The Circle, November 5, 1998.pdf
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 52 No. 6 - November 5, 1998
content
-VOLlJME.#52
ISSUE#
6
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area; and hopefullyMariststu-
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said
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Manstis not
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Currently
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there is other co~-
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undergoing major construction.
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stmcti()ii in progress,
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not related_ to the Galleria' s
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Wa:tehotise
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J;Ieath~~}?~l_d~er, s~d~n,t go~-
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people from. other
.
sch<?ols."
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is setting upin
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the
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College-Mall
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~girnen~
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Ou~dner~atd this y~l9ey are
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25 years
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Accordmg tc:> owner
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Acad
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em1c Co~nctl sway
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en-
Golettt
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Theater.
_
.
·
Stev~ Ferber, thisjs not'a typi-
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·.
hance academic endeavours on
cal
mall..:music store.
.
-
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_
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- -
,
-
campus," she said
;
_
.
.
. ..
..
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-
-
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·
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·
"Our
business is t(? buy,
s~ll
'
Rhino'
R~~ords
:
b~ys,
seU~
-
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a~d
t~ad~~
-
~ev/:a~lc=ocCD~
.
SGK and
.
college a~tivities
llll-S,Tr
ID
-
E,
and
-
trade,'' FeH,er said .
.
''We
and reco'rds. Their new store 9p~ned
in
the
.
College
Mall.
.
C()sponse>red
.
the ~ou
.
mament.
l l
11 -~
Jl
have a huge variety of
both
new
The game is in a format similar
and usetl'music."
.
about helpingpeoplefind new
·
"We may nothaveevecything,
to Jeopardy! with questions
Through buying and trading,
music.
-
. .
.
_
.
buf
.
w~•re really good on spe~
being asked by a moderator.
he
said,
Rhino is
,-
able to get
.'~We
want to
-
help expose
cial
orders,''Ferbersaid. "Ifwe
Six
.
team.s participat~
-
i~ the
sligqtly used music and selLit people
to
as many
types
of mu-
don't have it, we can get it pretty
!?umam~nt often_referred ~o
~
cheaper.
-
It helps to add to the
sic as possible," she said.
quickly."
the varsity sport of the nund.
variety of the music available
She also said that even
Inside, customers can find
Two faculty teams and four
and open up new
-
options to
though the ~tore is not a huge
many different selections. All
student teams rushed to beat
customers.
·
media outlet, the selection is
·still
genres of music are represented
the buzzers when asked various
Lisa Ferruggia, general man-
top-rate.
_
They concentrate along with a "Rhino Recom
acade!IDc questions.
.
·
ager of the new store, said buy-
mainly in CD and vinyl recor~
Seru?r C~arles Leone sat~ ~e
ing and trading music is all
sales.
·
···
please see
RHINO,
pg.4
and his fnends have part1c1-
TODAY:
.
Cloudy
bi:45°
lo:32°
Co~unity .............. ; .. 2
Features
.............. ~.:
....
·
s
A&
·
E ....................... 11
Opinion .......................
9
Sports .. : ......................
16
.I
Student Government
In an ef-(ort to promote alco-
hol awareness, the Student
Government Association will be
sponsoring a-series of work-
shops in November. The work..,
shops will deal with a variety of
alcohol related issues.
The workshops will be held:
*Tuesday, Nov. 10 at 7 p.m. in
thePAR
*Tuesday, Nov. 17 at 7:30 p.m.
in SC 348 & 348A
*Tuesday, Nov. 24 at 7 p.m. in
the PAR
On Nov. 10 Igor Lckmus, a
Deputy with the Dutchess
County Sheriff's Department,
will be presenting information on
the criminal ramifications of al-
cohol abuse.
On Nov. 17 Dr. Mario
Malvarossa, addictionologist,
will
speak about the medical
consequences of alcohol abuse.
On Nov. 24 Judge Ronald
McGaw, from the Poughkeepsie
City Court, will be speaking
about the legal aspects of alco-
hol related crime.
Literary Arts Society
The Literary
Arts
Society is
npo/ 11ccepting. subm.issions for
their literary magazine, The
Mosaic. If you have any prose,
poetry, short stories, artwork, or
photographs that ypu wish to
submit please put them
in the
t.AS club mailbox in SC 369.
Submissions will also be ac-
cepted by any club member,·
.· If you have· any questions;
PAGE2
. Security B.riefs' -
---C-o-mp-ile_d;_,by-S-co-tt. N....;.e-ville
A Marian Hall resident's car
was vandalized in the Sheahan
Parking Lot
sometime between Oct. 22 an·d
27. The extensive damage in-
cluded dented door panels and
hood, and a bent antenna. Se-
curity
contacted .
the
Poughkeepsie Polic~ Depart-
ment and opened an investiga-
tion.
A friendly game of "Capture
the Flag" turned ugly last Sat-
urday when
a
student lacerated
his kne~ on the capstone of a
wall near Leo H;ill. The
Champagnat resident was
rushed to the hospital by am-
bulance around 8:30 p.m.
A 56-year-old white male was
found sleeping at the base of a
fence bordering Marist and
Delafield Street last Thursday.
The man was found
in
a c"irrd-
board box by a group of male
students who conversed with
him for afew moments. ,The po-
lice were later notified and the·
man was advised to leave
around 7:30 that morning
vandalism. The first flooding · .
occurred at 3:50 a.m. Halloween
night When a RA heard rushing
water and walked
into the bathroom to find an in-
toxicated guest holding the bro-
ken faucet. A security guard ar-
rived shortly after and shut off
the water. The water flooded the
bathroom floor and caused··
some damage in two rooms, as · -
well as some minor ceiling dam-
·
age on the 7th floor. The faucet · ·
repair job did not last long, since.
.another report of flooding was
calledinSundayat4:50a.m. The .
"second wave" caused more
FRIDAY:
cloudy
cloudy
hi:
44°'.
hi:
46°
hi:
46°
lo:
34°
lo:
31°
lo:
30"
Source: http://www.weather.com. (The Weather· Channel)
minor water damage. An. 8th
E'-'~
'·
r
1· h
.
floor resident was found at the
1.1.ects
O · 1g
t
and c,olor on health
scene and said that he was: ·
washing his hands when the
faucet came off.
Unison Arts and Leaming
been in practice specializing in
Center is offering a workshop -visual therapy since 1980. •-
with Dr. Marc Grossman, O.D.,
Grossman holds degrees in op-
Two students had windshield
entitled
"'The
Effects of Light
tometry, biology, physical edu-
wipers stolen from their vehicles
and Color on Health" on Mon-
cation and learning disabilities.
Sunday in the Lowell Thomas
day,Nov.9froni7:30to9:30p,m.
He is the State Director of the
parking lot. The cars' drivers -
Lightand color are an impor-
·optometric Extension Program
received tickets earlier in the
tant part of-each individual's
a·nd has Iectt1red exterisively
evening, when the windshield
everyday life>This· workshop
throughout tl11{U:S. . _ .
_ wipers were still in place.
will.explore both the physiologi-
The cost is $10 for member !ind
.. _
.. _
cal and psychological effects of $12 for non.;m~mbers. For in-
-
. A.
resident· reported the fog
Hght and color. The difference . fonnati~n call· Unison at 255-
lights to his Honda Civicstolen ·. between artificial versus nai.u-
15,59. Unison is a not-for-profit
Alcohol was confiscated in
Monday,
The
car was parked in
raUull spectrum .lighting will
multi-arts center located at 68
Leo Ha~l last Wednesday. Four . the UpperJ{oop parkihg·Jot
also_be discussed.. .
Mountain Rest Road in New
residents were found with ~ree .. w,heri the robbery occurred ..
_
Dr. Marc Grossi:nan,
Q.D.,
has
Paltz ..
full cans of beer.
·
-
.
.
,
.
The.~efMrity .Offii::~. received
a call for assistance on the .4th
flo6r of Champagnat last Thurs:
day around 1_2:52
a.in;
A
Champagna( res}dent was
.
-
•
·
_
. _ .
· .
_
·
_ ·,
found ~appegfo~airofhand~ .
Should Manst
open
up-the camp· us to the_
cuffs without a key. The student • •
_
_ _
_ _
.
. _ · _
, · ·
· ·
. . . _ · · .
·
was talcento.the Pollghkeepsiecomm·um·
·ty·by
~eno· vatin• g ·the· w·ate' ~~ont?
police station, where the hand-
·
_ . -.•.
.._,
·· ·
·
: .
.
-
rl.I.} ..
• ·
cuffs were unlocked;
·
·
· ·
~~e:e:~~~~l:k~:~~~
2
3J[
4052
, .•. •. ,Two st6len identification
Ail submissions
will
be re- - cardswere reported ai:4:00 p.m.
turned with r_ equest_ .. · .
· 1ast Thurs4ay by
tw6
football
players: The -students' ac-
Kappa Lambda Psi' -
The
Kappa Lambda ~si soror~ .
.
.
ity_
will
be spo11s9rjng a _bl~od
drive.on Thursday;Noy;_ 12.
It
will take place in the ~tudent
Center, in the PAR room from
11 :30 a:m; .until Sp.in. ,
.
Sign-ups
will be.taking place
over the next three weeks in·
Dyson, the Breezeway and in
front of the cafeteria. Walk-in' s
on the day of the event are more
than welcome.
Donating blood can save lives_
and we would appreciate your
support wi~ this cause.
Rlrilla
-
Jamaica.
Ballamas
=.sia
- ·
·:1-101M20-m1
cpunts· .w~re fr:ozen, 'l:>utonly
after-$86.8Lwasdeaned out
of
cineaccount:apd
$111:
70 out of
the other. The. Poughkeepsie
police ,have b~eri brpught
in
_to
investigate• the· theft..
A
fire alarm was set off in
Gartl~d
''G''
block· at;l p.m.fasl
Friday. No damage w,as reported,
but the resident was advised
fo
dean out the oven'~_dryp pan. -
-
.
Champagnat's 8thfloormen's
. bathroom was underwater twice
over the weekend due to faucet ·
ITING UNDER CONSTRUCTION
me
to the
MARIST WRITING CENTE
ocated Just
Past
The
Post
Office In
ampagnat Lo..-er Le\'el
"Yes, because the --
waterfront
is
too
beduiifitl_to
be
wasted.
11
Bassel. Nelson
junior
~'No/because
it
· w9itld
qlliiw too
manf
r4ndoni
people
.on
campus.
11
Korin Daniels
junior
"Yes, because-it can_
be
uiecf,
towards
. more rev_·enue for
the
colli!ge .. "
John Carollo
senior
GOOD WEEKLYINCOME
processing mail for national company! Free supplies,
postage! No selling! Bonuses!
Start Immediately, Genuine Opportunity!
Please rush long self-addressed stamped envelope to:
. MPC,. Suite 391
2045 Mt. Zion Rd.
Morrow, GA , 30260
...
·
..
.
.
·
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-
PAGE3
-
HARD AT
·
WORK
_
.
.
·
Access
·
overlooked
in
:
·
waterfront renovations
by
TOM
.
SCHWAB
Staff Writer
.
Marist may have spent more
than $1 million to renovate the
campus waterfront, but one
thing seems to be missing - a
way in.
Although there is a tunnel that
allows automobile access to the
waterfront, there is no adequate
pedestrian walkway either
through the tunnel or from any
other point on campus.
According to Susan Roeller
Brown, executive assistant to
We in no way want
to encourage any
type of foot traffic
across those tracks
because it's very
dangerous.
Susan Roeller Brown
executive assistant to the
president
the president, Marist is limited
campus are using that path ....
in what it can do with the tun-
They should either improve it
nel.
with the money they're getting
"We don't own the tunnel,"
or put a barrier along the prop-
she said. "ConRaiJ does, but we
erty so no one can use it."
have put in a request for a sig-
Brown
said
the administration
nal light which would prevent
has tried
.
to put up barriers in
anyone from being hit by on-
the past but they have been
coming traffic."
taken down. However, she said
·
But some
·students
have found
Marist is applying for additional
a more convenient way to g?in
grants that may cover the cost
access.
for new barriers.
It is a clearing through a mas-
"We have requested, in a sec-
sive web of bushes and trees,
ond round of grant applica-
followed by a rocky slope, then
tions, funds to fence the sides
over some train tracks to an-
of the railroad tracks and to re-
. _
other hili and then down to the
establish some habitation of
waterfront. The clearing is lo-
plants and trees that would
cated behind the Mid-Rise resi-
grow and mask both the visual
dence hall.
sight of the tracks arid act as a
Other students like Junior Sara
natural barrier," Brown said.
Bergeron think this path is un-
Bergeron said she
.
did not
.
.
.
.
.
Circle photo/Jeremy Smith
safe because of the train tracks
think barriers will. work.
_
~~Cl~~E:~~
.
?~:.!~e new
_
lib~a_'!' ~s
-
~-Cl_ving along on schedule.
and lack oflighting.
''They' re building
a
huge pier
"1Aiali9r~mm
~iI)iiidS
north
;
St~:~E::~E1~rfa~1::i~
·
.
~1:~~~~-~~~-1::;~~!f
!f
/
byjANiNESZAL
.
·
_·
StaJfWriter
,.
,
:•
;
,.
·
·
north of the
Bank
of New York,"
···
-~'There
_
are signs that warn
put up barriers because it's just
he
,
s"aid: .
_.
.
·
...
pedestrians not to cross over
like Route 9. No matter how hard
"Its. sylvan setting will be called
the tracks because it's more of
they try to block different areas,
"C
)iarist
is
.
taidng-ari fnJentory
:
.
~:~!i~:t~s~~:~,
~e
-
~aine of :.:::i::~h~::a~J_zar~ for the
~~n~f
;~: :~c~~~\~J, ~nyself, will
ofi!5 foiiage
:
..
,·
·
·
.
Cas~ysaid he has learned that
·
She said she thinks since
Some students have ap-
·
-.
In ~9
.
8?
;
a
_
discu
_
ssio~
_
be~een _ the owner of the property at the
Marist plans on enhancing
.
the
proached the Student Govern-
·.
•
Wil~~~
-
-p~?"otte,.assist;mt
pro-
·
tulll
of
the century was Frederic
waterfront, which will encour-
ment Association (SGA) about
.
,fes
.
~gr
:
of b~9l9gy and
:
Tho_mas
.
Newbold, founder of the Horti-
·
age more student participation,
putting up a pedestrian bridge
:
q~s~y
iA
~sistant profes
,
sor
°-f.
.
:·
culti.Iral Society of New York.
the college should pave or im-
over the tracks. McCulloch said
-
:.
P~~?~9P
,
?Y,_resul~e~i~
_
the
de'"
\"
.
:
•:J\side from adding 800
.
feet
prove the walkway down
to
the
she is pursuing the idea and
•
.
~is1on to turnthe Mapst
·
cam;.
-,
to the
·
Hu:dson River waterfront tracks.
plans to present it to the admin-
.
-
~l!finto
·
~ Ar~oretujii
r
i
<
_
pf our camp~s, the
·
new prop-
·
She said the college should
istration within the next few
C~~~y
:
sa.i~
,
tlt~s I'fOJ~ft mea~t
~-
erty contributes measurably tQ
think about building an over-
weeks.
_.
the
_
;~_yolv_ell!ent <?f°s~de~ts
m_
·
ol_i
_
r
.
~bo_retuµi
.
holdings," he
pass rather than update the tun-
"People will use the shortest
·
V<Y:to
,
u~J>iology a11d envuon-
0
said
.
"Richard Feldman of the
nel already there.
and quickest possible route,"
m~ntal classes ~n_g an i~ven-
.
.
bjology department is
.
already
"I think they should build a
McCulloch said.
"Is
Marist will-
-:
tory
.
of tlie ,van9us species of·
·
surveyipg the trees and plants
structure to get over the tracks
ing to wait until someone gets
pJants already on the caniplis as, with the assistance of his biol-
because very few students are
hurt? I agree with students that
well as new plantings.
·
·
·
·
ogy
students.;'
'
going to take the time to walk
some sort of bridge should be
"This
.
student involvement
Casey said the Arboretum is
under the railroad bridge that
·
built, and we plan to ask them
.
was greatly
·
assisted by
·
Ralph
like making a family history, it exists next to the water treatment
about this
."
~h<>rt,
_
the head __ of the grounds
will never be completed
plant," said Bergeron.
Brown said she would be in-
staff, as well as Presid_ent
"I would like it to get to the
Brown, however, said the col-
terested to hear what SGA has
Murray," he said.
.
point
·
where e
_
very student at
lege cannot do anything to that
to say, but emphasized that
Casey said he was delighted
Marist could have their own
property.
·
ConRail owns the property and
·
todiscover
_
ttiatthec~pus was
·
tree,'; he said.
"It
would give
"We have absolutely no legal
Marist would end up having to
already populated with a con:-
students
·a
wonderful identity
right to pave the trail since it's
pay the entire bill, which would
siderab]e variety of trees that
with the campus."
owned
PY
the ra_ilroad, and we
be in excess of$ I million dollars
includes pines, oaks, beaches,
He said the Arboretum project
in no way want to encourage
due to the American Disability
walnuts, magnolias, ginkgos,
is almost free of cost because it any type of foot traffic across
Act (ADA).
maples, hemlocks and tulips.
is the result of the work of vol-
those track~ because it's very
The act requires that the struc-
"My coJleagues and I pro-
unteer and interested parties.
dangerous," she Brown.
ture
be
handicapped accessible.
ceeded to identify and tag the
'We already paid for the prop-
The college decided last year
C
''If
there was an easy way, we
trees for public edification,"
erty,"
·
casey said. "We just to apply for grants to refurbish
would have certainly preferred
.
Casey said. "This had been
have to identify and tag the ex-
six acres of the riverfront area,
to make an attractive alternative
going on over a period of 10 to
isting plantings."
but Student Body President,
instead of having to walk toward
12 years."
.
Senior Meredith Halstead, a
Colleen McCulloch, said she
the tunnel," Brown said
.
"But
Casey said new plantings in
biology and environmental sci-
wants to know why none of this
there are so many factors work-
the past ten years have in-
ence major, said she thought money has not gone towards
ing against that,. including the
eluded a rare Tortuou~ Beach,
putting tags on the trees at Fem
making the underdeveloped
immense cost of ADA require-
CutleafMaples, oaks, and most Tor is a good idea.
pathway safe or preventing stu-
ments, such as elevators on ei-
recently, the relocation ofa large
"Ifl was walking;,!' d stop and
dents from using it.
ther end of the bridge."
Weeping Hemlock to the look at the trees," she said.
If
I
"Nobody really understands
Brown said there was a foot
McCann Center.
saw a tree I was not familiar
that people use that path,"
bridge over the tracks about 20
"Last December, Marist ac-
with, I would stop and look at McCulloch said. "Students and
years ago, but Murray had it
quired 15 acres of property
the tag."
evencrewmemberscomingfrom
taken down because he did not
Mid-Rise and the South End of think students were using it
ill
f
r
I .
Social Security
aids youths .
Should-the subject of Social
Security arise, most young
people. would· say that they do
not believe the program wiUbe
there for· them when they need
it in the future.
·
However, the sad truth is th_at
for many younger Americans,
the need for Social Security
could occur sooner than· they_
think.
Early death_ and disability
seem like a remote possibility
when people are young and
healthy. But consider this sober-
ing fact: one-third of all twenty-
year-olds will die or become dis-
abled before they reach their
65th birthday; Consequently, for
millions of young people, Social
Security is there today provid-
ing valuable grotection.
What significance does this
have for students on America's
- campuses? Without Social Se-
against such eventualities for
young workers and their fami-,
, lies. Shorter work histories, high
medical expenses, lack of em-
ployer provided insurance cov-
. erage, low· salaries, even poor·
planning~these and other rea-
sons inean that many young
workers and their families have
little insurance of."extra" re-
sources to help out if their earn-
ings stop abruptly. Socfai Secu-
rity can be a critical lifeline:_
Here are some little known, but
important, facts about Sodal
Security and young workers and.
their families:
-Social Security provides sur-
vivors insurance for a young,
average worker with.a family
that is equivalent to a personal
life insurance policy worth
about $300,000. Average ben-
efits for a widowed mother or
father with two young children
are currently about $1,500.per
month.
curity, many middle-aged par-
-For a disabled worker with a
ents of today's college students
spouse and two yo1:1ng children,
would feel an obligation to help
the average Socfal Security dis-
provide for their own aging par-
ability payment is now about
ents and there would be fewer
$1,200 per month. The value of
family resources to usefor their_.. the Social. Security
.
PW~~\fon,
ch!]dren)
equcational ·
c;fx-:.; :
including financfal·:piotectfon
penses; -
afterreachifig retiiement1ge, for
It is true that Social Security · a young average earner with a
is facing long-term financing
family is equal to a)qng:-term
challenges in the next century._ disability· policy worth about
based on demographic trends, -
$200,000.
·
pat;ticularly the fact _that people
.
_
.
are living longer, healthier lives.
-Benefits· are based· on pro-
Of course, this longerJife span
gies_sive formulas that take into
is good news for everyone, But,
account the fewer work years
we must recognize that chang-
and lower earning of younger
ing deillographics win_ put.a
workers. _This meansthat, even
strain on America's retirement
though
a
worker may not have
program.
_ _ .
a fulUifetime's earnings, the
We must dispel this notion· workei-anclhisorherfan:iilystill
that Social Security will not be
have significant insurance pro-
there in the future.
tection in case of death or dis-_
It wiU beJhere.
ability. ' . .
The only question is what
shape the program will take for
the next millennium. But what
wtll happen in the future is only
part of the story. As explained
earlier, for many young p~ople,
the future could be now if pre-
mature death or unexpected dis-
ability occurs.
Social Security can provide· a
buffer of economic _security
-Sodal Security cash benefits,
·
including disabil~ty and survi-
vors' benefits, .are indexed,.to
inflation; -benefitsincrease as
the cost of livingincreases.
~Once a disabled Worker is
entitled to cash benefits for
24
months, he oi- she is e~titled to
-Medicare health insurance cov-
erage.
PAGE4
CAMP.lJS.CANOlbs
Seniors Nadine Simon, Amy Borden and Emily Kucharczyk
(pictured/eh to
ngh~
en-
. joyed the festivities of Halloween this past Saturday.
.
,
Options considered in Route 9 ·crossing situatio))
won't want to walk up the
b~SCOTINEVILLE -
twenty or thirty step!l when
StaffWriter
Sa-1-'.
__ ety_is theprimary
they can just walk across the
':I'
road."
· · ·
·
As th·e demolition crews haul
concern.
Based upon the meetings she
away rubble to make room for
attended, McCulloch said a ·
the Home Depot, Student Af-
crosswalk between the main and
fairs and Student Government
-
Colleen McCulloch
south entrances is an option
have begun exploring options
student body president
being considered.
to funnel people across Route
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
"Safety. is the primary con-
9.
Depot wants a tum lane onto cem," she·said.
"If
we put the
Mari st representatives, · in-
Fulton. They were considering
crosswalk up~ we would need a
eluding Vice President Gerald
a fence from·Fulton down to the
funneling system, like the
Cox and Student Body Presi-
(temporary)
library." . .
shrubs in the middle of Route
dent Colleen McCulloch, have
Cox said the r1eetings with the
9."
_
met: with the Department of· DOT
were
not finalized.
. Cox. said Marist. used to
be
a
Transportation (DOT) · to dis-
"Nothing is· definite. We are
closed campus 30 years ago .. ·
~uss pQsgible.altemativesJo _tlle
waiting on the DO'f·J9:get_~ack
.. '.'Iron_
.. ic~ly;_~ere u_se,d_. tctbe:a
future HomeDepot traffic and
to us'' he said. _ . \., •,.
c
storte
.
wail in the '60s, but the
the students' di~regard for the
M~Culloch said thete.Were
campus·'w~s too· isolated a~d
Route
9
crosswalks.
·
four options to getting across
they took it down," he:said.
· Cox, dean for student affairs,
Route
9, each having its own
A shuttle bus would
'
also be
said the talk around campus of negatives.
_.
impractical,McCull<>fhsaid,be-
fences and extra lanes of traffic
"There are_ four options: an
cause of the time inconvenience.
has some validity,
overpass, an, underpass,. a
·· "Students won;t
wait
to be
"The rumors are basedupon
crosswalkanda'shiittie:bus,"
picked up by the
·
shuttle bus,"
some discussion betwi~n _col-'> shes~d: "Thefirstt\\TOWillnot . she said, ~'Tl:iey:HjusJcC.l!t
lege officers and theDO_T;'' he _ ,be J~as1.ble;jve '~<>n'(ll~ve an
across campus and walk across
said. "On the East side/Holl!e >areato
.
puttlf~rnin.and-~199-ents · · the road.'!,
Have you t1sed the: ·
. _ temporary
l,ibiarf ..
facilities across Route
9.
inBeckj'lace-yet?
I
YES
75
This
is
an
unsdmtlfic sun.·ey taken from 100
Marist szudnu.s.
Vehicle donation
aids
lung ~iation
By donating a used or W()m
out vehicle to the American
· Lung Ass_ociation of Northeast-
ern New York, residents of New
York State may be eligible
to
a
tax deduction toward their Fed-
eral Income
Tax Return.
The vehicle donation program
allows car owners to avoid the
hassles of selling.
The ALA will make arrange-
ments for the quick pick-up of
automobiles at no charge to the
owner. Cars, trucks, sports util-
ity vehicles, motorcycles and
: boats all quality for donation.
· The ~ehicle ca~ be any age
and alm·ost any condition. The
value of the ·automobile is inde-
pendently determined by _val-
ues set in ·the National Automo-
bile Dealers Association book
(the official used
car
guide); The
better the condition of the ve-
hicl~, the bigger your
tax
deduc-
tion may be.·
Proceeds from donated ve-
hicles will benefit the services
and programs of the American
Lung Association. An automo-
bile donation,
will help fund h,mg
disease research, as well as re-
· duce. pollution by helping· to
control vehicle emissions.
Donating an automobile is a
step in working to ensure that
the entire community can
breathe easier. The American
Lung Association of Northeast-
ern New York is
a nonprofit or-
ganization that provides educa-
tional programs, community
service, advocacy and research
for the prevention of lung dis-
. ease and promotion of lung
health. For information and an
auto donation packet, call toll
free
1-800-577-LUNG.
_
s·pring Break_ '~9
Large·st selection
of Spring BreakDesti
.
nations, including Cruises!
Foam Parties, Drink Specials and Club
Admissions.
Group Admissions and free Trips
Availa"fJle
Epicurian Tours 1-800-231-4-FUN
'
.
NOVEMBER 5, 1998
Eeiiiires
PAGES
Students celebrate mole
·
day
byEMILYKUCHARCZVK
Features Editor
secretary of the Society, said the
A mole is a means of measure-
morning was an unusualexperi-
ment in chemistry. It is a fixed
ence for her.
·
. number at 6.02 times 10 to the
Getting up
to
dri~k water at
"It
was extremely early," she
23rd. power. Avogadro pro-
6:02 in the morning meant fun
said. "I didn't think it could be _ posed this hypothesis in 1811.
for some students.
that dark on campus.''
At the ti.me, there was no data
Weil sort of.
Mole day came to Marist after
on the number of particles in a
A group of students rnse early
Dr. Matthew Poslusny, associ-
mole.
to celebrate national mole day
ate chemistry professor and
To put the concept in perspec-
·on Oct. 23_.. l)le event was spon-
chair of the chemistry .depart- · tive, Dr. Richard LaPietra, pro-
s?red at Maris(by the student
ment, read about itin Chemical
fessorofchemistry, compares it
affiliate of the American Chemi~
Engineering News. ·, Poslusny
to living in a world full of peas.
cal Society.
mentioned the article to on~ of
"Imagine if the whole world
The day honors Amadeo _ his'classes and he said every:-
was covered in peas chest
Avogadro's, an Italian scientist,
one agreed it would be a fun
high," he said.
"It
would take
number, 6.02
times
10 to the 23rd
time. So, in 1995 the first annual
25 worlds like that'so the num-
power. Participants in the event
mole day was established at
ber of peas would roughly be
meet in the chemistry lab and
fl~
Marist •,
.
.
Avogadro's number."
exactly 6:02 a.m.,
drink
one mole
Hecht said the event offers a
LaPietra said he looks forward
of water, which is about 18
bonding experience for stu-
to mole day each year. He said
grams. Afterwards, serious and
dents and professors.
.
he likes the way the day brings
silly, speeches are presented
"It
gives a chance for a lot of students and faculty together.
and then all go to the Palace
science students to interact
Matthew Loewenthal, senior
Diner for breakfast. .
with professors outside of class
chemistry major, said events like
The early rriqrning time was
on a more_ social basis and
m9le day let students explore
haidforsome, according to se-
maybe give them a greater un-
their major more.
nior and president of the Soci-
derstanding of the mole," he
"Being part of a specific major
ety, Simon Hecht. · ·
said.
.
· or discipline doesn't just mean
"Personally I'd liked to see ir
Seaburg said the day makes
you go to class, do your work,
done at 6:02 in the evt,ning," he
concepts more real.
and take a test," he said. "But
said laughing, "Butseeing that
"It
makes you think of quanti-
you should also actually partici-
it's only once a year, I guess we
ties on how big a thing actually
pate in things outside of class
can suffer."' . -
is, especially in.chemistry since
and get a better feeling of the
Priscilla Seaburg, junior and
everything is so_s_maU," she said.
class on a more personal leveL"
:
•.
,,'.'.
· . ~.·:_;
!)':.•·
>:, :.
,:
'
Y l
Oifiljiffi9g .
bard
work
andservice
.-
•. 71.SlOD
by
RICHSHUTKIN
Staff Writer
Marist College has many
places where students consis-
tently involve themselves ..
The campus chapel is one of
those places.
The chapel sits atop the hill
where the library used to be.
Circular in shape, it is hard to
miss
with
its cross sticking up
into the sky. The chapel's con-
struction took place from 1950
to 1954. It was built by the
Marist Brothers, witho1:1t any
outside physical assistance;
The ·Marist Brothers were
solely responsible for. the c~-
menting, digging and place~ent
of the electrical outlets. They
also substituted bricks with
multicolored patties of cement
to build the chapel.
Parents ofMarist College stu-
dents supplied much of the
funding. They financed many
of the statues and the altar.
Eli justin, a blind Marist
Brother, however, contributed
most of the .funding for the
project. He took responsibility
.
Circle file photo
Built in
19.54,
the chapel is a place of meditation for many.
for
funding· the majority of the
construction.
· When the cliapel was nearly
completed in 1953, the Cardinal
proclaimed it "the church of the
future."
·
Brother Paul Ambrose, the el-
dest of the Marist Brothers, said
he has pleasant memories of his
efforts and involvyment with
the chapel.
"Because we [the Marist
Brothers] built the chapel' by
ourselves," he said, "we. take
great pride in the chapel. - The
people who know what we went
through appreciate it a great
deal."
-
Ambrose also said his most
vivid memories involve the in-
spiring moments he spent with
Justin.
''The man's blindness did not
stop him from actively particJ-
pating in the construction of the
chapel," he said. "I will always
remember him for it"
Ambrose said he gets an over-
all pleasure from being involved
with the chapel.
"It was a great experience
be-
cause we built it ourselves," he
said. "We have also always
gotten along with everybody."
The chapel also exists as a
place of enjoyment and medita-
tion for many Marist College
students.
Sergio Alves, sophomore,
said he enjoys the chapel's ser-
vices.
''The services are well-suited
for students," he said. "The
services there are not as tradi-
tional as other Catholic ser-
vices."
Alves said he likes the
chapel's size.
·''The
chapel is nice and small,''
he said. "You can always get
good seats and easily see the
priest."
Dan
Will,
sophomore ,said he
likes the convenience of the
- chapel's 7 p.m. services.
''The· times at which the ser-
vices are held are convenient,"
he said. "They are held at night
so that they do not conflict with
anyone's daytime activities."
Will also claimed to admire the
preaching methods of the priest.
. "The priest relates Biblical
passages to modern times," he
said. ''That makes the services
very enjoyable."
Photo courtesy of Richard LaPietra
Senior Simon Hecht carefuUy measures out one mole of
water before the 6:02 a.m. start time of national mole day.
Ptofessot ·
h,elps
people.with OCD
by
JAIME ANDERSEN
Staff Writer
able to contact four top experts,
and one psychiatrist in OCD re-
search to answer·question:,·on
-
the list.
Itis possible that
120
people
The list can be accessed on
at MaristCo11ege could be suf-
the Internet at the address:
fering from some
fonn
of OCD.
USTSERV@VM.MARIST.EDU.
It
is estimated Obsessive
She said she believes it is nee-
Compulsive Disorder (OCD)
af-
essary to recognize, a signifi-
fects two to three percent of the
cant number of those belong-
population.
ing to the Marist community, are
While most connect OCD with
probably suffering from the dis-
a psychologic·al impairment, in
order.
actuality. it is more biological
Vertullo said there· are two
than anything . else. The prob-
ways to treat the disorder: medi-
lem arises when the brain sends
cine and cognitive behavioral
the wrong message. Therefore,
therapy.
it is.a malfunctjon occurring in
"Cognitive behavioral therapy
the brain~ rather than an emo-
consists of exposing yourself to
tionai problem.
what you are afraid of, and pre-
While the individual may have
venting the ritual or response
some emotional difficulties, they
from happening," she said.
are not the cause of the actions
In addition to her list, Vertullo
or rituals, which the individual
started a physical suppqrt
feels compelled io repeat. Some
group, because she said she felt
of these rituals might include,
people were not receiving qual~
washing hands continually,
ity help for their ailments.
checking door locks, straighten-
She- found three therapists
ing one's room, and disinfect-
that would help form the sup-
ing the doorknob before touch-
port group, which meets at
ing it.
Vassar Hospital twice a month.
Christina Vertullo, lecturer in
There are good ways to treat
mathematics at Marist, has
OCD, but not everyone knows
spent the last four years try!ng
about them Vertullo said.
tohelpthosewho1ivewithOCD.
"The average person waits
In 1992 her daughter was diag-
seventeen years before seeking
nosed with OCD, after being in-
corrective therapy," she said.
jured in a car accident.
Vertullo has also held confer-
In an attempt to reach out to
ences at Marist to raise awar~-
those suffering from the disor-
ness about the issue. The next
der, Vertullo began a list via the
conference is scheduled for
Internet in 1994, by which dis-
June. More information about
cussions could be held pertain-
the support group may be ob-
ing to life with OCD. She was
tainedbycalling473-2500.
ill
I
l
I
j
l
j
j
l
l
, I
I
, I
J
NOVEMBER 5
2
1998
GOod
\
f!,JJ.tritiolt
,
im.ppi;tant
for
bealthy,b3Pi>Y ~eme~ter
·
.
..
.
-
.
.
.
.
·
•
.
.
-
.
.
.
.
by
ELIZABETII CARRUBBA
people
to
not eat~o;e than they
.
fat
~ortie~t.
Managing Editor
,
need to eat/'
.
.
.
.
·
Toere
·
are
a
lotof goodcere-
~
She
.
also
'
said nutrition plays a
.
als that
are
hlgh
iii
'
fiber and
high
Everyday, college students
big role in preventing illnesses,
·
grain. When buy\ng_fruit, shop
_
face the dilemma of having.to
,
.
and a balanced diet is
.
a perscm'~
.
.
_
arci~nd
·:
fil1~}iiidJ>t1t
_
what fruit
·
make health and nufritfon
bestprotectio1;i against
.
being
is
·
in season
,
becaiise compari-
choices for themselves.
.
sick because it increases your
·
son
.:
snopping is
iJ'!)portanC
C
Many students came honie
energy, stamiiu1
;
and immune
Pastas are
:
a gooci'eJCample o
_
f
from high school
an~
had a bal:.
system.
·
.
·
.
.
:
.
.
.
.
.
a food
,
that i~ not too e~pensive
anced meal
·
made for them
.
QY
"If
you're run down and not' and
.
makes
a
he@y meal.
>
·
mom or dad. Now that they are
eating in
a
healthy way, you're
. .
Pre-mixed salad
_
s 3!e sonie
~
.
making decisions for them-
.
going to be more prone ~o
;
g~t'-
·
_
ti~~s·
·
a
·
~etfor
.
,
~~y,
:
c_:ost wise,
selves in college, they should. ting sick and your resistance is
bec
·
ause thf
extra
ingredients
know
it
takes a conscious effort
going to
be
Io.w," she said.
arifalr~ady iricl
_
u~ed.
·
..
,.
~·
to take care of themselves.
Freshmen; in particular, haye
"If you have saladbefore the
.
Jane M. O'Brien, director of the most difficult
time
adjusting
main course, then it can help to
health servic~s
and
a registered
to making food choices and bat-
fill your stomach and there are a
nurse, said food plays a big role
·
tling the infamous
"freshman
lot of good, llealthy salad dress
_
.:.
in how someone looks, feels,
I 5" weight gain.
.
..
.
.
·
.
ings that have i'.edtked fat," she
·
handles stress,
.
avoids ilh~ess
_
.
"I've eaten in the din11ig
h~i
-
~
.
aid
:
·
<
.
. .
.
:
'.
,
·.
.
.
·
•
and performs academically.
· ..
and
I
think that
..
there are
.
very
· ·
,
·
S.nacks
_
are a type of food ev-
·
"Students should be mindful
- '.i.
good (ood choices available to
·
'
ery studeriH,e
.
em's
_
to
·
stock
\ip
.
that they should eat a balanced
;.
students, but I think that people
on. 0' Brien said pretzels,
diet, consisting of protein, com-
sometimes get locked into eat-
granola; trail mixes, and popcorn
plex carbohydrates, fruits, and
ing the
·
same
.
foo~s all of
·
the
ax;<?
g9od, f~t
fr<te
s~acks: .
.
..
vegetables," she said. "They
time or they may be eating too
, .
0
Popcorn
.
i
.
s go
.
od
_
3cs long as
should also cut down on fat.". · much of th(? wrong food,"
you dori
.
't ~uy the l;cind tlia~h,~
.
·
O'Brien said
fat
is important
.
O'Brien said.
.
a lot of flavoring and ·butter,"
·
in the diet, but Americans eat
·
She said people should be
she
.
said.
"YQu can buy popcorn
too much of
it.
Most of the fast
·
.
more careful about planning
that contains no
,
fat
.
and then
foods, such as pizza and ham-
what they'aregoing
to
eat
·
dur-
add something
·
to it; just be
burgers, contain more fat than a
ing a day.
.
.
. .
·
careful
·_
about how much you
person needs iri their entire daily
There are choices that can be
add
:"
·
:
·
.
.
·
· ·
.
· ·
·
.
·
.
diet.
,
.
.
.· ..
...
'
.
.
made and they
·
i:nay not
.
be the
·
O'Brien said
:
exercise goes
Complex
·
carbohydrates; such·
·
favorite
choke
of students;
A
along with good nutrition and
:
.
as
'
pas~
'
lllld 1fo~toe,s,
:
~hichare pfoc~bfcake_loo~s ~nd
:.
tas,tes
·.
is
;
itnpdrtal).~ bec
,
ius~.of
its nu
-
,
.
,
g9.ci;d,
,
f~r:energY
.
