The Circle, September 17, 1998.pdf
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 52 No. 1 - September 17, 1998
content
: Marist student$ spend their
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the student newspaper of.·Aarist College
VOLUME
#52 ISSUE# 1
·WELCOME BACK EVERYONE!!!·
. SEPTEMBER 17.1998
SteelMill{Pro~ides new home
Library offers addedser{iices
to
ease _str~ss
of
temp
loca:(io..n
• f
-'·'
'
. . .
'
- · . _·• ,-,~. :-:·· - -.•
by
BEN AGOFS.
sands. of periodkals for free ..
News·Editor
"This is the kind of things
a
lot of libraries are doing," he
Half a:million dollars later,
said ofMarist's push for art
all-
Marist has turned an old. steel
digital library.
He said since
plant
mill
i~to thi new library.
adopting the new program, the
The total_costs of renovating
library has been able to expand
the old mill came to $545,000, but · its list of periodicals from I ,200.
not all that money went to paint
to 4,800.
.
and building supplies. The col- •
Access to all periodicals via
Iege pumped some into making
ProQuest Direct will be offered
reference materials and research
at
least during the library tran-
easier
for
students.
sition period, and .the.re will _be
Forinstance, in the past, sN:-
no more copying fee's, l>ut.only;
dents had to pay 25: _cents
a .
for on:.:camp~s stu_aerits ·using
.. ;.page. to .. print .off.,µJ_i!, Iil:>rary:'.$ ,,,.Marist: s
,In
tem.~t c:oilp~c:Ji()n, ..
digit~} periodic:~! program, ·. Ben,mt~tisf1~cl.,.
<
·
.,\·•·· :.
J')•· _
--ProQuest/ .1'ut since· -moving·
· · Commufors\vith
the
Internet
across to the steel plant mill, the
in their homes will not be able
library now. offers ProQuest Di-
to use the new.
·
program. . ... ··• . . .
_ _
_
_
_
. .
_
.
.
_ _ _ _ :
_
_ _ _
_
_
_ _ _
.
C~R:1C. __ rr101,~J~r\:nly
Smi_ll~
T11e••11brarymakes ..
.
the
best
of.the •shortage of
sp11ce bytstacklng•·books ·and
rect.
.
.
. . . ..
· The Hbrary has also created a
per.lodlcals eight s.hel~es. high.
·
·
·
· ·
·
. Dennis Benamati, assistant Ii-
0
hosting program to ease the .
braiy dire~te>r, ~aid. ProQuest
transition.
Thursday 3to9
·
p.m. a11d
0
is a
and they don't krioW.WDere
need help ..
,--.·
.
chance
for
students to become
things are anymore,U she said,
':The .student is supposed to
_
l)i~(!~fgi_ves stud,ents,who.h_ave
·ElenaFik,hatina, library pul?-
the·Jhternet Jn their rooms the
lie services coordinator, said the
cap
0
abBity of accessing · tho~-
program run~ S~nday through
aquatinted with the library's
The backbone.of the program
show. the library user where the
temporary facilities.
. .
.
is
student worke,:s who ~ct as
collectionsi are located,"
"Students come to the library
gu•ides to .anyone who may
...
pl~a.\:eseeLIBRA.RY,pg,
3 ·
Cl:"()~ing
.
.
solution
J>raise,.problenis for
·we.st:Ceclar·bousing
"
.
·.,-
·.
~
---·:•
S<iught
by
CHRIS
GROGAN
· · Staff Writer ·
Ffrst reactions
to
the
·
new
West Cedar. townhouses· are
b y ~ ~ O
being heard fro,m students liv~
·
. ing there, and not all are posi.:
After weeks of speeding traf-:-
. tive.
fie, congested intersections and
Students' are encouraged to use the
c~:ar:~ik~m:i
Many students did notexpect
an. estimated.· 500 ·. students ..
the ·1ntersectlona· at .Marlst's Main. and. South gates.
to move into buildi_ngs that were
crossing ~oute 9 everyday,
tlte . . . . ·
.
; .· .·.
· .. · •• .· . ·
·
·
still under construction.
Department of Tran~po.r.t_ation ·ac~orpingTimMassie,Marist's ·. located.
;
· ·
. SeniorMikeMilbysaidheex-
has agreed there isaproblem. . chief relations officer, because
:''Stµdeilts.have ni~y things . pected that atleast the apart-
Maris_t Ptesid~nt D¢n~is
they
would
be
too costly.:
going. on," she said. "One of men~would be cleaned before
Murray, Dean of Student Affairs
According. to the DOT; a
them is getting places on time.
everyone arrived ..
Ger~rd Cox and Student Body
cr~ssing. signal between the
It's human nature i:O take ·the
'There was dust, plaster, and
· President. Colleen_ M~Culloch,
temporary library and _the West
quickest. path .. ·That quickest
even clothing materials left be-
met w.ith · representatives from
Cedar apartments would slow
path can be made safe by the
hind by the construction work-
the state Department of Trans-
traffic.
_
addition
of
a crosswalk and a
ers," he said.
''They didn't
portation (DOT) last Friday.
· Regional Traffic Engineer, Bill
light between West Cedar and · do a good job clianing up be-
The DOT toured the area and,
FitzPatrick said the DOT is not
the library."
fore the residents moved in."
according to ~urray, is willing
endorsing the
·
mid-point cross-
The SGA will be promoting a
Junior Jen Armstrong, another
to cooperate with the college.
ing signal·option.
safety campaign for students . resident of Wesi Cedar had the
''They acknowledge that there
· ''The students are not utiliz-
which will urge people to use
same complaint. ·
is a problem_," he said. ''They
ing the pedestrian crossing ar-
the crosswalks, be aware of traf-
"There was a Jot of dust from
agreed that m the n~xt °!?nth
eas now," FitzPatrick said.
fie and adhere to th.e crossing
all the dirt being moved around
we will work on solutions.
. The Student Government As-
signals.
and the rooms smelled like
Some solutions include con-
sociation passed a bill Sept. 9
Massie, said the administra-
paint," she said.
structing a tunnel beneath
supporting the crosswalk solu-
tion and staff support the SGA's
Sarah English, director of the
Route 9, joining the two sides
tion.
safety campaign.
.
Housing and_ Residential Life
of campus with an overpass, or
Student Body President, Col-
"We're asking the students to
office, saidf she expected the
creating another traffic light and
teen McCulloch said students
please· be careful and cross at
project would be completed by
crosswalk. The tunnel and over-
do not use the crosswalks be-
the crosswalks," he said.
the time students arrived.
pass options are not feasible
cause they are not conveniently
· "We were given a date auhe
beginning of the summer by the
contractor for. when the project
·
was . to. be done, and . that was
Aug. 3/' she said. ·
·
That projection had to be
modified, and by the middle of
August,the'contractors guar-
anteed an buildings except for
the "O" block would be com-
pleted by Aug. 30'.
...._ "We were concerned that the
''.O" building wouldn't be ready,
... please see
HOUSES,
pg.
3
·1NSIDE
TODAY:
Partly Cloudy
hi:76
lo:54
Community ................. 2
Features ..................... 5
A&E ........................ 7
0 ..
.
9
p1n1on ..................... .
Sports ........................ 12
:
PAGE2
September
.18-20-
Hellenic
Festival
(914-452-5990) Hel-
lenic Center Grounds, 24 Park
Place, Poughkeepsie. Greek
food and pastries, music and en-
tertainment, crafts, children's
events, games of chance, DJ,
dancing.
What solution
dO
you thirik woulti stop
people from dangerously.croSsing Route 9?
· Fri. & Sat. llam-llpm. ,Sun.
llam-Spm.
September
19-20-
Hudson
River Arts Fetival.
Waryas
P a r k .,
w
a t e r f r o n t ,
Poughkeepsie and Riverfront
Park, Beacon.
Two days
_
of
entertainment, various types of
food, arts/crafts and kid's
shows. Programs include Latin,
Irish, Kle.zmer and gospel• mu-
sic, Greek & East Indian, and
African dance and drumming.
Presentations, demonstrations
and workshops in crafts from
various tradition, as well as tra-
ditional cultural sporting
events.
10am-4pm. 473-4ART
Jacki¢ Fitzpatrick
Sophomore_
'The time length could be
longer for crossing the street.
They also could have a shuttle
system to go to West Cedar
-Street.'.'
Jessica Duggan .
Freshman
· "There could be a crossing
guardto wear a reflector to
. help students cross Route 9. "
Aatori Frechette
Freshman
'!
It wouid b~ benefi~ial
t~·bu1li :
'l
a
catwalk. i/wouid/4~if/d
!q~.
i
J
They· also could develop
a . :
longer period at the light."
September
20- The Center For
Curatorial Studies At Bard C.ol~
lege: Openingofthreenewex-
hibitions devoted
to
Franz
Kafka, the new millenium, and a
collection of works on paper by
one of the leaders ofltaly's Arte
Povera movement. The mu-
seum opens
Sept.
20 with a re~
ception from
1:00-4:00 pm and
runs through
Dec.
18. The mu-
seum wil be open
Wednesday
through Sunday
from
1:00-
5:00 pm. For information, call
S~curi(y,Brit!f~.--
·
---'---------'-
____
-
·_W
____
e _ ·
_e_k_e_n
___ d_W_·._.
_:_e_-_a_t
___
h_:_e_r
__ . ,_.· ---- •
A patrol through the Student maj~r dd111~ges have been re~
Center at 2 p:m., Aug. 31 uncov- . · ported except for some. melted ·
ered a·box of 42.sandwiches _floortiles.
914-758-7598.
.
sunny
hi:
72
lo: 46
sunny
hi:
67
lo:
47-
which the·Marist Band had left
behind. The sandwiches were
destroyed due to health con-
cerns.
Security broke up a party and
· confiscated a keg· in West Ce-
dar Friday, Sept. 4. ·
:·,<;
Source: http://wwl~:weather.com (The ·weather Cha1111el)
Multiple fire alarms have been
activated on the North End be-
cause. of cooking mishaps.
Gartland E and G have been the ·
most frequent, andWest Cedar.
and Talmadge Court have re-
ported small cooking fires. No
A Sheaha.n .re~ident-slipped,
while walking across
th<::.
cam-
pus gre(;!h Sunday, Sept.
6:
The ·
student was later. taken to St
Ftari_cis and· diagnosel with a
broke11n.b. Toe·studerit wasre~
leased after observation.
The Circle
is offering to campus
clubs the opportunity to participate
in our
"Club Bulletin Board."
This
is a free service for you, on a weekly
basis to notify your club members and
the entire Marist community of your ·
upcoming events and me~tings.
If.you would like-to post something
on our board, please leave .an. enve-
lope in our mailbox in
SC 369.
Questions? Call Matt
@
x2429.
Attention
c
~ommun1cation Majors
*An
'
nouncing New Prerequisite and credit change·
. in 'the communication Internship Program beginning FALL 1999
o Students must take the prerequisite I -credit course - CRDV l 00N
Employment Practicum before they do an internship
o The total number of internship credits
will
change to 14
THIS CHANGE APPLIES TO ALL STUDENTS WHO ENROLL IN A
COMMUNICATION INTERNSHIP FOR FALL 1999 OR AFTER.
· For
more infonnation, ,isit Communication Internship Director Gerry
McNulty at LT226, Call the office at x3655 or email:
gcrald.mcnulty@marist edu
MODELS WllNTED
.
.
Looking for Marist students to model for tne 13th Annual
Silyer
Needle Fashion
Show and Awards on Thursday, April 29,: 1999 ..
'
.
Requirements: Height 5'9"
· Weight proportioned to height
Size 6-8
Only
TYROUTS ARE WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1411
a.m.
IN THE NELLIE GOLLETTI THEATER
INFORMATION-EXTENSION 2124
·
.
-
-
.
.
. continued from
pg.
1
~-
so we contacted those planning
·
to live
in
that building and of-
fered them options to live else-
where just in case it was not
.
ready'.
In
the erid the building
ended up being completed the
night of August
29,"
English
said.·
·
Tom Daly, director of physical
plant
,
who oversaw the entire
·
project, said he felt everyone in-
volved with tile project worked
hard to get it
_
dorie on time. He
.
said the major construction was
finished "literally an hour before
students mov.ed in."
Mnrist College Libr-.ary Services
in
Beck
Place:
We'll help you save time and steps.
--
:
1HE(H]E
.
N
·
·
ews
'
'
Ground was broken for the
project on February 26 of this
year, which meant that we were
under an aggressive schedule
to complete it on time," Daly
said. "The majority of construc-
tion was completed before stu-
dents moved in
.
The entire
project, including gr
a
ss planted,
will be completed within the next
two weeks
:
'
.
'
Residents of West Cedar had
.
other complaints
a
s well.
Construction n
·
oise woke
many up during the first week
living there
,
including senior
Rachel Ammons.
''There was a lot of noi
s
e from
machines and workers at around
7
a
.
m." she said.
Many students were
dis-
m~yed at the fact that they did
not have Internet connection
until Sept. I 1, two weeks after
they arrived.
Residents also complained
that they rarely had hot water.
~
The Housing Office reacted to
this complaint by contacting
maintenance that turned up the
water boiler temp
e
rature from
200
degrees to
210
degrees
.
After the boiler was turned up,
there were no more complaints
regarding Water, according to
English.
"We (Housing) try to act as
PAGE3
an ally to the students," English
said. "The night before stu-
dents were to move in
,
we real-
ized that there were no shower
curtains, so we ran out and pur-
chased shower curtains for all
bathrooms in the West Cedar
townhouses
.
"
.
Housing listened to student in-
put and responded accordingly,
English said
.
"We purchased new furniture
including adjustable beds that
allow students to make them
higher
,
or lower as needed,
which is especially helpful when
bunking the beds," she said.
"We used student feedback to
buy furniture that was really
flexible t6 residents' needs."
While
the
library is at
its temporary
site
on
Beck Place, Marist
students,
staff
,
and fuculty
are imitcd
to
take
advantage
of
some additional and unique
services
we
are
offering:
WELCOME STUDENTS
.
.
:
-
.
.
.
.
.
.
Staning Monday
;
September 14
,
satellite referem;es services
\\'ill
be
pro..,ided
in the
Donne
.
Uy
HaUComputer Lab. A n:ferencc librarian
will
be
there from 3:00pm
until
·
6
:
00pm Monday
through Thursday
.
The
librarians'
prirnaiy
function
will
be
to
answer
questions, to help you
in
ident~g
sources.
and
developing
research
strategics
before
you
come
to
the
Beck Place
Library.
Refere~e
assistance may
be
needed in son~ cases.
and
is
available until midnight Sunday
through
Thursday; 8 am
to
4:30pm Friday, and 11 run to 8 pm
on
Saturday
at
the
Beck
·
Place site.
Student Hosts will be available between 3:00pm
and
9:00 pm, Sunday through Thursday.
They will not do your research for you. but they
~ill
give you~ t_our o_f
lhc
building
and
services, help you find a book. etc.
The
Hosts
will also
be
asststmg \,.1th backed·
up
photocopiers, printers in need of paper, etc;
Just
look for
the
name tags.
Please keep in mind
that
we
have
pro..,ided
access
to a ~e number of ~11
text
periodicals
and databases throucll our web page at http://wv,-'\v.manst.edu/1.11>rary (click on
"Electronic Periodic~ls and
fndc.xes
"
).
Such
sources
are a\'ailable to. the entire
Marist
community
,ia
any computer connected to
the
network, and arc a,mlable 24 bou~ a
day .
.
Please remember to take responsibility for your safety when coming
to
the
Library. Cross
at the intersection and
with
the
traffic lights.
We
wi-.h
you a producln>e
and successful school
year,
The
Marist
College
Library Staff
Marist
Foxnet
Student
Telephone (STS),
the most
cost effective
·
way to place long distance calls from your residence telephone.
FOXNET STS
is
CHEAPER
than.....
.
•Calling cards
-Prepaid cards
-Personal
800 Service
-All
Operator
Handled
Calls
And
REMEMBER.
..
you
will continue to receive a
10% DISCOUNT
on your
total
bill.
ALSO
this year, your cost
will
be
REDUCED
an
ADDITIONAL
3.5%,
'!-,vith
the
elimination
of the federal excise tax.
Come
see us when you arrive on
campus, if
you
have any questions on the
telephone selVice. We're in
Donnelly 241.
FOXNET STS STAFF
'
/
SEPTEMBER 17, 1998
F
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Students spend
summer
atl)isl].ey
by
JENNIFERMATARAZW
Staffiyriter
While most college students
spent their summers locked up
in a·crnmped office filing papers,
a few students had the unique
opportunity to intern in one of
the happiest places in America,
Disney World.
Of course spending the entire
summer with Mickey and the
rest of the gang is not the daily
grind, but it beats busing tables
on the weekends. We all have
the inner desire to be
a
kid again
and seven Marist • students did
just that. Afte~ all,cwhat
·a
better
place to fulfill this dream than
Disney World.
.
Desmond Murray, assistant
director of field experience at
career services, participated in
the recruitment. c:if these stu-
. dents. The State University at
Photo courtesy. of Kevin Lundy
New Paltz was chosen
ai
the
Senior Kevin Lundy Interned at Disney World during the summer. Lundy worked
host for many of the .colleges
at Blizzard Beach, one of the water parks on the Disney World property.
located ,in the Mid:-Hud~on.Val- ·
·
leyarea. RecruitersfromDisney
demiccreditorfornoncredit. He
Marist College representative
chology and special education
presented the internship and
said all of the students were
for Disney. His role is to stay in
major, said her experience work-
summer job packagt!, and from
p_aid.
contact with Disney and to as-
ing at Disney was like.
a:
dream.
there intervie~s wer(set up.
"Although students had to
sist in recruiting more Marist
come true.
"Tomy sui-prise;:many of the
incur thei_r own tra".el expenses,
students
·
. to participate in the
'.'I worked at the Magic King-
students who wendnterviewed
the students werepajd a salaryt
internship program.
<lorn . at the 'Barnstormer,
1
received job offers
to
pruticipate
he said.
. .
"I've always wanted to work
Gooffs ride in FantasyLand/
· in the Disney program? he said.
A unique aspect of the Disney
for Disney," he said. "Now,
I ·
Sommers said.
"I
was an atµ-ac-
At least 16 stude11ts received · internship programis thatthey
am the liaison between Marist
tion hostess."
.
"
job offers and of those 16, seven
accept studentsinio the pro-
and Disney."
ClaudiaDiaz,sophomoreinter-
students actually went. ·
gram at the freshman leveL
Lundy said he worked at Bliz-
national business major said her
Murray said consi~ering that · "This is a ~ood e·xperience for
zard Beach, one the water parks
experience was a positive one.
Disney is a Fortune
500
com~
students to be away from home,
on the Disney property..
"It was iny first time iriDisney
pany, it is something that is-very
to learn new cultures, and, once
"I was a park gr,eeter," he said.
World," she said. ·
"I.
enjoyed
good to have on a resume..
.the stude.nts areth,ere,theycan
"I
worked at one of the en-
beingawayfromhomeanddeal-
"Our students had a tremen-
network and see what other op-,
trances and greeted the guests
ingwit4 problem,s on my own."
dous o·pportunity by being
portunities a.re available to
as they came in, handed out
Diaiworked in the Magic
there, meeting with other college
them," he said.
,
< ·.
maps and just made them
Kingdom selling
·
personalized
students and networking wfth
Students arrived at Florida.on · happy."
· st011es · at Disney's Wal.k
large universities around the June
2
and their last day was
on -··.
Lundy said he also worked at · Around thecW'orld.
country," he said. -.
Aug. 23.
· .
. . .
guest relations, tickets and fi-
;'People' can; buy ~tones and ·
Murray said students could
Kevin Lundy, senior political
nances.
~ritetheir names and birthdays
opt to do the program foraca-
s~ience major, became the
Jennifer Sommers, seniorpsy-
onJhem_," she said.
·
· Di~ s~i.ci s~e found it very in:.
. te.resting how
<1
big industry like
Disney runs itself. . . .
.
, ...
C •, . •
"I was able
fo
look at this from
behind the scenes,'' she sa.id.
These students put in· about.
40
hours a week with, only .two
days off .. All. the students re-
.
ceiye9 free a_dmis_sion toall of
the Disney . theme and water·
parks as wen· as . discounts to
various places.
.
'.fhe living arrangements ac-
cording to Sommers, are similar
to the Marist lifestyle.
•.•we stayed in Vista V/ay, right
on the Disney property," she
said;
"It
reminded me of the
Gartland setup:·
All
of the col-
Ie.ge, studerits • stay~d here."
Diaz said some days· were. not.
easy.
.
.
..
"As with any job, some people
are often hard to deal with," she
said .. •~We alwayshad to smile
and keep everyone happy."
• Lundy said living in Disney
was like living in· a fantasy
world.
: "The months spent at Disney
were the greatest three months
ofmy life,''. he said, ..
.
