The Circle, April 23, 1998.pdf
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Part of The Circle: Vol. 51 No. 7 - April 23, 1998
content
INSIDE-
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12
The s
_
tudent-newspaperof Marist College
._
April 23; 1998
fillUFeCallsesconiroversy
_
by
BEN AG
.
OES
them forthe rest of their career
,"
ings were tainted
-
by personal
·
:
Neivs'Editor
he said .
.
"The trend has been to
issues as well.
deny tenure as often as possible
·
.
.
. ·
She said a senior faculty 111em-
.
and bring in adjuncts."
ber who had
filed
a grievance
Barker said there were serious . against her in
1992
was allowed
flaws in the procedures govern-
to sit on her peer review com-
Another. round of professors
. are upfortenure this spring, but
the rough waters from last year
have yetto
.
c
.
alrn .
.
Fouro
.
ufof the seyen profes-
sors who applied for tenure last
year were
.
denied, setting the
stage fora hot debate among
·
·
the faculty
on
tenure proce-
.
dures.-The debate has renewed
as the latest bunch await the
ing his tenure application, in-
mittee.
.
.
duding personal
.
issues which
"No one
_
should sit on a com-
_
he believes tainted the various
mittee where those judge a per-
committee's attitude about him.
.
son whe
_
n they have show to
"In mycase I was fairly con-
have !}iased against a person,"
vince9 the [Rank and Tenure]
Evans said. "It
'
s a question of
Committee was
·
not going t<>
power and not wanting to reHn-
• give meteni.lre before I walked_
qui~h it.
O,
decision on them.
.
though ttie door," he said:
A.riinArslaniap; dean of fac-
.· Richard Barker, assistant pro-
''.They are so far rem~ved.that. ulty a~d vice
-
p~esiden~ for Aca-
fessor of mariagement,was de-
all they can opernte on are
i-ti- ·
de'micAffairs
;
said he believes
nied tenure last spnng, but he
mor and innuendo, allowing
every candidate was treated
said his case is ju~t a common
prejudices into the decision."
fairly last year. He said it is only
.
example o(Marist
;
s 11ew strat-
Jeanne Evans
,
assistant pro;.
human nature for
_
those that
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·
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TENURE,
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Staff Writer
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Please see
LECTURE,
page) ..
_
:
:
la~(Flidaf ~ig~
(
w~iliialcirig
a
.
.
~cC:~e
l
)lfr,adioed to security'_
·
ha~
:
to resorfto trying to revive
.
break from his shift
;
·
:
:-
)-.
: .
.
i
•
,
around -W:45 p.m. that
there
was
.
.
Dingee with electric paddles.
·
Haroid
.
A,IJ¢nI>irig~f
;'
<>:4
;\
v~nt
·
:,
{
heaf{~ttack
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progress;
-
~ricl
.
}enniferTaylor, freshman, was
HEY!!!
Did you
know ....
The FDR
hon1e is
located
just up
the
road, and is open to the public, so
anyone can visit.
FDR and his wife Eleanor were fifth
.
cousins, and had six children. They
also
lived
:
,vith theif-dog Fala,
-
~
·
black
Scottishterrior.
··
~
-
·
'
-
·-
irito cardiac
:
arres~
·
i<>~nq
10:4?
.
.
security
'
quickly
·
called
,-
for ari
oii her way out ofCtiamp
·
agnat
p.m. Friday irithehallw_ay of the
ambulance.
.•
. .
_ .
.. _.
for the night when she saw
.
·
·
Student Ceriter~
'
·
He was
pro-
Qoug I)eiss, freshman~
was
the Dingee being wheeled out on
a
nounced dead at St. Francis
-
first student on the scene.
. stretcher.
.
·
Hospital due to complications
.
"Whenlg6t close enough to
''They were still giving him
·
from a heart attack.
· .
him, I saw that his eyes were
.
CPR and there \Vas a large group
-
:
According to Joe
Leary,
dfrec~
wide open and his face was all
of people who w_ere following
tor of safety and security
;
red.
It sounded like he
_
was
himouttoth
·
eambulance. It was
Dingee had agreed to work an
·
breathing through a straw.
·
a pretty chaotic situation," she
_
extra
.
shift that night after his
·
That's when I realized some-
said.
·
scheduled 3 p.m.
11
p.in.
shift
thing was very wrong,"
·
Deiss
teary praised Dingee as one
was completed.
said.
.
·
of the best security guards he
Just after finishing his night
Deiss
·
then
'
proceeded to get
has met.
shift in Marian Hall, Dingee pro-
some more help. He ran towards
"lfl had more Harold Dingees,
ceeded to the Cabaret to pur-
the college activities office
then I could leave and play golf
chase some coffee before he
when he saw about four secu-
every day a11d be secure in
began his over-time shift in
rity
-
gtiards running to the scene.
knowing that things were safe,"
ChampagnaL
.
"It
was
about that time that
Leary
said
.
.
Walking back to Champagnat
many people started flocking to
Harold Dingee is survived by
fonn the Cabaret, Dingee fell to
where the security guard was
-
his
_
wife and two children who
the ground.
down," Deiss said.
live in Hyde Park.
·
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The Marist Community
April
23~
1998
·
.
Studentsptepare:for 12thatm.ualSilYiN¢edlfFru;!nOil$h~w
byHEATIIERBAUGHMAN
.
Staff
Wriier
·
Fashion design majors pre>quce
,
the gar-
hov.i.m6ch wo~k each
·
individual
h~s
to
ments and merchandising fuaJ0fS produce
..
do
and
ho~ much
:
time
they ha~e. We
the show .
.
.
'
come in d~ys, nights and ~eeke~ds."
Csordas said the
.
department strives to
·
Csordas said each
:
designer has an in-
It is almost time for the fashion event
.
of the year at Marist.
.
get everyone involved.
·
.
·
.
_;,·
"·
.
·
,
.
.
spiration ailcf creates garinents accord-
· ''The garments are executed in
i
senior ingly
/
Each seni6/gets to create six gar-
capping COUrl!eS," she said.
'
'
!
They are
.
.
'
mentsJor the sh
.
ow, ~hilejuniors only
designed and made by seniors with the
get
one
designJach as an introduction.
assistance of a designer critic from New
:
Ed
.
round Ercole, senior fashion design
York
.
Merchandising majors produce the
major, said his inspiration this year came
show and Marist students, who fit the
fromNativeAmericans.
•
·
The Twelfth AnnuaFSilver Needle
Fashion Show and Awards Presentation
is rapidly approaching: The show will
take place on April 30 at the Casperkill
Country Club in Poughkeepsie.
Marist's Fashion Department will put
on two shows.
measurements and height, model the
· "r
·
m using lots ofreathers, suede and
clothes.
"
fringe," Ercole said
.
''I've never reaHy
The afternoon show will begin at 2
p.m., and tickets will cost $10. Cocktail
hour for the evening show will begin at
6
p.m., followed by the show at 7p.m.
Tickets for
'
the evening
·
wm cost $30.
Melissa Graybill
,
senior fashion design
seen this done by big designers, I
major, said fabric companies provide
.
thought it would be something different."
some supplies for the show.
Jessica Hipolito,
'
also a fashion major,
·
Elizabeth Csordas, fashion director at
Marist, said tickets for the show are sell-
ing fast.
"We had quite a
few
donations- a few
said her theme
·
is,caridy and was inspired
boxes of fabrics to choose from. The rest
when
·
she was hanging out with her
we buy ourselves_; buttons, zippers,
·
friends at the candy store where she
everything
:
·
We also ordered from books
works.
that companies sent us:' she said.
She said she wants to remind people of
"The evening show is already sold
·
out," said Csordas. "That's 568 seats.
'
We still have niaybeW0 tickets left for
the afternoon performance."
·
·
According to
Marist Fashion,
a news-
Kristen Dreyer, senior fashion design
.
childhood and the joys of being a child.
major, said a lot of time went in to prepar-
•
:
"l'mmaking a cardigan, pleated skirt
ing the garments for the sh'ow.
. .
.
and camisole inspired by a Reese's Pea-
"We've been working all year for the
·
riut butter Cup
.
.
My
evening wear is
designers and everyone else involved,''
· ·
Truffles," she said.
.
letter created by the Fashion Depart-
ment, turnout is expected to be around
·
700 people between the afternoon and
evening performances
.
she said. "We have two classes aweek
that last for two hours and
45 m
·
inutes.
Everyone comes in mostly. everyday,
though,
.
but not all day. It depends on
·
SECURITY BRIEFS
·
April
-
17 -
Fun was had by all in Gartland and down in the Hoop lot for
River Day. Thank-you's go out to security for giving us a b~eal,c! There
was, however,
_orie mishap a female student was taken by ambulance to
the hospital after
hurting
her head .
.
Rumor
has
it
she was accidentally
.
dropped by.her dance partner as, fu.ey
.
danced:
\
Tom McLain of security
·
.
said
that
overallRiveiDay\vas'a success
:
.
.
Aprill7 in the
p.m. -
One of th~
~lltry
officersllad a heart atta'.c~ wI?le he
'•
·
was working in Champagnat. The officer, Hal Dingee, passed away'after
·
several ttjes to revive him .
. ·
One of our students started
to
give him CPR
· ·.
·
until security, and then the ambulance, were able to take over.
Mr.
Dingee
will be missed by
all.
·
WHY?
1. ALL day ac che be~ch is boring
2. Pick up some credits
·
3.
Take a subject you love
4. Gee a hard course out of the way
5. Monmouth is right near the beach
6.
The campus is great
7. Housing is available
8. Monmouth is a private university,
where students always come first.
9. Gee your degree sooner
10. You can say you're going co
summer school.
NOT!
For more information on Summer Sessions,
a schedule, available classes, the works,
call 1·800•543-9671 or 732-571-3456
"'"-w
.
monmouth
.
edu
MONMOUIH
UNIVERSITY
Your future starts here
'. ~.
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''How's the
:
.
•
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.
.
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•
.
.
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• '
,
;
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.-
~·
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weather?'~
·:
.
.
Thursday: Mild, Sunny.
.,
..
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,
,
,~•,,,
,.
4!:>'0
•
·
·
:
'
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.
Friday: Mild, Overcast, Rain.
49° 63
°
Saturday: Overcc1St, Light
Rain.
47
0
r,2•
·
,
.
3
THE CIRCLE
News
-
A.pril
23, 1998
-'------------------------
Seniors recognized
for accomplishments
by scorr NEVILLE
Staff Writer
With spring here, 64 Marist
seniors have been selected as
.
budding leaders in the nation-
ally recognized program known
as Who's Who.
students
,"
he said.
Cox also said the national rec-
ognition helps seniors as they
enter the competitive job mar
-
ket because they are profiled in
a book of all the award recipi-
ents.
Chris Hogan and Stephanie Mercurio take a break from The Circle and
.
e~°y°ffieY
j_;ftf~J/ies"'~t
River
Day.
·
-
·
.
·
·
.
Gerard Cox
,
dean for student
affairs, heads Marist's participa-
tion in the nation-wide program
.
In conjunction with the Student
Government Association, Cox
begins the selection process
during a student's junior year
by sending out applications for
the national selection. Notifica-
tion is then sent back to the win-
ners by mid-March of their se-
nior year.
'The Who's Who program is
nationally recognized and em-
ployers often have a copy of the
book, giving students an oppor-
tunity to put in their resumes
that they have received that
honor," he
said.
"That really is
an indication that they were rec-
ognized as having potential for
the future
.
"
RiVer Day a success despite
changes made to limit drinks
Frank Maduri, a recipient of
the prestigious award, said
Who's Who is a positive pro-
gram.
by JILLGIOCONDO
·
Staff Writer
.
:
~
-
·.
River Day faced a format
change this year with the pas-
sage of a new-State laws.
Heather Marriott, president of
.
1998 class, said despite rumors,
:
the college did not implement
this new policy.
"New York State has placed a
ban on unlimited drinking at
·
programs such as River .Day,"
·
she said. "In order to hold River
·
Day we
had
to apply to the State
for a permit and come up with a
·
plan to control consumption."
In order to get the permit, the
class officers had to go through
an application process and write
t
several
·
essays-on event secu-
•
rity and consumption.
The plan that was developed
·
was to limit students to six
.
drinks. After six drinks, students
could pay to purchase more
,
drinks. This number was devel-
:
oped by trying to calculate how
many times students could reach
the beer truck.
College Activities and the
Class of 1998 also had to make
sure there was tightened secu-
·
rity to avoid people under age
from sneaking into the event.
Security was also increased to
prevent people who had been
drinking before the event from
entering the tents.
Many students were not
happy with this change in
policy.
Marriot said that she worked
the ticket sales tables and heard
_
many students express dissat-
isfaction. Other
students
thought that six drinks was a lot
and did not think the new policy
was restrictive.
_
Student Christine Lloyd said
that she did not think
_
students
·
were too upset aboutthe policy
·
change.
"A
lot people were annoyed
with the change in policy but I
think the rain affected people
Final film series
.
by BEN AGOES
News Editor
.
The Bardavon's Friday Film
.
Series concludes Friday, May 1
at
7 :30
p.m. with a screening of
the 1952 Gene Kelly musical
classic,
Singin' In the Rain.
This is
a
rare opportunity to
see one of the greatest
Technicolor musicals of all time,
the way it should be seen
,
on
the largest screen in the Hudson
·
Valley.
Singin'
In
the Rain
has been
voted one of the greatest films
of all time in international critic's
polls, and is routinely called the
greatest of all the Hollywood
musicals.
Sing
in'
in
the
Rain
has every-
thing: great songs, great
dances, a wonderful nostalgic
story, and a superb cast, all di-
rected at a dazzling pace that
matches the speed crazy era it
profiles-the roaring Twenties.
The film works on several lev-
els, presenting
a
great musical
but also commenting-often un-
favorably but always accu-
rately-on the wild personalities
·
and studio machinations that
characterized the colorful pe-
riod.
This mastezpiece of American
cinema was directed
,
by Gene
Kelly and Stanley
_
DoneQ (the
recipient of the 1998 Lifetime
Achievement Oscar), and
starred Gene Kelly;_Donald
O'Connor. Debbie
.
Reynolds,
Jean Hagen and
•·
Millard
Mitchell with Cyd Charisse as
a special guest artist
.
:
,
A vintage Hollywood film
memorabilia collection will be
displayed in the lobby by col-
lector, Tony Musso.
For over two decades, Tony
Musso has gathered original
posters, props, and all things
related to films from the earliest
of movies. Pieces from his col-
lection including posters and
displays from movies starring
Bogie and Bacal, John Wayne,
Clark Gabel,
Gary Coop!r and
more
will
be
highlighted
.
Some
pieces will be available for sale
at the perf orrnance.
Tickets are
$5
for all seats and
available at the Bardavon Box
Office located in the
.
theatre
lobby at 35 Market Street in
Poughkeepsie. Call
473-2072
for ticket availability. Tickets
can be charged using credit
card through TicketMaster at
454-3388.
more," she said.
"People
still
seemed to have a good time."
Jerome Pickett, senior, said the
format was a good way to con-
trol drinking.
"I don't know too much about
how it was run last year, but I
think it was a good format," he
said.
"If
the senior class was
worried about consumption
then the limited drinks helped
limit consumption."
The weather also caused prob-
lems with River Day. It was a
cloudy day and eventually it
began to thunder storm, this did
not seem to bother students too
much.
After all of the work to pull off
River, Day Marriott said that
things w~11t well oth~r ~J;ien the
weather.
·
.
.
"Ninety-five percent of
the
people acted responsibly and
things went smoothly," she
said.
·
•~1
really appreciated ev-
eryone who came down to help
set up."
Cox said Who's Who gives
stude
-
nts
a
chance to be re-
warded for their efforts during
their last four years on and off
campus
.
"The program gives Marist the
opportunity to put forward
some of its most accomplished
"It's nice to get Marist recog-
nizing its leaders," he said
.
"It
keeps people involved and
striving to do better."
A reception
will
be held April
29 recognizing the 64 winners
with certificates for their accom-
plishments.
Names hold import_ance
...
continued from page 1
According to DeAngelis,
names distinguish us as plainly
as our race or ethnic group.
Society allows names to deter-
mine social class as well.
DeAngelis explained that as
immigrant
children
grew up
many decided to rename them-
selves to regain control of their
lives
.
One woman by the name
of Stephana renamed herself
Nancy Peters
.
Many Italian immigrant chil-
dren answered to two different
names through their school
years
.
For example, they were
Salvadore and Giovanni at
homem
,
but in
school
they were
Sal or John. DeAngelis said
that things have changed over
the
past
couple o(decades.
"Twenty
years
ago we were
told we must assimilate,"
DeAngelis said. "Today as-
similate is a bad word.
"
IONA
Now
.
get
~
Iona College
ii~ ?r:onh Avenue. Sc.1.
•
Ro
c
h.:!!~.~ ... "\\. York hi
.
"¥ll-1S
1
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.
ion:t
.
c<lu
lotto
is
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mlq<
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tn>ftion
oflhe
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ondkn<ric«I Gmoic ,-..,,..,--
"'
I
I
i
I
l
4.
TUECIRCLE
:
¥eatures
·
April~3,1998
-
.
.
.
~.
·
...
·
.
,
·
·
-
lV[arist
·
students
·
buddy
_
up
.
.
with
area
c;ti.ilclt"~ri.
.
.
EMILYKUCHARCLYK
..
afi~~ truck, lunch, an? a perfor-
.
· .
.
.
··
mance
,-
-
by
.
the
-
=-
MCCTA
.
.
.
Feature Eduor
.
·
children'sTheati-egroup.
:
The Psychology cl~b is plan-
·i
Lamande said
an.y,
Marist stu-
ning a little one to one.
.
_
.
.
d~ntc~mparticipatein the event
~,
.
The annual Orie to One Day,
..
Last)~ar about
.
89 :Marist stu~
.
sponsored by the Psychology
dents participatef Sh~ said ev-
club,
\Vill
take placeApril 29 from
'
eryone in~blved in
the
day usu-
9
a.m:
to 2 p.m. outsicle on the
,
allyJovesi.
<
.
:
.
.
Dyson lawn .
.
The event is day
:
. "Ifsjust alotofftin and you're
of funfilled activities for emo- )el ping others
·
and. it'_s
.
kind of
tionally and
.
physically haridi~
-
·
semrewardirig as well,''. she said.
·.
-
capped students
·
coming from
,·
'.'lt'sreally-a mutually rewarding
schools in the Poughkeepsie
expedence."
_·
.
•,
.
o
o cou
C!;y
,m
as.sic
Desmond Murray and Deidre Sapp
'
present Mary Martello with the Intern of the Year Award.
Martello, an environmental science major, worked at Scenic Hudson, Inc. last semester.
area
:
Giving pack to the community,
·
Senior Tiffany Lamance, sec-
is something Lamance
.
said
.
is
retary of the club, said the day
important.
gives the younger students a
'
"We have a responsibility to
_
Breakfast full of surprises for intern
chance to feel good about them~
·
giveback to
_
the community be-
'
selves.
.
causethere.'s a l9t of people out
"It\ definitely a feel-good day
.
there who have problems that
MATIHEWCOUMBF..S
Staff Writer
Mary Martello had an impor-
tant breakfast to go to:
She never thought
she
would
receive the intern of the year
award while there.
On April 8, the senior environ-
mental science major received
the top honor as the Mari st Col-
lege Internship/Co-op Student
of the Year during the Field Ex-
perience Recognition Breakfast
in the Cabaret. Martello was
selected among fellow contend-
ers from other departments on
campus. She
said
the award
came as a surprise.
"l was pretty excited over the
award since I hadn't heard any-
thing about it prior to receiving
it," she said
.
Martello was nominated for
·
her internship at Scenic Hudson,
Inc. in Poughkeepsie where she
compiled a report on PCB's in
the upper Hudson Valley
.
and
distributed it to Scenic Hudson
members as well as other envi-
ronmental groups.
"I
worked for Scenic Hudson
in the fall ofl997froin the end
"I think the award will look
of September to November com-
good on my resume when I start
piling this report of different
looking for a job," she said.
sites in
.
the upper Hudson Val-
The first runner up for the In-
ley," she said. ''.I researched the
tern of the Year award was se-
information and also talked to a
nior communications major
lot of people on where to go and
Rachel Carter, who received a
what to study."
certificate of outstanding per-
The report titled,
Forgotten
formance for
active
participation
PCB Dump Sites of the Upper
in the Field Experience Program ..
Hudson Valley: GE's Legacy of
Carter said she accomplished a
Off-site Pollution,
included in-
lot during her internship.
formation on sites such as the
"I worked at
-
the Dutchess
General Electric Plant Site and
County Girl Scout Council as a
Glens Falls Landfill. These ar-
public relations person since
·
for them," she said.
.
many of us don't have and we
Lamance said about 50 kids
are very fortunate that we don't.
.
from three area schools will take
have;'' she said. "Giving back
part in the day. Each student
kind of initiates us as adults into
will be paired up with a Marist
society.
-
And the kids just de-
student and have a buddy to
serve our help.''
·.
participate with in a variety of
Anyone interested
'iri
partici-
activities. Some of the activi-
pating iri One
to One Day
ties include arts and crafts, should contact Dr
.
.
Britt in
.
the
,
..
.
sports, face painting, a visit by
Psychology hepartmeilt.
.
:
..
.
i;:
PEZ-mania hits.
_
_
,·
·
eas are used for disposal of
.
mymajorisPR,"shesaid.
"The
smokers; Aheadless PEZ di
_
s-
.
wastesandothercontaminating
main reason
·
! was nominated
~!~~~
penser-was invented
-
in 1948 .