~rid
growth,,
better than
:
an)1pp~~;
-but stu-
'
in~~~u
·
~
,
p~ri~fj\¥{
/)
,
:
;;
;
/
. ·
should
.
be
where 1feople get
dents have to think
,
apout what
·
..
.
·
•·
i(h~lP
.
s
.
;
yotj(apP,earance,
riio
_
stof9{eir calories
:
.
.
·
..
food does °forJheri
(
'
_
;
..
.
0
·_'
•
make
f
yoll
fee!'.b~ttei-, boosts
. "
Proteins,
such
as meat,
''Cerealforbreakfa.stisagood
_your self:;-esteem
t
gives your
·
chicken; turkey, and fish; help
source
.
.
of
carbohydrates,"
'
she
mo~
:
enetgy,
:will
t)lostlikely help
.
:
to build bones. Fruits and veg-
said.
"-Salad;alongwitha'sand-
you
,
to sleep
~
better; increast!s
etables co1,1tain nutrients and
wich containing
·
turkey or tuna
metaboiism; is
·
·:
a
i
wondedul
minerals necessary for body and
fish
;
and
a
piece
:
offruit would
stress r~lie
.
ver, a~d prevents
brainfunctiori.
·
.
..
be
'
an
example
<>
,
fa
·
·
goodltmch;
w~ightgaiii
i
_:
·.i .
..
·
.
·
•
·
.
.
•
"That's why the diet needs to
Once
in awlule; it'.s
·
9ktcihave.
She said ifpeople
,
are
.
uncer-
contain
an
three ofthose forms
~
ice
~ ~
:
ofc~ki
/
btjdf yot1're
iairi,a~bu
_
t wpeiher ~ey.are eat-
of nutrients," she sa.i
,
d
,
·
"You . having
,
that
.
_
evefyd~y ~deat.:
ing
~1
b~!aric
_
e,cf. ~~et, then
.
it
need a balanced diet to
'
oe
!it ing
things
;
that'
are loaded with
woµld b~ helpfulfo~ them to
youroptimum.'
.'
,:
'.
:
, :
·
=
,
;
:
calories
_
and}at,
/
yb
g
r~gofogto
.
keep
.
_
afo9d di<!fY, V'ritipgdown
· \Vater is another necessity
.
start
seeiiig
.
weightgajn."
-
·
.
what they eat at ~ach
rrieal.
.
a:nd
·
everyone should have at
. :
Uppei-cfassmen w.ho
are
cook~
''Tijat
wiir lei you
'
know
·
if
.
least six to eight glasses of it a
:
:
ing aqd
,.
gNcery
.
_
sh9pping(or yo~
're
i
making
~ome
choi
.
ces
.·
day.
. .
.
.
·.
themselves can alsoinake good
'.
tliatai-eil't as healthy for you or
''.Water
is very important for
..
·
health
and
n,utrition choic~ tfi,at ·
.
if
there
ruiiim~s
during the day"
your body because your cells
are
'
not too
~ostly;
:
~
: -
.·
.
.
that are pai:ticulady difficult for
.
are made up of water and you
O'Brien said shopp~rs shouid
you and
you
'.
re grabbing fast
need to keep replacing
th~
fluid
not grab what th
_
ey first see on
food or unhealtl,ly snacks," she
in your system," she said. "It
the shelf. Instead, read labels
said
.c
"Jt would make you more
.
.
helps every
_
organ of your body,
and iook
on
the
back of foods
·
aware
·
arid help you to maJ.ce
skin, appearance, and also helps· to s~e what i! contains, such as
.
chan~es~"
-
.
-- -
---
---
-
...
.
.....
,
-
.
NOVEMBER 5
2
1998
TH£.-CCIRCCLE
E8cl
'
t-ures
PAGE7
http://www.snoopy.com
Einily's Recipe
of
the
Week
Looking
for
some. infonnati~n on Linus, Lucy, Snoopy or any other members of the Peanuts comic
strip?
·
·
FruitCrumble
·
Butter for greasing
1.5 lb. apples
. Check
outhttp://www.Snoopy.com.
_
The page offers
_
a lot of colorful images and infonnation on the Peanuts gang. The site features
articles on the creator of the Peanuts comic
.
strip, Charles Schulz. The articles are written about
2
tbsp. soft brown sugar
·
l tsp. cinnamon
. . 2
tbsp. apple juice
Cup blackberries, or apricots, or plums, or raspberries
1/2 cup buuer
various times in his life.
.
·
There is also
a
history of the comic strip as well as profiles of each of the characters.
1.5
cups all-purpose or whole-wheat flour
1/2
cup oatmeal
The site o_ffers various games a vi~wer can play such as "who's who,"
an
identify the characters
game, and a Peanuts' trivia game. Viewers can also send a Peanuts post card to a friend.
1/2
cup light brown sugar
Pinch of salt
Past comic strips can also be brought up from the archives. .
So, check out
http://www.snoopy.com
for some animated fun.
If
you have any suggestions for this column, or would like to lVrite
a
column, contact Emily at
extension 2429 or emailHZAL. Features Editor Emily Kucharczyk wrote this Searching the sites
column.
Preheat oven to 375. Grease pie pan. Peel apples, cut them into
quarters, and cut out cores, then slice. Cook apples,
2
tbsp.
brown sugar, cinnamon, and apple juice gently in saucepan until
apples are soft, but not pulpy. Meanwhile, mix butter and flour
~
together in mixing bowl, then mix in oats, sugar and salt. Put
apples into dish and mix
in
other fruit. Spread crumble on top
Horoscopes
·
and bake for 30 to 40 minutes. Serves 6 - 8.
ARIES: Contiime to
·
other people.
ff
it
push yourself hard.
was just for you, it
·
You' could be in a
would be easy. Well,
·
work
_
situation that's
pretend it is and then
·
rather stressful, but
justfactor them in,
don't despair.
·
Al'-
o_ne at a time. Mean-
though it
.
seems like
while,ifthesituation
this will go
.
on forever,
is tough at work, you
it's actually a tempo~
·
may not be
_
able to
rary condition: Make
·
ask for a ·raise. In-
the most ofit while
·
.
stead, think of an-
.
you can:
,
You
can get
..
other way to gener:..
,
sometliing
.
hehHiiicL
'
·
"
,·, .
::
ateincome'.
'
1
·
,,,
.
..
, ·
·
·
·
·
i,.,.,
,
. ~
," ·
·
.
,,
,
,
..
,.
,
1
'
.
_
:
,
.. ,
,
.
,
.
•
;
'
-'
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;
L
·':
·
E
·
·
o·:
•:
y,
·
o
'
u·
;
·
c
'
··
a
'
'
n
·
··
a•
·
c
·
-
-
.
· ..
,
',
,
.
,
,
_.
nov,i tUaf
'
may
n:Ot be
.
aVailabk
agaitj
for
I~
-
-
t
_
_
-
I
caon
__
.
_
my
_
:tphl
,
1
_
_
ins
_
hg
_
·
.
J.:ufsyt oa
_
ub?
.
·vuet
-
-
•
quite
a
while, sOm6ve
_
. \1~
'i
ckly.
_
Besid'es; .
.
'
·
-got a good team
_
on
, you're gahiing
vali.i:.
_
,
,
your side. Today;
_
_
able experience.
·
·
·
.
_
make a little·e)(tratime
·
,
- '
'
-
TAURUS: Itlooks"like
to acknowledge the
_
the money Y.Ou11e¢~
·
people who have
,
)savailab
.
I
_
e
•
if
_
.
~0"1
s~m~
-
.
-
been working so hard
·
ply
.
ask for 1L_Well,
·
.ror you lately: They
,
.·
· .
thah:night not b~
_
as
need to have more of
·
simple as it fi,rst ap-
the recognition. An-
·
pears. There's some-
other
.
thing you can
thing you needto say
.
__
do is make sure e.~ch
thatyou'vebeenhesi-
of your players is
tating about. It's the
strong enough to
truth,•
of course
;
and
make it on their own .•
you even have the
~
-
_
-
VIRGO: Hopefully,
factstosupportit'But
you've already got
you didn't want to
your rot,1tine pretty
say anything
for
fear
·
well in place. You'll
of upsetting the other
.
·
·
do best if you' re
person.
"
But don't be
-
working within a
like that. It's more up-
structure you can
setting
·
fo everybody
trust. That"gives you •
to keep this buried.
certainty in
·
case
GEMINI:
.
You're
there's a.change.
It
stronger tod
.
ay
.
. b
-
7-
·
1ooks like that could
-·
cause the Moon
IS
m.
happen. You
,
.
can
.·
your sign
.
The Sun is
pretty w~ll count on
·
stilfin Scorpio, hoW-
·
acoupleofsurprises.
ever. That puts a little
Expect the unex-
pressure on you at
pected, and watch
.
,vork. You'll be using
out for delays.
·
· at·on to
·
~ - LIBRA:Itlookslike
your 1magm 1
solve
problems.
you'd love to get
That's your job all the
away, but for some
time anyway, but to"'
reason you can't
_
day they'll be throw-
quite make it. Is it a
ing
things at you hot
financial consider-
and
heavy.
If you pay
ation? Well, maybe
attention to your ob-
it's not as bad as you
jective again, you can
think. You may feel
figure out what needs
like a lack of money
to be done.
is preventing you
.
CANCER:
It looks like
from doing all sorts
there's a financial de-
_
of things.
If
there's a
cision to
be
made, and
class you want to
·
this one is kind of a
takebutyou'reafraid
toughie. It involves
you can't afford it,
run out the numbers
I'd be
a
little careful if
one more time.
I
were you right now.
SCORPIO: Money
It looks like some-
is tigh-t right now, but
body else is listening
it's by your own
in, and that person is
choosing. You're in-
not necessarily on
vesting in something
your side.
that's going to pay
~CAPRICORN: This
off later. At least,
is a good day to do
that's what you
.
paperwork, especially
.
ought to
.
be doing..
stuff you've been
.·
Be very careful,
.
·
·
avoiding. The Moon
.
:
..:
howev,yt.
No"
.
jj~kY
:,
;
in Gemini helps
with
ventures are
_
al:-
.
communications
.
Io.wed. Only
_
do
People will be more
something
_
you' re
-
willi~g to talk now
sure is going to
·
than usuaL
·
That Sun
work. You'll kno_w
inScorpiokindofputs
what that is, because
a
·
lid on things,
you're going to make
though. Scorpio is the
it happen.
sign of secrets
.
You
,
SAGITTARIUS: You
especially, need to be
:
and you
·
r favorite
careful about what
adversary could get ·
you say.
into a great conver-
~AQUARIUS: This
sation tod
_
ay. Well,
could tum out to be a
sometimes
your
good day for you ro-
conversatioris are
mantically; You tend
.
more- like battles of
to fall in love with the
wits, and the two of
other individual's
you are pretty much
mindfirst. A scintillat-
evenly matched. But
ing conversation, a
passionate appeal for
liberty and justice
,
somebody who stirs
you by getting
.
you
motivated or giving
you new ideas; that's
the kind of stuff that
turns you on. Today,
you could find a per-
son who's talking your
·
·
talk. If this happens,
-
definitely set
up
a date
.
for dinner toniglH
,
.
_
.
[§]
-
PISCES: idcioks like
there
are
some
changes that you've
been thinking about
making. Tonight
;
con-
ditions are good for ti-
dying things
up
a bit.
It kind oflt looks like
an explosion is
going
on at your place. \\Tell,
'
you have to make
messes if you want to
really clean things up.
You have to brea.\ eggs
to make an omelet.
That's not a bad idea·
for dinner. You'll be too
busy to do much fancy
cooking
.
Then stop in and see us at,
MILLMAN~S T-SBIRT
FACTORY·
12 Fowler ave., Poughkeepsie
(Take Route 9 South to 44-55 East
12 traffic lights 1B/ock down on left.)
-
454~2255 FIX 454-5771
·UMDliil
the Marist Communi since 1978
I
Student shares internship .·
1£]fll1fllli\-l
experieuc~
tq
ijrg~;:9th~rs
'Edit' . . .
"·tr . '" ,,, ..
'afibr ·'
r
a
ti
.. -•Erut~r:'·:·~ -,
,
:.
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·
.·
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.
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~_Q11
Taking on the internship at NB(; Newschrumel4
.
~as, byfar the best thing that I
I am proud to. be ajournalisni"ipajor ~t Maj:ist; but
for.a
ichoc:il:lli.afto_uts itself as
have ever challenged myself to doin myJife;Jp.a:µ ~~ysecond thoughts about
•
·a
leader in colllI)1unications;·Mm.ist. do1?5 a pp01' job offering its students· the·
·
what I was getting myself into ~d\\'.~~the(pr_~otlwould b'e able to handleit.
ability to succeed,'. , :
>< ,. .. \ ,,
.
. ·. · ... ; · ..
•
·· ·. ••·
<:-: :•
>.·· ·
There were thoughts about the t\vo llourfC>µ1lllU!e in tlietllorning and the long
·
· What Marisfs School ofCommunications·does'not uridetstandis.the·.,
•
,. ··
hours at night; I doubted my ability to sµfyive in
·
a pi:o.fessional environment
as
hnportantance
·
C>f eru:lyinte;raction between fr~shnjinJh~it;pJQfe.#pi:~ anch, , .· ... · .. ·
well as with'those·who are-far more expep.e'nced than myseif. ·
·
·
advisor .. Itcan make·or break
a
s_tudentin amajor: ,That is ',why;gqpd.profe.~sors,are ··
. Most of all,
I.fe.
ared how·.qiffi. erC?nt·m···y.·lifew.·ould b.e
from
the lives_ ofmy peers.
I
a muSt at any inStitutlon.
:c ,
·
. :.
,<
:,_<'./_ /.
',\)}~t')/,:'._~./;?) :':, :_-, . . , .
,
th
.
· · · , ,.-•
, b
•
.The School.:shC>\ll,4 ree:valua~ \VhaJ 1t_ccms1ders "gooW
1
:teacp.er~ \Vhen ltlring,
realized ·. at ~eaving at 6:3Q.a.ni.,Jilef111tlwouldn•t . e around for the bonding .·
. .·. and it shoulc:l al~o li~t~!irilpre'to sruct.ent eyaluaµonS?:J:'lie,fir~ftip:ie'profesfors/ :.
experiences that we. alllivdoi:atcollege:Trealized that missing meals would mean
<
ar~
:
evalua.,t~d sho~ld not
~~
\iiheri they go iip for ~miref·Jristea.d/~ac_liprofessor· ·
missing all those· cooking mistalces tliat we experience as college chefs, and · .
· should rec(?tVe a yearly cntique on the:effectiveness
of
the~;teac,_llihg .bas~d on
.reali_stically;lositig alargepo_rtion·~fniysocial life. Being here fora month has
,studeritevaluations.
'
, :
-
·/;. '.
·:<
/c'
,
·
·> ..
_,.,.(/ti
X ;::,:,;/ .. , ... ··· .. ·. :
.
convinced)nethat I.was almost completely wrong...
.
.
. .· .
.
·
... ·•
.· This wo~lcl ,benetit,profe~sC>rS&W.liP go upJor.tetiurearid'.dien
w<>nder
,\Vhy they
· First of ail, the commute ·was brµ(al
,in
the beginning, there is not doubt about·.
·
do
·noyeceive it. P,m~e,s$.cirs sho11Icq,~ ftredaft~r three"year;s of l:iad ev~uations
that. To solv~that problemlbought a good l:m9k andreadrriyself to sleep ori the
so;is notto·waste his; or. stude11ts';tiriie; ·•· :.·.· ·
.
·•·
·
'..> ·· :
_
..
.
·
>':: ..
,
:-·,
< ••,·.
·
.
·. · way in aild out,ofthedty. Ifexhausticmis riot what puts you to·sleep,itWiHbe,
.
.
. TI.ie'School also·ifoeds to:eipahd
how many
class sectfons·itofffas each.· .
·• ihe muffled huin of the engine on ifs \Vay to Grand Central. Don'tget nie wrnng;,
.
. · se~est~r, forip~tafice; ne)(f_seiriester there'is oi:tly:one~section each ofMass
there.·.are nights w. he
.
.
n.
1
·get home at 10 p.m. or later, but becausel_appredate.e.v.· ery · Comin. Law;Press in America and;News ~itjtjg.
If
a
sttiderithast\vo'requfre-.. ·. · · ..
.
..
. rnents to fill,'o,ne._News·Editihg arid the'othe(dass off~r~d atthe·same
time;
it is ·
moment that I can spendarthe N'e\YsChani:J.el. I am never in a ru·sh to go home.I0c
.
J()\ighjuck. · 'fha,tstuden(may be
'
forcid tpJoi:fei(taldiig
·a
class·fie needfto
·
have time
to
stay up and chat
wi.!]:1 Jl).Y
rqommates ·and they are al.w~ys inquisitive"
·
sticc~ed i11_ his pr()fessioh~ career.•:~:,' : :
·
>_;/.:. :.::.;
:
:
'.
. -(
J
.
;,'
,
. ., :: · . ··.
about what happened in my day: They push my along and em;ourage ·me
as
I
go
.
Fiilally,'the School needs'to·starfutilizijig !echnolcigyJ>ettef
:·
..
. ·.
·
· ..
. through this exciting experience.On the weekends lgcroui-and.have
a
good time,
· One example iswhen. Maristfirst subscribedto the AP wire service in .1995.
but the thc;i1,1ghf oflvtc:mday Illorning doesn'tgo too far froin*my ntind:It doesn'~
T,her~ w~re high expe<::tatiotis, but 11othi~g ever happed with, it;Nqt many people
do\•o.u
any
good to overdo it,· beca1,1se.
th~
lack. of s~e'?p catclles up with you .·
.
•
·
JdlBW
the college:s coµa:~ct finajly,
r?rl.
out
_
this S~j:,teintier. Stucleiits, werenever
qufokly . .
·
.
.
:
: .. :
~;>.
.
i. ·. · · .
. . . · .. ·
:
:
· .. ·.·· .. ·
taugllthow,touse
.
th~wrre~_howto¢it_or,cpde.storiesforit.The:seivicewas
,: The uniqueness of this.internship:c!)mes.from the people that putittog~ther.L · ~~&l~ted likla :useless ~ovelty'_ih~ s,choC>l pµrchased and.thei!}o_rgoL;A lotof.
. workwfth. .Prod. uce. r.D. i.an
.•. .'ne,D. rummey
..
an ..
d.Jnvestigativ_ e .. Report
.. er !lalph·P· enza...
ttme ~d money was was~dwpen
1r
co~ld have been aiding students. '• . :
.
_
. . .. .
• , . . .
-
- •. . •
· • •
.
•
. · .
,lam
glad
I
attended Manst be<::ause I have been lucky. I have had two intern-
. They are two of the niost intelligent; irteresting, and considerate people rhave
.·ship~; good teachers and worked
'
on
The
Cjrc,le
cill
3J/2 years::'. So;maiiy
go · ...
,
· ever met in my life. I am so fortunateto work.with a team that is willing to include ... thro!lgh iny !llajor. without any experience or passion for the field;) cannot help
me on all of it's activiti_es and projects. When therejs ajobto be done they don't· ;-b~t.wonder ifthey·were the unlucky ones who fell throught the cracksin Marist's ·
hesitateJo
asknie
to doit, nor do :they expect me to complete 'things without
School of Communications.
-.
,
.
.
·
.
many questlons.
-
.. .
. ..
·
. :
.... .
.
. . . . .
.
.
>
BEtn
Agoes~
News E;ditc,r
.
Theyare·always_willingtoanswer'iµlythingimayaskofthem,whetherit
.
.
.
. . ·
.
, . •, .
regards
an
ru.signment or something as essential'as the
·
computer. I appreciate this •.
I""." _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
..;.. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
. more and more· everyday because, due to their open attitudes and consideration
THE. CIRCLE,
of my lack of experience, they have contributed to. the large
b.ank
of knowledge I
.
.
have developed so quickly.
·
. · . · .
Going
cm
location with Ralph for assignments is ·one of the most exciting things
.
· ·
that I do. tve been with Ralph to report things lik~ the Swiss Air Plane Crash- ·
Flight 111, the presidential visit to the Foreigi:i Affairs Council in the city, and a
profile report on the President of the New York Stock Exchange, Richard Grasso.
There is no excitement like this in the world, especially to any student that aspires
to be in .the television industry.
The purpose of this article is to inspire you to take on the chaUenge of an
internship. It is to push you in the scary direction of the professional world and it
is
to
convince you that it will be a priceless experience.
Meghan Quinlan
Junior
.·Amanda
Bradley
Editor-in~chief
Emily Kucharczyk
Features Editor
BenAgoes
N~ws Editor
Tho~Ryan
Sports Editor
Patrick Whittle
Arts & Entertainment
TuraQuinn
Opinion Editor
Joe Scotto
Toni
Constantino
G.ModeleCJarke
. Photography Editor
Busilless Manager .
Faculty Advisor
The Circle
is the student newspaper of Marist College, Poughkeepsie, NY.
Issues are published every Thursday.
· ·
·
Vve welcome letters to the editor, club ~nouncements and story ideas. We can-
riot publish unsigned letters to the editor.
.
.
The Circle staff can
be
reached at
575-3000 x2429
or by email at
H'ZAL
----------- -~~--
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- -
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,~
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.,--~•-
,
·--~
•
• •
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1 . .
•
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'
•
•
••
•
•
'
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'
•
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"
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,,.,
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· TH£
:CIRCLE ,
NOVEMBERS, 1998
( ) , : ·.
.;.
E
cl
------~_.,_;;,;.;..;;,_ _____ ~_;,_-.......;;;:= ..........
Questioning· Autonomy
t,)'-KrisHart
'·.
only was;a
life
prematurely . - - - - - , - - - , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
SiaffWriter?._:•::, '
'
·ended,,but WOfi!en's autbnpmy
Autonomy• is · crucial · .. to. the · · .· \Vas_thieatep.eq.
·
Dr._Slepian was --
maintenance·
Of
the liberal de-
ari obstetrician/gy11ecologist
·
· ·
- - who perfomied.imi~y.:·services •:·
m
..
:o. _c,rac .. y in w
..... hich
.. we
.. live. As a
·
·
·- ·
·
· ·
·
. for' 'women over. th.e
fours~
of
: society.we have nothing if all
his career. :In his·lifetim. e(Dr .
. members ·do not have.the.au-
-
tono.
m,y
to.self
.. -.d.e. t.ermin·e.their: .. Sfopian conscientiously pro-
.
·
·vided a widerange ofhealtli'care
_
actio~s and thoughts,. We
do .
services for women of ali races
Columnist
condones
controversy
by
CARTER RANDOLPH
HAYES
Staff Writer
' not even have the basic prin- ' and cias'ses_;
inclticled
in'.tliese'
' ciples that' OUI' 'country was
services was. the constitliticm-
Battle lines have been drawn.
f91.111ded on: liberty and
in~li- .
ally guaranteed righdo apgrtion
The trenches have been dug
vidualism. .
,.
. .
.
services. !twas ·betause of his
•
and now we choose sides, jump
_ : Unfortunately; persoriaUib- -
·
·
into. a trench and fire at will.
·· - .
·
.
.
.
vow to provide aborti<:>n ser-
There have been special SGA
erty, autonomy, is given to orily
vices to the ·wonien of \Vestem ·
discussions, councils, and pro-
a
privileged few in our social
N
y
k th t
· d D
.___....,.._....,.. _ _ _ _ _ _
_,;...;....;. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
--J
d
h
. . . . . Oft. . .
. .·.. . . .
ew
or
. a cause
r.
pose town alls, not to men-
sys. tern. .. en our race, gender, SI .
t.
b.· b.·
:tat.I·.
0
·.·.d. . d
·
·
·
f
th
d
d th
"r' ·•; ... -, -
-
.· , .ta;tu' .. d .t• .·
. ep1an o e
rn ..
ymur ere
health_c.· ate
.. providers who are
.. -
,··.J
·
beli'e::.ve that the choi·ce t·o
ion e wor s upon wor s at
? _
~ocme.conomtc s ·. s e er- .- •
h'
h.
·i
t···· ·
k . ·
·
hav b
h
d
b h If
.,· . . ,th.'
' '
'
'r' ,'',: '
m
1S
ome as wee.
educa,te,dand.:w,i,llingtoproyide· ,clloosff.an.abortionw1·11beu·n-,
e eenexc ange one a
mtne.s:' e amount o personal.
·
th'
of everyone and their brother.
auto!iomfwe_ha~e .. Thei~di~ ·
:'J~7■■■■■r,;:--:-
is_serv~ce. Thisheinou_smu:- ''jfa~tlyandsystem~ticallyelimi- · But why?
I
need to start by
vid!}ais who do not
fall
into
the ·
·· · · ·
·
dens a drrect attack
0 ~
women s
nated without going through
commending both Michelle
righ~categories ofrace, gender; .
When Dr. . Barnett
autonollly to choose their ·own
.
Co~gress or the courts. Abar-
Corinne White, the authorof the
and.class are not afforded the'
Slepian ,was assas-
~ate. i:iowcanonemak~a_ch?ice . tion services will be removed
articlein_lastweek'spaper, "Sur-
.
rights ,and privileges that our
sinatea last week
1~ social pressure and mtu~uda-
through social pressure, intimi-
vivor sa~s rape is not co~~dy"
·society claims to hold ·so dear.
• '
tion close off
0
,n~
of the option~?
dation, and a lack of qualified
and C~ht~: the author of J?ys
S
·-nce·y
all
d .
'f
not OTJ,ly Wa.S' a lil'e
Advocatesagamstfreedomof providers Whatwi'llawoman's
ofSobnety fromtheA&Esec-
.
1
ou ai:e
won enng 1
.
_ ,
~ • •
.
,
·
·
f
,
I.
. - t b
d.
al
t
prematurebrended
chmce have-not seen the con-
choice be then?
t10n O October
8th
s paper.
am
gomg
O
e so _ra ic . as O
'J
, · '
r ·
b
t
D SI · ,
.
·
Both authors are obviously
name these "othered" groups
·but womens, au-
-ne_c ton e ween r.
eptan s
Will women have the au-
t
t
d
t l
d
·
murder and female autonomy
t ..
·
d l'b
k
compe en
an
a ente
,and the privileges they lack,
I'll
tonomv was threat
.
.
.
. .
.
onomy an
l
erty to ma e
wordsmiths
get :right to it:' ·wo'm~n, rion-.. ,
.
, :-··
d-- ~. . . . .
• .
They do not se_e th~t the ab-
choices when abortion services
However.
I
think as an aspir-
hi
'::
0• 0
•
•
-
• ' ,
ene . .
·
.
.
sence of Dr. Slep1an will prevent
h
b .
b
I
?
0
·11
.
.
: . .
w te~. the poor, and homosexu-
--.
-
· . •., : _, _ .,
_
.
.
··
· .
ave ecome O so ete •
r, w1
mg Journalist 1t 1s my place and
als. Unfortu11ately;icouldwrite _.
•·.
.
. .,:,_
.
,, ··
many
_
womenfrombei~gabl~to
womenbeforcedintoawrong
possibly my duty to defend a
., for hours·on sociafinjustic~:·sei
·
f
:'.¥
0 ~.
m~y-
-
~~ _asl~iI_ig _yourself
m~e the pe_rson~~.c~_pice to re- .: situation by'_ society's unwill-
·-fellow journalist.
I
do not con-
··I'd.Ij'jJ.!~~qi~cu~sJ-few~~~l.JQj~~
if'~aJ:W~
~~t~EP!';~~ ....
b~ ..
~o.Ao6 _c~~V!\~~rtion Services in the .
-
fogness.to ensure the rights of .:-done_ every aspect of "Joy in
_ --~~( h·~v(b'e°eft_~_ro.ugh_t}a . .'
111
~f
'~~~"'om~n's a~,t~noniJ.: w:en, ?Buffal~ area. Or maybe they see
women.
Sobnety:'- Half of me
felt that
. : . att,ention/isca_restili.
of
in
.
, .ert:,
·
;~~itt:
a
pit..:
~e,
C:.9nst1t?tion.
~
to wet
; '
.
Our society always preaches
some
ot
It
was tasteles~ and pre-
- ·'sqnfil}d~rttlW.\;_ :·
.
.
r- ';:
;.,f
:f
~
~
::~t~yides \VOllleil .\Vith
~~
°:ght '
.
. i\Vlio
,\Vl~tp~
qtere to take his' the value' of liberty above all,
sented ma way that rrught have
Asa\Vomariih_aveficiildaily·
:
to_I11~raJ?,er:~9,n~:9:~gs10~on . -plac~\Vh,~;1n1~<l!-cf st,udentsare_ but what about the liberty of _been hurtful to so!11e ~eople.
threats. f:ron:i
'
,. i ndi\i
Hi
tial
if~,,
,wheth,~rnr not,it_is ~ppropnate
n~ longer !eam,~n8. howto pro-
women? If we cannot control
The
other half was JU~pmg for
,
· · ·
• <. ·
.
.•
••• :
'
•
••
•;
,. .';_ •.
tha.t she.receive.an abortion; No
vide al:?ortion services in medi- . .
· ·
JOY
th
at s~meone at this largely
gro~ips, and 1nst1tu~10ns that · · .. ·. ;
.
·, :
·
.· .. · · · ,-
.
·.. ·..
·
.
·
· .· ·. . .
?
· ·
. . ·.
•
wh~f h~ppens· to our own bod- •. conservative school was push-
would seek-to rip. my.personal
one 1s supposed tq
:
,be able to
calscho<>L Sadly,Dr: ~lep1a1
1
ies:
ihen how much liberty do .. ·
th
I ·.
Wh
d
··-"::.····. ,:
,
• .·· . .., -·
f:
,,.h
·
.
. h. ···.· b
.
. ···
wasoneofaniinority'fhalth
.
mg
eenveope ..
ata ay
_.iu:foµqtny;'aW?.Yffpmllle.
D~y:
,orce ert°.;?Ye
•
.11!1,'a,_~rtwn
..
. - . _.'
. ' •
0
_
_
e ; . ' ~ereallyhave? Perhaps it was
for college new_spapers in
·byJday ,,my . autonomy has .. ?Jl,d
t10
?11e i~ s11p~o~e~_ to pre-
care providers ~ho_ w~r~_wi]~ng . assassinated by the intimidation
America, the country where you
'sloWlybeentedticedJfhjs past· : :Ve!lt li,erfr
0
f11bb~Iling 1ne.
to face
th,~
socia~ m_ttmidation,
C
and pressures. of society, not
can state your opinion, your
. week, it just diminished alittie . _ . Womei:i, stil! retam thenght to
ai_id e:ven nsk thei_r hves to ~ro-
unlike Dr. Slepaiq_ was assassi-
story, or you feelings as long as
· rriore: : ·
-
:
·
· _ , have an abe>rtion; tlley just can-
v1de females with a choice;
nat('.!d by society's unwilling-
they do not present a clear and
:\vhen, Dr. Barn~tt,S}ep· ian
w~, _ ·
·
IlOt.fin4 anyom(to: provide the
When the providers of abortion
·
.
.
present physical danger.
· ·
· ne.ce·.ss·ary·
·
·
•s·erv
.. 1·c· e·
.. s··.··a·s. a.·.re· s·ult
servicesareeliminated, what will
...
please see
AUTONOMY,
Granted, White said that ev-
assassinated last week
in,
his
-
.
JO
.
horn.
e.m.·
Amh
... ' ...
ers.·t,
·
N.·.e\V.
_
.•.Y◄.·
ork
.. n.o.t
ofthesystemiticeliminationof ,thefateoffeinaleautonomybe?
pg.
eryone h_as the right to _be free
.
·
·
·
·
·
of harassment or offensive ma-
s · · .. ·
h
e
·
· ·
b
w
terial at this institution.
But
, O_ffle.·_
-
..
t
ID_·
_·
o.·
a __
()_Ut ·
arren
~:s:.\s~es:~:~:~~e:~~~
t::
·
.
e
stated that,
"I
have to read this
,
-
. .
·
·
·
and then
I
have to listen to those
excess. :1h~d-justfigured this
,, to
be a·habit: Some people like
.. t9
~ear
platfqrni'shoes;
I
like to
'
\v~a'Walkman.
· . : . ·
Though I
am
seldom·dis-
·gusted· with movies, there·was·
something about "There's-
Something. About
Mary"
that
truly disturbed me;
:
:· .
·
Granted, I did
·
not realize this
until I was walking across cam-
pus the other night. In fact, it
hit me like· the stench of a sew-
age plant sitting on the edge of
campus. Or maybe it was just
that stench that hit me. Either
way, my little epiphany was
probably a long time coming.
It has been brought to my at-
tention· on numerous occasions
by friends and strangers alike
that I wear my, Walkman to _an
In.fact,
I
firid a Walkman to be
.. failess of
a
hindrance than plat-
.
· form. shoes .. When-I. was in
· middle.s1.::h9ol, I frequ~ritly vis-
ited a neighbor whohad seem- .
ingly been victhniz,ed by the sev- .
enties. Over the
years,
she ad-
vised me to nev~r §hoot up or
wear platform shoes.
I once did not heed her ad-
. vi~ and ended up late for work.
I
wore platforms and could not
run to catch my bus. Of course,
the. "bad trip"
l
had courtesy of
the three-inch
lift
of those stu-
pid shoes was a rough enough
experience. So, needless to say
I
never had
the
inclination to try
that other means of getting
"high."
.
_
Changing the subject· and
sharing silly anecdotes are also
probably worsehabits than
wearing a Walkman.
Of
course,
that is unless
I
plan on becom-
ing
'a
politician; As this is not
the dise;
·f
will attempt to get
back to tl).e point.
As I completed my stroll
across carp.pus,
I
realized that
I
had travelled from Point A (my
house) to Point B (my class)
with no recollection of HOW
I
got there .
.I
thought about how
weird thatwas.
As
I
rea~hed to my ears to re-
move my headphones, it struck
me, No, this time,
I
am sure it
was not that stench.
I
came to
the realization that my behavior
was quite similar to that of
Warren's.
.
For all of those who have ei- ·
ther not seen "There is Some-
thing About Mary," Warren
(W.
Earl
Brown)
is Mary's
(Cameron
Diaz) mentally handicapped
brother.
His biggest quirk is that he al-
ways has to keep his ears cov-
ered, and he is not a man of few
quirks. Throughout the movie,·
he was seldom seen without
headphtnies, very much like me
on campus.
to say the least, this guy is not
exactly one who fits into the
normal realms of society.· So, the
idea that is quite possible that
I
wear my Walkman so much that
I. could quite feasibly be con-
sidered by my peers to be just
. like Warren made me glad that
I
occasionally have a sense of
humor.
The revelation that my quirk
has been mocked .by a main-
stream mediumcaused me to be
pretty disgusted with myself.
So,
I
shoved my Walkman in
my desk for a few days.
From time to time,
I
do use my
Walkman. If anyone notices
and points out my similarity to
Warren, I can just tune it out.
Tara Quinn
is
a junior commu-
nications major with a minor
in English. She is from Tet111.eck,
New Jersey.
who defend this as humorous."
There in lies my point. One does
not have to read something that
. may be potentially damaging to
one's mental or physical well
being. One does not have to lis-
ten to people state their opin-
ion.
It
is the right of every United
States citizen to chose what
they will and will not read or lis-
ten to. Whether or not one
agrees with what is being said
or is upset with the ideas is not
decided by one page in a col-
lege handbook; but instead by
the blanket of freedom that cov-
ers the country where we live.
I
think it is fair to mention, as
I
have in the past on these pages
been chastised for missing this,
Carlito's article contained the
type of tongue-in-cheek college
humor that we all
chuckle at
some
where along the line. Co-
medians, whether writing or
... please see
DEBATE,pg.10
r
I
.
..
.
·-·
~.
-
,.
-
_
,
-
-
tH£)ClRCL£
,,.
NOVEMBERS,1998
·
-
·
·
O
.
.
;
.
~Ed
_
•
_
_
.
.
_
..
·c"·
,
_
.
_
.
.
R
.
-, .
.-
_
-
·
c
think differently about party
PAGElO
.
DEBATE:
-
Scandalhas benefits
-
:
•
.
November
brings
··:
Turkey
::
~nd
·
·
__
El~~Jiop\
:_:
~~::f;s::i:.ri~;i~r~~~~;::
·
Day;_ but
-
are
they
-
-
one
-·
ancl
t h e
;
s a m e ?
·,~-
!~~
-
~!itt~~r~it~ti~:~:c1~~
.
ment and mandated family.val-
...
continuedfrom
pg.
9
_
trasts at the
·
legislative level;
will hurt theireiection chances;
ues, that have surfaced as more
.
and
.
th¢k
_
agend.is
·
are geared
.
TheDem~raticPartymaybe
pro~change
;,
: .
_
·
·
:
.
,
,:
· ..
_
:·
:
:
speaking,drawo11lw~anex~-
_
towards suppressing
'
the oppo-
heading towards
a,
perioa of iri-
.
The New York Times reports
·
·
rience
to
make people laugh at
nent and'forwarding their inter-
ner turmoil. Democrats around
that there is little in the way of
themselves. Certainly White's
ests. Voters see the vicious ad
the country are displeased with
national platforms surfacing for
experience
_
·
is not
_
a
-
laughing
.
camprugns, and are bludgeoned
any negative associations that
either party,
.
such as the."Con-
·
matter at all.
•
Sexual assault is
POUIICAl
with_ claims of the
,
opponents'
have been drawn to them due
tract with America" in 1994. But,
one an issue that needs to be
'
COUJMNIST
abs"olute stance on
_
controver-
to the President's actions, but
the ambiguity surrounding the
addressed more closely by col-
.
.
sial issues.
.
.
-
they
are
also
·
d.ispleased
~vith
the
·
inost important issues this year
.
·
lege campuses across the coun-
The cauldron in which.these
p
·
artyleadership. Jnstea9- of fo-
mightn'lake it the most politically
try. But this does·not mean that
In the nineties, we have be-
negative and exaggerat~d cani":
cu~ing on wining·· Congres- ·- significant election in recent
a writer that addresses this mat-
come used to the stagnant
paigns brewjs WashingtonD;C
.
.
sional
·
seats,
a
bulk of Demo-
.
,
memory,
ter in. any way should
·
be por-
sameness of two presidential
Within the chambers of Con-
cratic funds
are'
going towards
-
:·,
·
·
-
·
·
trayed as a rapist or as an
un-
elections. At least in 1992 we
gress, daily dissections of
_
our
preparation to make Al Goi::e the
-
BillM~krut is
a
;senior
politi-
caring individual.
.
could celebrate Fleetwood Mac
Constitution and the laws that
next presidenL
.
-
~al science ahd.English double
The op-ed page prints a won-
style with the first president
we live by result' in minuscul_e
-_'[he
possible schism_.fo the
major
from
.
L_indlon,
RI.
:
He /s
derful line atthe top. "Congress
-
younger then Mick Jagger. Bor-
differences in opinion and gov-,.
Democ~tic Party might_be coµn-
tile
Ci
ri:le's political columniSt.
shall make not law abridging the
ing presidential elections have
emmental philosophy. Tho~e
·
terbalanced by the
fear
of elect-·
. .
.
freedom of speech or of
·
the
yielded the comparative sue-
differences fester until· they
:
ing Repu_blicans hi the midst of-
.