. Sommers said the Dis11ey in-
ternship prngram is a great
learning, working and living
ex-
perience .. ·. .
.
...... .... , .•.. ·
''I made.friends frorri·an over
.the country and the worid," she
said. "I knowthat we;ll stay in
touch arid always have 'this in
common." .
.
Murray said he encourages
students to attend
a.
presenta-
tion on the program: .
. .
Ifinteming with Goofy and the
pack interests you; contact the
Centerfor.CareerServices: They
have
the
information for the next
presentation,Jvqichwill be held
at SUNYAlbany on Oct. 15 at
7p:m. for the Sprjng packiige.
Fallmeansnewbeginningsforfreshf"aces.
Worfa
Jamous
Freshmen
artd
transfer students
exp~rience life at
Marist College·
by
EMILYKUCHARCZYK> ..
Features Editor ..
Cindy Butcher and Catherine
Hurlbut are happy because they
survived their first two weeks
at Marist still smiling.
· Only this time, the smiles were
not nervous.
Butcher, a junior transfer from
Lynbrook, NY and Hurlbut a
freshman from Roxbur,y, CT, are
experiencing living at college
for the first time. According to.
the Admissions Office about
176 transfer students and 855
freshmen started off the fall I 998
semester.
Butcher, an undecided major, ·
said she was a little nervou·s not
knowingwhattoexpect.
"I
didn't expect
""ltwashaidnotknowingany-
that people would
one, but I II1et a lot of people
and
.
theymade me feel more
be as nice as they
comfortable/' she said. "I didn't
d h l
t
expectthatpeople WOL!.ld be as.
are an.
e rp me
OU
niceastheyareandhelpmeout
with everything
with everything and show me
and show
me
around and take me out."
Hurlbut,aps·ychologyspecial
around and take
education major, said she had
me out,."
said'
mixed feelings about coming to ·
school.
.
Butcher.
"The week before I left I was
so excited, I just wanted to
leave," she said, "but the last
night I was home I could not go
to sleep at all and in the morn-
ing I had __ a stomachache and I
was nervous, but I found out it
was not.really that bad."
Hurlbut said she enjoys her
classes and the social life, but
is finding it difficult to fill up her
day with things to do.
"The classes are great and I
arn going to join some clubs and
there seems to
be
a lot of school
spirit, but I never expecte9 to
have this much free time," she
said.
Classes at Marist, according
to Butcher who transferred from
Nassau Community College,
NY, are very different.
'.'The classes at Marist are
a
: lot harder, a lot more wotk,,,she
. said. ''.Also, people here seem
. to take school work more seri-
ously.''
Butcher, who hopes to make
the Dean's list, said she has
learned a lot about herself so far.
''I thought it would be a lot
h,arder for me to st.µt something
new, to get up and leave and go
to school and not
be
so close to
my family," she said. "I thought
I would not be able to deal with
it
as
well
as
I am and I am really
happy that I can be okay with
that."
Hurlbut said she has already
learned that the days seem like
they go by too fast.
"In high school I was like aJJ I
want-to do is go to college," she
said, "and now I kind of wish I
was still back in high school
because I want not to always
rush things.''
Psychic·
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over
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11-IEOIOE.
SEPTEMBER 17, 1998
Features
PAGES
S~arching
tile
Sites
byEMILYKUCHARCZVK
1
Features· Editor
The Internet is.becoming.more
and _more popular. It seems ev-
erybody has a web-site. Some .
sites are really informative and
fun while others are just a waste
of time to even look at. · This
column
will
look at the sites that
are informative and fun.
How many times have you sat
in class and the professor starts
talking about some current
event in the world and you have
know idea what he or she is talk-
ing about? Well, a quick way to
access current eventsinforma-
tion is getting on on·e • of the
news web-sites. CNN, ABC,
and The New York Times all have
web~sites. Many ·home.town
television stations and newspa-
pers have web-sites as well.
The news web-sites are usu-
ally updated often with the ·lat-
est news and are fairly quick to
·
contact. The stories are easy to
follow and the photos and
graphics are good .. Also, at .the
e.nd of the stories there are links
. to other sites that one cari check
to get more information.
The addresses for a few of the
major news· sites are
http://
.w w w . c n n . c o m, http : I I
. www.abcnews.com, and
http:/
lwww.nytimes.com.
If
you have any suggestions
for this column, or: would like
to write a c·olumn, contact
Emily at X 2429 or e"mail HZAL.
. Emily's
Recipe of the Week
· Pineapple Beef
3/4 lb:· beef top round steak
8
oz. can pineapple slices
2
tbsp. water
I tbsp. soy sauce
I
~bsp. brown sugar
1/8 - 1/4
tsp. crushed red pepper
4
green onions. chopped
I
tbsp. cornstarch
Medium tomato cut into wedges
6
oz. Package frozen pea pods. thawed
Cut meat into strips. Drain pineapple. reserve juice. Cut pineapple
slices into quarters.
In
bowl stir together juice. water. soy sauce .
brown sugar, and red pepper. Add meat: stir till coated. Cover and
marinate meat at room temperature for
15
min .. drain reserve mari-
nade.· Stir-fry meat and onions until cooked. Stir cornstarch into
marinade and then add to meat. Cook and stir until thick and
- bubbly. Add tomato, pea pods. and pineapple. Cook till heated
through. Serve over rice. Makes
4
servings.
Horosco-pes
ARIES:
This
morning yo_u could
say something to a
loved one that you
didn't quite expect,
but you sincerely feel.
Although you're a
very outspoken per-
son in many regards,
when it comes to emo-
tional stuff; you can
.get tongue ded.
- .. T
A.°t1
R:lJ
-
S:
.
Completion. is the
dominant theme again
today. Action is re-
quired, and you'
II
have to make several
good-sized decisions,
too.
Heed
a
roommate's advice,
but don't get pushed
into doing something
. you're not going to
like later.
[ii]
~E,~!~.r;~i:
~
to change about your
domestic environ-
. ment, and guess
what? You can do it!
It
doesn't matter if
you've never done it
before. You can learn.
CANCER:
Fin-
ish up old business
today . .
Don't start
anything new. Gather
money that's been
promised rather than
making or getting any
new promises.
LEO:
You should
be getting pretty used
to this routine by now.
You've been in it for
three days. Although
you're getting lots of
attention and the spot-
light_ is definitely
· aimed in your direc-
tion, your motivation
has to be to take care
of other people or you
won't really succeed.
whole agenda for the
.~VIRGO:
The
•
~
day involv~s finishing·
old business. That has
been a theme for the
last couple days, but
now t~ere's n
'
o turning
back.
-
·
~ ·
·
. 'LIBRA:· The·
n
Moon is'inLeo again, .
. but it's void. That
.
· means it's made all the
aspects it's going to
make before it goes
into_ Virgo tomorrow.
When the Moon is
void of course, we
usually try not to start
new activities.
SCORPIO:
Leo.
people in your life
might be feeHng a little
feisty. Mars, of course,
would get them to do
things that they've
been thinking about,
· but-have been resist-
ing, or have been too
afraid to try.
SAGIT-
TARIUS:
Today
your burning curiosity
could lead you to try
something you never
considered before. •
Since that's a rarity,
you should be in for
an interesting day.
CAPRI-
CORN:
Money is
again the focal point
today,
especially
money you share with
other people. That in-
~l"W
York Srock Euhangc
Com1muy
\\;ill
Pav )." ou Immediate Cash Income
And
Lo;1g-Tcn11 Residual Income
k3raduatc & Undergraduate
StmkntJ;;
Needed
Full Trnining & Support Provilkd
Call For Recorded Preview
1(888)-234-1950
~xt.
652:J
eludes money you owe
to other people.
If
you
can figure out your
checkbook now and
pay your bills early,
you'll
be money
ahead.
AQUARIUS:
If
you push a partner re-
ally hard today - intel-
lectuaHy, that is - you
can· get 'what you
~
-;· \va~t:
Now,.that's· kind
.of an interesting situa-
tion to find yourself in.
Application deadline
for spring program:
Octi>bel" 15
I·
. For more information
and applications:
Ma:rist College
Office of
International
Education
Student Center
Room368
Tel:
914
575-3330
E-mail:
intcrnational@marist.edu
World Wide \Vcb:
www.
marist.cdu/intcrnational
PISCES:
Racing
around
again, trying to do
more than can possi-
bly be done. That"s
the game, and if you
think of it as a game,
it'll be a lot more fun.
Distinctive programs that
combine internships in most
majorfields with course ·.-vork at
host institutions.
Sydney, AUSTRALIA
Leeds, ENGLAND
Quito,
ECUADOR
Floren.ce, IT ALY
Dublin, IRELAND
Monterrey ,MEXICO
Moscow, RUSSIA
MADRID,
SPAIN
WEEKLY-WORDS,OFWISDOM.
"
''Happiness !s
good
4e.alt}l.
andabad•·
memory.:''
- Ingrid
!Jergman (
1917-1982) -
Editor.
Years ago there was
a
popular TV show entitled; ''I've Got A Secret,'' :in, which ' ·
celebrity panelists tried to discover a contestant's "secret."·
·· ' ·'
..
; For a long time now an academic version of this show has been performed at
· Marist; with faculty-and staff as conte~tants and students as panelists. we· have
a:
secret that you have to discover!! 'And that secretHfcontained
in
the answer to the
:
question; "What is'-the structure and function of the Marist Core/Liberal Studies
Program?"
.
,
,,·.
In an ~qitorial
in
last semester's' Circle, the editor was· highly critical
Qf
the Core/LS .
program, unwittingly revealing that _even after four years atMarist she.had not
uncovered the "secret." Unfortunately·she is not alone,: since practically every
graduating senior I query admi~ to riot. knowing the "secrer'-"- which, by the way,
. the faculty and adm~nistratfon fook two ye:ars to develop and twenty years to refine.
.
.
. ' Why should-any student
try
to discover the "secret''? The bestreasons I can give
._
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ . are that the "secret" wiirprovide meaning" and significance.to core/liberal studies
~anda Bradley ·
Editor-in-chief
Ben Agoes
News Editor-
Patrick Whittle
Arts & Entenainment
TaraQuinn
Opinion Editor
Joe Scotto
Photography Editor
Mattltew CoUJ)lbes
M_anaging Editor
Emily
Kucharczyk
Features Editor
ThoinasRyan
Sports Editor
Toni Constantino
Business Manager
G. Modele Clarke
Faculty Advisor
The Circle
is the student newspaper of Marist College, Poughkeepsie, NY.
Issues are published every Thursday.
We welcome letters to the editor, club announcements and story ideas.
The Circle staff can be reached at 575-3000 x2429 or by email at
HZAL.
courses, make learning easier and more ~nj9yable; and contribute to professional
and personal success. The pa~ to the "~lysian Fields," perhaps! ' · -
·
•
My challenge then, to an·students at Marist, is simply "'!Yhat's o~r secret?"
, Edward
J
O'Keefe
Professor
of
.Psychology
·
WHAT DO YOU THINK?
Do you think the charges against President Clinton
justify impeachment?
Call
(x2429),
write, or look for our pollers this week
as we ask the Marist campus this question.
We want to hear from you!! -
**Deadlines for submissions in. the next
Circle
coming out Thurs. Sept. 24 are Fri.,
-
Sept. 18.
**
SEl'TEMBER17,1998
a
.
·)•
13
cl
---.---.---.--~----------------~
PAGE7
Waiting
for good
·
d_oy
_
gh
~.
.
.
,
.
.
.
.
.
.
'
.
..
.
.
-•
Once again I spent my.break
ti ties
-
suth as
·
"Everything
I
-
;
selves diff~rentorexceptional.
7. College is very worth it. Make
summer job can
-
be difficult.
pouring coffee,
.
smiling, and
•
-
Need to Know I Learned in a
(r
prefe(
.
working with the
·
the most of it and have fun.
Waitressing gave me some help-
'Yearing a skirt so short that had
.
i..aundroinat;'>i
wiil
not w:aste
fonrter.)
·
ful i()sight Yes, I sound like
Mayor Guiliani passed by, he
.
my time and finish what coulc(
·
-
~
.,
8. There are so many wonderful
quite
the
pseudo-deep
probably would have
·
contem-
•
.
have been my take on this ad_.
· -
3.
·
Always
"
help others. Even if things-:
;
try not, to lose
sight
of cheese ball. ,il~ost like
·
a tossed
plated shutting
-,
down the mid-
_
·
_
vice boo
_
k trend.
_
.
one is completely self absorbed,
them. Some days are just rough,· script for a "\1/olider Years"
town restaurant w:here I worked;
-
-
;
Instead, I wiU P.rovide you with
one can reap the rewards of re-
but sunrises,
·
sunsets; laughter
voice over. However, like maca-
along with the 8th Avenue s~x
·
_
an excerpt from my
.
never
'
to be
ciprocation from those helped.
and good people cushion them.
roni and cheese arid french fries,
shops. Well; maybe not THAT
..
finished publication. It's like a
In
other words, they might be
If
those do not get you through
sometimes life is better with
short. Anyway, like mosf other
p_i:_~view for
·
something thaf will
more willing to help when you're
a bad day; a double shot of cheddar.
Marist
students, I had to work
never exist.
It
consists of seven
stuck.
espresso is
a
nice alternative
.
ridiculous hours at a rid
_
iculoi.ts
offerings of advic~ that I'd like
job, to get th(ough anothe,r yyar
'
to share, based on my summer
~K~cl .
..
. ·•-
--- ·
j ~
-
_
.
Even before.I offer iny greet-
-
So, I bid my welcome to Marist
ings and salutations upon the
students, both old and new as I
-dawn of a new semester, I'.11 just
, ·
offer my short list of findings:
let you know that I am aware that
''
you are sick of those little_ cof-:
I. All people are the same.
.
fee table books that offer really
lame advice an
_
d comment~ry
about things you
,
probably
never do, but know
·
you ought
to (like never write a run on sen-
tence in a newspaper column.)
Since the market for such ma-
terial is already saturated with
2. Even though aii people are the
same, there are two types of
people:
:
·
.
_
_
a. People who
-
are conscious
_
·
thaf they are no different fro
·
m
anyone else.
b. People who consider them-
4. Good people get good ser-
vice. Miserable people get mis-
erable service:,
5.
Do not
_
let unhappy people
bring you down. Some people
just want you to be at
their
own
inconsolable
.
level.
If
you are
aware of this, it-is more difficult
:
for them to win you over.
6. Never eat the coleslaw. (Just
trust me on that one.)
Gov'tneedscomnwnsense
fewest laws possible, both
·
so-
one to COfl}mit euthanasia or an
..
Soci~ty is produced
by_
our
-
.
.
cially and economically. That
abortion? Morally, I wish we did
wants; and government by our might be cruel in man}'. instanc
.
es
-
not hav~ to. Unfortunately, we
wickedness.-::,,
- ~, ,
_
.
;,
'
0
'
-,;,-
:
•·
<"
'
:
fukTng%e
"
goyernnYen(6u(8'i
,:;:
ao-Havlfif-)f
we
want
to
p·re~"
-Thomas Paine.
·_
.
the lives ofcitiiens implies that
vent such
.
sad thing~ from hap-
people
who
depend of the gqv-
pening. lt'would be better that
Everyone should read
Com:
emment for sustenance are sud-
we thought it our duty to do
mon Sense,
the infamous pam-
.
denly doomed to living poor, or anything for our sick ~nd old,
phlet written f?y Thomas Paine
.
worse.
to keep them comfortable
.
-
in the Ja
,
te
·
·
18th c:entury.
_
_
After
However, is
.
it not equally cruel
It would be better if there was
reading
it,·
[have
new
.
ideas
·
tqkeep heaping on society more
more responsibility among
about my\,wn vision of the
and more laws, and ultimately
those who
·
end up contemplat-
world.
_
.
_
_
• -.
.
.
_. __
.
.
rep~ess th~ free spi
_
rit th~t
ing aborti9n - by. this I mean the
"Government, like dress, is the
'
guided the foundation of
_
our
men and the women equally. But
6adge of lost fonoc~nce; the
.
country? ("What.free spirit,"
_
since this is not the case, if we
.
palaces of kings are built on the
.
,
you ask?
.
That free spirit en~
.
must prevent these things from
bowers of paradise."
W,e
have
-
_
slaved
;
ar
'
d
'
oppressed,
-
and
occurring; it must
-
be legally
governments because
_
we are
thought nothing of anyone else
mandated.
'
not capable oflivi,ng in parmony
:
but
_
itself!) That's ridiculous.
Thai is something we ~an riot
_
Therefore, there ~an be
110
bet-
.
There
are
many horrible things
do . .We can not allow ourselves
ter status then to live peaceably
that could be said aboutourori-
to regress and
_
ci-eate laws that
with
as
few laws
'
and as small
-
_
giris as a coimtry
,
We,
as
a coun-
FORBID. Such is what the reli-
amount
df
g
·
overninerit as pos-
try, can find ethica]
_
resolve in
gious
'
politics or'my time seek
sible,
.
,
.
-
the words of freedom that will
to
do.
I lo'{e
·
the notion of"fam-
People willingly to give
up
_
continue to echo throughout
ily values," but attempt to man-
their freedoms to law for the
time because of our country's
date those by law, and you chip
purpose
_
of
-
pr<>tecting t~em-
conc
_
eption.
-
away at the foundation of our
selves from people who would
·
As the world becomes bound
country.
_
abuse
-
freedom.
:
People can not
in
the maelstrom
-
of technology,
.
Each law that FORBIDS chips
be frosted to make 1!10fal.deci-
we must be willing to come to
away at
_
the rock that supports
sions, as Hamilton was quite
the tablewiUI
o~r
world
-partners
our country. We must preserve
aware of
.
as equals. We must believe in
it at
.
-
The
_
history of the
•
USA has
our own worthiness to be equal
been
-·
continual dissipation of partners
in
a
global community.
laws. When the USA
_
starts
!~
_
To say our founding fathers
makeashifttowardsimplement-
were tyrants
·
and fools is stu~
ing more laws, there is a serious
pid. They were innovative ge-
problem with the foundati~n of
.
niuses that should be rev~reci
our existence as a nation
.
·
for their PROGRESSIVEtenden-
This is why I can not support
cies. They were the first to do
any evangelical wing of politi-
so many things that we take for
cal parties. This is why I can
granted every day.
consciously support free
Back to where I was headed
choice, in spite of the fact that I
initially. Since around the tum
think abortion is morally wrong.
of the 19th century, the U.S. has
Bill Mekrut is a senior Politi-
cal Science/English double
major. He
is
The Circle's
Po-
litical Columnist.
HEYYOU!!!
he Op-Ed section
i
ooking for a cartoonis
ho would be intereste
n submitting weekly edi
orial cartoons.
The more laws we ha
_
ve, the
been a constant shedding of
less freedom we have. The more
laws. Or rather, laws have been
laws that the
rank
and file is will-
implemented to prevent the op-
ing to accept, the less trustwor-
pressive laws from dominating.
thy the rank and file is of the
There has been a giant increase
progress of mankind. I would
in laws that ALLOW and thank-
rather trust in man's progress
fullyagreatdeclineinlawsthat
then give up my liberties.
FORBID.
lf
interested, please call Tar,
The ultimate aim would be the
So, should we FORBID some-
"--x_2_4_2_9_. _ _ _ _ _ _
__,
Maybe everything
I
have said
has been said before, or maybe
it does not make much sense. It
helped me, so I figured I would
share what I found
.
After all, it
is not just about waitressing. It
is really about life. Anything,
from college, to a monotonous
Tara
Quinn
is
the Opinion Edi-
tor for
Tile Circle.
She spends
her breaks toiling at the
Howard Johnson's Restaurant
iri Times Square.
~PTEMBER 17.1998
•
-
:·•
:
··< __
..
-
■
-·
E
~-
:"
.
\·~
...
,,.
:,
..
:·
.
.
•,'
.
.
.
,
..
·
,
'
{
.
\
.
~
'
.
.
-
.
'
.
'
.
'
.
PAGES
,.
PearlJamlivein
New
/
York.
City
byCARLrro
·
Staff Writer
"You
haven't played any-
where until you've played Madi-
son Square Garden."
·
Those were the words that
came out of Eddie Vedder's
rriouth when Pearl Jam took the
stage Thursday night. Much
of what spewed from Vedder's
mouth was inaudible because
from
·
a Seinfeldian perspective,
he's a textbook lowtalker
,
not to
mention a bit of a mumbler.
When he did successfully re-
move the marbles from his
mouth, he had
a
few interesting
things to say. Pardon me if I'm
neglecting to comment on the
rest of the band and the fact that
they did in fact play music that
night, but
I
feel that
an
enigmatic
frontman such as Edward de-
serves a little more page space.
