The Circle, October 29, 1998.pdf
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 52 No. 5 - October 29, 1998
content
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arist C~Il~ge
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OCTOBER29,1998
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GR()GAN
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the sirbet
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not w~eto d~-
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arid
clear
,
.
Asst._lf
ews
Editor
stioy
.:.
the iree,
•
~
so
they
·
offered it
.
of
i
water
c
iines
•
was
·
difficult,"
.
·
-
·---
•
-·
to Marist
-
-
.
:
-
-
-
·
Short
-
said
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;
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·
.
. ._ .. -
.-
-
After ~6
t
~~~troversia1
·-
cle.:
.
But
)
heproblem
\
vas in mov-
c
A
-
20
:
foot'--wide
·
by
,
five
·
f pot
'
struction of
the
Ginko tree out-·
.
ing
th~
tree
;
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....
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:
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.
-
.
'
,
,
'
deep hbid
'
w~ dugJor:ih~ tree:
•.
·
sid~ ._ the Hbrary'
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last
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iemester,_
-
· ·
•·
Many' companies \Vanted up""
-·
Cufreµtly
;
~
_
er~
~in{
guidelin~s
-. Marist recently
'
added
,
a
:
\are
wards
of $30,000' to transport it,
in pli.t¢~
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Jo #i~e
.:
sure the' t_ree
•: breed of tree to
:
the campiis:
::
according
:
io Massie;
,
'
,
,
stays
rqoted
ii:(its
new
home.
_
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.
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The
'
contractors" d?rnoHshfog
::
.
Ralph
;
Short,
'
grouµds super-
The
guideHnes
are
a
temporary
the old
,
westenl PrintingJjuild.:
.
visor
>
said Marist
·
decided
'
it
.
precatition
:
·
·
according t6 Short .
.
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ing
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ac:rns's'tlif
street cicmated a
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's°ave
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a
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iarge
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unoilnt of
·
.
.
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''The
'
·
guideliries
\vill
·
-
be
-
re-
f
\\'eeping Hemlock to the
-
col
_:
rnoney by transporting the tree
moved irUate spnrig," he said.
lege. Maiist'moved the massive
-
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''iil_:hqus«
?
by
:
using
'
Marist
;
s
.
.
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Until then they are there for
.
tree ~dYransplant~d it in
'
front
grol111ds
·
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crew
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workers
i
an
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settling
_
and to
.
guard against
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Route
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project
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1999
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:~I ; be
-
as-
struction between Delafield and
Thu"°"
imsdmtifo:
sww,
takmfrc,n
100
upgrade was needed m the
fu-
et
an
?0
1
"··' thel
,I?ages
.
,Sharon Drive consists of drain-
Marinsrudnrn.
-
a
www.mans .euwa e res
Sports ........
.
............... 16
,;,.
i
I
·1
,
!
'
..
..
OCTOBER 29 ,1998-
Security Briefs .
--Compiled
by
Scott.Neville
. Poughkeepsie Police arrested a
.
the fire. No injuries were re- .
non-Marist student early Sun-'
ported.
day morning, Oct.11 for alleg-
edly harassing a female student
at the West Cedar apartments.
According to Joe Leary, direc-
tor of Safety and Security, the
man had twisted the student's
arm on Oct. 1, injuring her wrist.
This time, he had a couple of
friends with
him
when security
was called. A guard contacted
the Poughkeepsie Police when
the student filed a .complaint
about the Oct.
1
incident. The
offender was arrested and
charged with 3rd degree as-
sault.
Two students smelled a strong
burning odor in Donnelly Thurs-
day, Oct. 15,at 3:50 a.m. while
working on a fashion project.
Since the alarm did not sound,
the two students contacted·the
fire department who responded
and extinguished the electrical
short circuit in a hallway light.
A combined total of 289 cans
•
On Monday, Oct. 19 at 10:40 p.m.
a window in Gregory was bro-
ken. Leary said officers found a
female Sheahan Hall student at
the scene who admitted to the
vandalism, alleged! y saying that
the window's owner had been
"bothering" her friend.
·
A re-
placement window will cost ap-
. proximately $50-$70. ·
. and bottles of beer have been
confiscated, in addition to one
keg and tap, by the security
guards at Marist since the be-
ginning of the academic year.
A· tow truck hauled away two
vehicles from campus this past
week because the owners had
multiple, unpaid parking tickets.
The two offenders had to con-
tact the towing company to
claim their vehicles.
Thirty-four 12-oz cans and three
12-oz bottles of beer, one 12-oz
Rolling Rock ale and one bottle
of wine were confiscated from a
second floor suite in Mid-rise
at 10 p.m., Oct. 9 by security
guards.
Another fire alarm blared in the
"E
block" of the Town Houses ·
Security witnessed two legs _at 7: 15 p.m. ~aturday, Oct. 10. A
flailing out of a Sheahan cellar · cookfog i
_
w::ident set off the
win_dO\\'.
Qc:i-H
at 1: t5·a.m: The •··· alarm)V)illethe firedepartment
Jegfh~JCJnged. tQ,aii;_una'Litho:-;:j ·.aJJow~4li:helroom
-
to:air:out, a
rized guestthaLwas being
.
·securityguard cut his finger on
smuggled in. through the win-
-a broken plastic window frame.
<low by two female residents.
No serious damage was done.to
Security asked the guest to
the room or
to
the guard's fin-
leave shortly after completing
ger.
her climb through the window
safely.
:Two unauthorized guests were
·
found on the ninth floor of
An air-conditioning motor
ChanipagnatOct,11 at3:20a.m.
sei.zed and caught
.
fire in ,An RD heard them, yelling out
Doimelly~t3:55p.inJastSatur-
the window and asked the of-
. day. The fire department rushed ·. fenders to leave later in the
to thi{building 'and exting~ished
c
·
1!1o¥ing ..
su_n_ny_.
hi:
58°
Io: 38°
sunny.
hi: 55°
lo: 37°
· sunny
hi: 57°
lo: 36°
Source:·http://www.weather.com (The Weather Channel)
Reridt
cancan
Jamaica
Ballamas
frll
Barballes
$
SHIIIPadfa .
99
-
1-808-426-ffll
WRmNG UNDER CONSTRUCTION
Need Help With A Paper? .
e to tfte
M..\RIST WRmNG
.,,c,,rn:c·n
ocated
Just Past The Post
Off~
In ·
pagnat
lower
let-el
PAGE2
What-are you goingto be for
HalloW~n? ·
"I'm
going to be a
ghos_t."
J.T. Dolan
_ sophomore
"Pippi
Longstocking."
_Julie Rubinstein
sophomore
GOOD WEEKLY INCOME
processing mail for national company! Free supplies, post~ .
age! No selling! Bonuses!
·
·
Stait hnmediately, Genuine Opportunity!
Please rush long self-addressed stamped envelope to:
MPC, Suite 391
2045 Mt. Zion.Rd.
"I think
I'm
going tq
be· Batman
if
I can
find
a costum~. ".
Hshish Sharma -
_junior·
M"a:rist
Library
.j
ti
-
~
I
-
- - -
--
-
-
-
-------------
PAGE3
;
DungeFM{}llth.activities
aid needy
..
·:.
.
.
.
.
.
·
.
·
-
,
.
.
.
·
byTONYHEYL
is collected;
·
.. _
.
.
·
·
.
:
:
StajJWriter
,
.
.
.
-
,
.-
Hunger Awareness Month
·
•
-
_
•·•· ·_
··
.
.
·
•
•-
-
··
_
kicks off Nov.4 with a Hunger
Every 2.5 seconds
·
a c,hild dies'
-
Run/Walk
.
at
.·
noon in front of
-
of hunger related causes.
_
.
_
Champagnat Hall. There is a $2
.
ItJs shocking statistics like
.
entry fee for any adults who
that which have helped, give rise
·
want to participate and a
$1
fee
.
to Hunger Awareness Month
for students.
here at 1-farist~ ·
_ _
.
Kelly said he hopes this year's
Brother Frank Kelly, director
walk will attract at least
250
of campus mini~try,;said the en-
people and stressed
it
is not just
·
tire month of November is re-
forwalkers and runners
.
served
•
·
to increase conscious-
_
·.
"They can bicycle, rollerolade,
ness
aµd
raise 1Doney for hun-
skateboard, run or walk, as long
ger orgahizatic.ms
,:' .
.
.
as they do something physical
Last year was
·
the first
·
time
to finish the race;" he said. "Do-
.
Marist
·
extended the tradition-
ing something physical will help
'ally week-long observance to a
keep the issue in your mind."
month, and the change drew
in
·
"Buck Hunger Days" is sched-
a record $3,664.53 in donations.
uled for Nov. 6 through the 13.
Kelly said he is hoping this
Stations wilJ be set up inLowell
year can be even more success-
Thomas, Dyson, Donnelly, the
ful.
Rotunda and outside the Caba-
"Every year I am more and
ret to collect cash and Marist
more impressed by how many
Money for local food groups.
students really care about this
The OXFAM Fast Day is
issue," he said. "Their over-
scheduled for Nov. 11. Meal
whelmtng support is the evi-
ticket holders can sign up for
dence that they really want to
this event on Nov. 9.
help."
·
OXFAM Fast Day involves a
This year will be the first time
student giving up one meal from
students can donate to the
their plan. In turn, Sodexho will
cause
.
with Marist Money and
give the money to charities bun-
this is expected to greatly in-
ger fighting.
crease the amount of money that
.
The next event scheduled is
Clothesline Project
_
gives
_.,-
victims_ a
_
_
voice
·
·" o
-
KATIILEENMOYLAN
,y
. .
.
Staff Writer
Victims of sexual assault, rape·
and iricest and their families
used the Marist College campus
to air out their laundry last Tues-
day.
T-shirts adorned with stories
of domestic and sexual violence
were
.
strewn across the campus
green to commemorate this
It
is
a powerful,
graphic representa-
tion of domestic and
sexual relationship
violence.
Roberta Staples
Director
Counseling Services
·
year's Clothesline event.
-:
>•-
Joanne Myers, assistant pro-
:,-
fessor of political science and
.
advis9r
:
to the Gender Equality
said. "It is an important testi-
.
ciub
,:
saidtheClotheslineproject
mony to read these shirts."
is poignant:
;
The table was staffed by mem
-
.
'' It brings into public light the
bers of the Grace Smith House,
·
'
myth that families are not always
which provides Jong-term hous-
t-
safe sanctuaries
.
from the
ing and programs for battered
'world/' she said
.
''The
Clothes-
women and their children.
I .
·
•
·
-•.
__ .-
.
_-
.
.
,
·
·
Fne ProJect allows survivors to
Roberta Staples, director of
•·
bang out
·
their
dirty
laundry
to
counseling services, said
_
the
C
help educate others."
-
.
.
program was emotional for
'\(:_
The CloJheslirie project those who stopped to read the
.
started
.
in 1990
;
in
·
Massachu-
shirts.
:·
se~aild was C.?!11Prised
·
ot3t
.
<'It
lSJl powerful, graphic rep-
..
survi~~s ?f rape
__ .
;
sexual
_
ass
.
_ault
-
reientation of domestic and
and
.
irt~L
The
.
program has
sexu
_
aLrelationship violence,"
grown to
\,
mor~ than 3_5,000
.
s~e
.
~ai&
,
women, children and men who
-,
•
· Each r~stiirt on the clothes-
are survivors'of sexual assaults.
line
·
is
·
color coded by the type
It provides an
°'
o_ppqitimity to
of abuse victims suffered.
victims to share
.
their experi-
Whiteformurder,beigeandyel-
ences of violence.
\
_"
-- .
low for battery or assault, pink
The national program travels
·
for victims of rape or sexual as-
arourid the world and is part of sault and lavender shirts for vie-
the Dutchess County Domestic
.
-
tims attacked because of sexual
Violence Council's education
orientation.
project.
The program_was brought to
The Marist event was initiated
campus in order to promote
by students and sponsored by
·
awareness of sexual assault and
the Gender Equality Club, which
relationship violence.
is headed by junior Debra
Sophomore Lauren
Alfano.
Montemuro said she found the
Alfano said students, faculty
display to be emotional.
and staff were moved by the
"It's hard to look at something
project.
like that without having a reac-
"Domestic violence crosses
tion and a feeling of sympathy
age, class and racial lines," she
for the victims," she said.
the campus food drive from Nov.
15 to 22. It is cosponsored by
the Resident Student Council
and campus ministry. RSCs will
collect food from their respec-
tive residence halls and add that
to what campus ministry col-
lects.
_
All of the food collected will
be brought to the chapel on Nov.
23 for blessing and will then be
distributed to local agencies.
Last year
,
75
boxes offood were
collected and taken to local
agencies that serve the poor.
The All-Campus HungerBan-
quet will be at 6:30 p.m. in the
Cabaret on Nov. 18. At this
event, people eat a dinner either
from a developed country or a
third-world country. They will
not know what kind of meal they
will eat until they come to the
event.
"The banquet is for everyone,
staff and students," Kelly said.
"It
will be the luck of the draw
to determine what kind of meal
you will have, either first, sec-
ond or third-world. It shows
people that anybody can be-
come poor at anytime and that
you should appreciate what you
have and realize that it can be
gone at any time
."
Hunger Awareness Month is
capped off with the City Plunge
on Nov. 26 to 28. In this event
students will travel to Lawrence,
Mass
.
,
and prepare food bas-
kets for the poor at the Lazarus
House.
All money collected will go
to OXFAM, Dutchess Food
Outreach and Lazarus House
Ministries. The food collected
will go to Dutchess Food Out-
reach, the Holy Trinity Thanks-
giving Food Drive and Mount
Carinel Thanksgiving Food
Drive
.
CAMPUS CANDIDS
Cin:le photo/Joe Scotto
Junior Chris Rowland enjoys the beautiful October
weather outside with his dog, Jazz.
OCTOBER 29
7
1998
Studellts
...
questlOttfilg}l
cost of college housing
by
JILL GIOCONDO
.
Staff Writer
sociates, a rental agency lo-
Fifty thousand dollars can buy
cated in Poughkeepsie, said the
a nice new car, a small house or average rental cost for a
·
three
a year of housing for 1 O people
bedroom apartment similar to
in a Marist townhouse.
Gartland is between $600 and
Currently, North End resi-
$625 per month. An
·
average
dents, Talmadge and West Ce~
four-bedroom house would be
dar pay between $2,390 and
between $900 and $1000 per
$2,522 per
student
for one se-
month. Costs vary depending
mester to live in their apartment
on the
location,
landlord, utili-
or house.
ties and condition of the build-
Sarah English, director of the
ing.
Housing and Residential Life
Students who live off campus
Office, said students do not re-
also have to factor in gas money
alize all the services they receive
or public transportation, utili-
for the cost ofliving on-campus.
ties, phone and cable bills
.
"Although the number may
Although some students be-
seem high when combining lieve housing rates are high,
everyone's board cost per year,
area colleges have comparable
it actually isn't considering the
housing rates for similar hous-
programming, security anci
ing.
.
.
other services offered to on-
Vassar College in the City of
campus residents," she said.
Poughkeepsie, offers student
Pricing varies between each
townhouses accommodating
unit since age of the building
five students and terrace apart-
and amenities are taken into
ments that accommodate four
consideration.
students. Students are not re-
.
·
:
.
.
•
: .
.
. · .
Circle photo/Jeremy Smith
The Weeping Hemlock is a 75-year~old tree and is valued at approxiam~tely $
·
60,000~
TREE: Weeping Hemlock transplant appears
a.
success
... continuedftompg. 1
"It's a good idea to bless the
roots of
a
tree," he said
:
"It
would be a pity for it to be lost."
Short said he thinks
the
tree
has a good chancefor survival.
"The tree was treated profes-
sionally, the entire tree went
.
through a wilt proofing pro-
cess,'' Short said.
·
He
'
said the
·
nearly 7.S
~
year:old tree is valued
at approximately $60,000.
·
The campus gai~edan expen-
sive asset ata smal[price, ac-
cording to Massie.
"The college
.
saved
·
tens of
.
thousands
·
.
bf dollars
'
by
.
irarts~
porting
.
the tree without the cost
of
a'
private company," Massie
said .
..
·.
.
.
Massie said the planting of the
Weeping
.·
Hemlock ,is "totally
unielated"to
'
the destruction of
the Ginko tree.
Career/Employer Expo afMaristand SUNY Ne
-
w Paltz
eve~t to pro~id
.
e
.
im
.
arm
.
atio
.
n
..
on
·
The tenth annual Mid-Hudson
.
'
Witter; Paine Webber;
.
State.
C
d E
I
E
·11
career opportunitie~ to students
F
.
a
· -
rm
·
.
Insur
·
a
·
nc
·
e·, a
·
nd
.
..
x
•
..
e
·.
r
.
o
·
x
areer an
mp oyer xpo wt
and alumn
.
i from colleges
·
·
Board costs, determined by
quired to purchase a me
'
at plan
thefinancialboard,covermany
and they supply living and
things students take for granted.
kitchen furniture. Students pay
Unlimited utilities, phones in
$1,760 per semester to live in a
every room, furniture, mainte-
·
townhouse
7
•
.
·
..
.
. .· ....
nance, security and residential
.
SUNY~ev.r
,
Paltz has only tra-
staffing
are
some ofthe benefits
d,iticipal f(?,Sideiice h~lfs pnjts
of on-campus liying .
. ·
>
'
,
.
.
//
i ,
.
C~J?u~;:*c99r,4i11~
.
i<?}.h,~
~ib
be held
.
on Thursclay,
.
Oct. 29 in
Corp
·
·
the James J. Mccann Recre:.
'
lbroug~out th~
_
Mid-Hudson
Th~CaieerExpo is Sponsored
ationCenter oil the Marisi
Coi~
Valley,
.
.
·
-
·
·
·
·
.
·
by theMid~Hudson CareerCon-
··
..
.
Ep.glish ,said
~~s~
thi~gs
'
pf-
•
.
site.)-f~w. ,I>al~~S\i()UStng rffice
t~n
go'
'
imnotic~d
.
by students
w,af~~tyf1ilii\)1~
.
f?(qoipnient
unless there· is
~
problerri
.'
·· •
.
·
.beforeipress time
>
<
•·
, ,
''Students
take these benefits
IoriaJ~gllige[n
N~YI
Rochelle
for granted such as when
a
toi-
offers
studtmts
apartments as a
let overflows they call mainte-
.•
hou~ing optiori.
bait
·
ourury,
nance and a plumber conies to
.
housing office
:
assistant. said
fix it," she said.
.
Jona;s
:
apartments
are
located
Boardmoney'is
'
alse> µsect
·
to
·
:
\
acrbssthe
·
s'treet, but
.
are con-
update applianc~~
;
'.
co.fup).~~e
:
·
sid~~ed
.
crunpu~ housiµgi
·..
.
overall repairs
:
to
the
.
hQu
·
s~•s
'· :/:
The college's stude11t apart-
structure, andreplac¢ old foini-
.
·
·
n1ents.are divid~d i~tc,three
·
cat-
ture.
.
.
.
•
.
. ·.
·
·
egories and pi:ices
.
vary d
.
epend-
.
.
Amy Spern,
;;t
•
N~~~i
::
.
i~g
:
91\ the s
.
tyle of
,
apartment.
.
townhouse resident
:
said hous
;
;
:,
\
Stud1oapartrnents
,
cqst $2,425
.
ing costs
do
not
:
a~pearto
·
be
·
:,
pfr
·
semester; one-:be
.
dro~m
··.
·
.
applied
·
to mainteriarice
·
and rei
.
..
.
~p~entscost $2,7~2
,
50; and
.
pairs.
·
·
.
• •.·.· :
·
.
·
<,. :: ; •
C
•
· ·
:
,·:: .
tvi
_
o:;.Qetlfoom
ap~~nts cost
''I think thattheprice is ridicu~
.
$2;875
;
~er semester
>
S~dents
lotis because the house is not
·
living in apartments also
·
are re-
in gtiod shape
·
and repairs quirefto
.
be on a $6q0
.
per se-
should have been done before
·
mestermeal pla11
;
..
: )(
lege can1pus,
!lll~
on friday, Qct: · Among the firms atten~ing
~e
:
sor.tjum, an organization of ca-
30 · th
s
d
u
·
·
•
B "Id
A~erica11Express Financial
. ......
..
.
.
.
. .
.
..
.
. m
..
f
tu
e9t n1qn
.
.
111 --
Advisor~;
~
Bilrtk
of
'
N~viYork;
r.eerdeyelopmentprofessionals
ing on tlte
,cax:npus~f
the State Ifdeliliai
'
Pu
'
Bfo?Iiei'~fr6W~
who
:
,w<>rkto
::
provide.work.'.
University College atN.~w P~tz.
WotldwicferF.ffroL~yliic:::
J:¢:'
..
·
.
·
nshl_ti?epss .
.
and nytworking opportu:e
More than 140
.
employers are
Pe
.
nhey
·
;
Kaman
Aerospace
expected to attend this career
Corp.; Morgan Stanley Dean
.
Tenth Annual CareerandErnpfbye
.
.
'
-
.
:
.
~
.
·
Thursday,
·
october
29,
1998
:
::
"
:
·
4:oq
·
-
7:Q
:
o
p~rn:
.
.
Marist
College,
Mccann
Center
.
.
·
.· ·. . . .
.
we moved
in,"
she said. ''For
S~me
<
aparti;nen.t
·
and
example, my desk was broken
townh()use resid~ntf atMarist.
.
an
.
cl hasn't been replaced."
said they feefhousing costs
.
·
.
.
.
..
Friday,
Oc~ober
30,
199,
.
SUNY New
·
Paltz,
,,
Student
UnionBlc(
English said living off campus
-
could be lower
'.
· ·:
.
.,
may be cheaper than living on
Mandy Parillo, ajuni9r, resides•
campus but the
·
pros and cons
.
in the
.
new upper
.
te>wnhouses.
of each sit
_
1,1ation has to be She said that townhouse prices
could be
lower.
weighed.
.
.
.
"Students that live off campus
have to deal with non-college
neighbors, living away from the
campus, city police instead of
campus security and land lords
instead of RDs," she said.
Rob Dominquez of D&D As-
"I think that housing costs for
tlie year are too high consider-
ing what we seem to get in the
houses and that student hous-
ing should b~ priced more equal
to what is available
in
the
com-
.
munity," she said .
.
Spring Break 99'
La.rgest selection of Spring Break Desti11ations,
includi,zg Cruises!
Foam Parties, Dri11k Specials
and
Club
Admissions.
Group Discounts a1Zd Free Trips Available.
Epicurian Tours 1-800-231-4-FUN
)d:od
a.m.
~
·
2:cfop.ni.
Check
the
complete
list of participating
employer., at wv.-w.marist.cdu/c:arc:erserviccs
Sponsored
by
the
Mid-Hudson Career Consortium
for
students and alumni from
member
colleges
·
Bud
Catinuylns1itwlt
°""'-Colnznwity
Mm,t
Mo.NSt.Mo:y
~CountyCow,n,n;ty
SdlMn
Co,wyc-.n.n;ry
su:,;y
No,,,
l'olt>
lJlota,
eo-y
e:.r.:,_,.ry
V,au
..
.•
,
l
·
•
.
.
,
·.r
:
CLE
·
OCTOBER 29 1998
•.
es
PAGES
nting history
by
JENNIFERMATARAZZO
Staff Writer"
Once a year !he veil between
the realms of the living and the
dead is
·
at its thinnest; and the ·
dead
.
walk
.
freely amongst the
living.
·
Halloween, also known as
All
Hall<>WS Eve,
Oct.
31, is here
once again. Halloween is one
of the oldest holidays with ori-
gins
.
going back thousands of
years. From the Roman's
Pomona Day,to the Celtic festi~
val.of Samhain; to the
.
Christian
holidays of.All Saints and
.
All
Souls Days, these celebrations
have
·
come together to influence
today's meaning of Halloween:
Ka~eKrueger,juniorpsychol-
oftheDeadandPrinceofDark-
spirits of the dead roamed
ogy/special
•
education major;
ness took the sungod-prisoner.
around, villagers lighted bon-
said she cherishes her memories
On the eve before their new year
fires to either drive them away
oftJalloween. -
.
.
(Oct. 31),
it
was believed that
or to guide the spirits of the
early customs. On the eve of
All Hallows, Oct. 31, people
continued to celebrate the fes-
tival of Samhain and Pomona
Day, the Roman festival named
for their goddess of fruits and
gardens. Over the years, the
.
customs from all these holidays
mixed.
The
Halloween of today,
on Oct. 31, includes all of these
influences.
The history of trick or treating
can be traced back to the early
celebration of All Soul's Day in
Britain. The poor would go beg-
ging and the housewives would
give them special treats called
soulcakes. This was called go-
ing a-souling, and the soulers
would promise to say a prayer
for the dead.
Over time the custom changed
and the town's children became
the beggars. As they went from
·
house to house they would be
given apples, buns, and money.
believed to keep evil spirits
away. Children carved faces in
the turnips and these were
called jack-a-lanterns.
When the early settlers came
to America they found the big
round orange pumpkin. Being
larger and much more colorful
than turnips, the pumpkin made
a great jack-a-lantern. Eventu-
ally, the pumpkin replaced the
turnip.
Meghan McKenna, junior
psychology/special education
major said she can remember
carving pumpkins as a child.
"Every year, my brother, sis-
ter and I used to have contests
to see who would make the best
one," she said.
Although Halloween is an
American custom, Nicole
Bastiaanse, senior studio art
major, said she celebrated it in
Florence, Italy last year.
"I
will always remember one
Samhain c
_
alled together all the
dead back to their homes.
year
I
was a red crayon and it
dead people. The
.
dead would
The next influence came with
was my favorite costume," she
take different forms, with the bad
the spread of the new Christian
said.
"I
even won a prize at
spirits taking
.
the form of ani-
religion throughout Europe and
school
forit.''
•·
.
·
.
.
· .
nials. The most evil taking the
Britain.
In
the year A.D. 835 the
·
During the Pioneer days of the
American West, the housewives
would give the children candy
to keep from being tricked.
"Last fall,
I
studied
abroad
in
France," she said. "We were
travelling on Halloween in Italy
and we walked to an American
bakery. The cashier had us say
'trick or treat' and she handed
us little bags of chocolate chip
cookies. It was the best Hal-
loween."
·
Hundreds of .years
.
ago the
form ofa black cat.
.
Roman Catholic Church made
Celtics liv~d in
-
whatis now
·
:
onOct
.
3(youngpeople·dis~
·
Nov.
l achurchholidaytohonor
.
Oreat
,.
B.ritairi
·
ancl
,
Northern
.
guh;~d)~ scary: i:Q*~ks carye
·
!i
all
·
the
;
saints: The
'
day
was
Frruwe. 1beCe\tics W9f$hipped
1J¥t~~f_tiorii
'.
~~P('#'.4:f#~
called
:
i
; A:11
·
·
:,
saint's•
!
'Day;
nature
,
and
·
hadmany
1
gods;-with
.
ii~~
th~w.~R1;1gl1:t~~,v:iJJag9~,.-
HalloWm~s'
·
or''A
'
lf
Hallbws:
the·
s~~
g~d as
.·
their favorite;
:
The
Druids, the Celtic priests,
.
Years later
'llie
'
church
\vo
~
uld
The Celtics celebrated their New
beli~~edjt was
·
·on that night
make Nov.
2
a holy day.
It was
YearonNov.Litwascelebrated
whentheearthcomesintoclos-
called All Souls Day and was
every year with a.
,-
festival and
est contact with the spiritual
meant to honor the
.
dead. It was
mark~dthe
epd
of the. season of:
world;
~
and
.
consequently
celebrated with big bonfires,
the slin and the beginning of the
_
·
gho.sts, goblins and witches
·
·
parades, and people dressing up
season of darkness
·
and cold.
supposedly
.
destroyed crops, .as saints, angels and devils.
The
Celtics believed that dur-
.
'
killed farin animals and wreaked
But the spread of Christianity
ing the winter; Samhain; the Lord
•
,
,
havoc
•
on
'
thlvillagers
)
-,1.sJhese
did not make people forget their
.
'
, .
·
·.
<_'
~
"..
:j·_
,· ..
..
.
:
Smallne8S
with spirit and spunk
~
.
.
·
by
RICHSHUTKIN
,
·
Staff Writer
Some people say big things
come in small packages .
.
Marian
·
Hall is one of those
small packages.
While it exists as the smallest
·
dorm.atMaristCollege, the posi-
tive feedback from its residents
is abundant:
Marian
·
.
iiall was originally
builtasagymnasiumin 1947and
later transformed into a fresh-
man dormitory in 1982
.
•
Each of its rooms are inhab-
ited by four students, allowing
every residentto form close re-
lationships with numerous
roommates.
In addition,
Marian's small size enables its
inhabitants to acquaint them-
selves with all other residents
outside of their rooms.
Chuck Bechtel, a resident of
·
Marian Hall, said he enjoys liv-
ing in the dorm.
"I love it," he said. "It is a fun,
enjoyable atmosphere. There
are many activities and small
·•..
.
.
. ·
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
PholocourtesyofTimMassie
Built in 1947, Marian Hall was initially u
_
sed as a gymnasium
.
'
•
events ther~;
.
including one we
are about to do f9r Halloween."
He said he also appreciates
Marian Hall's convenient loca-
tion.
"Marian is close to Dyson and
Lowell Thomas, where many
students have classes," he said.
"No other freshman dorm is
closer to those places than
Marian."
Jimmy Willis, also a resident
of Marian Hall, said the donn
•
is
a good place to study.
"Because it is small, it is also
very quiet." he said. "That is
an especially gogd thing when
you are trying to study."
He said he also admires the
large size of the rooms.
"Even when living with more
than one roommate, the rooms
provide us with a lot of space,"
he said. "The closets are also
large and provide us with plenty
of room for our clothes."
·
Sophomore Scott NeviJle, a
resident assistant of Marian
Hall, said it is a resident friendly
·
aonn.
"I enjoy being an RA at
·-
Marian," he said. "Because it is
sinall, it is not difficult to keep
order among the freshmen stu-
dents tµere. Everybody knows
each other. We
are
like a fam-
ily."
.
Marian Hall is not merely a
dorm at Marist College, but evi-
dence of the notion that small
environments offer warmth,
friendship and little chaos.
Amy Kuhar, junior psychol-
ogy /special education m_ajor,
said she remembers trick or treat-
ingfrorii when shew.~ younger.