~
press". I have another one,
cess of a third party candidate
grow into raging ideological
.
what
could
be tlie gre~tconser:.
·
·
•
though, that goes along with
in 1992, Ross Perot, and the
wars.
.
vativerevenge. Avote for a
this: "You can't please all the
sleepy battle between Clinton
As party clashe~ mature, the
.
-
,
Republican in this election might
_
·
people all of the time''.
A
little
and
.
Dole in 1996
.
The public
public begins to icfontify
,
with
be interpreted as a
·
voteforim-
:
humor; a little scandal is gqod
finds difficulty discerning sub-
their general principJes; such
.
as
--
peachment Newt Gingrich is
for us. It reminds us of the real
stantial philosophical differ-
Free Choice versus Pro Lifoahd
-
looking for further vindication
·
·
:
w.orld instead of this green gl_ass
ences between presidential can-
-
Affirmative Action
.
. \,
-
~rsus the
.
for the present hearings,
.
and a
-
bubble that we"Iive with over our
·
didates, and has little motiva-
colorblind society. These grand
strong Republican victory will
heads, and sometimes think of
tion to
.
vote for one as opposed
philosophical differences are
.
be assumed a mandate.
as the real world.
to the other.
_
Also,
up
to the
the results of other ideological
·
Clinton's unbreakable popular-
We
:
really have so much to-•
second polling provides voters
clashes that we do not see iit
ity
is
being used by the Presi-
learn from each other; and from
·
with an accurate account of the
_
presidential races.
dent to run anti-Gingrich
·
cam-
·
_
that world out there. If you love
--:
race so far. When one candi-
_
It might be true that this year's
·
paigns around the country, hop-
·
journalism, you love America
date already appears to be
congressional races are differ-
ing that this wi
_
ll catalyze a
because it gives us the right. If
ahead, a potential voter per-
·
ent because of the present
im-
.
Democratic surge in Congress.
_
you do not like
The-Circle,
do
ceives their vote as pointless.
peachment hearings.
.
'
·
The outcome
·
·
of
this
.
notread
The
•
Cirde.
If you do
While presidential candi-
.
Ifmakes sense that the Re-
November's election wilf send
·"
not like an author, do not read
dates have lulled us to sleep
publicans willdo anything they
ripples in time that might esca- .
his
or bercolumn
:.:
Do not try to
from their apparent sameness,
_
.
can to suppress the}ss
_
ue of late intobouridary changing
·.
'._
taketherightofexpressionaway·
Congressional ~andidates haye
impe_achm~t1LM,aI1y
-
C
_
ong;rt?
_
S.:
. ·. :
Waves
,
:r~n~i.C>Jl
·
arnoll.g p¢mo-
-
from the
-
rest of us .
.
·
·
rendered us senseless
_
in an op-
.
,
·
,siomtl
Dell.lOCra~
are
dis~ci
_
ng
crats, and~
firri:1
giapplehc_;Jd
_
on
';
.
·,
)
•
.,
,
/'.;
ri
··
,;
:,
·;
_.
,,;
,:
posite way. The Rep'ublicans
'
:
themselves from
·
the
'
President;
-
~ the Repal>lican's by'the
'-'
Chris-=
::(
'
_
Carte
·
n;Rahdplph
1
Hayes
;
iis; al::,
:,
and Democrats are stark con-
.
:
forfeai:thatassoci~t:ion
:
~itl~
_
him
_'
'
·
tian co~fitio~
;
'
inight miice
_
us
''
:
junior
commwiications major.
:
_-
-
-
__
•-
_
•·.
-
.
---
~u;
Guaranteed
·
Credit
Cards
witl1
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-
Lilllits
''.
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Up To $10,000 \,Vithin
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No
CREDIT,
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PAGEll
R~NT
shines
on<Broadway stage
•
·
.
..
.
.
.
'
.
·-
by
JESSICA
'
COOPER
.
;
StaffWriter
.
ommend buying the CD, whi
_
ch
. features all of the songs in Rem,
if you cannot.get to see this
show in the near future.
If
you want to have ari experi-
·
One of the most well known
encethat will change your life,
and powerful songs in Rent was
goand
,
see the musical Rent. I
Seasons of Love which opened
·
had the
'
distinctpleasure of see-
·
up Act II. The cast was spread
·
ing this Broadway'musical on
across the front of the stage,
October 28 at the
-
Nederlander
hands interlocked, and sang
TheaterinNewYorkCity,anciif
about the
525, 600
minutes
truly impacted me inore than any
which constitute one year. The
other work of art ever has.
.
song, as well as the entire musi-
Reniis
'
a musical written by
-
cal, is really
sending
the mes-
the late Jonathan Larson,
-
who
-
sage to live the moments of each
.
died suddenly of an aortic an-
day as though they are the most
eurysm the night before Rent
sacred. Do not be concerned
was to open off-Broadway in
about the future or past because
·
1996.
WhileLarson was never
·
you are in neither
at
this very
able to see his dream of having
.
_
-
moment. You should appreci-
a musical show to which the so-
·
ate your life because you are
called "Generation
X"
could re-
blessed
·
to
have one at all and
late become a reality, it certainly
:
you never know when it could
touched millions of viewers all
photo
coune
s
y Jessica Cooper
end.
over
th
e w
9
rlcl .
.
: ,
•
.
. .
The cast of
RENT
_
brings critical issues and entertaining performances to Broadway.
Rent
was phenomenal. It dealt
·
Rent's,
plot is a bit confusing
The musical features young actors_ and actresses and is geared at a mature, younger
with issues with which our gen-
for
th
ose who have never_seen
audience: RE/1/Tfirst opened in 1996 is currently playing at the Nederland Theater in
eration has had to deal: homo-
it brought to life. It is about two
New York City.
"
.
.
·
sexuality, gender-identity crises,
meri, Mark and Roger (the latt~r
and most importantly,
_
AIDS.
of whom has AIDS), who live.in
Rent
was not like other musicals
a run-down
·
apartmerit
,
on the
tei-~in this show, inciuding
-
An-
on the audience who sc;reamed
musicals, such as opera and
that deal solely with issues of
LowerEastSideofManhattan
.
,
1
·
th
fu
·
d h
ev
.
ery
_.
tim
_
ehe
_
ap
.
pear
_
edonstage.
classical. Whileitincorporated
unrequited love and broken
Benny,Mark:anciRoger'sformec
.
:
~o~ex~al J!~;;::~ro fal~;
<;:ollins (played by Michael
many types of music, such as
hearts
.
While these themes
roommate, has come· int9 soine
-
in Jove with Collins the also-gay
McElroy) was also incredible as
•
dance, pop, salsa, and R&B, it
were involved, Rent went a step
money and plans on buymg the
11
.
.
f
,
.
A
.
I
·
a more mas
_
culine gay ch
.
aracter
.
.
was predominan
.
tly rock 'n roll.
further by confronting more
b
.
·
·id
.
·
··
•.
·
.·h
...
h
...
th
.
tw
.
_1:
.
co ege pro esso
.
r.
.
nge ,
.
.
.
1
.
h
Ul
mg mw
IC,
e
O
<110re-
:
-.
,
,:
·
1 •
.
d'b
w·1
-
c
·. . .
·
ch
·
a
His voice was so smooth it was' Jonathan Larson wanted the ' controversta topics, sue as
.
.
,
d -
r
B
.
·
•
.
.
.
.
•
,
t
p aye .. y .
.1
son
.
ruz e w s
.
,
h
f
.
d
mnlenttolne -m~nh,
~V~-
-
·
·
d
·
em1y ntho
'
..._
_RicjkxN~sguez,o~
'
.the
,
c:tjtica:liy
'.
1ike..,1J,1;(tt,,er.'1~q;<{
~hf
,
~~Pfr~
,
l!c,',e; ,c
_
roc~J~
,
~linf inH()rJ?.0rat~d,
irn~
t e a orementlone
cross-
0
y
,
P
ans on s utttn~ ow~- e
·
Le
acclaimed· show My So°Called
could truly feel.the mwnc he
the songs he wrote f?r Rent ~e- ,, 'dressing
:
.
:
~1~t:!"~1~~fj~~1~~e;:~e~~
-
_,
Liff!)
~as ~nam~~ng chara
_
cter.
a~catso
'
sr:
.
1s·ngainpdg
;
a
·
cl~r~:~~sal!;~~~~
-
~;usl~
~:
-
!~~~
~ire!:;~r::1:~
an~;~u~t~e~o;::-~i:;;~. t~
...
.
1
.
..
ff
.
·.
•
fh
·
;
..
.
1
..
-
, .
..
f
1
.
d
,-
Hewasstnckenw1thAIDS, but
f th .
peop e
.
~
o
.
·
o
.·
·
1s
;,
ot o
;,
an
•
;ti
-
(
·
"
d
·
>
h'cia
•
i:
-
the fullest and
show
·
had
-
sp~ctacuiar voices.
to,
_
and
-
a~preciate thi~ music
say' this because o
.
e issues
~~rl
f
~
'.
:.
:
frp~t\
'
g~_rifJ~l~~
)
:s1::g~:~my
~;J'
the
'
funniest
'
-
-
'
'
'.fhe songs
_
th~y sang evoked
best.
I
thmk _he was
_
n_ght be-
,
centered around sexuality which
.
~ureen,~ oish~
·
.
es 1an:p anb
.
s
· ·
·
soriits,
.
focfodfog You Okay
eons
''
of emotion and reaHy al-
caµse the aud1ence, which was
·
dominate the show. If you want
on prot~st10g t
1~
atrCJc:ity
.
Y
_
Hone
.
in full; Santa Claus-
lowed the audience to feel the
compqs~d of all high school and
to see a musical that will not
perforrmng on Christmas Eve.
A
·
·
y .
·
.
·
•·
.
. ·
•
·
h·
hardshi·p of the·i·r e
·
xpen
·
en
-
ces.
.
·
co_ lie
_
~e st
_
ud
_
ents (it was a spe_ -
·
only impress you, but will touch
·
·
.
-
_.
d
.
h
·
.
•
.,
·
.
1
.
esque atttre, not to mention ts
.
.
n~t e/:1~.U
~
~s
;:
an
-
-
t
e
,
st0
ry
me
.
bright; spllikling red lips~ick.
The music in this show was ·cml vtewmg), loved the music
you, hurry· to the box office and
·
..
pro
,
~f~s,~e~,,bu_t·I. do not wan.t
Thecharactertrul made
ail
im-
also amazing. It was not the type
and was_ screaming an_d yelling
see Rent in all of its glory.
to rum the en.dmg foryo
.
u:
.
.
·
·
-.
y
,
·
·
al
thth
t Ih hl
Th
,
.
. ·
.
.
-
.
,
..
th
.
,
..
h
-
.
,
pact on the story as a whole and
normally found in Broadway
ong wt
e cas .
_
1g
Y
rec-
ere are many o
.
ere llfac~
·
· • -
·
·
·
.
Defe:pdingthe
.
Artof
Entertainment
.
.
--·
.
:.
~.
.
.
.
.
.
-
.
·'
byCARLITO
Staff Eri_f ertainef
·
·, ,
·
it is because foy mother repeat-
mind can be taken at face value.
edlYtold
'
ine that
I
should stop
·
Did mommy ever tell you not to
breathing'because I was
·
wast-
believe everything that you see.
ing
·
oxygen that was better · on TV? Well the same goes for
.
Have you eyer
,
stopped
·
to •
.
suited for the rest of mankind.
what you may read in theenter-
question the purpose
:
,
of-enter~
'
Maybe it is because my brother
tainment cohimn of a college
taininent?
I
have. ]have
·
c9n:.
\vould pull his pants
;
down, sit newspaper,
.
tempiated both its value in gur
.
, .
on my face and wiggle
.
,
(Note
As
a
writer for
·
the Arts and
s~iety arid the role it plays)~
to self:
.
you are not on Di:.
_
Entertainment section, I have a
everyday'life
_.
After c9unt!es~
Susco's sofa so suppres~ an:y
-
distinct job to do. And that job
nights_ ofinsom:nia prodded
-
by
future cathartic impulses
·
;)
'.
-
is to assimilate my
-
readers into
cyclic philosophiiing,t hav~
_
'.
Tile a99veparagraph was one
·
.
adopting my belief that the
come to seyeral conclusions
:
/
• .
hundred percent hogwash; but
'
-
world would be a better place
The primary purpo§~ of
_
~n
_
ter
-
·
-
:
you know what?
I
Vfas laugh-
without asparagus. Rats, there
tainment is to givet1s a
_
l:if¢ak ..
;
.
,
1!,
-.
ing _whet! lwrote·jt,
_
and you
goes my subliminal stranglehold
break from the monotony
of
our'
-
'
know why? B~use
.
I visualized
on .the reading pubJic. Actually
futile existence on this planet. I
it and it is unbelievably prepos:.
my job is to entertain
,
hence-
do not know about you but my
_
terous. Much, ifnotall, of what forth the Arts arid Entertain-
ii(!!
is unbearably boring and
I writeis either an absurd <;tis-
ment section. I try to write
there are many occasions
'
where
·
·
tortion of tnith or fiction that is
things that people might find
if l do not take a break, I
-.vill
.
:
spontaneously expelled from my
funny and most of what I write
haye
a
cranial aneurysm.
warped ~i
_
nd. Several weeks
can be amusing
-
if people detach
Throughout life, I have pos-
·
ago,
·
I broadcasted_my lack of themselves from reality. Why
sessed an instinctual ability to
credibility~ a journalist by stat-
is this detachment a mandatory
entertain people, or at least that
ing that the article was written
prerequisite to reading my ar-
is what my mom tells me. I en-
-
by Carli.to, Staff liar.
ticles? Because if people be-
joy entertaining people and
For those of you
·
that are still
Ii
eve everything I write, they
maybe that is because I am
ambiguous about how to trans-
may become depressed by the
starved for attention. Maybe it
late that, allow me to spell it out
facts (lies)- that Alf is now an
is because my fa~er
-
used to
for you. I am completely and
alcoholic
and·
George
_
lock me in a closet with nothing
utterly full of crap. Absolutely
Popodopolis was killed in a car
but issues of Playgirl. Maybe
nothing that spews from my
bombing perpetrated by
Emanuel Lewis
.
-
·
Let us not forget the self-defa-
mation that l partake in. Hon-
_estly, I have suspicions that I
am a first stage alcoholic, but
they are probably just one of the
-
many paranoid delusions that
pass
-
through my
_
mind. Al-
though several years ago dur-
ing a crippling bout of depres-
sion, I did wallow in suicidal
doldrums, I do not presently feel
that I should be shot in the face.
In all honesty, I have only rented
soft porn on one occasion and
although I do enjoy hard porn, I
have never paid money for it.
An article in last week's Circle
has prodded me
_
to commentjn
regards to the use of Rohypnol
as a means of satisfying your-
self. Although several years
ago; nothing could successfully
jump-startmy sex life, I would
never consider using roofies to
do so. I find
.
the thought of a
fellow that is so desperate that
he would actually resort to se-
dating women in order to sleep
with them to be pathetic, tragic
and humorous. Does that mean
that I think rape is funny? Ab-
solutely, positively NOT. I was
poking fun at the sex-starved
loser that would do such a thing,
not the victim. Several women
very close to me have been vic-
tims of date rape and I have shed
many tears with them. There is
nothing funny about a woman
that is raped. They endure
trauma that I can not even
fathom and the memory is en-
graved in their mind for life.
But you know what? I did not
point to a girl that had been
- raped
.
and laugh in
,
her face.
That would take a lack of hu-
-
, manity
'
that I
am
incapable of. I
did not mock anyone's pain to
invite the defamation of charac-
ter that I endured last week.
Freedom of speech gives rrie the
right to poke fun at anyone I
want (including myself) in a
subtle fashion, but it does not
give me the right to insult some-
one directly. Except Tutie from
The Facts of Life.
...
please see
ART?,
pg. 12
,_
PAGE12
NOVEMBER 5
2
1998
.
Gi
.
v
_
·
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us
·
·
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.
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.
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.
·
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.
ti:~;;~i:r:~~;,tim
•
A
.
-
RT? :
.t'
and Jere.my.
'
Saturday
·
nights
from 10:30-12:00 is
The Beat
A
.
·
1
··
:
.
.
·
.
.
;
;
.
'
.
·
t
•'
Section with
.
DLG
;
with
live
·
_
L,()
·
·
umn1s
.
mixes of disko, house techno,
byCHRISKNUDTSEN
Staff Writer
and drum and bass.
The
'
ha
·.
s
·.
th
'·
e
·
88.1, WMCR, where the fox
SheehanFunk is on every Sun-
runs slowly and does not quite
- day night from 7:30-9:00with
•
make it to the other side of the
tl!,~ Spindoctor and B-Rock
''wr1
te''
campus ... not that anyone listens
playing'
a
variety of rock music.
to us anyway.
·
W~dnesday nights
·
from
9-
I do not understand why some-
10:30
;
WM CR kingpin Bob and
... ~ontinuedfrom
pg.
JJ
thing as entertaining as the cam-
·
his sidekick Brian spin the best
'(hat is not the marketplace of
pus radio station is s9 widely
·
in hardcore and metal on
the
ide
·
as that the First Amendment
•
.
ignored. We h,we quite a few
U~ityShow. Theteanurriberof protects, that is
"
a personal a
_
t-
.
quality shows, includi'ng my
shows
-
not mentioned here that
·.
tackreminiscentoftherank-out
own
·
(shameless plug), that are
are on every week, but there
co~tests
·
tµat I
·.
participated i!}
·
on once
.a
week. There are
wOuld be'too long
'
a
list
for
nie
'.
,
dtiringth~fourthgrade
,
The fact
shows for basically' every type
to continue. Concert tickets and
that someone could read a few
of music, from indie-rock
,
io
rap
,
·
other assorted items of note are
.
.
lines of print and use it
as a foun~
to techno, to punk, arid to any-
·
often peddled
off
during WMCR dation for verbaJ assault is in-
thing in-between as well as
•
shows, so yourincentive to
lis
-
.
fantile
:
-
·
sports talk shows too .
..
Now
ten is
.
that
_
·
muc
.
h
:
g
·
reater now.
.
.
If anyone
·
'riu
.
ttli~re ~ctually
_
c
i
n:le phoii>'Jotµiny Wigclow
granted, parts
·
ofthe canip~s
You could be missing out on:
·
believesthatlamarapist,Ihave
Cannot actually g
·
et the stati·on
·
,
.· ·
·
·
free
.
tickets to c
.
heck out
·
so
·
m
·
e
"o
·
ur words "or you.
WAKE
UP
·
·
WMCR Mus
_
ic Directo
.
r
.
Bob Roth
·
g
·
ives t
.
he
·
station tv.io
.··
.
big
·
·
·
·
·
1
'
1
'
in for one reason or another but
great live mus
.
ic'in the area!
' -
LITTL
.
E.SU
.
Z.IE
.
.
I h
.
ave noth
.
ing
.
thumbs up.
-
His anonymous friend looks to 'gtin down' lo
.
sers
m
·
·
·
·
·
it is still very discouraging for
.
·
vveU that is my sale_s
·
pitch for
'
but the utmost. respect
fo
.
r
who do not listen to WMCR. Ttie station's call numbers are
· ·
·
us DJ's who sltow up
·
to the sta
-
· ·
the
"
radio
·
station:
·
WMCR has
·
wom~n apd that is my opinion,
.
tion
full
of enthusiasm to
.
piay
..
88· 1 FM
.
<
-
.
the
.__
talent and the potential to
not my libido's. Although
I
like
our favorite music and nobody
reach
a
greater audience~ but we
·
small boys, I would never con-
seems to be lis
t
ening.
my show whether someone
·
Half Day Closing with Mike and
have
·
to start by supporting
.
sider
.
raping ~ne': I would like t~
.
If
you actually turned off the
calls in or not, but still it makes
Kate which is on from 1
:
30
-
3:00
them campus-wide.
•.
Try tum-
-
make a reque
s
t to those readers
Playstation for once and tuned
the show that much better when
on
·
Mondays.
Monday Nitro,
ing the di alto 88.1 next time you "that
.
are extremely sensitive.
in
,
you would hear other stu-
someone out there acknowl'-
no,notthewrestling,isonfrom
are working out, taking
·
a
WhenyouJlip
.
through
The
·
dents putting on surprisingly
.
edgesyourefforts. There area
10:30-12:00 hosted by Mikail,
·
shower
,
skippingclass,orwhat-
·
Circ~e
_
and
y~m
.
stumble upqn
good shows. Now this might
plethora of quality shows
·
on
playing hip-hop and rap .
.
Fol-
evei- else it is that you do. Ymir
an ar:ticle with
my
naine on
.it,
really be pushing it, but if you
WMCR and°the best part is that
lowing this is
The Darkside with
friends are the onesin the sta-
tum t~e page. Right now Puff
made the effort to actually !is
-
·they are
.
student-run as op-
Self Caged and Ivo, playing a
.
tion so give them some encour
:
·
Daddy
_
is on my television.
I
ten to the show, you might as
.
posed ti:> being owned by some
mix of gothic and industrial mu-
agement arid check
.
out their
~ate what)
am
being exposed
well go the extra step further and
.
·
corporate figurehead
.
Why not
sic. Every Thursday at
4-:
30-6:00
shows; Who knows, you might
t9 so I
.
am going to change (he
call extension 2132 to let the DJ
encourage them. and listen to
is a punk show run by Rich and
actually l_ike ~ome of them.
.
channel. You can d
_
o w
.
e same.
·
know that at least one person is
some music that you might not
·
Mike. My own punk show,
4
tuning in. Believe me,
_
we ap~
~e able to hear on other st~-
.
Empty
Pocfq?ts,
'
is on
,
Fridays
predate it.
·
Now speaking out
hons?
.·
. .
..
.
'
from 3:00-4:30 with'my
.
~o.:host
-
of my own experience, limited
As said e!iflier
-
tl}ere
:
3!,"e
i
~how,s
Jimbo~
!
La:terdn
,
lht
·
e~enihgrat
though it is,
I will keep enjoying
focusing on ~n?
:
~e~r9ck such as
6:00-:7 ,30·
_iiL:Fridaj' Sporis
.
;~
PRESSWIRl!
·
1
3
6
9
10
11
12
13
15
17
18
19
·
21
22
.
23
24
26
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
1
2
3
4
.
5
.
6
7
8
14
16
19
20
22.
23
Across
One Half of a
Pair
What
Did You
Say?
Not Lost
One Before a Vowel
·
Single
Female sheep
Classic Japanese Drama (Var.)
Egyptian Crown
Habituated
.
Classical Prefix
His, Objective Case
OtherHalf
of a Pair
In Accordance With
Study
of people (prefix)
Male
. .
Most Extended
Piercing Sound (adj
.
)
Musical Note
Legume
..
Member of
a:
Fraternal Order
Get_thecar
In Addition
Change Color
Possessive
Down
Tomorrow
(Spanish)
Primary CeU Terminals
Arizona
Indian
Not Educated
;
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··
In
a
Feverish
Manner
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Topossess
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___
aridHaw
CanyOut
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&
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·
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-
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7
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·
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15
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21
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·
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athap://www.q>Wi.rc.com
Wire Nail
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·
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Last week's answers
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·
PAGE13
AJlOtaWarCDanaRoutwinner
across to the audi~nce. He told
.
.
. by
.
BOB ROTH
Staff Writer
:
Which. Hudson Valley area
band has
·
been around
·
for six
years and is finally breaking out
to a natural audience? If you
answered All Out War, then you
me that he was trying to expose
were
,
so tl;lat people ~an experi-
.
the problems of society. I found
ence their Jive show .
.
Mike told
that the meaning of the title was
me that they are going on tour
to showhow people and prob-
with a band called Buried Alive
Iems in society and history have
now, and a future tour with
beeri neglected_. The crucifix
Crowbar is in the works. Check
metaphor was used to show
out A/I Out War's great new full-
how people have been put down
length'For Those Who Were
and were never able to liberate
Crucified for band contact ad-
themsel ves. They have been
dresses and other information.
shut down for so long that soon
If you want to know more about
~is will overflow and spill these
All Out War's music and lyrics,
issues like poverty and
·
prob-
chec~ out the following
!ems into society.
I
was also
website:
http://
,wondering what their tour plans
Wlllvw. vict,oryrecords. com/
''
.·
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
·.
•
Umty Fest" brings
good
-
times,
music
.
byPA,TRICkWHITILE
·
·
A &E Editor
are correct!
.
.
AllOut War's new CD For
Those
·
Who Were Crucified is
out _now an
_
~ i~ going to be a
crucial
.
record
for
.
the
·
Poughkeepsie area.
·
Tots record
indudes three songs from their
first full-1ength,
·
Truth In The
Age0/Lies,\vhich had little U.S.
with an Irishfolk influence to
distribution. There
.
stoftheCD
create something botli rousing
includes nine new songs, as
.
well
and origina1. Much of the mate-
as some hidden cover songs by
The nationwide "Unity Fest"
ria1 from theirfirstfull-lengthon
the Cro-Mags and Corrosion of
tour set a new standard for live
Hellcat Records was show-
Confonnity. With All Out War
rilus~c at The
'
Chance this pist cased, along with some newer
n~w on Victory Records
,
you
Saturday.
·
,
·
sorigs.
·
They even treated us to
wdl be able to get their new CD
"Unity Fest
"
is a tour
·
set
up
their
.
own rendition of Charlie
everywhere.
.
by
veteran New York City pro-
On_ The MTA, the highlight of
This CD is a combination of
moter Bill_y
;
Milano to bring
·
their set.
If
you are a fan of Irish · metal and modem hardcore.
It
young and old bands
·
and audi~
folk music and think you could
possesses a huge crossover
ences in the hardcore scene to-
stand hearing it mixed with some
potential and a swift punch with
gether for a good time and great
loud guitar, _definitely check out
·
music sounding like Slayer and
music. The tour is in its first
The Dropkick Murphy's. They
old thrash metal. As each song
year and will hopefully become
can be seen on tour with The
progresses, you hear how the
a
:
yearly event.
.
This year's
Mighty Mighty Boss tones from
band is diverse enough to be
lineup includesNYC's Agnos-
time to time.
capable of not making every
tic Front and Maximum Pen-
New York's seminal hardcore
song sound alike, something
alty,
Boston's
Dropkick
band Agnostic Front closed out
hardcore bands often fall into,
Murphy's, and California
'
s US
the show. AF got their start in
The addition of Mike Score on
Bonibs, no
·
t
to
mention different
1980 and broke up in early 1993,
vocals gives this record a dark
loca1 support at each venue
;
but two years ago they resur-
and evil feel. Tackling issues
··
$.e(f:Decay~rovid~d
_
the}ocal
.
~aced
_
with ~eir classic lineup
like poverty and neglected
~UPR?i:t
NJh1s:_P.~1~u,l
"
8f
/
S~op
;
'
/nl!lct. __ . Jhelf setli
_
.
now
:
feature
people in their lyrics
,
they shed
<;1n tli~
~
rour. They
c:
are a
y
9
_
4
ng
·
,
ih
~elect ·s911is
frcj
.
1j:j;
,
their first
some light on issues that people
_
band
.
·
who _do ndf Iook
·
t
g
be
::
:
single, f983'sJ'{,iTted
Blood'
tend·to:push•away
-
and forget
mucli~lderJ~an high
/
school
>
their dassicfi~~t'albiim, 1984'~
about w~ile living at college and
age, _but they sho'Y
·
e~
·
some
_·
_
Vi_<:_tim1n Paill
/
and
'
this year
'
s
separated from the world.
!'ronuse for thefoture
_
.
:
Their set
,
,.:
n~w releas
,
e S~mething
's
Gotta
If you are a fan of metal or
included a Cro~Mags cC>vei- that
.
"
GlvE!.(Epitaph Records)
,
Vocal-
h
_
ardcore or just want to hear
gotthecrowdgoing. They
:
were
.-
ist
:
~o
·
ger Miret and guitarist
something new, this disc from
fol
,
1owed by Maximum Penalty,
-
Vinny Stigma might not be the
·
~ll Out War is rightfor you. It
who have
_
been around t4e un-
·
kids they were when they first
is a perfect blend of metal and
derground hardcore circuit for
started,
:
but they seem to hav-
hardcore that will make listen-
·.
~I most ten years. This band
ing the time of the lives, They
ers aching for more. After re- .
.
.
r1ever really. managed
·.
to get
opened with a great one-two
viewing
·
the CD I became curi- ·
nmch of a following outside of _punch from the first album with
ous about how they began, and
New York City, but' some of the
the title track and -Your Mistake
how their
.
·
influences have
1?ds at The Chance seemed to
·an_d proceeded to play
a
good
shape
_
d their-sounds. Aftertalk-
hke th~m. They p]ay a style of mix of old and new rµateriat
ing with Mike Score, I found out
melodic hardcore
·
·
music with
Most
-
of the
.
audience
,.
seemed
that the band has
.
been around
hip~hop undertones that so'ine
niore familiar with
.
the
.
newer
for si~ years. Ali the members
think is th'e best thing since
stuff, but I thought the old
live in the Poughkeepsie area,
American chees
·
e and others
songs were delivered the best and have
·
been involved in the
think
is worse than curdled milk.
·
AF
closed out their set with their
hardcore and metal scenes all
fersonally I could stand seeing signature song (which most
their lives. I found out that a
them agai!1, so long as the ~inger
:,
pepple do not realize is actually · combination of-Sli;,yer, Sick Of
leaves his dancing shoes at a
.
cover), Crucified. They in-
It
All, Celtic Frost, apd the Cro-
home
.
next time;
,·
CA's popular
.
v1ted eye9'.
_
~ne on stage with
Mags have all
.
hid
·
their styles
US Bombs played next, in ftdl
.
them to sing along, which was a
mixed
.
in
.
to come
·
up with the
.
1-Ialloweeri attire. They have
'
a
·
;
nice
·
touch. A great time was
sound associat~p.
.
v/ith the mu-
.
lot of personality on stage
,
and
had by aU at The Chance
,
and
·
sic of All Out War .
.
.
put on a much better set than I
frankly I wish I had the time and
. After
.
r~ading the lyrics and
expected. They performed on
money to give up school for a
the title of th
_
e r~cord I asked
Comedy Central's Premium
bit and follow the "Unity Fest"
.
Mikewhat
_
they
·
meantand ~hat
.
Blend this summer and I remem-
·
<!fOund for the rest of the tour .. :
message he is trying to get
berthinking·they were the worst
'
·
r'"::~"".""'.-".":'
·
_
·
,
__
-
..;..
•·
-
·
_..;.....;. ___
..;.. ______ _
.
band I had'.ever seen,
·
so.I was
·
s -- ·
■
·
~-:ri::"~1..~~~u;~~:"J~;
.
·
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.
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·
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;
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traditional punk-rock sound
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·
casJl:
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;
Go
·
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·
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&Florida
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or
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.
.
a outwar. 1tml
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.
.
_)_.
f
)'.
.
.•
-l'.
·.
•
TH1tiH1g
\VHS
t
<:~
S
-your potential.
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-
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-·
NOVEMBER
5, 1998
·
:
Sg:
:
o
:
:~~s __ -..
_.
·
·•
-.
.
.
-~-
-
-
.-. ,.·
-
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-
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..
->~·
-
-_-_,PAGE
.:
14
Cetd~
i~njoYitJ.g
•
fine
ta.re~r:
(Of Ji~4F,oJeS
',
by
ALFREtioEFATIA
.
'
,;I
fight
tili t~e
-
en~:" said
She ;eally s~~d .t() ot~
~p
~
--
:·
iidii
tiie\6ain.
·
~he
'
sa~tih~
~
-
~io~eril~n~ natiori
'
and
.
wb:ld-
.
.
StaffWrit(!r
Cerda on the mentality she
.
some eyes
·
from different col-
·
bond between her and the rest
wide" added Cerda
.
·
;
·
'
.
'
·
"
:
·
brings into each
and
every
leges when she played qn _the
of her
.
teammates is something
·
.
The improvementshe would
Many people in
life
when they
game.
Big Apple Nassiu.i County Voi~
·
special
;
:
·
·
.
.
.
.
.
rnost'like to·seejs 1n women
'
s
are faced with adversity
will
About eight years is how long
leyball Team. She would
:
play
·
.
•
''Ifitwasnqtforiny.teammates
··
high
·
school sports
·
where she
.
·
give up
oi-
back
'
down. Well
volleyball
star
·
Cerda has been
on this team fqr two years and
lwould notbeatMarist," O;rda
feels
:
people still do not give
that's not the case of 5 -
11
jun-
. competing in volleyball. She
travel all' overthe
:
country.
In
said;
. .
.
~omen: respect. She is satisfied,
iorvolleyball player Julee ~erda. . ~as something special
at
Long
her second year on
.
the team . ·
·
bff
th.e court, Cerda is major-
·
;
however, with magazines such
Words like quitter, loser, or cow-
Beach High s
·
chciofo11Long Is-
they would
,
reac;h the regional
ing
'
in communicationb:ut does
as Women Sport~
_
Illustrated
ard are not in Cerda's vocabu-
land. In her freshman year she
championship
·
games "".hich
not know wh
_
at aspect ·of the
and other wome11 sport maga-
lary when she's on the court.
was placed on the varsity team.
were
-
held in
-
California. As a ·
.
communication field she wants
zines that
.
feature women ath-
She is actually the total oppo-
In her first full seas9n
9n
the
result of playing
-
:
onthis learn,
to
do
,
as a
·
career.
.
.
.
.
,
.
.
le
.
tes. She says-sh~ sees these
site; she is aggressive and de-
team she was so good that she
she
-
would
get
many
-
looks
,
at
"fr.eally don'tknoV{ wliatspe-
;
magazines as a source to
-
help
termined to get the job done on
was named rookie of the yearin
.
different c
·
olleges like
.-
Siena,
--
dfically
'I.
want
t<>
·.
do," s
·
aid
inspire up and corning women
the court.
.
.
her schools
.
conference. She Towson State; Delaware, Hart-
Cerda. That's why she is
_
taking
.
athletes
;
,
.
.
·
.
,
What makes her a key parfof would continue to dominate all ford, and Marist;
.
-
.
.
diffe~ent courses.
_
to see \I/hat
Maybe one. day. Julee Cerda
the women's volleyball team
·
at
througho,ut herhigh school ca-
.
.
She says when
·
she reflects on
appeals to
·
her .
.. ;
·
·
will
befeaturedfo a women sport
Marist College? Cerda said she 'reer arid would receive all-con-
her years spent here at Marist,
As for her feelings with regard
.
magazine playing vollt:yball for
thinks she has the answer. .
ference and all-county_ awards.
she
·
is glad she decided .to at-
to w~mien athletes she sees more .
·
·
theU
,.
S. Olympic team.
.
SOCCER:
.·
·M
: ·,
·
·
·
•
1d
·tend.
·
·
-
·
roomfor
_
improvement. Shesees
Or: maybe
.
when.she.retires
•.
e
·
n
·
·
co
·
U
.
"Marist was not rriy fii:st
thatithaschangedfortheg()od,
·
fromvolleyballCerciawillbea
.
.
,·
..
.·
·
.
.
.
·
.
choice,"Cerdasaid
.
"I'msoglad
but still needs more.improve-
reporter fora
.
woman'.s sport
·
•.o,
·
·
'
·
'
I'mhere. Ilove
.
theteam.'.'
.
..
·
.
·
,
inent
·
.
:
.
_
magazinesoshecaninspireand
en
.
.
11
_
oy
_
_
S
.
U
_
~
-
c
..
. ,
e
.
s
_
_
s
1·
_
1).
·
_
'
_
9
,
9
.
.
.
.
She has high
:
regards for;her
..
..
('Ifs becoming a gradually
give knowledge to women ath-
~
teammates and enjoys b~ing a
·
prpcess but, it needs more im-
.
letes on the rise.
- •
.
thi~t;e~•~::~!~~~~:~~
_Women·'s·volley
· ·
b
·
all
fin
_
_
~ish
_
es
·
2-
_·
7
_
.
__
·
developed the year before.
·.
-
the last: But then again, how.
After DeBrito's consecutive. . could
.
it have possibly been
•
·
·
·
-
,i..,.,.~
'
· -
· ·
·
·
·
·
1 · · 1 ·
•,
t
'
·
•
l\ ,. _·,( ..
A
·c
·
·
... continuedfrom
pg
15
shutouts,theFoxesdriftedback
worse?
:
With the bulk of;the
ID
C0111.erenc
.
•
e
:
p
·
.
a~, .. ·
as
.
m
_
.
·
.
ll':LtU-1
_.
-
,
-
.
.
.
,
.
'
·.
tcim~diocritythe
·
restofthe year.
:
. team return)ng,
:
inclu~irig a
J ·~
But-it was a competitive rriedi-
.
heaithy Joe
·
Crespo for
·
the'full
byRYANMARAZffl
·
·
rassi~g .Joss .
.
:
·
.
.
.
.
.
_
theI~ssto Fairfield (6;15,
5
~
15,
ocrity.
.
season, all the ingredients are
Staff Writer
.
.
Maristbegan
.
thefoui:th game
.
and 8-15). Heiabovepar play
Apyone who saw tllem pJay
·
th"ere fcir a wit
:
ming 'recipe.
leading
'
5.:0.
'.
Then
-
the
.
tides
.
has
'
oeen
'
'a pleasant surprise to
knows thatMaristneverfelleas-
;,
The 14freshmen
will
turn into
2-7 is noi:agreat'i-ec9rdforone
.
turn~dan4 I~ma took°ady~ritage
all
:
.
.
.
.
.
·
..
·
ily. They were in every ga~e
14
sophomores. No longer can
of
·
the strorigest
.
teams
'
in
the
.
of me
"
ntal errors ·
•
and
.
sloppy
'
Maiist continued its winning
they f?laye_d
.;
. .
.
. .
.-
:
.
~
, . the Fpxes µii,ie
.
behinqinexperi-
MAAC.
.
.
..
·.
,
,.
·
bumping
'
by
.
Manst.
,-:-;,,.- ·
·
::.:
streak fo
_
tothis
'
pastweekend,
; '
"Our kids
'
'don'
t
back clown .. : ence
.
a~ an
·.
ex~u
-
~e
_
,
fo( lo~i~g.
Unfortunately, Mirist College
Aftei'reelin
'
g
'
offeight str~ght
. '
taking
,
alLthree ihatches
'
th
'
ey
'from
anybody," said Herodes.
·
Coach flerodes is
·
upbeat about
Volleyball i~
2
-:
7
1
_
n the MAAC
. -
. poin\s
/
J\hlgu{st salle:<i
a:
time-
·
.
_':
p_l~yed
'at
•
th~
.
B-~cknell In vita-
. ·And that's
.
allwel\
.
and good,
the.~t\lre,claillY.,n,g"the kids are . _·e~~i:\tl}!l#~}P~Y, re
_
o11e ·~r.~_e
.
ori
(,
~
-
~
t
~
;
w~!'.~~g}_o~~lgi·Jhe
•
·
.~
~
-
~
-
11~b
' ...
;
.
,:
.. \;\
·
. ,
;.
,
:i;,
.
