the
·
opportunities in the second pe-
scoring at
9: 16
of the first pe-
riod, but failed to score.
riod.
Sullivan said the team should
They scored their second goal
of the game on a power play at
15:19. Marist's freshman for-
ward Todd Hutton took two
minu·tes in the box after a cross-
checking penalty.
The Red Foxes answered with
their only goal of the game.
scored by junior forward Bill
Persson, at
17: 18
in the first pe-
riod. Sean Powers and Ray
Kenahan received the assist.
Penn State opened the scor-
ing on another power play at
5: I 0,
after freshman defenseman
Pat Donohoe
.
was guilty of trip-
have taken advantage
of
those
opportunities.
"We had a couple five on three,
five on four, one man
,
two man
power plays, and we just
couldn't put it togethert he ex-
plained.
"
We couldn"t
set
up
the zone."
In
the third period, Penn State
scored at 14:02 and 6:39
,
mak-
ing the final score 6-1.
This weekend, the Red Foxes
host Rider at the Mid-Hudson
Civic Center at
9: 15
p.m. on Fri-
day, and travel to Franklin Pierce
on Saturday.
Co-captain Mark Avagliano
said he expects a good game
against Rider.
"I
think we'll do pretty good,"
he
said.
Sullivan confirmed
his
teammate ·s prediction.
"
I
definitely expect a win
against them," he
said.
Kamp is a little more pmgmatic.
"We;re looking to do what
we'.~e been
_
trying to
.
do
all
sea-
son
:
which is put together a
full
team effort. Both
.
are weaker
teams that we should be able to
beat,"
he
said.
According to Kamp, Warzecha
is expected to play
both
garnes.
The
.
following weekend, the
Red Foxes travel to Penn.State
for their Thanksgiving tourna-
ment
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·· .. •
..
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·
·
~
·
~
Mk
have somethingfor everyone
Store Hours
on your list! Your on-campus
bookstore is a great pl(lce to start
your holiday shopping. Right
now, we're featuring special
purchases
for a limited time ...
Monday-Thursday
.
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
9 a.m.-7 p.m.
9 a.in:-5
p.m .
10
a.m.-4 p.m.
Closed
so come
_
down and check it out!
Marist College Bookstore
Located in the Student Center Rotunda
of
the
SEASON!
.
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14
THE CIRCLE;
November
20, 1997
Steve
on
Sports----
·
What's On
Tap?
.
.
Oh, the weather outside is frightful~~-
See the Red
-
Foxes
.
in action: ..
........................
.
......
The transition from fall to win-
ter last weekend was almost
poetic.
Could you ask for a better
bridge between seasons for the
Red Foxes than the events of
Friday and Saturday?
First, the men's basketball
team kicked the bejeezus out of
a barnstorming group of Euro-
peans- a nice way to start the
1997-98 campaign. And it hap-
pened in the middle of a mid-
November blizzard.
Actually, even before that hap-
pened,
I was at the Galleria and
they were playing Christmas
carols. 'Tis the season,
I
guess.
Then, on Saturday, the foot-
ball team closed out its sched-
ule by dominating Siena, 34-9,
on a carefully plowed
I
00-yard
mud bath masquerading as
Leonidoff Field
.
The winter season began with
a
bang, the
fall season ended
with an exclamation point, and
it all happened in less than 24
hours as a nice b\anket ofsnow
provided closure for
Marist's
autumnal athletes.
It has only been a few weeks
since the Florida Marlins cap-
tured their first World Series
-
crown, arid already they have
begun tearing apart the team
that madf it possible.
·
Moises
Alou went to Houston for a pair
of minor league players and it
is
rumored that anyone is avail-
able for the right price.
The situation
in
Florida illus-
trates, in a nutshell
,
why own-
ers must stop overpaying
play-
ers. Mariins owner Wayne
Hui'zenga dished out $89 million
last
.
off-season to build a con:..
tender: won a championship
,
and now is forced to either sell
·
the franchise or dismember it.
Althoiigh he
WO~
the Serie~: he
·
still lost $34
inf
Ilion. · ·
The people that I feel sorry for
arethe Florida fans
.
They went
from following
·
an expansion
team to watching that team blos-
sominto a winner, and now must
sit and watch that winner be
broken up. They
will
probably
still have a competitive ball club
next season, but there is no way
the Marlins
will
repeat as cham-
pions of baseball.
Bernie Williams is asking for
$10 million a year from the Yan-
kees. Now Williams a very good
player, probably the best the
Yanks have, but there is no way
Although
·
the
·
snow
.
beat me
·
to
.
it,
I
think I should also at-
tempt to close the book on fall.
Heeeere we go ...
The football team's uplifting
victory over Siena on Saturday
was the Foxes' fourth consecu-
tive win, and their sixth of the
year.
A
6A
record is not spectacu-
lar, and the near misses versus
Georgetown and Duquesne cer-
tain
I
y still sting, but this
season's defensive excellence
cannot be tainted by
a
few last-
minute miscues.