.
factors affecting the environ-
was for forming the Dutchess
The dispenser was designed to ,
m~~ello satd the expe
_
.rience Co~ty?irl ~~i°¥~C~o-;us-
'.
'i-r
·
0
· ,
CharissaJoyce;juhior,justgot fook like ~ccigaretteJighter to
..
.
ar er Sal
.
.
·
,
e m em
_
s
Ip
an Easter bunny one.
.
.
. .
encourage people to stop smok.::
was very infonnative.
.
·
gave her a chance to apply the
-
Sh
I
d h
.
1
d
fog. Instead
-
0
r
picking up a
"Itw
_
ashelpfulandlleam
_
eda conceptsofPRthatsheleamed
.
Beatrea
Y
das:,1adnybmc uh-
mg a man an
.10
a ut s e
lighter a
_
nd sm
_
oki
_
·
.
n
_
g, a smoker
lot about PCB problems in the
from classes.
.
.
.
·
·
'
·
·
-
--·
th
h th
•
d
Th
1
.
t
f th
..
Yi
d
still wants a Wonderwoman one.
would pick up a PEZ dispenser
environment roug
_
·
·
.
e
;
a vo-
.
e n em o
e ear a war
.
J
·
.
d
11
i
T
.
·
·
and eat a PEZ and have fresh
cacy of the company," she said.
has been given anmially
-:
~ince
.
.
oyce sat s ea so ikes ~o use
.
"T
_
he proc
_
ess of publish
_
ing
·
a
1993, recognizing a graduatin
._
g
her Santa Claus one as a kmd of
.
breath too.
.
.
mascot
In
1952 Haas moved his com-
report was also interestin
·
g
·
while
senior for his or her
·
outstand-
·
·
·
·
t
worked on compiling the re-
·
h"
t
·
·
f l
"It's funny, whenever my
.
pany to New York and started
.
mg ac tevemen m expenen
ia
friend from home and I go some-
marketing the candy dispensers
port."
.
.
. .
•
.
.
_
<
.
·
..
·
ed~cation. It has been spon-
- ·
·
h
· ·
h
s
·· ·
·
·
Cl
to children.
In order
·
to make
Martello, who grad
_
u
_
ate
_
sin
_
s
_
or
_
ed for the past five years by
·
w ere we put t e
.
anta
aus
·
·
up
·
on the
·
dashbo
·
ar
· ·
d
·
and 1
.-
f he
them
_.
mo
_
r
_
e
.
at
_
trac
_
tive to
_
ki_
"ds,
-
_
he
M
_
ay
·
, said she d
_
c:ies no
_
t
_-
_
h
_
ave
_
a
the Center for Career Services.
·.
•·
·
·
·
· ·
·
. .
.
·
.
.
falls ofr'\',fhile we're driving then
.
began
.
making
.
the dispensers
job lined up, bunhatthe intern-
we know it's going to be a tiad
with heads and
candy
that had
ship and the award may help her.
trip/ she said. "But, if he
a fruity flavor. Today the dis-
stands tifw~knowJhetrip will
pensers are manufactured
·
_
in
be a lot of fun."
-
.
Austria, Czec::h Republic, China,
·
.APEZ
dispenser
.
.
Conven-
Hungary, and Slovenia. The
·
Top Ten Reasons Professors Do Not Get Tenure
10.
-Required
students to buy the 1nost expensive
textbooks from the bookstore.
tioris are held allover the world
dispensers are then packaged
forthes~ littlepiastic candy dis-
.
with the candy in Orange, Con~
pensers
;
Thousands of dollars
necticut.
·
have been paid by. serious col-
-
•
PEZ comes in a variety of fla-
lectors who want to claim
-
that
·
_
vors including Grape, Orange,
·
rare dispenser that almost no-
1.emon, and Strawberry. These
body has.
·
flavors are pretty norrhalwhen
The PEZ c:lispenser
_
has made
compared with the not so suc-
appearancesin at least 35
_
mov-
.
cessful flavors made available
ies and television shows .
.
Elliot
in Europe.
·
-
·
Chlorophyll, Men-
in the movie
E.T., The Ext rater-
thol, Eucalyptus, Flower Flavor,
rest rial
showed E.T; how to use
and Coffee were soine of the
a dispenser. A whole
Seinfeld
more unusual flavors that have
episode was centered around a
been discontinued.
9. Did not have class outside on those nice spring
days.
8.
Showed
up
to class too many ti1nes.
7.
Assigned homework.
6. Did not make not coming to class an option in the
syllabus
5.
Wquld not allow naptime during clas_s.
4.
_Did
not accept the stray dog ate
my
paper excuse.
3.
_
Did not get published in
The Circle~
2. :
Did
110.t
canc~f 5
p:m.
classes
th
_
e day before- a
..
..
·
=
.
.•
·break. :
_
.
.
_
.
.
.
.
_.
l..
D.id not
park
in assigned
parking
lot.
Tweety Bird PEZ, The
.
band
Each PEZ dispenser also has
Less Than Jake has a CD titled
different
.
variations of character
PEZCOREwhich
.
features a
heads such as different colors
song about PEZ. And there was
and facial expressions. For ex-
even a band in the late 1970's
amplethereare56U.S.releases
from Los Angeles called The
of the
Teenage Mutant Ninja
PEZBand.
Turtle
dispensers. The four
All this excitement over a little
turtles each have two facial ex-
candy dispenser that initially
pression, smile or grimace, and
began as a breathmint.
·
seven body colors.
Austrian PEZ inventor J:!duard
Joyce said she started col-
Haas III began making the candy
lecting PEZ dispensers because
in 1927. The name PEZ comes
they are fun.
from the first, middle, and last
"They're cool because of the
letters of the German word for
characters, colors, and candy,"
peppermint, pfefferminz. PEZ
she said
.
"It's a good time and
was marketed as a breath mint
if you've never had PEZ, then
in Austria, targeted at adult
you've never lived."
I
5
,
Fairne.ss•of,t~nure.process
·
debated aI11.ong
:
Maristf~cultyand
.
admirustration
.. :continuedfrdm page
i.
·.
·
letters of reference.
·
The Com-
ure poHcies. "They do require · teacher who is not a scholar but
··out ofa t'ew hundred. it was
that the judgement was unfair.
mittee interviews the divisional
people to interpret.
·
There are
.
has pubiished a few articles:· he
a few crabby remarks." she said.
.
"l can guarantee to you that
dean, interviews the candidate,
parts that are very objective and
said.
.
Arslanian said it would be
there was no biased," Arslanian
votes and then drafts a letter to
others that are
·
subjective."
But Barker said he could not
unfair judge the tenure policies
said. "These people [ on the
the Academic Vice
.
President
Sherry Dingman;
·
assistant
help feeling the pressure to be a
under last spring" s results which
Rank and Tenure Committee]
recommending the candidate for
professor of
·
Psychology was
~uperhero during the pro-
he called an aberration. Since
were really struggling with these
tenure or not.
denied tenure, but the decision
·
cesses.
I 986. he
said.
and including the
decisions.,,
The Academic Vice President
was later reversed by Marist
·
"What
they're looking for is
statistics from last spring. 43
Robert Grossman, professor
reviews the decision, writei his
President, Dennis Murray. She
someone who gives no grade
people have been granted ten-
of management and chairof the
own letter to the college's presi-
said for some people, the three
higher than a C and still gets
·
ure. and I 9 denied.
R~ and
:en?~
Committee last
.
dent who can disagree or agree
criteria for tenure
as
outlined in
glowing evaluations." Barker
"It's a fair process. an open
sprmg, said his Job was to make
with the Rank and Tenure Com-
the handbook, service to the
said.
process." he said. "We should
sure all the rules and policies
mittee. From there the president
students, research and teach-
In terms of student evalua-
not have to see this situation
outlined in the faculty hand-
makes a recommendation to the
ing, are too much.
tions, Barker said, the Rank and
happen again."
book were followed.
Board of Trustees who makes
"The biggest problem for the
Tenure Committee used them
Barker disagrees. He said he
"I believe I did that to the best
the final decision.
junior faculty coming up is that
.
unfairly against him. He said the
is not sure where the college is
of my ability and the committee
Vernon Vavrina, assistant pro-
they're being asked to do what
Committee highlighted IO or 15
headed.
did it to the best of their abil-
fessor of political science, is on
is physically impossible," she
bad reviews out of hundreds.
"That's one of the things that
ity," he said. The committee
the Rank
·
and Tenure Commit-
said.
"It's
like asking people to
Evans said the Committee dug
frightens me." he said. "The
acted in a fair way in how
it
tee now, and said tenure is based
have three full-time jobs and
up three bad stuclent evalua-
word's out about Marist. Don·t
treated each of these cimdi-
solely on how a person has per-
then complaining because they
lions early in her career to use
go there unless you can
·1
find
dates:"
formed according to the faculty
don't treat it like their only job."
against her.
anything else:·
Marist's tenure procedures
handbook.
A lot of times, she said, it is
Dingman echoed the criticism.
are quite simple but tedious.
But just what the handbook
not realistic to ask a professor
A faculty memberusually goes
outlines, according to some fac-
to excel at both teaching and
up for tenure in his or her sixth
ulty, is sketchy.
research. She calls the confu-
year. The semester prior, a Peer
Evans said the Rank and Ten-
sion over whether Mari st wants
.
Review Committee composed of ure Committee did not dutifully
to be a teaching or research col-
people from the same discipline
follow what is written in the
lege, the Marist identity crisis.
evaluate the person and drafts
handbook.
There is no crisis, according
a
·
letter of approval or disap-
"It was a committee that has
to Grossman. Marist is a teach-
proval.
had a problem in how carefully
ing college without a doubt.
The division dean then writes
they read the material and fol-
"There was never any ques-
his or her own letter that agrees
lowed the faculty handbook,"
tion that teaching was the most
or disagrees with the Peer she said.
important
for
Marist,"
Review's recommendation.
Grossman said new faculty
Grossman said. "That was one
Fromtherethesix-memberRank
members are well aware of all
areatherewasnogroundorroom
and Tenure Committee will
that is expected of them when
to equivocate. They had to be
evaluate a person's folder.
they are hired. But, he admit-
good teachers."
In that folder are the Peer Re-
ted, some of the policies in the
Professors do not have to be
view and dean's recommenda-
handbook do require a certain
superheroes by being great
tion, student evaluations, a
amount of interpretation.
teachers and excellent research-
grade distribution list, publica-
"I don't think they're hazy,"
ers, Arslanian said.
tions, transcripts, resume and
he said of the handbook's ten-
"I will recommend an excellent
Emily's Recipe
of the Week
Creamy Caramels
Package ( 14.3 ounces) butter pecan frosting mix.
I /2 cup butter or margarine ( I stick).
Cup half-and-half.
1/2 cup light com syrup.
Grease a
square
8x8x2 inch baking pan. Mix the frosting mix, 1 /
2 cup butter or margarine, cup half-and
-
half, and 1/2 cup of
com syrup in saucepan, stirring until just blended. Cook with-
out
stirring
over medium heat until a small amount of the mix-
ture dropped into a glass of very cold water forms a hard ball,
about 30 minutes. Pour the mixture into the buttered pan. Re-
frigerate about I hour until firm. Cut into I-inch squares. Makes
64 squares.
WANT A JOB INFIRMS llKE THESE?
....... AC
Niesa1 ..........
Br1std
·
Myas
Squibb .......... C'.8blev1s01 ........
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(£
C'.8ptal .... ..Time Warner Qible ...... Caiair ...... D.JP01t..
...
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AT&
T.: ....
.NYS
Ov1s01
of
Human
~ghts ..... Addisa1~Wesey PubliSling
............. .
Tha,goto
CEAJOB DAY
Wednesday, Apil 29, 1998
,4:00 - 6:00
p.m. - Lowel Thanas,
R0001125
Bring
resumes! Dress to impress!
Talk w1h SilpqJment
agencies
rep-ese,ting
1he
firms
above,
and
many
o'tha's.
~ e d
bJ
ffieC,a,ta-
fa
Ca-ea-~-~
575-3547
fa
mcreinfd
6
1'HECIRCLEEDITORIALApril23,1998
Editorials
Editor wonders aboutthe meritof.tenttre
Tenure~ What does this word mean? Anclwhyis it that teachers
fear
it so much?
I remember my sophomore year, when my beloved advisor, Evan Rivers was up for
tenure review,_and did not receive it, arid therefore lost his job. Definitely one of the
more stupid moves this school has_ made;
Evan was a·great teacher, a wonderful person; and loved by his students. Yet he
was fired because he did not meet all of the "standards" the tenure committee has
put together.
Just what
are
those standards?lhad one ofthe worst, most mundane, un-:thought
provoking classes at Marist given by
a
teacher who had long ago received tenure.
As a class, we sat down with the teacher and made suggestions that would liven ·up
the class and make it more interestin·g, yet he dismissed them and informed us that
he would stick with "his way." Oh, he had no need of impressing us; we did not even
fill out an evaluation form at the end of the class.
The reporter that covered this week's tenure story informed me that many of the
teachers did not want to talk to him, for fear that they would lose their jobs. That is
one of the most pathetic things
I
have ever heard, not on the teacher's part, but on
the administration's part.
Imagine working in an environment where you fear you will lose your job if you
simply discuss a "normal" procedure, especially when that place is Marist and the
procedure is the granting of tenure:
I have seen what some teachers go through when they are going up for tenure,
they do their best teaching classes, and put up a lot of effort to impress their
students and their peers; in hopes they will be guaranteed their jobs.
I have also
seen teachers who have had tenure for a long time, and
do not care about what they
are teaching their students, or they have ideas that are so antiquated, they cannot
keep up with a completely different generation than twenty years ago.
I
blame te11ure
for this.
I think teachers should be evaluated constantly, checked on all of the time to be
sure they are doing their job. Or, they should attend conferences on updated meth-
ods of how and what to teach. Maybe this is supposed to happen, but
I do not think
that some Marist teachers attend these kinds of conferences.
Do not get me wrong,
I have had some truly great teachers who have tenure v,,ho
still care about their students. I have also had some excellent teachers who do not
have tenure, who are in danger of losing their jobs because of this fact.
I know tenure is here to stay, but I think that the whole system needs to be
completely revised. Teachers as great as Evan are being lost, and teachers who do
not deserve the title are left in his place.
Stephanie Mercurio
is
the Editor-in-Chief for The Circle
Quote of the Week:
The key to immortality·is first living
life worth remembering.
-~Bruce Lee
The View from Sue...
•
of=
'THE:.
ToP
7l;,'1
f<.Now
Yov/2-
c~
7E.4/VJ
f3GST.
.
/5
TH-e
THE CIRCLE
Stephanie Mercurio
Editor-in-chief
BenAgoes
News Editor
ThomasRyan
Sports Editor
Christopher Thorne
Focus Edito-,.
----
Joe Scotto
Chris Hogan .
· G. Modele Clarke
AnuUldaBradley
Managing · Editor
Emily Kucllarezyk
-
Feature Editor_,
.
-
Tim.Mamon.
_ Opinion Editor
-
.
'
'.
'
·:
-Jim
Dziezynski
Aris & 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 cari e-mail
The Circle
at
HZAL.
If
you are interestedin advertising in
The Circle,
please leave a message for
Chris Hogan at575-3000 ext. 2429.
Letter to the Editor
Lacrosse player defends team effort and intensity
To the Editor:
Next time, before Thomas Ryan gets on his journalistic high horse degrading and : -
diminishing the hard work and effort put in by his own college's student-athletes,-it- - -
might be a good idea for him to find the substance behind his statements. It is easy
to criticize and come up with
New York Post
style headlines;.but presumably it is too
difficult for a
Circle
sports writer to find out the facts of the story. Thefacts are that -
Marist College Lacrosse, Men's and Women's, are both without scholarships br,any- _ .
kind. This is unlike every other MAAC Conference opponent, even "perennial
cream puffs" Canisius and Manhattan, both of ·whom recei_ve four
full scholarships
ayear.
. __
The lacrosse teams may both _be in the middle of hard times, and how quick Mr,
Ryan is to point this out, but the men's team each of the last two seasons has had an
individu~l finish first in the country in the ,NCAADivision
I
final se~son statistics> .
_
_ A\'._ery impressive result for a small school, and not once did.either indiyidual
receive a word of print in
The Circle
for their accomplishments. · Next time, Thomas,
-before you ciriticize the holes in our team's-defense, maybe you should fill the hol~s
in your own story and place
-
the blame in the Athletic Department's lap, wllere it
belongs, and not on the hard working members of a greatly under-funded lacrosse
team.
Respectfully,
P.J.Wilson
-- Jr:Men's
Lacrosse
-Resident Assistant corrects security bfl~fs.
Editor: __ .
,
-
-·. In the April 9 edition of
'(he Circle.you
printed in $e Security Briefs that the boys
in Gregory Hall had their inflatable.pool party broken up and deflated by security
7
That is not true .. I am the Resident_Assisstant for both Gregory and Benoitand
lam
the one who broke the party up anddeflated their pooL Security had nothing
to
do
with it In fact, they knew about the party all night iong but yet they did nothing to
--- end it. They had absolutely nothing to do with this issue.
·
-I would really appreciate it if you retracted the statement saying that security was
the one who dealt with them because that would be a blatant lie.
-Thank you,
_ · Luis Santiago
North End R.A.
otice to all.readers:
Since no one has responded to our
requests throughout this school
year, The Circle is no longer look.:
ing for opinion writers. Thanks
for nothing.
.
THE
CIRCLE
OPINION
April23,1998
.
.
.
-
;
·
-
-·-
•
.-
.
- -
'
.,
.
.
'
<
;
_
..
-
~
-
. -
·.
;
-~-- -
•
_
a
.
,.
"
:
S~niot
Wee~ is
coming:
startsavmg
noW
··.
With
the school year winding
'
.
drink some beers.
more money. See p~graph.five.
,
dowri
·
and gr,:aduation approach-
.
Unfortunately, none of this
The riext event is a little more
ing,J find myself with
'
much
. ·
comes fr~ely. The average go-
'.
expensive thari the last. The din~
more important things to do thari
·
ing price for a shot is
$3; beers
ner cruise, priced at
$22, is more
write another
_
incredibly witty
can range from one dollar for a
classy
.
than the drool-all-over-
.
and entertaining article for your
sweet,
_
urine tasting lager to
yourself clam bake. But, your
personal enjoyment. But
I
guess
$3.50 to
$4
for all you Guinness
$22 is spent on everything but
l have no choice. The subject
_
fans. So the binge drinking will
·
booze. There is
a
DJ, a nice meal
of thisw~ek's article.is money:
cost yo1,1 about $20
_
t<f$3O,
,
de-
and, of course, a rented boat.The
who has
.
got it (no one),
-..yho
' ..
·
pendipg on your tolerance; per
booze, though, is sold ata·cash
needs
it
(everyone) and who is
'
night. But thereare
·more
ex-
bar. At this cash bar, students
taking it all (Marist).
perises. First, the binge drink~
.will
spend every ounce of cash
·
On top of the $80,000we have
..
ing causes an overwhelming
on their person, as well as bor-
already paid the school in tu-
.
_
_
feeling ofrelief and joy: Su~h a
·
rowing as much as pOS$iblefrom
ition,housingarrangements
_
arid joy
_
often
,
causes thenow.Ioos~
.
friends and non-friends. This
parking tickets, we are now
ened up person
·
to
'
buy°shots
enqeavor will probably total
asked, just a month prior to
.
not only for themselves but for
around
$60 to $70.
graduation, to fork up a little bit
everyone that they know in the
The final, and m_ost important;
more. Actually, a lot more.
·
·
bar .
.
By the end of the night
event for graduating students
The article that follows
.
will
very few people have been
·
left
outside of graduation is these-
document-for future seniors
.·.
out.
·
Said situation brings
:
up
•
nior formal. This is the mon~y
why_
$300 is not enough money
the bartab for the night to about
,
scam of all scams, The senior
for the last month of your se-
$50 to$ 60. So that concludes
has to shell out
a
ludicrous
$90
nior year. It will sit in the com-
the nights of your finals week.
for him/herself and their date.
·
pany of the Ten Commandments
Nextcornessenior week.
.
.
•·
.
.
(Unless there is some dutch
as guidance to graduates of th
_
e
·
-
This is a week
_
designed
·
for
.
tiling going on in which,
-
man or
year2002., telling thein why $500
the celebration
·
of graduating
·
·
woman, you are the ultimate
was not enough for one month
seniors, their almost graduating
-
_scam
·
artist.) Most are not so
for
.
the graduates
four
y~ars
_.
need-orie,--more-semesfor
lucky and have to pay the whole
their elders.
It
will r~ign in the
·
·
friends and the underclassmen
amount. With this $90 comes
annals of good advice with Ann
who tell their parents that finals
Landers and her sister Dear got pushed back a week. This
Abby,
;explaining
that the last
is where the real money kicks
month of college could cost
in.
anyone up to $750.
First comes the clam bake.
The last month of a student's
This is where you get to eat as
collegecareerisfilledwithmany
much as your body can ingest
stressfuLthings.
,
There is the
.
for $12. You also get six free
dreaded capping paper, usually
drink tickets.
·
In terms of stick-
about
20 to 30 pages in length.
·.
ing itto Mari st as much as pos-
The problem is that no one
sible,
l
suggest eating all you
starts this paper untilthe week- can, then stuffing clams, ham~
before it is due causing stress
·
.
burgers, hotdogs, buns or any
and, afterwards, quite a bit of
·
.
other foods into whatever you
bingedrinking.4am nofsaying
i'
are
wea'riilg and storeitiri' your
_
thatlcendorse this
.
binge drink-
;
fridge until after you get home
ing, lam just relaying the facts
·
that night.-
of the situation .