,
·"i'
lDv~Wwhen
we
\"8tild
0
et
t◊'
a\!a~aiit
ii6us'eiinc1
$.Wp~9p1e
would leaye
c:t
f?aske(ofcandy
for us to
fake,"·
she
said: "\.ye
always tot>k
.
mo'rd' than
'
one.;,
Another HaJloween tradition
is pumpkin c~ing. The Celtics
carried lanterns when they
walked
on
the eve of Oct. 31.
The lanterns were carved out of
big turnips and the lights were
•
Today Halloween
is
enjoyed
by
people of allag~s. Although
some people enjoy the
·
mischie-
vous aspect of the holiday such
as smashing pumpkins and
dousing each other
with
shav-
ing cream, others enjoy it as a
night of mystery. People cari be
whoever they want for a night
,continuing
old customs of
walking amongst the dead .
Halloween
•
appenmgs
.
Halloween Bash
on Oct. 30.
21 Society Event, so everyone 21 years of age and older are
invited.
Starts at
6
p.m. in the Perf onning Arts Room
in
the Student
·
Center.
Sponsored by the Class of 1999.
Costumes are optional, but there will be door prizes for the
best costumes.
'Iiip
to Great
Adventure's,
''Fright Fest,"
on Oct. 31.
All students are invited. $25 per person.
Bus leaves Donnelly parking lot at 7:30 a.m. and returns
between 9 and 9:30 p.m.
Sponsored by Black Student Union, El Arco Iris Latino, and
the
Office of College Activities.
Pumpkin
Sale
through Oct. 30.
Located in Champagnat Breezeway from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Haunted Mansion and Horror Wood,
open until Nov
I.
Fridays and Saturdays from 6 to 11 p.m. $6. Located 2
iles
south of Poughkeepsie Galleria Mall.
For more information call 297-BA'.
Compiled
by
Staff Writer Elizabeth Ca
THE
-
CIRCLE
-
-
Feat
·
ure
·
s
-
PAGE6
art-time a ~s
_
anager-
_
ee e
For Paging/Wireless
:
¢oinpany,
_
Greit
~~
.
ume Builder,
Ore.at
·Ihcorhe
.
.
While
:
J
chooL
_
Fax Resum~-To: Rick Thompson
.:p.
Corporate Development, Collegiat
-
ink,
Inc.
215) 735-2194
or call
(917) 852-0419.
Students
raise
.
alcohol
awareness on campus
I
_/byKATRINA
/
FUCHSENBERGER
/
Staff Writer
weight. Participants were al~o
able to make decisions when en-
·
countering different problems
such as a person wanting to
drive home drunk or a girl deal-
College students have a repu-
ing with sexual assault.
·
tation for drinking excessively,
Carolyn Fielder, commuter
but now they can have a repu-
mentorandadvisortotheGreek
tation for making students aware
Council, said she thought this
of the consequences.
·
program
was
important because
LastweekwasAlcoholAware-
the students
•
wflre being edu-
ness Week, a national event that
cated by their peers.
is held by
-
the Bacchus and
"It
_
created an atmosphere
GammaPeerEducationNetwork.
where it was safe for students
At Marist,
it
was sponsored by
to talk about [drinking]," she
the Greek Council and the Com-
·
said.
·
"People could relate to the
muter Student Council.
_
_
_
situations
.
"
Doug Smith, the chairman of
·
Another event that was held
fundraisingfortheGreekCoun-
-
·
was a
"Battle of the Bands"
cil and member of Phi Kappa
whith took placeiri the Cabaret
Sigma, said he thinks it made an
on Oci 24. There was a $2 cover
impact on the Marist commu-
charge which will be donated to
nity.
the group RID (Removal of In-
"One of my goals is that I'd
toxicating Driving).
like to see the campus recognize
The bands who played were
the Greek organizations in a
.
Fizzlewink, Mid-Hudson Pork,
higher
esteem
because a lot of Pajamazon,
Slice,
and Double
people look down on us," he
Exposure .
.
The program was
said. "We' re not just about go-
hosted by WRRV, a modem rock
ing out and getting smashed."
station. Prizes were given away
One of the events of the week
which were donated by local
was a CD-ROM interaction
businesses.
game held in the Nelli Goletti
Smith said he thought the pro-
Theateron Qct.
2
L
The game
gram was a good idea.
_
involvaj ~ituations dealing with
· .
_
''.We
wanted to make
itfun
for
~rinking
_,
~nd
,
p~p:_ies. In
·
the
e~eryone)'
:
he saicL
•
t
ifis
nice
game
_
a
·
stude
.
nt was able to
to
:
ha:ve a party
without alco-
choose his
_
age, sex, height, and
hol.''
·
.
In a 1997 Harvard study statis-
tics
'
were. shown regarding
drinking in colleges across the
country. Some of the results
were that 42.7 percent of stu-
dents were binge drinkers,
20
.
7
percent
-
were
·
.
frequent binge
drinkers, and
81.1
percent of
those living in fraternity or so-
rority houses were binge drink-
ers.
Fifty-two percent of the sub-
jects whq drink admitted they
·
drank to get drunk, compared to
just
39 percent who admitted to
such behaviorin 1993.
Some of the positive results
·
were that the number of stu-
dents who
·
said they
do
not
-
drink
at
all rose from 15.6 per-
cent in 1993 to 19 percent in
1997.
The percentage of binge drink-
·
ersdroppedfrom44.1 iri 1993 to
42.7 in 1997 .
-
The percentage of
students who have not touched
a drink in a year rose
from
15.6
in 1993 to 19 percent in 1997.
Smith said he thinks the
events of the week were educa-
tional for the students.
"We focused on drunk driv-
ing and
·
other
-
repercussions
that happen from drinking and
tried to bring this to the atten:..
-
tiqn of
.
tlie
,
studerit: body,"
·
he
~aid.
\'It's.
relevant
to
us be-
cause itgoes
oil
all the time."
.
,
·-
.
\;\."
.
?
}/
).
'. ::
·
_
· -
~
.
,f
"'.'
i
·
:
-
:
·
__
_
_
-·
.
·•
.
;
:·
:·
•>·
·
Ill/ti:
"'
'
;
-
:
"
' , '
}ii!ll
I
TH£ CIR.CLE
.
Features
.
OCTOBER 29
2
1998
Searching the
.
sites
..
.
http://www.urbanext.uiuc.edu/pumpkinsf'mdex.html
Since it is !he season of Halloween why not search a site you probably nonnally would not
search; ..
a
site
aboutpumpkins.http://www.urbanext.uiuc.edu/pumpkins/index.html
is
maintained
by
the University of Illinois and has links to almost everything you might ever
want to know about pumpkins.
The site has information on pumpkin history, pumpkin growing, and pumpkin purchasing.
There are also sections that explain the different varieties of pumpkins. And if you want to
add a little pumpkin to your diet
,
there is a link to pumpkin recipes and nutrition information.
.
This site also offers learning games for younger students and craft.and creativity ideas for all.
So, c~eck out
http:l/www.urbanext.uiuc.edu/pumpkinsfmdex.html
to satisfy your craving for
,PU!Tlpkin.
·
.
If
you have any suggestions for this column, or would like to write a column, contact Emily
at extension 2429 or email HZAL. Features Editor Emily Kucharczyk wrote this Searching
the sites column.
Horoscopes
-~ARIES:
Comfort a
1
.
i•,1
LIBRA:
You look
~
frie
.
nd who
.
.
's having a
marvelous, and that
~
hard time with an au-
comes in handy
·
if
·
.
. .
thority figure. Also,
you're in one of
advise yourfriend not
those moods where
to make too big a deal
y
,
ou don't express
of this: Advise caution
-
yourself very well.
and diplomacy.
You ought to be
TAURUS:
The overall
.
.
··
.
.
careful what you say.
im
.
pre. ssi~n is~
-
at you
~
:
SCORPIO:
The Sun
.
·
·
·
shouldn
t-
give an
is
in
.
Scorp1.o and
.
the
,
·
.
Jnch
f.
Someone
else
.
Mo_on
isin Aquai/us.
·
·
'thii;iks he
.
1
or s,he
·
•
·
·
This could cause
·•
knows what's
.
besffor
·.
complications. Once
you. You're not that
far
·
you figure out where
off track. Your intu-
you want to
be,
how-
.
itionshould
'
be pretty
ever, the rest of the
accurate.
puzzle
.
will fall into
i]
! ; ~
_
er
_
.
··.
to
···
~
_
:~
.
-ma
.
ti
.
·
.
e
.
~
_
·
.
r:~
_
.
~~:~~is!~~o
s!~:~~
day.
,
Without going
·
vice of yourroom-
info
-
much detail, just
·
·
.
.
mate.
·
.
·
.
kn.ow
thatthe
'
·words
'
~
-
SAGITIARIUS
:
The
won't c:'ome easy. If
•
po
.
ssibil
.
ity
·
~or~
.
rro~s
•
.
.
.
you're trying to Write
.
10
commumcat1on
IS
_
.
a short story, d,o your .
really high today.
-
rough
:
draft and
let
it
. . .
·
.
Looks like someone
go at that. You'ff b~
.
·
mightmi~understand
able to put in the cor-
your instructions, on
rections later.
purpose
.
To av
·
oid
CANCER:
If you run
.
that sort of situation,
out of ideas today,
make yourself very
don't despair. Simply
clear. The person
.
take several deep
who
wi11
cause the
·
breaths and then call
most trouble isn
'
t
your sweetheart for
saying much. He or
advice. It looks like he
she is in a position to
or she is in a tough
force
.
an outcome,
situation too, but be
7
however. So, besides
tween you, a solution
being
·
srriart and di-
to the problem can be
·
rect, you'il also have
found.
to do some sleuthing.
AQUARIUS:
Becme-
ful what you say. You
might be misunder-
stood. If you choose
your words slowly
and think each pos-
sible consequence
out before you act,
you can spend all day
long and hardly say
much ofanything
.
In
other
:
words;jlist stall.
·
Thelonger you hold
out, the better your
.
chances of success.
§
.
PISCES:
The ego
battle c
_
ont
.
inues
with
no end in sight.
Sometimes you won-
der how people can
get so stuck on them-
selves when they ob
-
viously don't know
·
the answer. You
don't know the an-
.
· swer either, but at
least you
•
admit
it.
-Because you admit
it,
yoti might actually
find the answer
.
PAGE7
Entily's
Recipe of the
Week
Ghosts in the Graveyard
Package(] 6 oz.) chocolate sandwich cookies
3 1/2
cups cold milk
2
pkgs.
(4
serving size) chocolate flavor instant
pudding
Tub
(12
oz.) whipped
topping
Crush cookies in plastic bag with roHing pin or in food
processor. Pour cold
milk into
large
mixing bowl. Add
pudding mixes. Beat with wire whisk
2
minutes
.
Let
stand
5
minutes. Stir in
3
cups of whipped topping and
1/2
of the crushed cookies. Spoon into 13x9-inch dish.
Put remaining mixture in little cups. Sprinkle with
remaining crushed cookies. Refrigerate
I
hour or until
ready to serve. To make graveyard decorate assorted
cookies with decorator icings to make tombstones; use
candy com to stand them up. Drop spoonfuls of
whipped topping to make ghosts. Be creative. Serves
15-18.
,
Western
Ne,v
?
~~glmd
College Schoolof Law
(fl
~
~
~:filfil
:
ceh~wn
-
g
,
Intellects
i
~
~
~~l)~ctives
.
...
·
.
··
·
·
.·
Th
>
;i
e~
lb!
C
o
Isl
0
"
Sfu.iqol
i
6Hi~w
Sprindicld.
~14s$3chU$e«S
LEO:
Your partner
~
CAPRICORN:
You
seems to
.
th
.
inkhe or
.
s~mtobedoingwell
she knows everything
nght
now, even
today, and that might
though you're push-
be the case. If you treat
ing
hard.
That's not
Then stop in and see us at,
this other person as if
·
a
contradiction in
it were true, a strange
terms. It's more like
thing
could occur, He
your regular way of
.
or she could start
being. Some people
trusting your opinion
think Capricorns are
a little bit more.
workaholics, but you
VIRGO:
Therearestill
probably
don't
a bunch ofhas
.
sles a
.
nd
agree. You just like to
you may be feeling
stay busy, that's all.
pressured, but don't
You're not interested
let it get to you. You' re
in small talk, and you
still able to concentrate
find most conversa-
marvelously well, and
tions Qoring. It takes
you're learning very
a real challenge to
quickly.
get your interest.
MILLMAN'S T-SBIBT
FACTORY
12 Fowler ave., Poughkeepsie
(Take Route 9 South
to
44-55 East
12 traffic lights 18/ock down on left.)
454-2255 FAX 454-5771
UJMUIHI
the Marist Communi since 1978
.,
I,
THRClRtLR
__
o __
c __
TO_B
__ E
__ R
__ 2:,;:;9.a..,;1:..9~98;::.,__ _ _ _ _ _ _
( ) _
·
.,;;;;. ;;._
.
·-J
.
~-·a
cl
PAGES
.
·
.
.
.
'
CONGR~SHALL~lAK"El\'OlAW-ARRl'OOll\'G'lllEl<"REEOOMOl.<'SPltEClj,OROFTHEPRFSS ...
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·
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.
olunteers~
·:_
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.
·
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&~~•~~f¥3lli'.~~t~t:hlt;iJ~ft~/6I!ff~\t(,
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.
I wish to thank
:
the stu<let1ts, faculty, and
stiff
who participated
in
the ch oles-
·.
•.··
•
.
.
,;f
eClpI,e qften
_
tak~
.
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(9f
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eir
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terol ~Crl!ening ·cgnducted
'
as
part\>f
~~
_
:Marist CollegeJiealthfail'on Sept
,
;,25
at
;
.
YO.!Ces. 9ther~
~~
th~}lPP?~lt(?
,;
s~~
ail~
.;
<1:~tlyely
.
try
to suppres~ th9se_
.
.
·.·
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.
theJamesJ.McCanhR.ecieaµon(:eilter
'.
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se>µs
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2P.i.~9~S:are
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:
or~
..
Thirteen mecli~al tecbnqlogy
_
~iµ
_
den~s. ~
.
cmducted the
·
screinj11g.
·
The ~µoi~s~rol
.
·
y~ltd
tll~
:
otllers;
:
~~ps·
Uif
R~alify 9.f,the fieedoni ofexp~
,
s~i<lri grajited_ through
·
talion belonging to the medical tecluiology department. Prof. Catherine Newkirk
.
. '
..
:
The
first Aine~~nient
has
been' pro)'~n
.
bithe
·
Supremi C<lurt
'
to.
'
P,fo,tect spee~h
also participated;
.
.
.
·.
.
.
. .
·
..
......•.... ·.·.··.
.
.
.
..
··
.
··
·
that sow~
•
peopl~
.
~y~n find detestable.
:
$P~!t
.
c:l
.
o
.
~s n<>tohly apply ~o
:
the written
Sixty-Si~ patients had their cholesteml Illeasu~ed,
ThereJs
Jittle difference
,
oc
·
_
asr sep~exase~
:
:,vv.
.
o_,ffo
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between the
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se;,ceswhen ~xamining faculty/~taff sample
_
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l>C>tll
gr9ups producing
.ll
J<
,
'
a mean in the moderate risk category (200~240mg/dl)
.
.
S
.
tudents aia whole were
.·
Theri~
-
~~paper
,
_
bhsiness
'
~uryiyehhrough tll~
·
Fir~tknendment. Itha.s alw.iy~
healthier, with a mean
in
.
the low risk category ( <200 mg/dl):
Male
students had the
been a forum ~oilghout history
_
fo~· pee>plt: to
~?'press
theii'views to~e public
lowest mean cholesterol of thdcreening
.
.
··:
.
and to allowJor the p
_
ubH~toreactin:
.
the Satlle manner.
-
.
-
.
·
..
·
.
.
:
.
.
.
.·.··
Robert J~ Sullivan, Ph.D., MT(ASCP)
Associate Profe11sor of
_
Medlcal Technology
Sororities welcome new sisters
·
Editor.
On behalf of the Greek Community, we would like to welcome and congratulate
the newest classes of the following sororities:
Alpha Sigma Tau, Theta Class:
.
.
.
Alicia Gabriel, Melissa Hart, Vanessa McKee, Debbie Moran, Gina Pascucci, Katie
Tower
Kappa Kappa Gamma, Kappa
Class:
,
Jill
Ambrosio, Jenny Baraldi, Kristine Bonsack,
Tracy
DePasquaJe, Melissa
Giandurco, Megan Moore, Amy Ostgulea, Alison Stec
Sigma Sigma Sigma,
Pi
Class:
Sadie Killian, Melissa Novick; Roseanne Raccinelli, Marissa Thornton, Kate
Willhort
Kappa Lambda Psi, Omicron
CJ~:
Lauren Devnew, Becky Kizirian,
Janine
Kramer, Liz Martel, Gina Montoro
·
,
The Firs
:
t
'
.t\niendnien.,t
i
.
~
\V~a(ni*<;s
the lJrµteq State:s
one oftlle
rtjo~f
iinique
.
.
nations
~ri
the world
\
\Ve'shollld
be
griiieful eyery
·
day w<; ~e
.
allowedjo express
.
.
.
◊urs.e{~es
in the ma,n11e~ wfcljpose ,m.d ar
.
e not suppressed like so
·
many people in.··
.
otl!~r11aµ<Jn~. Whe~erwe agree with
.
other's opinions
or
not.we ares@
·
lucky to
.
¥
able'.to express ourselves
:
either way~ !hope everyon~ takes
?gyantage
of this
nght.
..
.
·
.
..
•..
.
.
<
.
'·
·
.
···
·
.
.
.
•·
·..
.
.
·
.
•
··
,
·
The <:irde champions the right Qf a
.
f~~
pr~ss and expression. To show its
· ·.
importa~ce,
we
paraphrase
the
First Arn,endment on the Editorial page. It is a
'.
re~der toall. Perhaps
The
Circle.shc,mld put these words a
top
each page.
.
.
Amanda Bradley,
.
·
Editor-In-chief
·
Amanda
Bradley
Editor-in-chief
Emily
Kucharayk
Features Editor
BenAgoes
News Editor
ThomasRyan
Sports Editor
Patrick Whittle
Arts
&
Entertainment
·
TuraQuilln
,Opinion Editor
Joe Scotto
Toni Constantino
G. MO<lele CJarke
Photography Editor
Business Manager
Faculty
Advisor
The Circle
is the student newspaper of Marist College, Poughkeepsie, NY.
Issues are pub1ishe4_every Thursday
..
We welcome letters to the editor, club announcements and story ideas. We can-
not publish unsigned letters to the editor.
.
The Circle staff can
be
reached at
575~3000
.
x2429
or by emaii at
H'Z.AL.
PAGE9
St1tvivor
says
rape
is
not comedy
· byMICIJELLECORINNE.
come after the initial. The as-
• \
<,
WHIIE
.
sault
of
popular media is fore~
/
St~ffWrit~
(
.
front on m,Y.mind
:
·
Recently, in
'
·
I
am
:
11_siiivivorof
sexual as-
-
one
..
daylhave bee~ re~victim-
sault
t
·no
you
know
.
what that
izeci several titnes
?Y
the public.
.means?
;<
From an€arly'.age;•1
·
Qnceby_a,cotnedt~ fh? used
haveJooked through
_
a
lens of t!1e plrras~ date rap~
-
m
his rou-
'.
paih
:
a(a, \VOrld-in which chil-
..
t1~e, agam by. a
Circ!e
colum-
d.reri
fear
for their safefy
and
we
.
_
msf who put h1mse1f.m the ro~e
each
must
.
survive
:
the abuses
of perp~trator
:
an~ then agam
ofthbse\vho deem themselves
and aga~n by
··
the
,
people who
mo~p()\i/ei-fuL.
:
.
.
.
.
. .
.
~~fend ?-Im both personally and
·
·
...
Unless,it has affected you,
professionally'.
you
can
riot understand whafit
.
means
.
to
-
have ~onieone rip
;:,,h
·.
-
-
h
'
.
.
.
h
. .
.
away
<
yol.ir auton()my
:
By ac-
.I.
,
,
eQUt Or
; .
aSpU(
tioris
·
alone, thej,erpetratortells
._
hifflself in
.
-th.e role
.
a victim that they are
·
not worth
of
a repeated, pre-
;
liVitlg .
.
i
'Every day:
I
hav~
to
re,-
d .
d
.
.
affil'mthatmylife1sworth
:
liv~
me lfa
_
te rapist.
ing
/
''
After'iline year~
:
of heal<
.
:
n
e
has
•
done so in
ini;r,~mi,?ave:thisf~t?
'
goand
:
•
thenameb,f
·
..
humor.
I
wondemfthis self-doubt and
.· ·
.
.
.
.
..
• .
•
fear
.
w~U:~verease.
:
:
:, .
-
.
The
.
c
.
ol
.
umrii
.
stw
_
-
r
_
·
o
.
fo,'
.
'M
.
aybe
.
·
People
:
~ight a
_
ssulJl~
:
that
~
vi~tirii's pain_ com.es from the
·
·
.
someday a gfr}willaccompany
mem:ory
:
ofthe assault alone.
..
me on ni.y
.
walks to the river.
This isfarfromtrue. There are· Maybe they
will
go vo(untarily
·
several types
.
of
·
assault that.
-
or
_
IDaybe
I
will need six rufies
[sic] and a pinfofJim Beam like
lasttime.''.
.
For those readers who do not
know
.
what "roofies" are: the
.
word stands for
-
Rohypnol, the
illegal date rape drug used by
placing it in a potential victim's
drink. Rohypnol is used with
premeditated intent by an at-
tacker .
.
By addirig this sentence,
the author has put himself in the
·
role of a repeated, premeditated
rapist.
.
.
He has done so in the
.
name
,
of humor.
1
ha:ve to read
this and then I have to listen to
those who defend this as hu-
morous. As of late, this is the
most offensive attack by popu-
_
lar media.
·
rerhaps many people did not
catch this line. When I read the
·
column, it sto<id out in neon let-
ters. All over again,
I
thought
to myself, 'Why me?
Why
aml
Jiving in a world where people
treat violence against women as
acceptable rnat
,
erial for humor?
Whf do people laugh? Why is
it that someone who views rape
as comedy can say whatever he
wants on this campus and
I
have
to
feel my safety compromised
by his freedom of speech?'
·
Again I ask myself, 'Is life
worth living?' The same man
who put himself in the role of a
rapist for the sake of humor an-
..
swers no. " .. .life is pain, so
·
by
all means jump ... and leave the
bungee at home." Well now the
mystery seems a little clearer.
Perhaps when a perpetrator
sends the message that a victim
·
.
·
~
i
'1>!l'ti:fn:iiiSt
.
i•.
1earns.,;afbout
j
-
•~
-
i~
S
~:r1
~Jtf
.
t;
.
i{g
·
1{
=
-
-<
0z
,
-fu(}$fS
;
~_...;..._~
.
tne
:
J
'
;;;;;sld~
·
·
··
:e::J.~~e(l't.'ftM•t:;}
·
·
,!~~~fi~:~m~:d
·
· ··· ·.
•
·
Witch, and never set outto look City
can
not
be
tangible. Remem-
for
·
the city's
·
glist~ning gr~en
·
ber, the wizard is nothing spe~
towers, would she have found
cial,just an old guy behind
a
curtain. D
_
o 11otJet the superfi-
_
Jf1Jorothf 1uiver
set
:
~~~~~!fc;fJ:c;o:nt~eJ:!~
.
gut
to
look for the
.
not even the wizard, really has
· ·
. ,
1 ·
t
·
.
the answers.
city
.
s_
,
-
g
lS
ening
'
!tis okay to h~ve an Emerald
~~e
wliefe1t~oes.Jtis l~ke~k-
g_r,ce/ll
- :
\
towers,
City
or goal, but try not to let
m~_~
..
w
.
~Ikw1th n?
.
~:~tmation.
_
:
would she
have
the dream make you lose sight
··
This
.·
·may
se
_
eID
·,
pomtless
·
to
..
i
f
·.-
-
d
·
·
h
.
·
.·
·
•
.
ofwhat you
;u-e
doing now- en-
. ·
.
sonit
{
aiyolifoay
thinkt
i:eally
'
j
OU n
. .
ap pl n
e
S S
_
joy i
_
t.
··
The only thing anyone
oug~
(
to.
_.
pay.e
'.
~
'
distinli
:
Ho}l'.
,·
:
forever
in
the
can
·
guarantee is the present.
,_:;JtTui~JffJ<>x;}ik~rt!t,;
/./
T
:
e
_c·h
·
nft
o lo
.
r
~:~~•g;:~
0
:i~~~;;;
'
end
'.
uir
con:viritedJ arrdn the.
-
f
<!,ntasy
la,id
of
,
Oz?
.
the power to
.
do whatever
.
we
wrong place. Where as,
if!
did
-
·
·
want. We do not even need a
not s~tup a destination,
I
would
happiness forever in the pairof ruby slippers. Why let a
never be off course.
I
would
•·:
Techriicolorfantasylandof Oz?
mad paved by someone else set
never
.
b~lost.
'
. . .
,
:
whit was
so
grea(about
-
get-
our limits?
.
.
.
Qr~buldl al\Va.ys b~ lost?
..
ting pack to ~ansas? Sure; tllere
What am
.
I
talking
.
about?
Sometimes
I
think that theJat-
.'
·
is no place like home, but is th
_
at
·
Sometimes
I
think that if
I
do not
ter
is th.e tase:
After reading to
such, a bad thing? What did she
step off that yellow brick road
this
.
pC>1nt, you
•
are
.
.
pr9bably
do
once she got back? Where from time to time and reflec~
I
right with me:lost, thatis .
..
Or;
is she riow?
-
will lose sight of where
I am.
maybe we are both perfectly
Ihavefriendsathomewhodid Then
I
start to think about
·
content with where we are, just
not take to the white wisdom of
·
whether or not
I
ever knew.
because we are here. Maybe all
Glinda. They have no jntention
I
kind of feel like I just ended
I
write is just a lame attempt to
of finding the Emerald Cicy or up right where
I
started, in the
convince mys~lf that
,
there is
·
·
the manufactured happiness of beginning
.
of this column.
some good in not really know-
a college degree, for that matter.
The funny thing about this
ing where I am headed. How-
Some were on the yellow brick column is that there is no reso-
ever, I like to think that I am not
road for a while, but they just lution.
·
There is no one-liner to
alone. After all, today, I am
never got
·
passed the poppy sum this whole thing up. Some-
bringing you, the reader, with
fields. For those ofus who are
times, there are no guarantees
me.
hereatMarist, we have reached
of anything- not even a bad
Taking a walk without a des-
a sort of Emerald City and are pun. If that is not testament to
tination holds no disappoint-
awaiting our awards from the everything I just wrote, I do not
rnents. Such a walk might
be
Wizard. For those we left
be-
know what is.
considered a stroll on the yel-
hind to the poppy fields, we dis-
low
brick road without hopes of miss their happiness as their
finding the Emerald City.
·
Is
·
hallucinations. Sometimes I
there a point to such an en-
thinkthatourcityisjustasmuch
deavor? I mean, if Dorothy
a mirage as theirs.
Tara Quinn is
the
Circle's Opin-
ion Editor. She is a communi-
cations major from Teaneck,
NJ.
is worthless, they
are
really
try-
ing to send it to themselves. A
man who cared little for himself
assaulted me. I can not imag-
ine how low a man must feel to
wiHingly take on that role to en-
tertain others. At least
I
know
I
am better off than that kind of
person. So
I
choos~ to reject
.
that message. My life isworth
living.
·
... please-see
SURVIVOR,
pg.JO
•,
·_
;:.
;.
,
< •
.
October 29 1998
Survivor: Stude
·
11}t:
>
·
:,
·
.
•
.
.
·
"
:
:·
rro~
lia#~sm~nt.
.
.
.
_
_
:>:
·
•
Yet
*Y.:
Ffe
'\.
~~s
•
,
b
_
e~11
.
p~~
611
-;
/.
hold;
,
my·
stuclies. affected
/
and
off ended
by
-
c
·
olumil
·
·
rriy"
emotions have riin
wilcf
dtje
.
.
·
.
to
-
this infringement on
niy
rights. People may say that this
ismychoice. OFCOURSETHIS
IS MY CHOICE .. It i~ important
for me to act against those who
would re-victimize
me
by their
ignorance.
Tam
driven by the
primal urge of self-preservation.
It
is very important for
·
me to
speak out against a
. '.
school
newspaper thafsupports the
.
image of aperpetrator"as "Arts
and Entertainment."
.
It is ex-
tremely important
for
me to re-
claim my autonomy every time
society mocks nieas
·
a survivor.
... co11ti11uedfrom
pg.
9
I am not asking for sympathy,
in fact,
I
ask nothing.
l
demand
that you reevaluate your posi-
tion of victimization. We need
to stop blaming the innocent,
and return the shame to the one
who should bear it, the
perpe-
trator. The first step is to assert
that sexual assault is not com-
edy. The person who takes on
the role of
a
rapist can do so
because he knows that society
will support him. He knows that
whatever he says, he will be
safe. Yet when! walkout of my
house,
I
never know
if
I
will
be
safe.
One in four women will be
sexually assaulted in their life-
time. One in six men will be as
well. One in six women will be
raped, some with the aid of
Rohypnol, during their four
years at college. One in
·
two
women will be in a battering situ-
ation in her lifetime involving
someone who supposedly
loves her. It is not funny. It is
a
big deal.
I do not care to
.
be delicate.
No one has been delicate with
me. I have been re-victimized
by the apathy of society toward
this issue for the past nine years.
Every time it happens I.remem~
ber the face of the man who told
me I was not worth living. The
face of society blends well with
his. Now you put yourself in
my shoes and try to laugh. Im-
possible, right? Why do you
expect laughter from me? .
·
.
One reason I know life is worth
living is the simple fact that I
am
not alone. Sadly, if we add all of
the statistics oJ people who
have been assaulted,
I
am prob-
ably in the majority. Yet there
are those who still oppress us
by relegating our pain as
.
their
comedy,
·
It disgusts me. People
who advocate rape disgust me.
Am
I entitled to say that? Or
will I be censored in my effort to
respond to an advocate
_
of
sexual violence who was given
free reign to t.ise his voice. Per-
haps we give our freedoms se-
lectively.
.
.·
In our handbook on page 21 it
states that "The student is en-
titled to freedom froin any form
of discrimination or harassment
resulting from prejudice, racism,
sexism, anti-Semitism." I feel
that this situation has created a
hostile environment and has
been adirectinfiingementon my
right as a
·
woman to
_freedom
I
will
not allow myself to be vie-
.
timized ~y longer. Why would
you expect it?
.
People might wonder why one
person's words might incense
me to such a point One voice
undisputed speaks for the mul-
titudes.
·
Do
you agree with the
.
message sent?