,
·butwhenyq1.1coroe·rignfclqwn . readf' to
'
't'tjirt
·
the
·
program ·top powerhouses both 1tat1st1-
Gaels' attack Thetacticseemed
..
Manstwonconvmcmglyover
to,itthe bottoni)foe ~s
.
wiris and
around.
·
..
-
.
·
·
.
·
'
'
·
"chny1iridftindaili¥riihl'i:Y!
~h'tch
·
•,;
ttfwti;k
~PMt~FdeiN2rtfc'i'a·kill
·
'f
1ribb~nMdni's'oii
~i~hitcia~
1
ti'nd
loss'es .
.
,Once again
,
th~ Red
.
.
Tnne
will tell
if
this
ye?f'S glim-
miisf
~ri% hea
'
ct.
c
·
o~~Ji
;~~H~y
·
:,
~
#~Jvt,
ij
-fmji:~~~-1
~~
~~
:
poi~ts .
.
:
}
~
-
?.~l'i~
1
~t~f
~?d)3u
,
ciai
:
~!
i
'
:
on
Foxes finished with m
'
ore of the
.
mers ofhope:werlsimply glim
-
~lqmst cra~y. A_n~ if thaqs
,
Unfortunat
_
ely th!! scoi:i
_
ng was
·
·.
Su~~ay; losing only one gan:ie
.
. .
latter, and that is never good,
"
·
mers, or if they provided ail ;ic-
.
;
_-
not
.
(?
_
ilough,
.
the,
~ed,
;£oxes
..
·
~parsi
'
:a11d1
'
e.rra#c'a'(ihe
'
R
_
ed
._..
tbeeriiire
·
weekeqd.
·.·
.
·.
,
.
'.:
..
.
:·
·
_no matter how
-
hard
the
'
.
team
.
c~rate
Ioo'k
info the
.
future of
.
s~gg!ed
'
~dcl~~e~f9rits J~t
·
~
t~~~s
.
e,ve~to~Iy
_
f~11
J
2:1,:\
.
,·
.
_i
:
.
)
P
!!J
f
tO~fl!~~DtiS~~.rd~~~d
·
),~ay,s.
.
,
·
·
,
·
.
..
·
,
,
.
)vfarist
sc:icce
t.
_
. ·
. ,
_
· : ·_.
wi~
over
.
a
.
_
rri
,
~c,h
_
,
w
,
e~ff.;Iona .
,
;
·
With
a
2
;;
2
tie;~~ foxe~
.
~d
.
-~
28-
.
'
.
1?lls
:
al9~g
_
w1~
~1~
,
~~i.:1~e
team;
.
-
.
~
-_
,
>
,
·
. · · .
.
:
'
GaelsJcickedupfor
.
afinalnµly
·
'.
a~es
;
_:
~ameyaMed three more
Yw.oe learred llE lrtlm
ski[~~
il's
~
IQ
tak?
lf'Sn
to
a
ligher
IML
~
~e
lo
oo
i
5
: .
,
. ~-\'idh~
'
JEdl#smJ'.an
.
.
atstaroog
1r~11rurogram,
;wl
frd
tta
we're
as ·
.
mtllati~iedi~~a~~~esMa
.
'tlsiti:uwibs.te
iriltest-~
·
cu~s
tooay.
.
,. .
.
~.
.
;
~
~
•.•
:
_
.
.
.
.
·,
.
!
;
l'leareai~O!)mnq~.
___
PaineWebber
.•. Launchingyour:
_
career
.
On Thursday, October 15th,
match
:
to
,
decide the
·
wiriher.
·
aces
:,
fo
iip
her
.
season totaLto
the volieybal{
_
t~am l,msied(l7
.
_
l\fadstreally'dispfayed'its core
)
36
;
;
'goo
'
d
'
for
'
seiohd irhhe
-
L·p.Ill.
niflt9~
{
·\ga\r,ts
_
t=~~eJ<ma·
:
)?
-
W~-
.
~aw~
,
'.-:
t
/
'
·
::
.:.;,;.i
:,:
.
{
¥MP.
·
;!3ik:11?~}l-.~f~~io
·
Gaels
_
.
.
The
_
~~orter-Gaels per-.
·
.
·
•AfterJUmpmg
-
outto a9~7lead
:
:·
blocks
.
Hertwnito'Yer,llp'iftont
formeQ well eqough
_
toJorce a
the
_
Red
:
Fpxes ran. into a told
:
Virtaliied
lJ
blocks increasing
,
·
su
_
qde}idea~ r~~Y
:
tn~tc~•wiQi
.;
'stre~l)p!,d~ned
::
iith
;
p~q 1~£k
:}
·'
:
li~r
}
1MfJ~aging
:
!otal
j
o
'
76 .
.
the towering
lled
Fox,es.·
\
-
.
·'
-
·
.
'During
·
one
·
ra1l)'the Foxes s~nC
He
r'.
'76
blocRs
are
a},so
·
go~d for
J\c!].tally, tpe Red Foxes suf-
.
.
hard hit after hard hit thatloria
18~
-
~the
riati{?n
:
airiong
NCAA
.
>
feied
th~it common lapse
info-
contiimaliy
kept
alive.
<
. ·
::
/
<
..
):>1yision
fsctiools
:
':
_'
.
.
.
.
c
·
us
'
that
·
h
'.
a
{
huri thern 'often
.
_
FoUow\rig a Julee
.
Cerda
·
hit
.
.
.'
Despite
th~
}ndiyjclual su~
_
cess
during thi$
'
season:
•.
.
.
.
_
frorn'tJie
·
·
outsiQe, anJona player
·
Manst pfayers.Jave
had
/
they
.
Marist opened the mate~ win-
lunged
for
Aft
errant
bunip pass,
..
are
. :
·
not
.
satis
,
fied
:.
\il.ith
.:
their
i1inggameone,
15~11.
Bo.thJen
passing
'
itov'er he/ shoulder
.
. .4r
,
!1~sf
,
ni°ii't~piate
'.
i~
.
-
fhe
Parker and Cara ,Birksent numb-
'
before 'toppling offthe· court·.
'
.
'
¥MC:.
\.,:.
;
\
: . ·
.
J
,
. ·•
·
• ·
•·· ..
.
ing spikes~~ kills toward~ the
..
.
.
D.~~pite Jon;t',s
•
pesky faliies,
_
.
·
.
,
:
'·
:.-~tf:sJitc.<>iiferense
.
play
:
and
feeble Gael~
,
.
Th~ de~ense of 'Matj.~tco~tirmedto'holdfa
-
stto
.
'
ip
..
go
,
veraJl/Nl~~thop~d
-
to
.
Bir~andlfeatherVlrlimitedthe
a
trim
(poiritleaµ:
__
.·
.
_
.
;
>
'
;
'
improve.its
re~ord
,
when tl}~y
:
Iona offense
to
'
strategically '
·
;
Then
disaster
almost
struck .
.
:
·.~
played S
(
Pefors
'
{in
Wednes~
-
pla~ed durripsfuld sideline
·
scor-
·
Stnneh9w
;
Ioriafoui;d'th~
wiil
.
·,
day
)
iiicl
~
'
alsi/when
.
ilieftrav~
.
ing.
.
;
:
;
.
. .
;
' .
.
. .
as
welf
as
the holes
·
ili the
Man.st
'
eled to
Manhattan
io take on the
·
Maristthen dropped the.sec-
.
.
'
defen~e-to,kee1{th~
'
ganie'close
,
Jasp~~
->'
iri
Jpih'"c:a~es Marist
ondgame8
c:
15.
·
.
•
' .
_. and
,
eventually' take
.
the lead at
.
''
c'arneupempl)(
'
.
·
'
.
=
.
.
.
·
Thethirdgamewasmorecom-
12-11.'
· ·,
.
.
.
.
:.·.
':·
'
.
.·
'
On
.
Wednesday they Were
petitive but Marist used
its
size
·
.
Enlivened by°devas_titirig ~ts
·
~:,yept
by
theJh~n
7.:1
Peacocks,
to dominate the court wirining . from Parker'.and Birkan(i
~CCU~
·
:
3-0, :_rhey'managed to win 'one
15-11. .
,
.
·
. _
· . . .
.
late se~~ce
_
from
¥~_ry
1
·Beth
:
gam~ aga,i~sf;fy1~piu1ttan, but
Leadmg two g~es to one;·the
. _
Koh_lhepp
"
an~
_
1p$hil
~arney
stilI lost to the'Jaspers, 3-
_
l.
:
Red Foxes.appeared to be head-
(four ac~s); the Red Foxes dug
.
.
.
..
I\:farist will travel up to
.
Mas-
ing for a f~ur g~e~ mat~h ~in.
..
d~p into
.
its pride pre~aiJing 15-
.
s~~hus~~ts this weekend
t<>
par-
Instead, they found themselves
.
12 taJ<ing
the
game and
·
match.
ticipate in the Harvard Touma
-
staring in the face of an embar- '
·
Kohlhepp also
'
played
well in
merit'
'
.
·
..
.
.
:
.
.
,·
s
ancun
*
N~ssau
*
·
,
arnaiea~· Maza'tlan ~
-
Acapulc
*
Bahamas
Cruise
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*
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.
Travel Free and make lots
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411
-
THE
CIRCLE
.
NOVEMBER5,i998
·
,sgorts.
ff
Citlfil)nS
'Rel}()r1i
.
.
-
by Jan.Beighley,Jr.
While the New
'
York
=
Mets
-
~ere rejoi<:ing over what \Vas a
major victory last week; the rest
·
of baseball is getting· set to suf-
_
casualties, most namely the first
·
With the Vikings falling to the
month of the·s~ason.
:
.
Buccaneers 27-24, the Denver •
-Broncos
are:the last remaining
fer.·
·
·
·
.·
'
-
~ase~(!,ll-'feels like
.
Mike Piazza was signed to
a
--
seven~year,
.
91
•
million-ciollar
A..
.
1!1-erica's_
_·
pastime
.
contract iti whatis
·
the richest
·
again, do not let
contract ever signed by
:
a
Ma-
.
'
t
'
h
·
t
·
h
.
:
b
-
·
·
.
k
jor League baseball player.
·.
: -
a
C
ange
'J
·
Plll_ -
While
'
signing Piazza long-
ing the
same
mis-
termwasri~tlyamajorg~alfor
.
takes made in "1994
the Mets this off;season, 1t was
.
·
·
a signing thanet the
·
pace
·
ror
·
all of the remainingJree agents,
Now,. what does this
·
have to
including Bernie Williams, Mo
-;
do with baseball?
·
Major-League
Vaughn, Kevin Brown and
.
owners have complained about
Randy Johnson.
·
·
·
-
rising salary structure .in the
The true travesty that- base-
·
past, particularly with the
•
issue
ball has not learned from the
of the·
-
have's
.
.
(George
example of the NBA: One of the
Steilibrenner'
t
and the Yankees
undefeated team
-
in the
NFL.
.
-
WithTertell Davis, John Elway,
. Shannon Sharpe, Rod Smith and
an
unbelievable offensive line, ·
·
the defending Super Bowl
··
'.
Champions are going to be
.
tough to beat. While Cincinnati
gave the Broncos a run, with
Denver escaping ·with a 33-26
win on Sunday, nobody seems
to be able to' stop the offensive
machine that Mike Shanahan
has concocted. Add to that an
outstanding defense and you
have the best team in football.
You want to win the AFC'? The
road ends in Denver.
remaining free agents will surely
.
and Ted Turner and the Braves)
Also in the world of
slgnformorethanthe9fmilliori
.·
vs:
_
the have-nots (Pittsburgh,
sports this week:
that Piazza ac~epted froin the
Montreal). With some
.
teams,
.
. .
Mets. Likely baseball will b<;!
stich as the Mets, pushing sala-
1.
Green Bay Packers- Favre and
faced with the 'firs~
·i
00 million
:_;
tjes tjpwards of 15 to 20 million
Freeman combine for 2 touch-
dollar contract within
a
coµple
'
·
dollars
a
y~ar, there
_
wiU be simi-
downs and 193 yards in defeat-
of month
_
s. This i~ a_ situation
lar difficulties in MLB as to
ing the 49ers 36-22.
that basl_(etball
_
has
.
been faced
those in the NBA is right now.
2. Mike Richter
:.
Back to back
with over the
last
couple of sea-
.
Like basketball, owners will re-
shutouts ... he again looks like
sons.
·
·
alize that they liave been over-
the goalie that led the Rangers
In the NBA;
.
salaries have
· '
~pending and then
try
to devise
to their fist cup since 1994
.
.
beeri escalating at a phenomenal
a
c91Iective bargaining agree-
3. Kerry Collins- Return to Caro-
pace. I~ the mid-1980's the av-
·
ment that slows
.
do\\'n .the rise
Jina, despite the fact that he did
erage salary was in the low six
·
.
of salaries .. This could lead to
.
not play, resulted in not only a
figures.
·
Since Michael Jordan
anothe{strike, or like basketball,
loss for the Saints but also be-
entered- the
.
leag~e. however,
.
an owner induced 1~ckout
.
.ing arrested for drunken
:
driving.
:
'
salaries have rose dramatically,
,
/
Myple~gcies
to
ail'th~niajor
:
4. NBAfockout:, I knowl men-
.
.
:Witli°some
players
riiaki~g
in
·
ex-
.
leaglJe bas·eball. owri~rs:
Learn
tioned
fr
last week, but ~ome on!
c~s
.
of l0
_
mil
.
lion
'
dollars,topped
frqm
the example of basketball
Play the gllllles.
.
.
,
.
by fordan
'
hiirl
_
self at aro-ii~d 35
. ·_
ancJ_
stop
the
.
escalati?n ofsala-
.
.
5.
S
_
o ~uch for Peyton Manning
million~y~.
.
.
. .
.
.
.
.
~es before:itge~
·
.o~t
of
hand.
- Tee Martin c
_
ompleted an
:
This dramatic change i
_
n
.
sal-
,
:
.Baseball feels Jik.:e America's
.
.
NCAA
recorci
_
23 straight passes
:
ary
_
structure
·has
_
helped to
·
..
pastim.e again,
clo
;
not let that
.
for the University of Tennessee
.
c
'
ause
_
the NBA
·
1ockout
.
this
.
change by maldng
.
·
the
•'
saine
against South Carolina last Sat-
.
year, wllkh has already taken
.
mistakes made in 1994.
.
.
urday. .
.
;
Ments
Soc
.
cer
~PPears
to be on
tlte
5
tight
tr"c
:
}{f
(}r
next
season
by.JEFFD~CKE
-
.
.
H~rodes, ~ho was siarklicriti-
.
o~~s. F,orthe firs
_
t time in a long
SrajJWriter'
.
.
cized 1::i~t
lieasori
foi:
.
his p~ifor-
.
time;'Marist soccer looked
--~
.
.
.
·"
·
.
:
.
-
'
mimceonthe s1deHrie;remained
good: They
.
lo9ked like
_
they
.
_
SiX wins on a_l ?'g~e s
·
cned-
caliri, ;He
'
constantiy _said
_
his
belonged on tJ-1~ field. They
.
,
ule rriay so.und'like a t~rtj.bl~ sea-
·
·
~lub was playing well thi:oµgh
·
.
looked like they were ready to
son; for· successful programs
.
the Josses and he
_
never
'.
pan-
tnakeamarkin the Metro Atlan-
·
win more than one-third of their
·
icked,
·
.
,
·.
.
•tic
Athletic Conference.
·
g
.
anies. Btitthis yearh~d tooe
.
'
f...fore impo~ritly hi~ pl~yers
.
The success e
_
leased Herodes,
consid~red
a
s_tep_
:in
th~ right
.
.
maintained a po~itive attitude,
but he did not get too excited.
dire
.
ctio~ for)h~ Marist m,en's
_so~~t~pg thatw~s
.
noneiistent
I:Ie kne_w this team l_lad great
soccer
t ~
Ms_pite their 6-11
the
.
previ9us season.
'F.reshmiffi
potentiai, po_tential.that was be-
mark.
·
· · · ..
·
·
·
·
·
Brian Garafola, one of the team's
.
ginning to ooze out. ~ut he also
However, j
'
ustbecausejt\vas
•
biggest offensive threats, ex.bib-
knew he had 14 freshmen on his
.
astepintherightciirection,does
·.
ited this
•
atiitudeaftera3,,1 loss
squad, 11 of which were start-'
not mean it was a good
'season.
to «;olgate left Mari.st 0-4.
·
ers.
Six winsdoppteq1:1al
.
~s\l
_
ccess-
.
.
.
"Although we have been los-
"We're just too young," he
ful year.
It is.mediocre at best.
ing,' we are playirig well," he
.
said of his team.
.
The
_
players :shquld be disap-
;
said. .
.
.
This was an excuse that had
pointed anci strive for improve-
.
·
Whiri ~king to any of the
..
been employed during the 1997
ment.
·
·
.
.
· .
players they seemed
.
confident
·
h!)rror show. It is.always easy
.
But the Foxes undoubtedly
·
that things would get better, that
.
to ci~e inexperience as a reason
ma4e progress
'
since 1997, a
,
they had to get
tiette,r.
Iil time
for losing. But (here was a dif-
carnpaign that saw them l.ose
_
all
·
theyultimatelywouid,asMarist
_
ference between these two
but two of their contests, not to
began to get some of the breaks
teams.
mention the bulk of their fr~h- . and bounces that
,
had been
.
.
· ..
The young I 997 squad
men recruiting class tfiadtans-
·
eluding thein the last two years. . showed no signs of progress.
ferr~ to_ 9ther schoo!s.
.
...
.
A
4::1
v{~tory: o:ver St. Peter's
They lost game after game with
·
Simply put, 1997 was a·horror · finally gave the Foxes a taste
of
·no
signs of concern .
.
movie.
,
Al;ld after the Fox
.
~s be-
·
wiefning-:Her9des
·
said he knew.-
In I 998 that was notthe case.
gan 1998 ..vi$ fiye _conse<:u
_
tiv~
,
tl}e fir5t_woulft ~ome eventually.
Players were disappointed after
losses, it appeared that the
~•it finally clicked, it was just a
losses. They wanted to im-
Marist men's soccer team \Yas
·
· .matteroftime/'hesaid.
.
.pr<>ve.
They wanted to shed
.
pro.du~ing aterribl~·sequel to
_
an
'fhey W(?µld win ~eirne_xt two
tbeir repu!ation of b~ing a joke
even
worse
film.
'. -:
.
·
behind the goalkeeping
-
of
of
a piograrrr, something that
•
Despite_
.the
sluggish-
.
s~art,
.
Carlos D
.
eBrito, as the
.
.
freshman
Mari sf" head. coa'.ch
":Bobby:
;
provided back-to-baclc shut-
..
:
please see SOCCER,
pg. 14
PAGE15
What's on Tap?
.
Football
11/7
Home vs. Canisius
1
p.m.
l\1en's
tennis
11/5.-11/7
@
Rolex Tournament
Volleyball
il/6-11/7
@
Harvard
Invitational
. Swimritin~
and
~ving
(M&W)
fl/4
@
Iona
6
p.m.
Hockey
11/6 Home vs. Penn St. 9
p.m.
_
T()ugh Trivia
:
When was
the
last time a team from the state of
New York won the National Championship
in
Di-
vision
I
college football?
Last week's question - What team holds the NFL record for
wins in one season, including the post-season?
Answer - The 1985 Chicago Bears won a total of 18 games.
Ice Hockey team
3-2 with Penn St.
visiting on Friday
byKAARENUMMEm
.
.
Staff Writer
· goaltenders Carl Wagner and
John Nicolucci get better.
Macys said he feels that ex-
The Marist Men's Hockey
pectations are high early on.
team faces
_
an important game
"To have the best year we can,
early on in the season. Off to a
we have to win this game against
solid 3-2 start (as
·
of last week-
Penn State," he said. "Coach
end), the Penn St. Nittany Lions
Kamp has us ·ready to defend
visit the Mid-Hudson Civic
ourtitle
.
"
·
Centeron Fijday Nov.~-
)Yith pl?ymakers such as
J}iese
·
two-tearp_s have.an in_-, Mac)'s, R.ay Kenehan,iSean
tense rivairy dating
'back
the
Powers and Todd Hutton the
pastcouple of years
/.
The·Red
.
'.-Red ]:oxes
.
will put up a lot of
Foxes camitout on
the
losing
· .
goals. Returning for:his senior
end last year and are looking to
season is 1:3
.
ri~n
.
Warzecha who
defend their home ice.
,
was the Super East player of the
Sophomore forward Sean
Year last year. His presence will
·
Macys knows the importance of ignite the offense just by his
playing well
.
·
.
.
..
·
being on the ice.
--••we
·
liav
'
e not
·
done well
With
all
the weapons of of-
against these guys in the past,"
fense, our attention turns to the
he said. "Winning this game is
defense. With Senior Dan
the real dealfor us early on 1n
~ullivan and
. _
_
Ralph A.i~llo an-
the season."
.
.·
.
.
choring the defenders they will
Under Bill Kamp's first year as
be one of the keys
to
wins dur-
head
·
coach, the Red Foxes won
ing the long season which car-
the Super East Hockey
_
League
ries over into the spnrig semes-
in impressive fashion and coin-
ter.
_
peted well in the NationalTour-
.
·
At
the heart of any hockey
narnent. Marist this year again
team is the nefminder. The nice
isofftoagoodstartcompeting
thing about
·
Wagner and
against different teams outside
Nicolucci is now they are
the Super East.
·
·
sophomores. They have a year
Marist has beaten Monmouth
experience in a tough confer-
and the University of Maryland
ence plus key time in the na-
at home by a co111bined score of tional tournament. That should
13-2 and beat the Flying Dutch-
bowed weH for a repeat run at
men of Hofstra
·
on Long Island.
the title.
Another positive note is their
There are
·
two main keys for
loss to Westchester University,
success this year for the Marist
which is a Division 1 school.
Men's hockey team. One will
Tied 3:3
.
going- into the third
be for the players to remaining
period
the
Red Fox~
·
play~d well
healthy for the long haul. Sec-
considering it was the season
ondly putting together a streak
opener.
in the middle to late part of the
The
'Red
Foxes have plans
season to gain momentum for
again this year to return to the
the playoffs.
National Tournament in Salt
If they do that, this team will
.
Lake City in the spring. Losing
. ·
be the team to beat in the Super
just a few players to graduation · East:'
_
Then if they get to the
last year, the explosive offense
National Tournament, anything
should help both
.
sophomore
is_.possible.
di!.:
,.
I
i
· · ·staftor
the'Week •
~~~rif~a_ck)J;Alle_n,
:.
.
·.·:-'
TH£ CI°CE£. . .
-l ·_
;·
· bfokeexZ.teariimateJovan
.
.1\;
.
' ing·-recoid,\\li!h"316 yards·
...
_
.
': ··Quoteoft~.e~eek:
. "If
~ot for
iriy
teammates, I
.... ,.., :.:l·d· . .-ti:>e·''t
Matist ,,: .
.
. wou . no
,~ ,
_
., ...
:
~
°women'.'s volleyball
plafer.Ju1ee qerda
. .
'
~.~.
:·
..
:
.
.
.
.
.
:ID,i~~~)µig~&::g~e_fys~~>.
·.
·
..
.
~.·.:···.'
,._ .· :::_~ .. _: ,:· . : - - : ·
-:.-~ . .:"-\.· .. : , . - :
:.'
-
.
:
··t·.'
.
·s··· ,
:on:
safurda . .. .
· '
>·· ,_
1
.:.
•:
·.:·.-
:
.. · ... ·
_ .
..
: ._·.
-..1~·owMBERS
1998. .
.
;
:
.. .-
:!!!!!~·
·~E--~-
!!!!,;'...;;.~
--
;:!!!!!!W•
·:.!!!~-~·
·-:~~~~~~......, ....... """'.".""'~---
.. >-·-.•:;
. , . ,_. .·· .. _•. · .. ··_·
._,-r•,·. :;. .
:
. · .• ,.:.
·
:. ·.·
Atl~n ·
..
runs .
wil•tt"
dul'::111g
· · · · · ··.• ' ' · · • · • f
faillia ,6\oJe,
tire
HYe;j/i!I:;,
<lidn't
fiJOO\tlp1ete1s,;SD)oqth,
~
byTH()MASRYAN
...... theRedFfash,44. "-IttookAHeo.·;'. tlie
"
Red Flash'irussed·the·en~u-
·. ,-
-
··s~orf.~ -Edita~•.
.
, ·
:exacJly:two-carriesto:convert· ingextrapoi!1J,
~
·,::; ./:::. .
.
:
.
·
J.-J.Allen
is starting to make a . tliafmiscue into a touchdown;.
Also in that tlilid'.quarter,AJ..len
Cll!eer ofhayirig career-games.· · ·
·Ffr$f
pfay; Allen32 yards t~
:.
tlie .. reeled offhis jongest}uirof:the
,The <;lu~pl~. senio(tailbac~
·
. · S(F'~cis.i2~yar9:H11e.
_
Seco.nd .
day,
a
53-rarde(·Jh~t.gav.e'him
carried 3:4 'tj.aje:S for a· school- . ·play;Allehbreaksa tackle at the·: '
·
305forth~ afterrioon;fouryards
•
record 316: yarcls:and.
4
·touc)l- _ :goalJine·to push the:1ealft9 14.:
.
· nioreJliari Rhodes: ha.cl against
downs'ili,the Red·Foxes ,-t-1::6
o.·}:, . _·-•
· __ .. , •·
·>< ..
Sienain.1994;.· ·;/
>
. mauling
<>1:
the St .. Francis Red . .
i
Allef{
'Y~S 'ntce en,ou:@f to
~a.if,' ....
Ail en had·.chanct:s
'
to>go for,
Flash: . .
'"~:-'O
.. _ . . ..
.
.ufltil'the second:quarter:b~fotit:·
TD
number fi.Y~:i
.
n
'
tha,Uhitd
Allen~s·hµge day ruined the
.
'.'he'scoredagain. He !hought26C 'quarter, but
to
theif credit the
rewm~of
:
K,:e.viii .Pohem,
t9.
the : .
•;yfii'tls
iounded preitf goo(Loi( pattered; St>·.Francis ·.d~fense
.
.
. !\1arist.Goll~gej::amplis· .. The. t.fjisJifst
ID,
·so .he .. d~dcled/fo 'stiffened and keptAllen ciiitof
forn:ierRe~,f<>~esdefensiveco~ ·doJ(agajn from that:cijstanc_e · ... ·· t_he. endzone~ 'Adamoyurka
ordinator.made·his first trip:to ·fortouchdown•number:thre,L ·_ .. made •his second field:goal.of
Poughkeepsif after Jeaving in . ,_' A,Il~n sai~ he was ptoud:qf
th~-'
.·tile day, this 6ne:fy9m:i4 Y~ds
the off-seaspp.:t<> take the head
way/he played jn the fjrsfh_alf . ~way
to
give_Mlllista34-'61~act. ..
coaching position with the·Refi . ·and:thi entire grune. ._·
. '. .· ·
:
.
.
The Marist defensedipped of
Flash. Alo~g \Vitn Doherty ,we~e . .) ~'1:feet·Hke
I.
~ccompHshea ..• the scoring on tlie
d~y.:
'Darren
four otherex":Mhlist playet:S and ·.: something here;" Allen said.<~It . · . Yaldes returned an interception
coaches w.hq are now with St makes me·feel like !did some~ . · for a touchdownfor'the, second
Francis,)ncluding cme of·last thing.positiveY
.
'.: . .
·
.•.
'tillle this·.seasori:to)inish the
year's'.captain~;Mario Wilson, .. ·• Before.the·.half-was.o\1¢r;Ja"; :·.· scoring in.the.thirg quarter and
Allen and ,the rest
of
tlie. Reel · : s'oriAdiunoyurka made the first.·. •the game'. Although not as dra~ .
Foxes irnide su_re it was not a .of his two field goalsonJ.biday . ~:matic as l1is
p~i::k~
agai11st
:the
happy·hon,iec;om.ing.
. _ . . .. ·.
•
to:give
M~st'a comforutble 24-; ·.·. Fairfield Stags, V~defintercep.:
. · ~oth
.sitlef
qf
·the· ball. :for,_ .· O:Jead ·· heading :into . fi!e_Jcic~¢t ;: Jio11
was.
good:' enpugh;t<>Jinish
•·• . .
·
· ·
• ;.<.· . · • ,- . .
.
, . ·;
'
. · ·:
.
.
. . . Circle photo/Joe Scouo
.Joe
Galabri_a hau!s in ~pass
fron,
quarterbcick Bin Tramaglini in
frorit
of the Red
FQX8$':berichduririg'Marist'$ 41.:a
win
on Saturday.
,,
. ,
' : ,
-
,
-,
,.
,
'
,,,
..
,,
..
-
..
" '
·.
'
•
'.
•,
...
Marist. s~9.~
,
~d. ~arly • and 9fteq ·. rooni.\Bythe half, Alle.n h~4hl.~ : {~ff•by, wh~t;.~_asj~~(-alfqut •,a ·
that al~<>,ll~!i;.Qolle~ \yas:
~e
':.,jeadr-~assed 203
Yar,cl_s}:>~.ttj~: ·: •:
P.erfec,t
.
day,for, ~~R.~~·f:;g:Xes:.·
.
coord1n.a.~ggi<>,(JasLy,ea_r s: ,grcmnd. -
_
· ;,
_
·
.
: .,;-:
: · Altho,ugh ov~r.~l!~~Q~ed_by :
record~se,tti~g:pefense,:he. was
:> -•~
'1-(e was n()_tnearly:Jll:C<>pglC. ,AIIen
1
s·perforinaft~e;:@~:l,v.1arist
· not the imiiii:component. With.:
.
... noweve.r .. -He ·weritt6r,
sc(ji-e' :.·
defense- had,orie
.
c,of.Jfs :finest,
~ut.s.the .. ~g~ij;:
.
110: schemei ·. no . \iri~berfour :earlyi~;
the:liiJ,rci:
,;:games; which'accQt4irif tC>1ine~
matt~ih9,~(,gqo,d it_ is, ,is going·. "\qti~er, .this timefrolll
oiily!pv'.(: .
backer Chris_'Mey~r.\~as .a:re-
to .be
effci:~y,ei
;
The.Red-Flash· :yard~',awa:y . .
Allen'sj'.f9Jir.tl(_/sult
·
~f the Red.f)Jsh'.:style
qf
. do not'·,Jiave:::Jhe :horses yet,
<
'
touchdown•tied hiITI witlfJoVfill·• :' play .
.
• .
·.)
i{':>·; ·.·.·· .. · . .
Maris(dpe~;.',/:
·
.. ·
. . ·-·. . · • .. ·
Rh6Cies·
for·mosttouthdci~s"iri
.
. ·· ''N~team· can stitc~sftilly run
Of:~011fs~t@eir nµmber .. oni
;
,' ;i{sipg!e•game.i~ Marist~fsj6ry.';: iigainsf us .witl(~.~g!it:dive,,,
col_t is All¢"p'.)iA}len opened.th~i: ,\Jeff.De-Vito conyeriedhis:.fdiittli :.: .. :tvteyer. said, ,wlii~hJs_i,~xacdy .···
~i?il~x!]l;lf
li~f
&~lli;;~tittli~ •. ·.
lowingJtjck9Jfcas St, ·Francis
)tie
third· quarter.:: E:veJf:tliat/ · game for theMii!i:St~eniors.
:
·
.
~iii~~;~·
-
·· ...
>
,.cStdff Wr#er.
-
·•·• ..
. · ·
.J:~s~r;s, but 1t
all
came,dq"\Vtft<>. ,
''Coach O'hiJ,K;~!ly);\V~s ~op,-
· 1s our9f':tlle:':qu,estton · w1th;the . ; 1,.1ie_keyto this m~t;'liow~ver,
-•~~.awAf~tii.rkeep.piliJgiiJ::·••·t~f&l~-Foxesrem~ri;J{~~~/i.:~¥1:tut;r:~~~::t:ik.!:· ...
·i~:~tGitr~1ii:~;tl~!~2.:..·:
,.
:iih!;~t~Ji~toi~t%:;1 •.
t::s~
· forthe men~s'and women's
q-ps~ : .
fid~nt; aueflected by
fr~sljniiul.
~ <most jmp_ortantly;:J wantaj. to
·.
Tp.efefoi;e;: tli.e·{ta<?¢.'.is::
·
r~~lly
,:
. : coiintryterut).cHead c<>ach _J>ete
-·co_untcy\~:atiJt:,_i ..•.. ·__ ·•··. ..
l~~,ninnerL~Grudzi?~k!~--. ::
_'
nI!}
w~ll
~n~
he_lp_
9i~
t~am,"
a~.?Ut,~h~~.h~illn
·
}:~:fiaj~pj11.; :SBlcpi~Q[~~te~;•~a(it'Yasjm~. ·
· · :Sund~y;)jo:v.:1 ;brought fp@
.
''I~eww~coulddefiniu;:ly_~ Grudzinskj sruq.·.: _::.
. . . .
. sec
_
ond.plac.~, -\Vi~,~trong:r.u.n:-'
:
., p!)rtantfQr oth,~r;peopleto step
the tiltimatf~lihl.lengef otth~e ·.
·
· tliis
~eei
if
w~
were
all
on tr.tc_k;": .
.
· Arid, as if has been _aU se~son,.. . n~rs. fr~rii qajiisius:, ~d-~r;
<W,~ ; ·
up in
·
the
i
wijy .that
iqey
did; es'-
two. t~ain:s)hatJi!}Ve proven·tcr sve:: ~aid.. . .. ·
.
· ' . . •. . ".
·
·
·/J.:., . : ..
it Jook_.a .
.
tea11r:~f~C>ttf~r .the
Manh~~taQ;Jh~; ·Ill_ei(s;-;te.a111 ~-,-:.~ially senior
.Be11
'lfeff~r<>n; .
be ·• su¢.ce·s·sf?t~eek,. in
a~t :
(IJ1~
¥arist worn~~ ~t~9up "
.
' -.~'?me~ to wili 9te:¥AA,C:~~~:: ·: _
~ew,t,hat'~~jrc'9tan1~<l.
toj~~t
?
·~effe1:o~ finisheg nin_tlf over- .
week-out~th1s season. Thts . to:tlle challenge, w1nn111g th~
•·
p1onship. 13es1des (ptcizlilslci s .. togetJi.e:i:a-~l1d.performiµice. . .all
.111
the. meet, second for the
: · y~ar' s)vietr<> 'A:tiap_tiq Athleµc : .
·
.
•fustMMC
.champfonship;Jn : fir~t place finisIJ;
,.pie
,tQP.
fi~e
_ AftefJilst y~af's. ~ism~ perfor- · Red Foxes .. : . _. _.
.
.
. _ _ .
Coilfere11~.e):hampionships . jt1s(theirs~oridyearigthe¢o.n'- · scor~rs were'rouilded OU!,by-. manceat~e'MJ\A.Gchampiol}'- · ·: · ~•faJwaysJ(ilew thatBen had
were held>,at
.
Manhattan's. fer¢nce, ·beating Man,liatta!LOD:· sophomore-}!eat!ier]>errine's
ships; the :men.-wa.n~ed.
tp,p
,
ut :
it·i0;.hini to 'run
1:1
big race,'~
V~Coi:tJan1t p~: . . _·
_ _ . . .then: ~ome .course by the score _
foµrth place.fmish;~~ Minor's
togetller
at:ac~ ili.,at
was
indica-
Colaizzo '"s~id oL4is_ · runner ...
Both teams had high expecta- · of 3948. .
. sixth,
a
twelfth place finish, and
tive of the har~ VIOrk anc:tdepi-
·
"And hini,
11;1nning
as
weUas he
tions' after !he
·
illµstrious
sea-. .
.Grudzinski contin'ued
to
be ·
fres~anLeanneBolingbrokein. c~tion thaUhey, put into th~__ did/was a ·big:part of us :cioing
sons that they had been hav-
the front-pack force f~r- the R,ed
sixteenth.
. ... -
·
.. - . .
. program .. -'fhe men
ran
to_ a sec':". · as \Vell (in the
MAAC
charripi-
ing. · Orily_ one m9re obstacle Foxes, as she picked up another
- The champion~h~p coul.d not
ond.place finish, acconiplishing
O!}ship race)."
·
. .
. ·
st09P in the way of making their
.
victory.
have been won without the help
9ne of their biggest goals fortlle-
Bothteains now set their sites
season· an· absolute success -
· Her time of 18:46 led the way
of the. other runners, ·however,
season .. SeniorMike Melfi once . ahead to one more race also at
victories at the MMC champi-
for the MAAC
~
she won tile
as they continued to run stron- . _againran to a.team-leading per.:.
VanCortlandtPark. Being in a
011s_hips.
.
. .
championship race in herfirst ?er than ot}ler.~s, and push-
fonnancewithhis.timeof25:12.
difficult region, both teams
G:oing int9 Sunday's competi-
season. The time was also good
mg the compebttonfurther and
The greater accomplishment-for
know that they go in with a chal-
tion, the women knew that they
fo~ ;28th overall in the history of ·· further bac~ from the front pack
Melfi w~ how well he was aple · lenge to finish in the top half of
had~ excellent opportunity to . the MAAC.
hel~ Man~t a ~ t
deal..
to run ~th the pack ofl~na run-
the race .. ·
.
However, building on
win the conference. The only
The young runner knew that
'J'!lis year s men s team also
ners. His fifth place fimsh kept !he strength that they have
team that stood between Marist
there was pressure on her to do
kn~w that they ~ad an excellent Iona from scoring a perfect fif-
shown all year, with a focused
and the 1998 championships
wellthismeet,butshestillcon-
chance
?f
putt!ng together a
teen~intsandalsoallowedhim attitude,'both teams have a
was last year's runner-up, Man-
tinued to run at the talent level
top-pl~cmg fimsh. For most to prove that he can run with
chance to accomplish their final
hattan College.
1n
previous
that she hac; • proved she could
teams
m the MAAC conference;· some of the very best runners
goal. :
52.6.1
52.6.2
52.6.3
52.6.4
52.6.5
52.6.6
52.6.7
52.6.8
52.6.9
52.6.10
52.6.11
52.6.12
52.6.13
52.6.14
52.6.15
52.6.16
ISSUE#
6
·
·
·.
·
.
),
;
~!~~tfest
ofliie
;
Red
Foxes=c'fushed
vi~itµtg
~
St'-f'.raµcis
'
on
:
:~
· '
~~hitgay,
_/
pgi
f~
.:)<<
>
·
·
.
~/
·
•
·.
·
.
. .
·
■arist.
College
·
-
NC>VEMBER
'
S,°1998
C1a11etift
•
;
•itt
i
ifl
~
lo:Ql,IC
i
ifs
.
.
·
.•
siZe
·
.-
i:>y
cinus
GRooAN·
-
-•
·.·
•·
AsstUVews
-
Editor
-
·
·
area; and hopefullyMariststu-
-
deiltstoothe
said
.
. _
-
Manstis not
tiie
only place
-
.
·
1
b,!t;
M'ht~"
Currently
.
there is other co~-
'
undergoing major construction.
.
·
.
~L,;;~~
~ffi'!'~':ll!t:
stmcti()ii in progress,
,
though
-
-
The Poughkeepsie (}~l~ria,
aJ.,
..