Marist's overpowering rush
defense challenged Division
I-
AA history all year long, and
eventually established a new
record for dominance against
the ground attack last Saturday
by holding Siena's own record
holder, Reggie Greene, to 80
yards.
And, astonishingly, Marist
returns all four of its starters on
the defensive line next year.
Could the Foxes break their own
record
.
next fall? Stay tuned.
The women's soccer squad
surprised some people by earn-
ing the third spot in the
MAAC
Tournament, but were unable to
move past the semifinals.
Head coach Tara Nichols did
a
solid job leading this team
through its first year in a new
conference
;
asthe Foxes went
6°3
in· regular season MAAC
play.
Freshman forward Jamie
·
Bierworth finished with what
was, by far, a team high 28 points
on
13
goals and two assists.
Second
·
leading scorer Nicole
Bruno had
11
points, and Beth
Zack provided a steadying in-
fluence in the net, allowing only
1.65 goals per game.
_
The men's soccer team's, uh,
"situation" has been, well, docu-
mented.
The Red Foxes finished
2.:.13-
1
after last year's step towards
respectability.
·
They struggled
to score, they struggled to pre-
vent the opposition from scor-
·
ing, and, as a result, they
struggled to win. They do have
several young players who
should not be
.
ruled out quite
yet, but this season was, obvi-
ously, a complete loss.
Since Steve does not want to
ruffle any more feathers, or get
tossed out of any more parties
as retribution,
.
that is all
.
Steve
has to say about the soccer.
team.
Early on, Emily Alquist's
women's volley!Jall teamlooked
like it was headed for a decent
season, winning non-confer-
ence games against Long Island
University and Coppin State
.
But then
·
the MAAC sched-
ule kicked in. After
13
games,
.. the Red
f
o
.
xe~ stood at 5-8, and
still had
\
dhotto foach
'
.500, or
everi
;"
tbp iL Th~\ne;t
of
the
conference
'
schedule putan end
Men's
·
Basketball
at Vermont
(1V23),
ho~ting
.
Marist Pepsi Classic ( 11 /28., 11/29), and
Vs.
Colgate
.
( 12/2);
Women's Basketball
at Boston College
.
( i
1/20), and at Boston University ( 11/22);
Swimming
·
·
&
Diving
vs.
Fairfield (12/3);
Hockey
vs. Rider
.
( 11/21 ), at Franklin Pierce
(11/22), and at
Penn
St.
Tournament ( 11/28-11/29).
Tom's Trivia Corner
A.C. Green is on t.lie verge of breaking the
NBA record for consecutive games played.
Who holds that record?
-
(Last week's answer: David Nied was
selected by the Colorado Rockies in 1993.)
Tom Drag
is
a regular
contributor
to The Circle
to those hopes, however, as
leave Marist and enter the real
Marist tailspinned through the
world.
months of October and Novem-
The cross country teams were
·
ber.
llp and down all sea~on, but
.
An eleven game losing streak
.
showed unmistakable signs of
down the stretch made the
life.
Foxessettle for
a
5-19 overall
Pete Colaizzo and.Phil Kelly
mark. The team's last winofthe
are already
•
fooking ahe~d
,
tJ
season came against LIU on
next year, when the group of
Sept
27
'.
..
young runners they oversee
will
The good news? Sophomore
be ready to chalienge some of
Julee Cerda will lead a strong
the more prestigious programs
returning contingent into 1998
in the
MAAC.
. . :
.
.
;
'
..
withayearofMAACexperience
·
And finally, oneofMarist
;
s
behind them
.
club sports enjoyed unprec-
.
.
The men's and women's ten-
edented success. among its
;
re-
nis teams were active in the fall,
•
··
.
gional peers. The rugby team;
although
:
the bulk oCiheir
.·
Jed by Jeff' Carter, Martin
matches
are
setfoi" spring;.
, . ·
Kappus, andDave Sciascia,
ad~
.
.
Holly Robinson played well at
variced to the quarterfinals of
number
·
one singles for
'
the
the Northeast Rugby Union
:
women,
.
.who w~ri five of the
Playoffs, and fini5.heci th~
.
sea.-
~kven contests they partici-
son as the runner-up in the Di-
p~it~ci
.
in. At first doubles,
vision II Rugby Union.
.
.
.
Robii:isqirpaired up with Kara
Apparentlyrugbyteamsdon't
·
he is worth tha! kind of money.
simply to be polhically correct.
Oliver arid
'
the duo compiled a
form
··
1eagues or conferences;
If he will not sign for less, let
Then it was,
.
believe it or not,
9J
record together.
they form "unions." More
hirri go. I would much rather see
Dennis
.
R6dman, who spoke out
1
(fa
.
the men's· side, Clint
power to them.
that money
'
spent 6n free agent
against
.
theJem
:
~le refs;
.