.
The cappini
Speaking of
that night, those
paper, along :with other end of ~ix free drinks will most likely
·
dinner, dance, a huge extrava-
gant hall, and one hour of free
cocktails. But "cocktail hour" is
before dinner, therefore all drinks
are quickly negated and the bar
is open to cash only. (Well, prob-
ably credit cards too.
God,
I
hope so.) The one piece of ad-
.
vice I have been given by the
•
editor-in-chief of
The Circle, for
all you girls out there, is to wear
purses that are large enough to
stuff
-
with various flasks and
nips, · $ound advice;
--
SO
the
grand
1
total for senior
week comes to about $124 for
·
events.and an extra $350 to $500
for the l;>ar scene. Call your par-
ents now, at least you will not
be calling to tell them that you
are not going to graduate.
,
tp.e year projects and finals, ere-
.
be just a tease because you will
ate a tension more unwavering
·
be
eating so much food that you
·
than Bill Cliiltori's reputati~n.
cannot get as drunk as you
.
The most common way that stu-
might like to. Considering the
derits
.
re
.
Ii eve them. selves
.
of
.
this
situ
.
ation, most of you will prob-
Tim Manson is th
e
Opinion
Editor for
The Circle
·
teilsio9, is to dos_ome shots and
ably· go to the bars and spend
sceneSitom
a shopping mall
.
. ·
My ten~
,
ency
to_
recklessi}'ride
'
'crappadrio'-you know that hot
my old bicycle leadsnie to worry
_. ·
sugar-water
that comes out
of
a
about breaking my wreck-fre
,
e
_
machine? Yeah, she rieve~ ate
.
record;
-
I
admit, it is lllore otatj
·
_
the bagels; though. We have
ego thing than
·
a niatter of
.
good bagels.
,In
fact, this week
safety.
·
The thought of a crash
.
.
we are having a special on ba-
reminds me of the Russian whis~
_
;
gels-"
·
_
key distiller who died of
cirrii6~
.
.
Anyway, the whole thing re-
sis. Everyone would be sitting
ally does not appeal to me. So,
on the
·
sidelines muttering,
"I
I have decided to invest in a car
told you so."
I
would mutter
this summer and to get my
Ii-
·
under my dying breath that I
cense- in no particular order.
wasa
·
complete moron:
Right now,
I
do just finewith-
·
In that sctrt of slldden ra9dom
out a car.
l
can walk, run, or
accideilt
•
scenario,
·
I
am sure
·
take my bike most places. I of-
there would be a small para-
ten walk to the shopping mall
graph in a local paper. One of from my house. It is a nice walk,
those ones where they inter-
but not because
I pass hun-
view some neigl!bors who
dreds of post-war cape houses
would say,,"Yes, she was a ni~e
with aluminum siding in every
girl. She was always out on the
·
pastel shade imaginable. It
bicycle, it is a shame, but no
takes
an
hour, and this is exactly
surprise."
_
how long it takes me to realize
They also always seem to find
that I do not need anything that
some distraught bodega owner
·
I can get at a shopping mall. ·
who would say in broken En-
Unfortunately, once I arrive at
glish, "She was always a smile.
the mall, this epiphany causes
She like Coca-Cola everydaf
me to become quite the arrogant
Sometimes a knish."
bastard. I begin to think that I
However, there are no bodegas
have found some sort of true
in the area, so presumably, they
happiness that nobody ever
would talk to the bagel guy who
could have found in a pair of
would probably say, "Yeah, she
Ferragamos. So, I sneer at the
always got that vanilla
skinny ladies with cigarette skin
and thi
·
s week's hair color. I
wonder if what they are seek-
ing can really be found at
Saks
Fifth Avenue.
Apparently, they
are never satisfied, After all,
they just keep coming back for
more.
Yes, so
I
will get a car this
summer, perhaps
a
little second-
hand Japanese thing. It is re-
ally such a big change for me- a
step closer to fitting into every-
thing I observe on my long
walks and bicycle misadven-
tures. Maybe I am overthinking
this, but
I tend to think too_
much when walking or biking or
waiting for a train. Maybe some-
day I will forget where I stand
now. Perhaps I will join those
ladies grazing suburban shop-
ping malls. After all,
I
am sure
they once had hopes
.
and
dreams just like you and me, but
somewhere along the way, they
sold them all to Ralph Lauren.
Tara Quinn is the humor col-
umnist for
The Circle
and is a
shamel~ native of New Jersey
7
"
f
if
W
l
fillJ
\
:
,K
gi
;
QS
t<>4ri4
~~Yi
,
rg
y
gµ~~f:passes.
·.
oteyer~g~e
y,
liyes on. the
.
,
rth
f:p~
/
~~
.
sti~ltjas
to
have
~iJI
,:
#fi~
:
~r)fiifr
/
giflfriend,
a.,;
··:·
i~['~~
9
i~\i~t~
,
:
,
t
.
ha
_
t
·
·
··
that
ltJ
The
ff
isti-ided
'
socialJife
.
•
at
sfMf
~
:
~1:lfit~~!rtr
•·
!~~
tnisiriition
:
does
mil
.
trust
Us.
V
J
'
qverl'y ing pl"oble
'
nt here is
he
>
w~y
1
,
t~at t~<(school's
;.
. ,tjigher
;
4P*
t
~9~
.
y~
;.
t~~ir
,
belief
·
•
.·
0
)'SJem qgY1:p
·
.9µrJhroats.
Sornerp:iy~ayJhatJ am
.
beat-
. .c;/-,
mg
a,
d~~q hqr~e;'
,
bllt, the
.
fact
s;
·
af;
,,
y21,1
.
C
~an
,,::
not
/
obtain
olidoms
,i
aiiywhere
'
on
.·
this
·
lrnP~
{
i
i
'.
~q~
'.
:QrilY
,.•
ludicrous,
t
n
s.
•
,
f!o~nrighf dapgerous.
h_O
is
/
kidding themselves
h'aiMarist
.
stude
-
~ts
do
•.
not
·
·
·
·
·•
·
;.
,.ave
sek71~
.
jtany
..
~onder
that
\Vehav~
<
!h~
/
'.fvlattress
.
Col-
?leg~''.
11i<:K11~rn~,
.
()[that Play-
faryY
'/Joxmag~fine
.
pllt us
·.
at
.
the top
,
n
\
.
o
:
giy..,
>\
of
·
thec:ttaris
'
ofschools
.
with
e scli@lWantedtq put
a huge
•
<
·
·•:
•
-
;
.•
>i't>·•,
:
~t
1
~2i
:.
~~ii~()
· ..
q99rp
:
llst!i
oi
::.
~
gi
¼lif
-i
.
,
.r
"
t!f
that
hie
Be~:
o~f;
8
THE CIRCLE
April 23, 1998.
Taking a
Closer·.
Look
at
..,
'
,'
,·.
,
---
.
·
News.
and R~vlews.
i. ·
The
final
leg on the Great Southern Swing finds our heroes
in Georgia, North Carolina, on Indian Reservations, .etc.·.
.
could see the clouds thousands
by JIMDZIEZ\'NSKI
of feet below us, spinning up
A&EEditor
through the valleys and lower
This
year's last adventure
found our humble hiking group,
M.E.O.W, in the Deep South as
we went for the highpoints of
North Carolina, South Carolina,
Georgia, and Tennessee. It is
possible to swing through all
these hikes in three days be-
cause they are all located within
a couple hours of each other.
Each hike offered a different
perspective on the rewards of
highpointing-as well as some of
the disappointments. We got
the best of both worlds; the
endless above-the~clouds maj-
esty of the Great Smokey Moun-
tains in Tennessee to the bu-
colic, polluted highpoint of
South Carolina. We also got to
sample the unique and some-
times disturbing mountain com-
munities familiar to the south.
Joining
me
were
Sean
Dougherty, Christina Sheedy,
Chris Knapp, and Ryan Sheeler.
Our first highpoint in this leg of
the journey was North
Carolina's Mt. Mitchell. Mt.
Mitchell is the highest point in
the United States east of the
Mississippi River at 6,684 feet.
The summit of this challenging
hike is higher than Mount Wash-
ington
(6288
ft.)
and is the
gravesite of Reverend Elisha
Mitchell, for whom the moun-
tain is named. We arrived on a
miserable day. ;The-· low.er
reaches of the mountain were
subject to a furious downpour
and the thick fog prevented us
from seeing too far ahead on the
trail. This became a problem
when we reached the higher
parts of the mountain because
we were soaked (though we had
as much raingear as possible)
and the upper reaches had a
temperature drop from about45
degrees to 10-15 degrees.
Couple that with a wind esti-
mated close to forty miles per
hour and it made very welcome
conditions for hypothermia.
mountains.· we·walked most of
the way down; when we were
about a mile from the bottom a
nice couple who raised pack lla-
mas gave us a lift. We ran into
some difficulties getting home
· and spent three eJCtra days in
North Carolina (Clingman's is
on the N.C./fennessee border).
We were in Cherokee, an Indian
reservation renowned for its
Harrah's Casino. Since it was
not tourist season, we were in a
ghost town. Still we met some
nice folks and had a good time
when we could. Thanks to the
following folks for their help
with this trip: John Ragozzine,
Maral Arslanian, Christy Jus-
tice, Dave Etzold, Jody Pratt,
Charles Cavalier, and the nice
fellow with one hand in North
The Marlst Expedition proudly standing at the high point of Georgia, Brasstown Bald (4,784
ft,)
Caroliµa. Well; that concludes
From left to right: Ryan Sheeler, Chris Knapp, Sean Dougherty, and Jim Dzlezynskl. Absent Is
my career as an adventure con~
Christina Sheedy because she took the picture!
sultant at Marist College. This
Fortunately, we all had good
thus offered no views whatso-
that made us feel like we were
year Marist hikers were able to
enough gear and reached the
ever. There were the remains of on another planet. To reach this
bag highpoints in New York,
summit with a little struggle.
makeshift. campfires; garbage,
summit, wehadamerethree-rnile
New Hampshire; Connecticut,
Even though it was a rather aus-
and beer bottles all over the
hike up and a three-mile hike
Rhode Island, New Jersey;,Penn~ •
picious highpoint, there was no
place.
It
was not anyplace one
down. We did Georgia on the
sylvania, Maryland, Virginia,·
time to linger. There were no
would .want to visit for an ex-
same day ~e drove up to Sout_h
West Virginia, North Carolina,
views from the top due to the
tended time. We snapped a few·
Carolina. Our firial destination
South Carolina, Georgia, and
stormy conditions, so we said
pictures (with feigned enthusi~
_v.r_as
Clingrr.ian) Dome (6643 ft.)
Tennes~ee.1 would like to per-
hi to ReverendMitchell, took a· asm) 3.-!l~Hjrepareq.t,o}eave; V{e · AfterMt Mitchell, Clingman's
sonally thank everyone who
few quick pictures, and were on
had,. ~~-~ujlpl~a-~arit~urp_i:ise to;.;; 'Do.ID;~- is the second highest joined me on my adventures; I
our way. On the way down we
find
oul
~
parkeo
witµiil.25 feet '" pointeast of the Mississippi. It
hope your memories ofour times
opted to bushwhack down the
of two·_recently shot?:dog car-_ is also the most visited
together win lastalifetime(even
steep slopes of the mountain in-
casses rotting-in the rain.
:We - highpoint, courtesy of a well-
those of you who are sick of the
stead of enduring the seemingly
had enough of South Carolina.
maintained road ,that.coJI1es .. _van breaking down and Bad
. endless switchbacks;'
Oui .
"In 'contrast, the highpoint of within a half-mile from the top
Religion!) I encourage everyone
gamble paid off a11d we cut two··· Georgia offered a·much more
(the Nation~}. Park·S.ervice re-
to enjoy the beauty of the.world
n<.'. ~-.
hours off our ascenttime. After
sophisticated reward for attain-
ported over. seven. MILLION . aro~~dus; id\'!!]lly may
it
become -. -- {
· warming up and. regrquping _it· _ing)ts
~ummiL
Brasstown Bald
yisitorsJo Clingman's in 1995).
riot a
retreat
from· the difficul-
,:
was off to South Carolina's
(4,784ft) features a spectacufar
Located in Tennessee, it is in the · ties of "reality'i but
cl-
special and
highpoint, Sassafras Mountain
visitor's center that looked like
peart of the Great Smokey
delicate part of your life. One
(3560 ft.) There are no short
~omething out of a science fie-
Mountains. There was some
last note: if anyone woulcflike •,
trailstothes,ummitofSassafras
tion movie. Giant observation
park maintenanc;e workers on
to continue hiki,~:g ··with'· ·
· Mountains ~owe had to take a
towers·coupled with an aerody-
the day we arrived, but they M,E.O.W. email
''me at:
narrow, Winding road to a park-
namic weather station made this
were working on helicopter air-
BR UPLEX@ AOL.COM. or
inglotl00yardstotheGeologi-
highpointthemostelaborateof liftsintheparkinglot. Wehiked
JOHN
RAGOZZINE
at
cal Survey marker. There is
a
any on our trip. Even though it
up to the summit along the Ap-
KZBS@MARISIBMARIST.EDU.
good reason
.why
there are no
was closed, we enjoyed walk-
palachian Trail and for the first
If
you like highpoints check out
trails up to this mountain; the
ing around the structure. Once
timeinoveraweekwehadfJaw-
.America's Roof, a great web·
summit is filthy and not very
again, heavy fog prevented any
less weather. There was a nifty
page located at: HTTP://
well maintained. The high point
remarkable views but there was
tower· at the summit and the
_
www.inch.com/;--dipper/html.
was in the middle ofwoods and
a warm mist and strong wind
views were spectacular. One
Thanks again!
Shift and friends rock out at The Chance
~0---M-E--S-'-E___,,
HEY MIGH
EGIANT
IVE A
ARIST COL
EGE!!
WIT
byPAUUCKWIIl'ITLE
Assistant A&E Editor
Columbia Records recording
artists Shift made a stop on their
U.S. tour at the Chance in
Poughkeepsie on a recent Fri-
day night. The few who at-
tended the concert were treated
to an exceptional performance
by one of the best pure rock
bands of today. A local band
called Joshua provided the
opening act. They were a late
addition to the show as special
guests of Shift. Three other lo-
cal acts preceded them, but
Joshua gave the first heartfelt
performance of the night.
Joshua is a three-piece who
play a sometimes drifty, some-
times driving style of emotional
rock. They have a distinct pop
edge to their music that makes
them accessible to both hard
rock and "alternative" fans.
What keeps them sounding
original is the influence they
appear to take from bands Hke ·
Burn. Their use of hardcore-
style rhythms keeps them from
becoming a formulaic rock band,
and instead makes them in equal
parts emotional and melodic
without being too soft. Strong
songwriting and vocals comple-
ment the music perfectly.
Joshua has a six song CD out
on Immigrant Sun records and
have recently recorded a new EP
for the Doghouse label. Shift
took the stage to a rather sparse
crowd late in the evening. They
delivered a genuinely convinc- ·
ing performance for the crowd
at the Char.ce. As a band that
had been independent for the
better part of their seven years,
they seem to have made the tran-
sition into commercial rock suc-
cess well.
If
you are not familiar
with their music, Shift play a
style of music sometimes re-
ferred to as "post-hardcore".
They owe a lot of their sound to
Quicksand, one of the pioneers
of this genre. Their newer songs
lean more toward the MTV rock
of bands like Better Than Ezra,
but still keep a certain sincerity
not found in most mainstream
music. The highlights of their
set included their new single "I
Want To Be Rich" off of their
major-label debut CD "Get In",
and some older material from
their indie rock efforts, "Pathos"
and "Spacesuit." They played
the highly emotional "Sun-
flower" (probably their best
song) towards the end and
closed their set with the title
track from "Spacesuit". Al-
though they have a slightly
more aggressive sound than
most modem rock bands, Shift's
singer Josh keeps an inspiring
and soulful edge to his voice
that makes them easy to listen
to for anyone who appreciates
honest melodic rock. Although
not yet rock stars, Shift have the
potential· to permeate into Top
40 radio and billboard charts in
the coming months. Shift and
Joshua put on an extraordinary
performance considering that
only a couple hundred people
showed up for the show. Shift
recently shot a video for the
song "In Honor of Myself' from
their new CD. I recommend pick-
ing up both bands' CD's or
checking them out when they're
on tour. To learn more about
Shift, check out their website at
http//:www.shift.net
PECIA
UESTS,
DA
FX AND LIN
OLN!
ICKETS: $5.00
fo
tudents
10.00 for non-stu
ents
MAY 2, 1998 at Th
cCann Center
They Might Be
Gi~nts
-
-
~oming_ soon to Marist!
by Jll\iDZIEZ\'NSKI
following lyrics:
"Hello,
I'm Dr.
A&E Editor
Worm/
I
am not a real doctor/
I
am a
realwoiin:"
,
·
.
Big News! They Might Be Gi..'.
.
One of my favorite T.M.B.G
ants are going to grace us with
games was the
_
"Planet of the
their presence here
_
at Marist
_
.
·
Apes
_
Supersong." This song
College on May
2.
The cost for
·
involved the crowd iri
a
chant-
students
is
a mere $5, non-stu-
'
ing match which would deter-
dents $IO.Also joining T.M.B.G
.
mine who would emerge victo-
·
is Das EFXand perennial open-'
·
rious, a~ or people. I REALLY
ers Lincoln. As a Iittle
'.
preview
hope they play this tune at
for our special little treat at
Marist when they come.
.
Marist
I
decided to check out
Despite their goofy veneer,
They Might Be Giants at Toad's
·
T.M.B.G (playing
as
a fourpiece)
Place in New Haven last week.
I
are highly skilled musicians.
.
·
was not disappointed in the
Their musical apthude is as ab~
least!
.
·
stract and unique as theirJyr~
Lincoln
.
opened for They...
·
ics. They play around with time
and
·
got a good response from
·
signatures and rhythm changes
the crowd, especially for an
like a bee with a honey drenched
opening band. Butthere was no
.
infant (Sorry,
I
am just getting
comparing the fun~filled, goofy
into
the
T.M.B.G mode of meta-
energy that pervaded the club
phorical thinking).
as we eagerly awaited John and
After rocking out such clas~
John (the quintessential mem-
sics as "XTC vs. Adam Ant''.
_
..
bers of They Might Be Giants)
·
and "Twisting", T.M_,B.G left the
, to hit the stage. When they
ti-
stage. The fan's chants brought
nally came on, the crowd erupted
them back out to play" Ana Ng"
into a frenzy of bouncing and
and they closed the show with
dancing to the abstracttunes of
·
a conga line and "Dig My
this New York City based band.
Grave." All in all, a great
-
show!
Besides the normal crowd
·
I
highly recommend seeing
pleasers; such as "Particle
these guys when they come to
Man"; "Istanbul",
:
"Ja!JleS
_
K.
play atMcCann. You might also
Polk",
"Exquisite
.
Dead Guy",
want to pick up any of_ their fine
and "The Guitar'\ They ... intro-
albums, Lincoln, Flood, Apollo
duced a few new tricks
to
their
'
]8, JolmHenry, FactoryShow-
show.
A
newly written song room, and all the others remem-
called "Dr. W9rm''. features the
·
'
ber, that·
is
May
2.
'
,
S.GA
.
Executive
-·
Board· and Senate Joint Meeting
-
;·
·
:·
· ·
-
·
.
·
Wednesday April 29, 1998
·
· :
·
·
·
· ·
9:30p.m. in CabaretA&B
On
The
Agenda:
··
*
Natiop.~_Chaiter for Habitatfor Humanity
*
cniWMana:gement
_
_
.
_
_
_-
*
Introcbic~iori of Assistant Vice Presidents
*
Faculty
of
the Year
_.
_
*
Freshman Focus Group
_
Results
*
Student Survey Results
**This
meeting
is
open to
all
students ... Come Voice Your Opinion!**
S.G.A.
··
is
Looking~For Your Help!
Positions are still open for 1998-1999
*
Student Academic Council Divisional Representatives
for each major
*
Student Life Council Executive Board positions
*
Pubic Relations Committee members
*
Elections Commission members
If interested call
x.
2206
...:,_ This is
·
a great way to have fun, build your re-
sume, earn priority points, and make a difference
on campus!-
111
Annual
01111
al
2001 Barbecue
Sunday May 3, 1998
12:00p.m. until 3:00p.m.
On the Leo/Sheahan Hill
Food ... Entertainment. .. Fun !
**Free Frisbees and Tee-shirts**
•
·
•;
k~
ti~
:
4
.
t
fi~1i'
f
~6
~hct,
:
uh
·
¥[i
f
;l
i
i~i~Att~
. :
et(m~
~
¢Xpe,pen
_
<;e
:
~It
.
;
'\,'1:':::
/,·'.,
..
.
. ·
.
'
~
.....
,
.-
.
.
-
.
. :,
"
,•
,,
.,.
.
.
t\i
j~i
!
i~~
i~ets
ensorHs
i
creature
t:;.
<
>)
.. :;
-•··
~J.i"~rJ
i";
ON THE GREEN
9:00 p.m.
Food! Fun! Fear!- Don't Miss It!
***Sponsored
by S.G.A ***
/
--.
r
ScAw;;is
You;'opinio~
*
Fill
out
&Enter for a chance
to
win a $20 calling card
*
I
I
CLASS
OF:
(cirde ,;11e)
1998
1999 2000 200 I Graduate Student
I
1. Do you know who your
S.G.A
representatives are?