Clad in a T-shirt and black trou-
sei:s of a quasispandex consis~
tency,
·Vedder's
v.oice was di:.C
vine. Few artists possess the
ability to bring their
,
digitally
enhanced studio voice
.
to
.
the
stage and reproduce it Michael
Bolton and a prepubescent
Hanson are
.
two
.
others that
come to mind. After the middle
Hanson
(I
think his name is Lisa)
started growing hair under his
anns, he lost some of his vocal
tenacity. Once that hair heads
-
south of the equator
,
his career
is finished. Vedder aid not
·
dis~
play the spiteful "I'm the God
·
of the rock universe
·
and lhate
it"persoria: he orice possessed.
At times he actually appeared
giddy and overcome with Gar-
den fever. Everyone was in~
tlicted with the fever, myself
in-
cluded. I've nevefseen so many
men bouhcirfg around with
permi-grins giggling sheepishly.
You would've thought that Gin-
ger Spice was the ql}e on stage
singing Evenflow
.
.
I
was dis-
mayed by the fact that Evenflow
and Alive
_
were
·
the only num'..:
bers perfonned from the album
Ten. When
·
lead guitaristMike
Mccreedy played the opening
chords; to
Alive,
.
the crowd's
eruption shook the foundation
of the Garden. You might even
say that it raised
.
the roof. Or
perhaps that the roof, the roof,
the roof was
·
on
.
fire. We didn't
need any water,
:
we
·
let the
motherbum. O.Knowl'mjust
getting silly.
Their set consisted of the
more popular tracks
fr;om
each
of their five
albums
as
well as
two cuts from their Mirkinball
EP .
.
I prayed to
the
god of ~he · a little chaos caused by the de-
·
stage but once we left the safety
· rock and roll universe (who'co-
·
parture of a number of fans not
of the crowd, lmet a man I like
incidentally is Eddie· Vedder) familiar with the tenn "encore:"
to call "the Enforcer". He
that Neil
.
Young_Would descend
I made my way to the bottom of greeted
·
me with a slap to the
:
from the heavens
•
and join the
the lowest level aside from the
head and inquired
'
about the
·
band foi:
,
a
few so rigs,' but it flooi: and devised my attack.
level of niy intelligence. Aword
neverhappened. 'I)te ho~pla
'
After opening the encore with
to the wise. Whena300-pound
surro:unding
th
.
e (;:lihton
·
sex
"Hail Hail", they
·
dove into
behemoth asks you if you're
·
sca:ndaf has
·
perme'ated every
"Wishlist''
.
.
·
A soft, hypnotic
stupid, your response should be
·
facet of my
life
thus far,
·
so
·
why
melody perfect for sedating ~he
·
·
"ye
·
s sir". If your reply is;"Ac-
should a concert be an excep-
atmosphere, mainly the security
tually I've got an
IQ
of 158,
tion?
guards;
·
The nian next to me
what's the average
IQ
for a se-
After
Pearl
Jam
finished their
appat'ently sensed that I was
curity guard", that will only re-
·
set, secret servicemen
(I'm
·
visualizing my decent and told
suit in a retaliatory slap. Al-
pretty sure they were just im-
me all lneeded to hear. ''Go for
though the two slaps were not
posters) started carrying out
it, man":
I
·
smiled; shook his
entirely necessary, it's not a
boxes similar to
the
ones given
hand and whispered two words
good idea to bring that to the
tocongress contai
_
ntng testi-
into his ear. Carpe diem. After
enforcer's attention. The next
mony about Slick \\filly's \villy.
hopping
·
over two railings, I
slap landed on my right ear,
For the love of God, stop
'
the
reached
.
my secondary destina-
.
which is still a wee bit tender.
madness. Regarding the scan-
·
tion, the floor level. My primary
·
That slap must have knocked
dal, Vedder stated for the record,
destination 'was front row
'
cen-
the common
.
sense right out of
"I
don't give a fl'@L" Amen,
ter and !had to move fast be-
me because without hesitation,
my brother. Due to the fact that
cause the flock of gorillas (se-
I reciprocated with a backhand.
my seats were directjy behind
curity) was in hot pursuit.· Bar-
Although I did land it, its only
the stage,
I
only stayed there
reling through the crowd, my
accomplishment was to anger
for two songs. Vowing that
I
presence wasn't greeted hospi-
him. He cocked his hand back
would get to the floor level or
tably by the crowd
.
I
tossed out
and this time it took the
form
of
die trying,
I
left my seat and pro-
a few apologies with the utmost
a closed fist. !'ducked and def-
ceeded to sneak into various
sincerity and made my way to
ecated in unison, escaping the
lower level sections where I
.
the center of the stage: I was
brunt of.the blow but catching
watched the show
-
three songs
there for four
.
seconds when
aportionofit. Twoofthesecu-
at a time. Three songs, that's
Eddie looked at me. Probably
_rity
.
guards left my side to re-
the duration of time required for
·
because he knew
I
was about to
.
straln him while the remaining
a security guard ~() P{9gress
.
be planhandledby security. Jhe guard: walk
.
ed. me out of the
f.rom staringat me to thteaten-
,-.
thi:ee that snagged me were rea:.
···
arena,'
once
·
again telling me how.
ing me withexpulsion:.A[terthe
·
s
'
oriably bel)igerent in'their ef-
·
smart
I
was.
band finished
.
its set, their was . forts to escort
me
a.way from the
54
br!ngs sincerity,
ingenuity
t9
scr~el1
byPATRICKWHlTILE
A
&
E Edtior
The new drama
''54~'
is a grip-
ping step
_
back into the final
days of American excess.
.
Set in the)ateJ970
'.
s andhrly
80's, the film concerns the
.
char-
acters and lifestyles centered
around the legendary New York
City disco Studio 54. Writer and
director Mark Christopher ~uc-
ceeds ih recreating th
.
e glittery
atmosphere of Studio 54 with~
out alJowing style to
·
over
shadow
,
substance:
'
Most films
.
released by Miramax maintain at
least some sense of cinematic
art regardless of their subject
matter, and this is no exception.
The plot is centered around I 0
days at the club ~nd is seen
largely through the eyes of
Shane O'Shea (Ryan Phillippe),
Jersey City kid turned S
_
tuqio 54
bartender. He takes 9n the moni-
ker ''Shane 54" as he makes a
name for himself in the club. His
character can
b,e
seen as both a
monument to excess and a case
of blind ambition
·
gone astray.
He becomes enthralled with Julie
·
Black (Neve Campell), a soap
opera star who frequents the
club. Her character is an enig-
matic representation of what
Shane thinks he is looking for.
She is glamorous and high pro-
■
file but has a lb~
.
self~e>pinion.
Shane
.
's best friend
.
at S~udio 54
is Greg (Bree
.
kin Meyer), a
young married bus boy.
,
He
.
doesn't quite
.
fit the
54
mold, but
·
he understands the truth abou
.
t
.
the club
.
better ~ban mosL
.•
His
.
, wife Anita (Salrria Hayek) is des-
perately seeking a record deal
that she thinks she'lLfind
through Studio 54, Mike
Meyers, who plays the clµb's
owner Steve Rubell;delivers the
fi
Im' s
·
best perf or,nance
.
and
most interesting character .
.
Rubell
's
excessive drug use and
.
tax evasion we>uld eventually
lead to the closing of the club's
doors .
.
While ~tudio 54 was iQ
fuU
swing, he was
·
the
..
eyes and
ears
·of
a multi~!llillion dollar
monolith of self
-
(;lestructive di-
version. Rubell
.
would appear
to be the only factual character
in the film, which is based on
actual events in his life. While
much of the film
'
is
_
fictitious
,
Meyer makes his real-life char-
acter wqrk with his charisma.
The film does suffer from
some shortcomings. Studio 54
. was a meeting place for 70's ce-
lebrities, an
_
d Chri~topher's at-
tempt to workthis into the plot
falls short. The painlessly brief
appearar.ce of a very uncon-
vincing Ardy Warhol almost
comes offas campy self-satire
.
Everyone from Mick Jagger's
I
wife to
,
Rcm Jeremy has a ~rief
and avoidable piece in the
movie, and each adds Iittl~
.
indi-
vidually and only serve as stage
pr:ops as
iwhole. '~54".succeeds
despite this trivjality becau.se
·
of
Christopher•s
·
_
~xcellent sense of
character dev,elopinent, particu-
lady
of Shane O'Shea.
The
mhln
characters 1n the film undergo
Danvinian'tivohnions over the
93-minute
·
running time.
Toe
,
only exception is Rubell, who
appears
.
unchanged even as the
film draws to a close.
,;54" is destined to be com-
pared to l 997's Bpogie Nights,
another film centered on 70's
·
ex-
cess. BoogieNighi'swas a far
more low profile endeavor, al-
though in the end the two films
prove about equal. While "54"
is about
·
disco, Boogie Nights
was a yarn about the life of a
porn star. While the
.
subjec,t
matter of the two movies may
seem ostensibly incongruous, in
the end both prove to
.
be fact-
based stories about th~ path of
self-destructive lifestyles. I
would recommend both "54"
and "Boogie Nights" to anyone
who appreciates mature subject
matter. "54" is a film that will be
remembered as a slice of time
recreated with sincerity and
captured beautifully.
•
.
by Rachael
Vollaro
-
·
~:
:
StajJWriter
•
·
·'.
·
_;~.
Acioiie
Scene
1
Tirri~: September
1998
'
Scene: The scene is Marist Col~
lege in
.
Poughkeepsi,e, New York.
Wheri the curtain rises the
s~g'e is set f<>r
a
new piece to
be added to The Circle; As the
writer of this piece, I wiU also
serve as your narrator. As the
semester progresses, this piece
will feature different stories, in-
formational updates, and pro-
files. It is a work in progress
and will never stay the same for
long. I guess you could say that
we're still in
.
"Previews". Al-
though the stars of the show are
the Arts at Marist ColJege, off-
campus visitors will make guest
appearances.
·
.
Remember there
is no food or drink allowed in
the theatre and that the exits are
located to sides and back of the
theater. Thank you and enjoy
the show!
7
A~
the fall semester proceeds,
the Marist College Council on
Theatre Arts (MCCTA) is hard
;
at work for its first two prodiic-
··
.
lions.The first is
a
Noel Cow-
ard play, Pre~e
.
nt Laughter: A
lightcomedy_in three acts
}
·
Di-
rected by Ma.ristProfessorDon
'.
Anderson; Present Laughter
centers
'
around a fainous Brit-
·
ish actor, approaching 30, and
how he attempts to maintain
control of his artistic and sexual
life. Present Laughter will be
perfonned in the Nelly Galetti
TheaterOctober8th-l Ith. More
infonnation wiU be provided.
The second is MCCTA's pro~
duction of Leonard Bernstein's
West Side Story. Co-produced
with the Marist Singers, West
Side Story will- be performed
sometime in November. Re-
cently casted juniors Michael
Seaman
and
Jennifer
Schneiderman will play star-
crossed lovers Tony and Maria.
The Marist Band will also be
making its debut this month. On
Saturday, September 19, the
Marist Band will play its first
half time show at Marist's first
home football game versus
Fairfield University.
•
.
·
SEPTEMBER
17, 1998
.
.
·Rap-jam;l!rty
slatnl}ling
be~r
·
·
~odka shots
· --
dis~ppear,
you'
.
re
,driving·
tdehdsjiving
'
<
-
·
.
.
on~
·
J11ore
fo1
<
tlie
road.
·
Your
1nind's
a
-
haze
intoxication
then
tije rush
acceleration,
.
~
-
.
;.
burn~ng
r'ub~er
bl~rring minds
'
ffantic
'
"Faster!''
Dr1ving blind.
Wailing
screeching
violenrblue
·
!
"
.
.. , ..
.
.
.
..
...
•'.•~P:!rp,,r~Jigl
1
t§
"
>
·
..
rescue
cr~w,
.
,
,
,i
,
"
,
i
.l
~\\'
jawsoflif~
IJ~ttle
'.
de
.
ath
cniqipJed .car
·
dyirig
.
breath
:
·
Guilt, grief
a
=
life's
reg
·
ret
.·
can'tchange
what's
do11e
and
can'tJorget,
. :
I·
-
'.
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,
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•
'··t~~\~
PAGE9
T
-
be Urge:
CD
.
Review
by
Nik Bonopartis
Staff Writer
The Urge~
_
Mas·ter Of Styles
For the better part of a decade
The Urge have been forking on
the edge of
,
the musical under-
grouhd, with a rapidly develop-
ing fanbase and ready to cx-
p1ode into
the mainstream. With
their release of Master Of Styles
they have done just that The
first single off of the album,
"Jump
Right
lil",
earned a spot
in MTV's regular rotation this
summer, and for good reason .
Boasting a loud three piece horn
section
,
powerful guitars and
cutting percussion, the Urge
deliver a heavy hitting mix of ska
and hardcore. Featuring vocal
stylings by frontman Steve
Ewing, and even guest vocals
by Nick Hexum of
311
fame.
"Jump Right In .. has become a
fan favorite.
The rest of the album ranges
from the very heavy to the very
funky. with several tunes an-
gling towards the metal and
hardcore end of the spectrum.
Not once does the Urge slip into
the commonplace cliches of
modern ska,- choosing instead
to take a fresh, more direct route
.
towards songwriting. The album
rocks from beginning to end.
Now and again the band also
treads into rap territory, but
never without forgetting their
roots. The
CD
also comes with
a multimedia extra
,
featuring a
playable video game demo and
sever.11 videos of the band in
action, as
·
well as other features.
So if you
'
re in the mood for an
album that doesn't let you down
until the last guitar fades out,
Master Of Styles is a definite
winner.
Top 5 most annoying
events of the summer
by
Anthony Civacelli
·
s1ajfWriter
Our summer was riddled by
· innumerable ongoing
_
and
unnecessary events that
dragged our collective states
.
of consciousness through the
mud. Why doesn't tabloid
fodder like this· happen in
Canada or Mexico? Maybe
because we are the ones who
buy into it...
I.
The Lewinksy scandal.
Didn't anyone sto to think
that Clinton's mishap was just a
regular day at the office for JFK?
·
·
2. Ginger Spice leaves the Spice
Girls. Sure it happened in May
,
but I was still pretty upset.
What will she do
for
work now'?
3. Alleged death of"actor" Ron
Jeremy. A true genius was lost.
4. Prophecies for the end of the
world in 2000.
Certainly we
have become accustomed to
this, and we will see even more
·
of them in
1
_
999.
But what hap-
pens when they are proven
wrong?
I
don't think
I
can wait
until
3000
to
find out...
5.
My inability to think of num-
ber 5.
atrick's
-
Filler:
'What if every-
bing is illusio
ndnothing
xis ts? In tha
ase,
I
definitely
verpaid for m
arpet."
--Woody Allen
◄
.
..
.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ·
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.
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.
.
SEPTEMBER·t1,
1998 · ·
.
·
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..
.
.
..
·-
.
.
.
··
-
.
.
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~
.-.-.-,-~.,-
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AT THE
RIGHT
PRIC·E
.
.
, Student Aid, just for Marist College ....
:
-
•
'
f
·
-- CHE.CK OUT
·
.
'
OURWEBSITE
FORlllFF.ER.E:N.T
.SAVINGS.
EACHWEE·K!
WWVV.caldor.·coffl
· ...•.......
···,;;,..·.·[Z]·
.·.
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.
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•
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.
.
VISA
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.
.
•·
.·.·'
. .
·
. .
.
SEPTEMBER 17;1998
.
.
.
ff
Campus
Report-
·.
----------'
'
-
_.,.
'
.
.
y
_
by Jan Beighley, Jr.
The
·
sports world
waii'
brought
'.
_
·
_
.
.
McGwire, Sainiriy Sosa has qui-
·
.
Moss; through
·
two games, has
to a viciou
·
s halt early las~ w,eek ·
·
etlymatchedtvicG~i[ehomerfor
10
_
receptions for 183 yards and
when
·
Mark McGwire set a
homer. Sure; we have all known
.
a touchdown. Projected over a
record for the ages. .
·
and
·
noticed t'1e_.
-
season Sosa
full season, that would be 80
McGwfre has now done some·~
has jlad,-, but'who really took
.
c:,itches for
·
1464 ytirds and 8
thing that only two other play~
h~m seriously? Now he is in the
toucbdowns .. But the numbers
ers in
•
inajor league history ha.d
running for
~
record that he
don't stop there. Curtis Enis
,
done - hit 60 homers.
,
He has
should not bdn·contention for.
after
·
ending
·
w
hold-out that
.
no.whit more in
a:!)i~gi~)eason
S~s~ can now.~be
·
found i
_
n the
lasted most o(
,
fr~it1ing camp,
th~i:t any otherJ?iisebaitplayer
mitl~t of a phenomena!
l~ason
has_ come on
strong
"
ii! the first
ever. McGwire's 62fiomers are
that has him tied wit!-\ McGwire
two ·games of the
.
regular sea~
more than Babe Ruth ever hit
.
.
atop
:
the record books with
62
son rushing for
.171
yards on
more than Roger Maris, mor~
home runs.
·
·
only 34 carries. He has had an
than
_
Hank Aaron (his ca
_
reer
..
Th{!
_
.reco~d i_s the most presti-
_
explosiveness not featured in a
highwasameasly47),morethan
gious in all of- Qaseba.11.
Chicago backfield since Walter
Mickey Mantle, Jimmie Foxx
..
.
M:cGwire broke it first;
•
b
,
ut the
.
Payton.
the list goes on and on. Trying
real winner
will
j)ehe who holds
Th~ next t,w9 names have been
to put the home run record into
the record at the end of the s~a-
tossed about for:sonie time lead-
·
historical perspective is not
son.
iilg up to and following the 1998
only difficult; it is impossible.
draft. They ar~_Ry~n Leaf and
WhenMarkMcGwire·hitthe
:_'
.
·J?eyt<:>n
•
M!}nriing
/·
With any
line shot that was number
62
off
r9_okie quanerback; coaches and
·
of Steve Trachse~
1
it was
:
notj~st
*
*
*
:i<
fans
.
a.like mus.t expect some mis-
the record books he rewrote, it
tak~~
an_µ
-
.
these
two
was history.
.
wunderkinds
are
no exception
.
McGwire has
·
proven-worthy
Just watching
'
the
NFL
and
Leaf has qpened up
.with
two
·.
backer Andy Katzmoyer, arid
comerback Dre· Bly. Each of
these
.
players has something
special abo
.
ut them and none of
them have much doubt. sur-
rounding them. Couch holds
both high s
_
ch-ool and collegiate
passing records and shows no
.
signs of stopping. McNabb and
Culpepper
are
both phenomenal
athletes that can throw
a
foot-
ball as well as any quarterback
to play the game. with mobility
of the great wide receivers. Wil-
liams might have been·
.
the best
running back in C
_
<>Hege
-
football
three years running:
a11µ
soon
will have the_9p1?"~rtupity to
prove it in the pros
.
Katzmoyer
.
is quite
·possibly
the greatest
PAGE 11
.
collegiate Iinebackerofourtini~
and will give a lucky NFL team
the answer at middle' lioebacker
for
IO
years:
Dre
81
y
intercepted
I
I passes as a freshman and
was All-America
as a
sopho-
more.
He
,viii
no doubt be
All-
America again. and then a start-
ing corner in the
Pro
Bowl be-
fore long.
It
just seems to this writer that
the collection or young talent
in football is mounting. This
talent gives hope to all the fans
that are gelling ready to say
goodbye to John.Elway, Steve
Young
~
Dan Marino and Jerry
Rice. Have no fear. Tim Couch.
Peyton Manning. Curtis Enis
and Randy Moss are coming.
MAKE
YOUR OWN HOURS
SeJ
Kodak
Sprsng Brea!<
·
s~
ir:;:,s
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: ·
·,
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.
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drink
J.
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.
~
.
'
'
.
.
.
.
'
.
·.
-: :
;<
.
.
.
WORLD CLASS VACA TICHS
1998 STUOENT TRAVEL
PLANNERS
"TOP
PRODUCER"
1-800-222-4432
·
Fast ~fart
r9r.
Melfi,
Inen's
..
cross country
to be mentioned among the
college football games these
consecutiye,
-
wins, but has not
greatest home run hitters of all
~
•past couple wee.ks has given me
been astq~ishing. Manning has
time, worthy of being nientioried ·' hope
for
the future of profes-
had some· big moments, includ-
in the same breath wfth Ruth,
sional
football. After
a
couple
ing a 300 yard game against
·
Aaron,Mays,etaLWhowould
of weakdrafts that haye pro-
Miami in the Colts season
have thought in 199}
·,
(when
duced more flops and busts
.
opener, but has also been prone
fyf
cGwire hit .20
I
·
with 22 ham:-
than any NFL general. manager
to interceptions
,
having thrown
by
JENNIFER GLOVER
ers in 154 games) that it would
\Vould like to admit to, there is
six in his first two games'.
Staff Writer
prepare for this season. Over
the summer months the team
followed their workout regiment
and put in the miles that was
necessary t'or them to come in
and become one of the top
teams.
Qe McGwire that would break
finally an inkling of hope forthe
As well as these four players
,
..
.
the most magical recor~
in
all of future of football.