Vanas
\
vegan
'
captured the
If
you do not count the men
'
s
·
Kenny Lofton, an e.stablislied
·
These
:
w'omenprobably know
Player of the Conf~rence trophy
.
soccer andw.omen'.s volleybaU
superstar, than on a 'very good
the giune ofb~k'.etb
a
li very well
.
at the
·
MAAC Chanipi~nships .
.
.
tefuns)viariit's
t~bintlaii✓e
'
f~I
player with great potentiaL
and are undoubtedly excellent
The team as a whtile tied for sec-
record was 29-23-2.
•
•
Not bad, l
· ·
*
·.
*
*
·
*
*
officials
.
Bun am noLsure if ond
·
1n the tb
\i
rrt.i~ent.c.....:. the
suppose.
·
Last week Kevin
.
Garn~tt;
.
the}'wiU
i,J
accepted
.
Player:s
.
·
besfresuir
"
f
y~
rJor a Red Fox
But when we do account for
Stephon Marbury; Chris Carr,
.
·
find problems with officials wlfo
squad atJhe
.
MAACs.
the redheaded stepchildren
·
of
Clifford Rozier, and Doug West
have been in the league ten
The
:
tea~
werii
5:.
I in'the ab-
the
'
athletic department, the
were'tined $2
.
500 each'and the
years.
:·
How
·
ar~
:
they going·w
bre\
1
1ate4
•'
se~son, and heads
overall mark falls to 36:.55~3.
Timberwolves
'
as
·
a
·
tearri was
vieivwomeni-eferees who have
fofot~~spring~ithachanceto
a
·
ulp.
fined $25,000
. ·
'
The reason?
not even be
'
en around for
a
.
d,osim:ie
damage in·the confer:-
Their shorts \Vere too long.
whole season?
. ·
'
ertce'_:_
-
·
·
with
·
or without
Sr eve
Wqnczyk
is
I almost fell off my diair when
·
Wha{we saw froin WiHiams
'.
:
Vanaswegan, who may opt to
The
Circ(e'ssports editor.
I heard this
'
news
.
You wouid
and Rodman is just the tip
.
of
think the NBA would have more
the iceberg
.
The criticism will
imp_ortant t~i!)gs to worry about
continue
·
to come. I would be
th;n the size.ofplayefs
·
apparel.
greatly surprised if female offi-
What is next, fines for shoe
cials are eyer treated with the
laces tied too
·
loosely? I mean
same res
'
pect as aHue Hollins
come on.
or a Dick Bavetta.
·
.
· Charles Barkley throws a man
· And now, my topfive from the
through a bar window and does
week that was:
not get penalized
.
But when the
I. Indianapolis Colts - at least
league
sees
that
the
they will get one win .
.
Timberwolves shorts are get-
2. Atlanta Hawks - the NB A's
ting pretty long they slap
surprise team so far, at
10-0:
$37,500 in fines on them. Some-
3. College basketball - get
thing does not fit there.
ready for another trip down the
*
* * *
*
The NBA season is only two
weeks old and players are al-
ready having problems with the
new female officiaJs
.
First it was
Piston center Brian Williams
saying that it was a move made
road to the Final Four.
4. New York Jets - they are
back on top of the AFC East
·
s.
Barry Sanders - I know I
put him on last week, but nine
straight 100-yard games de-
serves to be mentioned.
·
Men's ~oops ---.-..
-co-,-m-·n--u-ed-
_
fi_1i_Om_p_a_g_e_l_6_
.
-
"These guys are all pro play-
ers,''
·
said Magarity in his post-
game press conference. "Their
timing and experience was like
night and day
·
c·ompared
:'
i:o
Friday's game."
The All Stars did not run many
set offensive schemes, choos-
ing instead to simply isolate its
best
.
players and lettheir natu-
ral ability take over.
·
"This wasn't a typical game,"
Magarity admitted. "It was
more like a pick-up game."
·
·
"The situation wasn't as real-
istic as the
·
season," agreed se-
nior Bryan Whittle.
There are still serious ques-
tions about the frontcourt as
Marisi begins its regular season
.·.
on Sunday at Vermorit, and
there is still rusfo\1 the Foxes'
•
offensive
·
sets. But the up-
tempo
·
game was effec"tive in
both games, and this team al-
ready seems to have more of an
ide
.
ntity
·
than it did last year
.
·
As
'
time ticked down in the
second half against Belgrade,
a
local broadcaster· shouted to
Mustafa Barksdale fro~ press
row: "Hey Mustafa; why' d they
let you back in this building?"
"Has this ballclub
won
any
rings yet?" Barksdale re-
sponded from the floor.
Not yet, Mustafa
.
Not yet.
The jury is
still
out
THE CIRCLE, November 20, 1997
15
•
CroSS.;COlJ.l1try'teani
.
ruri.s
;
OUtof
gas
~t
NCAA
Regionals
-
·
.
si~tencf
'
thio·uglfo~t the
;
sea~
.
son.
