The Circle, December 10, 1998.pdf
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 52 No. 9 - December 10, 1998
content
L
· ..:.FEATURES~ ..
December
is
a
month of
. many
ce.1e6ratlo11s, pg~
s
-i-~
·1spo'.R.Ts2
The Ivlarist
hockey
te,aril'
s_
showdownwith:Wagner
did ·nor
turn out
as
they
h~d_ 1.J.<>ped, pg.J6,.
VOLUME#52
ISSUE#9
Happy Holidays!
t
DECEMBER 10, 1998
"W~~t<C~dar parkillg ·
lilliited
for
resid.ents
..
'
.
,,
. · by
JAIMETOMEO
Sta}f Write_r
thei-e;yetwhenthiscomplexwas
keep it open because wehave
· b~ili:, parking for only 116 ve-
·receiv~d complaints from the
· hides was made available to resi-
students who live over there,"
West Cedar offers hiiic:Hin
the
dents.
he said:
.
.
.
\Vay
of
ru:nenities tostud~nts,
Simon Hecht,
a
senior resid~nt
·
The
Resident Sttident Coun-
. . yetJti.~
·
lacking in a crus~al _area
assistan.t at West Cedar, s_aid.
the ..
cil bver ih West. Cedar has also
. -:.parking:t:<:< . . · ..
•.i.:.'X
t
.
.. /·
·problem:is
·
not only thafthe~e beenworkingonrectifyingthis
Joe-Leiuy,"director of safety
was not enough_spots· created.
problem. They worked with
and security, said thitthe
"People with.permits.from
Marist security to get 12 more
amount of spots needed:is un- . other lots park
in
West Cedar,-
·spots added on the eastern end
predictable.
·
taking our spots," Hecht said. _ of the lot.
'.'.We don't know how many
Another dilemma, besides the
Security was hoping to create
people o·ver there are\ going;
·
to · lack of parldng, is the misuse of even more parking after the con-
want
fo
bring cars inr
Ile
said. . the lot 'its
.
elf.
·
Students have
struction crew cleaned up and -
"Thej.:e is no-way th.at we can
guests stay with therri and their
vacated the premises. However,
supply parking'. spaces for(ev--=
guests park in spots· that are
the blacktop manufacturers are
. ery sfoden.i":ov~r there that designated for residents.
.
closed for the winter, which
wishes to bringJ.car\
·
Leary said secudty has been - means these spots will not be
· West Cedar is tlie)1ewest ad-
tryit_:1g to curb :utegal parking . available until spring.
· d_ition toMaristCoJlege's hous- ·, there .. -
. :, ' •
.
. ·
•
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:
·• · .. ) ::·····•,·)"''' -::
·
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-·c~,•:,,,:,~,:.;'~f:0?£',,.:fc;':"-'9.irclw~!>ll'/'J'?'i~~l!O.
;;ing:rit'ogram,;.Whi}eiitJias
aJiv-:-: ... -'
,;:•.we:ha'le;beenputting a.full
- A West,Gedaq:>,arkmg lot fire zone ha:s recently been~-:· ~
~
.,:;:~.~---·~ ... ,,. . ••;,,
·-°ti'4-"
"'·''t-:-t
1
:s--"•
-
,_ ·· --,
r·--··- .. •). -· .. , .. -" .... ·
'f -···
please.see.PARKING.pg. 3
··, ··•relTl?~ea,JdYpro~id~\~xtr~?p_?i~i_nij~foFf~'sfci~~t~:t:pr,:y:;r:
·
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.
···.·c(JJl~i~t~a:i~no~ .
.
-
. bytJm.ACIMl\.flNO
_· Staff Writer. .
'~SJµndiiig' .
a .. ••
up.-,,
... · _
..
.
:::-.agqfnstthis
is~uf"is·.
. . Mari~.t College.: h~s Jane-. .
in
the
besi
interest<Jf
·.
'.
tioned seven freshmen and the ..
·
. .
·
, . . . . ,, .
.
_
members of thenon-Marist af.:
eyeryone
filiated locaLTau Kappa Epsi-
. -
Ion (TKE) fraternity chapter in -
lieu. <:>fevents that took,_place
.·Rick:. Winters.
TKEBrother ..
on Nov. 6.
. _ ·_ · . .
.