_·
=.,-
_:
":
·
an9 all the other rookies this
If
the first two\Jeets
·
are 1ny
sports? Wh
"
o would have
This year we, haye been
year (Charles Woodson; et al.)
indication, this
··
year·s
·
Marist
guessed that anyone could hit
_
blessed with the
.
debuts of there is a very talented group of
men's cross country team could
50+ homers in three
·
ccmsecutiVe
'
·;
Randy
,
Moss, Curtis
:,
Enis, juniors'and seniors corhingfrom
be potential leaders in the Metro
seasons? McGwire has turned
Peyton Manning and Ryan
the
:
collegiate ranks. Among
Atlantic Athletic Conference.
•
his doubters into his mostavid
Leaf.
.-
While some, noticeably
.
these collegians are
.
quarter-
.
·
Hard work and dedication has
supporters, and now
we
all just
Manning and Leaf,
will
not re-
backs Donovan McNabb, Tim
put this team
:
a
fe~
st~ps above
want to see how far he will go
.
ally put
up
astounding numbers,
Couch, Daunte Culpepper, run-
theircompei:ition
,:
as evident by
In
:
a year that has been all
their presence is undeniable.
ning back Ricky Williams, line-
their early season performar:ices.
On Sept. 5, at their ffrst meet of
the
season,
the'
.
men's 'cross
country team traveled to Lehigl1
University; where they ran to a
second place fin
.
ish. Then, the
following
weekend,
at
Hartford's Wickham Park, the
Red Foxes
·
did even better -
scoring a near-perfect sixteen
points, en route to an easy first
place victqry,
Senior Mich~el Melfi led the
team on both occasions, ·as he
raced to back-to-back first place
finishes. It has been a true team
·
effort,
.
howe~er, as Mari st run
-
ners up and down the roster
. have been d6minating the com-
petitors. At the Hartford lnvi-
.
tational, Red Fox runners domi-
nated the field. Along with
Melfi's win, senior Ben
Hefferon, sophomore Greg
Salamone, and freshman Coby
Jacobus, worked together to
.
claim the top four pqsitions.
The
.
top ten was rounded_ out
with four more Marist runners
·
as juniors Jeff Grady, St~ve
Palmer, and freshmen Mike Nehr
and Gilby Hawkins kept any
other team from competing wit~
.
the Red Foxes.
.
-
.
What can this year's
success
be attributed to? The combina-
tion of experience and young
energy could be the key to this
year's team. The
team
welcomes
back six seniors, five juniors; and
four sophomores,- all of whom
have given guidance to afresh-
man
class that boasts
six new-
comers. Head coach Pete
Colaizzo also notes that each
team
·
member worked hard to
After their first two outstand-
ing performances, what can we
expect from the Marist men's
cross country team for the re-
·
mainderoft~eirseason'? Expec-
tations; as well as confidence,
run high for the team right now
.
Junior Tom Henry says he
thinks
.
his· team is noticeably
better this season.
'These
two meets (al Lehigh
and Hartfo_rd) are good indica-
.
tors of how m
_
uch this team has
improved from last year, and
·or
how much this team can do
throughout the rest of the sea-
son,"
Henry said.
"This
is the
best (cross country) team that
Marist has had in
a
long time.
"
c;oiaizzo reaffirmed Henry's
statement.
·
"This isthe deepest team that
I
have coached in my eight years
at Marist," Colaizzo said.
This Friday, the cross coun-
try teams travel to South Bend,
Indiana, where they will compete
in the
_
National Cross Country
Championships, hosted
.
by the
University of Notre Dame. The
team has huge goals for them-
selves,
·
hoping to finish in the
top fjve.-atthis highly competi-
tive me
.
et.
·
This is the beginning of
a
·
string of goals that the team has
set forth for
.
themselves. The
tearn.hbpe~;;to finish in the top
three at the
MAAC
champion-
ship and among the top ten
teams at the ICAAAA Regional
race in October.
The women's cross country
team has also gotten out to a
good start. The women won
at
both Lehigh and the Hartford
Invitational.
They are led by freshman Liza
Grudzinski who notched a first
place finish in both races.
...
'-
Stat:
of the
·
Week
·.
·
·
:
The football te'runga:ve up
;:
320
'
yards
·
iushing.against
.
.
:.
o~orgefo.wii
/
0111y
'·
14
··
<
Yards
·
less than all
'
of
fas(
'.
i
•
-'
e
'
~.
'.
.
.
.
.
· ..
.
.
. .
·:
SEPfEMBERl7
'
1998
•
.
.
,.-
,
:
.
.
.
.·.
,·,
.
'·,
.
:
.._
·
·
•
·
.
'
;
•
·
..
'
·
•
·
:
;
'
..
~
'
Quote
of
.
the
Week
:
"Hopefully, thisyeru:will
be
a
··
stepp!rig
~
stone-fof
y~ars
fo
come/'
·:
·
.
.
,:
'_•···
/
·::
.
•
·
·
.
-Matt
Sommers,
'
.
:
,
.
,
.
'
,
·
,
,
,
.
..
,
.
.
..
.
.
'
.
·
,,
.
•
.
Hoyas
tun
over
FOxes_.,111.-
.
0-pener
_
'
.
by
THOMAS
RYAN
that
.
in perspective; the Red
..
.
iii
.
the
-
final pla;
:
of
th~
;
g~e,
Marist head coach
:
Jim Parady
;
Marist defen
'
sive coordina_tor
Sports Editor
·
Foxes defotise•gave up
.
394
.
Geor.getowri took
:
controLearly . .
was disappointed
'
with
-
his
RkkPardy,attc::mptingtoinstall
yards on
'
the_ground
_
all·season
of this one and never
.
looked
.
·team's
effort irithat:finalquar:. ·a new ~ystem
_
with the. Red
What was supposed•· to be a
lastyear.
·
.
back, notching
_
theit.f'ift~
·
c
_
on-
ter. .
.
. .
.
. .
.
.
.
Foxes,
was impressed with BeJl's
n~w beginning
for·
the Manst
.·
.
Of course that defense did not
secutive win ovetthe RedFoxes.
.''We broke downmen~lly, in
performance.
:
.
.
Red Foxes ended up being noth-
have.
'
to . g()
..
up
<
.
against
GeofgetQ\VIl kf~ker Paul
.
thefourth qµarter/' Para~y told·
"He~s a hell of a player,!'
.
the
ing more than an embarrassing
Georgetown running ~ackRob
·
Wiorowski gotthe H9yas oil the
reporters following the game.
former MMst head coach said f
repeat of. years past.
.
·
Belli last season,
·
The transfer
board firsr w
.
ith
'
a 38~yard field
·
The
.
effort of Belli also had a
Marist looks
.
to rebound next
·
A
·
Marist
·
team foll of hope
·
froin Richmoridrushed.foi: 187
goal that was set up by a Belli
-
lot to
'
do with Marist's fourth
-
week~hen theytak~oriFairfield
.
when it showed up in Washing~
yards and his first canier
-
fouch-
•
38-yard run
-
on the
·
fourth
.
play
·
..
quarter struggles
.
on Saturday at I :00 p.m.
ton
~
D.C; leftwith
·
their tails be-
down in leading
.
the Hoya's bal-
from scrhnmage .
.
L~ter
-
in tll~·
tween their legs aftera24-
7
de
..:
anced ground attack
:
.
first.
·
quarterback
-J
_
.J.
,
.M:ont
.
feat at the hands of the
.
The only offensive success
threw a 4-yard touchdown pass
Georgetown Hoyas.
.
for Marist came on the ground
to Mike Romoszka to give the
Picked to finish fifth,in the
as well. J.l Allen ran for 91
Hoyas~-}O~Olead:
.
.
·
·.
·.
·.
·
,
MetroAt!anticAthleticConfer-
yardsandscored the.Red Foxes
.
The game stayed)hat way;
·
ence pre-season coaches pol!
,
oniy touchdown of the day, de-
.
thanks
.to-
three Ge<>,rgetown
the Red Foxes had dreams of spite separating his shoulder in
turnovers d!!ep inMarist terri-
knocking off tlie
.
defending the first half. Senior quarter~
.
tory,
··
until the fourth qul!rt~r
,
MAAC champs in their own
back ~i
.
llTramaglinihad a dis-
when Belli regist~reclhis
'
l7~yard
back yard. It was
:
not meanno
··
appointing opener, finishing 6-
TDrun. On
.
th~next Hoya pos:-
.
be on this afternoon.
for.:.J9for 109 yards and two in~
.
session AnthonyTuozzo reeled
TheHoyasamassed452 yards
terceptions.
off
•
his
.
Jong
,
run, arid
of total offense; including 320
.
.
Unlike last· year's s~e-saw
·
•
Georgetown was comfortably
yards on the groun~. To put
battle that was not decided un
.
~
.
ahead 24-0.
Wome
:
n
's
.
volle
:
yb
'
all
·nets
tWo,
wins.
in
Classic
byRYANMARAZITI
Staff Writer
s:
Marist was plagued early with
·net
· .
.
violations, accumulating
four and keeping
·
Columbia in
Metro: A suitable adjective to
the ga~e
·
at 8-5
,
.
The turning
describe the
fury
of.
:
moveinent
.
point seemed .to be a
·
long vol-
.
during a Marist women's volley-
ley
.
that involved an
•
incredible
ball game.
·
·
dig by Ramey,
.
great back row
Constant rotations, position-
bumps by Heidi Backlund, and
ing, play calling; digging, bump-
strong
•
hitting from Birk. Despite
ing; setting and
.
of course the
losing the volley, Marist used it
spiking:are about as intense as
as a wake up call, as. Parker
a crowded New York City inter-
served the final four points for
section;
·
·
·
Everyone is puinped.
the
·
win
,
Everyone is fierce and unw"aver-
Marist seemed to lack its early
ing.
.
agressiveness iri the third game,
Men·'s
·
s:oe
.
c
·
e.r·
.-
s
-
tarts
·.
new
season where theyJeftQ(f
by JEFFDAHNCKE
Sta.ffWriter'
·
OrmaybeMetrowastheword
losing 7:-15. One factor that
·
tattooed above a
·
skuU:-wearing
·
stands out was
·
the
·
absence of
a cowboy hat and banaana
·
on
HeaterVirfrom the lineup; Per-
theshoulder of the Quinnipiac
haps coach Emily Ahlquist was
fan sitting besid
.
e me
.
·
·
.
giving Vir a rest and preserving•
Nevertheless, .the
:
women's . her for later action. A move
Jtis a new season for the men's
voUeyball te.am played abqve
wisely chosen.
·
soccer team; but it has staned
·
par during· the
·
Marisf Classic
Maristjumped out fast going
i~ an aH too
·
familiar way.
tournament this past weekend:
up 2-0 after a side-out set up by
Coming offlastyear's 2-13-1
:
Spcirting~2-l record in theJour-
Cerda and a numbing spike by
campaign the
·
-
Foxes
:
.
have
·
.
ney;MaristdefeatedArmy and
·
Parker.Columbiahungtightand
opened with
.
four. consecutive
:
·, '
Columbia
'.
before
.
bowing
.
to
eventually went up 4-2
.
That
losses.
.
.
.
'
. _.
;
,
:
.
Quinhipiac
:
M.a.nii
upp#citheir
would be the clbsest they would
.
The club tra~eled to the N~w
.
r~cor~
·i()
.•
2-2~p ~
.
e
·
se
_
as
.
on.-
.
C
get as
_
M:ari
,
st went on
a
tear that
Ygrk
:
s
.
tate Invit~ifo11~l
-.
irt
>
·
ii
OilJJriday.
·
~ight
/
¥arist
·
puttlierriupJ0,-6forcingColum-
.
Oneonta back on September
'
5
,
.a\'oi_d~d
:,
a
:
disa~~ro~s}~~dp~n· biaintoa
_
T9.
_
Mari~twouldnot
ar(d f~U to HartwickCollegeg--J.
, ;
by,~,w1nning th~
,;
frn~l game
b~
,
slowed d~wn
·
and won both
The
.
next day
.
it was
,
Fqt'dham'
/
·agaipstArm,y;
:
,Mer\.\liQ11iflgthe
the.game(i5
~
6)a11d t)lematch.·
sending Mari st
.
back
:
to
·.'
first~o 15~12an,d'J6~14,Maiist
:
Leigh $hillington played sol-
Pciughkeepsie winless:S-2 was
droppeg the next ~wo,
'.
12~15 ang
.
:idly with five.
kills,
three service
·
·
the score;
.
.
'
·
·
.·
:
·
.
J3-f!
,
5
.
bif~ri
~
wi~~~rig
"._
the deci-
,
/
ac~s;si~
-_
dig's;a~d her signature
·
:'
.In
.
game three, Lqhg
/
Js
·
Ia~d°-
.
;
.
si~~ garri<:
~
Jf?
~
~,J~aptaiij Trisha
)e~-"hit:
,
Whatis
:
~i"seFhit?
.
Well
.
Uni-versityhande<Lthe
·
Red
:•
.
·.
':
Ram
_
(Jy1¢dthe
·
\V~Ywitlfl2kills
c' •
tmadeitupb~causeitbestde-
.
Foxes a'2-]defoat. The
.
home
'
.
.
and.-f1;er,vice aces.
·:
Cara
'
,
nfrk scdbe
'
s this deceptive
'
settertac-
opener last Saturday was
m9ie
-'
:
.
pl~ye~
~
soHd qeferi
'
se
:
w.itli
;
i)
·
.
jic in which the
.
set is faked and
..
·
ofthe same;as Colgate v
·
isit~d
·
..
.
5J~gs ancfl,1 ~lls
/
NI!!f¢ercla;
<'.
softly hitover the net. Cerda
t~e Gartiand Athletic Compie,(
·
·
.
.
·. · ·.
•
.
·
. .. .
.
·
. .
. .
Circle
ph<>tolien:my
Siniih
')en.Par_kerand c;tptaiQ I-leather
had-1
Q
kills
.
while Parker and Vir
.
and
left with a3°
I' win
·•
The
rrien's
·si>ccei
~•
·
am got
off
to
a
rough~
star{ag1ln
'
this
>
.,·
·
.Vi
.....
1 .
r_·.a1
..
1_ .. hi.·
_
:t
.
..
w .
e
.
:i
..
,
1
..
fo
,.
r
.
th
, .
.
· .
.
e
.
.
·
.
.
·
·
f{
·
ed
··
·
.
.
•.·•
.
B
,
.
.
P
.
X
.
.
e
.
s.. . p·1.~{y
··
e
..
d·
.
·•
.
s
..
u
,
.
.
.
·
Pe
.
·
.
..
r
..
b
.
·
·
.
..
d
..
e
.
fi
.
e
.
n
.
se
.
.
·
·.
·
· ·
· · ·
.
·
·
-:
·
•
.
·
>
'
·
<
•
.
season,' dropping thltlfflrat
·
tour games 01·1991
·
-:.
<
:
·
,:·
.
·
'
..
.
·
,
Despitethesfowstart, theplay-
.·
· ·
.
.
.
·
·
•
..
.
•·
·
·
.
. .: :
·
.· •
.··
··
..
·
.
•
•
• ·
:
.
•·Marist.faced
Coluni~ia: early ·
.
Jn theevening,Maristfaced
ers
.
have remaine~ optimistic;
-·
-
...
- .
.
,
.
.
:.
s.aturdayjno,ming irifr<>nt'of.a
the Quinnipiac
.
Bi-ayes and their
Accordirig
,
tofresl}men
•
foiw,ard
. .
'
'
Freshman goalkeeper and
.
tri-
·
..
·
Being thc1t he is
.
~~
-
only se-
. . _
cfowdal>out the size ~fi11'1arist
.
.
"mad midgett
·
I>espite theidn-
.
Braiii Garafola; the 0~4 record
·
.
captairiCarlos DeBrito agreed.
.
nior, Sommers'f?JllS to g~tba~l(
:·
..
E~icsda~s:
:
I)e
-
~p~(e
th~
SIJlan
.
·
te~~ify dur,ing
·
vJarm~ups, Marist
has not been inclicative of the
·
!'.We
have
,
eleven different
.
.
in the lineµp
c1s
:
soon
.
as po
,
s-
· :
Jtimou.!
/
Mari
st
'
-
was
t
its 9wn
.
could notseein to
,
play consis-
team 's perfoniiance;
-
.
. ·
people coming together for the
sible. "IfeeJ.really bad
iightri()w
·
source
:
ofj~t~risity
:
/
font
team
tentlyatgame time. M.uist won
~'.AJ~ough
we have been los-
first time. It dpesn~t click right
that J'in hurt," he
-
~aid .
.
'
.
'hry
to
·,
that' plays
,
iri fronf
cif
a
.
couple
th~ ~ t
game
15~12 and seemed
ing, we are playing well," said: anywaytDeBrito said
.
. ·
lead by exampl~ on and off the
·
parents,
a
janit
_
or
·
and
·a
Marist
.
to
•
be
.
in contro}overwhelming
the
·
teams leading ~corer.
·
.
The FQxesfully expectto say
field and want to tum this pro~
security officer, this team
,
gets . the
_
passive ~raves with strong
'
:
These sentiments were echoed
.
goodbye to these losing ways.
gram around.'.'
.
.
.
i ·
.
·
·
.
.
.
pump~d
>
·
J\
,
trademark many
·
servic~
,
anci
_
aggressive attacks.
by
.
fellow freshmen Thomas There is a fee}ing of solidarity
Conference play begins" this
.
teams fack;)elf ~rnotivation·. ,: liowever,
:
Mai;ist would then
Mullowney. .
.
.
arriong the playerS.
·
week with
a
·
gariie
.
against Marist'came out strong jump~
drop
the next two
S~
15 and I
0--
.
"We've been dominating
.
..
!1.asi year was thrown away
Fairfield. Sommers
•
is looking ingtoa9:.21~dinthefii"$tgame.
15 .
.
·
.
.
.
'
.
games," sai·d
:
Mullowney.
and
this is a new beginning,,, forward to
MAAC
play
~cl
trilly
..
Aftera kilJ by
.Cerda
aiid°strong
.
Vir had
.
a
reascinfor the incon-
"We' ve just· been very un-
said Garafola
.
"The team is
expects to make a markinthe
.
servi.ce.Marist\Veiliup H-2and
sistency.
.
·
lucky.';
tightly knit and everyone gets
league ande11d up in the
'
pray-
forced Columb1a
i
to take
-
.
a
· -
.
"We made mental errors and
Whether itis-bad.iuck or not~
along."
offs at season's
.
end:
:
:
timeout. After the timeout hit poorJy after
the
first match,"
on
.
e thing the team does not
Inexperiencehasnotbeerithe
"Oncewepersevere(through
Marist's
.
dominanffront row
'
saidVir. "Wecouldn'tfindour
have is experience. Fourteen only obstacle for Marist, as the
mental lapses) we
will
.
be
.
on
a
·
.
continuecl to pound
.
the under-
.
rhythm.''
..
. ,
·
freshmen are on this year's
lone senior on the club has
roll," he said.
:
''Hopefully this
sized Lions.with strong outside
,
Encouraged by their "mad
squad, ten of whom' have
.
start-
played in only one game. Matt
year will
be
a stepping stone for
hitting by'Cerda and strong de-
midget's" amu$ing mannerisms,
ingpositions. Arid after 1997's
Sommers, considered to
be
the
years to come and we can tum fensebyVir. Virsealedthegame
Quinnipiac eventually took the
nightmareseason, J998should
team leader, suffered a ham-
Marist Soccer into a power-
withaspikeforal5-2win.
·
firialgame(l3-15)andthematch.
probably be considered a re-
string injury the second day of
.
house in the
MAAC."
.
In the second game, Marist
Although unable to take advan-
building year.
training camp and re-aggravated
The Red Foxes will
be
in ac-
displayed its blend of power · tage of the Braves, Marist did
"We work as hard as we can
it last week. He hopes
.
to return
tion this Saturday as th~ play
and technique by using an ar-
not fold easily and lost only af-
but none ofus have Division-I
intimefortheSeptember26con-
hosttoStPeter'sCollegeat 1:00
ray of cross-court hits, soft
ter a series of kills and strong
experience,'' said Mullowney.
test against Niagara.
·
p.m.
touches and fake sets to win 15-
volleys;
.
.
52.1.1
52.1.2
52.1.3
52.1.4
52.1.5
52.1.6
52.1.7
52.1.8
52.1.9
52.1.10
52.1.11
52.1.12
\spm.n,ierj~t~pti~g·
a.~;th_e ,..
· •Ma¥icKingdorii(pg;
4 · {
'
'
•
w
•
· · •
._.-;
.
. .
\
~SPORTS--'
Men's soccer heads into
the.1998-99 seasohl6ok-
ii1g
to
relioi.md 'i{om
last .