I
do not
Iwm
not remain silent when my safety
is being compromised. Would
you?
.
.·
_
Why are
'
sex crimes against ·
women the only epidemic you
wiU still advocate by your si-
lence?
Michelle Corinne
White
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with a minor in womens
stud~
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OCTOBER29~l998
PAGEll
Kini's
Xrocks out at The Chance
by.SfEPHENMERCIER
Staff Writer
songs were not as strong as the
graceful guitar style of Tabor
others, but solid tunes from their
could have reminded one of
records of 1994 (Dogman) and
Alex Lifeson's (Rush) playing
1996 (Ear Candy) showed that
on such albums as Hold Your
their song writing skills cannot
Fire
and Power Windows. The
King's X
proved to a packed
be counted out yet. .
other players were not as inter-
Chance that they'renot just
Over My Head,
the highlight
esting as Tabor, but were solid
hardroc:k, but have elements of
of the night, showcased the
in their accompaniment.
funk, soul, blues andR&B.
major strengths of the band,
A Box,
from the album Ear
On Oct.
10
at
1,'.he
Chance in·
vocalization and tight playing.
Candy, was a very laid back song
Poughkeepsie, the rock trio
The lead singer's soulful James
that featured one of the catchi-
King's
X
performedan liour and
Brown howls and bluesy sing-
est harmonized choruses of the
a,
~alf of passionately played
ing complemented the solid
set. The lead singer's spirited
.
music in supporf of their new
rhythm section and Tabor's
Jimi Hendrix-like vocalizing and
album,
Tape Head
(Metal
sweet guitar sounds. The band
Tabor's crystal clean guitar
Blade). The band consists of·
was also able to show their
sound brought a great balance.
lead singer/bassist Doug
many musical influences by
The guitarist's solid perfor-
Pinnick, guitarist/singer Ty Ta-
bringing R&B, rock, soul, and
mance in the tune peaked espe-
bor, and drummer/singer Jerry
blues to the tune.
cially during his soaring solo
Gaskill. When the band gained
The very catchy Sometime
that was reminiscent of guitar-
fame in the early 90s with their
was a good example of the
ist Eric Johnson.
album, Faith Hope And Love
band's overall vocal skills. All
Overall, King's X accom-
and its MTV staple, It's Love,
three sang well, but the combi-
plished a near flawless show.
the group was remembered for
nation of Pinnick's blues tinged
The first sm_ig had some bass
their heavy grooves,
Rush4ike
rasp and the lead guitarist's soft
tuning problems, but was
progressive rock, and Christian
yet strangely powerful vocals
swiftly fixed for the remainder
influenced lyrics.
created a distinctive singing
of the set.
When seen at The Chance,·
style for a hard rock outfit. The
Another imperfection oc-
they looked like a very different
funk driven rhythm section and
curred during a couple of selec-
band. Rather.than getting away
catchy guitar riffs in addition to
tions from the new record. The
from their earlier image, the trio
the vocals made the song one
well played, but lyrically repeti-
built upon
it.
By focusing on
of the strongest performed that
_live Groove Machine and the
Pinnick's· .funk/soul s1·ng1·ng 1·n-
circle photOIStcphen Mercier
Ki ' X I
d
·
·
f
Id
evening.
mediocre Hate
You
took away
stead of his e·ar1i·er. m. etal 1·nflu-
mg-s
P aye an 1mpress1ve set o o and new
f
t ·
I tTh Ch
c
IS
O
1
TheintenselymelodicLostln
rom the band's solid perfor-
enced vocals, th~ gr9up . .·
ma ena
a
e . an?e on ranne treet on
ct
O.
Germany displayed King's X
mance. Goldi/ox, a soulful bal-
;sounded morelikeCahard rock:
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. 9fthe ,. duded a couple.of songs from
strict progressive rock;'. The
a
a came a tert e two new
'flt~~~t_.,.~:.,ee,p,r9.c.Iqb,Iu~,1n~":F,!!;~·:;:~~;::i~~a:;~:(i~~ .·~
•
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···';:Of1:~iti!:C:·:~i:o~~~~~~:~ .· .
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show impressive.
soon to atheaternearyou!
byJOHNSULLIVAN
THE DEEP END OF THE
Staff
Writer .. ,
-
.
_
OCEAN
·
.
,; . , . ..·.. : . This is a11 upcoming
>
_k } .
'.3
0 ·.
filmstarring MicheUe Pfi~ffer
, .• ... _ . .• '"
•· "·who
piays
a mother whose child
, . fI()llyw9o_fis:alWays inses-
is kidnapped and then returned
sion::;-·~?
>?>' ..
'
'.:'
:
.- ·•:
-
years later. ~_qundsn~atbutdefi-
. While: schools Halloween-
nitely weepy:~
..
themed ·stores an'd police·• sta-
DEEPBLUESEA~Notto becon-
tions may takethe
'
'summer off, . fused with '.'The Deep End Of
Holly~ood-
the
interriationally
the Ocean". This one is about a
recognized movie machine - is
pack of killer sharks loose in a
always working. Iwilllimitmy-
seaborne laboratory. I liked
self to an overview ori some of ''Jaws"; so this film intrigues me.
prolificHollywood's upcoming- SamueJ L Jackson and Stellan
projects. A word of caution
Skarsgaard have been cast in
though: Most of my sources on
this early summer release. Renny
these in-development films ARE . Harlin directs.
·reliable. Sources such as Enter-. HOW
THE
GRINCH· STOLE
tainment Weekly, Variety.
and
CHRISTMAS:JimCarrey stars
The
HollywoodRepqrtercanbe
as the Grinch in_ this live action
counted on to report accurately
version of the classic D_r. Seuss
on the state of Tinseltown af-
tale. It won't be out.until prob-
fairs. Sources such as· the
.
ably 2000 considering that
Internet are completely unreli-
Carrey has just si~ed on for the
able. A lot of stuff on the
role and he has _two other
Internet is made up, pure and
projects in development in ad-
simple, I just choose notto trust
dition to the Andy Kaufman
a bunch of fat guys on their key-
biopic due this SUIJ1mer. Hold
boards
telling millions of people
your breath.
that "Batman 5" will star Luke . VARSITY BLUES: Hey
Perry for their own sick enjoy-
"Dawson's Creek" fans! James
ment. But, some sites on the
Van Der Beekstars as a under-
Internet (such as Dark Horizons)
dog high school football player.
seem fairly grounded in reality.
Sounds like girls will love it Due
The following is a short list of this spring.
·
interesting films to be released
SCREAM 3: Hey "Party of
in the near future. Some maybe
Five" fans! Wes Craven has
real. Some may be made up, but
signed on to direct the third
don't blame me. Blame technol-
(arid probably final installment)
ogy. And, for good measure,
of the overrated horror series.
blame Oprah.
Neve Campbell returns as
Sidney who has now become an
actr~ss (unlike the real Neve
-,Campbell). ·Someone;starts
·· stalkipg and killing the cast
members on the set she's work-
ing on'- a Jow budget horror
.movie;_
·
·
8 MILLIMETER: Hey filthy por.:
n·ography fans! Nicolas Cage
stars a~ a deteftive investigat-
ing the sleazy underworld of
porn and snuff films to uncover
:the truth about a murder.
Jouqu~n Phoenix co-stars as a
dirty book store owner. Scripted
by Andrew Walker who wrote
"Seven", so expect darkness.
RANGE: An armed, Apache
''Glmship" :helicopter is .hi-
. jacked by a madman who holds
the city of LA hostage from the
sky. Dylan McDermott (TV's
"The Practice") takes the hero
role who tries to foil the bad
guy's plot in a pursuing News
4
chopper. 20th Century Fox is
actually considering this as a
third "Speed" movie. I hope that
is not true. Next year.
WILD, WILD
WEST:
Wil1
Smith
(oh no) is James West, an un-
dercover
.
FBI agent in Clld west-
ern temtory. Kevin Kline is his
sidekick in this big screen re-
·make of the campy 60's TV se-
ries. There'l? a big mechanical
spider in the effects budget so
expect lots of "Men In Black"
type of foolishness. This sum-
mer.
STARS WARS-EPISODE 1:
THE.PHANTOM MENACE:
Anybody ever hear of this? I
don_'t know a thing about it.
Scorsese and Cage are an in-
What is Star Wars? May 21st. · spired cpmbination. Next year
END OF DAYS:
Arnold . GUYGETSKID: Andnowthe
Schwarzenegger vs. Satan. An
part of the article that all you
apocalyptic action film about
crazy collegf kids hav~ been
the Devil coming to New York
waiting
for ...
an Adam Sandler
to find a bride. Schwarzegger's
movie. After this·
.
wint,er's
security guard has to stop him.
"Waterboy", Sandler stars in a
PSYCHO '98: Gus Van Sant is
story about
a
guy who gets a
directing the remake of tlie ul-
kid to impress his ex-girlfriend.
tra-classic, seminal 1960 The title might be changed to
Hitchcock thriller. Many people
"Big Daddy" which is equally
think this is a bad idea but they
stupid. Spring.
can not say it is not
an
interest-
FOR THE LOVE OF THE
ing one.· Vince Vaugn (T from
GAME: A baseball movie from,
"Swingers") plays Norman
surprise, Kevin Costner. Actu-
Bates. Anne Heche is in the
ally ol' Kev's pretty reliable
shower scene. I have to see this
when it comes to baseball mov-
film just because it is so damn
ies, and not so reliable when it
intriguing. With Van Sant at the
comes to insipid post-apoca-
helm, very little can go wrong.
lyptic adventures. I am looking
Money baby, money. This
forward to another "Field Of
Christmas. ·
Dreams". I don't know when
YOU'VE GOT MAIL: Tom
this is coming out.
Hanks and Meg Ryan team up . MISSION. IMPOSSIBLE
2:
again for yet another romantic
People are still trying to figure
comedy - this time revolving
out the plot for the first one, but
around some misplaced e-mail.
I have a piece of information that
"Sleepless In Seattle" director
may clear it up: It had a bad
Nora Ephron is back with the
script. Now that we've settled
sweetness. Preliminary screen-
that issue, John Woo directs the
ings have been positive so
second installment with Tom
"You've Got Mail" is a likely
Cruise and Ving Rhames retum-
crowd-pleaser next year.
ing to their roles. Other casting
BRINGINGOUTTHEDEAD:
rumors include Dean Cain,
Nicolas Cage, the hardest work-
Lauryn Hill and Jason Patric as
ing guy in Hollywood, stars in a
a bad MI agent. With Woo di-
supernatural drama from Martin
recting, MI2 might not be so
Scorsese. Cage plays a para-
MIA. Ha l;a, that was pretty
medic who is haunted by the
clever but
if
you read it again
souls of the victims he could
you will realize it really did not
not save. It is based on a book.
make much sense. Like Mission
Impossible 1.
Lt.•
OCTOBER 29
7
1998
Battle
·of
the bari.dS
. ,
.,
.
long
·
on boredom
byCHRISKNUDTSTEN
Staff Writer
The Battle of the Bands was
held on Friday, Oct. 23 in the
Cabaret.
The flvers for this event had
made a ~int of stating that only
the first 200 people would ad-
mined but that was not a prob-
lem at all since there was prob-
ably no more than
50. I
guess
either not enough people knew
about it or everyone was too
busy_ getting ready to get
sloshed later that night. The
door fee was only two dollars
which is nc>t a bad deal consid-
ering the fact that therewerefive
bands including MidHudson
Pork
and Fizzlewink, the only
two bands that
I
had the chance
to stay for.
The reason why
I
could only
stay for the first two bands was -
because my patience and time
were short. I knew that the show
would not start as planned at
3:00 butl figured by the time I
got there around 4:30 the show
would have been well· under
way.
I
was wrong. The first
band had only started a little·
before that as MidHudson Potk
· " •.c.,•'
-'Si !Li
f ;/,
0 0 ~
Rl!!SSWIRE
ACROSS
1
Father
3
Electrical Measurement
7
Capillary-like
9
Switch Setting
11
Chubby
12
Royal"!"
13
Answer Choice
14 AGetAway
16
To Give Off
19 Nimbus
20 Shamrock Land
22 SeaBird
24 Sterile
26 Thus
27
Masculine
28 From Israel
31
Choice Word
32 N.J. Institute for Reeves
33 Formicidae
was the opening act. .Playing
couldnot bare to sirthrough .
without a bassist, Jon Murray
a·nother
·seemingly
endless
still managed to keep the crowd,
space betwee11 bands. · At- the
little though it was, entertained. - time ofmy departur¢lnotjced.
A peculiar combination of a vo-
the Cabaret had filled up\Vith
calist/guitarist, violinist, and
an enormousqowd, possibly 70
drummer made the sex-oriented
people were there afthispoint.
set of MidHudson Pork very
Now. maybe more people
refreshing. There is no real way
showed up· later that I missed
to define the eccentric style of but iny assumption is that there
MidHudso11 Pork,
it has the
wasageneralignoranceorapa"'. -
funkish feel of Beck while at the
thy about this event,. which is
a
same time springing from
a
folky
shame•·b~cause· it. wou.ld have
nature. Definitely one of the
been a positive. reinforcement
more amusing songs was
forthebandsifmC>repeoplehad
"Viagra Fa.lls" which drew a con-
shown up. The monitors. tllat
stant laughter from the few of ha.d been.set up also .. did nC>t
us· that showed up.
work which raised the question·
.
Following them was
ofwhy they were even there.
F'izzlewink,
with
a
style that re-
Agairi, maybe I am just being
sembles a mix betwee11 Weezer
over critical_ but this could have
arid MXPX. There had been a
been
ap.
rupazing ~vent if prop-
long and frustrating time gap
erly ·organized, Tdo notknow
between them and Mi<!Hudso11
who did organiz~_the event but
Pork
however tliat actually dis~
it could have been done
far
bet-
couraged a few of t:he eyen fewer
ter. The fewpeople who actu-
onlookers · from staying: The
ally did show up were frustrated
band played aHvely set,,opened
from waiting about a half-hour.·
with What Goes Around Comes
between
·
every band.. It_ is a·
Around
that picked up the pace
shame that the Battle of the
a little from MidHudson Pork.
Bands resulted in s_uch a way
It. was after Fiv.le_wink that I
but that is what happens wh.en,
could.
#6
Io~g,er: stay, ~t the
no .one is interested because
qilJ'ar'J~.:
MY
pci~i~nce)1ad hif:n
ther~.:i~
~~:
p~rty
•
at_ the_.' (~J)ter,
griiit
lpngJ~~f ore,: tlfi,~
:~1fq),
1wm~Y.s ,~9!J.s~.:.1
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u • <::•;;(gr!:
1
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13
. 16
27
31
CC) 1998
Collegiate
Presswm:
Features
Syndicale-Onlineathttp://www.cpwire.com
6
Plant of the Chevnl
Family
7 Part of a Windmill
8
OutofBed
10 WeddingAnnounce
mentWord
34
UsedtolndicatePosses-
15 lam, You _ _
_
sion
DOWN
1 WalkerAid
2
Black Cuckoo
3
Bum
Treatment
4
City
in
West
Italy,
known
for marble
5 Save lime in Chinese
Cooking
17
Roman
Numeral
18
Groupofthree
21 RuhrValleyCity
23 Type of Film
· 24 Used
to
Express
Surprise
25 Formerly
29
Simile Word
30 Tree
Look here for next
week's answers.
CPt02198 /
Oct
21, 1998
.PAGE12
MidHudso~Potf<vvere
·a breath of fresh air in .an otherwise
. foul battle of the bands.
,
·
;;EXTRAINCOME'F0R'9'8\\
Ea;h
$500 -
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1000
weeklystufflng . . -
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, env~lopes. Fordetails ..
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· with
SASE,to:. ,
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GROUP FLYE•
6547N. Acadarny
Blvd.;
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'•:Fa;tS~t•.isJhe:1~ading,
provide,r,.9f
pnline
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irtanciai,'market,
and economic
_·, informal~n.·our
producUs
used by
over 10,000 inyestrnenf :: ' .
·professiopals wor1dwide'
to
research
companies,
industries,
and
·
• ·
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, Career
Fair
.
,
Thursday, October 29, 1998
. Mccann Center
3:00-7:00
Software Engineers -
We look for experience in
Ci~,
exposure to
GUI
frameworks,
Perl / HTML,
algorithmic
ana~s~
and
des~n, software
en~neenng pracoces, M~rosoft
Wiooows
application
development,
graph~
and slatisticaUquantitative
ana~is.
---------
-
------
-
--
-
OCTOBER29,1998 · ·
Tun
..·· .. ·• •.
.
self',
some
p~ople
calfit
.''enio:
e·. -_
m'
·to•·. . · .
core'.\ sorrie peopl~:~ye~ c~l
if
,
.
. _::-
. . ' . ''hardcore"(lhevei-reallytinder-
.
. _. ,·_ ,-.
.
•··. _
_
. _ •
stood"wliattliat'.mearit).\Butit
DeW·IDUSIC··
:·ts~1.t:r~~:1i~
.
tuare·inter~
· · .· ··
· ·· · ·
-
. ·
-
The record labeisthat,put out
to
... --..
_·.·
·
· . a . : .
·
.·.· ... ·...
8.v.
_
...
l.
~
·
·
:1~~a~i::6J~:t,:t
r!~~~
.
.J
pendent rrit1sic :1ahels ·i~
- Dischoi:d, my subject last issue.
·
·byPA.TIUCKWHITILE
.. 'A&EEdiior
An up and coming labelis Jade
Tree;· whc> are
'.
responsible for
putting otitgreat music by the
like,s
of New Jersey melodic~rock
· ·
•
·· · ·
·
· ·
-
· · · - •
kings
Lifetime and the afore-
·· Ev.eryone inJh~unqergi'ound• mentioned.-
Promise
.
Ring.
musk sce,nds.sJupid. · -
·Florida-based
Doghouse
Apart
from
being the titl~ of a
records are the current champi-
song'.by i:t,band whose'name is. ons.ofthee,no-core scene (that
unrneiltionable in' a publication
means combing "emotion" with
such as tijis,-that is a·~eemingly - "h.ardcore", for you
Dave
a\,ery true.statement.·
1
atn
l!O,t.:
Af
atthews
!
'.Band-loving ge-
making refereilce, to: th~.MTV
niuses). -
Iiotwatt:r Music, the
alternative scene that died while
Get Up
Kids
(whowill
be play-
most
of
us .were·finishing up
ing
·
atthe ~hance on Nov. 10),
high school, to the exultation of arid the Hudson Valley's own
some (read: ine) and the anguish -
Joshua are some of Doghouse's
of others (read: everyone else
bestacts. Just in case you are
in my high school). Just as flan-
·
more into heavy. stuff, Edison
nel shirts do not constitute a
Records puts out some of the
radical fashion statement-_as
more innovative aggressive
some_thought, ~ • s '-'120
Min- ·
bands on the scene today, like
utes" does notconstitute un-
Boston's
Overcast
and
der~oi.md music: Except.when
Philadelphia's recently defunct
they play the
Promise Ring
Starkweather.
·
· Plus Edison's
video, anyway.
barids sound absolutely noth-
That being said, when
I
say - ing like
Korn and the Deftones.
"underground" what
I
actually
Bigger independent record la-
mean are the hundreds of art-
bels like Victory and Revelation
ists supported by)ndependi!nt
Records stock mall stores with
record labels, who choose to get
their releases, which are gener-
th~ii music
to
the.
masses with-
ally more accessible to the buy-
out the help of MTV
art4
corpo-
fog
public. Check out bands like.
~~.13~?:,~d~~a11~
9
f~~ei••
:!JyflzeJJrqce of G9.d ('{ict9ry},
artist$~ght not 13S;abl~.to fil~e ,
:
~~aridc:E!lz~ti(Rev~l~on)''iry<iiE
that f601ce; but,t!iat IS ~~~Ide
/are
new to
'
ihe indejfendent mti~
_
the P,£>~nt.-;,qp?d•music':is;not Jic world.
2
·ou~}riendly.neigh:.
dead;cyou3ust cannoLb.uy it at
borhciod Music Director at
SamGoody or the :Wall. Since
WMCR llappens to work for
Rhino,Reco~ds, an 1~dependent
Equal Vision Records; the label
store{IS s~tyng }1-P sh9p_across · responsiblefor two ofmy per-
fromManst; you are now given ~sonal favorites,
Shelter and
the opportunity to take me up
Shift.
.
on tt:11~ •. sta!ement;; Some people
Why did
I
begin this artic!e
call It·· md1e-rock , some people
with the sentence "everyone
m
call it''DIY'' as in "do it for our-
the
.
underground music scene is
stupid"? Because obviously if
no one is listening then• there
must b·e something wrong here. ·
Actuaily,'l rriostly just ihrew
that in, to get your attention, and
since
you
got this far I guess it
worked. I like
U2 just as much
_ as the. next. guy, -but unfortu-:-
nately
fr
seems like the next griy
never shares my enthusiasm for
bands that do not get constant
MTV airplay. It is all right to turn
offyour·TV and turn into some
new music! So if you are inter-
ested in finding out about some
great underexposed artists, both
old and new, stop by Rhino:
Records on your way to
McCoy's some Priday night,
and tell them the A & E editor
from
The Circle sent ou.
Spring Break '991 I
-Sell Trips, ·Earn Cash
&
Go
Free!!!!
Student Travel Services is now
hiring campus reps.
Lowest rates to Jamaica, Mexico
&
Florida
800-648-4849 or
www.ststravel.com
PAGE13
Tliepygillypower_of''SimonBirch''
:byCARLITO
•
· Staff Offender
Although
I
only weigh in at
147pounds,
I
stand at approxi-
mately 72inches in height and
· virtually everyone in my life ex-
ceeds the 60-inch mark. For,
· years I have yearned for some-
thing monumentaliy divine; but
something that could be intri-:-
cately packaged in a shoebox. I
found that something
in
"Simon
Birch".
-
"Simon Birch" is the tale of a
. freak: Ian Michael Smith bril-
liantly plays the role ·of Simon
Birch, who is a fully function-
ing Homo Sapien who stands at
roughly 16 inches in height. His
torso has no more girth than my
cat's but his cranium resembles
the jack-o' -lantern that resides
on my front porch. Although
his skull is so gargantuan that it
has its own gravitational field,
his heart is even bigger. Simon's
life is much more difficult than
that of the average human but
at the· same time possesses a
lucid simplicity. He sincerely
believes that he is God's instru-
ment and that he has a definite
purpose for being on this planet.
I thought he was merely a freak
of nature that existed for the sole
purpose of entertaining me, but
in actuality, he was put on this
earth to be a hero. When
I
say ·
hero,l do not mean that he has
aspirations of· leading fellow
midgets in a revolution against
full grown primate oppressors
like seen in the film "Willow"
(which was basically a pint-sized
version of "Braveheart"), I am
referring to more subtle fonn of
heroism.
It is hard to imagine that a per-
son roughly the same size as a
groundhog could be capable of
any heroics whatsoever, but
you just do not know Simon.
When introduced, he is 12
years .. o.ld and he resides in a
small town in upstate New York.
His parents emotionally neglect
him, which
I
find to be quite dis-
turbing. Had I given birth to
him
(actually ·giant strides have
been made in cross-gender im-
pregnation),
I
would most likely
keep him in a hamster cage and ·
rent hjm out for birthday parties
and barmitzvahs. That may
sound dehumanizing and de-
grading but at least
I
would let
him know how special he was.
Simon is not your average 12-
year-old. He possesses an in-
tellect superior to, that of the
average sixth grader and
I
can
only assume that that is a result
of his oversized cranium. He is
quick witted and has a filthy
mind that parallels that of my
grandfather's.
His best friend is a standard
issue human named Joe and
when I say "standard issue", I
mean that his height exceeds
that of a bipedal muskrat. Joe's
mother, magnificently played by
Ashley Judd is Simon's
1
!Ilother
figure. Simon has an 9¥d,ipus
Complexion infatuatio'n with
Miss Judd and who can blame
him. His real mother neglects
him and the mere sight of
Ashley makes me want to put
myself up for adoption. Justifi-
ably so, Simon is pissed off at
the world. He is a nonconfonn-
ist and has no qualms with ex-
pressing his left winged philoso-
phies. This apolitical extrover-
sion comes in many fonns. He
feels the need to inform Joe on
exactly how voluptuous his
mother's bosom is and cannot
seem to fend of his libido when
confronted with preadolescent
mammary glands. He also op-
poses structured religion and
exhibits this by giving a 90-sec-
ond dissertation on the superfi-
ciality of post-mass coffee hour,
and does so in the middle of the
priest's sennon. Although hos-
tile during his speech, he looked
so cute standing on that pew
that
I
just wanted to pluck him
off the screen and give him a
hug. Just kidding,
I really don't
like small boys in that way.
"Simon Birch" is definitely a
film
I
would have to recommend
for anyone that has a soft spot
in their heart for children with
disproportionately sized mel-
ons. His faith and warmth suc-
cessfully won me over and I
believe he can do the same for
you. Perhaps you are like me and
you have aspirations of obtain-
ing vast wealth that could ca-
pably support the hiring of a
staff of midgets to cater to your
every need. Or at least chimps.
But until you can afford such
luxuries, go see this film and ex-
perience Simon Birch and all his
cranial majesty.
The John P. Anderson
Annual Playwriting Contest
Invites All Undergraduates
To Take Part in this One-Act
Play Competition.
Guidelines and Applications Are
Available in Rotunda Office 389.
All Student Playwrights Are Asked
To Obtain and Read the Guidelines
Before Writing.
Deadlines for Applications is the End
of the Fall Semester.
Selected Submissions Will Be Used
To Illustrate the Developmental
Process of New Plays in the
Spring Theatre Workshop.
---
.
October 29, 1998
. FOOT~AL~:
.
:RedJ?ox¢s
•
fighting an
uphill
b
.
attle in conference race
.
... continued fron_i pg 16
_
east Conference. The Seahawks
"held" Allen·to
·
1os yards on 27
Duquesne the Marist defense
carries and contained Marist's
was rejuvenated by the oppor-
·
-big play passing
-
attack
·
to only
tunity to face a freshman quar-
one strike, a 69-yard TD pass
terback for the second time this
from Tramaglini to
.
Tim Korba.
season.
That pass gave Marist a 14-7
The Foxes picked off Iona's
lead, but Wagner's Mike Irving
Rob Violante twice and sacked
booted a 44-yard field goal at
him three times while holding
the end of the third period, and
the Gaels to just 225 yards of quarterback Jeff Skinner con-
total offense. Jerry Gerth was
nected with Mike Cerminaro on
named MAAC Defensive Player
40-yard TD pass to put Wagner
of the Weed for the second time
in front with seven minutes left.
in three weeks.
Jason Adamoyurka tried to tie
Marist's most recent game
the gaine for Marist with 30 sec-
was last Saturday against the
onds left, but his 43-yard field
Wagner Seahawks of the North-
goal attempt was blocked.
TENNIS: Men's team
will
head
to
NCAA championships in the spring
.,.continued from pg 16
came in the fifth singles game,
when Juan Delgado needed to
deliver a win in order to solidify
a
trip
to the NCAA's. When all
was said and done, Delgado de-
feated the 5th singles player
from Fairfield, and as he said put
the roof on the house.
Afterwards, Junior Mike
Racanelli commented on this ca-
reer moment.
"This
is what we worked for
all season long. We were given
a great opportunity to play in
the MAAC championships and
now we get the chance to play
some of the top teams in the
United States. it's a dream come
true,'' Racanellisaid.
. if'ihe
team
does'
not
really
seem that excited
·about
the
NCAA's
at
the moment,
it
is be-
cause they will not find
·
·
out
whom they are playing in the
first round until the spring: The
MAAC was_ the only conference
allowed to hold it's conference
championship in the
fall
this
year, and in the future they will
have to play in the spring as
well. This means that while the
team will still continue to prac-
tice, there is no real set game
plan to work around in order to
prepare for an opponent. The
hard part will now become the
waiting game.
For now however, it will be a
sweet and anxious winter for the
Red Foxes. Yes, they did accom-
plish a goal many thought was
unreachable. Yes, they: do have
a team with enough talent to
compete against the best teams
in the country.
.
Arid yes, they
didso·
·
by combining thauare
form.ui'aof
heart"an'cl talent that
seisJfiart th~
·
gdo'd
·teains''fr6m
·
the average.
.
.
. .
..
'
The tjuestion
·
now oecomes
·
however,
joi.t'
how
far
~art this
team go?
In
five
months from
·
now, both
'
Marist and the entire
country
will
find out.
,
Grae
.
.
,
{to the
right
program for
your
IT
career]
Yoo.e
leairerl
lte
litlri:a slils,
Now
it's
ll't ID
Bk?
1remto_aijghef
1cit~~~~tis
-
·
:
.
.:
.
.
..
.
.
~
.
" ' '
•
.
.
·
•
,
.
.
.
.
cdstar~
Ir~
~m.
~
fal
It.at
_
we're as
mdla ~WJtedl~as a
flWm
~iesfl1n.
,
.
.
-·
··
..
.
.
.
:
·
.
-
;
~"" \lebS.1!
_
an
~-ctMl
ar
kdmJges
kxlay.
l'k.aiai~~~
'
.
.
,
.,\
·~
~
.
~ ~~
-
.
- ! - - .
~~~
·-
-~•'"'""'
PaineWebber
Launching your career
·
·
•
·.
.
.
_..
. .
, _
.
,
.
.
.
·
Cin:le
photo.'Joc Scotto
.
Quarterback Bill TramagliniJhrows
a
pass on the run during the Red Foxes 45-9 win over
Iona. The senior threw
two
TD passes to Joe Calabria in the game.
MAA C'sloom
·
onthe
.
horizon for men's
a
_
nd women's
,
-
ctoss
country
..
.
teams
by.JENNIFERGWVER
show,
,
ho\Vever .. Mi~or ran) son, the ~en have had high
Staff Writer
cross country personal bt!stof hopes, knowing that they are
19:20,-one
_
minutefasterthan she
one of the
.
best
.
teams that
The moment of truth
'
awaits
:
ha
.
ct
·
run the
·
previous week at
Marist has had in years.
the men;s and woi:nen'scros~
Albany.
.
.
.
_
.
,
,
The men also
.
competed at
country
·
teams.
Manhattan looks to be the'big-
VanCortlandt Park last weekend
All season; the
_
cro
·
ss co~ntry
gest competitor for Marist this
in the IC4A meet. The men also
.
teams have beenpn;rving
_
that
.
year.
·.