The sevenfreshrrien involved
untilDe6:j1,
t999>'
Stoddard
rec~iveci letters from Marist's .said, ·"IM violate any code of
OfficeofHotisingandResiclen~
conduct; it's immediat~ dis~
tialUfeNov. 12: Thelettersin-
missal, (aJ!d)lh~ve to'clo
100
. formed the students
of
di~ciplin-
hours of community. service·
ary actions.taken upon them by
.
·v.ri.th
campus
~nistry by mid-
the college.
. •• ·· '
term ofnext semester.".,
...
Larry
Stoddard, one_ofthe
. J\ccordin}fto thelett~f from
seven freshmen· involved, said . Sarah English; qfrector ofHous.: .
he has been put on probation:
ing,
th~
fre~hmen · are also «re-
"l'
m on disciplinary probation
quired t()Hve in MaristCollege
·
· residence halls for the remain-
WUKLYPOLL
~ -
·
~
Do you think r.
Rogers should be
this year's
commenc~ment
speaker?
YFS
NO
44
81
SEE RELATED STORY, PG. 3
Tms
is on
,mscimtifie
sur.q
u,J;mfrom
125
Marist
studmts.
der of your stay at
M~si
µp to
arid including your senior year.'?
English said slJ.e cannot c:om:.
· ment on the letter.
''That's a personal letter, so I
can't talkat?out it," site said.
The freshmen, who were as-
sociate members pledging the
· TKE ·
fraternity, took part in a
unity event where they at-
tempted to "kidnap" James
·Tavares, a TKE brother. Tavares
was a willful participant, accord-
ing to the members ofTKE.
... please see
TKE,
pg. 3
Circle photo/Joe Scono
Jen Bowen picks out an ornament from the Giving Tree located in Lowell Thomas.
· ·
GivingT~aidsneedy
by
JESSICA SMITH
·
"I think people are aware that
StaffWriter
this is an opportunity to care
about the poor and that's what
·It is almost Christmas and the
Christmas is about," he said.
Giving Tree Project is keeping
The
Giving Tree is beinirun
the spirit alive by helping those
for the eighth year at Marist, and
in need,
is being sponsored for the first
Brother Frank Kelly, director · · time by Campus Ministry, which
of Campus Ministry, sa!d the
has
1J2
members. ·
·
entireMaristcoininµnityis:get~ . There
are
25 families being
ting fovolved and realizing the
sponsored this year.
deeper.meaning of the holiday
because of the Giving Tree.
•··
please see
TREE, pg. 3
INSIDE
TODAY:
Partly Cloudy
hi:42°
. lo:23°
Conununity ................. 2
Features ..................... 5
A&E ........ ; .............. 11
Opinion ...................... 9
Sports ........................ 16
"
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■
.
Awaterand power outage dis-
.
rupted the South End
.
's
.
McCann,
.
Leo,
.
Sheahan and
'
Byrne buildingsNov.19.':fhe
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get.or. t e
01 .
ays.
female talking with one another.
·
tioning transfonner off campus.
The two· residents
.
climbed the
Repairs were made arid the lights
stairs after hearing the two
were restored by 3:30 p
.
m.
·
A
voices move into the shower.
.
non-related water outage
.
oc-
About
45
minutes after the
curred around the same time,
voices were heard, the bath-
disrupting the SouthEnf aiid
room door opened and an -un-
the Dysoq and L
_
oweJl Thomas
known male and female, mini-
buildings. Central H~dson also
,,
mally clad, ran from the house
dealt with this problem, finding
as the three residents stood
the malfunction on Fulton
stunned. The residents
fol-
Street. The ~ater was ~estored
low~d the. unknown
.c:Ollple
out
CaJTlpus-wide by 4:30 p.m.
"·
,
the door, but~:the: tW.<11 disap:r;
.'.':
'piJH1is/e
SECURITY;
'
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FRIDAY:
SATURDAY:
SUNDAY:
'
-
'Spend
·
soff!-e_
,
quality
:·
.
time
with
'frierids q,nd
family at home
.
. And
rest because classes
·
"Time-tobe
•
with my
.
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·
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cloudy
partly cloudy
hi:
44°
lo:
28°
'
hi:
44°
lo:
24°
partly cloudy
.
hi:44°
.
'
,
'
.
"I want the Mets to
·
sign Roger Clemens
so al[the Yankee fans
can
get
off my
back!"
.
arid
MCTV
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tc;:h
Up
.