. year/pg.12 -~
.
the student newspaper of.·Aarist College
VOLUME
#52 ISSUE# 1
·WELCOME BACK EVERYONE!!!·
. SEPTEMBER 17.1998
SteelMill{Pro~ides new home
Library offers addedser{iices
to
ease _str~ss
of
temp
loca:(io..n
• f
-'·'
'
. . .
'
- · . _·• ,-,~. :-:·· - -.•
by
BEN AGOFS.
sands. of periodkals for free ..
News·Editor
"This is the kind of things
a
lot of libraries are doing," he
Half a:million dollars later,
said ofMarist's push for art
all-
Marist has turned an old. steel
digital library.
He said since
plant
mill
i~to thi new library.
adopting the new program, the
The total_costs of renovating
library has been able to expand
the old mill came to $545,000, but · its list of periodicals from I ,200.
not all that money went to paint
to 4,800.
.
and building supplies. The col- •
Access to all periodicals via
Iege pumped some into making
ProQuest Direct will be offered
reference materials and research
at
least during the library tran-
easier
for
students.
sition period, and .the.re will _be
Forinstance, in the past, sN:-
no more copying fee's, l>ut.only;
dents had to pay 25: _cents
a .
for on:.:camp~s stu_aerits ·using
.. ;.page. to .. print .off.,µJ_i!, Iil:>rary:'.$ ,,,.Marist: s
,In
tem.~t c:oilp~c:Ji()n, ..
digit~} periodic:~! program, ·. Ben,mt~tisf1~cl.,.
<
·
.,\·•·· :.
J')•· _
--ProQuest/ .1'ut since· -moving·
· · Commufors\vith
the
Internet
across to the steel plant mill, the
in their homes will not be able
library now. offers ProQuest Di-
to use the new.
·
program. . ... ··• . . .
_ _
_
_
_
. .
_
.
.
_ _ _ _ :
_
_ _ _
_
_
_ _ _
.
C~R:1C. __ rr101,~J~r\:nly
Smi_ll~
T11e••11brarymakes ..
.
the
best
of.the •shortage of
sp11ce bytstacklng•·books ·and
rect.
.
.
. . . ..
· The Hbrary has also created a
per.lodlcals eight s.hel~es. high.
·
·
·
· ·
·
. Dennis Benamati, assistant Ii-
0
hosting program to ease the .
braiy dire~te>r, ~aid. ProQuest
transition.
Thursday 3to9
·
p.m. a11d
0
is a
and they don't krioW.WDere
need help ..
,--.·
.
chance
for
students to become
things are anymore,U she said,
':The .student is supposed to
_
l)i~(!~fgi_ves stud,ents,who.h_ave
·ElenaFik,hatina, library pul?-
the·Jhternet Jn their rooms the
lie services coordinator, said the
cap
0
abBity of accessing · tho~-
program run~ S~nday through
aquatinted with the library's
The backbone.of the program
show. the library user where the
temporary facilities.
. .
.
is
student worke,:s who ~ct as
collectionsi are located,"
"Students come to the library
gu•ides to .anyone who may
...
pl~a.\:eseeLIBRA.RY,pg,
3 ·
Cl:"()~ing
.
.
solution
J>raise,.problenis for
·we.st:Ceclar·bousing
"
.
·.,-
·.
~
---·:•
S<iught
by
CHRIS
GROGAN
· · Staff Writer ·
Ffrst reactions
to
the
·
new
West Cedar. townhouses· are
b y ~ ~ O
being heard fro,m students liv~
·
. ing there, and not all are posi.:
After weeks of speeding traf-:-
. tive.
fie, congested intersections and
Students' are encouraged to use the
c~:ar:~ik~m:i
Many students did notexpect
an. estimated.· 500 ·. students ..
the ·1ntersectlona· at .Marlst's Main. and. South gates.
to move into buildi_ngs that were
crossing ~oute 9 everyday,
tlte . . . . ·
.
; .· .·.
· .. · •• .· . ·
·
·
still under construction.
Department of Tran~po.r.t_ation ·ac~orpingTimMassie,Marist's ·. located.
;
· ·
. SeniorMikeMilbysaidheex-
has agreed there isaproblem. . chief relations officer, because
:''Stµdeilts.have ni~y things . pected that atleast the apart-
Maris_t Ptesid~nt D¢n~is
they
would
be
too costly.:
going. on," she said. "One of men~would be cleaned before
Murray, Dean of Student Affairs
According. to the DOT; a
them is getting places on time.
everyone arrived ..
Ger~rd Cox and Student Body
cr~ssing. signal between the
It's human nature i:O take ·the
'There was dust, plaster, and
· President. Colleen_ M~Culloch,
temporary library and _the West
quickest. path .. ·That quickest
even clothing materials left be-
met w.ith · representatives from
Cedar apartments would slow
path can be made safe by the
hind by the construction work-
the state Department of Trans-
traffic.
_
addition
of
a crosswalk and a
ers," he said.
''They didn't
portation (DOT) last Friday.
· Regional Traffic Engineer, Bill
light between West Cedar and · do a good job clianing up be-
The DOT toured the area and,
FitzPatrick said the DOT is not
the library."
fore the residents moved in."
according to ~urray, is willing
endorsing the
·
mid-point cross-
The SGA will be promoting a
Junior Jen Armstrong, another
to cooperate with the college.
ing signal·option.
safety campaign for students . resident of Wesi Cedar had the
''They acknowledge that there
· ''The students are not utiliz-
which will urge people to use
same complaint. ·
is a problem_," he said. ''They
ing the pedestrian crossing ar-
the crosswalks, be aware of traf-
"There was a Jot of dust from
agreed that m the n~xt °!?nth
eas now," FitzPatrick said.
fie and adhere to th.e crossing
all the dirt being moved around
we will work on solutions.
. The Student Government As-
signals.
and the rooms smelled like
Some solutions include con-
sociation passed a bill Sept. 9
Massie, said the administra-
paint," she said.
structing a tunnel beneath
supporting the crosswalk solu-
tion and staff support the SGA's
Sarah English, director of the
Route 9, joining the two sides
tion.
safety campaign.
.
Housing and_ Residential Life
of campus with an overpass, or
Student Body President, Col-
"We're asking the students to
office, saidf she expected the
creating another traffic light and
teen McCulloch said students
please· be careful and cross at
project would be completed by
crosswalk. The tunnel and over-
do not use the crosswalks be-
the crosswalks," he said.
the time students arrived.
pass options are not feasible
cause they are not conveniently
· "We were given a date auhe
beginning of the summer by the
contractor for. when the project
·
was . to. be done, and . that was
Aug. 3/' she said. ·
·
That projection had to be
modified, and by the middle of
August,the'contractors guar-
anteed an buildings except for
the "O" block would be com-
pleted by Aug. 30'.
...._ "We were concerned that the
''.O" building wouldn't be ready,
... please see
HOUSES,
pg.
3
·1NSIDE
TODAY:
Partly Cloudy
hi:76
lo:54
Community ................. 2
Features ..................... 5
A&E ........................ 7
0 ..
.
9
p1n1on ..................... .
Sports ........................ 12
:
PAGE2
September
.18-20-
Hellenic
Festival
(914-452-5990) Hel-
lenic Center Grounds, 24 Park
Place, Poughkeepsie. Greek
food and pastries, music and en-
tertainment, crafts, children's
events, games of chance, DJ,
dancing.
What solution
dO
you thirik woulti stop
people from dangerously.croSsing Route 9?
· Fri. & Sat. llam-llpm. ,Sun.
llam-Spm.
September
19-20-
Hudson
River Arts Fetival.
Waryas
P a r k .,
w
a t e r f r o n t ,
Poughkeepsie and Riverfront
Park, Beacon.
Two days
_
of
entertainment, various types of
food, arts/crafts and kid's
shows. Programs include Latin,
Irish, Kle.zmer and gospel• mu-
sic, Greek & East Indian, and
African dance and drumming.
Presentations, demonstrations
and workshops in crafts from
various tradition, as well as tra-
ditional cultural sporting
events.
10am-4pm. 473-4ART
Jacki¢ Fitzpatrick
Sophomore_
'The time length could be
longer for crossing the street.
They also could have a shuttle
system to go to West Cedar
-Street.'.'
Jessica Duggan .
Freshman
· "There could be a crossing
guardto wear a reflector to
. help students cross Route 9. "
Aatori Frechette
Freshman
'!
It wouid b~ benefi~ial
t~·bu1li :
'l
a
catwalk. i/wouid/4~if/d
!q~.
i
J
They· also could develop
a . :
longer period at the light."
September
20- The Center For
Curatorial Studies At Bard C.ol~
lege: Openingofthreenewex-
hibitions devoted
to
Franz
Kafka, the new millenium, and a
collection of works on paper by
one of the leaders ofltaly's Arte
Povera movement. The mu-
seum opens
Sept.
20 with a re~
ception from
1:00-4:00 pm and
runs through
Dec.
18. The mu-
seum wil be open
Wednesday
through Sunday
from
1:00-
5:00 pm. For information, call
S~curi(y,Brit!f~.--
·
---'---------'-
____
-
·_W
____
e _ ·
_e_k_e_n
___ d_W_·._.
_:_e_-_a_t
___
h_:_e_r
__ . ,_.· ---- •
A patrol through the Student maj~r dd111~ges have been re~
Center at 2 p:m., Aug. 31 uncov- . · ported except for some. melted ·
ered a·box of 42.sandwiches _floortiles.
914-758-7598.
.
sunny
hi:
72
lo: 46
sunny
hi:
67
lo:
47-
which the·Marist Band had left
behind. The sandwiches were
destroyed due to health con-
cerns.
Security broke up a party and
· confiscated a keg· in West Ce-
dar Friday, Sept. 4. ·
:·,<;
Source: http://wwl~:weather.com (The ·weather Cha1111el)
Multiple fire alarms have been
activated on the North End be-
cause. of cooking mishaps.
Gartland E and G have been the ·
most frequent, andWest Cedar.
and Talmadge Court have re-
ported small cooking fires. No
A Sheaha.n .re~ident-slipped,
while walking across
th<::.
cam-
pus gre(;!h Sunday, Sept.
6:
The ·
student was later. taken to St
Ftari_cis and· diagnosel with a
broke11n.b. Toe·studerit wasre~
leased after observation.
The Circle
is offering to campus
clubs the opportunity to participate
in our
"Club Bulletin Board."
This
is a free service for you, on a weekly
basis to notify your club members and
the entire Marist community of your ·
upcoming events and me~tings.
If.you would like-to post something
on our board, please leave .an. enve-
lope in our mailbox in
SC 369.
Questions? Call Matt
@
x2429.
Attention
c
~ommun1cation Majors
*An
'
nouncing New Prerequisite and credit change·
. in 'the communication Internship Program beginning FALL 1999
o Students must take the prerequisite I -credit course - CRDV l 00N
Employment Practicum before they do an internship
o The total number of internship credits
will
change to 14
THIS CHANGE APPLIES TO ALL STUDENTS WHO ENROLL IN A
COMMUNICATION INTERNSHIP FOR FALL 1999 OR AFTER.
· For
more infonnation, ,isit Communication Internship Director Gerry
McNulty at LT226, Call the office at x3655 or email:
gcrald.mcnulty@marist edu
MODELS WllNTED
.
.
Looking for Marist students to model for tne 13th Annual
Silyer
Needle Fashion
Show and Awards on Thursday, April 29,: 1999 ..
'
.
Requirements: Height 5'9"
· Weight proportioned to height
Size 6-8
Only
TYROUTS ARE WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1411
a.m.
IN THE NELLIE GOLLETTI THEATER
INFORMATION-EXTENSION 2124
·
.
-
-
.
.
. continued from
pg.
1
~-
so we contacted those planning
·
to live
in
that building and of-
fered them options to live else-
where just in case it was not
.
ready'.
In
the erid the building
ended up being completed the
night of August
29,"
English
said.·
·
Tom Daly, director of physical
plant
,
who oversaw the entire
·
project, said he felt everyone in-
volved with tile project worked
hard to get it
_
dorie on time. He
.
said the major construction was
finished "literally an hour before
students mov.ed in."
Mnrist College Libr-.ary Services
in
Beck
Place:
We'll help you save time and steps.
--
:
1HE(H]E
.
N
·
·
ews
'
'
Ground was broken for the
project on February 26 of this
year, which meant that we were
under an aggressive schedule
to complete it on time," Daly
said. "The majority of construc-
tion was completed before stu-
dents moved in
.
The entire
project, including gr
a
ss planted,
will be completed within the next
two weeks
:
'
.
'
Residents of West Cedar had
.
other complaints
a
s well.
Construction n
·
oise woke
many up during the first week
living there
,
including senior
Rachel Ammons.
''There was a lot of noi
s
e from
machines and workers at around
7
a
.
m." she said.
Many students were
dis-
m~yed at the fact that they did
not have Internet connection
until Sept. I 1, two weeks after
they arrived.
Residents also complained
that they rarely had hot water.
~
The Housing Office reacted to
this complaint by contacting
maintenance that turned up the
water boiler temp
e
rature from
200
degrees to
210
degrees
.
After the boiler was turned up,
there were no more complaints
regarding Water, according to
English.
"We (Housing) try to act as
PAGE3
an ally to the students," English
said. "The night before stu-
dents were to move in
,
we real-
ized that there were no shower
curtains, so we ran out and pur-
chased shower curtains for all
bathrooms in the West Cedar
townhouses
.
"
.
Housing listened to student in-
put and responded accordingly,
English said
.
"We purchased new furniture
including adjustable beds that
allow students to make them
higher
,
or lower as needed,
which is especially helpful when
bunking the beds," she said.
"We used student feedback to
buy furniture that was really
flexible t6 residents' needs."
While
the
library is at
its temporary
site
on
Beck Place, Marist
students,
staff
,
and fuculty
are imitcd
to
take
advantage
of
some additional and unique
services
we
are
offering:
WELCOME STUDENTS
.
.
:
-
.
.
.
.
.
.
Staning Monday
;
September 14
,
satellite referem;es services
\\'ill
be
pro..,ided
in the
Donne
.
Uy
HaUComputer Lab. A n:ferencc librarian
will
be
there from 3:00pm
until
·
6
:
00pm Monday
through Thursday
.
The
librarians'
prirnaiy
function
will
be
to
answer
questions, to help you
in
ident~g
sources.
and
developing
research
strategics
before
you
come
to
the
Beck Place
Library.
Refere~e
assistance may
be
needed in son~ cases.
and
is
available until midnight Sunday
through
Thursday; 8 am
to
4:30pm Friday, and 11 run to 8 pm
on
Saturday
at
the
Beck
·
Place site.
Student Hosts will be available between 3:00pm
and
9:00 pm, Sunday through Thursday.
They will not do your research for you. but they
~ill
give you~ t_our o_f
lhc
building
and
services, help you find a book. etc.
The
Hosts
will also
be
asststmg \,.1th backed·
up
photocopiers, printers in need of paper, etc;
Just
look for
the
name tags.
Please keep in mind
that
we
have
pro..,ided
access
to a ~e number of ~11
text
periodicals
and databases throucll our web page at http://wv,-'\v.manst.edu/1.11>rary (click on
"Electronic Periodic~ls and
fndc.xes
"
).
Such
sources
are a\'ailable to. the entire
Marist
community
,ia
any computer connected to
the
network, and arc a,mlable 24 bou~ a
day .
.
Please remember to take responsibility for your safety when coming
to
the
Library. Cross
at the intersection and
with
the
traffic lights.
We
wi-.h
you a producln>e
and successful school
year,
The
Marist
College
Library Staff
Marist
Foxnet
Student
Telephone (STS),
the most
cost effective
·
way to place long distance calls from your residence telephone.
FOXNET STS
is
CHEAPER
than.....
.
•Calling cards
-Prepaid cards
-Personal
800 Service
-All
Operator
Handled
Calls
And
REMEMBER.
..
you
will continue to receive a
10% DISCOUNT
on your
total
bill.
ALSO
this year, your cost
will
be
REDUCED
an
ADDITIONAL
3.5%,
'!-,vith
the
elimination
of the federal excise tax.
Come
see us when you arrive on
campus, if
you
have any questions on the
telephone selVice. We're in
Donnelly 241.
FOXNET STS STAFF
'
/
SEPTEMBER 17, 1998
F
. .·
>t_·'.:•
.
·.,:."·:.,- ......
.
.
e
•
·
·
···a··
·
. · ... ·
·
·
··u•:
· ...
··.·r····.·.·c.•·····e·····,.
·
····· ......
'.···.s·.··'··.·
·•.·
. .
.
•
·
,
.
.
,
-
.
. .
.
·
·'
,.
-·,,
.
'
.
.'••
.
Students spend
summer
atl)isl].ey
by
JENNIFERMATARAZW
Staffiyriter
While most college students
spent their summers locked up
in a·crnmped office filing papers,
a few students had the unique
opportunity to intern in one of
the happiest places in America,
Disney World.
Of course spending the entire
summer with Mickey and the
rest of the gang is not the daily
grind, but it beats busing tables
on the weekends. We all have
the inner desire to be
a
kid again
and seven Marist • students did
just that. Afte~ all,cwhat
·a
better
place to fulfill this dream than
Disney World.
.
Desmond Murray, assistant
director of field experience at
career services, participated in
the recruitment. c:if these stu-
. dents. The State University at
Photo courtesy. of Kevin Lundy
New Paltz was chosen
ai
the
Senior Kevin Lundy Interned at Disney World during the summer. Lundy worked
host for many of the .colleges
at Blizzard Beach, one of the water parks on the Disney World property.
located ,in the Mid:-Hud~on.Val- ·
·
leyarea. RecruitersfromDisney
demiccreditorfornoncredit. He
Marist College representative
chology and special education
presented the internship and
said all of the students were
for Disney. His role is to stay in
major, said her experience work-
summer job packagt!, and from
p_aid.
contact with Disney and to as-
ing at Disney was like.
a:
dream.
there intervie~s wer(set up.
"Although students had to
sist in recruiting more Marist
come true.
"Tomy sui-prise;:many of the
incur thei_r own tra".el expenses,
students
·
. to participate in the
'.'I worked at the Magic King-
students who wendnterviewed
the students werepajd a salaryt
internship program.
<lorn . at the 'Barnstormer,
1
received job offers
to
pruticipate
he said.
. .
"I've always wanted to work
Gooffs ride in FantasyLand/
· in the Disney program? he said.
A unique aspect of the Disney
for Disney," he said. "Now,
I ·
Sommers said.
"I
was an atµ-ac-
At least 16 stude11ts received · internship programis thatthey
am the liaison between Marist
tion hostess."
.
"
job offers and of those 16, seven
accept studentsinio the pro-
and Disney."
ClaudiaDiaz,sophomoreinter-
students actually went. ·
gram at the freshman leveL
Lundy said he worked at Bliz-
national business major said her
Murray said consi~ering that · "This is a ~ood e·xperience for
zard Beach, one the water parks
experience was a positive one.
Disney is a Fortune
500
com~
students to be away from home,
on the Disney property..
"It was iny first time iriDisney
pany, it is something that is-very
to learn new cultures, and, once
"I was a park gr,eeter," he said.
World," she said. ·
"I.
enjoyed
good to have on a resume..
.the stude.nts areth,ere,theycan
"I
worked at one of the en-
beingawayfromhomeanddeal-
"Our students had a tremen-
network and see what other op-,
trances and greeted the guests
ingwit4 problem,s on my own."
dous o·pportunity by being
portunities a.re available to
as they came in, handed out
Diaiworked in the Magic
there, meeting with other college
them," he said.
,
< ·.
maps and just made them
Kingdom selling
·
personalized
students and networking wfth
Students arrived at Florida.on · happy."
· st011es · at Disney's Wal.k
large universities around the June
2
and their last day was
on -··.
Lundy said he also worked at · Around thecW'orld.
country," he said. -.
Aug. 23.
· .
. . .
guest relations, tickets and fi-
;'People' can; buy ~tones and ·
Murray said students could
Kevin Lundy, senior political
nances.
~ritetheir names and birthdays
opt to do the program foraca-
s~ience major, became the
Jennifer Sommers, seniorpsy-
onJhem_," she said.
·
· Di~ s~i.ci s~e found it very in:.
. te.resting how
<1
big industry like
Disney runs itself. . . .
.
, ...
C •, . •
"I was able
fo
look at this from
behind the scenes,'' she sa.id.
These students put in· about.
40
hours a week with, only .two
days off .. All. the students re-
.
ceiye9 free a_dmis_sion toall of
the Disney . theme and water·
parks as wen· as . discounts to
various places.
.
'.fhe living arrangements ac-
cording to Sommers, are similar
to the Marist lifestyle.
•.•we stayed in Vista V/ay, right
on the Disney property," she
said;
"It
reminded me of the
Gartland setup:·
All
of the col-
Ie.ge, studerits • stay~d here."
Diaz said some days· were. not.
easy.
.
.
..
"As with any job, some people
are often hard to deal with," she
said .. •~We alwayshad to smile
and keep everyone happy."
• Lundy said living in Disney
was like living in· a fantasy
world.