Whiie
·
fyiajist scoi-ed
_
in
finished in f~urth
-
plac
_
e, led by
-
.
they are
.
one
·
of
the best teams
front
of
Manhattan two
·
week-
senior Michael Melfi, .who
in their conference. This Sun-
ends
ago;
_
head. coach Phil Kelly
placed second in the field
()f
203
day, Noy.' l
'.
ilt-\_'aiiCortlandtPa.rk,
_
'
n6tes that
·
the
'.
M~nh~tt,a!_l
:.
ti?m
.
,_var~ity;
;
lJlllllers .•.
M.:;lfi,'.s
.
tirne,
Mari.st has th~
.
chalice
to prove
:
·· •
is
·.
sio~ger
'
than'_:t!i~'
-~eiufi
)hat
·
js:
1
:
',
r
}V;tS
:th(?
pest. tillle,
:
f9r-
:
a
that
tn,W
=
are
:
flfo
'
HesFaf
tl:i'e
'"•'
i.iie§
fafr
'
a(ECACs:
:
:X:·;stfong
Marist;runner at VanCortlandt
Metro Atlantic Athletic Confer-
race will be necessary
:
for.
the
.
:
Park
:
His secpncfpl3:ce)1Ili~ll
.
is
ence ~hampionships.
-
.
':
:
Marist.cross
'.
coiin°try.
team
to
also the
,
highest pl~ce
.
ev
.
er
.
o
_
b-
Marist's last meet! the fo-sfof
pick
·
up t~eir
.
fi!Sl
,
\\'iri
,
in
.
.
the
tained by a ~arist runne.r
.,
,
It was
the
three atVanCortlandtPark,
.
MAAC
··
confereiice, but itis ateameffortforthemen'scross
was a
·
good
'
wainMip
''
for
'
thtir
within their reach:
:
_
, :
.
· .
.
,
.
.
country
.
te~
• .l~o~~ver, as
.
th~
.
championships
,
this week.
-
:At
.
The men seek
an
equall:fdiffl-
team \\'.Orked together to
-
finish
the EastemConferenceAthletic
· :
cult challenge. The rtien are
ahead of every team froIU the
Conference rn:eet, the women
-
forced to
.
compete against na-
MMC conference.-. .
_
place
·
ct fourth
-
, the highest a tionally
:_
ra1,1ked
..
fona College.
.
After se;isqn long personal
cross
·
country team fr~mMarist
Whiie
:
a
first
,
plac,e vic_tory)s
and team bests, the.team.looks
h~s ever placed.
-
Six_ runners
_
iieariy
u.npos~ible, th~Jllen know
'
t6
capi~ize
011'
tll(mo'st illh~td-
.
·
·
ecl~psed
·
the former record of that s~c<>n~ place is within the
ousofthemall-'-thefirstMarist
20:01,on the course.
.
.
.
.
realm
·
of
their nmniilg ability.
cross country
·
tea~
-
to bring
Junior Erin Minor stole the
Sine~
$,d
b
'
egiruwig of this sea-
home
a:
MAAC chatjlpionship.
·
Women's
·-
soccer
.
team
fails
-
to
.
qualifyfor
M.AAC
CliapiOnshiJ)s
by
KAARENUMMEffl
The team loses seven seniors
Staff Writer
including mid~fielder Amanda
·
Swiderickwhohas IOpointsanµ
The Marist women's soccer
1 game:..winning
'
goal this
'
_
year.
team
-
has had a roller
·
coaster of Stepping up ru.cely to probably
a year thus far. Finishing out
till
in her shoes is freshman
their season at home against
Kasey Sibrinsz who
·
Ieaas·the
Loyola and at
Leliigh,
the Red
team with 14
':
points·'arid two
Foxes' 4-7-4 season thus far was
game~w1nning goals.
.
.
.
somewhat of a letdown;
•
S¢"nioigoalie Beth Zac}s has
In 1997 the Red Foxes were
had a tremendous Seasoir this
able to compete in the MAAC
year
:
withi L36 goal per game
Tournament, but this year fell a
average.
·
'I:ooldng to next
year
·
couple of games short. They
are
:
two sopho(li91:e goalies that
are currently sixth out of the lO
have filled in nicely this year.
teams, but only the top four will
Jamie Bierwirth and Katie
compete at Fairfield on Novem-
O'Connell have only allowed
her 6-8th.
seven goals in their 10
games.
s
.
Maiist beii the teairi~ they'
were supposed to·beat includ-
ing wins of3-1 against Rider, 4-
1
·
against Niagara and
)-0
against fona
.
Sieria managed a
-
1-1 tie with the Foxes.
·
.
.·
Marisf cariharig
'
their heads
high
·
because they
'
never gave
up. Of their 4 ties,
_
three were at
Manhattan, at the University of
Maine and against Holy Cross.
No
.
matter the outcome of their
Iast;two games;' the Marist
women's soccer team has some
.
.
things to buildon for next year.
'I)tere hard play all year under
coach Tara Nichols was
·
some-
thing to adi:nire.
·
ancun
*
Nassau
*
Jamaica ~
-
M~za-tl
_
an
*
Acapulc
*
Bahamas Cruise
*
Florida
*
South Padre
Travel Free and make
.
lots of Cash
!
Top reps are offered full-time
·
staff jobs.
Lowest price Guaranteed. Call now for details!
411
r
:i
•
;
•
:
.-~
·>
·
·
~
''
.
1
.
,
.
•
.
,
i
··
·
·
:
>•·
mpUs.
Repo
.
.
::
seven
:
inonths
:
aiid
125
·
~ins
laterithe
-
Ne\1/,York
Yankees
are
wofld ch~p-ions
·
for the 24th
tiine,:.
;i
/ .
'
.
C;.
'
',
,
• ,
.
TlieWorld Series was wori in
·
0
.
a
,
s\veep
,
c:hn~lude,if Jas(week
·
•
witha3~0winovertheSanDi'-
·
-
ego Padre~;'
;
The
,
Yankees rolled.
through
the
playQffS,
·
winning
in every hn
_
agin?ble\vay.
-
·
.
Agairist the Rangers iri the
firstmtirid, David Wells, David
Co~e
;
imd Andy Pettitte del_Ilor-
aiized the best offense in the.
,
Americiut
'
League, In the'Ameri-'.
cai_l League Chcl!Dpionship
·
se-
·
·-
-
ries againsnhe
·
Jndians, the
,_--
Yankees
-
fou_n'd ways to win,
despite not being on the top of
their game. When theYankees
needed the pitching to step
·
up,
.
it -did. When the-. Yankees
."
needed ihe
'
Jiitters'
·
to step
.
up,
,
they did
.
In winning the s
_
eries
4-2, the Yankees showed that it
.
was their tinting, dutch perfor-
mance, and heart that allowed
themselves
·
to win' the most
games in Americ"an League his-
tory.
-
,,
.
'
When it came to the Padres,
the Yankees were barely_ tested.
It
seemed inevitable, particu-
larly after beating Kevin Brown
in thefir"st game
.
of the
.
series,
that New York would win the
title.
WhileJt
was
notthe
most
exciting World Series; there was
.
..
.
_
, ._
·
-
.
.
_
·
Circle Photo/Joe Scouo
Yankees' pitcher Andy Pettitte looks on during New Yorks'
}Norld Series parade last Friday. Pettitte went 2-1 in the ptay-
:otts
·
and
won.th~
-
ga~e
4
clincher against the Padres,
. · .
-
..
,
-
·
•,
one
:•
"surpffs~'
'
performaricis
thattruly'exemplified the great-
ness of this year's
'
Yankees:
·
·.
·-
·
.-
It
was World Series MVP Scott
Brosius
.
•
Nobody thai'follow~d
the Yankees all year could
'
say
.
that Brosius was a ~urprise, but
iiwas
liis performance against
the Padres
.
that brought him to
national prorniile;ice: Qver the
course of the season Brosius hit
300with 19
'
hometsand
-
98
RBI's;
ofteri;hittingiri
tlie
ninth
spot in the order; He earned his
first ail-star appe~an~e; he\vas
qutstanding in
.
the
.
field; he.
"'ii~
~
.
-
'
,
:
'~
._
'
:
.'
_-;;
.
..
,
,
i~ on~
_
word; amazing_-
··
Wh~n it came down to the
World Series:
·
Brosius
_
came
thiotightime
and
time again. He
hit
.471 with 2 homers and 6 RBI
in
:
ihe fourgaine series. Both of
his home
'
nms cainein Game 3,
when the Yankees won
54
be-
cause of liis performance,
Brosius
·
maynot
_
be the
·
only
'
rea-
sorl the
Yankees
·
':"qn the series,
btit
it
can not be denied that he
wasan instriimental part, both
"in
getting
there
andin winning.
TheYankees of 1998
,
will be
reirtembere~
-
forever
:
for their
dominance, integrity and class.
It
was
an amazing team that had
an amazing season
.
It was
.
a
team that had heroes such as
Brosiqs, Ricky Ledee and Shane
Spencer; It was not that the
Yankees did not have and did
not need modern superstars,
like Bernie
:
Williams and Derek
Jeter, but it was
a
team that had
·
superst~rs
in
the
.
ti-aditiorial
mold, as well. :Brosius is the
:
best
'
example of traditional
_
supers~dom.
fie.
came up big
PAGE15
.
What's on Tap?
Football
!
0/31 Home vs. St. Francis 1 p.m.
Men's soccer
11/2
@
Oneonta 2:30 p.m.
Men's teililis
11/5-11/7
@
Rolex Tournament
Women's tennis
10/31-11/1
@
Rolex Tournament
William
&
Mary
Cross country
11/1
@
MMC Championships
Van Cortlandt Park Bronk.NY
Volleyball
l l/2 Home vs. LIU 7 p.m
Tough Trivia
What team holds the NFL record for wins in one
season., including
_the
post--season?
Last week's q~estion - What is the NFL reco,rd for passing
yards in a single season and who holds it?
Answer - Dan Marino passed for 5
,
084 yards in 1984.
all year, despite the fact that the
he knew that the lights were not
always shining on him. He qui-
etly did what he needed to do
and did it at the very top level
of baseball.
·
·
For
.
the Yankees, tlle World
Series was the conclusion to one
of the most-amazing seasons in
basebaUhistory.
.
.
, ..
'
It was a phenqmenai season,
not
only
for the Yankees, but for
baseball. There was the home
run chase, the end of Cal
Ripken's streak,
:
Kerry Wood's
emergence, Roger Clemens con-
tinued dominance and the return
of
fan
:
interest to the national
pastime. ,
It
will no
.
the_ a season
that\viHbe
·
soon forgotten
·
'.
by
baseball fans ..
'.
.
Also in the world of sports last
week:
.
1. NBA Lockout - Imagine the
NBA if the players cared as
much about the game as they
do about their paychecks ...
2. Denver Broncos - They are
undefeated, TerreH Davis has
l,001 yards in 7 games and Ja-
son Elamjust tied the 28-year
old field goal record with a kick
of
63
yards. Is there any stop
-
ping them?
3
.
.
Minnesota Vikings - They
have
an explosive offense that
no other team in the NFL can
match. Can
the
defense stack
up?
4. Tony Gwynn - He might be
the dassiest play~r in a11
··
of
,
sports and
.
while you may.have
-
been happy for the Yankees, you
·
kriow you felt
for
Gwynn when
·
the Padres lost.
·
5.
Jerry Rice
~
Yeah, he set an-
qther record, this time for most
consecutive games with a recep-
tion ... what else is new?
l1;w()tough
.
lossesleave men's soccer at
5-10
by
JEFF
DAHN~
,
·
· ·
Staff
Writer
FoUo~ing a _we~~e~d that saw
the Marisf Men's Soccer team
battle two tough conference
.
foes, it appears that year on~ of
the rebuilding process is all but
over.
.
_
.
.
The
·
Fqxes Jell to defending
Metro Atlantic Athletic Confer-'
ence champion Rider4-2
_
last
_
Friday. The defeat was followed
by a 2-0 loss
at
the hands of
Loyola
.
on Sunday; the team
Rider beat in last season's
MMC title game to capture the
conference championship.
·
-
With the pairoflosses, Marist
is now 5-10 overall, 3-5 in the
conference.
Rider, one of the top teams in
the MAAC with
'.
a 7-2 mark;
came in led by All-America can-
didate Craig Wicken. The se-
nior forward, who became
_
the
Broncs all-time leading scorer
last Sunday against Sien
·
a,
would prove to
be
the difference
in the game.
.
·
.
Marist coach Bobby Herdodes
sail he was impressed
'
with
Wicken
as
welt
--
-
-
.
,
,
''He's
ju1fr
:
rele~tless,. good
-
size, verygo
_
od skills,"
:
said
coach Herodes "They are re-
ally going to miss him."
.
·
Wicken opened up the scor-
ing at the 32-ininute mark when
he-took a pass from Mark
Ben
'
nett and knocked a left
footei; past goalkeeper Carlos
D
.
eBrito and irito the left comer
of the net.
T}Je score remained 1-0 until
the
·
second half when Steve
Jackson gave Rider a 2-0 advan-
tage
in the
5 I
st minute. Marist
.
would get on
·
the board eight
minutes later when Richard Bra-
dley placed
a
header into the top
comer of the goal, beating Rider
goalkeeper ~eith Richardson.
But Wicken would strike again
. at the 73-minut~ mark, giving
the Broncs a 3-1 lead with a shot
into the bottom left comer of the
net. It would be his second of
.
three scores on the afternoon,
.
as he completed the hat trick iri
minute 86 with a header that
beatDeBrito. .
.
Stev,e Murk would add a goal
for the Fo:x.es.
.
Herodes stressed that al-
though ihe final was 4-2, is was
far from a one-sided ballgame
.
"It wasn't that spread out," he
.
said of the score. 'That game
could have gone either way. We
missed three or four opportuni-
ties in the first five minutes of
the
game
and we could have just
put them right out of the game,
but we didn't and that's the busi-
ness."
Loyola was not an easy team
to face next, considering they
had won
8
consecutive MAAC
crowns before last year's loss
to Rider. Just as it had been all
Craig Wicken on Friday, it was
all Colley Bruce against Loyola
on Sunday.
The freshmen goalkeeper
stifled the Foxes en route to the
2-0 shutout. Junior Christof
Lindenmoyer scored the first
Loyola goal at the 16:25 mark,
assisted by Andrew Ogilvie.
After returning from halftime
with a 1-0 lead, the Greyhounds
did not wait long to add to the
cushion. Sophomore Mike
Strombers hit the top right cor-
ner of the net to beat DeBrito.
That would be all the scoring
on the afternoon, as the Red
Foxes missed a couple of key
header goals and were not able
to find the net.
Despite losing a second con-
secutive contest, Herodes
praised his players.
"Our kids don't back down
from anybody," he said. "The
weekend could have gone real
well."
The week was not a total loss,
though, as the Red Foxes de-
feated Sacred Heart last Mon-
day 3-0. It was a makeup game
after the scheduled match was
canceled due to a Sacred Heart
bus accident
After a scoreless first half
Ad
_
am Searle~ put Marist on the
board in minute 49, taking a
Brian Garafola pass anddrilling
it into the left comer.
Brian
Karcz
followed that at the 70-minute
mark with a header that beat
goalkeeper Scott Glibowski .
Thomas Mullowney would
score one minute
·
later on an
open-netter, preserving the 3-0
victory.
The win was DeBrito's third
shutout of the season.
Considering the Foxes began
the season with five consecu-
tive losses, Herodes is happy
with what he saw this year and
said he looks forward to next
season.
"The kids are ready," he said
about turning the program
around. "It's just a matter of
getting some depth. We should
really play hard for these last
games to get the experience for
the kids."
.
.
Marist
will
again
be
in action
next Monday at 2:30 p.m. at
Oneonta
. ;
,
'
l
I
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.:J.LAllen
..
· ocfo1i'eii)29 J99s
,
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ltlSOfi}it ...
.
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~;olloMDg,4{~tii,
i • . ·••. ··•.·••· . ; . . . . ·••. .. ./
> . •
... ·.
0
);~}~~j[~&~f~ti:~;
.
·:· ~siaffWriter
hejv;:mted so badly to
b~
ap~.
.
~9'Y.~?,
·
~~:~<>
did this ~r that,
- :-·'/ . .'.:··::.,·
·
, .. · . qfiti, · ... , .
. ··
.
•:,
>.:
·
_..;~lens~d.:,,:••
'.:.':,::;f/\, •· ..
. There W-e'.s!tuations in life in , ·' /'What I bring to the 't~aiµ'is.-~'. , .
.·. :/ ~en] :J;
Alie~}~
.not;~,e~~
()0.
which· one :door.doses and an- .··. ,-1orof. heart," said
JJ.:
Alleii ..
"7~· •·
: :.
the,
foot~all field or_i~ the_ \Yetght
other one:opens;
,
This is a situ-
will
sell
out for my tean{do·what-. .
:: tC??IU,)'()U i;ruiptobably.see
~~m
·
ation·.seniof(running;back .J.J.:: everittalcesto.win.·:rrn'alse>
a :
:·
in.>Donnelly.:taking·scien,c.e
Allen his•fariiliiarwithwhen is. po\Yerful runner which enables
-
.
dasses)He gets
th~
same
_thrill
footbalfc~frr\vas put on hold . : :ni~.to
'
get into the end
zoµe..?\
:
· ·
out 'of sdense. as ~e· ~oes:wh~n
,
during his]i:e~lunah year.
,
)11 Allen's first seasotj:wlih
the·
:
be ~reaks i1taclde.andrumbles
: J.J.All~n'originally signed
to
IledJ<'oxes'he scored
it
team<~
.. 50yardsJor·a.t9.uchd<:>wn.
playfootbal!'.f.or HowardUniver-:· :hi~i;lO touchdowns.:' Ikfin,-.
.
'~J
lov~ biol~gy b~caus_~ yo~ ·
sity.coming;out of Worcester · ishedtheseason with695yai;ds
.· .. ·.are clealmg with ~ealthmgs,·
Academy,N~wiYork. He would
on '161 carries. Out of the
'JQ
:
•.'said AUen: ''Jt~ hard work but
I
red~shii.-t,hisfreshman year at touthdown he scoredi~-1996;.
·. enjoyleamingscience:,lflcan:.
Howard?lJniversity·but. going~ two
,
,
.
of therri ... helped.Marist:. ·
;·. :iiot-1m1kefootbal.lacareer than I
into his spiing semester fresh-
c·oml-from-behind and.win the- ·
wilLwant to go .to: grad1:1ate
man year he would run into fi-
game over rival SL Peter'.s,
)1{
:
sc::hool and pui:st1e something in
ilancial
aid
problems ... As. a re- ' · 1997- Allen would· get-into
'
t11e·
the ·medical field. Graduate
sul.t he would.have tofoave the ·
.
endJ:9ne
10
times again like the
school is justas•competitive as
school aiid •·go•. through th,_e
p,eivious year. He would finish'
football, butthere is less chance
whole reciuitprocess over agairi
the season seventh• in: the .
to playfootball at the next level.
to find aschooL. . .
.
. · .. · lv1AAC. in rushing with.697'
lwill give itagoand try out for
"I
looke(~t a coupk().f. .. y~~s.and third in scoring:\\'ith:
the:NFL during thewinterand
schools bµtJ chose Marist be-
60 points,
.
· · ·
spring.breaks.
I will give it my
cause the cla,sses seemed ...
·
l'res~ritlyin his senior year at'
· best effort the Monday dght
smaller and :_the atmosphere ·· Marist, Allen is having his best
after the season ends. I will be
seemed frienqly/' said Allen. "It · s~a,s·onJor the Red Foxes;.
Cur,,·
in
the weight, room getting ready
also had a great biology program
r~ntl}' he has nine tou(?h_dcjwrir
for the league."
which lwasJgoking Jor in a
an.d
916 1'.llshing yards ori"}93 ·
What J.J. Allen wants people
school besidefootball," he said.
carries.
. . · . ·
.
· to know is that he is a down to
So the
fall
~f 1995, J.J. Allen
On
OctoberJ7, 1998 Marist.
earth guy. He considers him-
was taking ~lasses at Marist but
.
·would ,play ~he ·l911.t
·
aaels-it
self an everyday "Joe" and has
woul.d ha.ve .. to.·· sit .out the.year.·.
w.ould.·
.
b.ea.spe· .cial. dayfo.r
..
AI.·
..
I.e
.. n .. ·.:: ; ,_.. _-:
· .. .-:,_,:,.•.·
.
· ..
,i, ,. :
.
•·'
. . . ·.,: ..... :': .. ·.
·
,:
:',,---Circlephoto/JocScono·
no. probl.em.t.alking
t.o
an.ybo .. dy.
'Allentakes_a 11aridofUrom.Tramagljni du~ng .his monster game
because. of
N'GM
transferring
I-le_ h,ad
~
cweer. day.i11,111shing
against lonai Allen
ran
for
247
yards and three TD's in'the game.
He said people might think he
rules: While$eteam was prac~
yards'witli247. 'He also found
.
·· ·
.
·.
··
·
·
.
.
. < , . ,,. _ ... ·.·· .•. · ... •..
has a .big ego bec:au~e he is on
tic.1.ng.· fi
...
<>r ...
·u.
P..-
...
c
....
o.' ..
·
nu
..
·.·.ng
OPP.
on.erits
.
.
. · ...•.. the:efici"k6ri;tfu~etimesoh
the
·
·.the
R~d
'i:.~xiJ;;J~d
Allen.
,i'i
l<?t q_f.prac,:ti·c·. e ,th.a('o/.·,t'!e
..
Ic
phi~J
.. · ... ihefo~.
tb··.·al
... 1
team..
buf
that'is
not-
---..
. during tlie:~eascm,Al!en
,
would . ' d~twWr(outhddw~ runs
of
3
8, .
real.I
y
diet'
ri~iidiow
ff
I w
·
~'go- ..
\V~S -~()~.::
Th~,t~~~.
pie~•
.111~. ..
lus ~ersoriality ..
. do his schoolwork and_ work.:
10, an,W~ryards,, ,
·
,/
.
:. : ~,.
.
ing
fopiayi~
the
game
15efause. up'and'everythirlg el~e, fel}into . ·, AUen's stay. at Marist has·
out own his9~'.: He -would pie~ : .•..
·
.. ,
.'.~Tiut~
,»7as, !h,e IllO~tyitJ:g~). . someone, dqse>tcfme passed
place. thaFweekend :against been meinorawi
both
on and off
pare himseµ for spring practic~: ·h
,
aye )fad "si.i;ic
.
ebeing
a
part
cf.
ii
way on 1'h_u~5:day;
_I
missed a: Iona,,, '.
:
'
,
,
.> '.· · ..
•
· . . . . . ;
the field; He would like t,o thank
•
.
·
· :\Yhenaskedhqy.,hewouldlike_ players, coaches and teaches
u
t
R· d" ·
v
·
-
·
·
11 -
t '
•
11
~a-
--
11
to.be remembered on the field .. ·.that he has been: able to associ- .
... , oll
e ' .
.I'
oxes.-..
wl
s
I
',\IJ
.
byhiscoa
.
~hesandyeers,All~~· ate with during·his :stay at
•
•
•
0
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
• • • •
•
-
said he would like to be reinemc:. · Mari st. .
sh:Oct of
~ c
c~aJllpiOllSilip
·
~~ilit~il>it~tn~~t.
tof:J:.';,~~:ir:n:::.,::~
. ,·• .
.
:." '·-'
. . .
.
. :,,·,:::.
_
, , ': . :: "'.:''f;/
'.
,.
:
.•
., .
pe()p~e t?sa.y/y~u,Sh()llldN.1ve
•
\\'.h<ttey~i h.app~ns lie is ready
, byTij·O·
' · . M A S ·
·
.. ·•.
RY.
..
:AN
· ..
down·
·
_' pass
·.
fr~·;,.:.-./fony'
aglrir{ rehlrned-'fodt Duqu~sne . b~en-~t-¥~~t~nd
S~\V
tbe·-w~y ',t():~e it;head on ,~d o~er_the
. )Spofts:Editor .·
.,
·
·
Ziifunerman toGeritld
Fos~i:{: ,
.-
Jgu~hdown, thi~ tiJni:tJy;Keyin
'
tfii.s, ki4·~1ayed
·
· } always h~~: . top~JustJik~.o.ne ofbis.tnps mto
.... , .:':\c.
:/):J:Allen.gofMarisr~njij~,-iThompsoh;_M#ist.woidd'again' co~c~es talk about ex-Mai;ist
the end zone.
Apairoflo~ses;oneofwhich ... b(>ard.with
'..
l-yard·tou9fi.qo~.·.
·
get·on,'thebo#dj)~fore,'the'fi-'.
M
' .
t - •
allbtit ~li~pat~d Iv!aristfroni:. ,run~ofhis own;thefirs_(9fthr~:: .•. •n
'
al gtin s6ui1d~di}~
'
Trajtlglirtl.
.
. _- _
j
£l
n . s~.
·
..
Li
a·.'
·
n Is
therace'fQr,th~MetroAtlantic
.
jouchdowris ·onthe d~yffqr:\:hit
:
tight e11d.l<e\'.i,v·Br~wef·on···
""'
L,
AthleticJP.Qttfe,rence champion.: .•.
N!~n;_
to cut
the
le~d.to),3~7Jtt.·. i2:.yard pass "'.ifh
'fl:
seconds
ship,niage;efor-aless than en:.c:
,th~bitlf,
_AIIe.nvvouldgctont<>,
.·
,: -~IUainipg ..... · •.
-;
·<
:
..
. /~
;O,:,·,_;., .• : ·· ..
t ·
:
: ·.
> ;' ' . . , ; . ,
.
b. d'
~~~~~~r~¥.5f~r
th
~~ed'~~~~
-
~:·~~!i1:!f~f
1
~
1
·.~~:~~~~~h~~it~~~~~~~~-
·
:·.
-ea.m
ea~IIS .
I
t-~-~t•~t■ ~Nl·c··~~A~~
II}a:ulirigpftll~_lo~~9ael~.,'flle;,
.
in:5i~~e.the'Iellqto•l~:'6,?TIJ
,
e>-MA~ptitlean?/"'hpse:gajries. -. ·().:,\ · · .;
e/-
;c. ·:. ·
·
·. ' ~ ,
-
• ·
s ..
loss. to ·Dt1que,s~e g~ve the R,ed . D,ulq~s -went fortwo to !}1ake11.p, . do .not cou_Ilt}n,
)he.C::fvlJ\J\C
·
·
·
·
Foxe:S
tv,oJq~$~
in
·
conf~ren~.e: f<>f~~ii;earlie.r
{ail~
e~tril
j;aj~t_
stand,ings,, . puLup,· JittJe Jight, ·
by
PETER.M.()
_
38 fo>ints, and M:anbattan -took
play, whjc:hJD~an~ tliat-if .eitp.er
f
att.etnpt, but.c_ould
.
not c<>Iiy~It".:, · aglliiist_Mar:ist: :; ,. .
> .... · .. • .
StaffWritef i·
.
.
3rdwith-32 points)· :
GeorgefoWD;qf:Fairfield \\'Ills all so/the.lead rerilained .it)3
i
Allen. ag~itj~r~n;'f9r tqi:ee:
· ..... , :
·
, ,,
, .
.
:o-, ·
The scores however, really do
oftheir:;
.
feµiaityng confore:11ce
, .
• -points. . . ; .
.
.... '"
.:> ,,
.
:
touch.<f:C>\VIlS, _\Vhi!~·Juiinmg up
The ~ourtis qui¢tnow· at the . not.give a fair assessinentof
·games they)villfi.ni~h with only.
J\llen then: came right b.ick for: a grand tqtal of247'-yarcl~ 'rush-
Dutc:he:SS Racqu~tClub .
.
.... •.:·
·
.. ·
_
w~at a-dose .and .competitive
one.loss
in
MMC play. . .
Mari st,,· scoring his seconcI.. ing on
oiily22cames,
easily his.
· .. · .For. the; pas(inonths, .·(he . tou111anjent this year,'s MAAC
The game ~gainst the Dukes
t<iucP:dovvn of the
day
oh
iron; .·
best gatne as
a Roo
foi
' ,
courn. were
'
hoine. to not only . really was. :In fact, Marist actu-
that
coul4
h~ve propelled Marist . frgin four yards away, . That is .
Also ·enjoying hjs finest g~e the Maristtenrus)eam; but also·. ally lost three .of six singles
( 4-3, 3.:2):tothe·conference title • when things fell apait for the · ~t. Marist wasjuriior tailback
a dream. Well that dream is now
matches,• and· two of. theses
ended
up
being· quarterback Bill . Red.Foxes. . .
·.
. .
. ·.
.
.
Dave Spfoato .. Spinato ran for
a reality. For only the third time
matches went to three sets.
Tramaglini's ~orst game to date.
At the start the fourth quarter. 100
·
yards on .11
·
carries and
in our school~s history, a Marist
. Before the start.of the touma-
The senior- who had played so . Zimmerman .connected. \Vith
·
added a touchdown
of
his own; .
team will beat theNCAAcham-
inent,
coach
Tllll
Smith had a few
consistently for the Red Foxes · Fosterfor·the second tiine in the · All totaled the Red Foxes ran 51
pionships. .
words to say to the team on the
in their first four games, threw
game, this .time on . a. 25~yai:d · times on the. day for ·a stagger-
In
an
impressing and dramatic
importance of the final matches.
six interceptions, two of which
touchdown pass. - Again the
ing 456 yards..
.
.
manner, the Red Foxes captured
''We've dug a good founda-
wcre r~turned for Duquesne
kick failed, so the Dukes lead
· Bill Tramaglini and Joe
the MAAC championship, thus
tion," Smith said. ''We did an
touchdowns.
was 25-14. On Marist's next
Calabria also had fine after-
giving them a bid to the NCAA
excellent job framing the house
Despite'rushing for 210 yards
possession, Tramaglini was
noons, as the pair hooked up
championships this spring.
In
and putting up the walls, floors,
and holdipg the Dukes to just picked off by Duquesne's Andy
on two touchdown· passes, the
a tournament that featured such
and ceilings. However, without
85 yards on the ground, the Red
Defazio, who returned the inter-
first from 37 yards away and the
teams as Manhattan, Rider,
a roof (the MAAC champion-
Foxes never led in the game.
ception 45 yards for a touch-
second coming form 29 yards
Canisius, Iona, Siena, and rival
ship)
it
was going to
be
a long
The Dukes jumped out quickly
down.
out.
Fairfield, Marist rose above all
and cold winter."
inthefirstquartertoa 13-0noth-
After Allen's final TD run cut
the rest to capture the title with
The pivotal point for Marist
ing lead on I-yard run by Andre
the lead to 32-20, Tramaglini
...
please see FOOTBALL,
pg.
a combined total of 46 points.