.
-
,
.
·
-
.
.
·
Graduate
,
ctassesmeet
January
4,
s,
6, 1,
11, 12,
13,
14, 19,
20
untess
o~rwise
noted.
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.
MORNINGS
·
- 9:00
a.m
-12:45
plm.
_
.
.
i
ART
·
·
\12sL:.111
ArtiiandValues
·
'.;
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·
.,
·,.
Virg!nia
~~rquarctt
'
COM
.
202L-.-111
,
Corrimunication
Ethics·
_
DarreURoe
.
.
.
__
>
.
.
~oM
i
,;
310L-.-111
.
·
.
.
•
The8road~st
_
90,i:i,r~rcial
·;
:
.
·
.
;
_
,_;:
Ma~cia
Chfi~f
:'.,
·;
.
ECO.N
.
-1071.::-
.
111
_
:
"
Pri.n~iples
ot!Vl_i
.
c_r~·~c;on.qrnics
,
;
,:
,
·
:
F,'r~d. T,"yler ·
.
'.
,
·. _
,
;
.
ECON
/
.J.17.k·nr
:
:
:
·,:;
-<
J~pl!E!9~
,
Writir,g
_
1,L
;
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:,':,.
,
;
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·'
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>>.
·/
~
Fl
_
or~nce
8~8d~kian
•' -
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•
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J
.
,,
6NG;:,)r•292l;.1~t
·-
, :,.
,
:
,
Sp~ci.al,Topics:Shkspr'~Dram2J
'
Greg·Mach~cek
·
.
·
, ... J
HISTJBQ~~}~).\11f
.
:,,
,
,
History
.
Qf
Ameri~n,Presiden
_
cy
Martin
Sl')a,
_
ffE!r
(Dual
List~d,)
·-.-
,·
.' :
MATH
:
,
13
.
0L"'.'111
.
)ntroductory
Statistics I
_
·
Kathi
Timm
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
PHIL
/
300l~111 ·
,
.
Et~ics
:
·
_
:
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. ,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
_
Chris
Melley
.,-s,
. , ;
PSYC
.
: 101L-.-111
·_
,
lntrqducfory P~yphology
.
Lon
Cnspifll_eter
delRosa~lo
PSYC
.
317l•111
.
..
.
·.
Child Development
.
.
Linda
Dunlap
·
··
....:·.
·
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.
.O.FTERNOONS -1:00
p.m.
;,4:45
pJn:
·
;.
.
' ' '
.
..,·
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i
'
COM
·
25-5L'--112
.
·
Communicating
·
ori
the
lntem'et
:
'.
_
·
,t,.nthony
pennings
:
··
.
·
·
·
.
.
·
!;OM
289L-112
·
\;
'.~,
;:
'
<
Media
Writing (Diial
llsted
as
ENG327)Dc>1.iglas Cole
:
. ·,
>
•
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_
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•
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...
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E;NG
•
280L~112
:'
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Cr~ativeWriting
_
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,
·
·
;
Taa Richards
.
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•
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REGISTRATl~N:
:
Registrations
for_Mar.i$(Qpllege'
'.
.
.
_
EC
.
ON
·
·101L-J12.
·
·
,.
pririciplesof_Macroeconoinics
'
·
Nor~
VanValkenburgh
..
. ·
..-,~
·
and
visiting
students
wiR
·
be
accepted
'
evetfwork~
.
·
MATH· 108L~112
lntermed~t~Afgebra
.
·.
·,
·
Bro.
Ra~saurL
:;,
:
.
·
:_,,
.
,
·
day
thi'oughbctobe"i-19-
becifrntier
1
Sat th~ Gradu"'.
REST · 209L~112
Worfd Reltgtons
·
·
·
:
Evan
Pritchard
·
ate and c;o111:1nu\ng Education Office,
Dyso11
ce
_
nter
127
or'
at
ttitf
extension
.
centers
'
in
.
Fishkill
and
Goshen.
EVENINGS -
6:00
p.m. •
9:45 p.m.
.
ART
145N-234
Basi<i
Photography
Dan McCormack-
~
·
·
-
.
COM
270L-234
·
OrQaniZational CommiJnication
·
leo
_
McK8nzie
.
.
•
·
· : .
.
.
TUITION: $315
per
credit,
total
cost
fora tllree credit
'
.