I
(circle one)
YES
NO
2. What is the
best
way to find out about activities/ events?
(circle mw)
1
The Circle
WMCR
MCTV
Posters
I
J.
What is ;::~i::ortan:t:~::~;::~k
1-5: J=n~~v~c;=lca
.
vtJ
_Security _Housing _Activities/Event,; _Academic Policy _Other__
I
4. What would you like to see
S.G.A
do more of? _ _ _ _ _ _
_
I
*
Cut out and return to S.G.A Office
by
April 28
*
I
MSC#(fi,r
award use
011M
Any Que.ttimi, ca/1.r
.
lfi99
L -
- · - -
-
-
-
-
,(
10
THE CIRCLE, April 23, 1998
Internships Available
On-Campus!
.
,
.
·; .. _'·.•
.··
... ··i, -_-
,
_.;
. : ·;
:_,
.
.• ..
..
Great resume builder and a great wav to
u~t
inside inlorniation about your own career path.
.
.
.
.
.
,.
'
.
.._,·
.
Serve as a student advisor in the areas of resume. writing,-· ·
-
·
'
.
interviewing, job-search skills, and career exploration.- Assist _
and advise students through One-to-one interactions_.a1:1d· · __ ;:,
__,
group workshop.sand programs. Act-as an effective listener
and referral agent. Assist with and p_resent career _
workshops. Assist in the daily operations of the
CCS,
and
with_ s·rie-cial events. Develop and itnpl~ment a professional
projectWhi~h will either serve stud~nts··or contribute to the
enhancement of the office.
C:om_e io t_he
Center for Career Services (DN-226)
or calf~xtension 3547.fpr,mo;e information.
·.
'
.
.
1
,_
THE CIRCLE, April
23,
1998
ff
Campus
by
JeffDahncke
The Stadium is falling down?
Well that was the case last
week
_
when a 500-pound steel
joint plummeted into the stands
of an empty Yankee Stadium,
causing the Bombers to miss
two games and play another in
the home of the rival Mets.
.
The thought that naturally
arose in the minds of many is
that George Steinnbrenner had
something to do with
it.
After
all, what better excuse to ask to
move out of the Bronx than "the
Stadium is
.
falling down."
While
it
is highly unlikely
·
George seriously did
_
ha\ie any-
thing to do with it, one thing is
for certain. The debate over the
.future of the Yankees in the
Bronx has been fueled.
Just
_
this week Mayor Rudolph
Guliani revealed his desire to
replace the
_
75-year old ballpark
with a new one, while at the same
time keeping it in the Bronx.
Another plan would see the
Yanks vacate the Bronx com-
pletely and invade Manhattan.
But while both plans have
undeniable advantages, and
both would result in increc;lible
stadiums along the lines of
Camden Yards and Jacobs Field,
Rudy and those who seek to
uproot Yankee Stadium seem to
be forgetting something,
.
They seem to be forgetting
cured,
I
hope it is safe to say
that the House that Ruth Built
will stand strong right where it
always has. I hope it is safe t_o
say Yankee Stadium will survive
another 75 years.
***********************
that
_
the Yanks already h
_
ave a
Moving away from the pos-
great stadium. A stadium that
sible good-bye to one of sport's
the greatest teams in baseball
greatest attractions, lets move
history have called home. A
on to the actual good-bye to
stadium that has served as a
another.
·
·
stage for legends like Ruth,
The NFL's all-time sack leader,
Gehrig, Dimaggio, and Mantle.
.
Green Bay's Reggie White, said
A stadium that still gives its fans
he will call it quits at the end of
goosebumps every time they
next season. After 17(5.5 sacks,
pass through the gate or visit
12 consecutive Pro-Bowls, and
hallowed Monument Park.
·
a Super Bowl ring, it is safe to
Sure the traffic is bad after the
say that the Minister of Defense
games. Sure the Bronx is not
·
will soon have a place in Can-
the
·
best of areas. But these are
ton.
no reasons to strip: baseball
.
of
.
The announcement comes a
·
its
greatest
landmark. These are
.
·
few weeks after he was widely
no reasons to
.
take away
criticized for making insensitive
baseball's Mecca.
comments in a speech to Wis-
When the dust settles and all
consiri lawmakers. This speech
of the nuts and bolts are
S!;!-
is the latest thing people remem-
i
UCONN grad to replace
::
Babineua as head
.
women's
basketball coach next year
byJEFFD~CKE
,
hardwood, both as a player and
hiring. "Marist is a gre
.
at insti-
StaffWrzter
.
,
.
.
_
.
on the sidelines ... A four year
.
·
tution where the
_
student-ath-
ber of White but it should not
be the only thing.
Sure he said some things he
should not have. But they do
not take away what he did on
the gridiron. Nor do they di-
minish who he is as a person.
He has been model citizen
throughout his career and the
NFL could only pray to have a
league full of Reggie White's.
He will be dearly missed by
the Packers, the league, and the
fans.
11
And now the top five from the
week that was:
I • Randy Moss - the steal of
the draft by the Vikings at num-
ber 21 overall.
2. New Jersey Nets - back in
the playoffs at last.
3. New York Yankees - after a
sluggish start, making their way
to the top of the American League
East.
4. Prince Naseem Hamed -
boxing's newest
star.
5. Any takers'?
arist Athletes of the Week
Male Athlete of the Week
tu art MacMillan
scored
seven goals, including the
I
00th of his
areer, in the men's lacrosse team's
i
9-12 win over Canisius.
Female Athlete of the Week
am Brown was named Metro Atlantic Athletic Confer
nee Playerof the week for her perfonnance in the women
'
s
acrosse team's 22
-
21 win over Howard.
What's on Tap?
Baseball
-
4/25 Home St. Peter's
4/26 Home Manhattan
4/28 Home Hofstra
Softball
noon
noon
3:30
Men's Lacrosse
4/25 Home Mt.
St.
Mary's
4/26 Home
St.
Joseph's
4/29 Away Quinnipiac
Women's Lacrosse
1:00
1:00
3:30
,,
.
.
_.
. /~' 7
''
"•·
starter arthe·U11iversity ofC<in
~ "·"'
letes· are coI!fJfiitted to ~t:ademic-~"
There is a n,e_w head coach of
.
necticut, she
_
was named Big-
as well as athletic excellence and
~/25
Home Niagra
·
the Marist w<>rrien's basketball
·
East Freshman°of-the-Year in
I am confident that w"ith some
~/26 Home Canisius
TBA
11:00
4/26 Home Fairfield
1:00
4/29 Home Manhattan
1:00
team.
1986 and is fifth and sixth on the
hard work we will build a sue-
4/28 Home St. John's
3:00
Kristin Lamb, who came to the
school's
•
all-time rebounding
.
.
cessful program in the years to
.
,
.
program last season as an as-
and scoring lists, respectively.
come
.
"
;
1
sistant under head man Ken
As the Huskies co-captain in
Hard work will definitely be
'.
faabineau, was riamed the head
-
.
both her junior and senior sea-
required following last years
5-
:'.
women's basketbail coach back
sons she led Uconn to a pair of 21 record. Lamb intends to play
•
on April 9 by Athletic Director
.
NGAA Tournament appear~
•
a little more up-tempo style of.
f
Tim Murray,
·'
·
ances and Big East Titles
'.
·
basketball. She expects a lot out
l
Murray said he .was enthusi-
Following her playing days
of the upperclassmen and will
it
astic about the aririouncemeht
-
·
·
she joined the coaching staff of look towards this year's
strong
<
''I
am very excited to introqu~e
her alma mater a~
.
an assistant
·
recruiting class, that she helped
-
Kristin Lamb as the Head
.
under head
inan
.
Geno
bring in, to getthe program back
.
Women's BasketballCoachhere
Auriemma. During her tenure
on a winning track.
·
at Marist," Murray said follow
:.
·
·
there,
.
she
.
helped the ~uskies
While she did not exactJy rule
ing the announcemellt.
;
·•~stin compile a 70-27 record, includ-
it out, Lamb said she is not ex-
has earn.ed
.
the reputation as all
.
ing
a
Final Four appearance in
pecting a Metro Atlantic Ath-
excellent re_cruiterwith trerrieri-
.
·
i99I.
letic Conference title in her first
.
dous work ethic ~d energY, and
Lamb then spent. three sea-
year as a head coach.
I am confident that she is the
.
:
sons as the· top as_sist~nt at
"We are going to start out
right person to lead ourworrien's
Duquense University before
small and work our way up," she
basketball program into the
·
ru-
·
deciding to
.
coine to
.the
Red
said of her goals for this sea-
ture."
.
Foxes in 1997.
.
son. "It's not going to be an
. _
•
Lamb
.
has definitely enjoyed
''.This is a dream come true for
unsuccessful year if we
_
don't
Tom's Trivia
Who was the last person to win the NBA
scoring
title
besides Mchael J<>rdan in a year in which Jordan played the
entire season?
·
Last week's answer - Dale Long of the Pittsburgh Pirates
shares the record of 8 consecutive games with a home
run along with Ken Griffey, Jr. and Don Mattingly .
her share ofsuq:ess
·
on .the
me," said the new coach of her
win the conference.''
-
.
.
----====================~
THE-
.-
amERY
WELCOMES
MARIS1!
$/
5
HoircuLf
$/
8
v~
• - •
pi.,,
2S¾offallcdlc,,.._,.
fWidl ManSI 1.0 I
t.,4,,,~~
-
...
ttt-lP<.ftt'"-"'
164
NOtmt
IIQ,,.D,
l'Ouel41Cltrslt c54.9l)9
,..,,._,,.,. r.w--•~,.,..,,,,.,
~
~lilJ'°"- ,__..,'"(
~,.....,,.tl"-"IO.l,._lfll
Senring
The
Mari
st Communif'f
Since 1918
..
•
·.
· STAT OFTHE WEEK
:JinlMcGowancurrentlyleads' '
··the
Mari.st
baseball team
with
a
.367
av~rage.
'
.'i
.
~
.
.
IPORTS
QUOTE. OFTH~ ·WEE~
''This is a dream come true for
me.'"
., J.{risten·1:,llll):b, .
• · on being named
Ile\1/WOriieri!s
basketball·head
l2·.
coach
. .·
.. · . . . . .
. . ...
. .. . · THE CIRCLE, April 23, 1998 ..... •·· . . .
. . . . . .. ·. . ·. . ..... ·.
.. . .·
·Baseball eX:perienCingniany
t'Yists
:'1.I1dturns. ·
•
b
RYANMARAZTI1
· pitche~ five iiniings_giv_irig ul? 6 Red. ~oxes
.
~gain .. as~umed ~e ad~ust .. to ~eJoss of the1i- ace
S(?phome>re, Phil Toscan? leads
' ' y
'StiiftWriter
~
' ; '
n1ns (4earned), ,on
SI'.(
h1tswhde
position" With a commandmg
re~1eyer, Enc:Beckeqvh~ left for
the; ~BI depa~tment. with 28,
·
·
strikii:ig o_ut two. Offensively,
14:-5 victory. Leading the way
personal_ reasons .. _This could
while alse> sco11ng 26 runs~
J~~ .
If the phrase "winds of _ ~atcherFredMaiiriquezwent2--
wasJr~shrnanC<>reyBorqwitz,
pose apr<>bleITI as the_seascm
Andr()s and_.Anthony Cervmi
,change" heeds more towards its
for-2 and Tafuto provided the
who seems to have settled into
progresses and.the pitchers be-
(A88 OBP, 32,R; 6SB) h~ve als~
irittjnsic value than itsHteral
only extra base hit with a double: • his ow.n aft~ra rocky start, by
come more fatigued, the'J,fod
been offensive b_oosts,b_atti.n~
meaning, the Marist baseball
In the second game; LeMoyne
pitching se.ven solid innings
,Po.xes will have
~o
find another
.324 a.nd .308 r~spec~1vely.
team should find something ·sta-
again scored early, thi_s time plat-
and giving up only, onemri. CO-
solid_ closer._ -Perhaps;junior Fr!!shmen, Kevin Wissner
tionary .to hold on to.
ing two in the second inning off captain, Jim McGowan put on.a
Jake Ketcham, who has recently - (.34(>B_A, 3,4R, 2HR, 20BB)and·
_ Afterjumping oufto ~11 im-
MarkCiccarelli.-Fromthenonit
clinicofh1sowribygoing5-for-
reiurnedfrom elbow problems
RyanBrady(,295BA,23R,20BB).
pressive 6~ 1 start in their first
was a pitcher's duel, as Ciccarelli
6 in the ·contest.
.
or Sean Lomas wiU fill the posi-
have filled in nicelyin the areas
· y·ear
,
in _the MAAC, the. Red
huded four hit ball over six in-
The Red Foxes then hosted a · tion. Ketcham's return has been
vacated by last year's seniors.
Foxes' seasonh.as begurifo
t#rn. ·
riings .w.llile striking out six. . weekend of double headers
shaky bul he should return to
Defensively, .. the Red Foxes
sharper than a Greg .Macldux
lJnfortunately, the Red Foxes
against Siena. Marist was swept
fonn and provide quality innings
have played soHd,,turning 21
bieakingball.Afterbeingswept
didnotpro:vide,Ciccar.elli, 6-1 in
inthefirstpair,5-4andJ4-5 with_ forCoachHamme~. _ . . .
twin killings with second
in Saturday's doubl~header, 8~2 . MAAC play, wjth any support
Doug _Connolly arid. Dean
So far, Marist's four starters,
basem.at1 Ben Shove involved i.n
and 2-0, at LeMoyne, the Red
offensively, g~therj,ng only t\Vo
Puchalski each taking a loss.
Connolly, Ciccarelli, Olore and
19: Shove's .976 fieldi~g per-
Foxes enter the second double
hits. _ Fred Manriquez led the
On Saturday, while the rest of Borowitz are a combined 17-8
cent:age(3 errors in 30games) is ·
· header of the weekend:on Sun-
way _again going l.,for-1 while
the wodd was a_t home prepar-. witha5.0l ERA. Ciccarelli leads
second to only catcher, Fred
.day,hopingtoimprove~eir9-6
Phil .Toscano:punched outthe -ing for,Easter, the Red Foxes
the win department with six,
Manriquez's, .982amongevery-
re_co~d in le:ague play.
·
other hit. · Etght hits over b.oth
bounced back by· sweeping the
opposed to one loss, as well as
day position players. Shortstop
In the fir~t gallJe of the double
games combjned is not a goo_d
second double header, 5-4 and
striking out 50 ·and completing
has been shaky at times with 16
header, LeMoyne got to sopho-
sign this far foto ,the season.
.4-1.
Kevin Olore and Mark
6 contests. Connolly is at4-3 in
errors between Tafuto and
more, KevinOJoreearly, by jump-
Defensively, .the Red Foxes
Ciccarelli notched victories be- · the MAAC with a team leading
Lomas, but along with Shove,
ing out to a 3-0 lead in the first
turned:.three double plays .and
hind their solid performances.
ERAjustabove three and is the ·they have·been key in getting
. inni11g. They continued to hit
committed four errors while al-
On April 14th,the Red Foxes
owner of the only Marist shut-
their pitchers out of a jam-when
· Olore as they scored one run in -lowing -seven stolen bases qn
hosted Hartford and were shut
out. Olore is 3-4 in 9 games and
they have to.
.
each of the next two inni~gs and
eight_.a~tempts.
out as Connolly was hit with an · leads the whiff department with
Although this year.'s -record
finally causing him to depart
af-
How has the rest of the sea-
8-0 loss. Then on Thursday, the
67-through 55 innings. Horowitz
may not shine as brightly as last
ter adding another in"the fifth.
son been? After.the great start,
Foxes beatHartford.away, 7-5,
is 4-3 w
.
i.th.a 638 ERA, one that
year's, only the final results will
Marist scored two runs in their
the Red.F9xes split a double
behind another solid perfor-
has been on the decline of late. . matter. To survive down the
· half of the fourth wtth RBrs
header at Rider, winning6-land. mance.~y;Borowitz (7IP 2R):
.· Up to this·pointinthe season,
ro~d, thl: _Red F,oxes must get
, from
Jeff Tafu to and S ~an f;illing 17-6, and then beat New
Sean Lomas left a memento; cour-
the Red Foxes. ar~. batting a com-
solid relief from the bullpen in
Lomas. That wo~ld be allthe
York _Tech at home, 5-4, on a· -tesy of~ed FC>Xba~~))all,as he
bined .285, while scoring 190
order to protect leads in the later
offense the Foxes could mat1age
game w.inning home_IllQ by.Jeff -jacked. one ofLthe,Bartford runs and banging out 69 extra
i_n11ii,.gs .. As stated before; they
as
.
:they .struggled ·agajnst Tafuto._ On i\pril 1,8th, ~eRed
·
scorebo'ard. • -.
·
. ':\ _, ·. . ·
_
basellits.,)iin:tv1¢Gowa_n leads _must_progressin timely pitch~
teMoyne's Ryan Victo_r',viho
Foxestravelecl.to,Al}liy, a.team
•.' ·,
ff
Sat1.1r.~_ay;~Jo~s.es
fo,
th~teamwit.ha'.367
.
batt_i11gAY~·
i111fandclutchhittingtoprepare
gave up two mns in six inniµgs:
qut to avengelast
yiar'~
th9r~
Lel\1oJTTe.wete notmoral killers
eiage':as weII as:.gathedng 8
th~.m
for,Jhe,dog 'fights thatHe
Olore (3-4in MAAC
p\ay)
ough whipp~11g. This year, the
eno~gii, i~e: te~m:.-~~ib
.
hadto
doubies·,
3
HR's and ,23 RBL
aheadfor,playoff positioning.
Lacrosseteafunets
first
JiOme··Win·oithe Season
. :· byP~~=~~~:\\:
~~~s~8ie0~ik~~~g~ii:Js;J~:.
fi~
1
~·
-
g~ii:'i~r~s~~~ni~
-
·
·.
.
·.
greatseas9n. What'fans did not
Mekovitz:who'chipp¢d'in-with
.Awi·;e'inan6~cesaid
theirt~~-:' •.
'
,takeinto consideration was the' 2 ·goaJs.
'The.
defense played
''suriof a team. is riot ho\\' 'tlley
difficult ~clieduleMarist hadto equaily as welhvith goalie
'pj
act·. in; victory,- rnther'
it
is how ' play.
·
~ncf
:th~· ..
amount_ of: talent. Wilso.n playing/a great . g'aipe.' . '
they respond· to defeat.,.· .· .
their opponents ppssessed
as
\\Tilson . r~cked
_
uff3{,s~yes.
jn
...
_
For the Mari st Lacrosse team,
well. .
.
:, ·,.
< . :
net anclthe ·rest of the defense,
this Jeasori has ,unfortunately
All that.weQt outthe back
·
l~cl by (i{eg, Ellis, Adam:
been ,.cme fiUecl with response_s,
cioor however,
when
Mari st·. Rabidea1.1; }()t!,:Padruco, Paul.
·
That_is .until last Sunda.y, "".hen '' faced ,_off. ag~instJ;anisius.
Sydlanski; im,d ;r<ri{Miller, al.:
.
the Red Foxes let not only their
~bowing gre~t't~aili:~l}emistry
lC>\Ved onlylZgoaJs..
.
"<
'
·opponeQt C~njsius know,,but
and
'
tremendous .defense,•the
'\Vit_hf<>u,r'$~Illes,'Jetfin the
~~-
rest ofthe MAAC-as well
-R~d .F~xes piayed-tli{ki11d of ~~ason;
tlie~
itpl~hty ,of time
· that_ t_he spring ~easonj(not
•
gru.ne fans had ~e11·waiting to
for the'.Red Foxes'to''fitiish the
overjustyet.
' ·_
see aJI se~sori, as they pulled
seasonstrohg.
As
ifloC>ks now,
, For th!! past few games, ques-
out a 19.-12win.: _ . · .. ·.· ... ·.. .
-
if
they continµ~ to playJi~e they
lions have been raised about the
-
The offens!ve oµslaught was · did on Sunday/ther~ is a:g<>od
performance of the lax team.
lead by ~eniors Chris Pistello,
chance they could finish with a
With so much talent and the
who had 4 go~ls ~d 4 assists,
6-8 r~cord; one that is. highly
good number of quality under-
Stu MacMUlian, who had 7
respectableconsideringthecali--
ber
·
orteams they.·hav~ played·
against.• -In other· words, the
nex't few,\Veeks would tie a great
titn6
to go _out and catch some
. exciting lacrosse.as well as cheer
··on the Red Foxes. -
51.7.1
51.7.2
51.7.3
51.7.4
51.7.5
51.7.6
51.7.7
51.7.8
51.7.9
51.7.10
51.7.11
51.7.12
_
- -
Marist community.~.:~page 2
· F~tur~.~~u~ ...
~
...
~.:H~
·
.pag~
_4 .. •
Ojiil)ion ........
~
•..
~
_
••
.
····~··P
·
~ge
6.
A&E ....
~
..
~~
-
..
~
......
~~~
'
~.~~.:page
s
.
Sli"or~ ... : .......
:
.~.~ ......... page
_
12
The s
_
tudent-newspaperof Marist College
._
April 23; 1998
fillUFeCallsesconiroversy
_
by
BEN AG
.
OES
them forthe rest of their career
,"
ings were tainted
-
by personal
·
:
Neivs'Editor
he said .
.
"The trend has been to
issues as well.
deny tenure as often as possible
·
.
.