: "The months spent at Disney
were the greatest three months
ofmy life,''. he said, ..
.
. Sommers said the Dis11ey in-
ternship prngram is a great
learning, working and living
ex-
perience .. ·. .
.
...... .... , .•.. ·
''I made.friends frorri·an over
.the country and the worid," she
said. "I knowthat we;ll stay in
touch arid always have 'this in
common." .
.
Murray said he encourages
students to attend
a.
presenta-
tion on the program: .
. .
Ifinteming with Goofy and the
pack interests you; contact the
Centerfor.CareerServices: They
have
the
information for the next
presentation,Jvqichwill be held
at SUNYAlbany on Oct. 15 at
7p:m. for the Sprjng packiige.
Fallmeansnewbeginningsforfreshf"aces.
Worfa
Jamous
Freshmen
artd
transfer students
exp~rience life at
Marist College·
by
EMILYKUCHARCZYK> ..
Features Editor ..
Cindy Butcher and Catherine
Hurlbut are happy because they
survived their first two weeks
at Marist still smiling.
· Only this time, the smiles were
not nervous.
Butcher, a junior transfer from
Lynbrook, NY and Hurlbut a
freshman from Roxbur,y, CT, are
experiencing living at college
for the first time. According to.
the Admissions Office about
176 transfer students and 855
freshmen started off the fall I 998
semester.
Butcher, an undecided major, ·
said she was a little nervou·s not
knowingwhattoexpect.
"I
didn't expect
""ltwashaidnotknowingany-
that people would
one, but I II1et a lot of people
and
.
theymade me feel more
be as nice as they
comfortable/' she said. "I didn't
d h l
t
expectthatpeople WOL!.ld be as.
are an.
e rp me
OU
niceastheyareandhelpmeout
with everything
with everything and show me
and show
me
around and take me out."
Hurlbut,aps·ychologyspecial
around and take
education major, said she had
me out,."
said'
mixed feelings about coming to ·
school.
.
Butcher.
"The week before I left I was
so excited, I just wanted to
leave," she said, "but the last
night I was home I could not go
to sleep at all and in the morn-
ing I had __ a stomachache and I
was nervous, but I found out it
was not.really that bad."
Hurlbut said she enjoys her
classes and the social life, but
is finding it difficult to fill up her
day with things to do.
"The classes are great and I
arn going to join some clubs and
there seems to
be
a lot of school
spirit, but I never expecte9 to
have this much free time," she
said.
Classes at Marist, according
to Butcher who transferred from
Nassau Community College,
NY, are very different.
'.'The classes at Marist are
a
: lot harder, a lot more wotk,,,she
. said. ''.Also, people here seem
. to take school work more seri-
ously.''
Butcher, who hopes to make
the Dean's list, said she has
learned a lot about herself so far.
''I thought it would be a lot
h,arder for me to st.µt something
new, to get up and leave and go
to school and not
be
so close to
my family," she said. "I thought
I would not be able to deal with
it
as
well
as
I am and I am really
happy that I can be okay with
that."
Hurlbut said she has already
learned that the days seem like
they go by too fast.
"In high school I was like aJJ I
want-to do is go to college," she
said, "and now I kind of wish I
was still back in high school
because I want not to always
rush things.''
Psychic·
Famous ·Psychic
. To· the ·stars
over
30
years
experience.
·
can help you obtain
Love
J-feaftn
Wealtn
~
and£ucfr.
. Telephone
DPYld:Guat'dino
a11y\Iin1rat- ·
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(423)~Qg41~1~
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Teno~·ee.
Fax: {423)~9-o921
·
l
l
l
I
l
1
-
11-IEOIOE.
SEPTEMBER 17, 1998
Features
PAGES
S~arching
tile
Sites
byEMILYKUCHARCZVK
1
Features· Editor
The Internet is.becoming.more
and _more popular. It seems ev-
erybody has a web-site. Some .
sites are really informative and
fun while others are just a waste
of time to even look at. · This
column
will
look at the sites that
are informative and fun.
How many times have you sat
in class and the professor starts
talking about some current
event in the world and you have
know idea what he or she is talk-
ing about? Well, a quick way to
access current eventsinforma-
tion is getting on on·e • of the
news web-sites. CNN, ABC,
and The New York Times all have
web~sites. Many ·home.town
television stations and newspa-
pers have web-sites as well.
The news web-sites are usu-
ally updated often with the ·lat-
est news and are fairly quick to
·
contact. The stories are easy to
follow and the photos and
graphics are good .. Also, at .the
e.nd of the stories there are links
. to other sites that one cari check
to get more information.
The addresses for a few of the
major news· sites are
http://
.w w w . c n n . c o m, http : I I
. www.abcnews.com, and
http:/
lwww.nytimes.com.
If
you have any suggestions
for this column, or: would like
to write a c·olumn, contact
Emily at X 2429 or e"mail HZAL.
. Emily's
Recipe of the Week
· Pineapple Beef
3/4 lb:· beef top round steak
8
oz. can pineapple slices
2
tbsp. water
I tbsp. soy sauce
I
~bsp. brown sugar
1/8 - 1/4
tsp. crushed red pepper
4
green onions. chopped
I
tbsp. cornstarch
Medium tomato cut into wedges
6
oz. Package frozen pea pods. thawed
Cut meat into strips. Drain pineapple. reserve juice. Cut pineapple
slices into quarters.
In
bowl stir together juice. water. soy sauce .
brown sugar, and red pepper. Add meat: stir till coated. Cover and
marinate meat at room temperature for
15
min .. drain reserve mari-
nade.· Stir-fry meat and onions until cooked. Stir cornstarch into
marinade and then add to meat. Cook and stir until thick and
- bubbly. Add tomato, pea pods. and pineapple. Cook till heated
through. Serve over rice. Makes
4
servings.
Horosco-pes
ARIES:
This
morning yo_u could
say something to a
loved one that you
didn't quite expect,
but you sincerely feel.
Although you're a
very outspoken per-
son in many regards,
when it comes to emo-
tional stuff; you can
.get tongue ded.
- .. T
A.°t1
R:lJ
-
S:
.
Completion. is the
dominant theme again
today. Action is re-
quired, and you'
II
have to make several
good-sized decisions,
too.
Heed
a
roommate's advice,
but don't get pushed
into doing something
. you're not going to
like later.
[ii]
~E,~!~.r;~i:
~
to change about your
domestic environ-
. ment, and guess
what? You can do it!
It
doesn't matter if
you've never done it
before. You can learn.
CANCER:
Fin-
ish up old business
today . .
Don't start
anything new. Gather
money that's been
promised rather than
making or getting any
new promises.
LEO:
You should
be getting pretty used
to this routine by now.
You've been in it for
three days. Although
you're getting lots of
attention and the spot-
light_ is definitely
· aimed in your direc-
tion, your motivation
has to be to take care
of other people or you
won't really succeed.
whole agenda for the
.~VIRGO:
The
•
~
day involv~s finishing·
old business. That has
been a theme for the
last couple days, but
now t~ere's n
'
o turning
back.
-
·
~ ·
·
. 'LIBRA:· The·
n
Moon is'inLeo again, .
. but it's void. That
.
· means it's made all the
aspects it's going to
make before it goes
into_ Virgo tomorrow.
When the Moon is
void of course, we
usually try not to start
new activities.
SCORPIO:
Leo.
people in your life
might be feeHng a little
feisty. Mars, of course,
would get them to do
things that they've
been thinking about,
· but-have been resist-
ing, or have been too
afraid to try.
SAGIT-
TARIUS:
Today
your burning curiosity
could lead you to try
something you never
considered before. •
Since that's a rarity,
you should be in for
an interesting day.
CAPRI-
CORN:
Money is
again the focal point
today,
especially
money you share with
other people. That in-
~l"W
York Srock Euhangc
Com1muy
\\;ill
Pav )." ou Immediate Cash Income
And
Lo;1g-Tcn11 Residual Income
k3raduatc & Undergraduate
StmkntJ;;
Needed
Full Trnining & Support Provilkd
Call For Recorded Preview
1(888)-234-1950
~xt.
652:J
eludes money you owe
to other people.
If
you
can figure out your
checkbook now and
pay your bills early,
you'll
be money
ahead.
AQUARIUS:
If
you push a partner re-
ally hard today - intel-
lectuaHy, that is - you
can· get 'what you
~
-;· \va~t:
Now,.that's· kind
.of an interesting situa-
tion to find yourself in.
Application deadline
for spring program:
Octi>bel" 15
I·
. For more information
and applications:
Ma:rist College
Office of
International
Education
Student Center
Room368
Tel:
914
575-3330
E-mail:
intcrnational@marist.edu
World Wide \Vcb:
www.
marist.cdu/intcrnational
PISCES:
Racing
around
again, trying to do
more than can possi-
bly be done. That"s
the game, and if you
think of it as a game,
it'll be a lot more fun.
Distinctive programs that
combine internships in most
majorfields with course ·.-vork at
host institutions.
Sydney, AUSTRALIA
Leeds, ENGLAND
Quito,
ECUADOR
Floren.ce, IT ALY
Dublin, IRELAND
Monterrey ,MEXICO
Moscow, RUSSIA
MADRID,
SPAIN
WEEKLY-WORDS,OFWISDOM.
"
''Happiness !s
good
4e.alt}l.
andabad•·
memory.:''
- Ingrid
!Jergman (
1917-1982) -
Editor.
Years ago there was
a
popular TV show entitled; ''I've Got A Secret,'' :in, which ' ·
celebrity panelists tried to discover a contestant's "secret."·
·· ' ·'
..
; For a long time now an academic version of this show has been performed at
· Marist; with faculty-and staff as conte~tants and students as panelists. we· have
a:
secret that you have to discover!! 'And that secretHfcontained
in
the answer to the
:
question; "What is'-the structure and function of the Marist Core/Liberal Studies
Program?"
.
,
,,·.
In an ~qitorial
in
last semester's' Circle, the editor was· highly critical
Qf
the Core/LS .
program, unwittingly revealing that _even after four years atMarist she.had not
uncovered the "secret." Unfortunately·she is not alone,: since practically every
graduating senior I query admi~ to riot. knowing the "secrer'-"- which, by the way,
. the faculty and adm~nistratfon fook two ye:ars to develop and twenty years to refine.
.
.
. ' Why should-any student
try
to discover the "secret''? The bestreasons I can give
._
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ . are that the "secret" wiirprovide meaning" and significance.to core/liberal studies
~anda Bradley ·
Editor-in-chief
Ben Agoes
News Editor-
Patrick Whittle
Arts & Entenainment
TaraQuinn
Opinion Editor
Joe Scotto
Photography Editor
Mattltew CoUJ)lbes
M_anaging Editor
Emily
Kucharczyk
Features Editor
ThoinasRyan
Sports Editor
Toni Constantino
Business Manager
G. Modele Clarke
Faculty Advisor
The Circle
is the student newspaper of Marist College, Poughkeepsie, NY.
Issues are published every Thursday.
We welcome letters to the editor, club announcements and story ideas.
The Circle staff can be reached at 575-3000 x2429 or by email at
HZAL.
courses, make learning easier and more ~nj9yable; and contribute to professional
and personal success. The pa~ to the "~lysian Fields," perhaps! ' · -
·
•
My challenge then, to an·students at Marist, is simply "'!Yhat's o~r secret?"
, Edward
J
O'Keefe
Professor
of
.Psychology
·
WHAT DO YOU THINK?
Do you think the charges against President Clinton
justify impeachment?
Call
(x2429),
write, or look for our pollers this week
as we ask the Marist campus this question.
We want to hear from you!! -
**Deadlines for submissions in. the next
Circle
coming out Thurs. Sept. 24 are Fri.,
-
Sept. 18.
**
SEl'TEMBER17,1998
a
.
·)•
13
cl
---.---.---.--~----------------~
PAGE7
Waiting
for good
·
d_oy
_
gh
~.
.
.
,
.
.
.
.
.
.
'
.
..
.
.
-•
Once again I spent my.break
ti ties
-
suth as
·
"Everything
I
-
;
selves diff~rentorexceptional.
7. College is very worth it. Make
summer job can
-
be difficult.
pouring coffee,
.
smiling, and
•
-
Need to Know I Learned in a
(r
prefe(
.
working with the
·
the most of it and have fun.
Waitressing gave me some help-
'Yearing a skirt so short that had
.
i..aundroinat;'>i
wiil
not w:aste
fonrter.)
·
ful i()sight Yes, I sound like
Mayor Guiliani passed by, he
.
my time and finish what coulc(
·
-
~
.,
8. There are so many wonderful
quite
the
pseudo-deep
probably would have
·
contem-
•
.
have been my take on this ad_.
· -
3.
·
Always
"
help others. Even if things-:
;
try not, to lose
sight
of cheese ball. ,il~ost like
·
a tossed
plated shutting
-,
down the mid-
_
·
_
vice boo
_
k trend.
_
.
one is completely self absorbed,
them. Some days are just rough,· script for a "\1/olider Years"
town restaurant w:here I worked;
-
-
;
Instead, I wiU P.rovide you with
one can reap the rewards of re-
but sunrises,
·
sunsets; laughter
voice over. However, like maca-
along with the 8th Avenue s~x
·
_
an excerpt from my
.
never
'
to be
ciprocation from those helped.
and good people cushion them.
roni and cheese arid french fries,
shops. Well; maybe not THAT
..
finished publication. It's like a
In
other words, they might be
If
those do not get you through
sometimes life is better with
short. Anyway, like mosf other
p_i:_~view for
·
something thaf will
more willing to help when you're
a bad day; a double shot of cheddar.
Marist
students, I had to work
never exist.
It
consists of seven
stuck.
espresso is
a
nice alternative
.
ridiculous hours at a rid
_
iculoi.ts
offerings of advic~ that I'd like
job, to get th(ough anothe,r yyar
'
to share, based on my summer
~K~cl .
..
. ·•-
--- ·
j ~
-
_
.
Even before.I offer iny greet-
-
So, I bid my welcome to Marist
ings and salutations upon the
students, both old and new as I
-dawn of a new semester, I'.11 just
, ·
offer my short list of findings:
let you know that I am aware that
''
you are sick of those little_ cof-:
I. All people are the same.
.
fee table books that offer really
lame advice an
_
d comment~ry
about things you
,
probably
never do, but know
·
you ought
to (like never write a run on sen-
tence in a newspaper column.)
Since the market for such ma-
terial is already saturated with
2. Even though aii people are the
same, there are two types of
people:
:
·
.
_
_
a. People who
-
are conscious
_
·
thaf they are no different fro
·
m
anyone else.
b. People who consider them-
4. Good people get good ser-
vice. Miserable people get mis-
erable service:,
5.
Do not
_
let unhappy people
bring you down. Some people
just want you to be at
their
own
inconsolable
.
level.
If
you are
aware of this, it-is more difficult
:
for them to win you over.
6. Never eat the coleslaw. (Just
trust me on that one.)
Gov'tneedscomnwnsense
fewest laws possible, both
·
so-
one to COfl}mit euthanasia or an
..
Soci~ty is produced
by_
our
-
.
.
cially and economically. That
abortion? Morally, I wish we did
wants; and government by our might be cruel in man}'. instanc
.
es
-
not hav~ to. Unfortunately, we
wickedness.-::,,
- ~, ,
_
.
;,
'
0
'
-,;,-
:
•·
<"
'
:
fukTng%e
"
goyernnYen(6u(8'i
,:;:
ao-Havlfif-)f
we
want
to
p·re~"
-Thomas Paine.
·_
.
the lives ofcitiiens implies that
vent such
.
sad thing~ from hap-
people
who
depend of the gqv-
pening. lt'would be better that
Everyone should read
Com:
emment for sustenance are sud-
we thought it our duty to do
mon Sense,
the infamous pam-
.
denly doomed to living poor, or anything for our sick ~nd old,
phlet written f?y Thomas Paine
.
worse.
to keep them comfortable
.
-
in the Ja
,
te
·
·
18th c:entury.
_
_
After
However, is
.
it not equally cruel
It would be better if there was
reading
it,·
[have
new
.
ideas
·
tqkeep heaping on society more
more responsibility among
about my\,wn vision of the
and more laws, and ultimately
those who
·
end up contemplat-
world.
_
.
_
_
• -.
.
.
_. __
.
.
rep~ess th~ free spi
_
rit th~t
ing aborti9n - by. this I mean the
"Government, like dress, is the
'
guided the foundation of
_
our
men and the women equally. But
6adge of lost fonoc~nce; the
.
country? ("What.free spirit,"
_
since this is not the case, if we
.
palaces of kings are built on the
.
,
you ask?
.
That free spirit en~
.
must prevent these things from
bowers of paradise."
W,e
have
-
_
slaved
;
ar
'
d
'
oppressed,
-
and
occurring; it must
-
be legally
governments because
_
we are
thought nothing of anyone else
mandated.
'
not capable oflivi,ng in parmony
:
but
_
itself!) That's ridiculous.
Thai is something we ~an riot
_
Therefore, there ~an be
110
bet-
.
There
are
many horrible things
do . .We can not allow ourselves
ter status then to live peaceably
that could be said aboutourori-
to regress and
_
ci-eate laws that
with
as
few laws
'
and as small
-
_
giris as a coimtry
,
We,
as
a coun-
FORBID. Such is what the reli-
amount
df
g
·
overninerit as pos-
try, can find ethica]
_
resolve in
gious
'
politics or'my time seek
sible,
.
,
.
-
the words of freedom that will
to
do.
I lo'{e
·
the notion of"fam-
People willingly to give
up
_
continue to echo throughout
ily values," but attempt to man-
their freedoms to law for the
time because of our country's
date those by law, and you chip
purpose
_
of
-
pr<>tecting t~em-
conc
_
eption.
-
away at the foundation of our
selves from people who would
·
As the world becomes bound
country.
_
abuse
-
freedom.
:
People can not
in
the maelstrom
-
of technology,
.
Each law that FORBIDS chips
be frosted to make 1!10fal.deci-
we must be willing to come to
away at
_
the rock that supports
sions, as Hamilton was quite
the tablewiUI
o~r
world
-partners
our country. We must preserve
aware of
.
as equals. We must believe in
it at
.
-
The
_
history of the
•
USA has
our own worthiness to be equal
been
-·
continual dissipation of partners
in
a
global community.
laws. When the USA
_
starts
!~
_
To say our founding fathers
makeashifttowardsimplement-
were tyrants
·
and fools is stu~
ing more laws, there is a serious
pid. They were innovative ge-
problem with the foundati~n of
.
niuses that should be rev~reci
our existence as a nation
.
·
for their PROGRESSIVEtenden-
This is why I can not support
cies. They were the first to do
any evangelical wing of politi-
so many things that we take for
cal parties. This is why I can
granted every day.
consciously support free
Back to where I was headed
choice, in spite of the fact that I
initially. Since around the tum
think abortion is morally wrong.
of the 19th century, the U.S. has
Bill Mekrut is a senior Politi-
cal Science/English double
major. He
is
The Circle's
Po-
litical Columnist.
HEYYOU!!!
he Op-Ed section
i
ooking for a cartoonis
ho would be intereste
n submitting weekly edi
orial cartoons.
The more laws we ha
_
ve, the
been a constant shedding of
less freedom we have. The more
laws. Or rather, laws have been
laws that the
rank
and file is will-
implemented to prevent the op-
ing to accept, the less trustwor-
pressive laws from dominating.
thy the rank and file is of the
There has been a giant increase
progress of mankind. I would
in laws that ALLOW and thank-
rather trust in man's progress
fullyagreatdeclineinlawsthat
then give up my liberties.
FORBID.
lf
interested, please call Tar,
The ultimate aim would be the
So, should we FORBID some-
"--x_2_4_2_9_. _ _ _ _ _ _
__,
Maybe everything
I
have said
has been said before, or maybe
it does not make much sense. It
helped me, so I figured I would
share what I found
.
After all, it
is not just about waitressing. It
is really about life. Anything,
from college, to a monotonous
Tara
Quinn
is
the Opinion Edi-
tor for
Tile Circle.
She spends
her breaks toiling at the
Howard Johnson's Restaurant
iri Times Square.
~PTEMBER 17.1998
•
-
:·•
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PAGES
,.
PearlJamlivein
New
/
York.
City
byCARLrro
·
Staff Writer
"You
haven't played any-
where until you've played Madi-
son Square Garden."
·
Those were the words that
came out of Eddie Vedder's
rriouth when Pearl Jam took the
stage Thursday night. Much
of what spewed from Vedder's
mouth was inaudible because
from
·
a Seinfeldian perspective,
he's a textbook lowtalker
,
not to
mention a bit of a mumbler.
When he did successfully re-
move the marbles from his
mouth, he had
a
few interesting
things to say. Pardon me if I'm
neglecting to comment on the
rest of the band and the fact that
they did in fact play music that
night, but
I
feel that
an
enigmatic
frontman such as Edward de-
serves a little more page space.