Hatcher and a· 43-yard touch-
was again picked off, and it was
14 ·
(2nd place went to Fairfield with
...
please see TENNIS,
pg. 14
52.5.1
52.5.2
52.5.3
52.5.4
52.5.5
52.5.6
52.5.7
52.5.8
52.5.9
52.5.10
52.5.11
52.5.12
52.5.13
52.5.14
52.5.15
52.5.16
,
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-
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.
-
-
OCTOBER29,1998
·
'.'f
ill!!f
\
f
~selles
":
rare
.
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·
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GR()GAN
,_
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the sirbet
•
did
.
not w~eto d~-
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arid
clear
,
.
Asst._lf
ews
Editor
stioy
.:.
the iree,
•
~
so
they
·
offered it
.
of
i
water
c
iines
•
was
·
difficult,"
.
·
-
·---
•
-·
to Marist
-
-
.
:
-
-
-
·
Short
-
said
/
;
' - .
·
.
. ._ .. -
.-
-
After ~6
t
~~~troversia1
·-
cle.:
.
But
)
heproblem
\
vas in mov-
c
A
-
20
:
foot'--wide
·
by
,
five
·
f pot
'
struction of
the
Ginko tree out-·
.
ing
th~
tree
;
__
....
: ',
:
,
.
-
.
'
,
,
'
deep hbid
'
w~ dugJor:ih~ tree:
•.
·
sid~ ._ the Hbrary'
'
last
·
iemester,_
-
· ·
•·
Many' companies \Vanted up""
-·
Cufreµtly
;
~
_
er~
~in{
guidelin~s
-. Marist recently
'
added
,
a
:
\are
wards
of $30,000' to transport it,
in pli.t¢~
'
Jo #i~e
.:
sure the' t_ree
•: breed of tree to
:
the campiis:
::
according
:
io Massie;
,
'
,
,
stays
rqoted
ii:(its
new
home.
_
•
.
:
The
'
contractors" d?rnoHshfog
::
.
Ralph
;
Short,
'
grouµds super-
The
guideHnes
are
a
temporary
the old
,
westenl PrintingJjuild.:
.
visor
>
said Marist
·
decided
'
it
.
precatition
:
·
·
according t6 Short .
.
~
·.
ing
'.
ac:rns's'tlif
street cicmated a
-
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:
's°ave
'
a
·
iarge
)
unoilnt of
·
.
.
:
-
''The
'
·
guideliries
\vill
·
-
be
-
re-
f
\\'eeping Hemlock to the
-
col
_:
rnoney by transporting the tree
moved irUate spnrig," he said.
lege. Maiist'moved the massive
-
-
''iil_:hqus«
?
by
:
using
'
Marist
;
s
.
.
"
Until then they are there for
.
tree ~dYransplant~d it in
'
front
grol111ds
·
'
crew
-
-
workers
i
an
·
d
settling
_
and to
.
guard against
.
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_
-
..
nre . rob.I~ -
down during rush hour and we
· be
·
-
ood
·d "
cas
ut ere 1s a poss1
1
1ty
_
.
.
.
would
a g
1 ea.
that women's basketball soon
have sent adv1sones to the me.,.
_
The server onir al~ows
6~
will
be.
_
_
_
dia .when we ha~e cl?,sed I~es
people to lo~ on s1multa
TheRealAudiolinkforMarist dunngthesepenods, shesrud.
neously, but this has not been a
be
fi
d
th b
For the most part, the con-
.
,
TODAY:
Sunny
hi:
62°
lo:45°
CoIIlinunity ................. 2
Features ....... ; .............
5
A &
·
E .................... : .. 11
Op
.
. .
·
9
1mon ... .-................. .
problem yel Szilaski .said if an
f~:l cand
fi
:~I ; be
-
as-
struction between Delafield and
Thu"°"
imsdmtifo:
sww,
takmfrc,n
100
upgrade was needed m the
fu-
et
an
?0
1
"··' thel
,I?ages
.
,Sharon Drive consists of drain-
Marinsrudnrn.
-
a
www.mans .euwa e res
Sports ........
.
............... 16
,;,.
i
I
·1
,
!
'
..
..
OCTOBER 29 ,1998-
Security Briefs .
--Compiled
by
Scott.Neville
. Poughkeepsie Police arrested a
.
the fire. No injuries were re- .
non-Marist student early Sun-'
ported.
day morning, Oct.11 for alleg-
edly harassing a female student
at the West Cedar apartments.
According to Joe Leary, direc-
tor of Safety and Security, the
man had twisted the student's
arm on Oct. 1, injuring her wrist.
This time, he had a couple of
friends with
him
when security
was called. A guard contacted
the Poughkeepsie Police when
the student filed a .complaint
about the Oct.
1
incident. The
offender was arrested and
charged with 3rd degree as-
sault.
Two students smelled a strong
burning odor in Donnelly Thurs-
day, Oct. 15,at 3:50 a.m. while
working on a fashion project.
Since the alarm did not sound,
the two students contacted·the
fire department who responded
and extinguished the electrical
short circuit in a hallway light.
A combined total of 289 cans
•
On Monday, Oct. 19 at 10:40 p.m.
a window in Gregory was bro-
ken. Leary said officers found a
female Sheahan Hall student at
the scene who admitted to the
vandalism, alleged! y saying that
the window's owner had been
"bothering" her friend.
·
A re-
placement window will cost ap-
. proximately $50-$70. ·
. and bottles of beer have been
confiscated, in addition to one
keg and tap, by the security
guards at Marist since the be-
ginning of the academic year.
A· tow truck hauled away two
vehicles from campus this past
week because the owners had
multiple, unpaid parking tickets.
The two offenders had to con-
tact the towing company to
claim their vehicles.
Thirty-four 12-oz cans and three
12-oz bottles of beer, one 12-oz
Rolling Rock ale and one bottle
of wine were confiscated from a
second floor suite in Mid-rise
at 10 p.m., Oct. 9 by security
guards.
Another fire alarm blared in the
"E
block" of the Town Houses ·
Security witnessed two legs _at 7: 15 p.m. ~aturday, Oct. 10. A
flailing out of a Sheahan cellar · cookfog i
_
w::ident set off the
win_dO\\'.
Qc:i-H
at 1: t5·a.m: The •··· alarm)V)illethe firedepartment
Jegfh~JCJnged. tQ,aii;_una'Litho:-;:j ·.aJJow~4li:helroom
-
to:air:out, a
rized guestthaLwas being
.
·securityguard cut his finger on
smuggled in. through the win-
-a broken plastic window frame.
<low by two female residents.
No serious damage was done.to
Security asked the guest to
the room or
to
the guard's fin-
leave shortly after completing
ger.
her climb through the window
safely.
:Two unauthorized guests were
·
found on the ninth floor of
An air-conditioning motor
ChanipagnatOct,11 at3:20a.m.
sei.zed and caught
.
fire in ,An RD heard them, yelling out
Doimelly~t3:55p.inJastSatur-
the window and asked the of-
. day. The fire department rushed ·. fenders to leave later in the
to thi{building 'and exting~ished
c
·
1!1o¥ing ..
su_n_ny_.
hi:
58°
Io: 38°
sunny.
hi: 55°
lo: 37°
· sunny
hi: 57°
lo: 36°
Source:·http://www.weather.com (The Weather Channel)
Reridt
cancan
Jamaica
Ballamas
frll
Barballes
$
SHIIIPadfa .
99
-
1-808-426-ffll
WRmNG UNDER CONSTRUCTION
Need Help With A Paper? .
e to tfte
M..\RIST WRmNG
.,,c,,rn:c·n
ocated
Just Past The Post
Off~
In ·
pagnat
lower
let-el
PAGE2
What-are you goingto be for
HalloW~n? ·
"I'm
going to be a
ghos_t."
J.T. Dolan
_ sophomore
"Pippi
Longstocking."
_Julie Rubinstein
sophomore
GOOD WEEKLY INCOME
processing mail for national company! Free supplies, post~ .
age! No selling! Bonuses!
·
·
Stait hnmediately, Genuine Opportunity!
Please rush long self-addressed stamped envelope to:
MPC, Suite 391
2045 Mt. Zion.Rd.
"I think
I'm
going tq
be· Batman
if
I can
find
a costum~. ".
Hshish Sharma -
_junior·
M"a:rist
Library
.j
ti
-
~
I
-
- - -
--
-
-
-
-------------
PAGE3
;
DungeFM{}llth.activities
aid needy
..
·:.
.
.
.
.
.
·
.
·
-
,
.
.
.
·
byTONYHEYL
is collected;
·
.. _
.
.
·
·
.
:
:
StajJWriter
,
.
.
.
-
,
.-
Hunger Awareness Month
·
•
-
_
•·•· ·_
··
.
.
·
•
•-
-
··
_
kicks off Nov.4 with a Hunger
Every 2.5 seconds
·
a c,hild dies'
-
Run/Walk
.
at
.·
noon in front of
-
of hunger related causes.
_
.
_
Champagnat Hall. There is a $2
.
ItJs shocking statistics like
.
entry fee for any adults who
that which have helped, give rise
·
want to participate and a
$1
fee
.
to Hunger Awareness Month
for students.
here at 1-farist~ ·
_ _
.
Kelly said he hopes this year's
Brother Frank Kelly, director
walk will attract at least
250
of campus mini~try,;said the en-
people and stressed
it
is not just
·
tire month of November is re-
forwalkers and runners
.
served
•
·
to increase conscious-
_
·.
"They can bicycle, rollerolade,
ness
aµd
raise 1Doney for hun-
skateboard, run or walk, as long
ger orgahizatic.ms
,:' .
.
.
as they do something physical
Last year was
·
the first
·
time
to finish the race;" he said. "Do-
.
Marist
·
extended the tradition-
ing something physical will help
'ally week-long observance to a
keep the issue in your mind."
month, and the change drew
in
·
"Buck Hunger Days" is sched-
a record $3,664.53 in donations.
uled for Nov. 6 through the 13.
Kelly said he is hoping this
Stations wilJ be set up inLowell
year can be even more success-
Thomas, Dyson, Donnelly, the
ful.
Rotunda and outside the Caba-
"Every year I am more and
ret to collect cash and Marist
more impressed by how many
Money for local food groups.
students really care about this
The OXFAM Fast Day is
issue," he said. "Their over-
scheduled for Nov. 11. Meal
whelmtng support is the evi-
ticket holders can sign up for
dence that they really want to
this event on Nov. 9.
help."
·
OXFAM Fast Day involves a
This year will be the first time
student giving up one meal from
students can donate to the
their plan. In turn, Sodexho will
cause
.
with Marist Money and
give the money to charities bun-
this is expected to greatly in-
ger fighting.
crease the amount of money that
.
The next event scheduled is
Clothesline Project
_
gives
_.,-
victims_ a
_
_
voice
·
·" o
-
KATIILEENMOYLAN
,y
. .
.
Staff Writer
Victims of sexual assault, rape·
and iricest and their families
used the Marist College campus
to air out their laundry last Tues-
day.
T-shirts adorned with stories
of domestic and sexual violence
were
.
strewn across the campus
green to commemorate this
It
is
a powerful,
graphic representa-
tion of domestic and
sexual relationship
violence.
Roberta Staples
Director
Counseling Services
·
year's Clothesline event.
-:
>•-
Joanne Myers, assistant pro-
:,-
fessor of political science and
.
advis9r
:
to the Gender Equality
said. "It is an important testi-
.
ciub
,:
saidtheClotheslineproject
mony to read these shirts."
is poignant:
;
The table was staffed by mem
-
.
'' It brings into public light the
bers of the Grace Smith House,
·
'
myth that families are not always
which provides Jong-term hous-
t-
safe sanctuaries
.
from the
ing and programs for battered
'world/' she said
.
''The
Clothes-
women and their children.
I .
·
•
·
-•.
__ .-
.
_-
.
.
,
·
·
Fne ProJect allows survivors to
Roberta Staples, director of
•·
bang out
·
their
dirty
laundry
to
counseling services, said
_
the
C
help educate others."
-
.
.
program was emotional for
'\(:_
The CloJheslirie project those who stopped to read the
.
started
.
in 1990
;
in
·
Massachu-
shirts.
:·
se~aild was C.?!11Prised
·
ot3t
.
<'It
lSJl powerful, graphic rep-
..
survi~~s ?f rape
__ .
;
sexual
_
ass
.
_ault
-
reientation of domestic and
and
.
irt~L
The
.
program has
sexu
_
aLrelationship violence,"
grown to
\,
mor~ than 3_5,000
.
s~e
.
~ai&
,
women, children and men who
-,
•
· Each r~stiirt on the clothes-
are survivors'of sexual assaults.
line
·
is
·
color coded by the type
It provides an
°'
o_ppqitimity to
of abuse victims suffered.
victims to share
.
their experi-
Whiteformurder,beigeandyel-
ences of violence.
\
_"
-- .
low for battery or assault, pink
The national program travels
·
for victims of rape or sexual as-
arourid the world and is part of sault and lavender shirts for vie-
the Dutchess County Domestic
.
-
tims attacked because of sexual
Violence Council's education
orientation.
project.
The program_was brought to
The Marist event was initiated
campus in order to promote
by students and sponsored by
·
awareness of sexual assault and
the Gender Equality Club, which
relationship violence.
is headed by junior Debra
Sophomore Lauren
Alfano.
Montemuro said she found the
Alfano said students, faculty
display to be emotional.
and staff were moved by the
"It's hard to look at something
project.
like that without having a reac-
"Domestic violence crosses
tion and a feeling of sympathy
age, class and racial lines," she
for the victims," she said.
the campus food drive from Nov.
15 to 22. It is cosponsored by
the Resident Student Council
and campus ministry. RSCs will
collect food from their respec-
tive residence halls and add that
to what campus ministry col-
lects.
_
All of the food collected will
be brought to the chapel on Nov.
23 for blessing and will then be
distributed to local agencies.
Last year
,
75
boxes offood were
collected and taken to local
agencies that serve the poor.
The All-Campus HungerBan-
quet will be at 6:30 p.m. in the
Cabaret on Nov. 18. At this
event, people eat a dinner either
from a developed country or a
third-world country. They will
not know what kind of meal they
will eat until they come to the
event.
"The banquet is for everyone,
staff and students," Kelly said.
"It
will be the luck of the draw
to determine what kind of meal
you will have, either first, sec-
ond or third-world. It shows
people that anybody can be-
come poor at anytime and that
you should appreciate what you
have and realize that it can be
gone at any time
."
Hunger Awareness Month is
capped off with the City Plunge
on Nov. 26 to 28. In this event
students will travel to Lawrence,
Mass
.
,
and prepare food bas-
kets for the poor at the Lazarus
House.
All money collected will go
to OXFAM, Dutchess Food
Outreach and Lazarus House
Ministries. The food collected
will go to Dutchess Food Out-
reach, the Holy Trinity Thanks-
giving Food Drive and Mount
Carinel Thanksgiving Food
Drive
.
CAMPUS CANDIDS
Cin:le photo/Joe Scotto
Junior Chris Rowland enjoys the beautiful October
weather outside with his dog, Jazz.
OCTOBER 29
7
1998
Studellts
...
questlOttfilg}l
cost of college housing
by
JILL GIOCONDO
.
Staff Writer
sociates, a rental agency lo-
Fifty thousand dollars can buy
cated in Poughkeepsie, said the
a nice new car, a small house or average rental cost for a
·
three
a year of housing for 1 O people
bedroom apartment similar to
in a Marist townhouse.
Gartland is between $600 and
Currently, North End resi-
$625 per month. An
·
average
dents, Talmadge and West Ce~
four-bedroom house would be
dar pay between $2,390 and
between $900 and $1000 per
$2,522 per
student
for one se-
month. Costs vary depending
mester to live in their apartment
on the
location,
landlord, utili-
or house.
ties and condition of the build-
Sarah English, director of the
ing.
Housing and Residential Life
Students who live off campus
Office, said students do not re-
also have to factor in gas money
alize all the services they receive
or public transportation, utili-
for the cost ofliving on-campus.
ties, phone and cable bills
.
"Although the number may
Although some students be-
seem high when combining lieve housing rates are high,
everyone's board cost per year,
area colleges have comparable
it actually isn't considering the
housing rates for similar hous-
programming, security anci
ing.
.
.
other services offered to on-
Vassar College in the City of
campus residents," she said.
Poughkeepsie, offers student
Pricing varies between each
townhouses accommodating
unit since age of the building
five students and terrace apart-
and amenities are taken into
ments that accommodate four
consideration.
students. Students are not re-
.
·
:
.
.
•
: .
.
. · .
Circle photo/Jeremy Smith
The Weeping Hemlock is a 75-year~old tree and is valued at approxiam~tely $
·
60,000~
TREE: Weeping Hemlock transplant appears
a.
success
... continuedftompg. 1
"It's a good idea to bless the
roots of
a
tree," he said
:
"It
would be a pity for it to be lost."
Short said he thinks
the
tree
has a good chancefor survival.
"The tree was treated profes-
sionally, the entire tree went
.
through a wilt proofing pro-
cess,'' Short said.
·
He
'
said the
·
nearly 7.S
~
year:old tree is valued
at approximately $60,000.
·
The campus gai~edan expen-
sive asset ata smal[price, ac-
cording to Massie.
"The college
.
saved
·
tens of
.
thousands
·
.
bf dollars
'
by
.
irarts~
porting
.
the tree without the cost
of
a'
private company," Massie
said .
..
·.
.
.
Massie said the planting of the
Weeping
.·
Hemlock ,is "totally
unielated"to
'
the destruction of
the Ginko tree.
Career/Employer Expo afMaristand SUNY Ne
-
w Paltz
eve~t to pro~id
.
e
.
im
.
arm
.
atio
.
n
..
on
·
The tenth annual Mid-Hudson
.
'
Witter; Paine Webber;
.
State.
C
d E
I
E
·11
career opportunitie~ to students
F
.
a
· -
rm
·
.
Insur
·
a
·
nc
·
e·, a
·
nd
.
..
x
•
..
e
·.
r
.
o
·
x
areer an
mp oyer xpo wt
and alumn
.
i from colleges
·
·
Board costs, determined by
quired to purchase a me
'
at plan
thefinancialboard,covermany
and they supply living and
things students take for granted.
kitchen furniture. Students pay
Unlimited utilities, phones in
$1,760 per semester to live in a
every room, furniture, mainte-
·
townhouse
7
•
.
·
..
.
. .· ....
nance, security and residential
.
SUNY~ev.r
,
Paltz has only tra-
staffing
are
some ofthe benefits
d,iticipal f(?,Sideiice h~lfs pnjts
of on-campus liying .
. ·
>
'
,
.
.
//
i ,
.
C~J?u~;:*c99r,4i11~
.
i<?}.h,~
~ib
be held
.
on Thursclay,
.
Oct. 29 in
Corp
·
·
the James J. Mccann Recre:.
'
lbroug~out th~
_
Mid-Hudson
Th~CaieerExpo is Sponsored
ationCenter oil the Marisi
Coi~
Valley,
.
.
·
-
·
·
·
·
.
·
by theMid~Hudson CareerCon-
··
..
.
Ep.glish ,said
~~s~
thi~gs
'
pf-
•
.
site.)-f~w. ,I>al~~S\i()UStng rffice
t~n
go'
'
imnotic~d
.
by students
w,af~~tyf1ilii\)1~
.
f?(qoipnient
unless there· is
~
problerri
.'
·· •
.
·
.beforeipress time
>
<
•·
, ,
''Students
take these benefits
IoriaJ~gllige[n
N~YI
Rochelle
for granted such as when
a
toi-
offers
studtmts
apartments as a
let overflows they call mainte-
.•
hou~ing optiori.
bait
·
ourury,
nance and a plumber conies to
.
housing office
:
assistant. said
fix it," she said.
.
Jona;s
:
apartments
are
located
Boardmoney'is
'
alse> µsect
·
to
·
:
\
acrbssthe
·
s'treet, but
.
are con-
update applianc~~
;
'.
co.fup).~~e
:
·
sid~~ed
.
crunpu~ housiµgi
·..
.
overall repairs
:
to
the
.
hQu
·
s~•s
'· :/:
The college's stude11t apart-
structure, andreplac¢ old foini-
.
·
·
n1ents.are divid~d i~tc,three
·
cat-
ture.
.
.
.
•
.
. ·.
·
·
egories and pi:ices
.
vary d
.
epend-
.
.
Amy Spern,
;;t
•
N~~~i
::
.
i~g
:
91\ the s
.
tyle of
,
apartment.
.
townhouse resident
:
said hous
;
;
:,
\
Stud1oapartrnents
,
cqst $2,425
.
ing costs
do
not
:
a~pearto
·
be
·
:,
pfr
·
semester; one-:be
.
dro~m
··.
·
.
applied
·
to mainteriarice
·
and rei
.
..
.
~p~entscost $2,7~2
,
50; and
.
pairs.
·
·
.
• •.·.· :
·
.
·
<,. :: ; •
C
•
· ·
:
,·:: .
tvi
_
o:;.Qetlfoom
ap~~nts cost
''I think thattheprice is ridicu~
.
$2;875
;
~er semester
>
S~dents
lotis because the house is not
·
living in apartments also
·
are re-
in gtiod shape
·
and repairs quirefto
.
be on a $6q0
.
per se-
should have been done before
·
mestermeal pla11
;
..
: )(
lege can1pus,
!lll~
on friday, Qct: · Among the firms atten~ing
~e
:
sor.tjum, an organization of ca-
30 · th
s
d
u
·
·
•
B "Id
A~erica11Express Financial
. ......
..
.
.
.
. .
.
..
.
. m
..
f
tu
e9t n1qn
.
.
111 --
Advisor~;
~
Bilrtk
of
'
N~viYork;
r.eerdeyelopmentprofessionals
ing on tlte
,cax:npus~f
the State Ifdeliliai
'
Pu
'
Bfo?Iiei'~fr6W~
who
:
,w<>rkto
::
provide.work.'.
University College atN.~w P~tz.
WotldwicferF.ffroL~yliic:::
J:¢:'
..
·
.
·
nshl_ti?epss .
.
and nytworking opportu:e
More than 140
.
employers are
Pe
.
nhey
·
;
Kaman
Aerospace
expected to attend this career
Corp.; Morgan Stanley Dean
.
Tenth Annual CareerandErnpfbye
.
.
'
-
.
:
.
~
.
·
Thursday,
·
october
29,
1998
:
::
"
:
·
4:oq
·
-
7:Q
:
o
p~rn:
.
.
Marist
College,
Mccann
Center
.
.
·
.· ·. . . .
.
we moved
in,"
she said. ''For
S~me
<
aparti;nen.t
·
and
example, my desk was broken
townh()use resid~ntf atMarist.
.
an
.
cl hasn't been replaced."
said they feefhousing costs
.
·
.
.
.
..
Friday,
Oc~ober
30,
199,
.
SUNY New
·
Paltz,
,,
Student
UnionBlc(
English said living off campus
-
could be lower
'.
· ·:
.
.,
may be cheaper than living on
Mandy Parillo, ajuni9r, resides•
campus but the
·
pros and cons
.
in the
.
new upper
.
te>wnhouses.
of each sit
_
1,1ation has to be She said that townhouse prices
could be
lower.
weighed.
.
.
.
"Students that live off campus
have to deal with non-college
neighbors, living away from the
campus, city police instead of
campus security and land lords
instead of RDs," she said.
Rob Dominquez of D&D As-
"I think that housing costs for
tlie year are too high consider-
ing what we seem to get in the
houses and that student hous-
ing should b~ priced more equal
to what is available
in
the
com-
.
munity," she said .
.
Spring Break 99'
La.rgest selection of Spring Break Desti11ations,
includi,zg Cruises!
Foam Parties, Dri11k Specials
and
Club
Admissions.
Group Discounts a1Zd Free Trips Available.
Epicurian Tours 1-800-231-4-FUN
)d:od
a.m.
~
·
2:cfop.ni.
Check
the
complete
list of participating
employer., at wv.-w.marist.cdu/c:arc:erserviccs
Sponsored
by
the
Mid-Hudson Career Consortium
for
students and alumni from
member
colleges
·
Bud
Catinuylns1itwlt
°""'-Colnznwity
Mm,t
Mo.NSt.Mo:y
~CountyCow,n,n;ty
SdlMn
Co,wyc-.n.n;ry
su:,;y
No,,,
l'olt>
lJlota,
eo-y
e:.r.:,_,.ry
V,au
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·
•
.
.
,
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:
CLE
·
OCTOBER 29 1998
•.
es
PAGES
nting history
by
JENNIFERMATARAZZO
Staff Writer"
Once a year !he veil between
the realms of the living and the
dead is
·
at its thinnest; and the ·
dead
.
walk
.
freely amongst the
living.
·
Halloween, also known as
All
Hall<>WS Eve,
Oct.
31, is here
once again. Halloween is one
of the oldest holidays with ori-
gins
.
going back thousands of
years. From the Roman's
Pomona Day,to the Celtic festi~
val.of Samhain; to the
.
Christian
holidays of.All Saints and
.
All
Souls Days, these celebrations
have
·
come together to influence
today's meaning of Halloween:
Ka~eKrueger,juniorpsychol-
oftheDeadandPrinceofDark-
spirits of the dead roamed
ogy/special
•
education major;
ness took the sungod-prisoner.
around, villagers lighted bon-
said she cherishes her memories
On the eve before their new year
fires to either drive them away
oftJalloween. -
.
.
(Oct. 31),
it
was believed that
or to guide the spirits of the
early customs. On the eve of
All Hallows, Oct. 31, people
continued to celebrate the fes-
tival of Samhain and Pomona
Day, the Roman festival named
for their goddess of fruits and
gardens. Over the years, the
.
customs from all these holidays
mixed.
The
Halloween of today,
on Oct. 31, includes all of these
influences.
The history of trick or treating
can be traced back to the early
celebration of All Soul's Day in
Britain. The poor would go beg-
ging and the housewives would
give them special treats called
soulcakes. This was called go-
ing a-souling, and the soulers
would promise to say a prayer
for the dead.
Over time the custom changed
and the town's children became
the beggars. As they went from
·
house to house they would be
given apples, buns, and money.
believed to keep evil spirits
away. Children carved faces in
the turnips and these were
called jack-a-lanterns.
When the early settlers came
to America they found the big
round orange pumpkin. Being
larger and much more colorful
than turnips, the pumpkin made
a great jack-a-lantern. Eventu-
ally, the pumpkin replaced the
turnip.
Meghan McKenna, junior
psychology/special education
major said she can remember
carving pumpkins as a child.
"Every year, my brother, sis-
ter and I used to have contests
to see who would make the best
one," she said.
Although Halloween is an
American custom, Nicole
Bastiaanse, senior studio art
major, said she celebrated it in
Florence, Italy last year.
"I
will always remember one
Samhain c
_
alled together all the
dead back to their homes.
year
I
was a red crayon and it
dead people. The
.
dead would
The next influence came with
was my favorite costume," she
take different forms, with the bad
the spread of the new Christian
said.
"I
even won a prize at
spirits taking
.
the form of ani-
religion throughout Europe and
school
forit.''
•·
.
·
.
.
· .
nials. The most evil taking the
Britain.
In
the year A.D. 835 the
·
During the Pioneer days of the
American West, the housewives
would give the children candy
to keep from being tricked.
"Last fall,
I
studied
abroad
in
France," she said. "We were
travelling on Halloween in Italy
and we walked to an American
bakery. The cashier had us say
'trick or treat' and she handed
us little bags of chocolate chip
cookies. It was the best Hal-
loween."
·
Hundreds of .years
.
ago the
form ofa black cat.
.
Roman Catholic Church made
Celtics liv~d in
-
whatis now
·
:
onOct
.
3(youngpeople·dis~
·
Nov.
l achurchholidaytohonor
.
Oreat
,.
B.ritairi
·
ancl
,
Northern
.
guh;~d)~ scary: i:Q*~ks carye
·
!i
all
·
the
;
saints: The
'
day
was
Frruwe. 1beCe\tics W9f$hipped
1J¥t~~f_tiorii
'.
~~P('#'.4:f#~
called
:
i
; A:11
·
·
:,
saint's•
!
'Day;
nature
,
and
·
hadmany
1
gods;-with
.
ii~~
th~w.~R1;1gl1:t~~,v:iJJag9~,.-
HalloWm~s'
·
or''A
'
lf
Hallbws:
the·
s~~
g~d as
.·
their favorite;
:
The
Druids, the Celtic priests,
.
Years later
'llie
'
church
\vo
~
uld
The Celtics celebrated their New
beli~~edjt was
·
·on that night
make Nov.
2
a holy day.
It was
YearonNov.Litwascelebrated
whentheearthcomesintoclos-
called All Souls Day and was
every year with a.
,-
festival and
est contact with the spiritual
meant to honor the
.
dead. It was
mark~dthe
epd
of the. season of:
world;
~
and
.
consequently
celebrated with big bonfires,
the slin and the beginning of the
_
·
gho.sts, goblins and witches
·
·
parades, and people dressing up
season of darkness
·
and cold.
supposedly
.
destroyed crops, .as saints, angels and devils.
The
Celtics believed that dur-
.
'
killed farin animals and wreaked
But the spread of Christianity
ing the winter; Samhain; the Lord
•
,
,
havoc
•
on
'
thlvillagers
)
-,1.sJhese
did not make people forget their
.
'
, .
·
·.
<_'
~
"..
:j·_
,· ..
..
.
:
Smallne8S
with spirit and spunk
~
.
.
·
by
RICHSHUTKIN
,
·
Staff Writer
Some people say big things
come in small packages .
.
Marian
·
Hall is one of those
small packages.
While it exists as the smallest
·
dorm.atMaristCollege, the posi-
tive feedback from its residents
is abundant:
Marian
·
.
iiall was originally
builtasagymnasiumin 1947and
later transformed into a fresh-
man dormitory in 1982
.
•
Each of its rooms are inhab-
ited by four students, allowing
every residentto form close re-
lationships with numerous
roommates.
In addition,
Marian's small size enables its
inhabitants to acquaint them-
selves with all other residents
outside of their rooms.
Chuck Bechtel, a resident of
·
Marian Hall, said he enjoys liv-
ing in the dorm.
"I love it," he said. "It is a fun,
enjoyable atmosphere. There
are many activities and small
·•..
.
.
. ·
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
PholocourtesyofTimMassie
Built in 1947, Marian Hall was initially u
_
sed as a gymnasium
.
'
•
events ther~;
.
including one we
are about to do f9r Halloween."
He said he also appreciates
Marian Hall's convenient loca-
tion.
"Marian is close to Dyson and
Lowell Thomas, where many
students have classes," he said.