.
.
.
.
.
.
. :
-
~iWe w~
'
re
.
really
tip
ano dpwn
.··
this year;" Colaizzo said.
·
''When
we
·
were good, we were good;
.
But when we \Veren't; we
weren't.
.
"Next year,
the
team
·
must have
more consistency," he contin-
ued. "We have a lot of talent,
and we just have to put it to-
gether.:'
by JAN BfilGHLEY
JR.
Staff Writer
· ·
.
The Marist College men's and
worrien'.s cro~s country teams
seUie~:
,
for i1m~st· idehtical re-
sults· at the NCAA Division
I
Northeast Regional meet on Sat-
urday at Franklin Park i~ Bos-
·
ton.
,
The men wound up in 26th
plac
,
e finish out of 37 schools;
running the
.
ten kilometers in
"the worst conditions
I
have ever
seen," according to Coach Pete
Colaizzo; "There
was
snow, ice
and mud-::: the conditions were
really bad."
The top finisher for Mari st was
freshman Greg Salamone, He fin-
ished
l
08t~ out
.
of the 250
nm-
ners
.
in the event, with a time of
34
.
minutes and
54
seconds.
y
;
:
.::.:~-_;_
,i,l
~
i
u;l.1,
·
i ..
"'-\•
(
:t
•
; .• ,
Ji
,:.
:
,som!rr~!i
_
n}wN.f9r the
.
foxes was
Ben Hefferon, a junior, who fin-
tshed.125th
1n 35:
14 .
.
.
.
•
'
'
.
Other runners who crossed the
fi~ish iinefor'the R~d Fo'xes in-
•
;
'
l;
,
;
.
~'
,
5,
j ,. ,_;
'.
-
•;
'..
•
;
.
..-
.
· ,
~
-
-
_
!; : ,
·
-
.
eluded Pete Startz,
(I
43r~ jn
35:46),
-
Steve Palmer (lq4tli in
36:3
D,
Lou Caporale ( 172nd in
3]:04): a~d Jeff Grady ( I 78th in
37:43).
•.
•
-
.
Colaizzo \~as im'pressed with
Salam~ne'.s,results
i
-
"·'··
·
··
·
'
.
•
;,G;eg
rai~ re·a.11Y~~ll. he h~ci"a
personal best dme,"
,
the
,
coach
said
.
.
.
"It
wris
the
.
first ti me he
W~S
.
()Ur lead
_
runner a\\ year."
.
While tl'\e
_
fi_nishin the regional;
as
.
well.as in.the.MAACCham-
:
~
.
_
l
,-
:
;
<",
:
:. )
!
:
.
:.
."
~
·,
j
,
::;,
'
'
•
i
'
'
•
'
.
'
~
,
•
pior1ship, qisappoint~d
,
Colaizzo,
the season must be termed a suc-
cess.
;
The
.-
Foxes had Si?( f~e~h-
men .and five sophomores,
and
.
.
.
'
..
.
·
-
~
·
-
·
.
.
...
'~
,
.;
.
_.
.
'
.
will return almost
the
entire team
.
next fall.
Colaizzo is relatively content
with his team's perfonnailce this
year, which was-a rebuilding
one. The_ production they-re-.
ceived from the young con tin-
.
gent is one reason to be happy.
·
Salomone, km;>wn to the team
as R:eeses, was, as Colaizzo
phrased it, "a big, big surprise."
He entered ~he Marist program
with only two years of competi-
tive cross-country running un-
WhE:liwe were good,
we
we
good.
But
when
we weren't, we weren't.
-Pete Colaizzo
:derhis
belt, and improved ev-
ery
week.
,
JeffGrady, Joe Scelia, An-
thony Nero, Chris Smith, and
Joe Majkowski also contributed
as freshmen in 1997.
There are also several juniors
.and sophomores who added
scoring punch. for
.
the Red
Foxes,
and
will be
a
part ofnext
year'.~ tean_1.
Ben
.
Hefferon
1
,
the leading
runn~r in every event e;xcept
.
the
Regi<;m
.
als,
.
and Lo1,1 <;:aporale
were two o(the squad's m9st
valuable assets, and.will be se-
r
ni~rs in 1998.
Pete Startz and Steve Palmer,
- both sqphomores; also came up
big this
.
year for Marist. They.
established thems~lve,s as con-
si!;,tent runners
.
on a .team, for
the niost part,- that lac:ked co.n-
The women finished one place
higher the their male counter-
·
parts, coming iti 25th
·
out of a
very competitive field of 31
teams.
They were led through the
snowy course by freshman
Megan Bruno. Marist's top
seven was rounded off by
Heather Perrine, Keni Cleelarid,
·
Jen Glover, Debbie Flanigan,
Kristen Russo, and Karen
Donohue.