Clad in a T-shirt and black trou-
sei:s of a quasispandex consis~
tency,
·Vedder's
v.oice was di:.C
vine. Few artists possess the
ability to bring their
,
digitally
enhanced studio voice
.
to
.
the
stage and reproduce it Michael
Bolton and a prepubescent
Hanson are
.
two
.
others that
come to mind. After the middle
Hanson
(I
think his name is Lisa)
started growing hair under his
anns, he lost some of his vocal
tenacity. Once that hair heads
-
south of the equator
,
his career
is finished. Vedder aid not
·
dis~
play the spiteful "I'm the God
·
of the rock universe
·
and lhate
it"persoria: he orice possessed.
At times he actually appeared
giddy and overcome with Gar-
den fever. Everyone was in~
tlicted with the fever, myself
in-
cluded. I've nevefseen so many
men bouhcirfg around with
permi-grins giggling sheepishly.
You would've thought that Gin-
ger Spice was the ql}e on stage
singing Evenflow
.
.
I
was dis-
mayed by the fact that Evenflow
and Alive
_
were
·
the only num'..:
bers perfonned from the album
Ten. When
·
lead guitaristMike
Mccreedy played the opening
chords; to
Alive,
.
the crowd's
eruption shook the foundation
of the Garden. You might even
say that it raised
.
the roof. Or
perhaps that the roof, the roof,
the roof was
·
on
.
fire. We didn't
need any water,
:
we
·
let the
motherbum. O.Knowl'mjust
getting silly.
Their set consisted of the
more popular tracks
fr;om
each
of their five
albums
as
well as
two cuts from their Mirkinball
EP .
.
I prayed to
the
god of ~he · a little chaos caused by the de-
·
stage but once we left the safety
· rock and roll universe (who'co-
·
parture of a number of fans not
of the crowd, lmet a man I like
incidentally is Eddie· Vedder) familiar with the tenn "encore:"
to call "the Enforcer". He
that Neil
.
Young_Would descend
I made my way to the bottom of greeted
·
me with a slap to the
:
from the heavens
•
and join the
the lowest level aside from the
head and inquired
'
about the
·
band foi:
,
a
few so rigs,' but it flooi: and devised my attack.
level of niy intelligence. Aword
neverhappened. 'I)te ho~pla
'
After opening the encore with
to the wise. Whena300-pound
surro:unding
th
.
e (;:lihton
·
sex
"Hail Hail", they
·
dove into
behemoth asks you if you're
·
sca:ndaf has
·
perme'ated every
"Wishlist''
.
.
·
A soft, hypnotic
stupid, your response should be
·
facet of my
life
thus far,
·
so
·
why
melody perfect for sedating ~he
·
·
"ye
·
s sir". If your reply is;"Ac-
should a concert be an excep-
atmosphere, mainly the security
tually I've got an
IQ
of 158,
tion?
guards;
·
The nian next to me
what's the average
IQ
for a se-
After
Pearl
Jam
finished their
appat'ently sensed that I was
curity guard", that will only re-
·
set, secret servicemen
(I'm
·
visualizing my decent and told
suit in a retaliatory slap. Al-
pretty sure they were just im-
me all lneeded to hear. ''Go for
though the two slaps were not
posters) started carrying out
it, man":
I
·
smiled; shook his
entirely necessary, it's not a
boxes similar to
the
ones given
hand and whispered two words
good idea to bring that to the
tocongress contai
_
ntng testi-
into his ear. Carpe diem. After
enforcer's attention. The next
mony about Slick \\filly's \villy.
hopping
·
over two railings, I
slap landed on my right ear,
For the love of God, stop
'
the
reached
.
my secondary destina-
.
which is still a wee bit tender.
madness. Regarding the scan-
·
tion, the floor level. My primary
·
That slap must have knocked
dal, Vedder stated for the record,
destination 'was front row
'
cen-
the common
.
sense right out of
"I
don't give a fl'@L" Amen,
ter and !had to move fast be-
me because without hesitation,
my brother. Due to the fact that
cause the flock of gorillas (se-
I reciprocated with a backhand.
my seats were directjy behind
curity) was in hot pursuit.· Bar-
Although I did land it, its only
the stage,
I
only stayed there
reling through the crowd, my
accomplishment was to anger
for two songs. Vowing that
I
presence wasn't greeted hospi-
him. He cocked his hand back
would get to the floor level or
tably by the crowd
.
I
tossed out
and this time it took the
form
of
die trying,
I
left my seat and pro-
a few apologies with the utmost
a closed fist. !'ducked and def-
ceeded to sneak into various
sincerity and made my way to
ecated in unison, escaping the
lower level sections where I
.
the center of the stage: I was
brunt of.the blow but catching
watched the show
-
three songs
there for four
.
seconds when
aportionofit. Twoofthesecu-
at a time. Three songs, that's
Eddie looked at me. Probably
_rity
.
guards left my side to re-
the duration of time required for
·
because he knew
I
was about to
.
straln him while the remaining
a security guard ~() P{9gress
.
be planhandledby security. Jhe guard: walk
.
ed. me out of the
f.rom staringat me to thteaten-
,-.
thi:ee that snagged me were rea:.
···
arena,'
once
·
again telling me how.
ing me withexpulsion:.A[terthe
·
s
'
oriably bel)igerent in'their ef-
·
smart
I
was.
band finished
.
its set, their was . forts to escort
me
a.way from the
54
br!ngs sincerity,
ingenuity
t9
scr~el1
byPATRICKWHlTILE
A
&
E Edtior
The new drama
''54~'
is a grip-
ping step
_
back into the final
days of American excess.
.
Set in the)ateJ970
'.
s andhrly
80's, the film concerns the
.
char-
acters and lifestyles centered
around the legendary New York
City disco Studio 54. Writer and
director Mark Christopher ~uc-
ceeds ih recreating th
.
e glittery
atmosphere of Studio 54 with~
out alJowing style to
·
over
shadow
,
substance:
'
Most films
.
released by Miramax maintain at
least some sense of cinematic
art regardless of their subject
matter, and this is no exception.
The plot is centered around I 0
days at the club ~nd is seen
largely through the eyes of
Shane O'Shea (Ryan Phillippe),
Jersey City kid turned S
_
tuqio 54
bartender. He takes 9n the moni-
ker ''Shane 54" as he makes a
name for himself in the club. His
character can
b,e
seen as both a
monument to excess and a case
of blind ambition
·
gone astray.
He becomes enthralled with Julie
·
Black (Neve Campell), a soap
opera star who frequents the
club. Her character is an enig-
matic representation of what
Shane thinks he is looking for.
She is glamorous and high pro-
■
file but has a lb~
.
self~e>pinion.
Shane
.
's best friend
.
at S~udio 54
is Greg (Bree
.
kin Meyer), a
young married bus boy.
,
He
.
doesn't quite
.
fit the
54
mold, but
·
he understands the truth abou
.
t
.
the club
.
better ~ban mosL
.•
His
.
, wife Anita (Salrria Hayek) is des-
perately seeking a record deal
that she thinks she'lLfind
through Studio 54, Mike
Meyers, who plays the clµb's
owner Steve Rubell;delivers the
fi
Im' s
·
best perf or,nance
.
and
most interesting character .
.
Rubell
's
excessive drug use and
.
tax evasion we>uld eventually
lead to the closing of the club's
doors .
.
While ~tudio 54 was iQ
fuU
swing, he was
·
the
..
eyes and
ears
·of
a multi~!llillion dollar
monolith of self
-
(;lestructive di-
version. Rubell
.
would appear
to be the only factual character
in the film, which is based on
actual events in his life. While
much of the film
'
is
_
fictitious
,
Meyer makes his real-life char-
acter wqrk with his charisma.
The film does suffer from
some shortcomings. Studio 54
. was a meeting place for 70's ce-
lebrities, an
_
d Chri~topher's at-
tempt to workthis into the plot
falls short. The painlessly brief
appearar.ce of a very uncon-
vincing Ardy Warhol almost
comes offas campy self-satire
.
Everyone from Mick Jagger's
I
wife to
,
Rcm Jeremy has a ~rief
and avoidable piece in the
movie, and each adds Iittl~
.
indi-
vidually and only serve as stage
pr:ops as
iwhole. '~54".succeeds
despite this trivjality becau.se
·
of
Christopher•s
·
_
~xcellent sense of
character dev,elopinent, particu-
lady
of Shane O'Shea.
The
mhln
characters 1n the film undergo
Danvinian'tivohnions over the
93-minute
·
running time.
Toe
,
only exception is Rubell, who
appears
.
unchanged even as the
film draws to a close.
,;54" is destined to be com-
pared to l 997's Bpogie Nights,
another film centered on 70's
·
ex-
cess. BoogieNighi'swas a far
more low profile endeavor, al-
though in the end the two films
prove about equal. While "54"
is about
·
disco, Boogie Nights
was a yarn about the life of a
porn star. While the
.
subjec,t
matter of the two movies may
seem ostensibly incongruous, in
the end both prove to
.
be fact-
based stories about th~ path of
self-destructive lifestyles. I
would recommend both "54"
and "Boogie Nights" to anyone
who appreciates mature subject
matter. "54" is a film that will be
remembered as a slice of time
recreated with sincerity and
captured beautifully.
•
.
by Rachael
Vollaro
-
·
~:
:
StajJWriter
•
·
·'.
·
_;~.
Acioiie
Scene
1
Tirri~: September
1998
'
Scene: The scene is Marist Col~
lege in
.
Poughkeepsi,e, New York.
Wheri the curtain rises the
s~g'e is set f<>r
a
new piece to
be added to The Circle; As the
writer of this piece, I wiU also
serve as your narrator. As the
semester progresses, this piece
will feature different stories, in-
formational updates, and pro-
files. It is a work in progress
and will never stay the same for
long. I guess you could say that
we're still in
.
"Previews". Al-
though the stars of the show are
the Arts at Marist ColJege, off-
campus visitors will make guest
appearances.
·
.
Remember there
is no food or drink allowed in
the theatre and that the exits are
located to sides and back of the
theater. Thank you and enjoy
the show!
7
A~
the fall semester proceeds,
the Marist College Council on
Theatre Arts (MCCTA) is hard
;
at work for its first two prodiic-
··
.
lions.The first is
a
Noel Cow-
ard play, Pre~e
.
nt Laughter: A
lightcomedy_in three acts
}
·
Di-
rected by Ma.ristProfessorDon
'.
Anderson; Present Laughter
centers
'
around a fainous Brit-
·
ish actor, approaching 30, and
how he attempts to maintain
control of his artistic and sexual
life. Present Laughter will be
perfonned in the Nelly Galetti
TheaterOctober8th-l Ith. More
infonnation wiU be provided.
The second is MCCTA's pro~
duction of Leonard Bernstein's
West Side Story. Co-produced
with the Marist Singers, West
Side Story will- be performed
sometime in November. Re-
cently casted juniors Michael
Seaman
and
Jennifer
Schneiderman will play star-
crossed lovers Tony and Maria.
The Marist Band will also be
making its debut this month. On
Saturday, September 19, the
Marist Band will play its first
half time show at Marist's first
home football game versus
Fairfield University.
•
.
·
SEPTEMBER
17, 1998
.
.
·Rap-jam;l!rty
slatnl}ling
be~r
·
·
~odka shots
· --
dis~ppear,
you'
.
re
,driving·
tdehdsjiving
'
<
-
·
.
.
on~
·
J11ore
fo1
<
tlie
road.
·
Your
1nind's
a
-
haze
intoxication
then
tije rush
acceleration,
.
~
-
.
;.
burn~ng
r'ub~er
bl~rring minds
'
ffantic
'
"Faster!''
Dr1ving blind.
Wailing
screeching
violenrblue
·
!
"
.
.. , ..
.
.
.
..
...
•'.•~P:!rp,,r~Jigl
1
t§
"
>
·
..
rescue
cr~w,
.
,
,
,i
,
"
,
i
.l
~\\'
jawsoflif~
IJ~ttle
'.
de
.
ath
cniqipJed .car
·
dyirig
.
breath
:
·
Guilt, grief
a
=
life's
reg
·
ret
.·
can'tchange
what's
do11e
and
can'tJorget,
. :
I·
-
'.
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,
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PAGE9
T
-
be Urge:
CD
.
Review
by
Nik Bonopartis
Staff Writer
The Urge~
_
Mas·ter Of Styles
For the better part of a decade
The Urge have been forking on
the edge of
,
the musical under-
grouhd, with a rapidly develop-
ing fanbase and ready to cx-
p1ode into
the mainstream. With
their release of Master Of Styles
they have done just that The
first single off of the album,
"Jump
Right
lil",
earned a spot
in MTV's regular rotation this
summer, and for good reason .
Boasting a loud three piece horn
section
,
powerful guitars and
cutting percussion, the Urge
deliver a heavy hitting mix of ska
and hardcore. Featuring vocal
stylings by frontman Steve
Ewing, and even guest vocals
by Nick Hexum of
311
fame.
"Jump Right In .. has become a
fan favorite.
The rest of the album ranges
from the very heavy to the very
funky. with several tunes an-
gling towards the metal and
hardcore end of the spectrum.
Not once does the Urge slip into
the commonplace cliches of
modern ska,- choosing instead
to take a fresh, more direct route
.
towards songwriting. The album
rocks from beginning to end.
Now and again the band also
treads into rap territory, but
never without forgetting their
roots. The
CD
also comes with
a multimedia extra
,
featuring a
playable video game demo and
sever.11 videos of the band in
action, as
·
well as other features.
So if you
'
re in the mood for an
album that doesn't let you down
until the last guitar fades out,
Master Of Styles is a definite
winner.
Top 5 most annoying
events of the summer
by
Anthony Civacelli
·
s1ajfWriter
Our summer was riddled by
· innumerable ongoing
_
and
unnecessary events that
dragged our collective states
.
of consciousness through the
mud. Why doesn't tabloid
fodder like this· happen in
Canada or Mexico? Maybe
because we are the ones who
buy into it...
I.
The Lewinksy scandal.
Didn't anyone sto to think
that Clinton's mishap was just a
regular day at the office for JFK?
·
·
2. Ginger Spice leaves the Spice
Girls. Sure it happened in May
,
but I was still pretty upset.
What will she do
for
work now'?
3. Alleged death of"actor" Ron
Jeremy. A true genius was lost.
4. Prophecies for the end of the
world in 2000.
Certainly we
have become accustomed to
this, and we will see even more
·
of them in
1
_
999.
But what hap-
pens when they are proven
wrong?
I
don't think
I
can wait
until
3000
to
find out...
5.
My inability to think of num-
ber 5.
atrick's
-
Filler:
'What if every-
bing is illusio
ndnothing
xis ts? In tha
ase,
I
definitely
verpaid for m
arpet."
--Woody Allen
◄
.
..
.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ·
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.
•"
.
.
SEPTEMBER·t1,
1998 · ·
.
·
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..
.
.
..
·-
.
.
.
··
-
.
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l{/\r · . ·; __ ,
~
.-.-.-,-~.,-
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-~-.
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AT THE
RIGHT
PRIC·E
.
.
, Student Aid, just for Marist College ....
:
-
•
'
f
·
-- CHE.CK OUT
·
.
'
OURWEBSITE
FORlllFF.ER.E:N.T
.SAVINGS.
EACHWEE·K!
WWVV.caldor.·coffl
· ...•.......
···,;;,..·.·[Z]·
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.
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.
VISA
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.
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•·
.·.·'
. .
·
. .
.
SEPTEMBER 17;1998
.
.
.
ff
Campus
Report-
·.
----------'
'
-
_.,.
'
.
.
y
_
by Jan Beighley, Jr.
The
·
sports world
waii'
brought
'.
_
·
_
.
.
McGwire, Sainiriy Sosa has qui-
·
.
Moss; through
·
two games, has
to a viciou
·
s halt early las~ w,eek ·
·
etlymatchedtvicG~i[ehomerfor
10
_
receptions for 183 yards and
when
·
Mark McGwire set a
homer. Sure; we have all known
.
a touchdown. Projected over a
record for the ages. .
·
and
·
noticed t'1e_.
-
season Sosa
full season, that would be 80
McGwfre has now done some·~
has jlad,-, but'who really took
.
c:,itches for
·
1464 ytirds and 8
thing that only two other play~
h~m seriously? Now he is in the
toucbdowns .. But the numbers
ers in
•
inajor league history ha.d
running for
~
record that he
don't stop there. Curtis Enis
,
done - hit 60 homers.
,
He has
should not bdn·contention for.
after
·
ending
·
w
hold-out that
.
no.whit more in
a:!)i~gi~)eason
S~s~ can now.~be
·
found i
_
n the
lasted most o(
,
fr~it1ing camp,
th~i:t any otherJ?iisebaitplayer
mitl~t of a phenomena!
l~ason
has_ come on
strong
"
ii! the first
ever. McGwire's 62fiomers are
that has him tied wit!-\ McGwire
two ·games of the
.
regular sea~
more than Babe Ruth ever hit
.
.
atop
:
the record books with
62
son rushing for
.171
yards on
more than Roger Maris, mor~
home runs.
·
·
only 34 carries. He has had an
than
_
Hank Aaron (his ca
_
reer
..
Th{!
_
.reco~d i_s the most presti-
_
explosiveness not featured in a
highwasameasly47),morethan
gious in all of- Qaseba.11.
Chicago backfield since Walter
Mickey Mantle, Jimmie Foxx
..
.
M:cGwire broke it first;
•
b
,
ut the
.
Payton.
the list goes on and on. Trying
real winner
will
j)ehe who holds
Th~ next t,w9 names have been
to put the home run record into
the record at the end of the s~a-
tossed about for:sonie time lead-
·
historical perspective is not
son.
iilg up to and following the 1998
only difficult; it is impossible.
draft. They ar~_Ry~n Leaf and
WhenMarkMcGwire·hitthe
:_'
.
·J?eyt<:>n
•
M!}nriing
/·
With any
line shot that was number
62
off
r9_okie quanerback; coaches and
·
of Steve Trachse~
1
it was
:
notj~st
*
*
*
:i<
fans
.
a.like mus.t expect some mis-
the record books he rewrote, it
tak~~
an_µ
-
.
these
two
was history.
.
wunderkinds
are
no exception
.
McGwire has
·
proven-worthy
Just watching
'
the
NFL
and
Leaf has qpened up
.with
two
·.
backer Andy Katzmoyer, arid
comerback Dre· Bly. Each of
these
.
players has something
special abo
.
ut them and none of
them have much doubt. sur-
rounding them. Couch holds
both high s
_
ch-ool and collegiate
passing records and shows no
.
signs of stopping. McNabb and
Culpepper
are
both phenomenal
athletes that can throw
a
foot-
ball as well as any quarterback
to play the game. with mobility
of the great wide receivers. Wil-
liams might have been·
.
the best
running back in C
_
<>Hege
-
football
three years running:
a11µ
soon
will have the_9p1?"~rtupity to
prove it in the pros
.
Katzmoyer
.
is quite
·possibly
the greatest
PAGE 11
.
collegiate Iinebackerofourtini~
and will give a lucky NFL team
the answer at middle' lioebacker
for
IO
years:
Dre
81
y
intercepted
I
I passes as a freshman and
was All-America
as a
sopho-
more.
He
,viii
no doubt be
All-
America again. and then a start-
ing corner in the
Pro
Bowl be-
fore long.
It
just seems to this writer that
the collection or young talent
in football is mounting. This
talent gives hope to all the fans
that are gelling ready to say
goodbye to John.Elway, Steve
Young
~
Dan Marino and Jerry
Rice. Have no fear. Tim Couch.
Peyton Manning. Curtis Enis
and Randy Moss are coming.
MAKE
YOUR OWN HOURS
SeJ
Kodak
Sprsng Brea!<
·
s~
ir:;:,s
HIGHES~ co~~1ss10N •
c.owes+
PRICES
: ·
·,
NO COST TO YOU
.
T!a\'el
FREE
inc/1.;c:i09
fco:l
,
drink
J.
/l0
,~-
s1op
:,ar.ies
l!l
.
~
.
'
'
.
.
.
.
'
.
·.
-: :
;<
.
.
.
WORLD CLASS VACA TICHS
1998 STUOENT TRAVEL
PLANNERS
"TOP
PRODUCER"
1-800-222-4432
·
Fast ~fart
r9r.
Melfi,
Inen's
..
cross country
to be mentioned among the
college football games these
consecutiye,
-
wins, but has not
greatest home run hitters of all
~
•past couple wee.ks has given me
been astq~ishing. Manning has
time, worthy of being nientioried ·' hope
for
the future of profes-
had some· big moments, includ-
in the same breath wfth Ruth,
sional
football. After
a
couple
ing a 300 yard game against
·
Aaron,Mays,etaLWhowould
of weakdrafts that haye pro-
Miami in the Colts season
have thought in 199}
·,
(when
duced more flops and busts
.
opener, but has also been prone
fyf
cGwire hit .20
I
·
with 22 ham:-
than any NFL general. manager
to interceptions
,
having thrown
by
JENNIFER GLOVER
ers in 154 games) that it would
\Vould like to admit to, there is
six in his first two games'.