·
·
not related_ to the Galleria' s
-
readyth
_
eJaigestma)linthe
_
area,
_
· ,
:,
-
,
]lritiMI
-
1
·
.
_
. .
.
_
.
.
.
. _
pans
.
:
: .
.
,
_
IS planning to
_
doublein
s~
next
C
:
.
A~owes
Hom~ Improvement
.
year;
:
:
·
·
.
>
...
__
.
_
_
_
-
Wa:tehotise
-•
is being' con-
Accordi~g to
:
Monica Fteer
/
,_
sti:uct~d
!~
th~ area
:
south
·
ofthe
.
·
Poughl<eepsie Galleria market-
,·
·
_
mall:The new Lowes store
will
-
ing dir~ctor, the:Illall_i(h
_
oping
.
·
b1f prut
.;
o(a· chairi of over
400
-.
tci
_
ii:i,ci-eai;e )n
siii
·
by
909,
_
00Q
\
.
:
hor#i).mpro".emtmt
stores.
Toe
·
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)
(
I
·
.
\
.
square feet
Jara:
total of2
-
,
hnil~
:
_
stores
are. similar
to Home De-
lioirsquareJ~et
{
.
.
.
.
,
.
,
·
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:
·
·
>
_
-
_
.
_
-
_
-
.
.
·
_.
-
_
__
-
.
.
It is
a
long-process to accom"'
·:
:·
: ·
.
Filene'sis also curi'ently ex-
;:
;
· pHsli
.
the
,
majoi-
/
constiilction
<
_
·
·panding,
·
corist~i;ting
_
a new
-
~
such
as
:
the plans that~ being
:
'
wing
ori
the
-
nortllside of the
'
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.
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io l:4'r~~r.:
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·
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-
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:·
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.
quesuons
..
~d •~1
.
ce
~~c•f"'
.
•
·
·
.
•
{
Aicorrung
·
tc,
i'(e0r,cjµ€
new
U
.ioo]I
~ffOJ\aj~
F~pSaid
,¼
r
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·
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Th~$to,e
.
w1nai~ undergo
an
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-
.
,
-
-
;
.
.
with
~
:
s
.
t9re alfyadyiliN'~~J>ajtz
/ :
.
-
.
-
,
•
.
. ..
J;Ieath~~}?~l_d~er, s~d~n,t go~-
·
people from. other
.
sch<?ols."
_
is setting upin
.
the
_
College-Mall
,'.
·
--•·
,
·
·
~girnen~
::
~sso_c1ate
_
v1ce,:prew
Ou~dner~atd this y~l9ey are
~il~t!if
.!
i
·
"
c
;i~r:~1~~::!.~i:t
~fa£1i'.a,:::;
b e e
_
.
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g~
_
m
_
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ng
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e
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-
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-_
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, theS
_
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_
~ent_ · onN
_
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py)3,
at
5
P:1,ll·
tn
the Nelh
_
25 years
_
:
:
Accordmg tc:> owner
_
. •
•
,
Acad
_
em1c Co~nctl sway
~o
.
en-
Golettt
.
Theater.
_
.
·
Stev~ Ferber, thisjs not'a typi-
:
·.
hance academic endeavours on
cal
mall..:music store.
.
-
-
_
-
- -
,
-
campus," she said
;
_
.
.
. ..
..
-·
-
-
·
·
-
·
"Our
business is t(? buy,
s~ll
'
Rhino'
R~~ords
:
b~ys,
seU~
-
-
a~d
t~ad~~
-
~ev/:a~lc=ocCD~
.
SGK and
.
college a~tivities
llll-S,Tr
ID
-
E,
and
-
trade,'' FeH,er said .
.
''We
and reco'rds. Their new store 9p~ned
in
the
.
College
Mall.
.
C()sponse>red
.
the ~ou
.
mament.
l l
11 -~
Jl
have a huge variety of
both
new
The game is in a format similar
and usetl'music."
.
about helpingpeoplefind new
·
"We may nothaveevecything,
to Jeopardy! with questions
Through buying and trading,
music.
-
. .
.
_
.
buf
.
w~•re really good on spe~
being asked by a moderator.
he
said,
Rhino is
,-
able to get
.'~We
want to
-
help expose
cial
orders,''Ferbersaid. "Ifwe
Six
.
team.s participat~
-
i~ the
sligqtly used music and selLit people
to
as many
types
of mu-
don't have it, we can get it pretty
!?umam~nt often_referred ~o
~
cheaper.
-
It helps to add to the
sic as possible," she said.
quickly."
the varsity sport of the nund.
variety of the music available
She also said that even
Inside, customers can find
Two faculty teams and four
and open up new
-
options to
though the ~tore is not a huge
many different selections. All
student teams rushed to beat
customers.
·
media outlet, the selection is
·still
genres of music are represented
the buzzers when asked various
Lisa Ferruggia, general man-
top-rate.
_
They concentrate along with a "Rhino Recom
acade!IDc questions.
.
·
ager of the new store, said buy-
mainly in CD and vinyl recor~
Seru?r C~arles Leone sat~ ~e
ing and trading music is all
sales.
·
···
please see
RHINO,
pg.4
and his fnends have part1c1-
TODAY:
.
Cloudy
bi:45°
lo:32°
Co~unity .............. ; .. 2
Features
.............. ~.:
....
·
s
A&
·
E ....................... 11
Opinion .......................
9
Sports .. : ......................
16
.I
Student Government
In an ef-(ort to promote alco-
hol awareness, the Student
Government Association will be
sponsoring a-series of work-
shops in November. The work..,
shops will deal with a variety of
alcohol related issues.
The workshops will be held:
*Tuesday, Nov. 10 at 7 p.m. in
thePAR
*Tuesday, Nov. 17 at 7:30 p.m.
in SC 348 & 348A
*Tuesday, Nov. 24 at 7 p.m. in
the PAR
On Nov. 10 Igor Lckmus, a
Deputy with the Dutchess
County Sheriff's Department,
will be presenting information on
the criminal ramifications of al-
cohol abuse.
On Nov. 17 Dr. Mario
Malvarossa, addictionologist,
will
speak about the medical
consequences of alcohol abuse.
On Nov. 24 Judge Ronald
McGaw, from the Poughkeepsie
City Court, will be speaking
about the legal aspects of alco-
hol related crime.
Literary Arts Society
The Literary
Arts
Society is
npo/ 11ccepting. subm.issions for
their literary magazine, The
Mosaic. If you have any prose,
poetry, short stories, artwork, or
photographs that ypu wish to
submit please put them
in the
t.AS club mailbox in SC 369.
Submissions will also be ac-
cepted by any club member,·
.· If you have· any questions;
PAGE2
. Security B.riefs' -
---C-o-mp-ile_d;_,by-S-co-tt. N....;.e-ville
A Marian Hall resident's car
was vandalized in the Sheahan
Parking Lot
sometime between Oct. 22 an·d
27. The extensive damage in-
cluded dented door panels and
hood, and a bent antenna. Se-
curity
contacted .
the
Poughkeepsie Polic~ Depart-
ment and opened an investiga-
tion.
A friendly game of "Capture
the Flag" turned ugly last Sat-
urday when
a
student lacerated
his kne~ on the capstone of a
wall near Leo H;ill. The
Champagnat resident was
rushed to the hospital by am-
bulance around 8:30 p.m.
A 56-year-old white male was
found sleeping at the base of a
fence bordering Marist and
Delafield Street last Thursday.
The man was found
in
a c"irrd-
board box by a group of male
students who conversed with
him for afew moments. ,The po-
lice were later notified and the·
man was advised to leave
around 7:30 that morning
vandalism. The first flooding · .
occurred at 3:50 a.m. Halloween
night When a RA heard rushing
water and walked
into the bathroom to find an in-
toxicated guest holding the bro-
ken faucet. A security guard ar-
rived shortly after and shut off
the water. The water flooded the
bathroom floor and caused··
some damage in two rooms, as · -
well as some minor ceiling dam-
·
age on the 7th floor. The faucet · ·
repair job did not last long, since.
.another report of flooding was
calledinSundayat4:50a.m. The .
"second wave" caused more
FRIDAY:
cloudy
cloudy
hi:
44°'.
hi:
46°
hi:
46°
lo:
34°
lo:
31°
lo:
30"
Source: http://www.weather.com. (The Weather· Channel)
minor water damage. An. 8th
E'-'~
'·
r
1· h
.
floor resident was found at the
1.1.ects
O · 1g
t
and c,olor on health
scene and said that he was: ·
washing his hands when the
faucet came off.
Unison Arts and Leaming
been in practice specializing in
Center is offering a workshop -visual therapy since 1980. •-
with Dr. Marc Grossman, O.D.,
Grossman holds degrees in op-
Two students had windshield
entitled
"'The
Effects of Light
tometry, biology, physical edu-
wipers stolen from their vehicles
and Color on Health" on Mon-
cation and learning disabilities.
Sunday in the Lowell Thomas
day,Nov.9froni7:30to9:30p,m.
He is the State Director of the
parking lot. The cars' drivers -
Lightand color are an impor-
·optometric Extension Program
received tickets earlier in the
tant part of-each individual's
a·nd has Iectt1red exterisively
evening, when the windshield
everyday life>This· workshop
throughout tl11{U:S. . _ .
_ wipers were still in place.
will.explore both the physiologi-
The cost is $10 for member !ind
.. _
.. _
cal and psychological effects of $12 for non.;m~mbers. For in-
-
. A.
resident· reported the fog
Hght and color. The difference . fonnati~n call· Unison at 255-
lights to his Honda Civicstolen ·. between artificial versus nai.u-
15,59. Unison is a not-for-profit
Alcohol was confiscated in
Monday,
The
car was parked in
raUull spectrum .lighting will
multi-arts center located at 68
Leo Ha~l last Wednesday. Four . the UpperJ{oop parkihg·Jot
also_be discussed.. .
Mountain Rest Road in New
residents were found with ~ree .. w,heri the robbery occurred ..
_
Dr. Marc Grossi:nan,
Q.D.,
has
Paltz ..
full cans of beer.
·
-
.
.
,
.
The.~efMrity .Offii::~. received
a call for assistance on the .4th
flo6r of Champagnat last Thurs:
day around 1_2:52
a.in;
A
Champagna( res}dent was
.
-
•
·
_
. _ .
· .
_
·
_ ·,
found ~appegfo~airofhand~ .
Should Manst
open
up-the camp· us to the_
cuffs without a key. The student • •
_
_ _
_ _
.
. _ · _
, · ·
· ·
. . . _ · · .
·
was talcento.the Pollghkeepsiecomm·um·
·ty·by
~eno· vatin• g ·the· w·ate' ~~ont?
police station, where the hand-
·
_ . -.•.
.._,
·· ·
·
: .
.
-
rl.I.} ..
• ·
cuffs were unlocked;
·
·
· ·
~~e:e:~~~~l:k~:~~~
2
3J[
4052
, .•. •. ,Two st6len identification
Ail submissions
will
be re- - cardswere reported ai:4:00 p.m.
turned with r_ equest_ .. · .
· 1ast Thurs4ay by
tw6
football
players: The -students' ac-
Kappa Lambda Psi' -
The
Kappa Lambda ~si soror~ .
.
.
ity_
will
be spo11s9rjng a _bl~od
drive.on Thursday;Noy;_ 12.
It
will take place in the ~tudent
Center, in the PAR room from
11 :30 a:m; .until Sp.in. ,
.
Sign-ups
will be.taking place
over the next three weeks in·
Dyson, the Breezeway and in
front of the cafeteria. Walk-in' s
on the day of the event are more
than welcome.
Donating blood can save lives_
and we would appreciate your
support wi~ this cause.
Rlrilla
-
Jamaica.
Ballamas
=.sia
- ·
·:1-101M20-m1
cpunts· .w~re fr:ozen, 'l:>utonly
after-$86.8Lwasdeaned out
of
cineaccount:apd
$111:
70 out of
the other. The. Poughkeepsie
police ,have b~eri brpught
in
_to
investigate• the· theft..
A
fire alarm was set off in
Gartl~d
''G''
block· at;l p.m.fasl
Friday. No damage w,as reported,
but the resident was advised
fo
dean out the oven'~_dryp pan. -
-
.
Champagnat's 8thfloormen's
. bathroom was underwater twice
over the weekend due to faucet ·
ITING UNDER CONSTRUCTION
me
to the
MARIST WRITING CENTE
ocated Just
Past
The
Post
Office In
ampagnat Lo..-er Le\'el
"Yes, because the --
waterfront
is
too
beduiifitl_to
be
wasted.
11
Bassel. Nelson
junior
~'No/because
it
· w9itld
qlliiw too
manf
r4ndoni
people
.on
campus.
11
Korin Daniels
junior
"Yes, because-it can_
be
uiecf,
towards
. more rev_·enue for
the
colli!ge .. "
John Carollo
senior
GOOD WEEKLYINCOME
processing mail for national company! Free supplies,
postage! No selling! Bonuses!
Start Immediately, Genuine Opportunity!
Please rush long self-addressed stamped envelope to:
. MPC,. Suite 391
2045 Mt. Zion Rd.
Morrow, GA , 30260
...
·
..
.
.
·
...
~
-
PAGE3
-
HARD AT
·
WORK
_
.
.
·
Access
·
overlooked
in
:
·
waterfront renovations
by
TOM
.
SCHWAB
Staff Writer
.
Marist may have spent more
than $1 million to renovate the
campus waterfront, but one
thing seems to be missing - a
way in.
Although there is a tunnel that
allows automobile access to the
waterfront, there is no adequate
pedestrian walkway either
through the tunnel or from any
other point on campus.
According to Susan Roeller
Brown, executive assistant to
We in no way want
to encourage any
type of foot traffic
across those tracks
because it's very
dangerous.
Susan Roeller Brown
executive assistant to the
president
the president, Marist is limited
campus are using that path ....
in what it can do with the tun-
They should either improve it
nel.
with the money they're getting
"We don't own the tunnel,"
or put a barrier along the prop-
she said. "ConRaiJ does, but we
erty so no one can use it."
have put in a request for a sig-
Brown
said
the administration
nal light which would prevent
has tried
.
to put up barriers in
anyone from being hit by on-
the past but they have been
coming traffic."
taken down. However, she said
·
But some
·students
have found
Marist is applying for additional
a more convenient way to g?in
grants that may cover the cost
access.
for new barriers.
It is a clearing through a mas-
"We have requested, in a sec-
sive web of bushes and trees,
ond round of grant applica-
followed by a rocky slope, then
tions, funds to fence the sides
over some train tracks to an-
of the railroad tracks and to re-
. _
other hili and then down to the
establish some habitation of
waterfront. The clearing is lo-
plants and trees that would
cated behind the Mid-Rise resi-
grow and mask both the visual
dence hall.
sight of the tracks arid act as a
Other students like Junior Sara
natural barrier," Brown said.
Bergeron think this path is un-
Bergeron said she
.
did not
.
.
.
.
.
Circle photo/Jeremy Smith
safe because of the train tracks
think barriers will. work.
_
~~Cl~~E:~~
.
?~:.!~e new
_
lib~a_'!' ~s
-
~-Cl_ving along on schedule.
and lack oflighting.
''They' re building
a
huge pier
"1Aiali9r~mm
~iI)iiidS
north
;
St~:~E::~E1~rfa~1::i~
·
.
~1:~~~~-~~~-1::;~~!f
!f
/
byjANiNESZAL
.
·
_·
StaJfWriter
,.
,
:•
;
,.
·
·
north of the
Bank
of New York,"
···
-~'There
_
are signs that warn
put up barriers because it's just
he
,
s"aid: .
_.
.
·
...
pedestrians not to cross over
like Route 9. No matter how hard
"Its. sylvan setting will be called
the tracks because it's more of
they try to block different areas,
"C
)iarist
is
.
taidng-ari fnJentory
:
.
~:~!i~:t~s~~:~,
~e
-
~aine of :.:::i::~h~::a~J_zar~ for the
~~n~f
;~: :~c~~~\~J, ~nyself, will
ofi!5 foiiage
:
..
,·
·
·
.
Cas~ysaid he has learned that
·
She said she thinks since
Some students have ap-
·
-.
In ~9
.
8?
;
a
_
discu
_
ssio~
_
be~een _ the owner of the property at the
Marist plans on enhancing
.
the
proached the Student Govern-
·.
•
Wil~~~
-
-p~?"otte,.assist;mt
pro-
·
tulll
of
the century was Frederic
waterfront, which will encour-
ment Association (SGA) about
.
,fes
.
~gr
:
of b~9l9gy and
:
Tho_mas
.
Newbold, founder of the Horti-
·
age more student participation,
putting up a pedestrian bridge
:
q~s~y
iA
~sistant profes
,
sor
°-f.
.
:·
culti.Iral Society of New York.
the college should pave or im-
over the tracks. McCulloch said
-
:.
P~~?~9P
,
?Y,_resul~e~i~
_
the
de'"
\"
.
:
•:J\side from adding 800
.
feet
prove the walkway down
to
the
she is pursuing the idea and
•
.
~is1on to turnthe Mapst
·
cam;.
-,
to the
·
Hu:dson River waterfront tracks.
plans to present it to the admin-
.
-
~l!finto
·
~ Ar~oretujii
r
i
<
_
pf our camp~s, the
·
new prop-
·
She said the college should
istration within the next few
C~~~y
:
sa.i~
,
tlt~s I'fOJ~ft mea~t
~-
erty contributes measurably tQ
think about building an over-
weeks.
_.
the
_
;~_yolv_ell!ent <?f°s~de~ts
m_
·
ol_i
_
r
.
~bo_retuµi
.
holdings," he
pass rather than update the tun-
"People will use the shortest
·
V<Y:to
,
u~J>iology a11d envuon-
0
said
.
"Richard Feldman of the
nel already there.
and quickest possible route,"
m~ntal classes ~n_g an i~ven-
.
.
bjology department is
.
already
"I think they should build a
McCulloch said.
"Is
Marist will-
-:
tory
.
of tlie ,van9us species of·
·
surveyipg the trees and plants
structure to get over the tracks
ing to wait until someone gets
pJants already on the caniplis as, with the assistance of his biol-
because very few students are
hurt? I agree with students that
well as new plantings.
·
·
·
·
ogy
students.;'
'
going to take the time to walk
some sort of bridge should be
"This
.
student involvement
Casey said the Arboretum is
under the railroad bridge that
·
built, and we plan to ask them
.
was greatly
·
assisted by
·
Ralph
like making a family history, it exists next to the water treatment
about this
."
~h<>rt,
_
the head __ of the grounds
will never be completed
plant," said Bergeron.
Brown said she would be in-
staff, as well as Presid_ent
"I would like it to get to the
Brown, however, said the col-
terested to hear what SGA has
Murray," he said.
.
point
·
where e
_
very student at
lege cannot do anything to that
to say, but emphasized that
Casey said he was delighted
Marist could have their own
property.
·
ConRail owns the property and
·
todiscover
_
ttiatthec~pus was
·
tree,'; he said.
"It
would give
"We have absolutely no legal
Marist would end up having to
already populated with a con:-
students
·a
wonderful identity
right to pave the trail since it's
pay the entire bill, which would
siderab]e variety of trees that
with the campus."
owned
PY
the ra_ilroad, and we
be in excess of$ I million dollars
includes pines, oaks, beaches,
He said the Arboretum project
in no way want to encourage
due to the American Disability
walnuts, magnolias, ginkgos,
is almost free of cost because it any type of foot traffic across
Act (ADA).
maples, hemlocks and tulips.
is the result of the work of vol-
those track~ because it's very
The act requires that the struc-
"My coJleagues and I pro-
unteer and interested parties.
dangerous," she Brown.
ture
be
handicapped accessible.
ceeded to identify and tag the
'We already paid for the prop-
The college decided last year
C
''If
there was an easy way, we
trees for public edification,"
erty,"
·
casey said. "We just to apply for grants to refurbish
would have certainly preferred
.
Casey said. "This had been
have to identify and tag the ex-
six acres of the riverfront area,
to make an attractive alternative
going on over a period of 10 to
isting plantings."
but Student Body President,
instead of having to walk toward
12 years."
.
Senior Meredith Halstead, a
Colleen McCulloch, said she
the tunnel," Brown said
.
"But
Casey said new plantings in
biology and environmental sci-
wants to know why none of this
there are so many factors work-
the past ten years have in-
ence major, said she thought money has not gone towards
ing against that,. including the
eluded a rare Tortuou~ Beach,
putting tags on the trees at Fem
making the underdeveloped
immense cost of ADA require-
CutleafMaples, oaks, and most Tor is a good idea.
pathway safe or preventing stu-
ments, such as elevators on ei-
recently, the relocation ofa large
"Ifl was walking;,!' d stop and
dents from using it.
ther end of the bridge."
Weeping Hemlock to the look at the trees," she said.
If
I
"Nobody really understands
Brown said there was a foot
McCann Center.
saw a tree I was not familiar
that people use that path,"
bridge over the tracks about 20
"Last December, Marist ac-
with, I would stop and look at McCulloch said. "Students and
years ago, but Murray had it
quired 15 acres of property
the tag."
evencrewmemberscomingfrom
taken down because he did not
Mid-Rise and the South End of think students were using it
ill
f
r
I .
Social Security
aids youths .
Should-the subject of Social
Security arise, most young
people. would· say that they do
not believe the program wiUbe
there for· them when they need
it in the future.
·
However, the sad truth is th_at
for many younger Americans,
the need for Social Security
could occur sooner than· they_
think.
Early death_ and disability
seem like a remote possibility
when people are young and
healthy. But consider this sober-
ing fact: one-third of all twenty-
year-olds will die or become dis-
abled before they reach their
65th birthday; Consequently, for
millions of young people, Social
Security is there today provid-
ing valuable grotection.
What significance does this
have for students on America's
- campuses? Without Social Se-
against such eventualities for
young workers and their fami-,
, lies. Shorter work histories, high
medical expenses, lack of em-
ployer provided insurance cov-
. erage, low· salaries, even poor·
planning~these and other rea-
sons inean that many young
workers and their families have
little insurance of."extra" re-
sources to help out if their earn-
ings stop abruptly. Socfai Secu-
rity can be a critical lifeline:_
Here are some little known, but
important, facts about Sodal
Security and young workers and.
their families:
-Social Security provides sur-
vivors insurance for a young,
average worker with.a family
that is equivalent to a personal
life insurance policy worth
about $300,000. Average ben-
efits for a widowed mother or
father with two young children
are currently about $1,500.per
month.
curity, many middle-aged par-
-For a disabled worker with a
ents of today's college students
spouse and two yo1:1ng children,
would feel an obligation to help
the average Socfal Security dis-
provide for their own aging par-
ability payment is now about
ents and there would be fewer
$1,200 per month. The value of
family resources to usefor their_.. the Social. Security
.
PW~~\fon,
ch!]dren)
equcational ·
c;fx-:.; :
including financfal·:piotectfon
penses; -
afterreachifig retiiement1ge, for
It is true that Social Security · a young average earner with a
is facing long-term financing
family is equal to a)qng:-term
challenges in the next century._ disability· policy worth about
based on demographic trends, -
$200,000.
·
pat;ticularly the fact _that people
.
_
.
are living longer, healthier lives.
-Benefits· are based· on pro-
Of course, this longerJife span
gies_sive formulas that take into
is good news for everyone, But,
account the fewer work years
we must recognize that chang-
and lower earning of younger
ing deillographics win_ put.a
workers. _This meansthat, even
strain on America's retirement
though
a
worker may not have
program.
_ _ .
a fulUifetime's earnings, the
We must dispel this notion· workei-anclhisorherfan:iilystill
that Social Security will not be
have significant insurance pro-
there in the future.
tection in case of death or dis-_
It wiU beJhere.
ability. ' . .
The only question is what
shape the program will take for
the next millennium. But what
wtll happen in the future is only
part of the story. As explained
earlier, for many young p~ople,
the future could be now if pre-
mature death or unexpected dis-
ability occurs.
Social Security can provide· a
buffer of economic _security
-Sodal Security cash benefits,
·
including disabil~ty and survi-
vors' benefits, .are indexed,.to
inflation; -benefitsincrease as
the cost of livingincreases.
~Once a disabled Worker is
entitled to cash benefits for
24
months, he oi- she is e~titled to
-Medicare health insurance cov-
erage.
PAGE4
CAMP.lJS.CANOlbs
Seniors Nadine Simon, Amy Borden and Emily Kucharczyk
(pictured/eh to
ngh~
en-
. joyed the festivities of Halloween this past Saturday.
.
,
Options considered in Route 9 ·crossing situatio))
won't want to walk up the
b~SCOTINEVILLE -
twenty or thirty step!l when
StaffWriter
Sa-1-'.
__ ety_is theprimary
they can just walk across the
':I'
road."
· · ·
·
As th·e demolition crews haul
concern.
Based upon the meetings she
away rubble to make room for
attended, McCulloch said a ·
the Home Depot, Student Af-
crosswalk between the main and
fairs and Student Government
-
Colleen McCulloch
south entrances is an option
have begun exploring options
student body president
being considered.
to funnel people across Route
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
"Safety. is the primary con-
9.
Depot wants a tum lane onto cem," she·said.
"If
we put the
Mari st representatives, · in-
Fulton. They were considering
crosswalk up~ we would need a
eluding Vice President Gerald
a fence from·Fulton down to the
funneling system, like the
Cox and Student Body Presi-
(temporary)
library." . .
shrubs in the middle of Route
dent Colleen McCulloch, have
Cox said the r1eetings with the
9."
_
met: with the Department of· DOT
were
not finalized.
. Cox. said Marist. used to
be
a
Transportation (DOT) · to dis-
"Nothing is· definite. We are
closed campus 30 years ago .. ·
~uss pQsgible.altemativesJo _tlle
waiting on the DO'f·J9:get_~ack
.. '.'Iron_
.. ic~ly;_~ere u_se,d_. tctbe:a
future HomeDepot traffic and
to us'' he said. _ . \., •,.
c
storte
.
wail in the '60s, but the
the students' di~regard for the
M~Culloch said thete.Were
campus·'w~s too· isolated a~d
Route
9
crosswalks.
·
four options to getting across
they took it down," he:said.
· Cox, dean for student affairs,
Route
9, each having its own
A shuttle bus would
'
also be
said the talk around campus of negatives.
_.
impractical,McCull<>fhsaid,be-
fences and extra lanes of traffic
"There are_ four options: an
cause of the time inconvenience.
has some validity,
overpass, an, underpass,. a
·· "Students won;t
wait
to be
"The rumors are basedupon
crosswalkanda'shiittie:bus,"
picked up by the
·
shuttle bus,"
some discussion betwi~n _col-'> shes~d: "Thefirstt\\TOWillnot . she said, ~'Tl:iey:HjusJcC.l!t
lege officers and theDO_T;'' he _ ,be J~as1.ble;jve '~<>n'(ll~ve an
across campus and walk across
said. "On the East side/Holl!e >areato
.
puttlf~rnin.and-~199-ents · · the road.'!,
Have you t1sed the: ·
. _ temporary
l,ibiarf ..
facilities across Route
9.
inBeckj'lace-yet?
I
YES
75
This
is
an
unsdmtlfic sun.·ey taken from 100
Marist szudnu.s.
Vehicle donation
aids
lung ~iation
By donating a used or W()m
out vehicle to the American
· Lung Ass_ociation of Northeast-
ern New York, residents of New
York State may be eligible
to
a
tax deduction toward their Fed-
eral Income
Tax Return.
The vehicle donation program
allows car owners to avoid the
hassles of selling.
The ALA will make arrange-
ments for the quick pick-up of
automobiles at no charge to the
owner. Cars, trucks, sports util-
ity vehicles, motorcycles and
: boats all quality for donation.
· The ~ehicle ca~ be any age
and alm·ost any condition. The
value of the ·automobile is inde-
pendently determined by _val-
ues set in ·the National Automo-
bile Dealers Association book
(the official used
car
guide); The
better the condition of the ve-
hicl~, the bigger your
tax
deduc-
tion may be.·
Proceeds from donated ve-
hicles will benefit the services
and programs of the American
Lung Association. An automo-
bile donation,
will help fund h,mg
disease research, as well as re-
· duce. pollution by helping· to
control vehicle emissions.
Donating an automobile is a
step in working to ensure that
the entire community can
breathe easier. The American
Lung Association of Northeast-
ern New York is
a nonprofit or-
ganization that provides educa-
tional programs, community
service, advocacy and research
for the prevention of lung dis-
. ease and promotion of lung
health. For information and an
auto donation packet, call toll
free
1-800-577-LUNG.
_
s·pring Break_ '~9
Large·st selection
of Spring BreakDesti
.
nations, including Cruises!
Foam Parties, Drink Specials and Club
Admissions.
Group Admissions and free Trips
Availa"fJle
Epicurian Tours 1-800-231-4-FUN
'
.
NOVEMBER 5, 1998
Eeiiiires
PAGES
Students celebrate mole
·
day
byEMILYKUCHARCZVK
Features Editor
secretary of the Society, said the
A mole is a means of measure-
morning was an unusualexperi-
ment in chemistry. It is a fixed
ence for her.
·
. number at 6.02 times 10 to the
Getting up
to
dri~k water at
"It
was extremely early," she
23rd. power. Avogadro pro-
6:02 in the morning meant fun
said. "I didn't think it could be _ posed this hypothesis in 1811.
for some students.
that dark on campus.''
At the ti.me, there was no data
Weil sort of.
Mole day came to Marist after
on the number of particles in a
A group of students rnse early
Dr. Matthew Poslusny, associ-
mole.
to celebrate national mole day
ate chemistry professor and
To put the concept in perspec-
·on Oct. 23_.. l)le event was spon-
chair of the chemistry .depart- · tive, Dr. Richard LaPietra, pro-
s?red at Maris(by the student
ment, read about itin Chemical
fessorofchemistry, compares it
affiliate of the American Chemi~
Engineering News. ·, Poslusny
to living in a world full of peas.
cal Society.
mentioned the article to on~ of
"Imagine if the whole world
The day honors Amadeo _ his'classes and he said every:-
was covered in peas chest
Avogadro's, an Italian scientist,
one agreed it would be a fun
high," he said.
"It
would take
number, 6.02
times
10 to the 23rd
time. So, in 1995 the first annual
25 worlds like that'so the num-
power. Participants in the event
mole day was established at
ber of peas would roughly be
meet in the chemistry lab and
fl~
Marist •,
.
.
Avogadro's number."
exactly 6:02 a.m.,
drink
one mole
Hecht said the event offers a
LaPietra said he looks forward
of water, which is about 18
bonding experience for stu-
to mole day each year. He said
grams. Afterwards, serious and
dents and professors.
.
he likes the way the day brings
silly, speeches are presented
"It
gives a chance for a lot of students and faculty together.
and then all go to the Palace
science students to interact
Matthew Loewenthal, senior
Diner for breakfast. .
with professors outside of class
chemistry major, said events like
The early rriqrning time was
on a more_ social basis and
m9le day let students explore
haidforsome, according to se-
maybe give them a greater un-
their major more.
nior and president of the Soci-
derstanding of the mole," he
"Being part of a specific major
ety, Simon Hecht. · ·
said.
.
· or discipline doesn't just mean
"Personally I'd liked to see ir
Seaburg said the day makes
you go to class, do your work,
done at 6:02 in the evt,ning," he
concepts more real.
and take a test," he said. "But
said laughing, "Butseeing that
"It
makes you think of quanti-
you should also actually partici-
it's only once a year, I guess we
ties on how big a thing actually
pate in things outside of class
can suffer."' . -
is, especially in.chemistry since
and get a better feeling of the
Priscilla Seaburg, junior and
everything is so_s_maU," she said.
class on a more personal leveL"
:
•.
,,'.'.
· . ~.·:_;
!)':.•·
>:, :.
,:
'
Y l
Oifiljiffi9g .
bard
work
andservice
.-
•. 71.SlOD
by
RICHSHUTKIN
Staff Writer
Marist College has many
places where students consis-
tently involve themselves ..
The campus chapel is one of
those places.
The chapel sits atop the hill
where the library used to be.
Circular in shape, it is hard to
miss
with
its cross sticking up
into the sky. The chapel's con-
struction took place from 1950
to 1954. It was built by the
Marist Brothers, witho1:1t any
outside physical assistance;
The ·Marist Brothers were
solely responsible for. the c~-
menting, digging and place~ent
of the electrical outlets. They
also substituted bricks with
multicolored patties of cement
to build the chapel.
Parents ofMarist College stu-
dents supplied much of the
funding. They financed many
of the statues and the altar.
Eli justin, a blind Marist
Brother, however, contributed
most of the .funding for the
project. He took responsibility
.
Circle file photo
Built in
19.54,
the chapel is a place of meditation for many.
for
funding· the majority of the
construction.
· When the cliapel was nearly
completed in 1953, the Cardinal
proclaimed it "the church of the
future."
·
Brother Paul Ambrose, the el-
dest of the Marist Brothers, said
he has pleasant memories of his
efforts and involvyment with
the chapel.
"Because we [the Marist
Brothers] built the chapel' by
ourselves," he said, "we. take
great pride in the chapel. - The
people who know what we went
through appreciate it a great
deal."
-
Ambrose also said his most
vivid memories involve the in-
spiring moments he spent with
Justin.
''The man's blindness did not
stop him from actively particJ-
pating in the construction of the
chapel," he said. "I will always
remember him for it"
Ambrose said he gets an over-
all pleasure from being involved
with the chapel.
"It was a great experience
be-
cause we built it ourselves," he
said. "We have also always
gotten along with everybody."
The chapel also exists as a
place of enjoyment and medita-
tion for many Marist College
students.
Sergio Alves, sophomore,
said he enjoys the chapel's ser-
vices.
''The services are well-suited
for students," he said. "The
services there are not as tradi-
tional as other Catholic ser-
vices."
Alves said he likes the
chapel's size.
·''The
chapel is nice and small,''
he said. "You can always get
good seats and easily see the
priest."
Dan
Will,
sophomore ,said he
likes the convenience of the
- chapel's 7 p.m. services.
''The· times at which the ser-
vices are held are convenient,"
he said. "They are held at night
so that they do not conflict with
anyone's daytime activities."
Will also claimed to admire the
preaching methods of the priest.
. "The priest relates Biblical
passages to modern times," he
said. ''That makes the services
very enjoyable."
Photo courtesy of Richard LaPietra
Senior Simon Hecht carefuUy measures out one mole of
water before the 6:02 a.m. start time of national mole day.
Ptofessot ·
h,elps
people.with OCD
by
JAIME ANDERSEN
Staff Writer
able to contact four top experts,
and one psychiatrist in OCD re-
search to answer·question:,·on
-
the list.
Itis possible that
120
people
The list can be accessed on
at MaristCo11ege could be suf-
the Internet at the address:
fering from some
fonn
of OCD.
USTSERV@VM.MARIST.EDU.
It
is estimated Obsessive
She said she believes it is nee-
Compulsive Disorder (OCD)
af-
essary to recognize, a signifi-
fects two to three percent of the
cant number of those belong-
population.
ing to the Marist community, are
While most connect OCD with
probably suffering from the dis-
a psychologic·al impairment, in
order.
actuality. it is more biological
Vertullo said there· are two
than anything . else. The prob-
ways to treat the disorder: medi-
lem arises when the brain sends
cine and cognitive behavioral
the wrong message. Therefore,
therapy.
it is.a malfunctjon occurring in
"Cognitive behavioral therapy
the brain~ rather than an emo-
consists of exposing yourself to
tionai problem.
what you are afraid of, and pre-
While the individual may have
venting the ritual or response
some emotional difficulties, they
from happening," she said.
are not the cause of the actions
In addition to her list, Vertullo
or rituals, which the individual
started a physical suppqrt
feels compelled io repeat. Some
group, because she said she felt
of these rituals might include,
people were not receiving qual~
washing hands continually,
ity help for their ailments.
checking door locks, straighten-
She- found three therapists
ing one's room, and disinfect-
that would help form the sup-
ing the doorknob before touch-
port group, which meets at
ing it.
Vassar Hospital twice a month.
Christina Vertullo, lecturer in
There are good ways to treat
mathematics at Marist, has
OCD, but not everyone knows
spent the last four years try!ng
about them Vertullo said.
tohelpthosewho1ivewithOCD.
"The average person waits
In 1992 her daughter was diag-
seventeen years before seeking
nosed with OCD, after being in-
corrective therapy," she said.
jured in a car accident.
Vertullo has also held confer-
In an attempt to reach out to
ences at Marist to raise awar~-
those suffering from the disor-
ness about the issue. The next
der, Vertullo began a list via the
conference is scheduled for
Internet in 1994, by which dis-
June. More information about
cussions could be held pertain-
the support group may be ob-
ing to life with OCD. She was
tainedbycalling473-2500.
ill
I
l
I
j
l
j
j
l
l
, I
I
, I
J
NOVEMBER 5
2
1998
GOod
\
f!,JJ.tritiolt
,
im.ppi;tant
for
bealthy,b3Pi>Y ~eme~ter
·
.
..
.
-
.
.
.
.
·
•
.
.
-
.
.
.
.
by
ELIZABETII CARRUBBA
people
to
not eat~o;e than they
.
fat
~ortie~t.
Managing Editor
,
need to eat/'
.
.
.
.
·
Toere
·
are
a
lotof goodcere-
~
She
.
also
'
said nutrition plays a
.
als that
are
hlgh
iii
'
fiber and
high
Everyday, college students
big role in preventing illnesses,
·
grain. When buy\ng_fruit, shop
_
face the dilemma of having.to
,
.
and a balanced diet is
.
a perscm'~
.
.
_
arci~nd
·:
fil1~}iiidJ>t1t
_
what fruit
·
make health and nufritfon
bestprotectio1;i against
.
being
is
·
in season
,
becaiise compari-
choices for themselves.
.
sick because it increases your
·
son
.:
snopping is
iJ'!)portanC
C
Many students came honie
energy, stamiiu1
;
and immune
Pastas are
:
a gooci'eJCample o
_
f
from high school
an~
had a bal:.
system.
·
.
·
.
.
:
.
.
.
.
.
a food
,
that i~ not too e~pensive
anced meal
·
made for them
.
QY
"If
you're run down and not' and
.
makes
a
he@y meal.
>
·
mom or dad. Now that they are
eating in
a
healthy way, you're
. .
Pre-mixed salad
_
s 3!e sonie
~
.
making decisions for them-
.
going to be more prone ~o
;
g~t'-
·
_
ti~~s·
·
a
·
~etfor
.
,
~~y,
:
c_:ost wise,
selves in college, they should. ting sick and your resistance is
bec
·
ause thf
extra
ingredients
know
it
takes a conscious effort
going to
be
Io.w," she said.
arifalr~ady iricl
_
u~ed.
·
..
,.
~·
to take care of themselves.
Freshmen; in particular, haye
"If you have saladbefore the
.
Jane M. O'Brien, director of the most difficult
time
adjusting
main course, then it can help to
health servic~s
and
a registered
to making food choices and bat-
fill your stomach and there are a
nurse, said food plays a big role
·
tling the infamous
"freshman
lot of good, llealthy salad dress
_
.:.
in how someone looks, feels,
I 5" weight gain.