Co-captains Beth Cimino and
Kerri Red01ond were pleased
with the team's effort
"The course was dangerous,"
Redmond
said.·
"With every
step we took we sunk deeper
into snow or
.
mud."
.
"It was tough to get a time,"
Cimino added. "It was difficult
for everyone, but since we all
had to run in th~ same condi-
tions, it evened out."
.
This meet was
_
especially
memorable for Redmond, who is
a senior. On Saturday, she ran
.
her last cross-country race for
Marist.
Unfortunately, a f~!low senior,
.
ChristineDolan;was unable to
c~mpete due to injuries
,
sus~·
tained in a recent car accident.
As the Red Foxes' fall cam-
paign came to a close, Redmond
was already looking ahead to
the next season. Marist opens
its winter schedule with
a
meet
at West Pointon Tuesday.
.
"We have a young team, and
I'm psyched for indoor track."
·
swifu
·
teamsope.nMAAC_schedule
--
by MARKJ. WELLS
·
·
StdffWriter
.
.
.
·
-
The Marisf College men's
swimn1ing aiilc_living team de-
feated two Metro Atlantic Ath-
letic Conference rivals last
w,
"'·
The Red Foxes won their sec~
ond home meet of the season on
Thursday, against the Jona
Gaels, 138-98. Then
,
on Satur-
day afternoon, the team traveled
to Rider University, where
it
squeal<ed out a
·
128~ 115 vi~tory.
The Red Foxes improved their
overaH record to.4
-
0 on the sea-
son. By beating lona and Rider,
Marist opened up its conference
scheduie with a mark of2-0.
The women's team did not fare·
as well as
.
the men, earning a split
against
.
the sam~ two oppQ-
nents. In their first match o(~he
week they hosted iona as well,
and defeated ihe Gaels, 154-8?.
Saturday's meet was a h~art-
breaker, however, as the Foxes
lost to Rider in the final race of
the afternoon.
Marist's 400 meter freestyle
team ~ame within
.
six seconds of
keeping the women's
.
undefeated
.
season alive. The Foxes have
ca'mpiled·a 3-1 overall record,
talent. The freshmen on both
incl1,1ding a I
-:I
mark in the
teams have been exceptional
MAAC.
·
.
.
thus far.
Overall, both the men's and
"I can't say enough
about
the
women's teams have been
freshman we have," Van
swimmingextremelyw~ll for so
Wagner said. "They have all
early in the season. Larry Van
done a great job for us."
Wagner, the men's head coach,
Freshman freestyle specialist
anticipated these positive re-
David Dobbins has accounted
suits.
for many of his
.team's
points in
'
.
'I had a firm belief that we
the freestyle events, and
would be 4-0 at this point in the
·
•
claimed first place in three dif~
season," Van Wagner said.
ferent races against the Broncs
There
_
have been many key
on Saturday.
contributors for both teams
Along with winning the 100m
thus far, including senior diver
and 200m freestyle races, he wac;
Chris Blackwell, who has not
the anchor on the victorious
lost in either the Im or the 3m
400m medley relay team. Keith
diving events alJ season.
Nichols, Michael Murphy, and
_
;'Chris Blackwell is the most
Craig Chatlos rounded out the
outstanding diver
.
in
:
the
rest of the foursome.
·
MAAC," Van Wagner praised.
"Dobbins has been really im-
,
Blackwell broke two of his
pressive so f~r," Van Wagner
own ~chooLrecords this past
said. "Right now he is the num-
week, both of which were set
ber sprint freestyle swimmer in
on the I-meter board.
the MAAC."
On the womeri 's side, junior
The Red Foxes have some tim
_
e
div~r Me_lanie Addington won
off before they get back in the
all four of the events she com-
pool competitively. They host
peted in this week, by a corn-
the Stags of Fairfield University,
bined total of 172 points.
in another MAAC matchup,
.
on
The swimming and diving
·
Wednesday, Dec. 3 at 7:00
p:m
teams are loaded with young
at the McCann Center.
C'in:k phtlhllfoc Sl·onu
ESPN came to Poughkeepsie last week to tape a segment
that was featured on College GameDay on Nov .. 15. Paul
Deckaj and Dwayne Bates were interviewed during the
three minute piece, which previewed the showdown
between Marlst's smothering rush defense and Siena's
record setting running
,
back, Reggie Greene.
.
Women's basketball
loses exhibitionfinale
by CHRIS O'DONNELL
·
Sta.ff Writer
Thewomen's basketball team
closed out its pre-season last
F:
riday night with a tough 78-
72
loss to the New York Gazelles at
the McCann Center.
Down 41-33 at halftime
,
the
Gazelles (5-4) used two
second
half runs to climb back into the
contest.
ond and third chances or -you
wjll
getburned."
The Red Foxes abandoned the
three pointer in the second half.
and only attempted four treys
after hitting
seven
of 15 in the
iirst half. Juniortri-captain Beth
Shackel
.
led the three point
charge in the first half by hit-
ting five-- she finished with
19
points before the break
,
but did
not score in the second half.