. ·
She said a senior faculty 111em-
.
and bring in adjuncts."
ber who had
filed
a grievance
Barker said there were serious . against her in
1992
was allowed
flaws in the procedures govern-
to sit on her peer review com-
Another. round of professors
. are upfortenure this spring, but
the rough waters from last year
have yetto
.
c
.
alrn .
.
Fouro
.
ufof the seyen profes-
sors who applied for tenure last
year were
.
denied, setting the
stage fora hot debate among
·
·
the faculty
on
tenure proce-
.
dures.-The debate has renewed
as the latest bunch await the
ing his tenure application, in-
mittee.
.
.
duding personal
.
issues which
"No one
_
should sit on a com-
_
he believes tainted the various
mittee where those judge a per-
committee's attitude about him.
.
son whe
_
n they have show to
"In mycase I was fairly con-
have !}iased against a person,"
vince9 the [Rank and Tenure]
Evans said. "It
'
s a question of
Committee was
·
not going t<>
power and not wanting to reHn-
• give meteni.lre before I walked_
qui~h it.
O,
decision on them.
.
though ttie door," he said:
A.riinArslaniap; dean of fac-
.· Richard Barker, assistant pro-
''.They are so far rem~ved.that. ulty a~d vice
-
p~esiden~ for Aca-
fessor of mariagement,was de-
all they can opernte on are
i-ti- ·
de'micAffairs
;
said he believes
nied tenure last spnng, but he
mor and innuendo, allowing
every candidate was treated
said his case is ju~t a common
prejudices into the decision."
fairly last year. He said it is only
.
example o(Marist
;
s 11ew strat-
Jeanne Evans
,
assistant pro;.
human nature for
_
those that
·
·
--~
,
,-
?
,
:-_
,
,
,
.•
-
c
•
,
~ ·•· '"
,
.
-
·
;r_
,
·
.
.. .
. .
·
.
.
Cin:lePhoto/JethmySmi
.
egy.
·
•
.
fessorofreligious studies, was
.
were
·
denied to make the case
AP·
.
l
_
it
_
'
·
1
:
_
!8
_
·
C:\~
_
r:~~:l::':,~:!.:
.
~=-·~::.s:·~
-
~~1
.
::~::t
°-:'t.~r:d':
_
Y:
.
"lfwe grant ~is perso~ ten-
also denied tenure lasfyear
,
and
·
•
.
. .
·
.
-
'
.
·
·
.
· .
.
·
-
-
be
stuck with
. ·
·
·
· ·
.
·
·
.
.
•
--
-
·
Please
see
TENURE,
page 5 ...
·
·.•>-
:
c
=
•··,r
:.~.=-
_
'.•
j y ~ ~ ~
-
-
'.
q
:
·
_·
.•
·
_
1
w~re_ d~rOg~tqryfiom
·
0the
. ·
,
children'sI6rieofC:voice.
·.·
·
·
:
She
·
,
..
.
,
Staff Writer
':.
~::t~he
:·
wa
t~
~
t~titrnr
xt~
};
.
·_ •
.
:
·
Namingjs o~~
-
of
the
'.
most
"If
you have an Itali'a11 name,''.
•
.
.
·
p
.
-
o\Yirful
_
weap
-
oris a human be~
_
·
·
·.- ·
DeAngelis s~id
'
'~they
'
.
assume
·
,
iµg can p<>s~~s .
. ,. :
;
. _
·
..
-
.
.
you are a in~b;t~
t
•
•
·•
,<:>'.'°
·
:
,-
_
,:
. _
,
_
'.
__
La~t 'I'hursday
£
R6se
-
·
•
.
Th{lectllre
:
emp
f~
si~~d
,-
the
·_
D~A,ngelisi assistant ~!}glish
·
··
distinct diffeierfce bet~een
.
:
·
·
pt:pfessof,
:
preierited a lecture
,
in
:.
_.
someone. wh:ci iu#e.s
;
_
anQ
;
soin~~
.. -,
tlie
.
Peiform.in·g
Arts
Ro<>m en- · one'who is
.
nefill~~
}
';:
rrh
_
ti~t
fo
vho
'
,,
titlecl "Whafs ina Name: Con::
.
rule•by:Iiarriing
~
'.9ppr~ss
H
a11ci
·
.
flicted
·
Idei1tities in
.
•
_
Black and
.
those
-
who ar¢':fule,d
\
b)i
;
'
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)
iaine
.,:::
.
·:r;~;e~;~i~l~r;:i:~to1!~~
·
·
arb:l~l~Wt
A¾~~
f
;~1~
t{~l
:
:
if
J
~
.
naming
ii
human being
.
.
naming
,
out~icl~
i
Jhe
:'
-
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tt.mrttr~
t-.#i~~1M.
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.
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.
.
.
.
.
;:.
····-···
.
.
.
.
...
.
.
~ m
l
.
.
source of a iorturotischildtiood
.
.
.
-
nam'es,
Moriiiqoe
7
hrtdC~pui~i
~
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,
St~CU
{
Rt~
~
)
;
gua~a
t
~
:
,
,
~:
uff
ers
·
.
.
fatal
.
heart
.
she did not kriow what these
.
.
..
_·
. .
. .
-
.
·
.
..
·
·
•
·
_
AMiiri~
f
secii~t
f
guru:d
'
~ied
.
t!if:fi
i:
stperson t(j arrive
'
offthe
_
administeijng CPR, and even
words meant
,
she knew they
Please see
LECTURE,
page) ..
_
:
:
la~(Flidaf ~ig~
(
w~iliialcirig
a
.
.
~cC:~e
l
)lfr,adioed to security'_
·
ha~
:
to resorfto trying to revive
.
break from his shift
;
·
:
:-
)-.
: .
.
i
•
,
around -W:45 p.m. that
there
was
.
.
Dingee with electric paddles.
·
Haroid
.
A,IJ¢nI>irig~f
;'
<>:4
;\
v~nt
·
:,
{
heaf{~ttack
i~
\
progress;
-
~ricl
.
}enniferTaylor, freshman, was
HEY!!!
Did you
know ....
The FDR
hon1e is
located
just up
the
road, and is open to the public, so
anyone can visit.
FDR and his wife Eleanor were fifth
.
cousins, and had six children. They
also
lived
:
,vith theif-dog Fala,
-
~
·
black
Scottishterrior.
··
~
-
·
'
-
·-
irito cardiac
:
arres~
·
i<>~nq
10:4?
.
.
security
'
quickly
·
called
,-
for ari
oii her way out ofCtiamp
·
agnat
p.m. Friday irithehallw_ay of the
ambulance.
.•
. .
_ .
.. _.
for the night when she saw
.
·
·
Student Ceriter~
'
·
He was
pro-
Qoug I)eiss, freshman~
was
the Dingee being wheeled out on
a
nounced dead at St. Francis
-
first student on the scene.
. stretcher.
.
·
Hospital due to complications
.
"Whenlg6t close enough to
''They were still giving him
·
from a heart attack.
· .
him, I saw that his eyes were
.
CPR and there \Vas a large group
-
:
According to Joe
Leary,
dfrec~
wide open and his face was all
of people who w_ere following
tor of safety and security
;
red.
It sounded like he
_
was
himouttoth
·
eambulance. It was
Dingee had agreed to work an
·
breathing through a straw.
·
a pretty chaotic situation," she
_
extra
.
shift that night after his
·
That's when I realized some-
said.
·
scheduled 3 p.m.
11
p.in.
shift
thing was very wrong,"
·
Deiss
teary praised Dingee as one
was completed.
said.
.
·
of the best security guards he
Just after finishing his night
Deiss
·
then
'
proceeded to get
has met.
shift in Marian Hall, Dingee pro-
some more help. He ran towards
"lfl had more Harold Dingees,
ceeded to the Cabaret to pur-
the college activities office
then I could leave and play golf
chase some coffee before he
when he saw about four secu-
every day a11d be secure in
began his over-time shift in
rity
-
gtiards running to the scene.
knowing that things were safe,"
ChampagnaL
.
"It
was
about that time that
Leary
said
.
.
Walking back to Champagnat
many people started flocking to
Harold Dingee is survived by
fonn the Cabaret, Dingee fell to
where the security guard was
-
his
_
wife and two children who
the ground.
down," Deiss said.
live in Hyde Park.
·
'
·
• • I • •
'
-l
.
•
-
·
·
•
.
.
-
...
.
..
The Marist Community
April
23~
1998
·
.
Studentsptepare:for 12thatm.ualSilYiN¢edlfFru;!nOil$h~w
byHEATIIERBAUGHMAN
.
Staff
Wriier
·
Fashion design majors pre>quce
,
the gar-
hov.i.m6ch wo~k each
·
individual
h~s
to
ments and merchandising fuaJ0fS produce
..
do
and
ho~ much
:
time
they ha~e. We
the show .
.
.
'
come in d~ys, nights and ~eeke~ds."
Csordas said the
.
department strives to
·
Csordas said each
:
designer has an in-
It is almost time for the fashion event
.
of the year at Marist.
.
get everyone involved.
·
.
·
.
_;,·
"·
.
·
,
.
.
spiration ailcf creates garinents accord-
· ''The garments are executed in
i
senior ingly
/
Each seni6/gets to create six gar-
capping COUrl!eS," she said.
'
'
!
They are
.
.
'
mentsJor the sh
.
ow, ~hilejuniors only
designed and made by seniors with the
get
one
designJach as an introduction.
assistance of a designer critic from New
:
Ed
.
round Ercole, senior fashion design
York
.
Merchandising majors produce the
major, said his inspiration this year came
show and Marist students, who fit the
fromNativeAmericans.
•
·
The Twelfth AnnuaFSilver Needle
Fashion Show and Awards Presentation
is rapidly approaching: The show will
take place on April 30 at the Casperkill
Country Club in Poughkeepsie.
Marist's Fashion Department will put
on two shows.
measurements and height, model the
· "r
·
m using lots ofreathers, suede and
clothes.
"
fringe," Ercole said
.
''I've never reaHy
The afternoon show will begin at 2
p.m., and tickets will cost $10. Cocktail
hour for the evening show will begin at
6
p.m., followed by the show at 7p.m.
Tickets for
'
the evening
·
wm cost $30.
Melissa Graybill
,
senior fashion design
seen this done by big designers, I
major, said fabric companies provide
.
thought it would be something different."
some supplies for the show.
Jessica Hipolito,
'
also a fashion major,
·
Elizabeth Csordas, fashion director at
Marist, said tickets for the show are sell-
ing fast.
"We had quite a
few
donations- a few
said her theme
·
is,caridy and was inspired
boxes of fabrics to choose from. The rest
when
·
she was hanging out with her
we buy ourselves_; buttons, zippers,
·
friends at the candy store where she
everything
:
·
We also ordered from books
works.
that companies sent us:' she said.
She said she wants to remind people of
"The evening show is already sold
·
out," said Csordas. "That's 568 seats.
'
We still have niaybeW0 tickets left for
the afternoon performance."
·
·
According to
Marist Fashion,
a news-
Kristen Dreyer, senior fashion design
.
childhood and the joys of being a child.
major, said a lot of time went in to prepar-
•
:
"l'mmaking a cardigan, pleated skirt
ing the garments for the sh'ow.
. .
.
and camisole inspired by a Reese's Pea-
"We've been working all year for the
·
riut butter Cup
.
.
My
evening wear is
designers and everyone else involved,''
· ·
Truffles," she said.
.
letter created by the Fashion Depart-
ment, turnout is expected to be around
·
700 people between the afternoon and
evening performances
.
she said. "We have two classes aweek
that last for two hours and
45 m
·
inutes.
Everyone comes in mostly. everyday,
though,
.
but not all day. It depends on
·
SECURITY BRIEFS
·
April
-
17 -
Fun was had by all in Gartland and down in the Hoop lot for
River Day. Thank-you's go out to security for giving us a b~eal,c! There
was, however,
_orie mishap a female student was taken by ambulance to
the hospital after
hurting
her head .
.
Rumor
has
it
she was accidentally
.
dropped by.her dance partner as, fu.ey
.
danced:
\
Tom McLain of security
·
.
said
that
overallRiveiDay\vas'a success
:
.
.
Aprill7 in the
p.m. -
One of th~
~lltry
officersllad a heart atta'.c~ wI?le he
'•
·
was working in Champagnat. The officer, Hal Dingee, passed away'after
·
several ttjes to revive him .
. ·
One of our students started
to
give him CPR
· ·.
·
until security, and then the ambulance, were able to take over.
Mr.
Dingee
will be missed by
all.
·
WHY?
1. ALL day ac che be~ch is boring
2. Pick up some credits
·
3.
Take a subject you love
4. Gee a hard course out of the way
5. Monmouth is right near the beach
6.
The campus is great
7. Housing is available
8. Monmouth is a private university,
where students always come first.
9. Gee your degree sooner
10. You can say you're going co
summer school.
NOT!
For more information on Summer Sessions,
a schedule, available classes, the works,
call 1·800•543-9671 or 732-571-3456
"'"-w
.
monmouth
.
edu
MONMOUIH
UNIVERSITY
Your future starts here
'. ~.
:. :.
;::i
::1
_
:,/;
.
.
,
·-.
:
.·
.
.
_;
;
:,
~;
-:-
;
/)
''How's the
:
.
•
.
.
.
.+;.
•
.
.
!
• '
,
;
.
.-
~·
;
weather?'~
·:
.
.
Thursday: Mild, Sunny.
.,
..
-,:,
,
,
,~•,,,
,.
4!:>'0
•
·
·
:
'
(,6
'
0
,
;, .
.
Friday: Mild, Overcast, Rain.
49° 63
°
Saturday: Overcc1St, Light
Rain.
47
0
r,2•
·
,
.
3
THE CIRCLE
News
-
A.pril
23, 1998
-'------------------------
Seniors recognized
for accomplishments
by scorr NEVILLE
Staff Writer
With spring here, 64 Marist
seniors have been selected as
.
budding leaders in the nation-
ally recognized program known
as Who's Who.
students
,"
he said.
Cox also said the national rec-
ognition helps seniors as they
enter the competitive job mar
-
ket because they are profiled in
a book of all the award recipi-
ents.
Chris Hogan and Stephanie Mercurio take a break from The Circle and
.
e~°y°ffieY
j_;ftf~J/ies"'~t
River
Day.
·
-
·
.
·
·
.
Gerard Cox
,
dean for student
affairs, heads Marist's participa-
tion in the nation-wide program
.
In conjunction with the Student
Government Association, Cox
begins the selection process
during a student's junior year
by sending out applications for
the national selection. Notifica-
tion is then sent back to the win-
ners by mid-March of their se-
nior year.
'The Who's Who program is
nationally recognized and em-
ployers often have a copy of the
book, giving students an oppor-
tunity to put in their resumes
that they have received that
honor," he
said.
"That really is
an indication that they were rec-
ognized as having potential for
the future
.
"
RiVer Day a success despite
changes made to limit drinks
Frank Maduri, a recipient of
the prestigious award, said
Who's Who is a positive pro-
gram.
by JILLGIOCONDO
·
Staff Writer
.
:
~
-
·.
River Day faced a format
change this year with the pas-
sage of a new-State laws.
Heather Marriott, president of
.
1998 class, said despite rumors,
:
the college did not implement
this new policy.
"New York State has placed a
ban on unlimited drinking at
·
programs such as River .Day,"
·
she said. "In order to hold River
·
Day we
had
to apply to the State
for a permit and come up with a
·
plan to control consumption."
In order to get the permit, the
class officers had to go through
an application process and write
t
several
·
essays-on event secu-
•
rity and consumption.
The plan that was developed
·
was to limit students to six
.
drinks. After six drinks, students
could pay to purchase more
,
drinks. This number was devel-
:
oped by trying to calculate how
many times students could reach
the beer truck.
College Activities and the
Class of 1998 also had to make
sure there was tightened secu-
·
rity to avoid people under age
from sneaking into the event.
Security was also increased to
prevent people who had been
drinking before the event from
entering the tents.
Many students were not
happy with this change in
policy.
Marriot said that she worked
the ticket sales tables and heard
_
many students express dissat-
isfaction. Other
students
thought that six drinks was a lot
and did not think the new policy
was restrictive.
_
Student Christine Lloyd said
that she did not think
_
students
·
were too upset aboutthe policy
·
change.
"A
lot people were annoyed
with the change in policy but I
think the rain affected people
Final film series
.
by BEN AGOES
News Editor
.
The Bardavon's Friday Film
.
Series concludes Friday, May 1
at
7 :30
p.m. with a screening of
the 1952 Gene Kelly musical
classic,
Singin' In the Rain.
This is
a
rare opportunity to
see one of the greatest
Technicolor musicals of all time,
the way it should be seen
,
on
the largest screen in the Hudson
·
Valley.
Singin'
In
the Rain
has been
voted one of the greatest films
of all time in international critic's
polls, and is routinely called the
greatest of all the Hollywood
musicals.
Sing
in'
in
the
Rain
has every-
thing: great songs, great
dances, a wonderful nostalgic
story, and a superb cast, all di-
rected at a dazzling pace that
matches the speed crazy era it
profiles-the roaring Twenties.
The film works on several lev-
els, presenting
a
great musical
but also commenting-often un-
favorably but always accu-
rately-on the wild personalities
·
and studio machinations that
characterized the colorful pe-
riod.
This mastezpiece of American
cinema was directed
,
by Gene
Kelly and Stanley
_
DoneQ (the
recipient of the 1998 Lifetime
Achievement Oscar), and
starred Gene Kelly;_Donald
O'Connor. Debbie
.
Reynolds,
Jean Hagen and
•·
Millard
Mitchell with Cyd Charisse as
a special guest artist
.
:
,
A vintage Hollywood film
memorabilia collection will be
displayed in the lobby by col-
lector, Tony Musso.
For over two decades, Tony
Musso has gathered original
posters, props, and all things
related to films from the earliest
of movies. Pieces from his col-
lection including posters and
displays from movies starring
Bogie and Bacal, John Wayne,
Clark Gabel,
Gary Coop!r and
more
will
be
highlighted
.
Some
pieces will be available for sale
at the perf orrnance.
Tickets are
$5
for all seats and
available at the Bardavon Box
Office located in the
.
theatre
lobby at 35 Market Street in
Poughkeepsie. Call
473-2072
for ticket availability. Tickets
can be charged using credit
card through TicketMaster at
454-3388.
more," she said.
"People
still
seemed to have a good time."
Jerome Pickett, senior, said the
format was a good way to con-
trol drinking.
"I don't know too much about
how it was run last year, but I
think it was a good format," he
said.
"If
the senior class was
worried about consumption
then the limited drinks helped
limit consumption."
The weather also caused prob-
lems with River Day. It was a
cloudy day and eventually it
began to thunder storm, this did
not seem to bother students too
much.
After all of the work to pull off
River, Day Marriott said that
things w~11t well oth~r ~J;ien the
weather.
·
.
.
"Ninety-five percent of
the
people acted responsibly and
things went smoothly," she
said.
·
•~1
really appreciated ev-
eryone who came down to help
set up."
Cox said Who's Who gives
stude
-
nts
a
chance to be re-
warded for their efforts during
their last four years on and off
campus
.
"The program gives Marist the
opportunity to put forward
some of its most accomplished
"It's nice to get Marist recog-
nizing its leaders," he said
.
"It
keeps people involved and
striving to do better."
A reception
will
be held April
29 recognizing the 64 winners
with certificates for their accom-
plishments.
Names hold import_ance
...
continued from page 1
According to DeAngelis,
names distinguish us as plainly
as our race or ethnic group.
Society allows names to deter-
mine social class as well.
DeAngelis explained that as
immigrant
children
grew up
many decided to rename them-
selves to regain control of their
lives
.
One woman by the name
of Stephana renamed herself
Nancy Peters
.
Many Italian immigrant chil-
dren answered to two different
names through their school
years
.
For example, they were
Salvadore and Giovanni at
homem
,
but in
school
they were
Sal or John. DeAngelis said
that things have changed over
the
past
couple o(decades.
"Twenty
years
ago we were
told we must assimilate,"
DeAngelis said. "Today as-
similate is a bad word.
"
IONA
Now
.
get
~
Iona College
ii~ ?r:onh Avenue. Sc.1.
•
Ro
c
h.:!!~.~ ... "\\. York hi
.
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1
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.
ion:t
.
c<lu
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ondkn<ric«I Gmoic ,-..,,..,--
"'
I
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i
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4.
TUECIRCLE
:
¥eatures
·
April~3,1998
-
.
.
.
~.
·
...
·
.
,
·
·
-
lV[arist
·
students
·
buddy
_
up
.
.
with
area
c;ti.ilclt"~ri.
.
.
EMILYKUCHARCLYK
..
afi~~ truck, lunch, an? a perfor-
.
· .
.
.
··
mance
,-
-
by
.
the
-
=-
MCCTA
.
.
.
Feature Eduor
.
·
children'sTheati-egroup.
:
The Psychology cl~b is plan-
·i
Lamande said
an.y,
Marist stu-
ning a little one to one.
.
_
.
.
d~ntc~mparticipatein the event
~,
.
The annual Orie to One Day,
..
Last)~ar about
.
89 :Marist stu~
.
sponsored by the Psychology
dents participatef Sh~ said ev-
club,
\Vill
take placeApril 29 from
'
eryone in~blved in
the
day usu-
9
a.m:
to 2 p.m. outsicle on the
,
allyJovesi.
<
.
:
.
.
Dyson lawn .
.