.
..
.
.
·
.
ings that have i'.edtked fat," she
·
handles stress,
.
avoids ilh~ess
_
.
"I've eaten in the din11ig
h~i
-
~
.
aid
:
·
<
.
. .
.
:
'.
,
·.
.
.
·
•
and performs academically.
· ..
and
I
think that
..
there are
.
very
· ·
,
·
S.nacks
_
are a type of food ev-
·
"Students should be mindful
- '.i.
good (ood choices available to
·
'
ery studeriH,e
.
em's
_
to
·
stock
\ip
.
that they should eat a balanced
;.
students, but I think that people
on. 0' Brien said pretzels,
diet, consisting of protein, com-
sometimes get locked into eat-
granola; trail mixes, and popcorn
plex carbohydrates, fruits, and
ing the
·
same
.
foo~s all of
·
the
ax;<?
g9od, f~t
fr<te
s~acks: .
.
..
vegetables," she said. "They
time or they may be eating too
, .
0
Popcorn
.
i
.
s go
.
od
_
3cs long as
should also cut down on fat.". · much of th(? wrong food,"
you dori
.
't ~uy the l;cind tlia~h,~
.
·
O'Brien said
fat
is important
.
O'Brien said.
.
a lot of flavoring and ·butter,"
·
in the diet, but Americans eat
·
She said people should be
she
.
said.
"YQu can buy popcorn
too much of
it.
Most of the fast
·
.
more careful about planning
that contains no
,
fat
.
and then
foods, such as pizza and ham-
what they'aregoing
to
eat
·
dur-
add something
·
to it; just be
burgers, contain more fat than a
ing a day.
.
.
. .
·
careful
·_
about how much you
person needs iri their entire daily
There are choices that can be
add
:"
·
:
·
.
.
·
· ·
.
· ·
·
.
·
.
diet.
,
.
.
.· ..
...
'
.
.
made and they
·
i:nay not
.
be the
·
O'Brien said
:
exercise goes
Complex
·
carbohydrates; such·
·
favorite
choke
of students;
A
along with good nutrition and
:
.
as
'
pas~
'
lllld 1fo~toe,s,
:
~hichare pfoc~bfcake_loo~s ~nd
:.
tas,tes
·.
is
;
itnpdrtal).~ bec
,
ius~.of
its nu
-
,
.
,
g9.ci;d,
,
f~r:energY
.
~rid
growth,,
better than
:
an)1pp~~;
-but stu-
'
in~~~u
·
~
,
p~ri~fj\¥{
/)
,
:
;;
;
/
. ·
should
.
be
where 1feople get
dents have to think
,
apout what
·
..
.
·
•·
i(h~lP
.
s
.
;
yotj(apP,earance,
riio
_
stof9{eir calories
:
.
.
·
..
food does °forJheri
(
'
_
;
..
.
0
·_'
•
make
f
yoll
fee!'.b~ttei-, boosts
. "
Proteins,
such
as meat,
''Cerealforbreakfa.stisagood
_your self:;-esteem
t
gives your
·
chicken; turkey, and fish; help
source
.
.
of
carbohydrates,"
'
she
mo~
:
enetgy,
:will
t)lostlikely help
.
:
to build bones. Fruits and veg-
said.
"-Salad;alongwitha'sand-
you
,
to sleep
~
better; increast!s
etables co1,1tain nutrients and
wich containing
·
turkey or tuna
metaboiism; is
·
·:
a
i
wondedul
minerals necessary for body and
fish
;
and
a
piece
:
offruit would
stress r~lie
.
ver, a~d prevents
brainfunctiori.
·
.
..
be
'
an
example
<>
,
fa
·
·
goodltmch;
w~ightgaiii
i
_:
·.i .
..
·
.
·
•
·
.
.
•
"That's why the diet needs to
Once
in awlule; it'.s
·
9ktcihave.
She said ifpeople
,
are
.
uncer-
contain
an
three ofthose forms
~
ice
~ ~
:
ofc~ki
/
btjdf yot1're
iairi,a~bu
_
t wpeiher ~ey.are eat-
of nutrients," she sa.i
,
d
,
·
"You . having
,
that
.
_
evefyd~y ~deat.:
ing
~1
b~!aric
_
e,cf. ~~et, then
.
it
need a balanced diet to
'
oe
!it ing
things
;
that'
are loaded with
woµld b~ helpfulfo~ them to
youroptimum.'
.'
,:
'.
:
, :
·
=
,
;
:
calories
_
and}at,
/
yb
g
r~gofogto
.
keep
.
_
afo9d di<!fY, V'ritipgdown
· \Vater is another necessity
.
start
seeiiig
.
weightgajn."
-
·
.
what they eat at ~ach
rrieal.
.
a:nd
·
everyone should have at
. :
Uppei-cfassmen w.ho
are
cook~
''Tijat
wiir lei you
'
know
·
if
.
least six to eight glasses of it a
:
:
ing aqd
,.
gNcery
.
_
sh9pping(or yo~
're
i
making
~ome
choi
.
ces
.·
day.
. .
.
.
·.
themselves can alsoinake good
'.
tliatai-eil't as healthy for you or
''.Water
is very important for
..
·
health
and
n,utrition choic~ tfi,at ·
.
if
there
ruiiim~s
during the day"
your body because your cells
are
'
not too
~ostly;
:
~
: -
.·
.
.
that are pai:ticulady difficult for
.
are made up of water and you
O'Brien said shopp~rs shouid
you and
you
'.
re grabbing fast
need to keep replacing
th~
fluid
not grab what th
_
ey first see on
food or unhealtl,ly snacks," she
in your system," she said. "It
the shelf. Instead, read labels
said
.c
"Jt would make you more
.
.
helps every
_
organ of your body,
and iook
on
the
back of foods
·
aware
·
arid help you to maJ.ce
skin, appearance, and also helps· to s~e what i! contains, such as
.
chan~es~"
-
.
-- -
---
---
-
...
.
.....
,
-
.
NOVEMBER 5
2
1998
TH£.-CCIRCCLE
E8cl
'
t-ures
PAGE7
http://www.snoopy.com
Einily's Recipe
of
the
Week
Looking
for
some. infonnati~n on Linus, Lucy, Snoopy or any other members of the Peanuts comic
strip?
·
·
FruitCrumble
·
Butter for greasing
1.5 lb. apples
. Check
outhttp://www.Snoopy.com.
_
The page offers
_
a lot of colorful images and infonnation on the Peanuts gang. The site features
articles on the creator of the Peanuts comic
.
strip, Charles Schulz. The articles are written about
2
tbsp. soft brown sugar
·
l tsp. cinnamon
. . 2
tbsp. apple juice
Cup blackberries, or apricots, or plums, or raspberries
1/2 cup buuer
various times in his life.
.
·
There is also
a
history of the comic strip as well as profiles of each of the characters.
1.5
cups all-purpose or whole-wheat flour
1/2
cup oatmeal
The site o_ffers various games a vi~wer can play such as "who's who,"
an
identify the characters
game, and a Peanuts' trivia game. Viewers can also send a Peanuts post card to a friend.
1/2
cup light brown sugar
Pinch of salt
Past comic strips can also be brought up from the archives. .
So, check out
http://www.snoopy.com
for some animated fun.
If
you have any suggestions for this column, or would like to lVrite
a
column, contact Emily at
extension 2429 or emailHZAL. Features Editor Emily Kucharczyk wrote this Searching the sites
column.
Preheat oven to 375. Grease pie pan. Peel apples, cut them into
quarters, and cut out cores, then slice. Cook apples,
2
tbsp.
brown sugar, cinnamon, and apple juice gently in saucepan until
apples are soft, but not pulpy. Meanwhile, mix butter and flour
~
together in mixing bowl, then mix in oats, sugar and salt. Put
apples into dish and mix
in
other fruit. Spread crumble on top
Horoscopes
·
and bake for 30 to 40 minutes. Serves 6 - 8.
ARIES: Contiime to
·
other people.
ff
it
push yourself hard.
was just for you, it
·
You' could be in a
would be easy. Well,
·
work
_
situation that's
pretend it is and then
·
rather stressful, but
justfactor them in,
don't despair.
·
Al'-
o_ne at a time. Mean-
though it
.
seems like
while,ifthesituation
this will go
.
on forever,
is tough at work, you
it's actually a tempo~
·
may not be
_
able to
rary condition: Make
·
ask for a ·raise. In-
the most ofit while
·
.
stead, think of an-
.
you can:
,
You
can get
..
other way to gener:..
,
sometliing
.
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caon
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J.:ufsyt oa
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ub?
.
·vuet
-
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quite
a
while, sOm6ve
_
. \1~
'i
ckly.
_
Besid'es; .
.
'
·
-got a good team
_
on
, you're gahiing
vali.i:.
_
,
,
your side. Today;
_
_
able experience.
·
·
·
.
_
make a little·e)(tratime
·
,
- '
'
-
TAURUS: Itlooks"like
to acknowledge the
_
the money Y.Ou11e¢~
·
people who have
,
)savailab
.
I
_
e
•
if
_
.
~0"1
s~m~
-
.
-
been working so hard
·
ply
.
ask for 1L_Well,
·
.ror you lately: They
,
.·
· .
thah:night not b~
_
as
need to have more of
·
simple as it fi,rst ap-
the recognition. An-
·
pears. There's some-
other
.
thing you can
thing you needto say
.
__
do is make sure e.~ch
thatyou'vebeenhesi-
of your players is
tating about. It's the
strong enough to
truth,•
of course
;
and
make it on their own .•
you even have the
~
-
_
-
VIRGO: Hopefully,
factstosupportit'But
you've already got
you didn't want to
your rot,1tine pretty
say anything
for
fear
·
well in place. You'll
of upsetting the other
.
·
·
do best if you' re
person.
"
But don't be
-
working within a
like that. It's more up-
structure you can
setting
·
fo everybody
trust. That"gives you •
to keep this buried.
certainty in
·
case
GEMINI:
.
You're
there's a.change.
It
stronger tod
.
ay
.
. b
-
7-
·
1ooks like that could
-·
cause the Moon
IS
m.
happen. You
,
.
can
.·
your sign
.
The Sun is
pretty w~ll count on
·
stilfin Scorpio, hoW-
·
acoupleofsurprises.
ever. That puts a little
Expect the unex-
pressure on you at
pected, and watch
.
,vork. You'll be using
out for delays.
·
· at·on to
·
~ - LIBRA:Itlookslike
your 1magm 1
solve
problems.
you'd love to get
That's your job all the
away, but for some
time anyway, but to"'
reason you can't
_
day they'll be throw-
quite make it. Is it a
ing
things at you hot
financial consider-
and
heavy.
If you pay
ation? Well, maybe
attention to your ob-
it's not as bad as you
jective again, you can
think. You may feel
figure out what needs
like a lack of money
to be done.
is preventing you
.
CANCER:
It looks like
from doing all sorts
there's a financial de-
_
of things.
If
there's a
cision to
be
made, and
class you want to
·
this one is kind of a
takebutyou'reafraid
toughie. It involves
you can't afford it,
run out the numbers
I'd be
a
little careful if
one more time.
I
were you right now.
SCORPIO: Money
It looks like some-
is tigh-t right now, but
body else is listening
it's by your own
in, and that person is
choosing. You're in-
not necessarily on
vesting in something
your side.
that's going to pay
~CAPRICORN: This
off later. At least,
is a good day to do
that's what you
.
paperwork, especially
.
ought to
.
be doing..
stuff you've been
.·
Be very careful,
.
·
·
avoiding. The Moon
.
:
..:
howev,yt.
No"
.
jj~kY
:,
;
in Gemini helps
with
ventures are
_
al:-
.
communications
.
Io.wed. Only
_
do
People will be more
something
_
you' re
-
willi~g to talk now
sure is going to
·
than usuaL
·
That Sun
work. You'll kno_w
inScorpiokindofputs
what that is, because
a
·
lid on things,
you're going to make
though. Scorpio is the
it happen.
sign of secrets
.
You
,
SAGITTARIUS: You
especially, need to be
:
and you
·
r favorite
careful about what
adversary could get ·
you say.
into a great conver-
~AQUARIUS: This
sation tod
_
ay. Well,
could tum out to be a
sometimes
your
good day for you ro-
conversatioris are
mantically; You tend
.
more- like battles of
to fall in love with the
wits, and the two of
other individual's
you are pretty much
mindfirst. A scintillat-
evenly matched. But
ing conversation, a
passionate appeal for
liberty and justice
,
somebody who stirs
you by getting
.
you
motivated or giving
you new ideas; that's
the kind of stuff that
turns you on. Today,
you could find a per-
son who's talking your
·
·
talk. If this happens,
-
definitely set
up
a date
.
for dinner toniglH
,
.
_
.
[§]
-
PISCES: idcioks like
there
are
some
changes that you've
been thinking about
making. Tonight
;
con-
ditions are good for ti-
dying things
up
a bit.
It kind oflt looks like
an explosion is
going
on at your place. \\Tell,
'
you have to make
messes if you want to
really clean things up.
You have to brea.\ eggs
to make an omelet.
That's not a bad idea·
for dinner. You'll be too
busy to do much fancy
cooking
.
Then stop in and see us at,
MILLMAN~S T-SBIRT
FACTORY·
12 Fowler ave., Poughkeepsie
(Take Route 9 South to 44-55 East
12 traffic lights 1B/ock down on left.)
-
454~2255 FIX 454-5771
·UMDliil
the Marist Communi since 1978
I
Student shares internship .·
1£]fll1fllli\-l
experieuc~
tq
ijrg~;:9th~rs
'Edit' . . .
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'afibr ·'
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~_Q11
Taking on the internship at NB(; Newschrumel4
.
~as, byfar the best thing that I
I am proud to. be ajournalisni"ipajor ~t Maj:ist; but
for.a
ichoc:il:lli.afto_uts itself as
have ever challenged myself to doin myJife;Jp.a:µ ~~ysecond thoughts about
•
·a
leader in colllI)1unications;·Mm.ist. do1?5 a pp01' job offering its students· the·
·
what I was getting myself into ~d\\'.~~the(pr_~otlwould b'e able to handleit.
ability to succeed,'. , :
>< ,. .. \ ,,
.
. ·. · ... ; · ..
•
·· ·. ••·
<:-: :•
>.·· ·
There were thoughts about the t\vo llourfC>µ1lllU!e in tlietllorning and the long
·
· What Marisfs School ofCommunications·does'not uridetstandis.the·.,
•
,. ··
hours at night; I doubted my ability to sµfyive in
·
a pi:o.fessional environment
as
hnportantance
·
C>f eru:lyinte;raction between fr~shnjinJh~it;pJQfe.#pi:~ anch, , .· ... · .. ·
well as with'those·who are-far more expep.e'nced than myseif. ·
·
·
advisor .. Itcan make·or break
a
s_tudentin amajor: ,That is ',why;gqpd.profe.~sors,are ··
. Most of all,
I.fe.
ared how·.qiffi. erC?nt·m···y.·lifew.·ould b.e
from
the lives_ ofmy peers.
I
a muSt at any inStitutlon.
:c ,
·
. :.
,<
:,_<'./_ /.
',\)}~t')/,:'._~./;?) :':, :_-, . . , .
,
th
.
· · · , ,.-•
, b
•
.The School.:shC>\ll,4 ree:valua~ \VhaJ 1t_ccms1ders "gooW
1
:teacp.er~ \Vhen ltlring,
realized ·. at ~eaving at 6:3Q.a.ni.,Jilef111tlwouldn•t . e around for the bonding .·
. .·. and it shoulc:l al~o li~t~!irilpre'to sruct.ent eyaluaµonS?:J:'lie,fir~ftip:ie'profesfors/ :.
experiences that we. alllivdoi:atcollege:Trealized that missing meals would mean
<
ar~
:
evalua.,t~d sho~ld not
~~
\iiheri they go iip for ~miref·Jristea.d/~ac_liprofessor· ·
missing all those· cooking mistalces tliat we experience as college chefs, and · .
· should rec(?tVe a yearly cntique on the:effectiveness
of
the~;teac,_llihg .bas~d on
.reali_stically;lositig alargepo_rtion·~fniysocial life. Being here fora month has
,studeritevaluations.
'
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-
·/;. '.
·:<
/c'
,
·
·> ..
_,.,.(/ti
X ;::,:,;/ .. , ... ··· .. ·. :
.
convinced)nethat I.was almost completely wrong...
.
.
. .· .
.
·
... ·•
.· This wo~lcl ,benetit,profe~sC>rS&W.liP go upJor.tetiurearid'.dien
w<>nder
,\Vhy they
· First of ail, the commute ·was brµ(al
,in
the beginning, there is not doubt about·.
·
do
·noyeceive it. P,m~e,s$.cirs sho11Icq,~ ftredaft~r three"year;s of l:iad ev~uations
that. To solv~that problemlbought a good l:m9k andreadrriyself to sleep ori the
so;is notto·waste his; or. stude11ts';tiriie; ·•· :.·.· ·
.
·•·
·
'..> ·· :
_
..
.
·
>':: ..
,
:-·,
< ••,·.
·
.
·. · way in aild out,ofthedty. Ifexhausticmis riot what puts you to·sleep,itWiHbe,
.
.
. TI.ie'School also·ifoeds to:eipahd
how many
class sectfons·itofffas each.· .
·• ihe muffled huin of the engine on ifs \Vay to Grand Central. Don'tget nie wrnng;,
.
. · se~est~r, forip~tafice; ne)(f_seiriester there'is oi:tly:one~section each ofMass
there.·.are nights w. he
.
.
n.
1
·get home at 10 p.m. or later, but becausel_appredate.e.v.· ery · Comin. Law;Press in America and;News ~itjtjg.
If
a
sttiderithast\vo'requfre-.. ·. · · ..
.
..
. rnents to fill,'o,ne._News·Editihg arid the'othe(dass off~r~d atthe·same
time;
it is ·
moment that I can spendarthe N'e\YsChani:J.el. I am never in a ru·sh to go home.I0c
.
J()\ighjuck. · 'fha,tstuden(may be
'
forcid tpJoi:fei(taldiig
·a
class·fie needfto
·
have time
to
stay up and chat
wi.!]:1 Jl).Y
rqommates ·and they are al.w~ys inquisitive"
·
sticc~ed i11_ his pr()fessioh~ career.•:~:,' : :
·
>_;/.:. :.::.;
:
:
'.
. -(
J
.
;,'
,
. ., :: · . ··.
about what happened in my day: They push my along and em;ourage ·me
as
I
go
.
Fiilally,'the School needs'to·starfutilizijig !echnolcigyJ>ettef
:·
..
. ·.
·
· ..
. through this exciting experience.On the weekends lgcroui-and.have
a
good time,
· One example iswhen. Maristfirst subscribedto the AP wire service in .1995.
but the thc;i1,1ghf oflvtc:mday Illorning doesn'tgo too far froin*my ntind:It doesn'~
T,her~ w~re high expe<::tatiotis, but 11othi~g ever happed with, it;Nqt many people
do\•o.u
any
good to overdo it,· beca1,1se.
th~
lack. of s~e'?p catclles up with you .·
.
•
·
JdlBW
the college:s coµa:~ct finajly,
r?rl.
out
_
this S~j:,teintier. Stucleiits, werenever
qufokly . .
·
.
.
:
: .. :
~;>.
.
i. ·. · · .
. . . · .. ·
:
:
· .. ·.·· .. ·
taugllthow,touse
.
th~wrre~_howto¢it_or,cpde.storiesforit.The:seivicewas
,: The uniqueness of this.internship:c!)mes.from the people that putittog~ther.L · ~~&l~ted likla :useless ~ovelty'_ih~ s,choC>l pµrchased and.thei!}o_rgoL;A lotof.
. workwfth. .Prod. uce. r.D. i.an
.•. .'ne,D. rummey
..
an ..
d.Jnvestigativ_ e .. Report
.. er !lalph·P· enza...
ttme ~d money was was~dwpen
1r
co~ld have been aiding students. '• . :
.
_
. . .. .
• , . . .
-
- •. . •
· • •
.
•
. · .
,lam
glad
I
attended Manst be<::ause I have been lucky. I have had two intern-
. They are two of the niost intelligent; irteresting, and considerate people rhave
.·ship~; good teachers and worked
'
on
The
Cjrc,le
cill
3J/2 years::'. So;maiiy
go · ...
,
· ever met in my life. I am so fortunateto work.with a team that is willing to include ... thro!lgh iny !llajor. without any experience or passion for the field;) cannot help
me on all of it's activiti_es and projects. When therejs ajobto be done they don't· ;-b~t.wonder ifthey·were the unlucky ones who fell throught the cracksin Marist's ·
hesitateJo
asknie
to doit, nor do :they expect me to complete 'things without
School of Communications.
-.
,
.
.
·
.
many questlons.
-
.. .
. ..
·
. :
.... .
.
. . . . .
.
.
>
BEtn
Agoes~
News E;ditc,r
.
Theyare·always_willingtoanswer'iµlythingimayaskofthem,whetherit
.
.
.
. . ·
.
, . •, .
regards
an
ru.signment or something as essential'as the
·
computer. I appreciate this •.
I""." _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
..;.. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_
. more and more· everyday because, due to their open attitudes and consideration
THE. CIRCLE,
of my lack of experience, they have contributed to. the large
b.ank
of knowledge I
.
.
have developed so quickly.
·
. · . · .
Going
cm
location with Ralph for assignments is ·one of the most exciting things
.
· ·
that I do. tve been with Ralph to report things lik~ the Swiss Air Plane Crash- ·
Flight 111, the presidential visit to the Foreigi:i Affairs Council in the city, and a
profile report on the President of the New York Stock Exchange, Richard Grasso.
There is no excitement like this in the world, especially to any student that aspires
to be in .the television industry.
The purpose of this article is to inspire you to take on the chaUenge of an
internship. It is to push you in the scary direction of the professional world and it
is
to
convince you that it will be a priceless experience.
Meghan Quinlan
Junior
.·Amanda
Bradley
Editor-in~chief
Emily Kucharczyk
Features Editor
BenAgoes
N~ws Editor
Tho~Ryan
Sports Editor
Patrick Whittle
Arts & Entertainment
TuraQuinn
Opinion Editor
Joe Scotto
Toni
Constantino
G.ModeleCJarke
. Photography Editor
Busilless Manager .
Faculty Advisor
The Circle
is the student newspaper of Marist College, Poughkeepsie, NY.
Issues are published every Thursday.
· ·
·
Vve welcome letters to the editor, club ~nouncements and story ideas. We can-
riot publish unsigned letters to the editor.
.
.
The Circle staff can
be
reached at
575-3000 x2429
or by email at
H'ZAL
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•
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1 . .
•
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•
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•
•
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· TH£
:CIRCLE ,
NOVEMBERS, 1998
( ) , : ·.
.;.
E
cl
------~_.,_;;,;.;..;;,_ _____ ~_;,_-.......;;;:= ..........
Questioning· Autonomy
t,)'-KrisHart
'·.
only was;a
life
prematurely . - - - - - , - - - , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
SiaffWriter?._:•::, '
'
·ended,,but WOfi!en's autbnpmy
Autonomy• is · crucial · .. to. the · · .· \Vas_thieatep.eq.
·
Dr._Slepian was --
maintenance·
Of
the liberal de-
ari obstetrician/gy11ecologist
·
· ·
- - who perfomied.imi~y.:·services •:·
m
..
:o. _c,rac .. y in w
..... hich
.. we
.. live. As a
·
·
·- ·
·
· ·
·
. for' 'women over. th.e
fours~
of
: society.we have nothing if all
his career. :In his·lifetim. e(Dr .
. members ·do not have.the.au-
-
tono.
m,y
to.self
.. -.d.e. t.ermin·e.their: .. Sfopian conscientiously pro-
.
·
·vided a widerange ofhealtli'care
_
actio~s and thoughts,. We
do .
services for women of ali races
Columnist
condones
controversy
by
CARTER RANDOLPH
HAYES
Staff Writer
' not even have the basic prin- ' and cias'ses_;
inclticled
in'.tliese'
' ciples that' OUI' 'country was
services was. the constitliticm-
Battle lines have been drawn.
f91.111ded on: liberty and
in~li- .
ally guaranteed righdo apgrtion
The trenches have been dug
vidualism. .
,.
. .
.
services. !twas ·betause of his
•
and now we choose sides, jump
_ : Unfortunately; persoriaUib- -
·
·
into. a trench and fire at will.
·· - .
·
.
.
.
vow to provide aborti<:>n ser-
There have been special SGA
erty, autonomy, is given to orily
vices to the ·wonien of \Vestem ·
discussions, councils, and pro-
a
privileged few in our social
N
y
k th t
· d D
.___....,.._....,.. _ _ _ _ _ _
_,;...;....;. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
--J
d
h
. . . . . Oft. . .
. .·.. . . .
ew
or
. a cause
r.
pose town alls, not to men-
sys. tern. .. en our race, gender, SI .
t.
b.· b.·
:tat.I·.
0
·.·.d. . d
·
·
·
f
th
d
d th
"r' ·•; ... -, -
-
.· , .ta;tu' .. d .t• .·
. ep1an o e
rn ..
ymur ere
health_c.· ate
.. providers who are
.. -
,··.J
·
beli'e::.ve that the choi·ce t·o
ion e wor s upon wor s at
? _
~ocme.conomtc s ·. s e er- .- •
h'
h.
·i
t···· ·
k . ·
·
hav b
h
d
b h If
.,· . . ,th.'
' '
'
'r' ,'',: '
m
1S
ome as wee.
educa,te,dand.:w,i,llingtoproyide· ,clloosff.an.abortionw1·11beu·n-,
e eenexc ange one a
mtne.s:' e amount o personal.
·
th'
of everyone and their brother.
auto!iomfwe_ha~e .. Thei~di~ ·
:'J~7■■■■■r,;:--:-
is_serv~ce. Thisheinou_smu:- ''jfa~tlyandsystem~ticallyelimi- · But why?
I
need to start by
vid!}ais who do not
fall
into
the ·
·· · · ·
·
dens a drrect attack
0 ~
women s
nated without going through
commending both Michelle
righ~categories ofrace, gender; .
When Dr. . Barnett
autonollly to choose their ·own
.
Co~gress or the courts. Abar-
Corinne White, the authorof the
and.class are not afforded the'
Slepian ,was assas-
~ate. i:iowcanonemak~a_ch?ice . tion services will be removed
articlein_lastweek'spaper, "Sur-
.
rights ,and privileges that our
sinatea last week
1~ social pressure and mtu~uda-
through social pressure, intimi-
vivor sa~s rape is not co~~dy"
·society claims to hold ·so dear.
• '
tion close off
0
,n~
of the option~?
dation, and a lack of qualified
and C~ht~: the author of J?ys
S
·-nce·y
all
d .
'f
not OTJ,ly Wa.S' a lil'e
Advocatesagamstfreedomof providers Whatwi'llawoman's
ofSobnety fromtheA&Esec-
.
1
ou ai:e
won enng 1
.
_ ,
~ • •
.
,
·
·
f
,
I.
. - t b
d.
al
t
prematurebrended
chmce have-not seen the con-
choice be then?
t10n O October
8th
s paper.
am
gomg
O
e so _ra ic . as O
'J
, · '
r ·
b
t
D SI · ,
.
·
Both authors are obviously
name these "othered" groups
·but womens, au-
-ne_c ton e ween r.
eptan s
Will women have the au-
t
t
d
t l
d
·
murder and female autonomy
t ..
·
d l'b
k
compe en
an
a ente
,and the privileges they lack,
I'll
tonomv was threat
.
.
.
. .
.
onomy an
l
erty to ma e
wordsmiths
get :right to it:' ·wo'm~n, rion-.. ,
.
, :-··
d-- ~. . . . .
• .
They do not se_e th~t the ab-
choices when abortion services
However.
I
think as an aspir-
hi
'::
0• 0
•
•
-
• ' ,
ene . .
·
.
.
sence of Dr. Slep1an will prevent
h
b .
b
I
?
0
·11
.
.
: . .
w te~. the poor, and homosexu-
--.
-
· . •., : _, _ .,
_
.
.
··
· .
ave ecome O so ete •
r, w1
mg Journalist 1t 1s my place and
als. Unfortu11ately;icouldwrite _.
•·.
.
. .,:,_
.
,, ··
many
_
womenfrombei~gabl~to
womenbeforcedintoawrong
possibly my duty to defend a
., for hours·on sociafinjustic~:·sei
·
f
:'.¥
0 ~.
m~y-
-
~~ _asl~iI_ig _yourself
m~e the pe_rson~~.c~_pice to re- .: situation by'_ society's unwill-
·-fellow journalist.
I
do not con-
··I'd.Ij'jJ.!~~qi~cu~sJ-few~~~l.JQj~~
if'~aJ:W~
~~t~EP!';~~ ....
b~ ..
~o.Ao6 _c~~V!\~~rtion Services in the .
-
fogness.to ensure the rights of .:-done_ every aspect of "Joy in
_ --~~( h·~v(b'e°eft_~_ro.ugh_t}a . .'
111
~f
'~~~"'om~n's a~,t~noniJ.: w:en, ?Buffal~ area. Or maybe they see
women.
Sobnety:'- Half of me
felt that
. : . att,ention/isca_restili.
of
in
.
, .ert:,
·
;~~itt:
a
pit..:
~e,
C:.9nst1t?tion.
~
to wet
; '
.
Our society always preaches
some
ot
It
was tasteles~ and pre-
- ·'sqnfil}d~rttlW.\;_ :·
.
.
r- ';:
;.,f
:f
~
~
::~t~yides \VOllleil .\Vith
~~
°:ght '
.
. i\Vlio
,\Vl~tp~
qtere to take his' the value' of liberty above all,
sented ma way that rrught have
Asa\Vomariih_aveficiildaily·
:
to_I11~raJ?,er:~9,n~:9:~gs10~on . -plac~\Vh,~;1n1~<l!-cf st,udentsare_ but what about the liberty of _been hurtful to so!11e ~eople.
threats. f:ron:i
'
,. i ndi\i
Hi
tial
if~,,
,wheth,~rnr not,it_is ~ppropnate
n~ longer !eam,~n8. howto pro-
women? If we cannot control
The
other half was JU~pmg for
,
· · ·
• <. ·
.
.•
••• :
'
•
••
•;
,. .';_ •.
tha.t she.receive.an abortion; No
vide al:?ortion services in medi- . .
· ·
JOY
th
at s~meone at this largely
gro~ips, and 1nst1tu~10ns that · · .. ·. ;
.
·, :
·
.· .. · · · ,-
.
·.. ·..
·
.
·
· .· ·. . .
?
· ·
. . ·.
•
wh~f h~ppens· to our own bod- •. conservative school was push-
would seek-to rip. my.personal
one 1s supposed tq
:
,be able to
calscho<>L Sadly,Dr: ~lep1a1
1
ies:
ihen how much liberty do .. ·
th
I ·.
Wh
d
··-"::.····. ,:
,
• .·· . .., -·
f:
,,.h
·
.
. h. ···.· b
.
. ···
wasoneofaniinority'fhalth
.
mg
eenveope ..
ata ay
_.iu:foµqtny;'aW?.Yffpmllle.
D~y:
,orce ert°.;?Ye
•
.11!1,'a,_~rtwn
..
. - . _.'
. ' •
0
_
_
e ; . ' ~ereallyhave? Perhaps it was
for college new_spapers in
·byJday ,,my . autonomy has .. ?Jl,d
t10
?11e i~ s11p~o~e~_ to pre-
care providers ~ho_ w~r~_wi]~ng . assassinated by the intimidation
America, the country where you
'sloWlybeentedticedJfhjs past· : :Ve!lt li,erfr
0
f11bb~Iling 1ne.
to face
th,~
socia~ m_ttmidation,
C
and pressures. of society, not
can state your opinion, your
. week, it just diminished alittie . _ . Womei:i, stil! retam thenght to
ai_id e:ven nsk thei_r hves to ~ro-
unlike Dr. Slepaiq_ was assassi-
story, or you feelings as long as
· rriore: : ·
-
:
·
· _ , have an abe>rtion; tlley just can-
v1de females with a choice;
nat('.!d by society's unwilling-
they do not present a clear and
:\vhen, Dr. Barn~tt,S}ep· ian
w~, _ ·
·
IlOt.fin4 anyom(to: provide the
When the providers of abortion
·
.
.
present physical danger.
· ·
· ne.ce·.ss·ary·
·
·
•s·erv
.. 1·c· e·
.. s··.··a·s. a.·.re· s·ult
servicesareeliminated, what will
...
please see
AUTONOMY,
Granted, White said that ev-
assassinated last week
in,
his
-
.
JO
.
horn.
e.m.·
Amh
... ' ...
ers.·t,
·
N.·.e\V.
_
.•.Y◄.·
ork
.. n.o.t
ofthesystemiticeliminationof ,thefateoffeinaleautonomybe?
pg.
eryone h_as the right to _be free
.
·
·
·
·
·
of harassment or offensive ma-
s · · .. ·
h
e
·
· ·
b
w
terial at this institution.
But
, O_ffle.·_
-
..
t
ID_·
_·
o.·
a __
()_Ut ·
arren
~:s:.\s~es:~:~:~~e:~~~
t::
·
.
e
stated that,
"I
have to read this
,
-
. .
·
·
·
and then
I
have to listen to those
excess. :1h~d-justfigured this
,, to
be a·habit: Some people like
.. t9
~ear
platfqrni'shoes;
I
like to
'
\v~a'Walkman.
· . : . ·
Though I
am
seldom·dis-
·gusted· with movies, there·was·
something about "There's-
Something. About
Mary"
that
truly disturbed me;
:
:· .
·
Granted, I did
·
not realize this
until I was walking across cam-
pus the other night. In fact, it
hit me like· the stench of a sew-
age plant sitting on the edge of
campus. Or maybe it was just
that stench that hit me. Either
way, my little epiphany was
probably a long time coming.
It has been brought to my at-
tention· on numerous occasions
by friends and strangers alike
that I wear my, Walkman to _an
In.fact,
I
firid a Walkman to be
.. failess of
a
hindrance than plat-
.
· form. shoes .. When-I. was in
· middle.s1.::h9ol, I frequ~ritly vis-
ited a neighbor whohad seem- .
ingly been victhniz,ed by the sev- .
enties. Over the
years,
she ad-
vised me to nev~r §hoot up or
wear platform shoes.
I once did not heed her ad-
. vi~ and ended up late for work.
I
wore platforms and could not
run to catch my bus. Of course,
the. "bad trip"
l
had courtesy of
the three-inch
lift
of those stu-
pid shoes was a rough enough
experience. So, needless to say
I
never had
the
inclination to try
that other means of getting
"high."
.
_
Changing the subject· and
sharing silly anecdotes are also
probably worsehabits than
wearing a Walkman.
Of
course,
that is unless
I
plan on becom-
ing
'a
politician; As this is not
the dise;
·f
will attempt to get
back to tl).e point.
As I completed my stroll
across carp.pus,
I
realized that
I
had travelled from Point A (my
house) to Point B (my class)
with no recollection of HOW
I
got there .
.I
thought about how
weird thatwas.
As
I
rea~hed to my ears to re-
move my headphones, it struck
me, No, this time,
I
am sure it
was not that stench.
I
came to
the realization that my behavior
was quite similar to that of
Warren's.
.
For all of those who have ei- ·
ther not seen "There is Some-
thing About Mary," Warren
(W.
Earl
Brown)
is Mary's
(Cameron
Diaz) mentally handicapped
brother.
His biggest quirk is that he al-
ways has to keep his ears cov-
ered, and he is not a man of few
quirks. Throughout the movie,·
he was seldom seen without
headphtnies, very much like me
on campus.
to say the least, this guy is not
exactly one who fits into the
normal realms of society.· So, the
idea that is quite possible that
I
wear my Walkman so much that
I. could quite feasibly be con-
sidered by my peers to be just
. like Warren made me glad that
I
occasionally have a sense of
humor.
The revelation that my quirk
has been mocked .by a main-
stream mediumcaused me to be
pretty disgusted with myself.
So,
I
shoved my Walkman in
my desk for a few days.
From time to time,
I
do use my
Walkman. If anyone notices
and points out my similarity to
Warren, I can just tune it out.
Tara Quinn
is
a junior commu-
nications major with a minor
in English. She is from Tet111.eck,
New Jersey.
who defend this as humorous."
There in lies my point. One does
not have to read something that
. may be potentially damaging to
one's mental or physical well
being. One does not have to lis-
ten to people state their opin-
ion.
It
is the right of every United
States citizen to chose what
they will and will not read or lis-
ten to. Whether or not one
agrees with what is being said
or is upset with the ideas is not
decided by one page in a col-
lege handbook; but instead by
the blanket of freedom that cov-
ers the country where we live.
I
think it is fair to mention, as
I
have in the past on these pages
been chastised for missing this,
Carlito's article contained the
type of tongue-in-cheek college
humor that we all
chuckle at
some
where along the line. Co-
medians, whether writing or
... please see
DEBATE,pg.10
r
I
.
..
.
·-·
~.
-
,.
-
_
,
-
-
tH£)ClRCL£
,,.
NOVEMBERS,1998
·
-
·
·
O
.
.
;
.
~Ed
_
•
_
_
.
.
_
..
·c"·
,
_
.
_
.
.
R
.
-, .
.-
_
-
·
c
think differently about party
PAGElO
.
DEBATE:
-
Scandalhas benefits
-
:
•
.
November
brings
··:
Turkey
::
~nd
·
·
__
El~~Jiop\
:_:
~~::f;s::i:.ri~;i~r~~~~;::
·
Day;_ but
-
are
they
-
-
one
-·
ancl
t h e
;
s a m e ?
·,~-
!~~
-
~!itt~~r~it~ti~:~:c1~~
.
ment and mandated family.val-
...
continuedfrom
pg.
9
_
trasts at the
·
legislative level;
will hurt theireiection chances;
ues, that have surfaced as more
.
and
.
th¢k
_
agend.is
·
are geared
.
TheDem~raticPartymaybe
pro~change
;,
: .
_
·
·
:
.
,
,:
· ..
_
:·
:
:
speaking,drawo11lw~anex~-
_
towards suppressing
'
the oppo-
heading towards
a,
perioa of iri-
.
The New York Times reports
·
·
rience
to
make people laugh at
nent and'forwarding their inter-
ner turmoil. Democrats around
that there is little in the way of
themselves. Certainly White's
ests. Voters see the vicious ad
the country are displeased with
national platforms surfacing for
experience
_
·
is not
_
a
-
laughing
.
camprugns, and are bludgeoned
any negative associations that
either party,
.
such as the."Con-
·
matter at all.
•
Sexual assault is
POUIICAl
with_ claims of the
,
opponents'
have been drawn to them due
tract with America" in 1994. But,
one an issue that needs to be
'
COUJMNIST
abs"olute stance on
_
controver-
to the President's actions, but
the ambiguity surrounding the
addressed more closely by col-
.
.
sial issues.
.
.
-
they
are
also
·
d.ispleased
~vith
the
·
inost important issues this year
.