"No other freshman dorm is
closer to those places than
Marian."
Jimmy Willis, also a resident
of Marian Hall, said the donn
•
is
a good place to study.
"Because it is small, it is also
very quiet." he said. "That is
an especially gogd thing when
you are trying to study."
He said he also admires the
large size of the rooms.
"Even when living with more
than one roommate, the rooms
provide us with a lot of space,"
he said. "The closets are also
large and provide us with plenty
of room for our clothes."
·
Sophomore Scott NeviJle, a
resident assistant of Marian
Hall, said it is a resident friendly
·
aonn.
"I enjoy being an RA at
·-
Marian," he said. "Because it is
sinall, it is not difficult to keep
order among the freshmen stu-
dents tµere. Everybody knows
each other. We
are
like a fam-
ily."
.
Marian Hall is not merely a
dorm at Marist College, but evi-
dence of the notion that small
environments offer warmth,
friendship and little chaos.
Amy Kuhar, junior psychol-
ogy /special education m_ajor,
said she remembers trick or treat-
ingfrorii when shew.~ younger.
,
·"i'
lDv~Wwhen
we
\"8tild
0
et
t◊'
a\!a~aiit
ii6us'eiinc1
$.Wp~9p1e
would leaye
c:t
f?aske(ofcandy
for us to
fake,"·
she
said: "\.ye
always tot>k
.
mo'rd' than
'
one.;,
Another HaJloween tradition
is pumpkin c~ing. The Celtics
carried lanterns when they
walked
on
the eve of Oct. 31.
The lanterns were carved out of
big turnips and the lights were
•
Today Halloween
is
enjoyed
by
people of allag~s. Although
some people enjoy the
·
mischie-
vous aspect of the holiday such
as smashing pumpkins and
dousing each other
with
shav-
ing cream, others enjoy it as a
night of mystery. People cari be
whoever they want for a night
,continuing
old customs of
walking amongst the dead .
Halloween
•
appenmgs
.
Halloween Bash
on Oct. 30.
21 Society Event, so everyone 21 years of age and older are
invited.
Starts at
6
p.m. in the Perf onning Arts Room
in
the Student
·
Center.
Sponsored by the Class of 1999.
Costumes are optional, but there will be door prizes for the
best costumes.
'Iiip
to Great
Adventure's,
''Fright Fest,"
on Oct. 31.
All students are invited. $25 per person.
Bus leaves Donnelly parking lot at 7:30 a.m. and returns
between 9 and 9:30 p.m.
Sponsored by Black Student Union, El Arco Iris Latino, and
the
Office of College Activities.
Pumpkin
Sale
through Oct. 30.
Located in Champagnat Breezeway from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Haunted Mansion and Horror Wood,
open until Nov
I.
Fridays and Saturdays from 6 to 11 p.m. $6. Located 2
iles
south of Poughkeepsie Galleria Mall.
For more information call 297-BA'.
Compiled
by
Staff Writer Elizabeth Ca
THE
-
CIRCLE
-
-
Feat
·
ure
·
s
-
PAGE6
art-time a ~s
_
anager-
_
ee e
For Paging/Wireless
:
¢oinpany,
_
Greit
~~
.
ume Builder,
Ore.at
·Ihcorhe
.
.
While
:
J
chooL
_
Fax Resum~-To: Rick Thompson
.:p.
Corporate Development, Collegiat
-
ink,
Inc.
215) 735-2194
or call
(917) 852-0419.
Students
raise
.
alcohol
awareness on campus
I
_/byKATRINA
/
FUCHSENBERGER
/
Staff Writer
weight. Participants were al~o
able to make decisions when en-
·
countering different problems
such as a person wanting to
drive home drunk or a girl deal-
College students have a repu-
ing with sexual assault.
·
tation for drinking excessively,
Carolyn Fielder, commuter
but now they can have a repu-
mentorandadvisortotheGreek
tation for making students aware
Council, said she thought this
of the consequences.
·
program
was
important because
LastweekwasAlcoholAware-
the students
•
wflre being edu-
ness Week, a national event that
cated by their peers.
is held by
-
the Bacchus and
"It
_
created an atmosphere
GammaPeerEducationNetwork.
where it was safe for students
At Marist,
it
was sponsored by
to talk about [drinking]," she
the Greek Council and the Com-
·
said.
·
"People could relate to the
muter Student Council.
_
_
_
situations
.
"
Doug Smith, the chairman of
·
Another event that was held
fundraisingfortheGreekCoun-
-
·
was a
"Battle of the Bands"
cil and member of Phi Kappa
whith took placeiri the Cabaret
Sigma, said he thinks it made an
on Oci 24. There was a $2 cover
impact on the Marist commu-
charge which will be donated to
nity.
the group RID (Removal of In-
"One of my goals is that I'd
toxicating Driving).
like to see the campus recognize
The bands who played were
the Greek organizations in a
.
Fizzlewink, Mid-Hudson Pork,
higher
esteem
because a lot of Pajamazon,
Slice,
and Double
people look down on us," he
Exposure .
.
The program was
said. "We' re not just about go-
hosted by WRRV, a modem rock
ing out and getting smashed."
station. Prizes were given away
One of the events of the week
which were donated by local
was a CD-ROM interaction
businesses.
game held in the Nelli Goletti
Smith said he thought the pro-
Theateron Qct.
2
L
The game
gram was a good idea.
_
involvaj ~ituations dealing with
· .
_
''.We
wanted to make
itfun
for
~rinking
_,
~nd
,
p~p:_ies. In
·
the
e~eryone)'
:
he saicL
•
t
ifis
nice
game
_
a
·
stude
.
nt was able to
to
:
ha:ve a party
without alco-
choose his
_
age, sex, height, and
hol.''
·
.
In a 1997 Harvard study statis-
tics
'
were. shown regarding
drinking in colleges across the
country. Some of the results
were that 42.7 percent of stu-
dents were binge drinkers,
20
.
7
percent
-
were
·
.
frequent binge
drinkers, and
81.1
percent of
those living in fraternity or so-
rority houses were binge drink-
ers.
Fifty-two percent of the sub-
jects whq drink admitted they
·
drank to get drunk, compared to
just
39 percent who admitted to
such behaviorin 1993.
Some of the positive results
·
were that the number of stu-
dents who
·
said they
do
not
-
drink
at
all rose from 15.6 per-
cent in 1993 to 19 percent in
1997.
The percentage of binge drink-
·
ersdroppedfrom44.1 iri 1993 to
42.7 in 1997 .
-
The percentage of
students who have not touched
a drink in a year rose
from
15.6
in 1993 to 19 percent in 1997.
Smith said he thinks the
events of the week were educa-
tional for the students.
"We focused on drunk driv-
ing and
·
other
-
repercussions
that happen from drinking and
tried to bring this to the atten:..
-
tiqn of
.
tlie
,
studerit: body,"
·
he
~aid.
\'It's.
relevant
to
us be-
cause itgoes
oil
all the time."
.
,
·-
.
\;\."
.
?
}/
).
'. ::
·
_
· -
~
.
,f
"'.'
i
·
:
-
:
·
__
_
_
-·
.
·•
.
;
:·
:·
•>·
·
Ill/ti:
"'
'
;
-
:
"
' , '
}ii!ll
I
TH£ CIR.CLE
.
Features
.
OCTOBER 29
2
1998
Searching the
.
sites
..
.
http://www.urbanext.uiuc.edu/pumpkinsf'mdex.html
Since it is !he season of Halloween why not search a site you probably nonnally would not
search; ..
a
site
aboutpumpkins.http://www.urbanext.uiuc.edu/pumpkins/index.html
is
maintained
by
the University of Illinois and has links to almost everything you might ever
want to know about pumpkins.
The site has information on pumpkin history, pumpkin growing, and pumpkin purchasing.
There are also sections that explain the different varieties of pumpkins. And if you want to
add a little pumpkin to your diet
,
there is a link to pumpkin recipes and nutrition information.
.
This site also offers learning games for younger students and craft.and creativity ideas for all.
So, c~eck out
http:l/www.urbanext.uiuc.edu/pumpkinsfmdex.html
to satisfy your craving for
,PU!Tlpkin.
·
.
If
you have any suggestions for this column, or would like to write a column, contact Emily
at extension 2429 or email HZAL. Features Editor Emily Kucharczyk wrote this Searching
the sites column.
Horoscopes
-~ARIES:
Comfort a
1
.
i•,1
LIBRA:
You look
~
frie
.
nd who
.
.
's having a
marvelous, and that
~
hard time with an au-
comes in handy
·
if
·
.
. .
thority figure. Also,
you're in one of
advise yourfriend not
those moods where
to make too big a deal
y
,
ou don't express
of this: Advise caution
-
yourself very well.
and diplomacy.
You ought to be
TAURUS:
The overall
.
.
··
.
.
careful what you say.
im
.
pre. ssi~n is~
-
at you
~
:
SCORPIO:
The Sun
.
·
·
·
shouldn
t-
give an
is
in
.
Scorp1.o and
.
the
,
·
.
Jnch
f.
Someone
else
.
Mo_on
isin Aquai/us.
·
·
'thii;iks he
.
1
or s,he
·
•
·
·
This could cause
·•
knows what's
.
besffor
·.
complications. Once
you. You're not that
far
·
you figure out where
off track. Your intu-
you want to
be,
how-
.
itionshould
'
be pretty
ever, the rest of the
accurate.
puzzle
.
will fall into
i]
! ; ~
_
er
_
.
··.
to
···
~
_
:~
.
-ma
.
ti
.
·
.
e
.
~
_
·
.
r:~
_
.
~~:~~is!~~o
s!~:~~
day.
,
Without going
·
vice of yourroom-
info
-
much detail, just
·
·
.
.
mate.
·
.
·
.
kn.ow
thatthe
'
·words
'
~
-
SAGITIARIUS
:
The
won't c:'ome easy. If
•
po
.
ssibil
.
ity
·
~or~
.
rro~s
•
.
.
.
you're trying to Write
.
10
commumcat1on
IS
_
.
a short story, d,o your .
really high today.
-
rough
:
draft and
let
it
. . .
·
.
Looks like someone
go at that. You'ff b~
.
·
mightmi~understand
able to put in the cor-
your instructions, on
rections later.
purpose
.
To av
·
oid
CANCER:
If you run
.
that sort of situation,
out of ideas today,
make yourself very
don't despair. Simply
clear. The person
.
take several deep
who
wi11
cause the
·
breaths and then call
most trouble isn
'
t
your sweetheart for
saying much. He or
advice. It looks like he
she is in a position to
or she is in a tough
force
.
an outcome,
situation too, but be
7
however. So, besides
tween you, a solution
being
·
srriart and di-
to the problem can be
·
rect, you'il also have
found.
to do some sleuthing.
AQUARIUS:
Becme-
ful what you say. You
might be misunder-
stood. If you choose
your words slowly
and think each pos-
sible consequence
out before you act,
you can spend all day
long and hardly say
much ofanything
.
In
other
:
words;jlist stall.
·
Thelonger you hold
out, the better your
.
chances of success.
§
.
PISCES:
The ego
battle c
_
ont
.
inues
with
no end in sight.
Sometimes you won-
der how people can
get so stuck on them-
selves when they ob
-
viously don't know
·
the answer. You
don't know the an-
.
· swer either, but at
least you
•
admit
it.
-Because you admit
it,
yoti might actually
find the answer
.
PAGE7
Entily's
Recipe of the
Week
Ghosts in the Graveyard
Package(] 6 oz.) chocolate sandwich cookies
3 1/2
cups cold milk
2
pkgs.
(4
serving size) chocolate flavor instant
pudding
Tub
(12
oz.) whipped
topping
Crush cookies in plastic bag with roHing pin or in food
processor. Pour cold
milk into
large
mixing bowl. Add
pudding mixes. Beat with wire whisk
2
minutes
.
Let
stand
5
minutes. Stir in
3
cups of whipped topping and
1/2
of the crushed cookies. Spoon into 13x9-inch dish.
Put remaining mixture in little cups. Sprinkle with
remaining crushed cookies. Refrigerate
I
hour or until
ready to serve. To make graveyard decorate assorted
cookies with decorator icings to make tombstones; use
candy com to stand them up. Drop spoonfuls of
whipped topping to make ghosts. Be creative. Serves
15-18.
,
Western
Ne,v
?
~~glmd
College Schoolof Law
(fl
~
~
~:filfil
:
ceh~wn
-
g
,
Intellects
i
~
~
~~l)~ctives
.
...
·
.
··
·
·
.·
Th
>
;i
e~
lb!
C
o
Isl
0
"
Sfu.iqol
i
6Hi~w
Sprindicld.
~14s$3chU$e«S
LEO:
Your partner
~
CAPRICORN:
You
seems to
.
th
.
inkhe or
.
s~mtobedoingwell
she knows everything
nght
now, even
today, and that might
though you're push-
be the case. If you treat
ing
hard.
That's not
Then stop in and see us at,
this other person as if
·
a
contradiction in
it were true, a strange
terms. It's more like
thing
could occur, He
your regular way of
.
or she could start
being. Some people
trusting your opinion
think Capricorns are
a little bit more.
workaholics, but you
VIRGO:
Therearestill
probably
don't
a bunch ofhas
.
sles a
.
nd
agree. You just like to
you may be feeling
stay busy, that's all.
pressured, but don't
You're not interested
let it get to you. You' re
in small talk, and you
still able to concentrate
find most conversa-
marvelously well, and
tions Qoring. It takes
you're learning very
a real challenge to
quickly.
get your interest.
MILLMAN'S T-SBIBT
FACTORY
12 Fowler ave., Poughkeepsie
(Take Route 9 South
to
44-55 East
12 traffic lights 18/ock down on left.)
454-2255 FAX 454-5771
UJMUIHI
the Marist Communi since 1978
.,
I,
THRClRtLR
__
o __
c __
TO_B
__ E
__ R
__ 2:,;:;9.a..,;1:..9~98;::.,__ _ _ _ _ _ _
( ) _
·
.,;;;;. ;;._
.
·-J
.
~-·a
cl
PAGES
.
·
.
.
.
'
CONGR~SHALL~lAK"El\'OlAW-ARRl'OOll\'G'lllEl<"REEOOMOl.<'SPltEClj,OROFTHEPRFSS ...
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&~~•~~f¥3lli'.~~t~t:hlt;iJ~ft~/6I!ff~\t(,
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I wish to thank
:
the stu<let1ts, faculty, and
stiff
who participated
in
the ch oles-
·.
•.··
•
.
.
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eClpI,e qften
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:Marist CollegeJiealthfail'on Sept
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at
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YO.!Ces. 9ther~
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Uif
R~alify 9.f,the fieedoni ofexp~
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s~i<lri grajited_ through
·
talion belonging to the medical tecluiology department. Prof. Catherine Newkirk
.
. '
..
:
The
first Aine~~nient
has
been' pro)'~n
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bithe
·
Supremi C<lurt
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to.
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also participated;
.
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that sow~
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~y~n find detestable.
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~s n<>tohly apply ~o
:
the written
Sixty-Si~ patients had their cholesteml Illeasu~ed,
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a mean in the moderate risk category (200~240mg/dl)
.
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.
tudents aia whole were
.·
Theri~
-
~~paper
,
_
bhsiness
'
~uryiyehhrough tll~
·
Fir~tknendment. Itha.s alw.iy~
healthier, with a mean
in
.
the low risk category ( <200 mg/dl):
Male
students had the
been a forum ~oilghout history
_
fo~· pee>plt: to
~?'press
theii'views to~e public
lowest mean cholesterol of thdcreening
.
.
··:
.
and to allowJor the p
_
ubH~toreactin:
.
the Satlle manner.
-
.
-
.
·
..
·
.
.
:
.
.
.
.·.··
Robert J~ Sullivan, Ph.D., MT(ASCP)
Associate Profe11sor of
_
Medlcal Technology
Sororities welcome new sisters
·
Editor.
On behalf of the Greek Community, we would like to welcome and congratulate
the newest classes of the following sororities:
Alpha Sigma Tau, Theta Class:
.
.
.
Alicia Gabriel, Melissa Hart, Vanessa McKee, Debbie Moran, Gina Pascucci, Katie
Tower
Kappa Kappa Gamma, Kappa
Class:
,
Jill
Ambrosio, Jenny Baraldi, Kristine Bonsack,
Tracy
DePasquaJe, Melissa
Giandurco, Megan Moore, Amy Ostgulea, Alison Stec
Sigma Sigma Sigma,
Pi
Class:
Sadie Killian, Melissa Novick; Roseanne Raccinelli, Marissa Thornton, Kate
Willhort
Kappa Lambda Psi, Omicron
CJ~:
Lauren Devnew, Becky Kizirian,
Janine
Kramer, Liz Martel, Gina Montoro
·
,
The Firs
:
t
'
.t\niendnien.,t
i
.
~
\V~a(ni*<;s
the lJrµteq State:s
one oftlle
rtjo~f
iinique
.
.
nations
~ri
the world
\
\Ve'shollld
be
griiieful eyery
·
day w<; ~e
.
allowedjo express
.
.
.
◊urs.e{~es
in the ma,n11e~ wfcljpose ,m.d ar
.
e not suppressed like so
·
many people in.··
.
otl!~r11aµ<Jn~. Whe~erwe agree with
.
other's opinions
or
not.we ares@
·
lucky to
.
¥
able'.to express ourselves
:
either way~ !hope everyon~ takes
?gyantage
of this
nght.
..
.
·
.
..
•..
.
.
<
.
'·
·
.
···
·
.
.
.
•·
·..
.
.
·
.
•
··
,
·
The <:irde champions the right Qf a
.
f~~
pr~ss and expression. To show its
· ·.
importa~ce,
we
paraphrase
the
First Arn,endment on the Editorial page. It is a
'.
re~der toall. Perhaps
The
Circle.shc,mld put these words a
top
each page.
.
.
Amanda Bradley,
.
·
Editor-In-chief
·
Amanda
Bradley
Editor-in-chief
Emily
Kucharayk
Features Editor
BenAgoes
News Editor
ThomasRyan
Sports Editor
Patrick Whittle
Arts
&
Entertainment
·
TuraQuilln
,Opinion Editor
Joe Scotto
Toni Constantino
G. MO<lele CJarke
Photography Editor
Business Manager
Faculty
Advisor
The Circle
is the student newspaper of Marist College, Poughkeepsie, NY.
Issues are pub1ishe4_every Thursday
..
We welcome letters to the editor, club announcements and story ideas. We can-
not publish unsigned letters to the editor.
.
The Circle staff can
be
reached at
575~3000
.
x2429
or by emaii at
H'Z.AL.
PAGE9
St1tvivor
says
rape
is
not comedy
· byMICIJELLECORINNE.
come after the initial. The as-
• \
<,
WHIIE
.
sault
of
popular media is fore~
/
St~ffWrit~
(
.
front on m,Y.mind
:
·
Recently, in
'
·
I
am
:
11_siiivivorof
sexual as-
-
one
..
daylhave bee~ re~victim-
sault
t
·no
you
know
.
what that
izeci several titnes
?Y
the public.
.means?
;<
From an€arly'.age;•1
·
Qnceby_a,cotnedt~ fh? used
haveJooked through
_
a
lens of t!1e plrras~ date rap~
-
m
his rou-
'.
paih
:
a(a, \VOrld-in which chil-
..
t1~e, agam by. a
Circ!e
colum-
d.reri
fear
for their safefy
and
we
.
_
msf who put h1mse1f.m the ro~e
each
must
.
survive
:
the abuses
of perp~trator
:
an~ then agam
ofthbse\vho deem themselves
and aga~n by
··
the
,
people who
mo~p()\i/ei-fuL.
:
.
.
.
.
. .
.
~~fend ?-Im both personally and
·
·
...
Unless,it has affected you,
professionally'.
you
can
riot understand whafit
.
means
.
to
-
have ~onieone rip
;:,,h
·.
-
-
h
'
.
.
.
h
. .
.
away
<
yol.ir auton()my
:
By ac-
.I.
,
,
eQUt Or
; .
aSpU(
tioris
·
alone, thej,erpetratortells
._
hifflself in
.
-th.e role
.
a victim that they are
·
not worth
of
a repeated, pre-
;
liVitlg .
.
i
'Every day:
I
hav~
to
re,-
d .
d
.
.
affil'mthatmylife1sworth
:
liv~
me lfa
_
te rapist.
ing
/
''
After'iline year~
:
of heal<
.
:
n
e
has
•
done so in
ini;r,~mi,?ave:thisf~t?
'
goand
:
•
thenameb,f
·
..
humor.
I
wondemfthis self-doubt and
.· ·
.
.
.
.
..
• .
•
fear
.
w~U:~verease.
:
:
:, .
-
.
The
.
c
.
ol
.
umrii
.
stw
_
-
r
_
·
o
.
fo,'
.
'M
.
aybe
.
·
People
:
~ight a
_
ssulJl~
:
that
~
vi~tirii's pain_ com.es from the
·
·
.
someday a gfr}willaccompany
mem:ory
:
ofthe assault alone.
..
me on ni.y
.
walks to the river.
This isfarfromtrue. There are· Maybe they
will
go vo(untarily
·
several types
.
of
·
assault that.
-
or
_
IDaybe
I
will need six rufies
[sic] and a pinfofJim Beam like
lasttime.''.
.
For those readers who do not
know
.
what "roofies" are: the
.
word stands for
-
Rohypnol, the
illegal date rape drug used by
placing it in a potential victim's
drink. Rohypnol is used with
premeditated intent by an at-
tacker .
.
By addirig this sentence,
the author has put himself in the
·
role of a repeated, premeditated
rapist.
.
.
He has done so in the
.
name
,
of humor.
1
ha:ve to read
this and then I have to listen to
those who defend this as hu-
morous. As of late, this is the
most offensive attack by popu-
_
lar media.
·
rerhaps many people did not
catch this line. When I read the
·
column, it sto<id out in neon let-
ters. All over again,
I
thought
to myself, 'Why me?
Why
aml
Jiving in a world where people
treat violence against women as
acceptable rnat
,
erial for humor?
Whf do people laugh? Why is
it that someone who views rape
as comedy can say whatever he
wants on this campus and
I
have
to
feel my safety compromised
by his freedom of speech?'
·
Again I ask myself, 'Is life
worth living?' The same man
who put himself in the role of a
rapist for the sake of humor an-
..
swers no. " .. .life is pain, so
·
by
all means jump ... and leave the
bungee at home." Well now the
mystery seems a little clearer.
Perhaps when a perpetrator
sends the message that a victim
·
.
·
~
i
'1>!l'ti:fn:iiiSt
.
i•.
1earns.,;afbout
j
-
•~
-
i~
S
~:r1
~Jtf
.
t;
.
i{g
·
1{
=
-
-<
0z
,
-fu(}$fS
;
~_...;..._~
.
tne
:
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;;;;;sld~
·
·
··
:e::J.~~e(l't.'ftM•t:;}
·
·
,!~~~fi~:~m~:d
·
· ··· ·.
•
·
Witch, and never set outto look City
can
not
be
tangible. Remem-
for
·
the city's
·
glist~ning gr~en
·
ber, the wizard is nothing spe~
towers, would she have found
cial,just an old guy behind
a
curtain. D
_
o 11otJet the superfi-
_
Jf1Jorothf 1uiver
set
:
~~~~~!fc;fJ:c;o:nt~eJ:!~
.
gut
to
look for the
.
not even the wizard, really has
· ·
. ,
1 ·
t
·
.
the answers.
city
.
s_
,
-
g
lS
ening
'
!tis okay to h~ve an Emerald
~~e
wliefe1t~oes.Jtis l~ke~k-
g_r,ce/ll
- :
\
towers,
City
or goal, but try not to let
m~_~
..
w
.
~Ikw1th n?
.
~:~tmation.
_
:
would she
have
the dream make you lose sight
··
This
.·
·may
se
_
eID
·,
pomtless
·
to
..
i
f
·.-
-
d
·
·
h
.
·
.·
·
•
.
ofwhat you
;u-e
doing now- en-
. ·
.
sonit
{
aiyolifoay
thinkt
i:eally
'
j
OU n
. .
ap pl n
e
S S
_
joy i
_
t.
··
The only thing anyone
oug~
(
to.
_.
pay.e
'.
~
'
distinli
:
Ho}l'.
,·
:
forever
in
the
can
·
guarantee is the present.
,_:;JtTui~JffJ<>x;}ik~rt!t,;
/./
T
:
e
_c·h
·
nft
o lo
.
r
~:~~•g;:~
0
:i~~~;;;
'
end
'.
uir
con:viritedJ arrdn the.
-
f
<!,ntasy
la,id
of
,
Oz?
.
the power to
.
do whatever
.
we
wrong place. Where as,
if!
did
-
·
·
want. We do not even need a
not s~tup a destination,
I
would
happiness forever in the pairof ruby slippers. Why let a
never be off course.
I
would
•·:
Techriicolorfantasylandof Oz?
mad paved by someone else set
never
.
b~lost.
'
. . .
,
:
whit was
so
grea(about
-
get-
our limits?
.
.
.
Qr~buldl al\Va.ys b~ lost?
..
ting pack to ~ansas? Sure; tllere
What am
.
I
talking
.
about?
Sometimes
I
think that theJat-
.'
·
is no place like home, but is th
_
at
·
Sometimes
I
think that if
I
do not
ter
is th.e tase:
After reading to
such, a bad thing? What did she
step off that yellow brick road
this
.
pC>1nt, you
•
are
.
.
pr9bably
do
once she got back? Where from time to time and reflec~
I
right with me:lost, thatis .
..
Or;
is she riow?
-
will lose sight of where
I am.
maybe we are both perfectly
Ihavefriendsathomewhodid Then
I
start to think about
·
content with where we are, just
not take to the white wisdom of
·
whether or not
I
ever knew.
because we are here. Maybe all
Glinda. They have no jntention
I
kind of feel like I just ended
I
write is just a lame attempt to
of finding the Emerald Cicy or up right where
I
started, in the
convince mys~lf that
,
there is
·
·
the manufactured happiness of beginning
.
of this column.
some good in not really know-
a college degree, for that matter.
The funny thing about this
ing where I am headed. How-
Some were on the yellow brick column is that there is no reso-
ever, I like to think that I am not
road for a while, but they just lution.
·
There is no one-liner to
alone. After all, today, I am
never got
·
passed the poppy sum this whole thing up. Some-
bringing you, the reader, with
fields. For those ofus who are
times, there are no guarantees
me.
hereatMarist, we have reached
of anything- not even a bad
Taking a walk without a des-
a sort of Emerald City and are pun. If that is not testament to
tination holds no disappoint-
awaiting our awards from the everything I just wrote, I do not
rnents. Such a walk might
be
Wizard. For those we left
be-
know what is.
considered a stroll on the yel-
hind to the poppy fields, we dis-
low
brick road without hopes of miss their happiness as their
finding the Emerald City.
·
Is
·
hallucinations. Sometimes I
there a point to such an en-
thinkthatourcityisjustasmuch
deavor? I mean, if Dorothy
a mirage as theirs.
Tara Quinn is
the
Circle's Opin-
ion Editor. She is a communi-
cations major from Teaneck,
NJ.
is worthless, they
are
really
try-
ing to send it to themselves. A
man who cared little for himself
assaulted me. I can not imag-
ine how low a man must feel to
wiHingly take on that role to en-
tertain others. At least
I
know
I
am better off than that kind of
person. So
I
choos~ to reject
.
that message. My life isworth
living.
·
... please-see
SURVIVOR,
pg.JO
•,
·_
;:.
;.
,
< •
.
October 29 1998
Survivor: Stude
·
11}t:
>
·
:,
·
.
•
.
.
·
"
:
:·
rro~
lia#~sm~nt.
.
.
.
_
_
:>:
·
•
Yet
*Y.:
Ffe
'\.
~~s
•
,
b
_
e~11
.
p~~
611
-;
/.
hold;
,
my·
stuclies. affected
/
and
off ended
by
-
c
·
olumil
·
·
rriy"
emotions have riin
wilcf
dtje
.
.
·
.
to
-
this infringement on
niy
rights. People may say that this
ismychoice. OFCOURSETHIS
IS MY CHOICE .. It i~ important
for me to act against those who
would re-victimize
me
by their
ignorance.
Tam
driven by the
primal urge of self-preservation.
It
is very important for
·
me to
speak out against a
. '.
school
newspaper thafsupports the
.
image of aperpetrator"as "Arts
and Entertainment."
.
It is ex-
tremely important
for
me to re-
claim my autonomy every time
society mocks nieas
·
a survivor.
... co11ti11uedfrom
pg.
9
I am not asking for sympathy,
in fact,
I
ask nothing.
l
demand
that you reevaluate your posi-
tion of victimization. We need
to stop blaming the innocent,
and return the shame to the one
who should bear it, the
perpe-
trator. The first step is to assert
that sexual assault is not com-
edy. The person who takes on
the role of
a
rapist can do so
because he knows that society
will support him. He knows that
whatever he says, he will be
safe. Yet when! walkout of my
house,
I
never know
if
I
will
be
safe.
One in four women will be
sexually assaulted in their life-
time. One in six men will be as
well. One in six women will be
raped, some with the aid of
Rohypnol, during their four
years at college. One in
·
two
women will be in a battering situ-
ation in her lifetime involving
someone who supposedly
loves her. It is not funny. It is
a
big deal.
I do not care to
.
be delicate.
No one has been delicate with
me. I have been re-victimized
by the apathy of society toward
this issue for the past nine years.
Every time it happens I.remem~
ber the face of the man who told
me I was not worth living. The
face of society blends well with
his. Now you put yourself in
my shoes and try to laugh. Im-
possible, right? Why do you
expect laughter from me? .
·
.
One reason I know life is worth
living is the simple fact that I
am
not alone. Sadly, if we add all of
the statistics oJ people who
have been assaulted,
I
am prob-
ably in the majority. Yet there
are those who still oppress us
by relegating our pain as
.
their
comedy,
·
It disgusts me. People
who advocate rape disgust me.
Am
I entitled to say that? Or
will I be censored in my effort to
respond to an advocate
_
of
sexual violence who was given
free reign to t.ise his voice. Per-
haps we give our freedoms se-
lectively.
.
.·
In our handbook on page 21 it
states that "The student is en-
titled to freedom froin any form
of discrimination or harassment
resulting from prejudice, racism,
sexism, anti-Semitism." I feel
that this situation has created a
hostile environment and has
been adirectinfiingementon my
right as a
·
woman to
_freedom
I
will
not allow myself to be vie-
.
timized ~y longer. Why would
you expect it?
.
People might wonder why one
person's words might incense
me to such a point One voice
undisputed speaks for the mul-
titudes.