The event is day
:
. "Ifsjust alotofftin and you're
of funfilled activities for emo- )el ping others
·
and. it'_s
.
kind of
tionally and
.
physically haridi~
-
·
semrewardirig as well,''. she said.
·.
-
capped students
·
coming from
,·
'.'lt'sreally-a mutually rewarding
schools in the Poughkeepsie
expedence."
_·
.
•,
.
o
o cou
C!;y
,m
as.sic
Desmond Murray and Deidre Sapp
'
present Mary Martello with the Intern of the Year Award.
Martello, an environmental science major, worked at Scenic Hudson, Inc. last semester.
area
:
Giving pack to the community,
·
Senior Tiffany Lamance, sec-
is something Lamance
.
said
.
is
retary of the club, said the day
important.
gives the younger students a
'
"We have a responsibility to
_
Breakfast full of surprises for intern
chance to feel good about them~
·
giveback to
_
the community be-
'
selves.
.
causethere.'s a l9t of people out
"It\ definitely a feel-good day
.
there who have problems that
MATIHEWCOUMBF..S
Staff Writer
Mary Martello had an impor-
tant breakfast to go to:
She never thought
she
would
receive the intern of the year
award while there.
On April 8, the senior environ-
mental science major received
the top honor as the Mari st Col-
lege Internship/Co-op Student
of the Year during the Field Ex-
perience Recognition Breakfast
in the Cabaret. Martello was
selected among fellow contend-
ers from other departments on
campus. She
said
the award
came as a surprise.
"l was pretty excited over the
award since I hadn't heard any-
thing about it prior to receiving
it," she said
.
Martello was nominated for
·
her internship at Scenic Hudson,
Inc. in Poughkeepsie where she
compiled a report on PCB's in
the upper Hudson Valley
.
and
distributed it to Scenic Hudson
members as well as other envi-
ronmental groups.
"I
worked for Scenic Hudson
in the fall ofl997froin the end
"I think the award will look
of September to November com-
good on my resume when I start
piling this report of different
looking for a job," she said.
sites in
.
the upper Hudson Val-
The first runner up for the In-
ley," she said. ''.I researched the
tern of the Year award was se-
information and also talked to a
nior communications major
lot of people on where to go and
Rachel Carter, who received a
what to study."
certificate of outstanding per-
The report titled,
Forgotten
formance for
active
participation
PCB Dump Sites of the Upper
in the Field Experience Program ..
Hudson Valley: GE's Legacy of
Carter said she accomplished a
Off-site Pollution,
included in-
lot during her internship.
formation on sites such as the
"I worked at
-
the Dutchess
General Electric Plant Site and
County Girl Scout Council as a
Glens Falls Landfill. These ar-
public relations person since
·
for them," she said.
.
many of us don't have and we
Lamance said about 50 kids
are very fortunate that we don't.
.
from three area schools will take
have;'' she said. "Giving back
part in the day. Each student
kind of initiates us as adults into
will be paired up with a Marist
society.
-
And the kids just de-
student and have a buddy to
serve our help.''
·.
participate with in a variety of
Anyone interested
'iri
partici-
activities. Some of the activi-
pating iri One
to One Day
ties include arts and crafts, should contact Dr
.
.
Britt in
.
the
,
..
.
sports, face painting, a visit by
Psychology hepartmeilt.
.
:
..
.
i;:
PEZ-mania hits.
_
_
,·
·
eas are used for disposal of
.
mymajorisPR,"shesaid.
"The
smokers; Aheadless PEZ di
_
s-
.
wastesandothercontaminating
main reason
·
! was nominated
~!~~~
penser-was invented
-
in 1948 .
.
factors affecting the environ-
was for forming the Dutchess
The dispenser was designed to ,
m~~ello satd the expe
_
.rience Co~ty?irl ~~i°¥~C~o-;us-
'.
'i-r
·
0
· ,
CharissaJoyce;juhior,justgot fook like ~ccigaretteJighter to
..
.
ar er Sal
.
.
·
,
e m em
_
s
Ip
an Easter bunny one.
.
.
. .
encourage people to stop smok.::
was very infonnative.
.
·
gave her a chance to apply the
-
Sh
I
d h
.
1
d
fog. Instead
-
0
r
picking up a
"Itw
_
ashelpfulandlleam
_
eda conceptsofPRthatsheleamed
.
Beatrea
Y
das:,1adnybmc uh-
mg a man an
.10
a ut s e
lighter a
_
nd sm
_
oki
_
·
.
n
_
g, a smoker
lot about PCB problems in the
from classes.
.
.
.
·
·
'
·
·
-
--·
th
h th
•
d
Th
1
.
t
f th
..
Yi
d
still wants a Wonderwoman one.
would pick up a PEZ dispenser
environment roug
_
·
·
.
e
;
a vo-
.
e n em o
e ear a war
.
J
·
.
d
11
i
T
.
·
·
and eat a PEZ and have fresh
cacy of the company," she said.
has been given anmially
-:
~ince
.
.
oyce sat s ea so ikes ~o use
.
"T
_
he proc
_
ess of publish
_
ing
·
a
1993, recognizing a graduatin
._
g
her Santa Claus one as a kmd of
.
breath too.
.
.
mascot
In
1952 Haas moved his com-
report was also interestin
·
g
·
while
senior for his or her
·
outstand-
·
·
·
·
t
worked on compiling the re-
·
h"
t
·
·
f l
"It's funny, whenever my
.
pany to New York and started
.
mg ac tevemen m expenen
ia
friend from home and I go some-
marketing the candy dispensers
port."
.
.
. .
•
.
.
_
<
.
·
..
·
ed~cation. It has been spon-
- ·
·
h
· ·
h
s
·· ·
·
·
Cl
to children.
In order
·
to make
Martello, who grad
_
u
_
ate
_
sin
_
s
_
or
_
ed for the past five years by
·
w ere we put t e
.
anta
aus
·
·
up
·
on the
·
dashbo
·
ar
· ·
d
·
and 1
.-
f he
them
_.
mo
_
r
_
e
.
at
_
trac
_
tive to
_
ki_
"ds,
-
_
he
M
_
ay
·
, said she d
_
c:ies no
_
t
_-
_
h
_
ave
_
a
the Center for Career Services.
·.
•·
·
·
·
· ·
·
. .
.
·
.
.
falls ofr'\',fhile we're driving then
.
began
.
making
.
the dispensers
job lined up, bunhatthe intern-
we know it's going to be a tiad
with heads and
candy
that had
ship and the award may help her.
trip/ she said. "But, if he
a fruity flavor. Today the dis-
stands tifw~knowJhetrip will
pensers are manufactured
·
_
in
be a lot of fun."
-
.
Austria, Czec::h Republic, China,
·
.APEZ
dispenser
.
.
Conven-
Hungary, and Slovenia. The
·
Top Ten Reasons Professors Do Not Get Tenure
10.
-Required
students to buy the 1nost expensive
textbooks from the bookstore.
tioris are held allover the world
dispensers are then packaged
forthes~ littlepiastic candy dis-
.
with the candy in Orange, Con~
pensers
;
Thousands of dollars
necticut.
·
have been paid by. serious col-
-
•
PEZ comes in a variety of fla-
lectors who want to claim
-
that
·
_
vors including Grape, Orange,
·
rare dispenser that almost no-
1.emon, and Strawberry. These
body has.
·
flavors are pretty norrhalwhen
The PEZ c:lispenser
_
has made
compared with the not so suc-
appearancesin at least 35
_
mov-
.
cessful flavors made available
ies and television shows .
.
Elliot
in Europe.
·
-
·
Chlorophyll, Men-
in the movie
E.T., The Ext rater-
thol, Eucalyptus, Flower Flavor,
rest rial
showed E.T; how to use
and Coffee were soine of the
a dispenser. A whole
Seinfeld
more unusual flavors that have
episode was centered around a
been discontinued.
9. Did not have class outside on those nice spring
days.
8.
Showed
up
to class too many ti1nes.
7.
Assigned homework.
6. Did not make not coming to class an option in the
syllabus
5.
Wquld not allow naptime during clas_s.
4.
_Did
not accept the stray dog ate
my
paper excuse.
3.
_
Did not get published in
The Circle~
2. :
Did
110.t
canc~f 5
p:m.
classes
th
_
e day before- a
..
..
·
=
.
.•
·break. :
_
.
.
_
.
.
.
.
_.
l..
D.id not
park
in assigned
parking
lot.
Tweety Bird PEZ, The
.
band
Each PEZ dispenser also has
Less Than Jake has a CD titled
different
.
variations of character
PEZCOREwhich
.
features a
heads such as different colors
song about PEZ. And there was
and facial expressions. For ex-
even a band in the late 1970's
amplethereare56U.S.releases
from Los Angeles called The
of the
Teenage Mutant Ninja
PEZBand.
Turtle
dispensers. The four
All this excitement over a little
turtles each have two facial ex-
candy dispenser that initially
pression, smile or grimace, and
began as a breathmint.
·
seven body colors.
Austrian PEZ inventor J:!duard
Joyce said she started col-
Haas III began making the candy
lecting PEZ dispensers because
in 1927. The name PEZ comes
they are fun.
from the first, middle, and last
"They're cool because of the
letters of the German word for
characters, colors, and candy,"
peppermint, pfefferminz. PEZ
she said
.
"It's a good time and
was marketed as a breath mint
if you've never had PEZ, then
in Austria, targeted at adult
you've never lived."
I
5
,
Fairne.ss•of,t~nure.process
·
debated aI11.ong
:
Maristf~cultyand
.
admirustration
.. :continuedfrdm page
i.
·.
·
letters of reference.
·
The Com-
ure poHcies. "They do require · teacher who is not a scholar but
··out ofa t'ew hundred. it was
that the judgement was unfair.
mittee interviews the divisional
people to interpret.
·
There are
.
has pubiished a few articles:· he
a few crabby remarks." she said.
.
"l can guarantee to you that
dean, interviews the candidate,
parts that are very objective and
said.
.
Arslanian said it would be
there was no biased," Arslanian
votes and then drafts a letter to
others that are
·
subjective."
But Barker said he could not
unfair judge the tenure policies
said. "These people [ on the
the Academic Vice
.
President
Sherry Dingman;
·
assistant
help feeling the pressure to be a
under last spring" s results which
Rank and Tenure Committee]
recommending the candidate for
professor of
·
Psychology was
~uperhero during the pro-
he called an aberration. Since
were really struggling with these
tenure or not.
denied tenure, but the decision
·
cesses.
I 986. he
said.
and including the
decisions.,,
The Academic Vice President
was later reversed by Marist
·
"What
they're looking for is
statistics from last spring. 43
Robert Grossman, professor
reviews the decision, writei his
President, Dennis Murray. She
someone who gives no grade
people have been granted ten-
of management and chairof the
own letter to the college's presi-
said for some people, the three
higher than a C and still gets
·
ure. and I 9 denied.
R~ and
:en?~
Committee last
.
dent who can disagree or agree
criteria for tenure
as
outlined in
glowing evaluations." Barker
"It's a fair process. an open
sprmg, said his Job was to make
with the Rank and Tenure Com-
the handbook, service to the
said.
process." he said. "We should
sure all the rules and policies
mittee. From there the president
students, research and teach-
In terms of student evalua-
not have to see this situation
outlined in the faculty hand-
makes a recommendation to the
ing, are too much.
tions, Barker said, the Rank and
happen again."
book were followed.
Board of Trustees who makes
"The biggest problem for the
Tenure Committee used them
Barker disagrees. He said he
"I believe I did that to the best
the final decision.
junior faculty coming up is that
.
unfairly against him. He said the
is not sure where the college is
of my ability and the committee
Vernon Vavrina, assistant pro-
they're being asked to do what
Committee highlighted IO or 15
headed.
did it to the best of their abil-
fessor of political science, is on
is physically impossible," she
bad reviews out of hundreds.
"That's one of the things that
ity," he said. The committee
the Rank
·
and Tenure Commit-
said.
"It's
like asking people to
Evans said the Committee dug
frightens me." he said. "The
acted in a fair way in how
it
tee now, and said tenure is based
have three full-time jobs and
up three bad stuclent evalua-
word's out about Marist. Don·t
treated each of these cimdi-
solely on how a person has per-
then complaining because they
lions early in her career to use
go there unless you can
·1
find
dates:"
formed according to the faculty
don't treat it like their only job."
against her.
anything else:·
Marist's tenure procedures
handbook.
A lot of times, she said, it is
Dingman echoed the criticism.
are quite simple but tedious.
But just what the handbook
not realistic to ask a professor
A faculty memberusually goes
outlines, according to some fac-
to excel at both teaching and
up for tenure in his or her sixth
ulty, is sketchy.
research. She calls the confu-
year. The semester prior, a Peer
Evans said the Rank and Ten-
sion over whether Mari st wants
.
Review Committee composed of ure Committee did not dutifully
to be a teaching or research col-
people from the same discipline
follow what is written in the
lege, the Marist identity crisis.
evaluate the person and drafts
handbook.
There is no crisis, according
a
·
letter of approval or disap-
"It was a committee that has
to Grossman. Marist is a teach-
proval.
had a problem in how carefully
ing college without a doubt.
The division dean then writes
they read the material and fol-
"There was never any ques-
his or her own letter that agrees
lowed the faculty handbook,"
tion that teaching was the most
or disagrees with the Peer she said.
important
for
Marist,"
Review's recommendation.
Grossman said new faculty
Grossman said. "That was one
Fromtherethesix-memberRank
members are well aware of all
areatherewasnogroundorroom
and Tenure Committee will
that is expected of them when
to equivocate. They had to be
evaluate a person's folder.
they are hired. But, he admit-
good teachers."
In that folder are the Peer Re-
ted, some of the policies in the
Professors do not have to be
view and dean's recommenda-
handbook do require a certain
superheroes by being great
tion, student evaluations, a
amount of interpretation.
teachers and excellent research-
grade distribution list, publica-
"I don't think they're hazy,"
ers, Arslanian said.
tions, transcripts, resume and
he said of the handbook's ten-
"I will recommend an excellent
Emily's Recipe
of the Week
Creamy Caramels
Package ( 14.3 ounces) butter pecan frosting mix.
I /2 cup butter or margarine ( I stick).
Cup half-and-half.
1/2 cup light com syrup.
Grease a
square
8x8x2 inch baking pan. Mix the frosting mix, 1 /
2 cup butter or margarine, cup half-and
-
half, and 1/2 cup of
com syrup in saucepan, stirring until just blended. Cook with-
out
stirring
over medium heat until a small amount of the mix-
ture dropped into a glass of very cold water forms a hard ball,
about 30 minutes. Pour the mixture into the buttered pan. Re-
frigerate about I hour until firm. Cut into I-inch squares. Makes
64 squares.
WANT A JOB INFIRMS llKE THESE?
....... AC
Niesa1 ..........
Br1std
·
Myas
Squibb .......... C'.8blev1s01 ........
.
(£
C'.8ptal .... ..Time Warner Qible ...... Caiair ...... D.JP01t..
...
.New
YakState Povver
Au1haity
.....
,
AT&
T.: ....
.NYS
Ov1s01
of
Human
~ghts ..... Addisa1~Wesey PubliSling
............. .
Tha,goto
CEAJOB DAY
Wednesday, Apil 29, 1998
,4:00 - 6:00
p.m. - Lowel Thanas,
R0001125
Bring
resumes! Dress to impress!
Talk w1h SilpqJment
agencies
rep-ese,ting
1he
firms
above,
and
many
o'tha's.
~ e d
bJ
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1'HECIRCLEEDITORIALApril23,1998
Editorials
Editor wonders aboutthe meritof.tenttre
Tenure~ What does this word mean? Anclwhyis it that teachers
fear
it so much?
I remember my sophomore year, when my beloved advisor, Evan Rivers was up for
tenure review,_and did not receive it, arid therefore lost his job. Definitely one of the
more stupid moves this school has_ made;
Evan was a·great teacher, a wonderful person; and loved by his students. Yet he
was fired because he did not meet all of the "standards" the tenure committee has
put together.
Just what
are
those standards?lhad one ofthe worst, most mundane, un-:thought
provoking classes at Marist given by
a
teacher who had long ago received tenure.
As a class, we sat down with the teacher and made suggestions that would liven ·up
the class and make it more interestin·g, yet he dismissed them and informed us that
he would stick with "his way." Oh, he had no need of impressing us; we did not even
fill out an evaluation form at the end of the class.
The reporter that covered this week's tenure story informed me that many of the
teachers did not want to talk to him, for fear that they would lose their jobs. That is
one of the most pathetic things
I
have ever heard, not on the teacher's part, but on
the administration's part.
Imagine working in an environment where you fear you will lose your job if you
simply discuss a "normal" procedure, especially when that place is Marist and the
procedure is the granting of tenure:
I have seen what some teachers go through when they are going up for tenure,
they do their best teaching classes, and put up a lot of effort to impress their
students and their peers; in hopes they will be guaranteed their jobs.
I have also
seen teachers who have had tenure for a long time, and
do not care about what they
are teaching their students, or they have ideas that are so antiquated, they cannot
keep up with a completely different generation than twenty years ago.
I
blame te11ure
for this.
I think teachers should be evaluated constantly, checked on all of the time to be
sure they are doing their job. Or, they should attend conferences on updated meth-
ods of how and what to teach. Maybe this is supposed to happen, but
I do not think
that some Marist teachers attend these kinds of conferences.
Do not get me wrong,
I have had some truly great teachers who have tenure v,,ho
still care about their students. I have also had some excellent teachers who do not
have tenure, who are in danger of losing their jobs because of this fact.
I know tenure is here to stay, but I think that the whole system needs to be
completely revised. Teachers as great as Evan are being lost, and teachers who do
not deserve the title are left in his place.
Stephanie Mercurio
is
the Editor-in-Chief for The Circle
Quote of the Week:
The key to immortality·is first living
life worth remembering.
-~Bruce Lee
The View from Sue...
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TH-e
THE CIRCLE
Stephanie Mercurio
Editor-in-chief
BenAgoes
News Editor
ThomasRyan
Sports Editor
Christopher Thorne
Focus Edito-,.
----
Joe Scotto
Chris Hogan .
· G. Modele Clarke
AnuUldaBradley
Managing · Editor
Emily Kucllarezyk
-
Feature Editor_,
.
-
Tim.Mamon.
_ Opinion Editor
-
.
'
'.
'
·:
-Jim
Dziezynski
Aris & 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 cari e-mail
The Circle
at
HZAL.
If
you are interestedin advertising in
The Circle,
please leave a message for
Chris Hogan at575-3000 ext. 2429.
Letter to the Editor
Lacrosse player defends team effort and intensity
To the Editor:
Next time, before Thomas Ryan gets on his journalistic high horse degrading and : -
diminishing the hard work and effort put in by his own college's student-athletes,-it- - -
might be a good idea for him to find the substance behind his statements. It is easy
to criticize and come up with
New York Post
style headlines;.but presumably it is too
difficult for a
Circle
sports writer to find out the facts of the story. Thefacts are that -
Marist College Lacrosse, Men's and Women's, are both without scholarships br,any- _ .
kind. This is unlike every other MAAC Conference opponent, even "perennial
cream puffs" Canisius and Manhattan, both of ·whom recei_ve four
full scholarships
ayear.
. __
The lacrosse teams may both _be in the middle of hard times, and how quick Mr,
Ryan is to point this out, but the men's team each of the last two seasons has had an
individu~l finish first in the country in the ,NCAADivision
I
final se~son statistics> .
_
_ A\'._ery impressive result for a small school, and not once did.either indiyidual
receive a word of print in
The Circle
for their accomplishments. · Next time, Thomas,
-before you ciriticize the holes in our team's-defense, maybe you should fill the hol~s
in your own story and place
-
the blame in the Athletic Department's lap, wllere it
belongs, and not on the hard working members of a greatly under-funded lacrosse
team.
Respectfully,
P.J.Wilson
-- Jr:Men's
Lacrosse
-Resident Assistant corrects security bfl~fs.
Editor: __ .
,
-
-·. In the April 9 edition of
'(he Circle.you
printed in $e Security Briefs that the boys
in Gregory Hall had their inflatable.pool party broken up and deflated by security
7
That is not true .. I am the Resident_Assisstant for both Gregory and Benoitand
lam
the one who broke the party up anddeflated their pooL Security had nothing
to
do
with it In fact, they knew about the party all night iong but yet they did nothing to
--- end it. They had absolutely nothing to do with this issue.
·
-I would really appreciate it if you retracted the statement saying that security was
the one who dealt with them because that would be a blatant lie.
-Thank you,
_ · Luis Santiago
North End R.A.
otice to all.readers:
Since no one has responded to our
requests throughout this school
year, The Circle is no longer look.:
ing for opinion writers. Thanks
for nothing.
.
THE
CIRCLE
OPINION
April23,1998
.
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a
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:
S~niot
Wee~ is
coming:
startsavmg
noW
··.
With
the school year winding
'
.
drink some beers.
more money. See p~graph.five.
,
dowri
·
and gr,:aduation approach-
.
Unfortunately, none of this
The riext event is a little more
ing,J find myself with
'
much
. ·
comes fr~ely. The average go-
'.
expensive thari the last. The din~
more important things to do thari
·
ing price for a shot is
$3; beers
ner cruise, priced at
$22, is more
write another
_
incredibly witty
can range from one dollar for a
classy
.
than the drool-all-over-
.
and entertaining article for your
sweet,
_
urine tasting lager to
yourself clam bake. But, your
personal enjoyment. But
I
guess
$3.50 to
$4
for all you Guinness
$22 is spent on everything but
l have no choice. The subject
_
fans. So the binge drinking will
·
booze. There is
a
DJ, a nice meal
of thisw~ek's article.is money:
cost yo1,1 about $20
_
t<f$3O,
,
de-
and, of course, a rented boat.The
who has
.
got it (no one),
-..yho
' ..