·
lege campuses across the coun-
The cauldron in which.these
p
·
artyleadership. Jnstea9- of fo-
mightn'lake it the most politically
try. But this does·not mean that
In the nineties, we have be-
negative and exaggerat~d cani":
cu~ing on wining·· Congres- ·- significant election in recent
a writer that addresses this mat-
come used to the stagnant
paigns brewjs WashingtonD;C
.
.
sional
·
seats,
a
bulk of Demo-
.
,
memory,
ter in. any way should
·
be por-
sameness of two presidential
Within the chambers of Con-
cratic funds
are'
going towards
-
:·,
·
·
-
·
·
trayed as a rapist or as an
un-
elections. At least in 1992 we
gress, daily dissections of
_
our
preparation to make Al Goi::e the
-
BillM~krut is
a
;senior
politi-
caring individual.
.
could celebrate Fleetwood Mac
Constitution and the laws that
next presidenL
.
-
~al science ahd.English double
The op-ed page prints a won-
style with the first president
we live by result' in minuscul_e
-_'[he
possible schism_.fo the
major
from
.
L_indlon,
RI.
:
He /s
derful line atthe top. "Congress
-
younger then Mick Jagger. Bor-
differences in opinion and gov-,.
Democ~tic Party might_be coµn-
tile
Ci
ri:le's political columniSt.
shall make not law abridging the
ing presidential elections have
emmental philosophy. Tho~e
·
terbalanced by the
fear
of elect-·
. .
.
freedom of speech or of
·
the
yielded the comparative sue-
differences fester until· they
:
ing Repu_blicans hi the midst of-
.
~
press". I have another one,
cess of a third party candidate
grow into raging ideological
.
what
could
be tlie gre~tconser:.
·
·
•
though, that goes along with
in 1992, Ross Perot, and the
wars.
.
vativerevenge. Avote for a
this: "You can't please all the
sleepy battle between Clinton
As party clashe~ mature, the
.
-
,
Republican in this election might
_
·
people all of the time''.
A
little
and
.
Dole in 1996
.
The public
public begins to icfontify
,
with
be interpreted as a
·
voteforim-
:
humor; a little scandal is gqod
finds difficulty discerning sub-
their general principJes; such
.
as
--
peachment Newt Gingrich is
for us. It reminds us of the real
stantial philosophical differ-
Free Choice versus Pro Lifoahd
-
looking for further vindication
·
·
:
w.orld instead of this green gl_ass
ences between presidential can-
-
Affirmative Action
.
. \,
-
~rsus the
.
for the present hearings,
.
and a
-
bubble that we"Iive with over our
·
didates, and has little motiva-
colorblind society. These grand
strong Republican victory will
heads, and sometimes think of
tion to
.
vote for one as opposed
philosophical differences are
.
be assumed a mandate.
as the real world.
to the other.
_
Also,
up
to the
the results of other ideological
·
Clinton's unbreakable popular-
We
:
really have so much to-•
second polling provides voters
clashes that we do not see iit
ity
is
being used by the Presi-
learn from each other; and from
·
with an accurate account of the
_
presidential races.
dent to run anti-Gingrich
·
cam-
·
_
that world out there. If you love
--:
race so far. When one candi-
_
It might be true that this year's
·
paigns around the country, hop-
·
journalism, you love America
date already appears to be
congressional races are differ-
ing that this wi
_
ll catalyze a
because it gives us the right. If
ahead, a potential voter per-
·
ent because of the present
im-
.
Democratic surge in Congress.
_
you do not like
The-Circle,
do
ceives their vote as pointless.
peachment hearings.
.
'
·
The outcome
·
·
of
this
.
notread
The
•
Cirde.
If you do
While presidential candi-
.
Ifmakes sense that the Re-
November's election wilf send
·"
not like an author, do not read
dates have lulled us to sleep
publicans willdo anything they
ripples in time that might esca- .
his
or bercolumn
:.:
Do not try to
from their apparent sameness,
_
.
can to suppress the}ss
_
ue of late intobouridary changing
·.
'._
taketherightofexpressionaway·
Congressional ~andidates haye
impe_achm~t1LM,aI1y
-
C
_
ong;rt?
_
S.:
. ·. :
Waves
,
:r~n~i.C>Jl
·
arnoll.g p¢mo-
-
from the
-
rest of us .
.
·
·
rendered us senseless
_
in an op-
.
,
·
,siomtl
Dell.lOCra~
are
dis~ci
_
ng
crats, and~
firri:1
giapplehc_;Jd
_
on
';
.
·,
)
•
.,
,
/'.;
ri
··
,;
:,
·;
_.
,,;
,:
posite way. The Rep'ublicans
'
:
themselves from
·
the
'
President;
-
~ the Repal>lican's by'the
'-'
Chris-=
::(
'
_
Carte
·
n;Rahdplph
1
Hayes
;
iis; al::,
:,
and Democrats are stark con-
.
:
forfeai:thatassoci~t:ion
:
~itl~
_
him
_'
'
·
tian co~fitio~
;
'
inight miice
_
us
''
:
junior
commwiications major.
:
_-
-
-
__
•-
_
•·.
-
.
---
~u;
Guaranteed
·
Credit
Cards
witl1
C1·edit
-
Lilllits
''.
':,.,,_a~
·
·•
·. .
.
.
.
.
.
.
Up To $10,000 \,Vithin
Day~t.
<
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.
·
.
·
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,_·_
•
.:--..
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No
CREDIT,
Nq
JoB, No
PARENT
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·
SECURITY
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···••'!'ft~•···
......................................................................................... .
.,,.
-
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.,,.
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.....
,..._
PAGEll
R~NT
shines
on<Broadway stage
•
·
.
..
.
.
.
'
.
·-
by
JESSICA
'
COOPER
.
;
StaffWriter
.
ommend buying the CD, whi
_
ch
. features all of the songs in Rem,
if you cannot.get to see this
show in the near future.
If
you want to have ari experi-
·
One of the most well known
encethat will change your life,
and powerful songs in Rent was
goand
,
see the musical Rent. I
Seasons of Love which opened
·
had the
'
distinctpleasure of see-
·
up Act II. The cast was spread
·
ing this Broadway'musical on
across the front of the stage,
October 28 at the
-
Nederlander
hands interlocked, and sang
TheaterinNewYorkCity,anciif
about the
525, 600
minutes
truly impacted me inore than any
which constitute one year. The
other work of art ever has.
.
song, as well as the entire musi-
Reniis
'
a musical written by
-
cal, is really
sending
the mes-
the late Jonathan Larson,
-
who
-
sage to live the moments of each
.
died suddenly of an aortic an-
day as though they are the most
eurysm the night before Rent
sacred. Do not be concerned
was to open off-Broadway in
about the future or past because
·
1996.
WhileLarson was never
·
you are in neither
at
this very
able to see his dream of having
.
_
-
moment. You should appreci-
a musical show to which the so-
·
ate your life because you are
called "Generation
X"
could re-
blessed
·
to
have one at all and
late become a reality, it certainly
:
you never know when it could
touched millions of viewers all
photo
coune
s
y Jessica Cooper
end.
over
th
e w
9
rlcl .
.
: ,
•
.
. .
The cast of
RENT
_
brings critical issues and entertaining performances to Broadway.
Rent
was phenomenal. It dealt
·
Rent's,
plot is a bit confusing
The musical features young actors_ and actresses and is geared at a mature, younger
with issues with which our gen-
for
th
ose who have never_seen
audience: RE/1/Tfirst opened in 1996 is currently playing at the Nederland Theater in
eration has had to deal: homo-
it brought to life. It is about two
New York City.
"
.
.
·
sexuality, gender-identity crises,
meri, Mark and Roger (the latt~r
and most importantly,
_
AIDS.
of whom has AIDS), who live.in
Rent
was not like other musicals
a run-down
·
apartmerit
,
on the
tei-~in this show, inciuding
-
An-
on the audience who sc;reamed
musicals, such as opera and
that deal solely with issues of
LowerEastSideofManhattan
.
,
1
·
th
fu
·
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ev
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ery
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tim
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ehe
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ap
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pear
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edonstage.
classical. Whileitincorporated
unrequited love and broken
Benny,Mark:anciRoger'sformec
.
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~o~ex~al J!~;;::~ro fal~;
<;:ollins (played by Michael
many types of music, such as
hearts
.
While these themes
roommate, has come· int9 soine
-
in Jove with Collins the also-gay
McElroy) was also incredible as
•
dance, pop, salsa, and R&B, it
were involved, Rent went a step
money and plans on buymg the
11
.
.
f
,
.
A
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·
a more mas
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culine gay ch
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aracter
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was predominan
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further by confronting more
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His voice was so smooth it was' Jonathan Larson wanted the ' controversta topics, sue as
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irn~
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cross-
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y
,
P
ans on s utttn~ ow~- e
·
Le
acclaimed· show My So°Called
could truly feel.the mwnc he
the songs he wrote f?r Rent ~e- ,, 'dressing
:
.
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~as ~nam~~ng chara
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-
the fullest and
show
·
had
-
sp~ctacuiar voices.
to,
_
and
-
a~preciate thi~ music
say' this because o
.
e issues
~~rl
f
~
'.
:.
:
frp~t\
'
g~_rifJ~l~~
)
:s1::g~:~my
~;J'
the
'
funniest
'
-
-
'
'
'.fhe songs
_
th~y sang evoked
best.
I
thmk _he was
_
n_ght be-
,
centered around sexuality which
.
~ureen,~ oish~
·
.
es 1an:p anb
.
s
· ·
·
soriits,
.
focfodfog You Okay
eons
''
of emotion and reaHy al-
caµse the aud1ence, which was
·
dominate the show. If you want
on prot~st10g t
1~
atrCJc:ity
.
Y
_
Hone
.
in full; Santa Claus-
lowed the audience to feel the
compqs~d of all high school and
to see a musical that will not
perforrmng on Christmas Eve.
A
·
·
y .
·
.
·
•·
.
. ·
•
·
h·
hardshi·p of the·i·r e
·
xpen
·
en
-
ces.
.
·
co_ lie
_
~e st
_
ud
_
ents (it was a spe_ -
·
only impress you, but will touch
·
·
.
-
_.
d
.
h
·
.
•
.,
·
.
1
.
esque atttre, not to mention ts
.
.
n~t e/:1~.U
~
~s
;:
an
-
-
t
e
,
st0
ry
me
.
bright; spllikling red lips~ick.
The music in this show was ·cml vtewmg), loved the music
you, hurry· to the box office and
·
..
pro
,
~f~s,~e~,,bu_t·I. do not wan.t
Thecharactertrul made
ail
im-
also amazing. It was not the type
and was_ screaming an_d yelling
see Rent in all of its glory.
to rum the en.dmg foryo
.
u:
.
.
·
·
-.
y
,
·
·
al
thth
t Ih hl
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,
.
. ·
.
.
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,
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th
.
,
..
h
-
.
,
pact on the story as a whole and
normally found in Broadway
ong wt
e cas .
_
1g
Y
rec-
ere are many o
.
ere llfac~
·
· • -
·
·
·
.
Defe:pdingthe
.
Artof
Entertainment
.
.
--·
.
:.
~.
.
.
.
.
.
-
.
·'
byCARLITO
Staff Eri_f ertainef
·
·, ,
·
it is because foy mother repeat-
mind can be taken at face value.
edlYtold
'
ine that
I
should stop
·
Did mommy ever tell you not to
breathing'because I was
·
wast-
believe everything that you see.
ing
·
oxygen that was better · on TV? Well the same goes for
.
Have you eyer
,
stopped
·
to •
.
suited for the rest of mankind.
what you may read in theenter-
question the purpose
:
,
of-enter~
'
Maybe it is because my brother
tainment cohimn of a college
taininent?
I
have. ]have
·
c9n:.
\vould pull his pants
;
down, sit newspaper,
.
tempiated both its value in gur
.
, .
on my face and wiggle
.
,
(Note
As
a
writer for
·
the Arts and
s~iety arid the role it plays)~
to self:
.
you are not on Di:.
_
Entertainment section, I have a
everyday'life
_.
After c9unt!es~
Susco's sofa so suppres~ an:y
-
distinct job to do. And that job
nights_ ofinsom:nia prodded
-
by
future cathartic impulses
·
;)
'.
-
is to assimilate my
-
readers into
cyclic philosophiiing,t hav~
_
'.
Tile a99veparagraph was one
·
.
adopting my belief that the
come to seyeral conclusions
:
/
• .
hundred percent hogwash; but
'
-
world would be a better place
The primary purpo§~ of
_
~n
_
ter
-
·
-
:
you know what?
I
Vfas laugh-
without asparagus. Rats, there
tainment is to givet1s a
_
l:if¢ak ..
;
.
,
1!,
-.
ing _whet! lwrote·jt,
_
and you
goes my subliminal stranglehold
break from the monotony
of
our'
-
'
know why? B~use
.
I visualized
on .the reading pubJic. Actually
futile existence on this planet. I
it and it is unbelievably prepos:.
my job is to entertain
,
hence-
do not know about you but my
_
terous. Much, ifnotall, of what forth the Arts arid Entertain-
ii(!!
is unbearably boring and
I writeis either an absurd <;tis-
ment section. I try to write
there are many occasions
'
where
·
·
tortion of tnith or fiction that is
things that people might find
if l do not take a break, I
-.vill
.
:
spontaneously expelled from my
funny and most of what I write
haye
a
cranial aneurysm.
warped ~i
_
nd. Several weeks
can be amusing
-
if people detach
Throughout life, I have pos-
·
ago,
·
I broadcasted_my lack of themselves from reality. Why
sessed an instinctual ability to
credibility~ a journalist by stat-
is this detachment a mandatory
entertain people, or at least that
ing that the article was written
prerequisite to reading my ar-
is what my mom tells me. I en-
-
by Carli.to, Staff liar.
ticles? Because if people be-
joy entertaining people and
For those of you
·
that are still
Ii
eve everything I write, they
maybe that is because I am
ambiguous about how to trans-
may become depressed by the
starved for attention. Maybe it
late that, allow me to spell it out
facts (lies)- that Alf is now an
is because my fa~er
-
used to
for you. I am completely and
alcoholic
and·
George
_
lock me in a closet with nothing
utterly full of crap. Absolutely
Popodopolis was killed in a car
but issues of Playgirl. Maybe
nothing that spews from my
bombing perpetrated by
Emanuel Lewis
.
-
·
Let us not forget the self-defa-
mation that l partake in. Hon-
_estly, I have suspicions that I
am a first stage alcoholic, but
they are probably just one of the
-
many paranoid delusions that
pass
-
through my
_
mind. Al-
though several years ago dur-
ing a crippling bout of depres-
sion, I did wallow in suicidal
doldrums, I do not presently feel
that I should be shot in the face.
In all honesty, I have only rented
soft porn on one occasion and
although I do enjoy hard porn, I
have never paid money for it.
An article in last week's Circle
has prodded me
_
to commentjn
regards to the use of Rohypnol
as a means of satisfying your-
self. Although several years
ago; nothing could successfully
jump-startmy sex life, I would
never consider using roofies to
do so. I find
.
the thought of a
fellow that is so desperate that
he would actually resort to se-
dating women in order to sleep
with them to be pathetic, tragic
and humorous. Does that mean
that I think rape is funny? Ab-
solutely, positively NOT. I was
poking fun at the sex-starved
loser that would do such a thing,
not the victim. Several women
very close to me have been vic-
tims of date rape and I have shed
many tears with them. There is
nothing funny about a woman
that is raped. They endure
trauma that I can not even
fathom and the memory is en-
graved in their mind for life.
But you know what? I did not
point to a girl that had been
- raped
.
and laugh in
,
her face.
That would take a lack of hu-
-
, manity
'
that I
am
incapable of. I
did not mock anyone's pain to
invite the defamation of charac-
ter that I endured last week.
Freedom of speech gives rrie the
right to poke fun at anyone I
want (including myself) in a
subtle fashion, but it does not
give me the right to insult some-
one directly. Except Tutie from
The Facts of Life.
...
please see
ART?,
pg. 12
,_
PAGE12
NOVEMBER 5
2
1998
.
Gi
.
v
_
·
e
:
us
·
·
a
,
r
.
ea
.
son
_
·
·
··
t
.
o
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.·
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d
.
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:
ay
....
.
...
.
·
.·
.
ti:~;;~i:r:~~;,tim
•
A
.
-
RT? :
.t'
and Jere.my.
'
Saturday
·
nights
from 10:30-12:00 is
The Beat
A
.
·
1
··
:
.
.
·
.
.
;
;
.
'
.
·
t
•'
Section with
.
DLG
;
with
live
·
_
L,()
·
·
umn1s
.
mixes of disko, house techno,
byCHRISKNUDTSEN
Staff Writer
and drum and bass.
The
'
ha
·.
s
·.
th
'·
e
·
88.1, WMCR, where the fox
SheehanFunk is on every Sun-
runs slowly and does not quite
- day night from 7:30-9:00with
•
make it to the other side of the
tl!,~ Spindoctor and B-Rock
''wr1
te''
campus ... not that anyone listens
playing'
a
variety of rock music.
to us anyway.
·
W~dnesday nights
·
from
9-
I do not understand why some-
10:30
;
WM CR kingpin Bob and
... ~ontinuedfrom
pg.
JJ
thing as entertaining as the cam-
·
his sidekick Brian spin the best
'(hat is not the marketplace of
pus radio station is s9 widely
·
in hardcore and metal on
the
ide
·
as that the First Amendment
•
.
ignored. We h,we quite a few
U~ityShow. Theteanurriberof protects, that is
"
a personal a
_
t-
.
quality shows, includi'ng my
shows
-
not mentioned here that
·.
tackreminiscentoftherank-out
own
·
(shameless plug), that are
are on every week, but there
co~tests
·
tµat I
·.
participated i!}
·
on once
.a
week. There are
wOuld be'too long
'
a
list
for
nie
'.
,
dtiringth~fourthgrade
,
The fact
shows for basically' every type
to continue. Concert tickets and
that someone could read a few
of music, from indie-rock
,
io
rap
,
·
other assorted items of note are
.
.
lines of print and use it
as a foun~
to techno, to punk, arid to any-
·
often peddled
off
during WMCR dation for verbaJ assault is in-
thing in-between as well as
•
shows, so yourincentive to
lis
-
.
fantile
:
-
·
sports talk shows too .
..
Now
ten is
.
that
_
·
muc
.
h
:
g
·
reater now.
.
.
If anyone
·
'riu
.
ttli~re ~ctually
_
c
i
n:le phoii>'Jotµiny Wigclow
granted, parts
·
ofthe canip~s
You could be missing out on:
·
believesthatlamarapist,Ihave
Cannot actually g
·
et the stati·on
·
,
.· ·
·
·
free
.
tickets to c
.
heck out
·
so
·
m
·
e
"o
·
ur words "or you.
WAKE
UP
·
·
WMCR Mus
_
ic Directo
.
r
.
Bob Roth
·
g
·
ives t
.
he
·
station tv.io
.··
.
big
·
·
·
·
·
1
'
1
'
in for one reason or another but
great live mus
.
ic'in the area!
' -
LITTL
.
E.SU
.
Z.IE
.
.
I h
.
ave noth
.
ing
.
thumbs up.
-
His anonymous friend looks to 'gtin down' lo
.
sers
m
·
·
·
·
·
it is still very discouraging for
.
·
vveU that is my sale_s
·
pitch for
'
but the utmost. respect
fo
.
r
who do not listen to WMCR. Ttie station's call numbers are
· ·
·
us DJ's who sltow up
·
to the sta
-
· ·
the
"
radio
·
station:
·
WMCR has
·
wom~n apd that is my opinion,
.
tion
full
of enthusiasm to
.
piay
..
88· 1 FM
.
<
-
.
the
.__
talent and the potential to
not my libido's. Although
I
like
our favorite music and nobody
reach
a
greater audience~ but we
·
small boys, I would never con-
seems to be lis
t
ening.
my show whether someone
·
Half Day Closing with Mike and
have
·
to start by supporting
.
sider
.
raping ~ne': I would like t~
.
If
you actually turned off the
calls in or not, but still it makes
Kate which is on from 1
:
30
-
3:00
them campus-wide.
•.
Try tum-
-
make a reque
s
t to those readers
Playstation for once and tuned
the show that much better when
on
·
Mondays.
Monday Nitro,
ing the di alto 88.1 next time you "that
.
are extremely sensitive.
in
,
you would hear other stu-
someone out there acknowl'-
no,notthewrestling,isonfrom
are working out, taking
·
a
WhenyouJlip
.
through
The
·
dents putting on surprisingly
.
edgesyourefforts. There area
10:30-12:00 hosted by Mikail,
·
shower
,
skippingclass,orwhat-
·
Circ~e
_
and
y~m
.
stumble upqn
good shows. Now this might
plethora of quality shows
·
on
playing hip-hop and rap .
.
Fol-
evei- else it is that you do. Ymir
an ar:ticle with
my
naine on
.it,
really be pushing it, but if you
WMCR and°the best part is that
lowing this is
The Darkside with
friends are the onesin the sta-
tum t~e page. Right now Puff
made the effort to actually !is
-
·they are
.
student-run as op-
Self Caged and Ivo, playing a
.
tion so give them some encour
:
·
Daddy
_
is on my television.
I
ten to the show, you might as
.
posed ti:> being owned by some
mix of gothic and industrial mu-
agement arid check
.
out their
~ate what)
am
being exposed
well go the extra step further and
.
·
corporate figurehead
.
Why not
sic. Every Thursday at
4-:
30-6:00
shows; Who knows, you might
t9 so I
.
am going to change (he
call extension 2132 to let the DJ
encourage them. and listen to
is a punk show run by Rich and
actually l_ike ~ome of them.
.
channel. You can d
_
o w
.
e same.
·
know that at least one person is
some music that you might not
·
Mike. My own punk show,
4
tuning in. Believe me,
_
we ap~
~e able to hear on other st~-
.
Empty
Pocfq?ts,
'
is on
,
Fridays
predate it.
·
Now speaking out
hons?
.·
. .
..
.
'
from 3:00-4:30 with'my
.
~o.:host
-
of my own experience, limited
As said e!iflier
-
tl}ere
:
3!,"e
i
~how,s
Jimbo~
!
La:terdn
,
lht
·
e~enihgrat
though it is,
I will keep enjoying
focusing on ~n?
:
~e~r9ck such as
6:00-:7 ,30·
_iiL:Fridaj' Sporis
.
;~
PRESSWIRl!
·
1
3
6
9
10
11
12
13
15
17
18
19
·
21
22
.
23
24
26
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
1
2
3
4
.
5
.
6
7
8
14
16
19
20
22.
23
Across
One Half of a
Pair
What
Did You
Say?
Not Lost
One Before a Vowel
·
Single
Female sheep
Classic Japanese Drama (Var.)
Egyptian Crown
Habituated
.
Classical Prefix
His, Objective Case
OtherHalf
of a Pair
In Accordance With
Study
of people (prefix)
Male
. .
Most Extended
Piercing Sound (adj
.
)
Musical Note
Legume
..
Member of
a:
Fraternal Order
Get_thecar
In Addition
Change Color
Possessive
Down
Tomorrow
(Spanish)
Primary CeU Terminals
Arizona
Indian
Not Educated
;
: ·
··
In
a
Feverish
Manner
·
.
Ovemrownwith __
(s)
Topossess
Meshed
Fabric
___
aridHaw
CanyOut
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Here
&
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·
24
Cleo's Friend
25
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26
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Case Pron.
27
' .
-
.
.
,
1
2
7
.
·
.
8
·
12
15
·
. ·
17
21
29
·
32
(C)
1998Collcgia1el'rcMwin: F ~
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athap://www.q>Wi.rc.com
Wire Nail
Dic:,van _ _
Health>' resort
·
Female Fowl
Last week's answers
CP102898 /
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28.
1996
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}uesday,
Novembe{17,
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·
-
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-
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Career Center
Fact
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erono'II~
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·
·-
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_NOVEMBER
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PAGE13
AJlOtaWarCDanaRoutwinner
across to the audi~nce. He told
.
.
. by
.
BOB ROTH
Staff Writer
:
Which. Hudson Valley area
band has
·
been around
·
for six
years and is finally breaking out
to a natural audience? If you
answered All Out War, then you
me that he was trying to expose
were
,
so tl;lat people ~an experi-
.
the problems of society. I found
ence their Jive show .
.
Mike told
that the meaning of the title was
me that they are going on tour
to showhow people and prob-
with a band called Buried Alive
Iems in society and history have
now, and a future tour with
beeri neglected_. The crucifix
Crowbar is in the works. Check
metaphor was used to show
out A/I Out War's great new full-
how people have been put down
length'For Those Who Were
and were never able to liberate
Crucified for band contact ad-
themsel ves. They have been
dresses and other information.
shut down for so long that soon
If you want to know more about
~is will overflow and spill these
All Out War's music and lyrics,
issues like poverty and
·
prob-
chec~ out the following
!ems into society.
I
was also
website:
http://
,wondering what their tour plans
Wlllvw. vict,oryrecords. com/
''
.·
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
·.
•
Umty Fest" brings
good
-
times,
music
.
byPA,TRICkWHITILE
·
·
A &E Editor
are correct!
.
.
AllOut War's new CD For
Those
·
Who Were Crucified is
out _now an
_
~ i~ going to be a
crucial
.
record
for
.
the
·
Poughkeepsie area.
·
Tots record
indudes three songs from their
first full-1ength,
·
Truth In The
Age0/Lies,\vhich had little U.S.
with an Irishfolk influence to
distribution. There
.
stoftheCD
create something botli rousing
includes nine new songs, as
.
well
and origina1. Much of the mate-
as some hidden cover songs by
The nationwide "Unity Fest"
ria1 from theirfirstfull-lengthon
the Cro-Mags and Corrosion of
tour set a new standard for live
Hellcat Records was show-
Confonnity. With All Out War
rilus~c at The
'
Chance this pist cased, along with some newer
n~w on Victory Records
,
you
Saturday.
·
,
·
sorigs.
·
They even treated us to
wdl be able to get their new CD
"Unity Fest
"
is a tour
·
set
up
their
.
own rendition of Charlie
everywhere.
.
by
veteran New York City pro-
On_ The MTA, the highlight of
This CD is a combination of
moter Bill_y
;
Milano to bring
·
their set.
If
you are a fan of Irish · metal and modem hardcore.
It
young and old bands
·
and audi~
folk music and think you could
possesses a huge crossover
ences in the hardcore scene to-
stand hearing it mixed with some
potential and a swift punch with
gether for a good time and great
loud guitar, _definitely check out
·
music sounding like Slayer and
music. The tour is in its first
The Dropkick Murphy's. They
old thrash metal. As each song
year and will hopefully become
can be seen on tour with The
progresses, you hear how the
a
:
yearly event.
.
This year's
Mighty Mighty Boss tones from
band is diverse enough to be
lineup includesNYC's Agnos-
time to time.
capable of not making every
tic Front and Maximum Pen-
New York's seminal hardcore
song sound alike, something
alty,
Boston's
Dropkick
band Agnostic Front closed out
hardcore bands often fall into,
Murphy's, and California
'
s US
the show. AF got their start in
The addition of Mike Score on
Bonibs, no
·
t
to
mention different
1980 and broke up in early 1993,
vocals gives this record a dark
loca1 support at each venue
;
but two years ago they resur-
and evil feel. Tackling issues
··
$.e(f:Decay~rovid~d
_
the}ocal
.
~aced
_
with ~eir classic lineup
like poverty and neglected
~UPR?i:t
NJh1s:_P.~1~u,l
"
8f
/
S~op
;
'
/nl!lct. __ . Jhelf setli
_
.
now
:
feature
people in their lyrics
,
they shed
<;1n tli~
~
rour. They
c:
are a
y
9
_
4
ng
·
,
ih
~elect ·s911is
frcj
.
1j:j;
,
their first
some light on issues that people
_
band
.
·
who _do ndf Iook
·
t
g
be
::
:
single, f983'sJ'{,iTted
Blood'
tend·to:push•away
-
and forget
mucli~lderJ~an high
/
school
>
their dassicfi~~t'albiim, 1984'~
about w~ile living at college and
age, _but they sho'Y
·
e~
·
some
_·
_
Vi_<:_tim1n Paill
/
and
'
this year
'
s
separated from the world.
!'ronuse for thefoture
_
.
:
Their set
,
,.:
n~w releas
,
e S~mething
's
Gotta
If you are a fan of metal or
included a Cro~Mags cC>vei- that
.
"
GlvE!.(Epitaph Records)
,
Vocal-
h
_
ardcore or just want to hear
gotthecrowdgoing. They
:
were
.-
ist
:
~o
·
ger Miret and guitarist
something new, this disc from
fol
,
1owed by Maximum Penalty,
-
Vinny Stigma might not be the
·
~ll Out War is rightfor you. It
who have
_
been around t4e un-
·
kids they were when they first
is a perfect blend of metal and
derground hardcore circuit for
started,
:
but they seem to hav-
hardcore that will make listen-
·.
~I most ten years. This band
ing the time of the lives, They
ers aching for more. After re- .
.
.
r1ever really. managed
·.
to get
opened with a great one-two
viewing
·
the CD I became curi- ·
nmch of a following outside of _punch from the first album with
ous about how they began, and
New York City, but' some of the
the title track and -Your Mistake
how their
.
·
influences have
1?ds at The Chance seemed to
·an_d proceeded to play
a
good
shape
_
d their-sounds. Aftertalk-
hke th~m. They p]ay a style of mix of old and new rµateriat
ing with Mike Score, I found out
melodic hardcore
·
·
music with
Most
-
of the
.
audience
,.
seemed
that the band has
.
been around
hip~hop undertones that so'ine
niore familiar with
.
the
.
newer
for si~ years. Ali the members
think is th'e best thing since
stuff, but I thought the old
live in the Poughkeepsie area,
American chees
·
e and others
songs were delivered the best and have
·
been involved in the
think
is worse than curdled milk.
·
AF
closed out their set with their
hardcore and metal scenes all
fersonally I could stand seeing signature song (which most
their lives. I found out that a
them agai!1, so long as the ~inger
:,
pepple do not realize is actually · combination of-Sli;,yer, Sick Of
leaves his dancing shoes at a
.
cover), Crucified. They in-
It
All, Celtic Frost, apd the Cro-
home
.
next time;
,·
CA's popular
.
v1ted eye9'.
_
~ne on stage with
Mags have all
.
hid
·
their styles
US Bombs played next, in ftdl
.
them to sing along, which was a
mixed
.
in
.
to come
·
up with the
.
1-Ialloweeri attire. They have
'
a
·
;
nice
·
touch. A great time was
sound associat~p.
.
v/ith the mu-
.
lot of personality on stage
,
and
had by aU at The Chance
,
and
·
sic of All Out War .
.
.
put on a much better set than I
frankly I wish I had the time and
. After
.
r~ading the lyrics and
expected. They performed on
money to give up school for a
the title of th
_
e r~cord I asked
Comedy Central's Premium
bit and follow the "Unity Fest"
.
Mikewhat
_
they
·
meantand ~hat
.
Blend this summer and I remem-
·
<!fOund for the rest of the tour .. :
message he is trying to get
berthinking·they were the worst
'
·
r'"::~"".""'.-".":'
·
_
·
,
__
-
..;..
•·
-
·
_..;.....;. ___
..;.. ______ _
.
band I had'.ever seen,
·
so.I was
·
s -- ·
■
·
~-:ri::"~1..~~~u;~~:"J~;
.
·
pr1ng
Break '991!
sound like a somewhat less
MTV-friendly
Rancid.
·
,
, .
·
.
T_he
D,:opkicf Murphy's
,
Boston's champions of. Celtic
·
Pride, pro':ed to be
.
perhaps the
_
best band of the evening. They
are the kind of band that appeals
to people with no interest in
their style of music because
·
of
their diverse use of other influ-
ences.
If
you have never he'ard
;
them, try to imagine a barroom
fight between
The Pogues and
The Ramones. They combine a
traditional punk-rock sound
Sell Trips; Earn
·
casJl:
&
;
Go
·
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U
!
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hiring campus reps.
:
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·
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800-648-4849
or
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.
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f
)'.
.
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·.
•
TH1tiH1g
\VHS
t
<:~
S
-your potential.
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NOVEMBER
5, 1998
·
:
Sg:
:
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.:
14
Cetd~
i~njoYitJ.g
•
fine
ta.re~r:
(Of Ji~4F,oJeS
',
by
ALFREtioEFATIA
.
'
,;I
fight
tili t~e
-
en~:" said
She ;eally s~~d .t() ot~
~p
~
--
:·
iidii
tiie\6ain.
·
~he
'
sa~tih~
~
-
~io~eril~n~ natiori
'
and
.
wb:ld-
.
.
StaffWrit(!r
Cerda on the mentality she
.
some eyes
·
from different col-
·
bond between her and the rest
wide" added Cerda
.
·
;
·
'
.
'
·
"
:
·
brings into each
and
every
leges when she played qn _the
of her
.
teammates is something
·
.
The improvementshe would
Many people in
life
when they
game.
Big Apple Nassiu.i County Voi~
·
special
;
:
·
·
.
.
.
.
.
rnost'like to·seejs 1n women
'
s
are faced with adversity
will
About eight years is how long
leyball Team. She would
:
play
·
.
•
''Ifitwasnqtforiny.teammates
··
high
·
school sports
·
where she
.
·
give up
oi-
back
'
down. Well
volleyball
star
·
Cerda has been
on this team fqr two years and
lwould notbeatMarist," O;rda
feels
:
people still do not give
that's not the case of 5 -
11
jun-
. competing in volleyball. She
travel all' overthe
:
country.
In
said;
. .
.
~omen: respect. She is satisfied,
iorvolleyball player Julee ~erda. . ~as something special
at
Long
her second year on
.
the team . ·
·
bff
th.e court, Cerda is major-
·
;
however, with magazines such
Words like quitter, loser, or cow-
Beach High s
·
chciofo11Long Is-
they would
,
reac;h the regional
ing
'
in communicationb:ut does
as Women Sport~
_
Illustrated
ard are not in Cerda's vocabu-
land. In her freshman year she
championship
·
games "".hich
not know wh
_
at aspect ·of the
and other wome11 sport maga-
lary when she's on the court.
was placed on the varsity team.
were
-
held in
-
California. As a ·
.
communication field she wants
zines that
.
feature women ath-
She is actually the total oppo-
In her first full seas9n
9n
the
result of playing
-
:
onthis learn,
to
do
,
as a
·
career.
.
.
.
.
,
.
.
le
.
tes. She says-sh~ sees these
site; she is aggressive and de-
team she was so good that she
she
-
would
get
many
-
looks
,
at
"fr.eally don'tknoV{ wliatspe-
;
magazines as a source to
-
help
termined to get the job done on
was named rookie of the yearin
.
different c
·
olleges like
.-
Siena,
--
dfically
'I.
want
t<>
·.
do," s
·
aid
inspire up and corning women
the court.
.
.
her schools
.
conference. She Towson State; Delaware, Hart-
Cerda. That's why she is
_
taking
.
athletes
;
,
.
.
·
.
,
What makes her a key parfof would continue to dominate all ford, and Marist;
.
-
.
.
diffe~ent courses.
_
to see \I/hat
Maybe one. day. Julee Cerda
the women's volleyball team
·
at
througho,ut herhigh school ca-
.
.
She says when
·
she reflects on
appeals to
·
her .
.. ;
·
·
will
befeaturedfo a women sport
Marist College? Cerda said she 'reer arid would receive all-con-
her years spent here at Marist,
As for her feelings with regard
.
magazine playing vollt:yball for
thinks she has the answer. .
ference and all-county_ awards.
she
·
is glad she decided .to at-
to w~mien athletes she sees more .
·
·
theU
,.
S. Olympic team.
.
SOCCER:
.·
·M
: ·,
·
·
·
•
1d
·tend.
·
·
-
·
roomfor
_
improvement. Shesees
Or: maybe
.
when.she.retires
•.
e
·
n
·
·
co
·
U
.
"Marist was not rriy fii:st
thatithaschangedfortheg()od,
·
fromvolleyballCerciawillbea
.
.
,·
..
.·
·
.
.
.
·
.
choice,"Cerdasaid
.
"I'msoglad
but still needs more.improve-
reporter fora
.
woman'.s sport
·
•.o,
·
·
'
·
'
I'mhere. Ilove
.
theteam.'.'
.
..
·
.
·
,
inent
·
.
:
.
_
magazinesoshecaninspireand
en
.
.
11
_
oy
_
_
S
.
U
_
~
-
c
..
. ,
e
.
s
_
_
s
1·
_
1).
·
_
'
_
9
,
9
.
.
.
.
She has high
:
regards for;her
..
..
('Ifs becoming a gradually
give knowledge to women ath-
~
teammates and enjoys b~ing a
·
prpcess but, it needs more im-
.
letes on the rise.
- •
.
thi~t;e~•~::~!~~~~:~~
_Women·'s·volley
· ·
b
·
all
fin
_
_
~ish
_
es
·
2-
_·
7
_
.
__
·
developed the year before.
·.
-
the last: But then again, how.
After DeBrito's consecutive. . could
.
it have possibly been
•
·
·
·
-
,i..,.,.~
'
· -
· ·
·
·
·
·
1 · · 1 ·
•,
t
'
·
•
l\ ,. _·,( ..
A
·c
·
·
... continuedfrom
pg
15
shutouts,theFoxesdriftedback
worse?
:
With the bulk of;the
ID
C0111.erenc
.
•
e
:
p
·
.
a~, .. ·
as
.
m
_
.
·
.
ll':LtU-1
_.
-
,
-
.
.
.
,
.
'
·.
tcim~diocritythe
·
restofthe year.
:
. team return)ng,
:
inclu~irig a
J ·~
But-it was a competitive rriedi-
.
heaithy Joe
·
Crespo for
·
the'full
byRYANMARAZffl
·
·
rassi~g .Joss .
.
:
·
.
.
.
.
.
_
theI~ssto Fairfield (6;15,
5
~
15,
ocrity.
.
season, all the ingredients are
Staff Writer
.
.
Maristbegan
.
thefoui:th game
.
and 8-15). Heiabovepar play
Apyone who saw tllem pJay
·
th"ere fcir a wit
:
ming 'recipe.
leading
'
5.:0.
'.
Then
-
the
.
tides
.
has
'
oeen
'
'a pleasant surprise to
knows thatMaristneverfelleas-
;,
The 14freshmen
will
turn into
2-7 is noi:agreat'i-ec9rdforone
.
turn~dan4 I~ma took°ady~ritage
all
:
.
.
.
.
.
·
..
·
ily. They were in every ga~e
14
sophomores. No longer can
of
·
the strorigest
.
teams
'
in
the
.
of me
"
ntal errors ·
•
and
.
sloppy
'
Maiist continued its winning
they f?laye_d
.;
. .
.
. .
.-
:
.
~
, . the Fpxes µii,ie
.
behinqinexperi-
MAAC.
.
.
..
·.
,
,.
·
bumping
'
by
.
Manst.
,-:-;,,.- ·
·
::.:
streak fo
_
tothis
'
pastweekend,
; '
"Our kids
'
'don'
t
back clown .. : ence
.
a~ an
·.
ex~u
-
~e
_
,
fo( lo~i~g.