Senior tri-captain Colleen
King said the team executed
King
said
the Gazelles were
its new motion offense well in
s~me....,hat of
,1
mystery.
.
:
1,
the first half.
•
·
:
~'We,<lidn't
know.much
.
about
,
·
"Last,gnme
.
we l
_
rnd some
this team going into the g;:i,ne.
trouble running the new of-
so
.we
dido '.t know their style of
fense," she said. "But this time
play,"
she
said.
we ran it a lot better, which re-
The Gazelles
stormed
irito:the
·
suited
in some
.
easy baskets."
second half with a 16-4 run in
-:.
But
·shackel
said team looked
the first four minutes and took a
49-45 lead. Sandie Propl
.
1et led
th_e way for the Gazelles with 18
points.
The
second
run iced the
game
for
,
the Gazelles, as they
scored
15 unanswered points to go up
72-64.
Marist Lid trouble boxing out,
and the Gazelles grabbed nine
offensive rebounds in the
sec-
ond half.
Sophomore Alex. Stephens
said the problems with boxing
out hurt the team.
'.'That
definitely had an effect
on the outcome of the game,"
she said. "You can'
_
t give the
opposing team too many
sec-
different in
each
half.
"We
were disciplined and ex-
ecuted in the ftrs_t half,'
"
she said.
"But in the second
.
half we
played their style and they got
back in the game."
.
Sophomore Sabrina Vallery
was the leading scorer for the
_
Red
,
Foxes with
.
21 points and
eight rebounds. Alex Stephens
added 11 points and four re-
bounds for Marist.
The Red Foxes start the regu-
lar season with a two game road
trip. They play at Boston Col-
lege on Thursday, and at Bos-
ton University on Saturday be-
fore hosting Army on Dec. 2 at
S:30p.m.
F o o t b a l l - - - - - - - - -
... continuedfrom page 16
tackle on his way
.
to the
.
end
zone.
The touchdowns by. seniors
Godfrey and D
_
eckaj were a fit-
ting way to end the careers of
the Marist class
qf
;98, as the
team won its fourth game
-
in a
row, tying yet another Marist
record.
After the game; the seniors
and their parents
·
were honored
on cold, dark Leonidoff field.
with
·
only the scoreboard and
the passing ca
.
rs providing
light. Marist public address
announcer Dan Henn summed
up
the accomplishments of this
outstanding group with one fi-
nal announcement.
"This class has set or tied 33
·
school and national records,"
Hen,:i said.
"They
are the only
class to have a winning record
in each of their four years."
Not too bad.
Individual Leaders:
Rushing:
Mari st: Allen I 9-120,
Godfrey 12-104, Rhodes 13-49.
Wickliffe 5-6, Daley .4-(-30).
Siena: Greene 25-80, Corvino 2-
6, Lostritto 1,0.
Passing:
Mari
st:
Daley 4-9-1-11.
Siena: Dearstyne 12-27-1-122.
Receiving: Marist: Reed 2-1.
Traynor 1-10, Reilly 1-0. Siena:
Muszynski 5-50, Madigan 3-49.
Hillier 3-18. Smith 1-5.
i:
f;
:
If
t
,
...
,.
· .
. :
·
'The
conditions were tough.
.
.
.
.
.
'
•
•
• • . •
.•
•
." .
..
..
..
·
•
>
....
..
......
.
:· ·
"
·;,
·
,,
.
'
·'
.
•
"
••
·.
Marist's
·
defensewastougher; .
'
'
'
.
.
··
.
_
.-.:
,.
·
.
.
.
-.:
''
_· .
'
·
.
.. ~<.:.
·
_
:
~~Siena
RB
Re~gie (]reene
.
~1~M~
h1
·
:sea~ori.
•
ti1i,1e;
.:
.
.
f1p~stii~
!
.#f
:
§7~
{:}
\:'
:
'
.
Stu
e::~~t~il1ilo~:::
0
:.;:ay
.
'
·
·
·· <-
·. ·
·
<
, ·
· ·
'· -
·.
':
halfback became the all~tiine
Di~
to d~scribethe performance of
j
ltf
iZ~,i
¾
~!
L;'<s
1
t
~l~~!f
~Wfii~J•!tit
;t~j.
C:kt;~:::::~ve
::~!
.
;
:.
:;~
it'
wbuld}1a~e be
.
en:t"un
•
,
:
io
:
.:
-
bestechhe record of \3~§
:
yirds
.
.
·
1es
:
Of!
the day; six of them solo,
~atch
,
Regg'ie
·
Greene
'
-run;
set lastyeclfbyNMI'sThomas
and
.
deflected
.
three passes .
..
Watch him
-
~qufrtthrotigh
•
the
Haskins with a 21 :-yard
run,
with
Deckajalso registered his first
smallest of iioies; cutbi1'ckin
:
the
6:41 lift in the first quarter
:
. .