·
pendipg on your tolerance; per
booze, though, is sold ata·cash
needs
it
(everyone) and who is
'
night. But thereare
·more
ex-
bar. At this cash bar, students
taking it all (Marist).
perises. First, the binge drink~
.will
spend every ounce of cash
·
On top of the $80,000we have
..
ing causes an overwhelming
on their person, as well as bor-
already paid the school in tu-
.
_
_
feeling ofrelief and joy: Su~h a
·
rowing as much as pOS$iblefrom
ition,housingarrangements
_
arid joy
_
often
,
causes thenow.Ioos~
.
friends and non-friends. This
parking tickets, we are now
ened up person
·
to
'
buy°shots
enqeavor will probably total
asked, just a month prior to
.
not only for themselves but for
around
$60 to $70.
graduation, to fork up a little bit
everyone that they know in the
The final, and m_ost important;
more. Actually, a lot more.
·
·
bar .
.
By the end of the night
event for graduating students
The article that follows
.
will
very few people have been
·
left
outside of graduation is these-
document-for future seniors
.·.
out.
·
Said situation brings
:
up
•
nior formal. This is the mon~y
why_
$300 is not enough money
the bartab for the night to about
,
scam of all scams, The senior
for the last month of your se-
$50 to$ 60. So that concludes
has to shell out
a
ludicrous
$90
nior year. It will sit in the com-
the nights of your finals week.
for him/herself and their date.
·
pany of the Ten Commandments
Nextcornessenior week.
.
.
•·
.
.
(Unless there is some dutch
as guidance to graduates of th
_
e
·
-
This is a week
_
designed
·
for
.
tiling going on in which,
-
man or
year2002., telling thein why $500
the celebration
·
of graduating
·
·
woman, you are the ultimate
was not enough for one month
seniors, their almost graduating
-
_scam
·
artist.) Most are not so
for
.
the graduates
four
y~ars
_.
need-orie,--more-semesfor
lucky and have to pay the whole
their elders.
It
will r~ign in the
·
·
friends and the underclassmen
amount. With this $90 comes
annals of good advice with Ann
who tell their parents that finals
Landers and her sister Dear got pushed back a week. This
Abby,
;explaining
that the last
is where the real money kicks
month of college could cost
in.
anyone up to $750.
First comes the clam bake.
The last month of a student's
This is where you get to eat as
collegecareerisfilledwithmany
much as your body can ingest
stressfuLthings.
,
There is the
.
for $12. You also get six free
dreaded capping paper, usually
drink tickets.
·
In terms of stick-
about
20 to 30 pages in length.
·.
ing itto Mari st as much as pos-
The problem is that no one
sible,
l
suggest eating all you
starts this paper untilthe week- can, then stuffing clams, ham~
before it is due causing stress
·
.
burgers, hotdogs, buns or any
and, afterwards, quite a bit of
·
.
other foods into whatever you
bingedrinking.4am nofsaying
i'
are
wea'riilg and storeitiri' your
_
thatlcendorse this
.
binge drink-
;
fridge until after you get home
ing, lam just relaying the facts
·
that night.-
of the situation .
.
The cappini
Speaking of
that night, those
paper, along :with other end of ~ix free drinks will most likely
·
dinner, dance, a huge extrava-
gant hall, and one hour of free
cocktails. But "cocktail hour" is
before dinner, therefore all drinks
are quickly negated and the bar
is open to cash only. (Well, prob-
ably credit cards too.
God,
I
hope so.) The one piece of ad-
.
vice I have been given by the
•
editor-in-chief of
The Circle, for
all you girls out there, is to wear
purses that are large enough to
stuff
-
with various flasks and
nips, · $ound advice;
--
SO
the
grand
1
total for senior
week comes to about $124 for
·
events.and an extra $350 to $500
for the l;>ar scene. Call your par-
ents now, at least you will not
be calling to tell them that you
are not going to graduate.
,
tp.e year projects and finals, ere-
.
be just a tease because you will
ate a tension more unwavering
·
be
eating so much food that you
·
than Bill Cliiltori's reputati~n.
cannot get as drunk as you
.
The most common way that stu-
might like to. Considering the
derits
.
re
.
Ii eve them. selves
.
of
.
this
situ
.
ation, most of you will prob-
Tim Manson is th
e
Opinion
Editor for
The Circle
·
teilsio9, is to dos_ome shots and
ably· go to the bars and spend
sceneSitom
a shopping mall
.
. ·
My ten~
,
ency
to_
recklessi}'ride
'
'crappadrio'-you know that hot
my old bicycle leadsnie to worry
_. ·
sugar-water
that comes out
of
a
about breaking my wreck-fre
,
e
_
machine? Yeah, she rieve~ ate
.
record;
-
I
admit, it is lllore otatj
·
_
the bagels; though. We have
ego thing than
·
a niatter of
.
good bagels.
,In
fact, this week
safety.
·
The thought of a crash
.
.
we are having a special on ba-
reminds me of the Russian whis~
_
;
gels-"
·
_
key distiller who died of
cirrii6~
.
.
Anyway, the whole thing re-
sis. Everyone would be sitting
ally does not appeal to me. So,
on the
·
sidelines muttering,
"I
I have decided to invest in a car
told you so."
I
would mutter
this summer and to get my
Ii-
·
under my dying breath that I
cense- in no particular order.
wasa
·
complete moron:
Right now,
I
do just finewith-
·
In that sctrt of slldden ra9dom
out a car.
l
can walk, run, or
accideilt
•
scenario,
·
I
am sure
·
take my bike most places. I of-
there would be a small para-
ten walk to the shopping mall
graph in a local paper. One of from my house. It is a nice walk,
those ones where they inter-
but not because
I pass hun-
view some neigl!bors who
dreds of post-war cape houses
would say,,"Yes, she was a ni~e
with aluminum siding in every
girl. She was always out on the
·
pastel shade imaginable. It
bicycle, it is a shame, but no
takes
an
hour, and this is exactly
surprise."
_
how long it takes me to realize
They also always seem to find
that I do not need anything that
some distraught bodega owner
·
I can get at a shopping mall. ·
who would say in broken En-
Unfortunately, once I arrive at
glish, "She was always a smile.
the mall, this epiphany causes
She like Coca-Cola everydaf
me to become quite the arrogant
Sometimes a knish."
bastard. I begin to think that I
However, there are no bodegas
have found some sort of true
in the area, so presumably, they
happiness that nobody ever
would talk to the bagel guy who
could have found in a pair of
would probably say, "Yeah, she
Ferragamos. So, I sneer at the
always got that vanilla
skinny ladies with cigarette skin
and thi
·
s week's hair color. I
wonder if what they are seek-
ing can really be found at
Saks
Fifth Avenue.
Apparently, they
are never satisfied, After all,
they just keep coming back for
more.
Yes, so
I
will get a car this
summer, perhaps
a
little second-
hand Japanese thing. It is re-
ally such a big change for me- a
step closer to fitting into every-
thing I observe on my long
walks and bicycle misadven-
tures. Maybe I am overthinking
this, but
I tend to think too_
much when walking or biking or
waiting for a train. Maybe some-
day I will forget where I stand
now. Perhaps I will join those
ladies grazing suburban shop-
ping malls. After all,
I
am sure
they once had hopes
.
and
dreams just like you and me, but
somewhere along the way, they
sold them all to Ralph Lauren.
Tara Quinn is the humor col-
umnist for
The Circle
and is a
shamel~ native of New Jersey
7
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h'aiMarist
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do
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8
THE CIRCLE
April 23, 1998.
Taking a
Closer·.
Look
at
..,
'
,'
,·.
,
---
.
·
News.
and R~vlews.
i. ·
The
final
leg on the Great Southern Swing finds our heroes
in Georgia, North Carolina, on Indian Reservations, .etc.·.
.
could see the clouds thousands
by JIMDZIEZ\'NSKI
of feet below us, spinning up
A&EEditor
through the valleys and lower
This
year's last adventure
found our humble hiking group,
M.E.O.W, in the Deep South as
we went for the highpoints of
North Carolina, South Carolina,
Georgia, and Tennessee. It is
possible to swing through all
these hikes in three days be-
cause they are all located within
a couple hours of each other.
Each hike offered a different
perspective on the rewards of
highpointing-as well as some of
the disappointments. We got
the best of both worlds; the
endless above-the~clouds maj-
esty of the Great Smokey Moun-
tains in Tennessee to the bu-
colic, polluted highpoint of
South Carolina. We also got to
sample the unique and some-
times disturbing mountain com-
munities familiar to the south.
Joining
me
were
Sean
Dougherty, Christina Sheedy,
Chris Knapp, and Ryan Sheeler.
Our first highpoint in this leg of
the journey was North
Carolina's Mt. Mitchell. Mt.
Mitchell is the highest point in
the United States east of the
Mississippi River at 6,684 feet.
The summit of this challenging
hike is higher than Mount Wash-
ington
(6288
ft.)
and is the
gravesite of Reverend Elisha
Mitchell, for whom the moun-
tain is named. We arrived on a
miserable day. ;The-· low.er
reaches of the mountain were
subject to a furious downpour
and the thick fog prevented us
from seeing too far ahead on the
trail. This became a problem
when we reached the higher
parts of the mountain because
we were soaked (though we had
as much raingear as possible)
and the upper reaches had a
temperature drop from about45
degrees to 10-15 degrees.
Couple that with a wind esti-
mated close to forty miles per
hour and it made very welcome
conditions for hypothermia.
mountains.· we·walked most of
the way down; when we were
about a mile from the bottom a
nice couple who raised pack lla-
mas gave us a lift. We ran into
some difficulties getting home
· and spent three eJCtra days in
North Carolina (Clingman's is
on the N.C./fennessee border).
We were in Cherokee, an Indian
reservation renowned for its
Harrah's Casino. Since it was
not tourist season, we were in a
ghost town. Still we met some
nice folks and had a good time
when we could. Thanks to the
following folks for their help
with this trip: John Ragozzine,
Maral Arslanian, Christy Jus-
tice, Dave Etzold, Jody Pratt,
Charles Cavalier, and the nice
fellow with one hand in North
The Marlst Expedition proudly standing at the high point of Georgia, Brasstown Bald (4,784
ft,)
Caroliµa. Well; that concludes
From left to right: Ryan Sheeler, Chris Knapp, Sean Dougherty, and Jim Dzlezynskl. Absent Is
my career as an adventure con~
Christina Sheedy because she took the picture!
sultant at Marist College. This
Fortunately, we all had good
thus offered no views whatso-
that made us feel like we were
year Marist hikers were able to
enough gear and reached the
ever. There were the remains of on another planet. To reach this
bag highpoints in New York,
summit with a little struggle.
makeshift. campfires; garbage,
summit, wehadamerethree-rnile
New Hampshire; Connecticut,
Even though it was a rather aus-
and beer bottles all over the
hike up and a three-mile hike
Rhode Island, New Jersey;,Penn~ •
picious highpoint, there was no
place.
It
was not anyplace one
down. We did Georgia on the
sylvania, Maryland, Virginia,·
time to linger. There were no
would .want to visit for an ex-
same day ~e drove up to Sout_h
West Virginia, North Carolina,
views from the top due to the
tended time. We snapped a few·
Carolina. Our firial destination
South Carolina, Georgia, and
stormy conditions, so we said
pictures (with feigned enthusi~
_v.r_as
Clingrr.ian) Dome (6643 ft.)
Tennes~ee.1 would like to per-
hi to ReverendMitchell, took a· asm) 3.-!l~Hjrepareq.t,o}eave; V{e · AfterMt Mitchell, Clingman's
sonally thank everyone who
few quick pictures, and were on
had,. ~~-~ujlpl~a-~arit~urp_i:ise to;.;; 'Do.ID;~- is the second highest joined me on my adventures; I
our way. On the way down we
find
oul
~
parkeo
witµiil.25 feet '" pointeast of the Mississippi. It
hope your memories ofour times
opted to bushwhack down the
of two·_recently shot?:dog car-_ is also the most visited
together win lastalifetime(even
steep slopes of the mountain in-
casses rotting-in the rain.
:We - highpoint, courtesy of a well-
those of you who are sick of the
stead of enduring the seemingly
had enough of South Carolina.
maintained road ,that.coJI1es .. _van breaking down and Bad
. endless switchbacks;'
Oui .
"In 'contrast, the highpoint of within a half-mile from the top
Religion!) I encourage everyone
gamble paid off a11d we cut two··· Georgia offered a·much more
(the Nation~}. Park·S.ervice re-
to enjoy the beauty of the.world
n<.'. ~-.
hours off our ascenttime. After
sophisticated reward for attain-
ported over. seven. MILLION . aro~~dus; id\'!!]lly may
it
become -. -- {
· warming up and. regrquping _it· _ing)ts
~ummiL
Brasstown Bald
yisitorsJo Clingman's in 1995).
riot a
retreat
from· the difficul-
,:
was off to South Carolina's
(4,784ft) features a spectacufar
Located in Tennessee, it is in the · ties of "reality'i but
cl-
special and
highpoint, Sassafras Mountain
visitor's center that looked like
peart of the Great Smokey
delicate part of your life. One
(3560 ft.) There are no short
~omething out of a science fie-
Mountains. There was some
last note: if anyone woulcflike •,
trailstothes,ummitofSassafras
tion movie. Giant observation
park maintenanc;e workers on
to continue hiki,~:g ··with'· ·
· Mountains ~owe had to take a
towers·coupled with an aerody-
the day we arrived, but they M,E.O.W. email
''me at:
narrow, Winding road to a park-
namic weather station made this
were working on helicopter air-
BR UPLEX@ AOL.COM. or
inglotl00yardstotheGeologi-
highpointthemostelaborateof liftsintheparkinglot. Wehiked
JOHN
RAGOZZINE
at
cal Survey marker. There is
a
any on our trip. Even though it
up to the summit along the Ap-
KZBS@MARISIBMARIST.EDU.
good reason
.why
there are no
was closed, we enjoyed walk-
palachian Trail and for the first
If
you like highpoints check out
trails up to this mountain; the
ing around the structure. Once
timeinoveraweekwehadfJaw-
.America's Roof, a great web·
summit is filthy and not very
again, heavy fog prevented any
less weather. There was a nifty
page located at: HTTP://
well maintained. The high point
remarkable views but there was
tower· at the summit and the
_
www.inch.com/;--dipper/html.
was in the middle ofwoods and
a warm mist and strong wind
views were spectacular. One
Thanks again!
Shift and friends rock out at The Chance
~0---M-E--S-'-E___,,
HEY MIGH
EGIANT
IVE A
ARIST COL
EGE!!
WIT
byPAUUCKWIIl'ITLE
Assistant A&E Editor
Columbia Records recording
artists Shift made a stop on their
U.S. tour at the Chance in
Poughkeepsie on a recent Fri-
day night. The few who at-
tended the concert were treated
to an exceptional performance
by one of the best pure rock
bands of today. A local band
called Joshua provided the
opening act. They were a late
addition to the show as special
guests of Shift. Three other lo-
cal acts preceded them, but
Joshua gave the first heartfelt
performance of the night.
Joshua is a three-piece who
play a sometimes drifty, some-
times driving style of emotional
rock. They have a distinct pop
edge to their music that makes
them accessible to both hard
rock and "alternative" fans.
What keeps them sounding
original is the influence they
appear to take from bands Hke ·
Burn. Their use of hardcore-
style rhythms keeps them from
becoming a formulaic rock band,
and instead makes them in equal
parts emotional and melodic
without being too soft. Strong
songwriting and vocals comple-
ment the music perfectly.
Joshua has a six song CD out
on Immigrant Sun records and
have recently recorded a new EP
for the Doghouse label. Shift
took the stage to a rather sparse
crowd late in the evening. They
delivered a genuinely convinc- ·
ing performance for the crowd
at the Char.ce. As a band that
had been independent for the
better part of their seven years,
they seem to have made the tran-
sition into commercial rock suc-
cess well.
If
you are not familiar
with their music, Shift play a
style of music sometimes re-
ferred to as "post-hardcore".
They owe a lot of their sound to
Quicksand, one of the pioneers
of this genre. Their newer songs
lean more toward the MTV rock
of bands like Better Than Ezra,
but still keep a certain sincerity
not found in most mainstream
music. The highlights of their
set included their new single "I
Want To Be Rich" off of their
major-label debut CD "Get In",
and some older material from
their indie rock efforts, "Pathos"
and "Spacesuit." They played
the highly emotional "Sun-
flower" (probably their best
song) towards the end and
closed their set with the title
track from "Spacesuit". Al-
though they have a slightly
more aggressive sound than
most modem rock bands, Shift's
singer Josh keeps an inspiring
and soulful edge to his voice
that makes them easy to listen
to for anyone who appreciates
honest melodic rock. Although
not yet rock stars, Shift have the
potential· to permeate into Top
40 radio and billboard charts in
the coming months. Shift and
Joshua put on an extraordinary
performance considering that
only a couple hundred people
showed up for the show. Shift
recently shot a video for the
song "In Honor of Myself' from
their new CD. I recommend pick-
ing up both bands' CD's or
checking them out when they're
on tour. To learn more about
Shift, check out their website at
http//:www.shift.net
PECIA
UESTS,
DA
FX AND LIN
OLN!
ICKETS: $5.00
fo
tudents
10.00 for non-stu
ents
MAY 2, 1998 at Th
cCann Center
They Might Be
Gi~nts
-
-
~oming_ soon to Marist!
by Jll\iDZIEZ\'NSKI
following lyrics:
"Hello,
I'm Dr.
A&E Editor
Worm/
I
am not a real doctor/
I
am a
realwoiin:"
,
·
.
Big News! They Might Be Gi..'.
.
One of my favorite T.M.B.G
ants are going to grace us with
games was the
_
"Planet of the
their presence here
_
at Marist
_
.
·
Apes
_
Supersong." This song
College on May
2.
The cost for
·
involved the crowd iri
a
chant-
students
is
a mere $5, non-stu-
'
ing match which would deter-
dents $IO.Also joining T.M.B.G
.
mine who would emerge victo-
·
is Das EFXand perennial open-'
·
rious, a~ or people. I REALLY
ers Lincoln. As a Iittle
'.
preview
hope they play this tune at
for our special little treat at
Marist when they come.
.
Marist
I
decided to check out
Despite their goofy veneer,
They Might Be Giants at Toad's
·
T.M.B.G (playing
as
a fourpiece)
Place in New Haven last week.
I
are highly skilled musicians.
.
·
was not disappointed in the
Their musical apthude is as ab~
least!
.
·
stract and unique as theirJyr~
Lincoln
.
opened for They...
·
ics. They play around with time
and
·
got a good response from
·
signatures and rhythm changes
the crowd, especially for an
like a bee with a honey drenched
opening band. Butthere was no
.
infant (Sorry,
I
am just getting
comparing the fun~filled, goofy
into
the
T.M.B.G mode of meta-
energy that pervaded the club
phorical thinking).
as we eagerly awaited John and
After rocking out such clas~
John (the quintessential mem-
sics as "XTC vs. Adam Ant''.
_
..
bers of They Might Be Giants)
·
and "Twisting", T.M_,B.G left the
, to hit the stage. When they
ti-
stage. The fan's chants brought
nally came on, the crowd erupted
them back out to play" Ana Ng"
into a frenzy of bouncing and
and they closed the show with
dancing to the abstracttunes of
·
a conga line and "Dig My
this New York City based band.
Grave." All in all, a great
-
show!
Besides the normal crowd
·
I
highly recommend seeing
pleasers; such as "Particle
these guys when they come to
Man"; "Istanbul",
:
"Ja!JleS
_
K.
play atMcCann. You might also
Polk",
"Exquisite
.
Dead Guy",
want to pick up any of_ their fine
and "The Guitar'\ They ... intro-
albums, Lincoln, Flood, Apollo
duced a few new tricks
to
their
'
]8, JolmHenry, FactoryShow-
show.
A
newly written song room, and all the others remem-
called "Dr. W9rm''. features the
·
'
ber, that·
is
May
2.
'
,
S.GA
.
Executive
-·
Board· and Senate Joint Meeting
-
;·
·
:·
· ·
-
·
.
·
Wednesday April 29, 1998
·
· :
·
·
·
· ·
9:30p.m. in CabaretA&B
On
The
Agenda:
··
*
Natiop.~_Chaiter for Habitatfor Humanity
*
cniWMana:gement
_
_
.
_
_
_-
*
Introcbic~iori of Assistant Vice Presidents
*
Faculty
of
the Year
_.
_
*
Freshman Focus Group
_
Results
*
Student Survey Results
**This
meeting
is
open to
all
students ... Come Voice Your Opinion!**
S.G.A.
··
is
Looking~For Your Help!
Positions are still open for 1998-1999
*
Student Academic Council Divisional Representatives
for each major
*
Student Life Council Executive Board positions
*
Pubic Relations Committee members
*
Elections Commission members
If interested call
x.
2206
...:,_ This is
·
a great way to have fun, build your re-
sume, earn priority points, and make a difference
on campus!-
111
Annual
01111
al
2001 Barbecue
Sunday May 3, 1998
12:00p.m. until 3:00p.m.
On the Leo/Sheahan Hill
Food ... Entertainment. .. Fun !
**Free Frisbees and Tee-shirts**
•
·
•;
k~
ti~
:
4
.
t
fi~1i'
f
~6
~hct,
:
uh
·
¥[i
f
;l
i
i~i~Att~
. :
et(m~
~
¢Xpe,pen
_
<;e
:
~It
.