·
Do
you agree with the
.
message sent?
I
do not
Iwm
not remain silent when my safety
is being compromised. Would
you?
.
.·
_
Why are
'
sex crimes against ·
women the only epidemic you
wiU still advocate by your si-
lence?
Michelle Corinne
White
is
a
junior American st~dies major
with a minor in womens
stud~
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OCTOBER29~l998
PAGEll
Kini's
Xrocks out at The Chance
by.SfEPHENMERCIER
Staff Writer
songs were not as strong as the
graceful guitar style of Tabor
others, but solid tunes from their
could have reminded one of
records of 1994 (Dogman) and
Alex Lifeson's (Rush) playing
1996 (Ear Candy) showed that
on such albums as Hold Your
their song writing skills cannot
Fire
and Power Windows. The
King's X
proved to a packed
be counted out yet. .
other players were not as inter-
Chance that they'renot just
Over My Head,
the highlight
esting as Tabor, but were solid
hardroc:k, but have elements of
of the night, showcased the
in their accompaniment.
funk, soul, blues andR&B.
major strengths of the band,
A Box,
from the album Ear
On Oct.
10
at
1,'.he
Chance in·
vocalization and tight playing.
Candy, was a very laid back song
Poughkeepsie, the rock trio
The lead singer's soulful James
that featured one of the catchi-
King's
X
performedan liour and
Brown howls and bluesy sing-
est harmonized choruses of the
a,
~alf of passionately played
ing complemented the solid
set. The lead singer's spirited
.
music in supporf of their new
rhythm section and Tabor's
Jimi Hendrix-like vocalizing and
album,
Tape Head
(Metal
sweet guitar sounds. The band
Tabor's crystal clean guitar
Blade). The band consists of·
was also able to show their
sound brought a great balance.
lead singer/bassist Doug
many musical influences by
The guitarist's solid perfor-
Pinnick, guitarist/singer Ty Ta-
bringing R&B, rock, soul, and
mance in the tune peaked espe-
bor, and drummer/singer Jerry
blues to the tune.
cially during his soaring solo
Gaskill. When the band gained
The very catchy Sometime
that was reminiscent of guitar-
fame in the early 90s with their
was a good example of the
ist Eric Johnson.
album, Faith Hope And Love
band's overall vocal skills. All
Overall, King's X accom-
and its MTV staple, It's Love,
three sang well, but the combi-
plished a near flawless show.
the group was remembered for
nation of Pinnick's blues tinged
The first sm_ig had some bass
their heavy grooves,
Rush4ike
rasp and the lead guitarist's soft
tuning problems, but was
progressive rock, and Christian
yet strangely powerful vocals
swiftly fixed for the remainder
influenced lyrics.
created a distinctive singing
of the set.
When seen at The Chance,·
style for a hard rock outfit. The
Another imperfection oc-
they looked like a very different
funk driven rhythm section and
curred during a couple of selec-
band. Rather.than getting away
catchy guitar riffs in addition to
tions from the new record. The
from their earlier image, the trio
the vocals made the song one
well played, but lyrically repeti-
built upon
it.
By focusing on
of the strongest performed that
_live Groove Machine and the
Pinnick's· .funk/soul s1·ng1·ng 1·n-
circle photOIStcphen Mercier
Ki ' X I
d
·
·
f
Id
evening.
mediocre Hate
You
took away
stead of his e·ar1i·er. m. etal 1·nflu-
mg-s
P aye an 1mpress1ve set o o and new
f
t ·
I tTh Ch
c
IS
O
1
TheintenselymelodicLostln
rom the band's solid perfor-
enced vocals, th~ gr9up . .·
ma ena
a
e . an?e on ranne treet on
ct
O.
Germany displayed King's X
mance. Goldi/ox, a soulful bal-
;sounded morelikeCahard rock:
:
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.
. 9fthe ,. duded a couple.of songs from
strict progressive rock;'. The
a
a came a tert e two new
'flt~~~t_.,.~:.,ee,p,r9.c.Iqb,Iu~,1n~":F,!!;~·:;:~~;::i~~a:;~:(i~~ .·~
•
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···';:Of1:~iti!:C:·:~i:o~~~~~~:~ .· .
~~~;!ct~:~:::~~~1:tgo:~~~
show impressive.
soon to atheaternearyou!
byJOHNSULLIVAN
THE DEEP END OF THE
Staff
Writer .. ,
-
.
_
OCEAN
·
.
,; . , . ..·.. : . This is a11 upcoming
>
_k } .
'.3
0 ·.
filmstarring MicheUe Pfi~ffer
, .• ... _ . .• '"
•· "·who
piays
a mother whose child
, . fI()llyw9o_fis:alWays inses-
is kidnapped and then returned
sion::;-·~?
>?>' ..
'
'.:'
:
.- ·•:
-
years later. ~_qundsn~atbutdefi-
. While: schools Halloween-
nitely weepy:~
..
themed ·stores an'd police·• sta-
DEEPBLUESEA~Notto becon-
tions may takethe
'
'summer off, . fused with '.'The Deep End Of
Holly~ood-
the
interriationally
the Ocean". This one is about a
recognized movie machine - is
pack of killer sharks loose in a
always working. Iwilllimitmy-
seaborne laboratory. I liked
self to an overview ori some of ''Jaws"; so this film intrigues me.
prolificHollywood's upcoming- SamueJ L Jackson and Stellan
projects. A word of caution
Skarsgaard have been cast in
though: Most of my sources on
this early summer release. Renny
these in-development films ARE . Harlin directs.
·reliable. Sources such as Enter-. HOW
THE
GRINCH· STOLE
tainment Weekly, Variety.
and
CHRISTMAS:JimCarrey stars
The
HollywoodRepqrtercanbe
as the Grinch in_ this live action
counted on to report accurately
version of the classic D_r. Seuss
on the state of Tinseltown af-
tale. It won't be out.until prob-
fairs. Sources such as· the
.
ably 2000 considering that
Internet are completely unreli-
Carrey has just si~ed on for the
able. A lot of stuff on the
role and he has _two other
Internet is made up, pure and
projects in development in ad-
simple, I just choose notto trust
dition to the Andy Kaufman
a bunch of fat guys on their key-
biopic due this SUIJ1mer. Hold
boards
telling millions of people
your breath.
that "Batman 5" will star Luke . VARSITY BLUES: Hey
Perry for their own sick enjoy-
"Dawson's Creek" fans! James
ment. But, some sites on the
Van Der Beekstars as a under-
Internet (such as Dark Horizons)
dog high school football player.
seem fairly grounded in reality.
Sounds like girls will love it Due
The following is a short list of this spring.
·
interesting films to be released
SCREAM 3: Hey "Party of
in the near future. Some maybe
Five" fans! Wes Craven has
real. Some may be made up, but
signed on to direct the third
don't blame me. Blame technol-
(arid probably final installment)
ogy. And, for good measure,
of the overrated horror series.
blame Oprah.
Neve Campbell returns as
Sidney who has now become an
actr~ss (unlike the real Neve
-,Campbell). ·Someone;starts
·· stalkipg and killing the cast
members on the set she's work-
ing on'- a Jow budget horror
.movie;_
·
·
8 MILLIMETER: Hey filthy por.:
n·ography fans! Nicolas Cage
stars a~ a deteftive investigat-
ing the sleazy underworld of
porn and snuff films to uncover
:the truth about a murder.
Jouqu~n Phoenix co-stars as a
dirty book store owner. Scripted
by Andrew Walker who wrote
"Seven", so expect darkness.
RANGE: An armed, Apache
''Glmship" :helicopter is .hi-
. jacked by a madman who holds
the city of LA hostage from the
sky. Dylan McDermott (TV's
"The Practice") takes the hero
role who tries to foil the bad
guy's plot in a pursuing News
4
chopper. 20th Century Fox is
actually considering this as a
third "Speed" movie. I hope that
is not true. Next year.
WILD, WILD
WEST:
Wil1
Smith
(oh no) is James West, an un-
dercover
.
FBI agent in Clld west-
ern temtory. Kevin Kline is his
sidekick in this big screen re-
·make of the campy 60's TV se-
ries. There'l? a big mechanical
spider in the effects budget so
expect lots of "Men In Black"
type of foolishness. This sum-
mer.
STARS WARS-EPISODE 1:
THE.PHANTOM MENACE:
Anybody ever hear of this? I
don_'t know a thing about it.
Scorsese and Cage are an in-
What is Star Wars? May 21st. · spired cpmbination. Next year
END OF DAYS:
Arnold . GUYGETSKID: Andnowthe
Schwarzenegger vs. Satan. An
part of the article that all you
apocalyptic action film about
crazy collegf kids hav~ been
the Devil coming to New York
waiting
for ...
an Adam Sandler
to find a bride. Schwarzegger's
movie. After this·
.
wint,er's
security guard has to stop him.
"Waterboy", Sandler stars in a
PSYCHO '98: Gus Van Sant is
story about
a
guy who gets a
directing the remake of tlie ul-
kid to impress his ex-girlfriend.
tra-classic, seminal 1960 The title might be changed to
Hitchcock thriller. Many people
"Big Daddy" which is equally
think this is a bad idea but they
stupid. Spring.
can not say it is not
an
interest-
FOR THE LOVE OF THE
ing one.· Vince Vaugn (T from
GAME: A baseball movie from,
"Swingers") plays Norman
surprise, Kevin Costner. Actu-
Bates. Anne Heche is in the
ally ol' Kev's pretty reliable
shower scene. I have to see this
when it comes to baseball mov-
film just because it is so damn
ies, and not so reliable when it
intriguing. With Van Sant at the
comes to insipid post-apoca-
helm, very little can go wrong.
lyptic adventures. I am looking
Money baby, money. This
forward to another "Field Of
Christmas. ·
Dreams". I don't know when
YOU'VE GOT MAIL: Tom
this is coming out.
Hanks and Meg Ryan team up . MISSION. IMPOSSIBLE
2:
again for yet another romantic
People are still trying to figure
comedy - this time revolving
out the plot for the first one, but
around some misplaced e-mail.
I have a piece of information that
"Sleepless In Seattle" director
may clear it up: It had a bad
Nora Ephron is back with the
script. Now that we've settled
sweetness. Preliminary screen-
that issue, John Woo directs the
ings have been positive so
second installment with Tom
"You've Got Mail" is a likely
Cruise and Ving Rhames retum-
crowd-pleaser next year.
ing to their roles. Other casting
BRINGINGOUTTHEDEAD:
rumors include Dean Cain,
Nicolas Cage, the hardest work-
Lauryn Hill and Jason Patric as
ing guy in Hollywood, stars in a
a bad MI agent. With Woo di-
supernatural drama from Martin
recting, MI2 might not be so
Scorsese. Cage plays a para-
MIA. Ha l;a, that was pretty
medic who is haunted by the
clever but
if
you read it again
souls of the victims he could
you will realize it really did not
not save. It is based on a book.
make much sense. Like Mission
Impossible 1.
Lt.•
OCTOBER 29
7
1998
Battle
·of
the bari.dS
. ,
.,
.
long
·
on boredom
byCHRISKNUDTSTEN
Staff Writer
The Battle of the Bands was
held on Friday, Oct. 23 in the
Cabaret.
The flvers for this event had
made a ~int of stating that only
the first 200 people would ad-
mined but that was not a prob-
lem at all since there was prob-
ably no more than
50. I
guess
either not enough people knew
about it or everyone was too
busy_ getting ready to get
sloshed later that night. The
door fee was only two dollars
which is nc>t a bad deal consid-
ering the fact that therewerefive
bands including MidHudson
Pork
and Fizzlewink, the only
two bands that
I
had the chance
to stay for.
The reason why
I
could only
stay for the first two bands was -
because my patience and time
were short. I knew that the show
would not start as planned at
3:00 butl figured by the time I
got there around 4:30 the show
would have been well· under
way.
I
was wrong. The first
band had only started a little·
before that as MidHudson Potk
· " •.c.,•'
-'Si !Li
f ;/,
0 0 ~
Rl!!SSWIRE
ACROSS
1
Father
3
Electrical Measurement
7
Capillary-like
9
Switch Setting
11
Chubby
12
Royal"!"
13
Answer Choice
14 AGetAway
16
To Give Off
19 Nimbus
20 Shamrock Land
22 SeaBird
24 Sterile
26 Thus
27
Masculine
28 From Israel
31
Choice Word
32 N.J. Institute for Reeves
33 Formicidae
was the opening act. .Playing
couldnot bare to sirthrough .
without a bassist, Jon Murray
a·nother
·seemingly
endless
still managed to keep the crowd,
space betwee11 bands. · At- the
little though it was, entertained. - time ofmy departur¢lnotjced.
A peculiar combination of a vo-
the Cabaret had filled up\Vith
calist/guitarist, violinist, and
an enormousqowd, possibly 70
drummer made the sex-oriented
people were there afthispoint.
set of MidHudson Pork very
Now. maybe more people
refreshing. There is no real way
showed up· later that I missed
to define the eccentric style of but iny assumption is that there
MidHudso11 Pork,
it has the
wasageneralignoranceorapa"'. -
funkish feel of Beck while at the
thy about this event,. which is
a
same time springing from
a
folky
shame•·b~cause· it. wou.ld have
nature. Definitely one of the
been a positive. reinforcement
more amusing songs was
forthebandsifmC>repeoplehad
"Viagra Fa.lls" which drew a con-
shown up. The monitors. tllat
stant laughter from the few of ha.d been.set up also .. did nC>t
us· that showed up.
work which raised the question·
.
Following them was
ofwhy they were even there.
F'izzlewink,
with
a
style that re-
Agairi, maybe I am just being
sembles a mix betwee11 Weezer
over critical_ but this could have
arid MXPX. There had been a
been
ap.
rupazing ~vent if prop-
long and frustrating time gap
erly ·organized, Tdo notknow
between them and Mi<!Hudso11
who did organiz~_the event but
Pork
however tliat actually dis~
it could have been done
far
bet-
couraged a few of t:he eyen fewer
ter. The fewpeople who actu-
onlookers · from staying: The
ally did show up were frustrated
band played aHvely set,,opened
from waiting about a half-hour.·
with What Goes Around Comes
between
·
every band.. It_ is a·
Around
that picked up the pace
shame that the Battle of the
a little from MidHudson Pork.
Bands resulted in s_uch a way
It. was after Fiv.le_wink that I
but that is what happens wh.en,
could.
#6
Io~g,er: stay, ~t the
no .one is interested because
qilJ'ar'J~.:
MY
pci~i~nce)1ad hif:n
ther~.:i~
~~:
p~rty
•
at_ the_.' (~J)ter,
griiit
lpngJ~~f ore,: tlfi,~
:~1fq),
1wm~Y.s ,~9!J.s~.:.1
·1
u • <::•;;(gr!:
1
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J.
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11
13
. 16
27
31
CC) 1998
Collegiate
Presswm:
Features
Syndicale-Onlineathttp://www.cpwire.com
6
Plant of the Chevnl
Family
7 Part of a Windmill
8
OutofBed
10 WeddingAnnounce
mentWord
34
UsedtolndicatePosses-
15 lam, You _ _
_
sion
DOWN
1 WalkerAid
2
Black Cuckoo
3
Bum
Treatment
4
City
in
West
Italy,
known
for marble
5 Save lime in Chinese
Cooking
17
Roman
Numeral
18
Groupofthree
21 RuhrValleyCity
23 Type of Film
· 24 Used
to
Express
Surprise
25 Formerly
29
Simile Word
30 Tree
Look here for next
week's answers.
CPt02198 /
Oct
21, 1998
.PAGE12
MidHudso~Potf<vvere
·a breath of fresh air in .an otherwise
. foul battle of the bands.
,
·
;;EXTRAINCOME'F0R'9'8\\
Ea;h
$500 -
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weeklystufflng . . -
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6547N. Acadarny
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irtanciai,'market,
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_·, informal~n.·our
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used by
over 10,000 inyestrnenf :: ' .
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to
research
companies,
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and
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Fair
.
,
Thursday, October 29, 1998
. Mccann Center
3:00-7:00
Software Engineers -
We look for experience in
Ci~,
exposure to
GUI
frameworks,
Perl / HTML,
algorithmic
ana~s~
and
des~n, software
en~neenng pracoces, M~rosoft
Wiooows
application
development,
graph~
and slatisticaUquantitative
ana~is.
---------
-
------
-
--
-
OCTOBER29,1998 · ·
Tun
..·· .. ·• •.
.
self',
some
p~ople
calfit
.''enio:
e·. -_
m'
·to•·. . · .
core'.\ sorrie peopl~:~ye~ c~l
if
,
.
. _::-
. . ' . ''hardcore"(lhevei-reallytinder-
.
. _. ,·_ ,-.
.
•··. _
_
. _ •
stood"wliattliat'.mearit).\Butit
DeW·IDUSIC··
:·ts~1.t:r~~:1i~
.
tuare·inter~
· · .· ··
· ·· · ·
-
. ·
-
The record labeisthat,put out
to
... --..
_·.·
·
· . a . : .
·
.·.· ... ·...
8.v.
_
...
l.
~
·
·
:1~~a~i::6J~:t,:t
r!~~~
.
.J
pendent rrit1sic :1ahels ·i~
- Dischoi:d, my subject last issue.
·
·byPA.TIUCKWHITILE
.. 'A&EEdiior
An up and coming labelis Jade
Tree;· whc> are
'.
responsible for
putting otitgreat music by the
like,s
of New Jersey melodic~rock
· ·
•
·· · ·
·
· ·
-
· · · - •
kings
Lifetime and the afore-
·· Ev.eryone inJh~unqergi'ound• mentioned.-
Promise
.
Ring.
musk sce,nds.sJupid. · -
·Florida-based
Doghouse
Apart
from
being the titl~ of a
records are the current champi-
song'.by i:t,band whose'name is. ons.ofthee,no-core scene (that
unrneiltionable in' a publication
means combing "emotion" with
such as tijis,-that is a·~eemingly - "h.ardcore", for you
Dave
a\,ery true.statement.·
1
atn
l!O,t.:
Af
atthews
!
'.Band-loving ge-
making refereilce, to: th~.MTV
niuses). -
Iiotwatt:r Music, the
alternative scene that died while
Get Up
Kids
(whowill
be play-
most
of
us .were·finishing up
ing
·
atthe ~hance on Nov. 10),
high school, to the exultation of arid the Hudson Valley's own
some (read: ine) and the anguish -
Joshua are some of Doghouse's
of others (read: everyone else
bestacts. Just in case you are
in my high school). Just as flan-
·
more into heavy. stuff, Edison
nel shirts do not constitute a
Records puts out some of the
radical fashion statement-_as
more innovative aggressive
some_thought, ~ • s '-'120
Min- ·
bands on the scene today, like
utes" does notconstitute un-
Boston's
Overcast
and
der~oi.md music: Except.when
Philadelphia's recently defunct
they play the
Promise Ring
Starkweather.
·
· Plus Edison's
video, anyway.
barids sound absolutely noth-
That being said, when
I
say - ing like
Korn and the Deftones.
"underground" what
I
actually
Bigger independent record la-
mean are the hundreds of art-
bels like Victory and Revelation
ists supported by)ndependi!nt
Records stock mall stores with
record labels, who choose to get
their releases, which are gener-
th~ii music
to
the.
masses with-
ally more accessible to the buy-
out the help of MTV
art4
corpo-
fog
public. Check out bands like.
~~.13~?:,~d~~a11~
9
f~~ei••
:!JyflzeJJrqce of G9.d ('{ict9ry},
artist$~ght not 13S;abl~.to fil~e ,
:
~~aridc:E!lz~ti(Rev~l~on)''iry<iiE
that f601ce; but,t!iat IS ~~~Ide
/are
new to
'
ihe indejfendent mti~
_
the P,£>~nt.-;,qp?d•music':is;not Jic world.
2
·ou~}riendly.neigh:.
dead;cyou3ust cannoLb.uy it at
borhciod Music Director at
SamGoody or the :Wall. Since
WMCR llappens to work for
Rhino,Reco~ds, an 1~dependent
Equal Vision Records; the label
store{IS s~tyng }1-P sh9p_across · responsiblefor two ofmy per-
fromManst; you are now given ~sonal favorites,
Shelter and
the opportunity to take me up
Shift.
.
on tt:11~ •. sta!ement;; Some people
Why did
I
begin this artic!e
call It·· md1e-rock , some people
with the sentence "everyone
m
call it''DIY'' as in "do it for our-
the
.
underground music scene is
stupid"? Because obviously if
no one is listening then• there
must b·e something wrong here. ·
Actuaily,'l rriostly just ihrew
that in, to get your attention, and
since
you
got this far I guess it
worked. I like
U2 just as much
_ as the. next. guy, -but unfortu-:-
nately
fr
seems like the next griy
never shares my enthusiasm for
bands that do not get constant
MTV airplay. It is all right to turn
offyour·TV and turn into some
new music! So if you are inter-
ested in finding out about some
great underexposed artists, both
old and new, stop by Rhino:
Records on your way to
McCoy's some Priday night,
and tell them the A & E editor
from
The Circle sent ou.
Spring Break '991 I
-Sell Trips, ·Earn Cash
&
Go
Free!!!!
Student Travel Services is now
hiring campus reps.
Lowest rates to Jamaica, Mexico
&
Florida
800-648-4849 or
www.ststravel.com
PAGE13
Tliepygillypower_of''SimonBirch''
:byCARLITO
•
· Staff Offender
Although
I
only weigh in at
147pounds,
I
stand at approxi-
mately 72inches in height and
· virtually everyone in my life ex-
ceeds the 60-inch mark. For,
· years I have yearned for some-
thing monumentaliy divine; but
something that could be intri-:-
cately packaged in a shoebox. I
found that something
in
"Simon
Birch".
-
"Simon Birch" is the tale of a
. freak: Ian Michael Smith bril-
liantly plays the role ·of Simon
Birch, who is a fully function-
ing Homo Sapien who stands at
roughly 16 inches in height. His
torso has no more girth than my
cat's but his cranium resembles
the jack-o' -lantern that resides
on my front porch. Although
his skull is so gargantuan that it
has its own gravitational field,
his heart is even bigger. Simon's
life is much more difficult than
that of the average human but
at the· same time possesses a
lucid simplicity. He sincerely
believes that he is God's instru-
ment and that he has a definite
purpose for being on this planet.
I thought he was merely a freak
of nature that existed for the sole
purpose of entertaining me, but
in actuality, he was put on this
earth to be a hero. When
I
say ·
hero,l do not mean that he has
aspirations of· leading fellow
midgets in a revolution against
full grown primate oppressors
like seen in the film "Willow"
(which was basically a pint-sized
version of "Braveheart"), I am
referring to more subtle fonn of
heroism.
It is hard to imagine that a per-
son roughly the same size as a
groundhog could be capable of
any heroics whatsoever, but
you just do not know Simon.
When introduced, he is 12
years .. o.ld and he resides in a
small town in upstate New York.
His parents emotionally neglect
him, which
I
find to be quite dis-
turbing. Had I given birth to
him
(actually ·giant strides have
been made in cross-gender im-
pregnation),
I
would most likely
keep him in a hamster cage and ·
rent hjm out for birthday parties
and barmitzvahs. That may
sound dehumanizing and de-
grading but at least
I
would let
him know how special he was.
Simon is not your average 12-
year-old. He possesses an in-
tellect superior to, that of the
average sixth grader and
I
can
only assume that that is a result
of his oversized cranium. He is
quick witted and has a filthy
mind that parallels that of my
grandfather's.
His best friend is a standard
issue human named Joe and
when I say "standard issue", I
mean that his height exceeds
that of a bipedal muskrat. Joe's
mother, magnificently played by
Ashley Judd is Simon's
1
!Ilother
figure. Simon has an 9¥d,ipus
Complexion infatuatio'n with
Miss Judd and who can blame
him. His real mother neglects
him and the mere sight of
Ashley makes me want to put
myself up for adoption. Justifi-
ably so, Simon is pissed off at
the world. He is a nonconfonn-
ist and has no qualms with ex-
pressing his left winged philoso-
phies. This apolitical extrover-
sion comes in many fonns. He
feels the need to inform Joe on
exactly how voluptuous his
mother's bosom is and cannot
seem to fend of his libido when
confronted with preadolescent
mammary glands. He also op-
poses structured religion and
exhibits this by giving a 90-sec-
ond dissertation on the superfi-
ciality of post-mass coffee hour,
and does so in the middle of the
priest's sennon. Although hos-
tile during his speech, he looked
so cute standing on that pew
that
I
just wanted to pluck him
off the screen and give him a
hug. Just kidding,
I really don't
like small boys in that way.
"Simon Birch" is definitely a
film
I
would have to recommend
for anyone that has a soft spot
in their heart for children with
disproportionately sized mel-
ons. His faith and warmth suc-
cessfully won me over and I
believe he can do the same for
you. Perhaps you are like me and
you have aspirations of obtain-
ing vast wealth that could ca-
pably support the hiring of a
staff of midgets to cater to your
every need. Or at least chimps.
But until you can afford such
luxuries, go see this film and ex-
perience Simon Birch and all his
cranial majesty.
The John P. Anderson
Annual Playwriting Contest
Invites All Undergraduates
To Take Part in this One-Act
Play Competition.
Guidelines and Applications Are
Available in Rotunda Office 389.
All Student Playwrights Are Asked
To Obtain and Read the Guidelines
Before Writing.
Deadlines for Applications is the End
of the Fall Semester.
Selected Submissions Will Be Used
To Illustrate the Developmental
Process of New Plays in the
Spring Theatre Workshop.
---
.
October 29, 1998
. FOOT~AL~:
.
:RedJ?ox¢s
•
fighting an
uphill
b
.
attle in conference race
.
... continued fron_i pg 16
_
east Conference. The Seahawks
"held" Allen·to
·
1os yards on 27
Duquesne the Marist defense
carries and contained Marist's
was rejuvenated by the oppor-
·
-big play passing
-
attack
·
to only
tunity to face a freshman quar-
one strike, a 69-yard TD pass
terback for the second time this
from Tramaglini to
.
Tim Korba.
season.
That pass gave Marist a 14-7
The Foxes picked off Iona's
lead, but Wagner's Mike Irving
Rob Violante twice and sacked
booted a 44-yard field goal at
him three times while holding
the end of the third period, and
the Gaels to just 225 yards of quarterback Jeff Skinner con-
total offense. Jerry Gerth was
nected with Mike Cerminaro on
named MAAC Defensive Player
40-yard TD pass to put Wagner
of the Weed for the second time
in front with seven minutes left.
in three weeks.
Jason Adamoyurka tried to tie
Marist's most recent game
the gaine for Marist with 30 sec-
was last Saturday against the
onds left, but his 43-yard field
Wagner Seahawks of the North-
goal attempt was blocked.
TENNIS: Men's team
will
head
to
NCAA championships in the spring
.,.continued from pg 16
came in the fifth singles game,
when Juan Delgado needed to
deliver a win in order to solidify
a
trip
to the NCAA's. When all
was said and done, Delgado de-
feated the 5th singles player
from Fairfield, and as he said put
the roof on the house.
Afterwards, Junior Mike
Racanelli commented on this ca-
reer moment.
"This
is what we worked for
all season long. We were given
a great opportunity to play in
the MAAC championships and
now we get the chance to play
some of the top teams in the
United States. it's a dream come
true,'' Racanellisaid.
. if'ihe
team
does'
not
really
seem that excited
·about
the
NCAA's
at
the moment,
it
is be-
cause they will not find
·
·
out
whom they are playing in the
first round until the spring: The
MAAC was_ the only conference
allowed to hold it's conference
championship in the
fall
this
year, and in the future they will
have to play in the spring as
well. This means that while the
team will still continue to prac-
tice, there is no real set game
plan to work around in order to
prepare for an opponent. The
hard part will now become the
waiting game.
For now however, it will be a
sweet and anxious winter for the
Red Foxes. Yes, they did accom-
plish a goal many thought was
unreachable. Yes, they: do have
a team with enough talent to
compete against the best teams
in the country.
.
Arid yes, they
didso·
·
by combining thauare
form.ui'aof
heart"an'cl talent that
seisJfiart th~
·
gdo'd
·teains''fr6m
·
the average.
.
.
. .
..
'
The tjuestion
·
now oecomes
·
however,
joi.t'
how
far
~art this
team go?
In
five
months from
·
now, both
'
Marist and the entire
country
will
find out.
,
Grae
.
.
,
{to the
right
program for
your
IT
career]
Yoo.e
leairerl
lte
litlri:a slils,
Now
it's
ll't ID
Bk?
1remto_aijghef
1cit~~~~tis
-
·
:
.
.:
.
.
..
.
.
~
.
" ' '
•
.
.
·
•
,
.
.
.
.
cdstar~
Ir~
~m.
~
fal
It.at
_
we're as
mdla ~WJtedl~as a
flWm
~iesfl1n.
,
.
.
-·
··
..
.
.
.
:
·
.
-
;
~"" \lebS.1!
_
an
~-ctMl
ar
kdmJges
kxlay.
l'k.aiai~~~
'
.
.
,
.,\
·~
~
.
~ ~~
-
.
- ! - - .
~~~
·-
-~•'"'""'
PaineWebber
Launching your career
·
·
•
·.
.
.
_..
. .
, _
.
,
.
.
.
·
Cin:le
photo.'Joc Scotto
.
Quarterback Bill TramagliniJhrows
a
pass on the run during the Red Foxes 45-9 win over
Iona. The senior threw
two
TD passes to Joe Calabria in the game.
MAA C'sloom
·
onthe
.
horizon for men's
a
_
nd women's
,
-
ctoss
country
..
.
teams
by.JENNIFERGWVER
show,
,
ho\Vever .. Mi~or ran) son, the ~en have had high
Staff Writer
cross country personal bt!stof hopes, knowing that they are
19:20,-one
_
minutefasterthan she
one of the
.
best
.
teams that
The moment of truth
'
awaits
:
ha
.
ct
·
run the
·
previous week at
Marist has had in years.
the men;s and woi:nen'scros~
Albany.
.
.
.
_
.
,
,
The men also
.
competed at
country
·
teams.
Manhattan looks to be the'big-
VanCortlandt Park last weekend
All season; the
_
cro
·
ss co~ntry
gest competitor for Marist this
in the IC4A meet. The men also
.
teams have beenpn;rving
_
that
.
year.
·.
Whiie
·
fyiajist scoi-ed
_
in
finished in f~urth
-
plac
_
e, led by
-
.
they are
.
one
·
of
the best teams
front
of
Manhattan two
·
week-
senior Michael Melfi, .who
in their conference. This Sun-
ends
ago;
_
head. coach Phil Kelly
placed second in the field
()f
203
day, Noy.' l
'.
ilt-\_'aiiCortlandtPa.rk,
_
'
n6tes that
·
the
'.