Staff Writer
prepare for this season. Over
the summer months the team
followed their workout regiment
and put in the miles that was
necessary t'or them to come in
and become one of the top
teams.
Qe McGwire that would break
finally an inkling of hope forthe
As well as these four players
,
..
.
the most magical recor~
in
all of future of football.
_·
=.,-
_:
":
·
an9 all the other rookies this
If
the first two\Jeets
·
are 1ny
sports? Wh
"
o would have
This year we, haye been
year (Charles Woodson; et al.)
indication, this
··
year·s
·
Marist
guessed that anyone could hit
_
blessed with the
.
debuts of there is a very talented group of
men's cross country team could
50+ homers in three
·
ccmsecutiVe
'
·;
Randy
,
Moss, Curtis
:,
Enis, juniors'and seniors corhingfrom
be potential leaders in the Metro
seasons? McGwire has turned
Peyton Manning and Ryan
the
:
collegiate ranks. Among
Atlantic Athletic Conference.
•
his doubters into his mostavid
Leaf.
.-
While some, noticeably
.
these collegians are
.
quarter-
.
·
Hard work and dedication has
supporters, and now
we
all just
Manning and Leaf,
will
not re-
backs Donovan McNabb, Tim
put this team
:
a
fe~
st~ps above
want to see how far he will go
.
ally put
up
astounding numbers,
Couch, Daunte Culpepper, run-
theircompei:ition
,:
as evident by
In
:
a year that has been all
their presence is undeniable.
ning back Ricky Williams, line-
their early season performar:ices.
On Sept. 5, at their ffrst meet of
the
season,
the'
.
men's 'cross
country team traveled to Lehigl1
University; where they ran to a
second place fin
.
ish. Then, the
following
weekend,
at
Hartford's Wickham Park, the
Red Foxes
·
did even better -
scoring a near-perfect sixteen
points, en route to an easy first
place victqry,
Senior Mich~el Melfi led the
team on both occasions, ·as he
raced to back-to-back first place
finishes. It has been a true team
·
effort,
.
howe~er, as Mari st run
-
ners up and down the roster
. have been d6minating the com-
petitors. At the Hartford lnvi-
.
tational, Red Fox runners domi-
nated the field. Along with
Melfi's win, senior Ben
Hefferon, sophomore Greg
Salamone, and freshman Coby
Jacobus, worked together to
.
claim the top four pqsitions.
The
.
top ten was rounded_ out
with four more Marist runners
·
as juniors Jeff Grady, St~ve
Palmer, and freshmen Mike Nehr
and Gilby Hawkins kept any
other team from competing wit~
.
the Red Foxes.
.
-
.
What can this year's
success
be attributed to? The combina-
tion of experience and young
energy could be the key to this
year's team. The
team
welcomes
back six seniors, five juniors; and
four sophomores,- all of whom
have given guidance to afresh-
man
class that boasts
six new-
comers. Head coach Pete
Colaizzo also notes that each
team
·
member worked hard to
After their first two outstand-
ing performances, what can we
expect from the Marist men's
cross country team for the re-
·
mainderoft~eirseason'? Expec-
tations; as well as confidence,
run high for the team right now
.
Junior Tom Henry says he
thinks
.
his· team is noticeably
better this season.
'These
two meets (al Lehigh
and Hartfo_rd) are good indica-
.
tors of how m
_
uch this team has
improved from last year, and
·or
how much this team can do
throughout the rest of the sea-
son,"
Henry said.
"This
is the
best (cross country) team that
Marist has had in
a
long time.
"
c;oiaizzo reaffirmed Henry's
statement.
·
"This isthe deepest team that
I
have coached in my eight years
at Marist," Colaizzo said.
This Friday, the cross coun-
try teams travel to South Bend,
Indiana, where they will compete
in the
_
National Cross Country
Championships, hosted
.
by the
University of Notre Dame. The
team has huge goals for them-
selves,
·
hoping to finish in the
top fjve.-atthis highly competi-
tive me
.
et.
·
This is the beginning of
a
·
string of goals that the team has
set forth for
.
themselves. The
tearn.hbpe~;;to finish in the top
three at the
MAAC
champion-
ship and among the top ten
teams at the ICAAAA Regional
race in October.
The women's cross country
team has also gotten out to a
good start. The women won
at
both Lehigh and the Hartford
Invitational.
They are led by freshman Liza
Grudzinski who notched a first
place finish in both races.
...
'-
Stat:
of the
·
Week
·.
·
·
:
The football te'runga:ve up
;:
320
'
yards
·
iushing.against
.
.
:.
o~orgefo.wii
/
0111y
'·
14
··
<
Yards
·
less than all
'
of
fas(
'.
i
•
-'
e
'
~.
'.
.
.
.
.
· ..
.
.
. .
·:
SEPfEMBERl7
'
1998
•
.
.
,.-
,
:
.
.
.
.·.
,·,
.
'·,
.
:
.._
·
·
•
·
.
'
;
•
·
..
'
·
•
·
:
;
'
..
~
'
Quote
of
.
the
Week
:
"Hopefully, thisyeru:will
be
a
··
stepp!rig
~
stone-fof
y~ars
fo
come/'
·:
·
.
.
,:
'_•···
/
·::
.
•
·
·
.
-Matt
Sommers,
'
.
:
,
.
,
.
'
,
·
,
,
,
.
..
,
.
.
..
.
.
'
.
·
,,
.
•
.
Hoyas
tun
over
FOxes_.,111.-
.
0-pener
_
'
.
by
THOMAS
RYAN
that
.
in perspective; the Red
..
.
iii
.
the
-
final pla;
:
of
th~
;
g~e,
Marist head coach
:
Jim Parady
;
Marist defen
'
sive coordina_tor
Sports Editor
·
Foxes defotise•gave up
.
394
.
Geor.getowri took
:
controLearly . .
was disappointed
'
with
-
his
RkkPardy,attc::mptingtoinstall
yards on
'
the_ground
_
all·season
of this one and never
.
looked
.
·team's
effort irithat:finalquar:. ·a new ~ystem
_
with the. Red
What was supposed•· to be a
lastyear.
·
.
back, notching
_
theit.f'ift~
·
c
_
on-
ter. .
.
. .
.
. .
.
.
.
Foxes,
was impressed with BeJl's
n~w beginning
for·
the Manst
.·
.
Of course that defense did not
secutive win ovetthe RedFoxes.
.''We broke downmen~lly, in
performance.
:
.
.
Red Foxes ended up being noth-
have.
'
to . g()
..
up
<
.
against
GeofgetQ\VIl kf~ker Paul
.
thefourth qµarter/' Para~y told·
"He~s a hell of a player,!'
.
the
ing more than an embarrassing
Georgetown running ~ackRob
·
Wiorowski gotthe H9yas oil the
reporters following the game.
former MMst head coach said f
repeat of. years past.
.
·
Belli last season,
·
The transfer
board firsr w
.
ith
'
a 38~yard field
·
The
.
effort of Belli also had a
Marist looks
.
to rebound next
·
A
·
Marist
·
team foll of hope
·
froin Richmoridrushed.foi: 187
goal that was set up by a Belli
-
lot to
'
do with Marist's fourth
-
week~hen theytak~oriFairfield
.
when it showed up in Washing~
yards and his first canier
-
fouch-
•
38-yard run
-
on the
·
fourth
.
play
·
..
quarter struggles
.
on Saturday at I :00 p.m.
ton
~
D.C; leftwith
·
their tails be-
down in leading
.
the Hoya's bal-
from scrhnmage .
.
L~ter
-
in tll~·
tween their legs aftera24-
7
de
..:
anced ground attack
:
.
first.
·
quarterback
-J
_
.J.
,
.M:ont
.
feat at the hands of the
.
The only offensive success
threw a 4-yard touchdown pass
Georgetown Hoyas.
.
for Marist came on the ground
to Mike Romoszka to give the
Picked to finish fifth,in the
as well. J.l Allen ran for 91
Hoyas~-}O~Olead:
.
.
·
·.
·.
·.
·
,
MetroAt!anticAthleticConfer-
yardsandscored the.Red Foxes
.
The game stayed)hat way;
·
ence pre-season coaches pol!
,
oniy touchdown of the day, de-
.
thanks
.to-
three Ge<>,rgetown
the Red Foxes had dreams of spite separating his shoulder in
turnovers d!!ep inMarist terri-
knocking off tlie
.
defending the first half. Senior quarter~
.
tory,
··
until the fourth qul!rt~r
,
MAAC champs in their own
back ~i
.
llTramaglinihad a dis-
when Belli regist~reclhis
'
l7~yard
back yard. It was
:
not meanno
··
appointing opener, finishing 6-
TDrun. On
.
th~next Hoya pos:-
.
be on this afternoon.
for.:.J9for 109 yards and two in~
.
session AnthonyTuozzo reeled
TheHoyasamassed452 yards
terceptions.
off
•
his
.
Jong
,
run, arid
of total offense; including 320
.
.
Unlike last· year's s~e-saw
·
•
Georgetown was comfortably
yards on the groun~. To put
battle that was not decided un
.
~
.
ahead 24-0.
Wome
:
n
's
.
volle
:
yb
'
all
·nets
tWo,
wins.
in
Classic
byRYANMARAZITI
Staff Writer
s:
Marist was plagued early with
·net
· .
.
violations, accumulating
four and keeping
·
Columbia in
Metro: A suitable adjective to
the ga~e
·
at 8-5
,
.
The turning
describe the
fury
of.
:
moveinent
.
point seemed .to be a
·
long vol-
.
during a Marist women's volley-
ley
.
that involved an
•
incredible
ball game.
·
·
dig by Ramey,
.
great back row
Constant rotations, position-
bumps by Heidi Backlund, and
ing, play calling; digging, bump-
strong
•
hitting from Birk. Despite
ing; setting and
.
of course the
losing the volley, Marist used it
spiking:are about as intense as
as a wake up call, as. Parker
a crowded New York City inter-
served the final four points for
section;
·
·
·
Everyone is puinped.
the
·
win
,
Everyone is fierce and unw"aver-
Marist seemed to lack its early
ing.
.
agressiveness iri the third game,
Men·'s
·
s:oe
.
c
·
e.r·
.-
s
-
tarts
·.
new
season where theyJeftQ(f
by JEFFDAHNCKE
Sta.ffWriter'
·
OrmaybeMetrowastheword
losing 7:-15. One factor that
·
tattooed above a
·
skuU:-wearing
·
stands out was
·
the
·
absence of
a cowboy hat and banaana
·
on
HeaterVirfrom the lineup; Per-
theshoulder of the Quinnipiac
haps coach Emily Ahlquist was
fan sitting besid
.
e me
.
·
·
.
giving Vir a rest and preserving•
Nevertheless, .the
:
women's . her for later action. A move
Jtis a new season for the men's
voUeyball te.am played abqve
wisely chosen.
·
soccer team; but it has staned
·
par during· the
·
Marisf Classic
Maristjumped out fast going
i~ an aH too
·
familiar way.
tournament this past weekend:
up 2-0 after a side-out set up by
Coming offlastyear's 2-13-1
:
Spcirting~2-l record in theJour-
Cerda and a numbing spike by
campaign the
·
-
Foxes
:
.
have
·
.
ney;MaristdefeatedArmy and
·
Parker.Columbiahungtightand
opened with
.
four. consecutive
:
·, '
Columbia
'.
before
.
bowing
.
to
eventually went up 4-2
.
That
losses.
.
.
.
'
. _.
;
,
:
.
Quinhipiac
:
M.a.nii
upp#citheir
would be the clbsest they would
.
The club tra~eled to the N~w
.
r~cor~
·i()
.•
2-2~p ~
.
e
·
se
_
as
.
on.-
.
C
get as
_
M:ari
,
st went on
a
tear that
Ygrk
:
s
.
tate Invit~ifo11~l
-.
irt
>
·
ii
OilJJriday.
·
~ight
/
¥arist
·
puttlierriupJ0,-6forcingColum-
.
Oneonta back on September
'
5
,
.a\'oi_d~d
:,
a
:
disa~~ro~s}~~dp~n· biaintoa
_
T9.
_
Mari~twouldnot
ar(d f~U to HartwickCollegeg--J.
, ;
by,~,w1nning th~
,;
frn~l game
b~
,
slowed d~wn
·
and won both
The
.
next day
.
it was
,
Fqt'dham'
/
·agaipstArm,y;
:
,Mer\.\liQ11iflgthe
the.game(i5
~
6)a11d t)lematch.·
sending Mari st
.
back
:
to
·.'
first~o 15~12an,d'J6~14,Maiist
:
Leigh $hillington played sol-
Pciughkeepsie winless:S-2 was
droppeg the next ~wo,
'.
12~15 ang
.
:idly with five.
kills,
three service
·
·
the score;
.
.
'
·
·
.·
:
·
.
J3-f!
,
5
.
bif~ri
~
wi~~~rig
"._
the deci-
,
/
ac~s;si~
-_
dig's;a~d her signature
·
:'
.In
.
game three, Lqhg
/
Js
·
Ia~d°-
.
;
.
si~~ garri<:
~
Jf?
~
~,J~aptaiij Trisha
)e~-"hit:
,
Whatis
:
~i"seFhit?
.
Well
.
Uni-versityhande<Lthe
·
Red
:•
.
·.
':
Ram
_
(Jy1¢dthe
·
\V~Ywitlfl2kills
c' •
tmadeitupb~causeitbestde-
.
Foxes a'2-]defoat. The
.
home
'
.
.
and.-f1;er,vice aces.
·:
Cara
'
,
nfrk scdbe
'
s this deceptive
'
settertac-
opener last Saturday was
m9ie
-'
:
.
pl~ye~
~
soHd qeferi
'
se
:
w.itli
;
i)
·
.
jic in which the
.
set is faked and
..
·
ofthe same;as Colgate v
·
isit~d
·
..
.
5J~gs ancfl,1 ~lls
/
NI!!f¢ercla;
<'.
softly hitover the net. Cerda
t~e Gartiand Athletic Compie,(
·
·
.
.
·. · ·.
•
.
·
. .. .
.
·
. .
. .
Circle
ph<>tolien:my
Siniih
')en.Par_kerand c;tptaiQ I-leather
had-1
Q
kills
.
while Parker and Vir
.
and
left with a3°
I' win
·•
The
rrien's
·si>ccei
~•
·
am got
off
to
a
rough~
star{ag1ln
'
this
>
.,·
·
.Vi
.....
1 .
r_·.a1
..
1_ .. hi.·
_
:t
.
..
w .
e
.
:i
..
,
1
..
fo
,.
r
.
th
, .
.
· .
.
e
.
.
·
.
.
·
·
f{
·
ed
··
·
.
.
•.·•
.
B
,
.
.
P
.
X
.
.
e
.
s.. . p·1.~{y
··
e
..
d·
.
·•
.
s
..
u
,
.
.
.
·
Pe
.
·
.
..
r
..
b
.
·
·
.
..
d
..
e
.
fi
.
e
.
n
.
se
.
.
·
·.
·
· ·
· · ·
.
·
·
-:
·
•
.
·
>
'
·
<
•
.
season,' dropping thltlfflrat
·
tour games 01·1991
·
-:.
<
:
·
,:·
.
·
'
..
.
·
,
Despitethesfowstart, theplay-
.·
· ·
.
.
.
·
·
•
..
.
•·
·
·
.
. .: :
·
.· •
.··
··
..
·
.
•
•
• ·
:
.
•·Marist.faced
Coluni~ia: early ·
.
Jn theevening,Maristfaced
ers
.
have remaine~ optimistic;
-·
-
...
- .
.
,
.
.
:.
s.aturdayjno,ming irifr<>nt'of.a
the Quinnipiac
.
Bi-ayes and their
Accordirig
,
tofresl}men
•
foiw,ard
. .
'
'
Freshman goalkeeper and
.
tri-
·
..
·
Being thc1t he is
.
~~
-
only se-
. . _
cfowdal>out the size ~fi11'1arist
.
.
"mad midgett
·
I>espite theidn-
.
Braiii Garafola; the 0~4 record
·
.
captairiCarlos DeBrito agreed.
.
nior, Sommers'f?JllS to g~tba~l(
:·
..
E~icsda~s:
:
I)e
-
~p~(e
th~
SIJlan
.
·
te~~ify dur,ing
·
vJarm~ups, Marist
has not been inclicative of the
·
!'.We
have
,
eleven different
.
.
in the lineµp
c1s
:
soon
.
as po
,
s-
· :
Jtimou.!
/
Mari
st
'
-
was
t
its 9wn
.
could notseein to
,
play consis-
team 's perfoniiance;
-
.
. ·
people coming together for the
sible. "IfeeJ.really bad
iightri()w
·
source
:
ofj~t~risity
:
/
font
team
tentlyatgame time. M.uist won
~'.AJ~ough
we have been los-
first time. It dpesn~t click right
that J'in hurt," he
-
~aid .
.
'
.
'hry
to
·,
that' plays
,
iri fronf
cif
a
.
couple
th~ ~ t
game
15~12 and seemed
ing, we are playing well," said: anywaytDeBrito said
.
. ·
lead by exampl~ on and off the
·
parents,
a
janit
_
or
·
and
·a
Marist
.
to
•
be
.
in contro}overwhelming
the
·
teams leading ~corer.
·
.
The FQxesfully expectto say
field and want to tum this pro~
security officer, this team
,
gets . the
_
passive ~raves with strong
'
:
These sentiments were echoed
.
goodbye to these losing ways.
gram around.'.'
.
.
.
i ·
.
·
·
.
.
.
pump~d
>
·
J\
,
trademark many
·
servic~
,
anci
_
aggressive attacks.
by
.
fellow freshmen Thomas There is a fee}ing of solidarity
Conference play begins" this
.
teams fack;)elf ~rnotivation·. ,: liowever,
:
Mai;ist would then
Mullowney. .
.
.
arriong the playerS.
·
week with
a
·
gariie
.
against Marist'came out strong jump~
drop
the next two
S~
15 and I
0--
.
"We've been dominating
.
..
!1.asi year was thrown away
Fairfield. Sommers
•
is looking ingtoa9:.21~dinthefii"$tgame.
15 .
.
·
.
.
.
'
.
games," sai·d
:
Mullowney.
and
this is a new beginning,,, forward to
MAAC
play
~cl
trilly
..
Aftera kilJ by
.Cerda
aiid°strong
.
Vir had
.
a
reascinfor the incon-
"We' ve just· been very un-
said Garafola
.
"The team is
expects to make a markinthe
.
servi.ce.Marist\Veiliup H-2and
sistency.
.
·
lucky.';
tightly knit and everyone gets
league ande11d up in the
'
pray-
forced Columb1a
i
to take
-
.
a
· -
.
"We made mental errors and
Whether itis-bad.iuck or not~
along."
offs at season's
.
end:
:
:
timeout. After the timeout hit poorJy after
the
first match,"
on
.
e thing the team does not
Inexperiencehasnotbeerithe
"Oncewepersevere(through
Marist's
.
dominanffront row
'
saidVir. "Wecouldn'tfindour
have is experience. Fourteen only obstacle for Marist, as the
mental lapses) we
will
.
be
.
on
a
·
.
continuecl to pound
.
the under-
.
rhythm.''
..
. ,
·
freshmen are on this year's
lone senior on the club has
roll," he said.
:
''Hopefully this
sized Lions.with strong outside
,
Encouraged by their "mad
squad, ten of whom' have
.
start-
played in only one game. Matt
year will
be
a stepping stone for
hitting by'Cerda and strong de-
midget's" amu$ing mannerisms,
ingpositions. Arid after 1997's
Sommers, considered to
be
the
years to come and we can tum fensebyVir. Virsealedthegame
Quinnipiac eventually took the
nightmareseason, J998should
team leader, suffered a ham-
Marist Soccer into a power-
withaspikeforal5-2win.
·
firialgame(l3-15)andthematch.
probably be considered a re-
string injury the second day of
.
house in the
MAAC."
.
In the second game, Marist
Although unable to take advan-
building year.
training camp and re-aggravated
The Red Foxes will
be
in ac-
displayed its blend of power · tage of the Braves, Marist did
"We work as hard as we can
it last week. He hopes
.
to return
tion this Saturday as th~ play
and technique by using an ar-
not fold easily and lost only af-
but none ofus have Division-I
intimefortheSeptember26con-
hosttoStPeter'sCollegeat 1:00
ray of cross-court hits, soft
ter a series of kills and strong
experience,'' said Mullowney.
test against Niagara.
·
p.m.
touches and fake sets to win 15-
volleys;
.
.
52.1.1
52.1.2
52.1.3
52.1.4
52.1.5
52.1.6
52.1.7
52.1.8
52.1.9
52.1.10
52.1.11
52.1.12