Unfortunately, Mirist College
Aftei'reelin
'
g
'
offeight str~ght
. '
taking
,
alLthree ihatches
'
th
'
ey
'from
anybody," said Herodes.
·
Coach flerodes is
·
upbeat about
Volleyball i~
2
-:
7
1
_
n the MAAC
. -
. poin\s
/
J\hlgu{st salle:<i
a:
time-
·
.
_':
p_l~yed
'at
•
th~
.
B-~cknell In vita-
. ·And that's
.
allwel\
.
and good,
the.~t\lre,claillY.,n,g"the kids are . _·e~~i:\tl}!l#~}P~Y, re
_
o11e ·~r.~_e
.
ori
(,
~
-
~
t
~
;
w~!'.~~g}_o~~lgi·Jhe
•
·
.~
~
-
~
-
11~b
' ...
;
.
,:
.. \;\
·
. ,
;.
,
:i;,
.
,
·butwhenyq1.1coroe·rignfclqwn . readf' to
'
't'tjirt
·
the
·
program ·top powerhouses both 1tat1st1-
Gaels' attack Thetacticseemed
..
Manstwonconvmcmglyover
to,itthe bottoni)foe ~s
.
wiris and
around.
·
..
-
.
·
·
.
·
'
'
·
"chny1iridftindaili¥riihl'i:Y!
~h'tch
·
•,;
ttfwti;k
~PMt~FdeiN2rtfc'i'a·kill
·
'f
1ribb~nMdni's'oii
~i~hitcia~
1
ti'nd
loss'es .
.
,Once again
,
th~ Red
.
.
Tnne
will tell
if
this
ye?f'S glim-
miisf
~ri% hea
'
ct.
c
·
o~~Ji
;~~H~y
·
:,
~
#~Jvt,
ij
-fmji:~~~-1
~~
~~
:
poi~ts .
.
:
}
~
-
?.~l'i~
1
~t~f
~?d)3u
,
ciai
:
~!
i
'
:
on
Foxes finished with m
'
ore of the
.
mers ofhope:werlsimply glim
-
~lqmst cra~y. A_n~ if thaqs
,
Unfortunat
_
ely th!! scoi:i
_
ng was
·
·.
Su~~ay; losing only one gan:ie
.
. .
latter, and that is never good,
"
·
mers, or if they provided ail ;ic-
.
;
_-
not
.
(?
_
ilough,
.
the,
~ed,
;£oxes
..
·
~parsi
'
:a11d1
'
e.rra#c'a'(ihe
'
R
_
ed
._..
tbeeriiire
·
weekeqd.
·.·
.
·.
,
.
'.:
..
.
:·
·
_no matter how
-
hard
the
'
.
team
.
c~rate
Ioo'k
info the
.
future of
.
s~gg!ed
'
~dcl~~e~f9rits J~t
·
~
t~~~s
.
e,ve~to~Iy
_
f~11
J
2:1,:\
.
,·
.
_i
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.
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!!J
f
tO~fl!~~DtiS~~.rd~~~d
·
),~ay,s.
.
,
·
·
,
·
.
..
·
,
,
.
)vfarist
sc:icce
t.
_
. ·
. ,
_
· : ·_.
wi~
over
.
a
.
_
rri
,
~c,h
_
,
w
,
e~ff.;Iona .
,
;
·
With
a
2
;;
2
tie;~~ foxe~
.
~d
.
-~
28-
.
'
.
1?lls
:
al9~g
_
w1~
~1~
,
~~i.:1~e
team;
.
-
.
~
-_
,
>
,
·
. · · .
.
:
'
GaelsJcickedupfor
.
afinalnµly
·
'.
a~es
;
_:
~ameyaMed three more
Yw.oe learred llE lrtlm
ski[~~
il's
~
IQ
tak?
lf'Sn
to
a
ligher
IML
~
~e
lo
oo
i
5
: .
,
. ~-\'idh~
'
JEdl#smJ'.an
.
.
atstaroog
1r~11rurogram,
;wl
frd
tta
we're
as ·
.
mtllati~iedi~~a~~~esMa
.
'tlsiti:uwibs.te
iriltest-~
·
cu~s
tooay.
.
,. .
.
~.
.
;
~
~
•.•
:
_
.
.
.
.
·,
.
!
;
l'leareai~O!)mnq~.
___
PaineWebber
.•. Launchingyour:
_
career
.
On Thursday, October 15th,
match
:
to
,
decide the
·
wiriher.
·
aces
:,
fo
iip
her
.
season totaLto
the volieybal{
_
t~am l,msied(l7
.
_
l\fadstreally'dispfayed'its core
)
36
;
;
'goo
'
d
'
for
'
seiohd irhhe
-
L·p.Ill.
niflt9~
{
·\ga\r,ts
_
t=~~eJ<ma·
:
)?
-
W~-
.
~aw~
,
'.-:
t
/
'
·
::
.:.;,;.i
:,:
.
{
¥MP.
·
;!3ik:11?~}l-.~f~~io
·
Gaels
_
.
.
The
_
~~orter-Gaels per-.
·
.
·
•AfterJUmpmg
-
outto a9~7lead
:
:·
blocks
.
Hertwnito'Yer,llp'iftont
formeQ well eqough
_
toJorce a
the
_
Red
:
Fpxes ran. into a told
:
Virtaliied
lJ
blocks increasing
,
·
su
_
qde}idea~ r~~Y
:
tn~tc~•wiQi
.;
'stre~l)p!,d~ned
::
iith
;
p~q 1~£k
:}
·'
:
li~r
}
1MfJ~aging
:
!otal
j
o
'
76 .
.
the towering
lled
Fox,es.·
\
-
.
·'
-
·
.
'During
·
one
·
ra1l)'the Foxes s~nC
He
r'.
'76
blocRs
are
a},so
·
go~d for
J\c!].tally, tpe Red Foxes suf-
.
.
hard hit after hard hit thatloria
18~
-
~the
riati{?n
:
airiong
NCAA
.
>
feied
th~it common lapse
info-
contiimaliy
kept
alive.
<
. ·
::
/
<
..
):>1yision
fsctiools
:
':
_'
.
.
.
.
c
·
us
'
that
·
h
'.
a
{
huri thern 'often
.
_
FoUow\rig a Julee
.
Cerda
·
hit
.
.
.'
Despite
th~
}ndiyjclual su~
_
cess
during thi$
'
season:
•.
.
.
.
_
frorn'tJie
·
·
outsiQe, anJona player
·
Manst pfayers.Jave
had
/
they
.
Marist opened the mate~ win-
lunged
for
Aft
errant
bunip pass,
..
are
. :
·
not
.
satis
,
fied
:.
\il.ith
.:
their
i1inggameone,
15~11.
Bo.thJen
passing
'
itov'er he/ shoulder
.
. .4r
,
!1~sf
,
ni°ii't~piate
'.
i~
.
-
fhe
Parker and Cara ,Birksent numb-
'
before 'toppling offthe· court·.
'
.
'
¥MC:.
\.,:.
;
\
: . ·
.
J
,
. ·•
·
• ·
•·· ..
.
ing spikes~~ kills toward~ the
..
.
.
D.~~pite Jon;t',s
•
pesky faliies,
_
.
·
.
,
:
'·
:.-~tf:sJitc.<>iiferense
.
play
:
and
feeble Gael~
,
.
Th~ de~ense of 'Matj.~tco~tirmedto'holdfa
-
stto
.
'
ip
..
go
,
veraJl/Nl~~thop~d
-
to
.
Bir~andlfeatherVlrlimitedthe
a
trim
(poiritleaµ:
__
.·
.
_
.
;
>
'
;
'
improve.its
re~ord
,
when tl}~y
:
Iona offense
to
'
strategically '
·
;
Then
disaster
almost
struck .
.
:
·.~
played S
(
Pefors
'
{in
Wednes~
-
pla~ed durripsfuld sideline
·
scor-
·
Stnneh9w
;
Ioriafoui;d'th~
wiil
.
·,
day
)
iiicl
~
'
alsi/when
.
ilieftrav~
.
ing.
.
;
:
;
.
. .
;
' .
.
. .
as
welf
as
the holes
·
ili the
Man.st
'
eled to
Manhattan
io take on the
·
Maristthen dropped the.sec-
.
.
'
defen~e-to,kee1{th~
'
ganie'close
,
Jasp~~
->'
iri
Jpih'"c:a~es Marist
ondgame8
c:
15.
·
.
•
' .
_. and
,
eventually' take
.
the lead at
.
''
c'arneupempl)(
'
.
·
'
.
=
.
.
.
·
Thethirdgamewasmorecom-
12-11.'
· ·,
.
.
.
.
:.·.
':·
'
.
.·
'
On
.
Wednesday they Were
petitive but Marist used
its
size
·
.
Enlivened by°devas_titirig ~ts
·
~:,yept
by
theJh~n
7.:1
Peacocks,
to dominate the court wirining . from Parker'.and Birkan(i
~CCU~
·
:
3-0, :_rhey'managed to win 'one
15-11. .
,
.
·
. _
· . . .
.
late se~~ce
_
from
¥~_ry
1
·Beth
:
gam~ aga,i~sf;fy1~piu1ttan, but
Leadmg two g~es to one;·the
. _
Koh_lhepp
"
an~
_
1p$hil
~arney
stilI lost to the'Jaspers, 3-
_
l.
:
Red Foxes.appeared to be head-
(four ac~s); the Red Foxes dug
.
.
.
..
I\:farist will travel up to
.
Mas-
ing for a f~ur g~e~ mat~h ~in.
..
d~p into
.
its pride pre~aiJing 15-
.
s~~hus~~ts this weekend
t<>
par-
Instead, they found themselves
.
12 taJ<ing
the
game and
·
match.
ticipate in the Harvard Touma
-
staring in the face of an embar- '
·
Kohlhepp also
'
played
well in
merit'
'
.
·
..
.
.
:
.
.
,·
s
ancun
*
N~ssau
*
·
,
arnaiea~· Maza'tlan ~
-
Acapulc
*
Bahamas
Cruise
*
Florida
*
Sou1'h Padre
.
Travel Free and make lots
ofCash·
!
Top reps are offered full-time
staff jobs.
Lowest
price
Guaranteed. Call now for-details!
411
-
THE
CIRCLE
.
NOVEMBER5,i998
·
,sgorts.
ff
Citlfil)nS
'Rel}()r1i
.
.
-
by Jan.Beighley,Jr.
While the New
'
York
=
Mets
-
~ere rejoi<:ing over what \Vas a
major victory last week; the rest
·
of baseball is getting· set to suf-
_
casualties, most namely the first
·
With the Vikings falling to the
month of the·s~ason.
:
.
Buccaneers 27-24, the Denver •
-Broncos
are:the last remaining
fer.·
·
·
·
.·
'
-
~ase~(!,ll-'feels like
.
Mike Piazza was signed to
a
--
seven~year,
.
91
•
million-ciollar
A..
.
1!1-erica's_
_·
pastime
.
contract iti whatis
·
the richest
·
again, do not let
contract ever signed by
:
a
Ma-
.
'
t
'
h
·
t
·
h
.
:
b
-
·
·
.
k
jor League baseball player.
·.
: -
a
C
ange
'J
·
Plll_ -
While
'
signing Piazza long-
ing the
same
mis-
termwasri~tlyamajorg~alfor
.
takes made in "1994
the Mets this off;season, 1t was
.
·
·
a signing thanet the
·
pace
·
ror
·
all of the remainingJree agents,
Now,. what does this
·
have to
including Bernie Williams, Mo
-;
do with baseball?
·
Major-League
Vaughn, Kevin Brown and
.
owners have complained about
Randy Johnson.
·
·
·
-
rising salary structure .in the
The true travesty that- base-
·
past, particularly with the
•
issue
ball has not learned from the
of the·
-
have's
.
.
(George
example of the NBA: One of the
Steilibrenner'
t
and the Yankees
undefeated team
-
in the
NFL.
.
-
WithTertell Davis, John Elway,
. Shannon Sharpe, Rod Smith and
an
unbelievable offensive line, ·
·
the defending Super Bowl
··
'.
Champions are going to be
.
tough to beat. While Cincinnati
gave the Broncos a run, with
Denver escaping ·with a 33-26
win on Sunday, nobody seems
to be able to' stop the offensive
machine that Mike Shanahan
has concocted. Add to that an
outstanding defense and you
have the best team in football.
You want to win the AFC'? The
road ends in Denver.
remaining free agents will surely
.
and Ted Turner and the Braves)
Also in the world of
slgnformorethanthe9fmilliori
.·
vs:
_
the have-nots (Pittsburgh,
sports this week:
that Piazza ac~epted froin the
Montreal). With some
.
teams,
.
. .
Mets. Likely baseball will b<;!
stich as the Mets, pushing sala-
1.
Green Bay Packers- Favre and
faced with the 'firs~
·i
00 million
:_;
tjes tjpwards of 15 to 20 million
Freeman combine for 2 touch-
dollar contract within
a
coµple
'
·
dollars
a
y~ar, there
_
wiU be simi-
downs and 193 yards in defeat-
of month
_
s. This i~ a_ situation
lar difficulties in MLB as to
ing the 49ers 36-22.
that basl_(etball
_
has
.
been faced
those in the NBA is right now.
2. Mike Richter
:.
Back to back
with over the
last
couple of sea-
.
Like basketball, owners will re-
shutouts ... he again looks like
sons.
·
·
alize that they liave been over-
the goalie that led the Rangers
In the NBA;
.
salaries have
· '
~pending and then
try
to devise
to their fist cup since 1994
.
.
beeri escalating at a phenomenal
a
c91Iective bargaining agree-
3. Kerry Collins- Return to Caro-
pace. I~ the mid-1980's the av-
·
ment that slows
.
do\\'n .the rise
Jina, despite the fact that he did
erage salary was in the low six
·
.
of salaries .. This could lead to
.
not play, resulted in not only a
figures.
·
Since Michael Jordan
anothe{strike, or like basketball,
loss for the Saints but also be-
entered- the
.
leag~e. however,
.
an owner induced 1~ckout
.
.ing arrested for drunken
:
driving.
:
'
salaries have rose dramatically,
,
/
Myple~gcies
to
ail'th~niajor
:
4. NBAfockout:, I knowl men-
.
.
:Witli°some
players
riiaki~g
in
·
ex-
.
leaglJe bas·eball. owri~rs:
Learn
tioned
fr
last week, but ~ome on!
c~s
.
of l0
_
mil
.
lion
'
dollars,topped
frqm
the example of basketball
Play the gllllles.
.
.
,
.
by fordan
'
hiirl
_
self at aro-ii~d 35
. ·_
ancJ_
stop
the
.
escalati?n ofsala-
.
.
5.
S
_
o ~uch for Peyton Manning
million~y~.
.
.
. .
.
.
.
.
~es before:itge~
·
.o~t
of
hand.
- Tee Martin c
_
ompleted an
:
This dramatic change i
_
n
.
sal-
,
:
.Baseball feels Jik.:e America's
.
.
NCAA
recorci
_
23 straight passes
:
ary
_
structure
·has
_
helped to
·
..
pastim.e again,
clo
;
not let that
.
for the University of Tennessee
.
c
'
ause
_
the NBA
·
1ockout
.
this
.
change by maldng
.
·
the
•'
saine
against South Carolina last Sat-
.
year, wllkh has already taken
.
mistakes made in 1994.
.
.
urday. .
.
;
Ments
Soc
.
cer
~PPears
to be on
tlte
5
tight
tr"c
:
}{f
(}r
next
season
by.JEFFD~CKE
-
.
.
H~rodes, ~ho was siarklicriti-
.
o~~s. F,orthe firs
_
t time in a long
SrajJWriter'
.
.
cized 1::i~t
lieasori
foi:
.
his p~ifor-
.
time;'Marist soccer looked
--~
.
.
.
·"
·
.
:
.
-
'
mimceonthe s1deHrie;remained
good: They
.
lo9ked like
_
they
.
_
SiX wins on a_l ?'g~e s
·
cned-
caliri, ;He
'
constantiy _said
_
his
belonged on tJ-1~ field. They
.
,
ule rriay so.und'like a t~rtj.bl~ sea-
·
·
~lub was playing well thi:oµgh
·
.
looked like they were ready to
son; for· successful programs
.
the Josses and he
_
never
'.
pan-
tnakeamarkin the Metro Atlan-
·
win more than one-third of their
·
icked,
·
.
,
·.
.
•tic
Athletic Conference.
·
g
.
anies. Btitthis yearh~d tooe
.
'
f...fore impo~ritly hi~ pl~yers
.
The success e
_
leased Herodes,
consid~red
a
s_tep_
:in
th~ right
.
.
maintained a po~itive attitude,
but he did not get too excited.
dire
.
ctio~ for)h~ Marist m,en's
_so~~t~pg thatw~s
.
noneiistent
I:Ie kne_w this team l_lad great
soccer
t ~
Ms_pite their 6-11
the
.
previ9us season.
'F.reshmiffi
potentiai, po_tential.that was be-
mark.
·
· · · ..
·
·
·
·
·
Brian Garafola, one of the team's
.
ginning to ooze out. ~ut he also
However, j
'
ustbecausejt\vas
•
biggest offensive threats, ex.bib-
knew he had 14 freshmen on his
.
astepintherightciirection,does
·.
ited this
•
atiitudeaftera3,,1 loss
squad, 11 of which were start-'
not mean it was a good
'season.
to «;olgate left Mari.st 0-4.
·
ers.
Six winsdoppteq1:1al
.
~s\l
_
ccess-
.
.
.
"Although we have been los-
"We're just too young," he
ful year.
It is.mediocre at best.
ing,' we are playirig well," he
.
said of his team.
.
The
_
players :shquld be disap-
;
said. .
.
.
This was an excuse that had
pointed anci strive for improve-
.
·
Whiri ~king to any of the
..
been employed during the 1997
ment.
·
·
.
.
· .
players they seemed
.
confident
·
h!)rror show. It is.always easy
.
But the Foxes undoubtedly
·
that things would get better, that
.
to ci~e inexperience as a reason
ma4e progress
'
since 1997, a
,
they had to get
tiette,r.
Iil time
for losing. But (here was a dif-
carnpaign that saw them l.ose
_
all
·
theyultimatelywouid,asMarist
_
ference between these two
but two of their contests, not to
began to get some of the breaks
teams.
mention the bulk of their fr~h- . and bounces that
,
had been
.
.
· ..
The young I 997 squad
men recruiting class tfiadtans-
·
eluding thein the last two years. . showed no signs of progress.
ferr~ to_ 9ther schoo!s.
.
...
.
A
4::1
v{~tory: o:ver St. Peter's
They lost game after game with
·
Simply put, 1997 was a·horror · finally gave the Foxes a taste
of
·no
signs of concern .
.
movie.
,
Al;ld after the Fox
.
~s be-
·
wiefning-:Her9des
·
said he knew.-
In I 998 that was notthe case.
gan 1998 ..vi$ fiye _conse<:u
_
tiv~
,
tl}e fir5t_woulft ~ome eventually.
Players were disappointed after
losses, it appeared that the
~•it finally clicked, it was just a
losses. They wanted to im-
Marist men's soccer team \Yas
·
· .matteroftime/'hesaid.
.
.pr<>ve.
They wanted to shed
.
pro.du~ing aterribl~·sequel to
_
an
'fhey W(?µld win ~eirne_xt two
tbeir repu!ation of b~ing a joke
even
worse
film.
'. -:
.
·
behind the goalkeeping
-
of
of
a piograrrr, something that
•
Despite_
.the
sluggish-
.
s~art,
.
Carlos D
.
eBrito, as the
.
.
freshman
Mari sf" head. coa'.ch
":Bobby:
;
provided back-to-baclc shut-
..
:
please see SOCCER,
pg. 14
PAGE15
What's on Tap?
.
Football
11/7
Home vs. Canisius
1
p.m.
l\1en's
tennis
11/5.-11/7
@
Rolex Tournament
Volleyball
il/6-11/7
@
Harvard
Invitational
. Swimritin~
and
~ving
(M&W)
fl/4
@
Iona
6
p.m.
Hockey
11/6 Home vs. Penn St. 9
p.m.
_
T()ugh Trivia
:
When was
the
last time a team from the state of
New York won the National Championship
in
Di-
vision
I
college football?
Last week's question - What team holds the NFL record for
wins in one season, including the post-season?
Answer - The 1985 Chicago Bears won a total of 18 games.
Ice Hockey team
3-2 with Penn St.
visiting on Friday
byKAARENUMMEm
.
.
Staff Writer
· goaltenders Carl Wagner and
John Nicolucci get better.
Macys said he feels that ex-
The Marist Men's Hockey
pectations are high early on.
team faces
_
an important game
"To have the best year we can,
early on in the season. Off to a
we have to win this game against
solid 3-2 start (as
·
of last week-
Penn State," he said. "Coach
end), the Penn St. Nittany Lions
Kamp has us ·ready to defend
visit the Mid-Hudson Civic
ourtitle
.
"
·
Centeron Fijday Nov.~-
)Yith pl?ymakers such as
J}iese
·
two-tearp_s have.an in_-, Mac)'s, R.ay Kenehan,iSean
tense rivairy dating
'back
the
Powers and Todd Hutton the
pastcouple of years
/.
The·Red
.
'.-Red ]:oxes
.
will put up a lot of
Foxes camitout on
the
losing
· .
goals. Returning for:his senior
end last year and are looking to
season is 1:3
.
ri~n
.
Warzecha who
defend their home ice.
,
was the Super East player of the
Sophomore forward Sean
Year last year. His presence will
·
Macys knows the importance of ignite the offense just by his
playing well
.
·
.
.
..
·
being on the ice.
--••we
·
liav
'
e not
·
done well
With
all
the weapons of of-
against these guys in the past,"
fense, our attention turns to the
he said. "Winning this game is
defense. With Senior Dan
the real dealfor us early on 1n
~ullivan and
. _
_
Ralph A.i~llo an-
the season."
.
.·
.
.
choring the defenders they will
Under Bill Kamp's first year as
be one of the keys
to
wins dur-
head
·
coach, the Red Foxes won
ing the long season which car-
the Super East Hockey
_
League
ries over into the spnrig semes-
in impressive fashion and coin-
ter.
_
peted well in the NationalTour-
.
·
At
the heart of any hockey
narnent. Marist this year again
team is the nefminder. The nice
isofftoagoodstartcompeting
thing about
·
Wagner and
against different teams outside
Nicolucci is now they are
the Super East.
·
·
sophomores. They have a year
Marist has beaten Monmouth
experience in a tough confer-
and the University of Maryland
ence plus key time in the na-
at home by a co111bined score of tional tournament. That should
13-2 and beat the Flying Dutch-
bowed weH for a repeat run at
men of Hofstra
·
on Long Island.
the title.
Another positive note is their
There are
·
two main keys for
loss to Westchester University,
success this year for the Marist
which is a Division 1 school.
Men's hockey team. One will
Tied 3:3
.
going- into the third
be for the players to remaining
period
the
Red Fox~
·
play~d well
healthy for the long haul. Sec-
considering it was the season
ondly putting together a streak
opener.
in the middle to late part of the
The
'Red
Foxes have plans
season to gain momentum for
again this year to return to the
the playoffs.
National Tournament in Salt
If they do that, this team will
.
Lake City in the spring. Losing
. ·
be the team to beat in the Super
just a few players to graduation · East:'
_
Then if they get to the
last year, the explosive offense
National Tournament, anything
should help both
.
sophomore
is_.possible.
di!.:
,.
I
i
· · ·staftor
the'Week •
~~~rif~a_ck)J;Alle_n,
:.
.
·.·:-'
TH£ CI°CE£. . .
-l ·_
;·
· bfokeexZ.teariimateJovan
.
.1\;
.
' ing·-recoid,\\li!h"316 yards·
...
_
.
': ··Quoteoft~.e~eek:
. "If
~ot for
iriy
teammates, I
.... ,.., :.:l·d· . .-ti:>e·''t
Matist ,,: .
.
. wou . no
,~ ,
_
., ...
:
~
°women'.'s volleyball
plafer.Ju1ee qerda
. .
'
~.~.
:·
..
:
.
.
.
.
.
:ID,i~~~)µig~&::g~e_fys~~>.
·.
·
..
.
~.·.:···.'
,._ .· :::_~ .. _: ,:· . : - - : ·
-:.-~ . .:"-\.· .. : , . - :
:.'
-
.
:
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.
·s··· ,
:on:
safurda . .. .
· '
>·· ,_
1
.:.
•:
·.:·.-
:
.. · ... ·
_ .
..
: ._·.
-..1~·owMBERS
1998. .
.
;
:
.. .-
:!!!!!~·
·~E--~-
!!!!,;'...;;.~
--
;:!!!!!!W•
·:.!!!~-~·
·-:~~~~~~......, ....... """'.".""'~---
.. >-·-.•:;
. , . ,_. .·· .. _•. · .. ··_·
._,-r•,·. :;. .
:
. · .• ,.:.
·
:. ·.·
Atl~n ·
..
runs .
wil•tt"
dul'::111g
· · · · · ··.• ' ' · · • · • f
faillia ,6\oJe,
tire
HYe;j/i!I:;,
<lidn't
fiJOO\tlp1ete1s,;SD)oqth,
~
byTH()MASRYAN
...... theRedFfash,44. "-IttookAHeo.·;'. tlie
"
Red Flash'irussed·the·en~u-
·. ,-
-
··s~orf.~ -Edita~•.
.
, ·
:exacJly:two-carriesto:convert· ingextrapoi!1J,
~
·,::; ./:::. .
.
:
.
·
J.-J.Allen
is starting to make a . tliafmiscue into a touchdown;.
Also in that tlilid'.quarter,AJ..len
Cll!eer ofhayirig career-games.· · ·
·Ffr$f
pfay; Allen32 yards t~
:.
tlie .. reeled offhis jongest}uirof:the
,The <;lu~pl~. senio(tailbac~
·
. · S(F'~cis.i2~yar9:H11e.
_
Seco.nd .
day,
a
53-rarde(·Jh~t.gav.e'him
carried 3:4 'tj.aje:S for a· school- . ·play;Allehbreaksa tackle at the·: '
·
305forth~ afterrioon;fouryards
•
record 316: yarcls:and.
4
·touc)l- _ :goalJine·to push the:1ealft9 14.:
.
· nioreJliari Rhodes: ha.cl against
downs'ili,the Red·Foxes ,-t-1::6
o.·}:, . _·-•
· __ .. , •·
·>< ..
Sienain.1994;.· ·;/
>
. mauling
<>1:
the St .. Francis Red . .
i
Allef{
'Y~S 'ntce en,ou:@f to
~a.if,' ....
Ail en had·.chanct:s
'
to>go for,
Flash: . .
'"~:-'O
.. _ . . ..
.
.ufltil'the second:quarter:b~fotit:·
TD
number fi.Y~:i
.
n
'
tha,Uhitd
Allen~s·hµge day ruined the
.
'.'he'scoredagain. He !hought26C 'quarter, but
to
theif credit the
rewm~of
:
K,:e.viii .Pohem,
t9.
the : .
•;yfii'tls
iounded preitf goo(Loi( pattered; St>·.Francis ·.d~fense
.
.
. !\1arist.Goll~gej::amplis· .. The. t.fjisJifst
ID,
·so .he .. d~dcled/fo 'stiffened and keptAllen ciiitof
forn:ierRe~,f<>~esdefensiveco~ ·doJ(agajn from that:cijstanc_e · ... ·· t_he. endzone~ 'Adamoyurka
ordinator.made·his first trip:to ·fortouchdown•number:thre,L ·_ .. made •his second field:goal.of
Poughkeepsif after Jeaving in . ,_' A,Il~n sai~ he was ptoud:qf
th~-'
.·tile day, this 6ne:fy9m:i4 Y~ds
the off-seaspp.:t<> take the head
way/he played jn the fjrsfh_alf . ~way
to
give_Mlllista34-'61~act. ..
coaching position with the·Refi . ·and:thi entire grune. ._·
. '. .· ·
:
.
.
The Marist defensedipped of
Flash. Alo~g \Vitn Doherty ,we~e . .) ~'1:feet·Hke
I.
~ccompHshea ..• the scoring on tlie
d~y.:
'Darren
four otherex":Mhlist playet:S and ·.: something here;" Allen said.<~It . · . Yaldes returned an interception
coaches w.hq are now with St makes me·feel like !did some~ . · for a touchdownfor'the, second
Francis,)ncluding cme of·last thing.positiveY
.
'.: . .
·
.•.
'tillle this·.seasori:to)inish the
year's'.captain~;Mario Wilson, .. ·• Before.the·.half-was.o\1¢r;Ja"; :·.· scoring in.the.thirg quarter and
Allen and ,the rest
of
tlie. Reel · : s'oriAdiunoyurka made the first.·. •the game'. Although not as dra~ .
Foxes irnide su_re it was not a .of his two field goalsonJ.biday . ~:matic as l1is
p~i::k~
agai11st
:the
happy·hon,iec;om.ing.
. _ . . .. ·.
•
to:give
M~st'a comforutble 24-; ·.·. Fairfield Stags, V~defintercep.:
. · ~oth
.sitlef
qf
·the· ball. :for,_ .· O:Jead ·· heading :into . fi!e_Jcic~¢t ;: Jio11
was.
good:' enpugh;t<>Jinish
•·• . .
·
· ·
• ;.<.· . · • ,- . .
.
, . ·;
'
. · ·:
.
.
. . . Circle photo/Joe Scouo
.Joe
Galabri_a hau!s in ~pass
fron,
quarterbcick Bin Tramaglini in
frorit
of the Red
FQX8$':berichduririg'Marist'$ 41.:a
win
on Saturday.
,,
. ,
' : ,
-
,
-,
,.
,
'
,,,
..
,,
..
-
..
" '
·.
'
•
'.
•,
...
Marist. s~9.~
,
~d. ~arly • and 9fteq ·. rooni.\Bythe half, Alle.n h~4hl.~ : {~ff•by, wh~t;.~_asj~~(-alfqut •,a ·
that al~<>,ll~!i;.Qolle~ \yas:
~e
':.,jeadr-~assed 203
Yar,cl_s}:>~.ttj~: ·: •:
P.erfec,t
.
day,for, ~~R.~~·f:;g:Xes:.·
.
coord1n.a.~ggi<>,(JasLy,ea_r s: ,grcmnd. -
_
· ;,
_
·
.
: .,;-:
: · Altho,ugh ov~r.~l!~~Q~ed_by :
record~se,tti~g:pefense,:he. was
:> -•~
'1-(e was n()_tnearly:Jll:C<>pglC. ,AIIen
1
s·perforinaft~e;:@~:l,v.1arist
· not the imiiii:component. With.:
.
... noweve.r .. -He ·weritt6r,
sc(ji-e' :.·
defense- had,orie
.
c,of.Jfs :finest,
~ut.s.the .. ~g~ij;:
.
110: schemei ·. no . \iri~berfour :earlyi~;
the:liiJ,rci:
,;:games; which'accQt4irif tC>1ine~
matt~ih9,~(,gqo,d it_ is, ,is going·. "\qti~er, .this timefrolll
oiily!pv'.(: .
backer Chris_'Mey~r.\~as .a:re-
to .be
effci:~y,ei
;
The.Red-Flash· :yard~',awa:y . .
Allen'sj'.f9Jir.tl(_/sult
·
~f the Red.f)Jsh'.:style
qf
. do not'·,Jiave:::Jhe :horses yet,
<
'
touchdown•tied hiITI witlfJoVfill·• :' play .
.
• .
·.)
i{':>·; ·.·.·· .. · . .
Maris(dpe~;.',/:
·
.. ·
. . ·-·. . · • .. ·
Rh6Cies·
for·mosttouthdci~s"iri
.
. ·· ''N~team· can stitc~sftilly run
Of:~011fs~t@eir nµmber .. oni
;
,' ;i{sipg!e•game.i~ Marist~fsj6ry.';: iigainsf us .witl(~.~g!it:dive,,,
col_t is All¢"p'.)iA}len opened.th~i: ,\Jeff.De-Vito conyeriedhis:.fdiittli :.: .. :tvteyer. said, ,wlii~hJs_i,~xacdy .···
~i?il~x!]l;lf
li~f
&~lli;;~tittli~ •. ·.
lowingJtjck9Jfcas St, ·Francis
)tie
third· quarter.:: E:veJf:tliat/ · game for theMii!i:St~eniors.
:
·
.
~iii~~;~·
-
·· ...
>
,.cStdff Wr#er.
-
·•·• ..
. · ·
.J:~s~r;s, but 1t
all
came,dq"\Vtft<>. ,
''Coach O'hiJ,K;~!ly);\V~s ~op,-
· 1s our9f':tlle:':qu,estton · w1th;the . ; 1,.1ie_keyto this m~t;'liow~ver,
-•~~.awAf~tii.rkeep.piliJgiiJ::·••·t~f&l~-Foxesrem~ri;J{~~~/i.:~¥1:tut;r:~~~::t:ik.!:· ...
·i~:~tGitr~1ii:~;tl~!~2.:..·:
,.
:iih!;~t~Ji~toi~t%:;1 •.
t::s~
· forthe men~s'and women's
q-ps~ : .
fid~nt; aueflected by
fr~sljniiul.
~ <most jmp_ortantly;:J wantaj. to
·.
Tp.efefoi;e;: tli.e·{ta<?¢.'.is::
·
r~~lly
,:
. : coiintryterut).cHead c<>ach _J>ete
-·co_untcy\~:atiJt:,_i ..•.. ·__ ·•··. ..
l~~,ninnerL~Grudzi?~k!~--. ::
_'
nI!}
w~ll
~n~
he_lp_
9i~
t~am,"
a~.?Ut,~h~~.h~illn
·
}:~:fiaj~pj11.; :SBlcpi~Q[~~te~;•~a(it'Yasjm~. ·
· · :Sund~y;)jo:v.:1 ;brought fp@
.
''I~eww~coulddefiniu;:ly_~ Grudzinskj sruq.·.: _::.
. . . .
. sec
_
ond.plac.~, -\Vi~,~trong:r.u.n:-'
:
., p!)rtantfQr oth,~r;peopleto step
the tiltimatf~lihl.lengef otth~e ·.
·
· tliis
~eei
if
w~
were
all
on tr.tc_k;": .
.
· Arid, as if has been _aU se~son,.. . n~rs. fr~rii qajiisius:, ~d-~r;
<W,~ ; ·
up in
·
the
i
wijy .that
iqey
did; es'-
two. t~ain:s)hatJi!}Ve proven·tcr sve:: ~aid.. . .. ·
.
· ' . . •. . ".
·
·
·/J.:., . : ..
it Jook_.a .
.
tea11r:~f~C>ttf~r .the
Manh~~taQ;Jh~; ·Ill_ei(s;-;te.a111 ~-,-:.~ially senior
.Be11
'lfeff~r<>n; .
be ·• su¢.ce·s·sf?t~eek,. in
a~t :
(IJ1~
¥arist worn~~ ~t~9up "
.
' -.~'?me~ to wili 9te:¥AA,C:~~~:: ·: _
~ew,t,hat'~~jrc'9tan1~<l.
toj~~t
?
·~effe1:o~ finisheg nin_tlf over- .
week-out~th1s season. Thts . to:tlle challenge, w1nn111g th~
•·
p1onship. 13es1des (ptcizlilslci s .. togetJi.e:i:a-~l1d.performiµice. . .all
.111
the. meet, second for the
: · y~ar' s)vietr<> 'A:tiap_tiq Athleµc : .
·
.
•fustMMC
.champfonship;Jn : fir~t place finisIJ;
,.pie
,tQP.
fi~e
_ AftefJilst y~af's. ~ism~ perfor- · Red Foxes .. : . _. _.
.
.
. _ _ .
Coilfere11~.e):hampionships . jt1s(theirs~oridyearigthe¢o.n'- · scor~rs were'rouilded OU!,by-. manceat~e'MJ\A.Gchampiol}'- · ·: · ~•faJwaysJ(ilew thatBen had
were held>,at
.
Manhattan's. fer¢nce, ·beating Man,liatta!LOD:· sophomore-}!eat!ier]>errine's
ships; the :men.-wa.n~ed.
tp,p
,
ut :
it·i0;.hini to 'run
1:1
big race,'~
V~Coi:tJan1t p~: . . _·
_ _ . . .then: ~ome .course by the score _
foµrth place.fmish;~~ Minor's
togetller
at:ac~ ili.,at
was
indica-
Colaizzo '"s~id oL4is_ · runner ...
Both teams had high expecta- · of 3948. .
. sixth,
a
twelfth place finish, and
tive of the har~ VIOrk anc:tdepi-
·
"And hini,
11;1nning
as
weUas he
tions' after !he
·
illµstrious
sea-. .
.Grudzinski contin'ued
to
be ·
fres~anLeanneBolingbrokein. c~tion thaUhey, put into th~__ did/was a ·big:part of us :cioing
sons that they had been hav-
the front-pack force f~r- the R,ed
sixteenth.
. ... -
·
.. - . .
. program .. -'fhe men
ran
to_ a sec':". · as \Vell (in the
MAAC
charripi-
ing. · Orily_ one m9re obstacle Foxes, as she picked up another
- The champion~h~p coul.d not
ond.place finish, acconiplishing
O!}ship race)."
·
. .
. ·
st09P in the way of making their
.
victory.
have been won without the help
9ne of their biggest goals fortlle-
Bothteains now set their sites
season· an· absolute success -
· Her time of 18:46 led the way
of the. other runners, ·however,
season .. SeniorMike Melfi once . ahead to one more race also at
victories at the MMC champi-
for the MAAC
~
she won tile
as they continued to run stron- . _againran to a.team-leading per.:.
VanCortlandtPark. Being in a
011s_hips.
.
. .
championship race in herfirst ?er than ot}ler.~s, and push-
fonnancewithhis.timeof25:12.
difficult region, both teams
G:oing int9 Sunday's competi-
season. The time was also good
mg the compebttonfurther and
The greater accomplishment-for
know that they go in with a chal-
tion, the women knew that they
fo~ ;28th overall in the history of ·· further bac~ from the front pack
Melfi w~ how well he was aple · lenge to finish in the top half of
had~ excellent opportunity to . the MAAC.
hel~ Man~t a ~ t
deal..
to run ~th the pack ofl~na run-
the race .. ·
.
However, building on
win the conference. The only
The young runner knew that
'J'!lis year s men s team also
ners. His fifth place fimsh kept !he strength that they have
team that stood between Marist
there was pressure on her to do
kn~w that they ~ad an excellent Iona from scoring a perfect fif-
shown all year, with a focused
and the 1998 championships
wellthismeet,butshestillcon-
chance
?f
putt!ng together a
teen~intsandalsoallowedhim attitude,'both teams have a
was last year's runner-up, Man-
tinued to run at the talent level
top-pl~cmg fimsh. For most to prove that he can run with
chance to accomplish their final
hattan College.
1n
previous
that she hac; • proved she could
teams
m the MAAC conference;· some of the very best runners
goal. :
52.6.1
52.6.2
52.6.3
52.6.4
52.6.5
52.6.6
52.6.7
52.6.8
52.6.9
52.6.10
52.6.11
52.6.12
52.6.13
52.6.14
52.6.15
52.6.16