M~nh~tt,a!_l
:.
ti?m
.
,_var~ity;
;
lJlllllers .•.
M.:;lfi,'.s
.
tirne,
Mari.st has th~
.
chalice
to prove
:
·· •
is
·.
sio~ger
'
than'_:t!i~'
-~eiufi
)hat
·
js:
1
:
',
r
}V;tS
:th(?
pest. tillle,
:
f9r-
:
a
that
tn,W
=
are
:
flfo
'
HesFaf
tl:i'e
'"•'
i.iie§
fafr
'
a(ECACs:
:
:X:·;stfong
Marist;runner at VanCortlandt
Metro Atlantic Athletic Confer-
race will be necessary
:
for.
the
.
:
Park
:
His secpncfpl3:ce)1Ili~ll
.
is
ence ~hampionships.
-
.
':
:
Marist.cross
'.
coiin°try.
team
to
also the
,
highest pl~ce
.
ev
.
er
.
o
_
b-
Marist's last meet! the fo-sfof
pick
·
up t~eir
.
fi!Sl
,
\\'iri
,
in
.
.
the
tained by a ~arist runne.r
.,
,
It was
the
three atVanCortlandtPark,
.
MAAC
··
confereiice, but itis ateameffortforthemen'scross
was a
·
good
'
wainMip
''
for
'
thtir
within their reach:
:
_
, :
.
· .
.
,
.
.
country
.
te~
• .l~o~~ver, as
.
th~
.
championships
,
this week.
-
:At
.
The men seek
an
equall:fdiffl-
team \\'.Orked together to
-
finish
the EastemConferenceAthletic
· :
cult challenge. The rtien are
ahead of every team froIU the
Conference rn:eet, the women
-
forced to
.
compete against na-
MMC conference.-. .
_
place
·
ct fourth
-
, the highest a tionally
:_
ra1,1ked
..
fona College.
.
After se;isqn long personal
cross
·
country team fr~mMarist
Whiie
:
a
first
,
plac,e vic_tory)s
and team bests, the.team.looks
h~s ever placed.
-
Six_ runners
_
iieariy
u.npos~ible, th~Jllen know
'
t6
capi~ize
011'
tll(mo'st illh~td-
.
·
·
ecl~psed
·
the former record of that s~c<>n~ place is within the
ousofthemall-'-thefirstMarist
20:01,on the course.
.
.
.
.
realm
·
of
their nmniilg ability.
cross country
·
tea~
-
to bring
Junior Erin Minor stole the
Sine~
$,d
b
'
egiruwig of this sea-
home
a:
MAAC chatjlpionship.
·
Women's
·-
soccer
.
team
fails
-
to
.
qualifyfor
M.AAC
CliapiOnshiJ)s
by
KAARENUMMEffl
The team loses seven seniors
Staff Writer
including mid~fielder Amanda
·
Swiderickwhohas IOpointsanµ
The Marist women's soccer
1 game:..winning
'
goal this
'
_
year.
team
-
has had a roller
·
coaster of Stepping up ru.cely to probably
a year thus far. Finishing out
till
in her shoes is freshman
their season at home against
Kasey Sibrinsz who
·
Ieaas·the
Loyola and at
Leliigh,
the Red
team with 14
':
points·'arid two
Foxes' 4-7-4 season thus far was
game~w1nning goals.
.
.
.
somewhat of a letdown;
•
S¢"nioigoalie Beth Zac}s has
In 1997 the Red Foxes were
had a tremendous Seasoir this
able to compete in the MAAC
year
:
withi L36 goal per game
Tournament, but this year fell a
average.
·
'I:ooldng to next
year
·
couple of games short. They
are
:
two sopho(li91:e goalies that
are currently sixth out of the lO
have filled in nicely this year.
teams, but only the top four will
Jamie Bierwirth and Katie
compete at Fairfield on Novem-
O'Connell have only allowed
her 6-8th.
seven goals in their 10
games.
s
.
Maiist beii the teairi~ they'
were supposed to·beat includ-
ing wins of3-1 against Rider, 4-
1
·
against Niagara and
)-0
against fona
.
Sieria managed a
-
1-1 tie with the Foxes.
·
.
.·
Marisf cariharig
'
their heads
high
·
because they
'
never gave
up. Of their 4 ties,
_
three were at
Manhattan, at the University of
Maine and against Holy Cross.
No
.
matter the outcome of their
Iast;two games;' the Marist
women's soccer team has some
.
.
things to buildon for next year.
'I)tere hard play all year under
coach Tara Nichols was
·
some-
thing to adi:nire.
·
ancun
*
Nassau
*
Jamaica ~
-
M~za-tl
_
an
*
Acapulc
*
Bahamas Cruise
*
Florida
*
South Padre
Travel Free and make
.
lots of Cash
!
Top reps are offered full-time
·
staff jobs.
Lowest price Guaranteed. Call now for details!
411
r
:i
•
;
•
:
.-~
·>
·
·
~
''
.
1
.
,
.
•
.
,
i
··
·
·
:
>•·
mpUs.
Repo
.
.
::
seven
:
inonths
:
aiid
125
·
~ins
laterithe
-
Ne\1/,York
Yankees
are
wofld ch~p-ions
·
for the 24th
tiine,:.
;i
/ .
'
.
C;.
'
',
,
• ,
.
TlieWorld Series was wori in
·
0
.
a
,
s\veep
,
c:hn~lude,if Jas(week
·
•
witha3~0winovertheSanDi'-
·
-
ego Padre~;'
;
The
,
Yankees rolled.
through
the
playQffS,
·
winning
in every hn
_
agin?ble\vay.
-
·
.
Agairist the Rangers iri the
firstmtirid, David Wells, David
Co~e
;
imd Andy Pettitte del_Ilor-
aiized the best offense in the.
,
Americiut
'
League, In the'Ameri-'.
cai_l League Chcl!Dpionship
·
se-
·
·-
-
ries againsnhe
·
Jndians, the
,_--
Yankees
-
fou_n'd ways to win,
despite not being on the top of
their game. When theYankees
needed the pitching to step
·
up,
.
it -did. When the-. Yankees
."
needed ihe
'
Jiitters'
·
to step
.
up,
,
they did
.
In winning the s
_
eries
4-2, the Yankees showed that it
.
was their tinting, dutch perfor-
mance, and heart that allowed
themselves
·
to win' the most
games in Americ"an League his-
tory.
-
,,
.
'
When it came to the Padres,
the Yankees were barely_ tested.
It
seemed inevitable, particu-
larly after beating Kevin Brown
in thefir"st game
.
of the
.
series,
that New York would win the
title.
WhileJt
was
notthe
most
exciting World Series; there was
.
..
.
_
, ._
·
-
.
.
_
·
Circle Photo/Joe Scouo
Yankees' pitcher Andy Pettitte looks on during New Yorks'
}Norld Series parade last Friday. Pettitte went 2-1 in the ptay-
:otts
·
and
won.th~
-
ga~e
4
clincher against the Padres,
. · .
-
..
,
-
·
•,
one
:•
"surpffs~'
'
performaricis
thattruly'exemplified the great-
ness of this year's
'
Yankees:
·
·.
·-
·
.-
It
was World Series MVP Scott
Brosius
.
•
Nobody thai'follow~d
the Yankees all year could
'
say
.
that Brosius was a ~urprise, but
iiwas
liis performance against
the Padres
.
that brought him to
national prorniile;ice: Qver the
course of the season Brosius hit
300with 19
'
hometsand
-
98
RBI's;
ofteri;hittingiri
tlie
ninth
spot in the order; He earned his
first ail-star appe~an~e; he\vas
qutstanding in
.
the
.
field; he.
"'ii~
~
.
-
'
,
:
'~
._
'
:
.'
_-;;
.
..
,
,
i~ on~
_
word; amazing_-
··
Wh~n it came down to the
World Series:
·
Brosius
_
came
thiotightime
and
time again. He
hit
.471 with 2 homers and 6 RBI
in
:
ihe fourgaine series. Both of
his home
'
nms cainein Game 3,
when the Yankees won
54
be-
cause of liis performance,
Brosius
·
maynot
_
be the
·
only
'
rea-
sorl the
Yankees
·
':"qn the series,
btit
it
can not be denied that he
wasan instriimental part, both
"in
getting
there
andin winning.
TheYankees of 1998
,
will be
reirtembere~
-
forever
:
for their
dominance, integrity and class.
It
was
an amazing team that had
an amazing season
.
It was
.
a
team that had heroes such as
Brosiqs, Ricky Ledee and Shane
Spencer; It was not that the
Yankees did not have and did
not need modern superstars,
like Bernie
:
Williams and Derek
Jeter, but it was
a
team that had
·
superst~rs
in
the
.
ti-aditiorial
mold, as well. :Brosius is the
:
best
'
example of traditional
_
supers~dom.
fie.
came up big
PAGE15
.
What's on Tap?
Football
!
0/31 Home vs. St. Francis 1 p.m.
Men's soccer
11/2
@
Oneonta 2:30 p.m.
Men's teililis
11/5-11/7
@
Rolex Tournament
Women's tennis
10/31-11/1
@
Rolex Tournament
William
&
Mary
Cross country
11/1
@
MMC Championships
Van Cortlandt Park Bronk.NY
Volleyball
l l/2 Home vs. LIU 7 p.m
Tough Trivia
What team holds the NFL record for wins in one
season., including
_the
post--season?
Last week's q~estion - What is the NFL reco,rd for passing
yards in a single season and who holds it?
Answer - Dan Marino passed for 5
,
084 yards in 1984.
all year, despite the fact that the
he knew that the lights were not
always shining on him. He qui-
etly did what he needed to do
and did it at the very top level
of baseball.
·
·
For
.
the Yankees, tlle World
Series was the conclusion to one
of the most-amazing seasons in
basebaUhistory.
.
.
, ..
'
It was a phenqmenai season,
not
only
for the Yankees, but for
baseball. There was the home
run chase, the end of Cal
Ripken's streak,
:
Kerry Wood's
emergence, Roger Clemens con-
tinued dominance and the return
of
fan
:
interest to the national
pastime. ,
It
will no
.
the_ a season
that\viHbe
·
soon forgotten
·
'.
by
baseball fans ..
'.
.
Also in the world of sports last
week:
.
1. NBA Lockout - Imagine the
NBA if the players cared as
much about the game as they
do about their paychecks ...
2. Denver Broncos - They are
undefeated, TerreH Davis has
l,001 yards in 7 games and Ja-
son Elamjust tied the 28-year
old field goal record with a kick
of
63
yards. Is there any stop
-
ping them?
3
.
.
Minnesota Vikings - They
have
an explosive offense that
no other team in the NFL can
match. Can
the
defense stack
up?
4. Tony Gwynn - He might be
the dassiest play~r in a11
··
of
,
sports and
.
while you may.have
-
been happy for the Yankees, you
·
kriow you felt
for
Gwynn when
·
the Padres lost.
·
5.
Jerry Rice
~
Yeah, he set an-
qther record, this time for most
consecutive games with a recep-
tion ... what else is new?
l1;w()tough
.
lossesleave men's soccer at
5-10
by
JEFF
DAHN~
,
·
· ·
Staff
Writer
FoUo~ing a _we~~e~d that saw
the Marisf Men's Soccer team
battle two tough conference
.
foes, it appears that year on~ of
the rebuilding process is all but
over.
.
_
.
.
The
·
Fqxes Jell to defending
Metro Atlantic Athletic Confer-'
ence champion Rider4-2
_
last
_
Friday. The defeat was followed
by a 2-0 loss
at
the hands of
Loyola
.
on Sunday; the team
Rider beat in last season's
MMC title game to capture the
conference championship.
·
-
With the pairoflosses, Marist
is now 5-10 overall, 3-5 in the
conference.
Rider, one of the top teams in
the MAAC with
'.
a 7-2 mark;
came in led by All-America can-
didate Craig Wicken. The se-
nior forward, who became
_
the
Broncs all-time leading scorer
last Sunday against Sien
·
a,
would prove to
be
the difference
in the game.
.
·
.
Marist coach Bobby Herdodes
sail he was impressed
'
with
Wicken
as
welt
--
-
-
.
,
,
''He's
ju1fr
:
rele~tless,. good
-
size, verygo
_
od skills,"
:
said
coach Herodes "They are re-
ally going to miss him."
.
·
Wicken opened up the scor-
ing at the 32-ininute mark when
he-took a pass from Mark
Ben
'
nett and knocked a left
footei; past goalkeeper Carlos
D
.
eBrito and irito the left comer
of the net.
T}Je score remained 1-0 until
the
·
second half when Steve
Jackson gave Rider a 2-0 advan-
tage
in the
5 I
st minute. Marist
.
would get on
·
the board eight
minutes later when Richard Bra-
dley placed
a
header into the top
comer of the goal, beating Rider
goalkeeper ~eith Richardson.
But Wicken would strike again
. at the 73-minut~ mark, giving
the Broncs a 3-1 lead with a shot
into the bottom left comer of the
net. It would be his second of
.
three scores on the afternoon,
.
as he completed the hat trick iri
minute 86 with a header that
beatDeBrito. .
.
Stev,e Murk would add a goal
for the Fo:x.es.
.
Herodes stressed that al-
though ihe final was 4-2, is was
far from a one-sided ballgame
.
"It wasn't that spread out," he
.
said of the score. 'That game
could have gone either way. We
missed three or four opportuni-
ties in the first five minutes of
the
game
and we could have just
put them right out of the game,
but we didn't and that's the busi-
ness."
Loyola was not an easy team
to face next, considering they
had won
8
consecutive MAAC
crowns before last year's loss
to Rider. Just as it had been all
Craig Wicken on Friday, it was
all Colley Bruce against Loyola
on Sunday.
The freshmen goalkeeper
stifled the Foxes en route to the
2-0 shutout. Junior Christof
Lindenmoyer scored the first
Loyola goal at the 16:25 mark,
assisted by Andrew Ogilvie.
After returning from halftime
with a 1-0 lead, the Greyhounds
did not wait long to add to the
cushion. Sophomore Mike
Strombers hit the top right cor-
ner of the net to beat DeBrito.
That would be all the scoring
on the afternoon, as the Red
Foxes missed a couple of key
header goals and were not able
to find the net.
Despite losing a second con-
secutive contest, Herodes
praised his players.
"Our kids don't back down
from anybody," he said. "The
weekend could have gone real
well."
The week was not a total loss,
though, as the Red Foxes de-
feated Sacred Heart last Mon-
day 3-0. It was a makeup game
after the scheduled match was
canceled due to a Sacred Heart
bus accident
After a scoreless first half
Ad
_
am Searle~ put Marist on the
board in minute 49, taking a
Brian Garafola pass anddrilling
it into the left comer.
Brian
Karcz
followed that at the 70-minute
mark with a header that beat
goalkeeper Scott Glibowski .
Thomas Mullowney would
score one minute
·
later on an
open-netter, preserving the 3-0
victory.
The win was DeBrito's third
shutout of the season.
Considering the Foxes began
the season with five consecu-
tive losses, Herodes is happy
with what he saw this year and
said he looks forward to next
season.
"The kids are ready," he said
about turning the program
around. "It's just a matter of
getting some depth. We should
really play hard for these last
games to get the experience for
the kids."
.
.
Marist
will
again
be
in action
next Monday at 2:30 p.m. at
Oneonta
. ;
,
'
l
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.:J.LAllen
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... ·.
0
);~}~~j[~&~f~ti:~;
.
·:· ~siaffWriter
hejv;:mted so badly to
b~
ap~.
.
~9'Y.~?,
·
~~:~<>
did this ~r that,
- :-·'/ . .'.:··::.,·
·
, .. · . qfiti, · ... , .
. ··
.
•:,
>.:
·
_..;~lens~d.:,,:••
'.:.':,::;f/\, •· ..
. There W-e'.s!tuations in life in , ·' /'What I bring to the 't~aiµ'is.-~'. , .
.·. :/ ~en] :J;
Alie~}~
.not;~,e~~
()0.
which· one :door.doses and an- .··. ,-1orof. heart," said
JJ.:
Alleii ..
"7~· •·
: :.
the,
foot~all field or_i~ the_ \Yetght
other one:opens;
,
This is a situ-
will
sell
out for my tean{do·what-. .
:: tC??IU,)'()U i;ruiptobably.see
~~m
·
ation·.seniof(running;back .J.J.:: everittalcesto.win.·:rrn'alse>
a :
:·
in.>Donnelly.:taking·scien,c.e
Allen his•fariiliiarwithwhen is. po\Yerful runner which enables
-
.
dasses)He gets
th~
same
_thrill
footbalfc~frr\vas put on hold . : :ni~.to
'
get into the end
zoµe..?\
:
· ·
out 'of sdense. as ~e· ~oes:wh~n
,
during his]i:e~lunah year.
,
)11 Allen's first seasotj:wlih
the·
:
be ~reaks i1taclde.andrumbles
: J.J.All~n'originally signed
to
IledJ<'oxes'he scored
it
team<~
.. 50yardsJor·a.t9.uchd<:>wn.
playfootbal!'.f.or HowardUniver-:· :hi~i;lO touchdowns.:' Ikfin,-.
.
'~J
lov~ biol~gy b~caus_~ yo~ ·
sity.coming;out of Worcester · ishedtheseason with695yai;ds
.· .. ·.are clealmg with ~ealthmgs,·
Academy,N~wiYork. He would
on '161 carries. Out of the
'JQ
:
•.'said AUen: ''Jt~ hard work but
I
red~shii.-t,hisfreshman year at touthdown he scoredi~-1996;.
·. enjoyleamingscience:,lflcan:.
Howard?lJniversity·but. going~ two
,
,
.
of therri ... helped.Marist:. ·
;·. :iiot-1m1kefootbal.lacareer than I
into his spiing semester fresh-
c·oml-from-behind and.win the- ·
wilLwant to go .to: grad1:1ate
man year he would run into fi-
game over rival SL Peter'.s,
)1{
:
sc::hool and pui:st1e something in
ilancial
aid
problems ... As. a re- ' · 1997- Allen would· get-into
'
t11e·
the ·medical field. Graduate
sul.t he would.have tofoave the ·
.
endJ:9ne
10
times again like the
school is justas•competitive as
school aiid •·go•. through th,_e
p,eivious year. He would finish'
football, butthere is less chance
whole reciuitprocess over agairi
the season seventh• in: the .
to playfootball at the next level.
to find aschooL. . .
.
. · .. · lv1AAC. in rushing with.697'
lwill give itagoand try out for
"I
looke(~t a coupk().f. .. y~~s.and third in scoring:\\'ith:
the:NFL during thewinterand
schools bµtJ chose Marist be-
60 points,
.
· · ·
spring.breaks.
I will give it my
cause the cla,sses seemed ...
·
l'res~ritlyin his senior year at'
· best effort the Monday dght
smaller and :_the atmosphere ·· Marist, Allen is having his best
after the season ends. I will be
seemed frienqly/' said Allen. "It · s~a,s·onJor the Red Foxes;.
Cur,,·
in
the weight, room getting ready
also had a great biology program
r~ntl}' he has nine tou(?h_dcjwrir
for the league."
which lwasJgoking Jor in a
an.d
916 1'.llshing yards ori"}93 ·
What J.J. Allen wants people
school besidefootball," he said.
carries.
. . · . ·
.
· to know is that he is a down to
So the
fall
~f 1995, J.J. Allen
On
OctoberJ7, 1998 Marist.
earth guy. He considers him-
was taking ~lasses at Marist but
.
·would ,play ~he ·l911.t
·
aaels-it
self an everyday "Joe" and has
woul.d ha.ve .. to.·· sit .out the.year.·.
w.ould.·
.
b.ea.spe· .cial. dayfo.r
..
AI.·
..
I.e
.. n .. ·.:: ; ,_.. _-:
· .. .-:,_,:,.•.·
.
· ..
,i, ,. :
.
•·'
. . . ·.,: ..... :': .. ·.
·
,:
:',,---Circlephoto/JocScono·
no. probl.em.t.alking
t.o
an.ybo .. dy.
'Allentakes_a 11aridofUrom.Tramagljni du~ng .his monster game
because. of
N'GM
transferring
I-le_ h,ad
~
cweer. day.i11,111shing
against lonai Allen
ran
for
247
yards and three TD's in'the game.
He said people might think he
rules: While$eteam was prac~
yards'witli247. 'He also found
.
·· ·
.
·.
··
·
·
.
.
. < , . ,,. _ ... ·.·· .•. · ... •..
has a .big ego bec:au~e he is on
tic.1.ng.· fi
...
<>r ...
·u.
P..-
...
c
....
o.' ..
·
nu
..
·.·.ng
OPP.
on.erits
.
.
. · ...•.. the:efici"k6ri;tfu~etimesoh
the
·
·.the
R~d
'i:.~xiJ;;J~d
Allen.
,i'i
l<?t q_f.prac,:ti·c·. e ,th.a('o/.·,t'!e
..
Ic
phi~J
.. · ... ihefo~.
tb··.·al
... 1
team..
buf
that'is
not-
---..
. during tlie:~eascm,Al!en
,
would . ' d~twWr(outhddw~ runs
of
3
8, .
real.I
y
diet'
ri~iidiow
ff
I w
·
~'go- ..
\V~S -~()~.::
Th~,t~~~.
pie~•
.111~. ..
lus ~ersoriality ..
. do his schoolwork and_ work.:
10, an,W~ryards,, ,
·
,/
.
:. : ~,.
.
ing
fopiayi~
the
game
15efause. up'and'everythirlg el~e, fel}into . ·, AUen's stay. at Marist has·
out own his9~'.: He -would pie~ : .•..
·
.. ,
.'.~Tiut~
,»7as, !h,e IllO~tyitJ:g~). . someone, dqse>tcfme passed
place. thaFweekend :against been meinorawi
both
on and off
pare himseµ for spring practic~: ·h
,
aye )fad "si.i;ic
.
ebeing
a
part
cf.
ii
way on 1'h_u~5:day;
_I
missed a: Iona,,, '.
:
'
,
,
.> '.· · ..
•
· . . . . . ;
the field; He would like t,o thank
•
.
·
· :\Yhenaskedhqy.,hewouldlike_ players, coaches and teaches
u
t
R· d" ·
v
·
-
·
·
11 -
t '
•
11
~a-
--
11
to.be remembered on the field .. ·.that he has been: able to associ- .
... , oll
e ' .
.I'
oxes.-..
wl
s
I
',\IJ
.
byhiscoa
.
~hesandyeers,All~~· ate with during·his :stay at
•
•
•
0
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
• • • •
•
-
said he would like to be reinemc:. · Mari st. .
sh:Oct of
~ c
c~aJllpiOllSilip
·
~~ilit~il>it~tn~~t.
tof:J:.';,~~:ir:n:::.,::~
. ,·• .
.
:." '·-'
. . .
.
. :,,·,:::.
_
, , ': . :: "'.:''f;/
'.
,.
:
.•
., .
pe()p~e t?sa.y/y~u,Sh()llldN.1ve
•
\\'.h<ttey~i h.app~ns lie is ready
, byTij·O·
' · . M A S ·
·
.. ·•.
RY.
..
:AN
· ..
down·
·
_' pass
·.
fr~·;,.:.-./fony'
aglrir{ rehlrned-'fodt Duqu~sne . b~en-~t-¥~~t~nd
S~\V
tbe·-w~y ',t():~e it;head on ,~d o~er_the
. )Spofts:Editor .·
.,
·
·
Ziifunerman toGeritld
Fos~i:{: ,
.-
Jgu~hdown, thi~ tiJni:tJy;Keyin
'
tfii.s, ki4·~1ayed
·
· } always h~~: . top~JustJik~.o.ne ofbis.tnps mto
.... , .:':\c.
:/):J:Allen.gofMarisr~njij~,-iThompsoh;_M#ist.woidd'again' co~c~es talk about ex-Mai;ist
the end zone.
Apairoflo~ses;oneofwhich ... b(>ard.with
'..
l-yard·tou9fi.qo~.·.
·
get·on,'thebo#dj)~fore,'the'fi-'.
M
' .
t - •
allbtit ~li~pat~d Iv!aristfroni:. ,run~ofhis own;thefirs_(9fthr~:: .•. •n
'
al gtin s6ui1d~di}~
'
Trajtlglirtl.
.
. _- _
j
£l
n . s~.
·
..
Li
a·.'
·
n Is
therace'fQr,th~MetroAtlantic
.
jouchdowris ·onthe d~yffqr:\:hit
:
tight e11d.l<e\'.i,v·Br~wef·on···
""'
L,
AthleticJP.Qttfe,rence champion.: .•.
N!~n;_
to cut
the
le~d.to),3~7Jtt.·. i2:.yard pass "'.ifh
'fl:
seconds
ship,niage;efor-aless than en:.c:
,th~bitlf,
_AIIe.nvvouldgctont<>,
.·
,: -~IUainipg ..... · •.
-;
·<
:
..
. /~
;O,:,·,_;., .• : ·· ..
t ·
:
: ·.
> ;' ' . . , ; . ,
.
b. d'
~~~~~~r~¥.5f~r
th
~~ed'~~~~
-
~:·~~!i1:!f~f
1
~
1
·.~~:~~~~~h~~it~~~~~~~~-
·
:·.
-ea.m
ea~IIS .
I
t-~-~t•~t■ ~Nl·c··~~A~~
II}a:ulirigpftll~_lo~~9ael~.,'flle;,
.
in:5i~~e.the'Iellqto•l~:'6,?TIJ
,
e>-MA~ptitlean?/"'hpse:gajries. -. ·().:,\ · · .;
e/-
;c. ·:. ·
·
·. ' ~ ,
-
• ·
s ..
loss. to ·Dt1que,s~e g~ve the R,ed . D,ulq~s -went fortwo to !}1ake11.p, . do .not cou_Ilt}n,
)he.C::fvlJ\J\C
·
·
·
·
Foxe:S
tv,oJq~$~
in
·
conf~ren~.e: f<>f~~ii;earlie.r
{ail~
e~tril
j;aj~t_
stand,ings,, . puLup,· JittJe Jight, ·
by
PETER.M.()
_
38 fo>ints, and M:anbattan -took
play, whjc:hJD~an~ tliat-if .eitp.er
f
att.etnpt, but.c_ould
.
not c<>Iiy~It".:, · aglliiist_Mar:ist: :; ,. .
> .... · .. • .
StaffWritef i·
.
.
3rdwith-32 points)· :
GeorgefoWD;qf:Fairfield \\'Ills all so/the.lead rerilained .it)3
i
Allen. ag~itj~r~n;'f9r tqi:ee:
· ..... , :
·
, ,,
, .
.
:o-, ·
The scores however, really do
oftheir:;
.
feµiaityng confore:11ce
, .
• -points. . . ; .
.
.... '"
.:> ,,
.
:
touch.<f:C>\VIlS, _\Vhi!~·Juiinmg up
The ~ourtis qui¢tnow· at the . not.give a fair assessinentof
·games they)villfi.ni~h with only.
J\llen then: came right b.ick for: a grand tqtal of247'-yarcl~ 'rush-
Dutc:he:SS Racqu~tClub .
.
.... •.:·
·
.. ·
_
w~at a-dose .and .competitive
one.loss
in
MMC play. . .
Mari st,,· scoring his seconcI.. ing on
oiily22cames,
easily his.
· .. · .For. the; pas(inonths, .·(he . tou111anjent this year,'s MAAC
The game ~gainst the Dukes
t<iucP:dovvn of the
day
oh
iron; .·
best gatne as
a Roo
foi
' ,
courn. were
'
hoine. to not only . really was. :In fact, Marist actu-
that
coul4
h~ve propelled Marist . frgin four yards away, . That is .
Also ·enjoying hjs finest g~e the Maristtenrus)eam; but also·. ally lost three .of six singles
( 4-3, 3.:2):tothe·conference title • when things fell apait for the · ~t. Marist wasjuriior tailback
a dream. Well that dream is now
matches,• and· two of. theses
ended
up
being· quarterback Bill . Red.Foxes. . .
·.
. .
. ·.
.
.
Dave Spfoato .. Spinato ran for
a reality. For only the third time
matches went to three sets.
Tramaglini's ~orst game to date.
At the start the fourth quarter. 100
·
yards on .11
·
carries and
in our school~s history, a Marist
. Before the start.of the touma-
The senior- who had played so . Zimmerman .connected. \Vith
·
added a touchdown
of
his own; .
team will beat theNCAAcham-
inent,
coach
Tllll
Smith had a few
consistently for the Red Foxes · Fosterfor·the second tiine in the · All totaled the Red Foxes ran 51
pionships. .
words to say to the team on the
in their first four games, threw
game, this .time on . a. 25~yai:d · times on the. day for ·a stagger-
In
an
impressing and dramatic
importance of the final matches.
six interceptions, two of which
touchdown pass. - Again the
ing 456 yards..
.
.
manner, the Red Foxes captured
''We've dug a good founda-
wcre r~turned for Duquesne
kick failed, so the Dukes lead
· Bill Tramaglini and Joe
the MAAC championship, thus
tion," Smith said. ''We did an
touchdowns.
was 25-14. On Marist's next
Calabria also had fine after-
giving them a bid to the NCAA
excellent job framing the house
Despite'rushing for 210 yards
possession, Tramaglini was
noons, as the pair hooked up
championships this spring.
In
and putting up the walls, floors,
and holdipg the Dukes to just picked off by Duquesne's Andy
on two touchdown· passes, the
a tournament that featured such
and ceilings. However, without
85 yards on the ground, the Red
Defazio, who returned the inter-
first from 37 yards away and the
teams as Manhattan, Rider,
a roof (the MAAC champion-
Foxes never led in the game.
ception 45 yards for a touch-
second coming form 29 yards
Canisius, Iona, Siena, and rival
ship)
it
was going to
be
a long
The Dukes jumped out quickly
down.
out.
Fairfield, Marist rose above all
and cold winter."
inthefirstquartertoa 13-0noth-
After Allen's final TD run cut
the rest to capture the title with
The pivotal point for Marist
ing lead on I-yard run by Andre
the lead to 32-20, Tramaglini
...
please see FOOTBALL,
pg.
a combined total of 46 points.
Hatcher and a· 43-yard touch-
was again picked off, and it was
14 ·
(2nd place went to Fairfield with
...
please see TENNIS,
pg. 14
52.5.1
52.5.2
52.5.3
52.5.4
52.5.5
52.5.6
52.5.7
52.5.8
52.5.9
52.5.10
52.5.11
52.5.12
52.5.13
52.5.14
52.5.15
52.5.16