.
.
career sack in his final
.
game,
.
tip¢n field
/
aiid
ac'c'elerat~
'
past
'.
. :
,
._
When
asked if
the
weath~r
.
-whichfor<:ed a fumble by Siena
:
~e°fehde{~
:
ii:~h]~se:.
The{ best
.
~rti
tti~
:
wet
,
and muddy field
.
quarterback
.
Steve Dearstyne.
Aishing tfofe
_
risefo
·
1~AAhistoty
·
were~ prbblem; Greene did not
He then capped
off
his day with
denied everyone of that oppor-
make any excuses.
.
. .
.
a 70~yard interception return for
tunitf on Saturday.
''.The conditions were tough,"
.
a touchdown late in the fourth
The Red
·
Foxes held Greene to
Greene said .
.
"But
Marist's de-
quarter
.
.
Deckaj's heroics earned
.
80 yards rushing · in their 34-9
fense was to
_
ugher;"
him Defensive
·
Player of
_
the
trouncjng of Siena>arid, th~nks
·
It was a defense that got con-
Week honors iri the
MAACand
to five stops b~hind the line of tributiorisfromeveryoneo~Sat-
ECAC.
.
.
.
.
'
-
.
'
CirclePhoto/JoeScotto
scrimmage; gave up only 36 net
urday.
_
R.eid Ellis, John Fox, and
.
He was not
.
alone, however.
Quarterback Jim Daley helped the Red Foxes destroy Siena
rushing yards to the Saints
:
In
Archer B
.
ridgefort:11 had a sack a
With a career bestl 20 yards and
on Saturday, but the defenH stole the shc,w.
doing so, the
.
Red Foxes broke
piece, while Darren _\!aides and
three touchdowns, junior standing second halfof the sea-
two Division I-AA records~
.
-
Mario
.
Wilson chipped in with
tailback J.J. Allen was named
.
son, as he had his second
GrambJing's thirteen-year
:
old
tackles for losses to help ensure
MAAC Co-Offensive Player of
·.
straight I 00-yard game with
.
I
04
.
markof 44.5 rushing yards al-
Marist's place in the record
the
,
Week .
.
He scored Marist's
yards on only 12 carries.
lowed per game by establishing
book.
·
·
first three touchdowns, on a25~
Godfrey also had what was
an average
·
of 39.8, and Florida
·
It
was fairly obvious immedi-
.
yard run in the first quarter, and
probably the Red Foxes' run of
A&M's 1978 record of2.3 yards
ately after the game that the Red
on runs of 16 and 9 yards in the
the year, going 57 yards in the
allowed per rush was replaced
_Fox pJayers were excited about
third quarter. Allen now has 20
fourth quarterfor a touchdown.
by the Foxes' average of2.2.
their records, despite the con-
career touchdowns,
IO
in each
On 3rd-and-2, Godfrey headed
Greene stole some of Marist's
stant reminders from the coach-
of his first two seasons, and
right, was hit at the line of scrim-
thunder with a record of his own,
ing st~ff that Winning should be
ranks third all-time in Marist his-
mage, hit again at the first down
·
despite having his worst rush-
number one in theii:rninds.
-
tqry.
.
.
.
.
.
.
marker, then somehow bounced
ing performance since his
"All week the coaches told us
Senior'. fullback
·
Samuel
outside and broke one more
sophomore season. The shifty
that winning was the most im-
podfrey continued his out-
:
Please see
F'BALL
011
page. 15
...
·
Men'S basketball SJ)rint:§tbrOUgh pfe:season schedule
by SfEVE W~CZ\'K
.
·
Sports
Editor
.
Mustafa Barksdale keeps find~
ing his way back to th~ NicCann
.
Center. But thistiine, finally;'the
Red Foxes sent hirri home with a
loss
.
Red Star features thirteen bud-
ding European players, and,on
this ttight at least, o~e
_
Ameri-
can:
.·
Mustafa
:
Barksdale, the
hero ofMonmouth'S: 1995 im-
possible comeback
·
against.
.
Marist in
-
the N~Csemifin~ls,
·
reappeared in Poughkeepsie for
•
The
•·
meri
's
hhsketbal I
-
team
the second time since Th~ Shot
opened its biiefexhibiticm sea~
a·sfmemtier'(somehowf of the
SOBOi)
Friday by clubbirigRed - Belgradebun~h . .
Star Belg
.
racle, a travelinlall-star
.
. .·
Last season, Barksaale led his
team from Yugoslavia; 110~68:
.
·
Monmouth Hawks to· an 83s
:
65
-
'!I though
f:
we
'
played
\1/ell
to~
·
regular
.
season ~ictory
·
·
at
'
the
night,"
·
said
.
head coach Dave
McCann Center, and was booed
Magarity
·
•
after the game. "Of unmercifully by the Marist faith-
course;
.
thatwas a young, inex-
ful each time he touched the
perienced team
."
ball.