;
'\,'1:':::
/,·'.,
..
.
. ·
.
'
~
.....
,
.-
.
.
-
.
. :,
"
,•
,,
.,.
.
.
t\i
j~i
!
i~~
i~ets
ensorHs
i
creature
t:;.
<
>)
.. :;
-•··
~J.i"~rJ
i";
ON THE GREEN
9:00 p.m.
Food! Fun! Fear!- Don't Miss It!
***Sponsored
by S.G.A ***
/
--.
r
ScAw;;is
You;'opinio~
*
Fill
out
&Enter for a chance
to
win a $20 calling card
*
I
I
CLASS
OF:
(cirde ,;11e)
1998
1999 2000 200 I Graduate Student
I
1. Do you know who your
S.G.A
representatives are?
I
(circle one)
YES
NO
2. What is the
best
way to find out about activities/ events?
(circle mw)
1
The Circle
WMCR
MCTV
Posters
I
J.
What is ;::~i::ortan:t:~::~;::~k
1-5: J=n~~v~c;=lca
.
vtJ
_Security _Housing _Activities/Event,; _Academic Policy _Other__
I
4. What would you like to see
S.G.A
do more of? _ _ _ _ _ _
_
I
*
Cut out and return to S.G.A Office
by
April 28
*
I
MSC#(fi,r
award use
011M
Any Que.ttimi, ca/1.r
.
lfi99
L -
- · - -
-
-
-
-
,(
10
THE CIRCLE, April 23, 1998
Internships Available
On-Campus!
.
,
.
·; .. _'·.•
.··
... ··i, -_-
,
_.;
. : ·;
:_,
.
.• ..
..
Great resume builder and a great wav to
u~t
inside inlorniation about your own career path.
.
.
.
.
.
,.
'
.
.._,·
.
Serve as a student advisor in the areas of resume. writing,-· ·
-
·
'
.
interviewing, job-search skills, and career exploration.- Assist _
and advise students through One-to-one interactions_.a1:1d· · __ ;:,
__,
group workshop.sand programs. Act-as an effective listener
and referral agent. Assist with and p_resent career _
workshops. Assist in the daily operations of the
CCS,
and
with_ s·rie-cial events. Develop and itnpl~ment a professional
projectWhi~h will either serve stud~nts··or contribute to the
enhancement of the office.
C:om_e io t_he
Center for Career Services (DN-226)
or calf~xtension 3547.fpr,mo;e information.
·.
'
.
.
1
,_
THE CIRCLE, April
23,
1998
ff
Campus
by
JeffDahncke
The Stadium is falling down?
Well that was the case last
week
_
when a 500-pound steel
joint plummeted into the stands
of an empty Yankee Stadium,
causing the Bombers to miss
two games and play another in
the home of the rival Mets.
.
The thought that naturally
arose in the minds of many is
that George Steinnbrenner had
something to do with
it.
After
all, what better excuse to ask to
move out of the Bronx than "the
Stadium is
.
falling down."
While
it
is highly unlikely
·
George seriously did
_
ha\ie any-
thing to do with it, one thing is
for certain. The debate over the
.future of the Yankees in the
Bronx has been fueled.
Just
_
this week Mayor Rudolph
Guliani revealed his desire to
replace the
_
75-year old ballpark
with a new one, while at the same
time keeping it in the Bronx.
Another plan would see the
Yanks vacate the Bronx com-
pletely and invade Manhattan.
But while both plans have
undeniable advantages, and
both would result in increc;lible
stadiums along the lines of
Camden Yards and Jacobs Field,
Rudy and those who seek to
uproot Yankee Stadium seem to
be forgetting something,
.
They seem to be forgetting
cured,
I
hope it is safe to say
that the House that Ruth Built
will stand strong right where it
always has. I hope it is safe t_o
say Yankee Stadium will survive
another 75 years.
***********************
that
_
the Yanks already h
_
ave a
Moving away from the pos-
great stadium. A stadium that
sible good-bye to one of sport's
the greatest teams in baseball
greatest attractions, lets move
history have called home. A
on to the actual good-bye to
stadium that has served as a
another.
·
·
stage for legends like Ruth,
The NFL's all-time sack leader,
Gehrig, Dimaggio, and Mantle.
.
Green Bay's Reggie White, said
A stadium that still gives its fans
he will call it quits at the end of
goosebumps every time they
next season. After 17(5.5 sacks,
pass through the gate or visit
12 consecutive Pro-Bowls, and
hallowed Monument Park.
·
a Super Bowl ring, it is safe to
Sure the traffic is bad after the
say that the Minister of Defense
games. Sure the Bronx is not
·
will soon have a place in Can-
the
·
best of areas. But these are
ton.
no reasons to strip: baseball
.
of
.
The announcement comes a
·
its
greatest
landmark. These are
.
·
few weeks after he was widely
no reasons to
.
take away
criticized for making insensitive
baseball's Mecca.
comments in a speech to Wis-
When the dust settles and all
consiri lawmakers. This speech
of the nuts and bolts are
S!;!-
is the latest thing people remem-
i
UCONN grad to replace
::
Babineua as head
.
women's
basketball coach next year
byJEFFD~CKE
,
hardwood, both as a player and
hiring. "Marist is a gre
.
at insti-
StaffWrzter
.
,
.
.
_
.
on the sidelines ... A four year
.
·
tution where the
_
student-ath-
ber of White but it should not
be the only thing.
Sure he said some things he
should not have. But they do
not take away what he did on
the gridiron. Nor do they di-
minish who he is as a person.
He has been model citizen
throughout his career and the
NFL could only pray to have a
league full of Reggie White's.
He will be dearly missed by
the Packers, the league, and the
fans.
11
And now the top five from the
week that was:
I • Randy Moss - the steal of
the draft by the Vikings at num-
ber 21 overall.
2. New Jersey Nets - back in
the playoffs at last.
3. New York Yankees - after a
sluggish start, making their way
to the top of the American League
East.
4. Prince Naseem Hamed -
boxing's newest
star.
5. Any takers'?
arist Athletes of the Week
Male Athlete of the Week
tu art MacMillan
scored
seven goals, including the
I
00th of his
areer, in the men's lacrosse team's
i
9-12 win over Canisius.
Female Athlete of the Week
am Brown was named Metro Atlantic Athletic Confer
nee Playerof the week for her perfonnance in the women
'
s
acrosse team's 22
-
21 win over Howard.
What's on Tap?
Baseball
-
4/25 Home St. Peter's
4/26 Home Manhattan
4/28 Home Hofstra
Softball
noon
noon
3:30
Men's Lacrosse
4/25 Home Mt.
St.
Mary's
4/26 Home
St.
Joseph's
4/29 Away Quinnipiac
Women's Lacrosse
1:00
1:00
3:30
,,
.
.
_.
. /~' 7
''
"•·
starter arthe·U11iversity ofC<in
~ "·"'
letes· are coI!fJfiitted to ~t:ademic-~"
There is a n,e_w head coach of
.
necticut, she
_
was named Big-
as well as athletic excellence and
~/25
Home Niagra
·
the Marist w<>rrien's basketball
·
East Freshman°of-the-Year in
I am confident that w"ith some
~/26 Home Canisius
TBA
11:00
4/26 Home Fairfield
1:00
4/29 Home Manhattan
1:00
team.
1986 and is fifth and sixth on the
hard work we will build a sue-
4/28 Home St. John's
3:00
Kristin Lamb, who came to the
school's
•
all-time rebounding
.
.
cessful program in the years to
.
,
.
program last season as an as-
and scoring lists, respectively.
come
.
"
;
1
sistant under head man Ken
As the Huskies co-captain in
Hard work will definitely be
'.
faabineau, was riamed the head
-
.
both her junior and senior sea-
required following last years
5-
:'.
women's basketbail coach back
sons she led Uconn to a pair of 21 record. Lamb intends to play
•
on April 9 by Athletic Director
.
NGAA Tournament appear~
•
a little more up-tempo style of.
f
Tim Murray,
·'
·
ances and Big East Titles
'.
·
basketball. She expects a lot out
l
Murray said he .was enthusi-
Following her playing days
of the upperclassmen and will
it
astic about the aririouncemeht
-
·
·
she joined the coaching staff of look towards this year's
strong
<
''I
am very excited to introqu~e
her alma mater a~
.
an assistant
·
recruiting class, that she helped
-
Kristin Lamb as the Head
.
under head
inan
.
Geno
bring in, to getthe program back
.
Women's BasketballCoachhere
Auriemma. During her tenure
on a winning track.
·
at Marist," Murray said follow
:.
·
·
there,
.
she
.
helped the ~uskies
While she did not exactJy rule
ing the announcemellt.
;
·•~stin compile a 70-27 record, includ-
it out, Lamb said she is not ex-
has earn.ed
.
the reputation as all
.
ing
a
Final Four appearance in
pecting a Metro Atlantic Ath-
excellent re_cruiterwith trerrieri-
.
·
i99I.
letic Conference title in her first
.
dous work ethic ~d energY, and
Lamb then spent. three sea-
year as a head coach.
I am confident that she is the
.
:
sons as the· top as_sist~nt at
"We are going to start out
right person to lead ourworrien's
Duquense University before
small and work our way up," she
basketball program into the
·
ru-
·
deciding to
.
coine to
.the
Red
said of her goals for this sea-
ture."
.
Foxes in 1997.
.
son. "It's not going to be an
. _
•
Lamb
.
has definitely enjoyed
''.This is a dream come true for
unsuccessful year if we
_
don't
Tom's Trivia
Who was the last person to win the NBA
scoring
title
besides Mchael J<>rdan in a year in which Jordan played the
entire season?
·
Last week's answer - Dale Long of the Pittsburgh Pirates
shares the record of 8 consecutive games with a home
run along with Ken Griffey, Jr. and Don Mattingly .
her share ofsuq:ess
·
on .the
me," said the new coach of her
win the conference.''
-
.
.
----====================~
THE-
.-
amERY
WELCOMES
MARIS1!
$/
5
HoircuLf
$/
8
v~
• - •
pi.,,
2S¾offallcdlc,,.._,.
fWidl ManSI 1.0 I
t.,4,,,~~
-
...
ttt-lP<.ftt'"-"'
164
NOtmt
IIQ,,.D,
l'Ouel41Cltrslt c54.9l)9
,..,,._,,.,. r.w--•~,.,..,,,,.,
~
~lilJ'°"- ,__..,'"(
~,.....,,.tl"-"IO.l,._lfll
Senring
The
Mari
st Communif'f
Since 1918
..
•
·.
· STAT OFTHE WEEK
:JinlMcGowancurrentlyleads' '
··the
Mari.st
baseball team
with
a
.367
av~rage.
'
.'i
.
~
.
.
IPORTS
QUOTE. OFTH~ ·WEE~
''This is a dream come true for
me.'"
., J.{risten·1:,llll):b, .
• · on being named
Ile\1/WOriieri!s
basketball·head
l2·.
coach
. .·
.. · . . . . .
. . ...
. .. . · THE CIRCLE, April 23, 1998 ..... •·· . . .
. . . . . .. ·. . ·. . ..... ·.
.. . .·
·Baseball eX:perienCingniany
t'Yists
:'1.I1dturns. ·
•
b
RYANMARAZTI1
· pitche~ five iiniings_giv_irig ul? 6 Red. ~oxes
.
~gain .. as~umed ~e ad~ust .. to ~eJoss of the1i- ace
S(?phome>re, Phil Toscan? leads
' ' y
'StiiftWriter
~
' ; '
n1ns (4earned), ,on
SI'.(
h1tswhde
position" With a commandmg
re~1eyer, Enc:Beckeqvh~ left for
the; ~BI depa~tment. with 28,
·
·
strikii:ig o_ut two. Offensively,
14:-5 victory. Leading the way
personal_ reasons .. _This could
while alse> sco11ng 26 runs~
J~~ .
If the phrase "winds of _ ~atcherFredMaiiriquezwent2--
wasJr~shrnanC<>reyBorqwitz,
pose apr<>bleITI as the_seascm
Andr()s and_.Anthony Cervmi
,change" heeds more towards its
for-2 and Tafuto provided the
who seems to have settled into
progresses and.the pitchers be-
(A88 OBP, 32,R; 6SB) h~ve als~
irittjnsic value than itsHteral
only extra base hit with a double: • his ow.n aft~ra rocky start, by
come more fatigued, the'J,fod
been offensive b_oosts,b_atti.n~
meaning, the Marist baseball
In the second game; LeMoyne
pitching se.ven solid innings
,Po.xes will have
~o
find another
.324 a.nd .308 r~spec~1vely.
team should find something ·sta-
again scored early, thi_s time plat-
and giving up only, onemri. CO-
solid_ closer._ -Perhaps;junior Fr!!shmen, Kevin Wissner
tionary .to hold on to.
ing two in the second inning off captain, Jim McGowan put on.a
Jake Ketcham, who has recently - (.34(>B_A, 3,4R, 2HR, 20BB)and·
_ Afterjumping oufto ~11 im-
MarkCiccarelli.-Fromthenonit
clinicofh1sowribygoing5-for-
reiurnedfrom elbow problems
RyanBrady(,295BA,23R,20BB).
pressive 6~ 1 start in their first
was a pitcher's duel, as Ciccarelli
6 in the ·contest.
.
or Sean Lomas wiU fill the posi-
have filled in nicelyin the areas
· y·ear
,
in _the MAAC, the. Red
huded four hit ball over six in-
The Red Foxes then hosted a · tion. Ketcham's return has been
vacated by last year's seniors.
Foxes' seasonh.as begurifo
t#rn. ·
riings .w.llile striking out six. . weekend of double headers
shaky bul he should return to
Defensively, .. the Red Foxes
sharper than a Greg .Macldux
lJnfortunately, the Red Foxes
against Siena. Marist was swept
fonn and provide quality innings
have played soHd,,turning 21
bieakingball.Afterbeingswept
didnotpro:vide,Ciccar.elli, 6-1 in
inthefirstpair,5-4andJ4-5 with_ forCoachHamme~. _ . . .
twin killings with second
in Saturday's doubl~header, 8~2 . MAAC play, wjth any support
Doug _Connolly arid. Dean
So far, Marist's four starters,
basem.at1 Ben Shove involved i.n
and 2-0, at LeMoyne, the Red
offensively, g~therj,ng only t\Vo
Puchalski each taking a loss.
Connolly, Ciccarelli, Olore and
19: Shove's .976 fieldi~g per-
Foxes enter the second double
hits. _ Fred Manriquez led the
On Saturday, while the rest of Borowitz are a combined 17-8
cent:age(3 errors in 30games) is ·
· header of the weekend:on Sun-
way _again going l.,for-1 while
the wodd was a_t home prepar-. witha5.0l ERA. Ciccarelli leads
second to only catcher, Fred
.day,hopingtoimprove~eir9-6
Phil .Toscano:punched outthe -ing for,Easter, the Red Foxes
the win department with six,
Manriquez's, .982amongevery-
re_co~d in le:ague play.
·
other hit. · Etght hits over b.oth
bounced back by· sweeping the
opposed to one loss, as well as
day position players. Shortstop
In the fir~t gallJe of the double
games combjned is not a goo_d
second double header, 5-4 and
striking out 50 ·and completing
has been shaky at times with 16
header, LeMoyne got to sopho-
sign this far foto ,the season.
.4-1.
Kevin Olore and Mark
6 contests. Connolly is at4-3 in
errors between Tafuto and
more, KevinOJoreearly, by jump-
Defensively, .the Red Foxes
Ciccarelli notched victories be- · the MAAC with a team leading
Lomas, but along with Shove,
ing out to a 3-0 lead in the first
turned:.three double plays .and
hind their solid performances.
ERAjustabove three and is the ·they have·been key in getting
. inni11g. They continued to hit
committed four errors while al-
On April 14th,the Red Foxes
owner of the only Marist shut-
their pitchers out of a jam-when
· Olore as they scored one run in -lowing -seven stolen bases qn
hosted Hartford and were shut
out. Olore is 3-4 in 9 games and
they have to.
.
each of the next two inni~gs and
eight_.a~tempts.
out as Connolly was hit with an · leads the whiff department with
Although this year.'s -record
finally causing him to depart
af-
How has the rest of the sea-
8-0 loss. Then on Thursday, the
67-through 55 innings. Horowitz
may not shine as brightly as last
ter adding another in"the fifth.
son been? After.the great start,
Foxes beatHartford.away, 7-5,
is 4-3 w
.
i.th.a 638 ERA, one that
year's, only the final results will
Marist scored two runs in their
the Red.F9xes split a double
behind another solid perfor-
has been on the decline of late. . matter. To survive down the
· half of the fourth wtth RBrs
header at Rider, winning6-land. mance.~y;Borowitz (7IP 2R):
.· Up to this·pointinthe season,
ro~d, thl: _Red F,oxes must get
, from
Jeff Tafu to and S ~an f;illing 17-6, and then beat New
Sean Lomas left a memento; cour-
the Red Foxes. ar~. batting a com-
solid relief from the bullpen in
Lomas. That wo~ld be allthe
York _Tech at home, 5-4, on a· -tesy of~ed FC>Xba~~))all,as he
bined .285, while scoring 190
order to protect leads in the later
offense the Foxes could mat1age
game w.inning home_IllQ by.Jeff -jacked. one ofLthe,Bartford runs and banging out 69 extra
i_n11ii,.gs .. As stated before; they
as
.
:they .struggled ·agajnst Tafuto._ On i\pril 1,8th, ~eRed
·
scorebo'ard. • -.
·
. ':\ _, ·. . ·
_
basellits.,)iin:tv1¢Gowa_n leads _must_progressin timely pitch~
teMoyne's Ryan Victo_r',viho
Foxestravelecl.to,Al}liy, a.team
•.' ·,
ff
Sat1.1r.~_ay;~Jo~s.es
fo,
th~teamwit.ha'.367
.
batt_i11gAY~·
i111fandclutchhittingtoprepare
gave up two mns in six inniµgs:
qut to avengelast
yiar'~
th9r~
Lel\1oJTTe.wete notmoral killers
eiage':as weII as:.gathedng 8
th~.m
for,Jhe,dog 'fights thatHe
Olore (3-4in MAAC
p\ay)
ough whipp~11g. This year, the
eno~gii, i~e: te~m:.-~~ib
.
hadto
doubies·,
3
HR's and ,23 RBL
aheadfor,playoff positioning.
Lacrosseteafunets
first
JiOme··Win·oithe Season
. :· byP~~=~~~:\\:
~~~s~8ie0~ik~~~g~ii:Js;J~:.
fi~
1
~·
-
g~ii:'i~r~s~~~ni~
-
·
·.
.
·.
greatseas9n. What'fans did not
Mekovitz:who'chipp¢d'in-with
.Awi·;e'inan6~cesaid
theirt~~-:' •.
'
,takeinto consideration was the' 2 ·goaJs.
'The.
defense played
''suriof a team. is riot ho\\' 'tlley
difficult ~clieduleMarist hadto equaily as welhvith goalie
'pj
act·. in; victory,- rnther'
it
is how ' play.
·
~ncf
:th~· ..
amount_ of: talent. Wilso.n playing/a great . g'aipe.' . '
they respond· to defeat.,.· .· .
their opponents ppssessed
as
\\Tilson . r~cked
_
uff3{,s~yes.
jn
...
_
For the Mari st Lacrosse team,
well. .
.
:, ·,.
< . :
net anclthe ·rest of the defense,
this Jeasori has ,unfortunately
All that.weQt outthe back
·
l~cl by (i{eg, Ellis, Adam:
been ,.cme fiUecl with response_s,
cioor however,
when
Mari st·. Rabidea1.1; }()t!,:Padruco, Paul.
·
That_is .until last Sunda.y, "".hen '' faced ,_off. ag~instJ;anisius.
Sydlanski; im,d ;r<ri{Miller, al.:
.
the Red Foxes let not only their
~bowing gre~t't~aili:~l}emistry
lC>\Ved onlylZgoaJs..
.
"<
'
·opponeQt C~njsius know,,but
and
'
tremendous .defense,•the
'\Vit_hf<>u,r'$~Illes,'Jetfin the
~~-
rest ofthe MAAC-as well
-R~d .F~xes piayed-tli{ki11d of ~~ason;
tlie~
itpl~hty ,of time
· that_ t_he spring ~easonj(not
•
gru.ne fans had ~e11·waiting to
for the'.Red Foxes'to''fitiish the
overjustyet.
' ·_
see aJI se~sori, as they pulled
seasonstrohg.
As
ifloC>ks now,
, For th!! past few games, ques-
out a 19.-12win.: _ . · .. ·.· ... ·.. .
-
if
they continµ~ to playJi~e they
lions have been raised about the
-
The offens!ve oµslaught was · did on Sunday/ther~ is a:g<>od
performance of the lax team.
lead by ~eniors Chris Pistello,
chance they could finish with a
With so much talent and the
who had 4 go~ls ~d 4 assists,
6-8 r~cord; one that is. highly
good number of quality under-
Stu MacMUlian, who had 7
respectableconsideringthecali--
ber
·
orteams they.·hav~ played·
against.• -In other· words, the
nex't few,\Veeks would tie a great
titn6
to go _out and catch some
. exciting lacrosse.as well as cheer
··on the Red Foxes. -
51.7.1
51.7.2
51.7.3
51.7.4
51.7.5
51.7.6
51.7.7
51.7.8
51.7.9
51.7.10
51.7.11
51.7.12