Sophomore.
Sebastian Beilln boxoa out a Y~goaf~v'fln'"t
fro°
Larragan and
Joe
Taylor look on.
.
This time arnund; everything
·
Manny Oter<?
.
arid Bobby] oe
Corey Williams, who poured in
but the booing had changed.
.
Hatt.on
·
poured in
I
7 and
I
5
33
points:
···
Barksdale led Red Star with 23
points, respectively, and
·
contin
-
With te
_
n
·
seconds remaining,
points,
·
b
_
ut received little help
ued to build reputations as de.,.
the touring semi~pro team held
as the Red Foxes cruised
to
an
pendable scorers, Otero buried
a slim two point lead;
easy win.
fotir
of six three~pointers,. and
A missed free throw opened
Marist sprinted out
'
to
a
quick
Hatton hit all three treys he at-
the doorfor Marist, which could
I 0-2 lead, and never looked back
: .
tempted.
.
.
·..
.
have had
a
chancelo tie or \Vin
Mag~rit/s
i
squad
;
held
'
~'33::13
.
Magarity
:
was ~otcompletely
thegami had:it cont~~ll~d the
advantage with 7:48 remaining
satisfied with the te~m's first
.
loose balL
iri the first half, and waltzed into
•
outing, however •
.
·
·
But the Foxes couldnot grab
th~
'
Ioc~erroom, iip52-29.
..
.
.
'They
goltoo many offensive
a rebound when they needed it
By the time forty
.
full minutes
rebounds;"
:
he
:
~xplained. · n10st, and Converse regained
had passed; the Red Foxes had
-·
''When
·
westarfpiaying teams
possesion ~fter an offensive
put up I
iO
points and show-
with rnqreexpenence,we've got
board. Maris( was
·
forced to
cased
:
its three key newcomers.
to
·
do a
·
better
-
j c>b on
·
the
--
send Duffy Samuels back to the
·
BoLarragari started the gam
.
e
bo'ards/'
charitystripe.
.
at poirit guard~ the role he will
·
·. ·
~ophomore
·
cente~ Seb~~tian
_
.
.. Our problems came down to
be
•
expected to
fi1i
this year-'-
BeJiin echoea
·
Magarity's state-
a piay here
/
and aplay
.
:th
_
ere,"
and
.
immediately
'
looked com-
.
ments.
.
.
.
.·.·.
·
.
explained Magarity. ''Missing
fortable as the team's floor gen~
''We
havefo s
·
tiive to
gef
b~t-
that last rebound was big."
.
era!.
-
The
.
junior transfer from
tert said
Belliri.
«We ne~d
to
·
The
-
Ali Stars converted on
''.
Pro\i
.
idence Cone
·
gejust missed
get more
.
rebounds:.,especially
-
tbeirfinal four free throws in the
a triple,double in his Marist
de-
from thefrontline."
. . .
·
w,ming
·
moin~nts of the game,
but, recording
·
15 points, 9 as-
:
That probiem
'
becainf pain-
and, despite some last~minute
sists;
·
and
9
rebounds.
'
fuHy dear in
;
Marist's second
.
heroics by
:
B6bby Joe H~tton,
Tomasz Cielebak provided of-
e~hibition ga~e, ~gainst the
.
Maristwas up~nded, ~8~85
:
ferisive punch off of the bench;
Converse Alf Stars;
on
Tuesday
·
Hatton finished with 27 points
·
drilling seven of'ttie
'
nine shots
at theMcCann Center.
and 8 assists, while Manny
he
·
took, including several jump-
.
The Foxes were able to hang
.
Otero tossed in 18, buttheir ef-
.
ers fromtheperimeter. The 6'9". with this group of solid college
forts were not enough to over-
sophomore finished with 16
veterans for most of the night,
come a teamful of very talented
~
.
points.
'
_:
•
.
despite the overwhelming pres-
.
and
,
seasoned players .
.
·
·
<
·
Freshman
·
Drew Samuels,
enceofformer Ari~?na Wildcat
Please see
HOOPS
011
page /4 ...
Magarity's
'
most prized recruit,
r--------------------:...;::....:. __
exploded for 14 points in his first
INSIDE ..
~
collegiate game. Three of those
points came when; on the receiv-
ing end of a Larragan pass, he
converted an acrobatic lay-up
that drew a foul and left· the
McCann crowd pleasantly
-
stunned.
Cross-Country . . . . . .
Off Campus.
Fall wrap-up
Hockey . . . . . . . . . . .
15
/4
14
. . . . . 13
... SPORTS
50.8.1
50.8.2
50.8.3
50.8.4
50.8.5
50.8.6
50.8.7
50.8.8
50.8.9
50.8.10
50.8.11
50.8.12
50.8.13
50.8.14
50.8.15
50.8.16