COM
287L-234
TV
Production
Michael
McCartney
course
is
$9r~-
lJ1e ~~ratiort fee
($30)
is
~ue
at
_
CSIS
152L•365
·
MS-Excet (1cr
.
, 1
-
week only)
.
Tom Rhode
Goshen
·
registration;
the
balance
($945)
is
DUE NO LATER
CSIS
153L-365
.
Exploring Internet
(1cr., 1
week
only)
Tom Rhode
.
Goshen
THAN DECEMBER 18. Tuition for High School
Stu-
ENG
235L-234
Literary Genres: Fiction
Kathi
Norklun
dents
is
$300
for
a
3-Credit
class.
ENSC
101
L-234
Introduction to
.
Environmental lss Tom
Lynch
.
HIST
228L-234
America Since
1945
Lucien Mott
HOUSING:
If
you
rurrently
reside
on
campus
and plan
HIST
249L-234
Eal1y
Modem Europe
John
White.
on
ta~ng
a
winter Intersession
course the
cost
of
PHrL
103L-234
WortdViews
and Values
Mar Peter-Raoul
housing
will
be
_
$35.00
per
week
for two
weeks.
For
REST
201 L-365
Religion in America
Don Drewitt
Goshen
additional
infonnation contact
the Housing Office
at
575-3307.
TRAVEL COURSE (Barbados)
MARI ST
PSYC 215L-235
Psychology
of Interpersonal Communication
John Scileppi
( January 4 - January 17) permission of instructor required. Fee: $1040 - $1170
+ tuition
THECCIR<CLH
DECEMBER 10- 1998:r--_ _ _ _
.;..,__·
N
.
ews _· ____________
P
.....
'.A __
G __
E ___
3
TREE:
.Gift
donations aid
1ocalfamilies·
· ... continuedfrompg. 1
Richard Tollen, -head of the
Giving Tree conunittee, said the
, families were compiled by four
local agencies
·
including
Dutchess Outreach, the Grace
.
,
~mith House, Family Services
)ind.
.
tpe C~tli.erine Street Con1-
munity Center.
·
-,,• The project entai_ls students
picking_ ornaments off various
-__ trees··lo"ii,t~djn Qonnelly, ·
::Dyson; the Student.Center and
-the Cabaret! Onthe ornaments
is ,written'the ag~. Se?( and.de-
• sired giftoftheJarnily member ..
The gifts fit one of three catego- ·
ries: household needs, personal
needs and wish list. The last
category covers toys, bikes and
. thing~ that are not vital.
People make the choice of
which present they choose to
buy and bring the wrappe_d gift.
to the Christmas Mass on-Dec.
13 in the chapel. The gifts are
blessed and brought to Lowell
Thomas where Social Services
will
pick
them up later in the
week, according to Kathleen
:rvloylan, Campus Ministry
board member.
Toll en said the Giving Tree has
been successful in the past and
it is expected to be a success
this' year as welL
"We're trying to get support
from thy;e»tir.~'.l<;:1,l.).rj.f?,t;.f.Q.mmu-
nity," she sai~b:n.H
To accomplish this· goal, Cam-
· _
CiJclc photo/Joe Scotto
Gift donations can be brought
to the chapel on Dec. 13
wt)ere. they are then picked
up
by
Social Services.·
pus Ministry has been doing a
. lot of public relations to in-
crease awareness. Advertise-
ments ha~e bee,n put
,iip
fo>ei-:
forts to expand the promotional
side this year. Already, many
ornaments have been taken
from the trees, according to
Kelley;
Participants involved get a lot
out of the Giving Tree, in terms
of Christmas spirit, and are well
aware of the objective.
It
is a
way to help out those in need
this holiday season; according
to Moylan.
"I think it's a wonderful cause
and
I
t\µ._\l\(.;i,t;~~ gr~AA,t!lflt stu-
dents want t9dJ#Jhothers who
aren't as fortunate,'' she said.
TKE:
·
pr~temity maytake
legal action against college,
... continued from
pg.
1
take action against these sane-
According to a TKEspokes-
tions.
man, the unity event was a tra- _
"Standing up against this is-
dition upheld for eight years, but·· sueis in the best interest of ev-
thatit is not required.
·
eryone," Winters said; "We _
A town resident witnessed the
don't want to give Marist a bad
; freshmen struggling witl].
image because it makes every-
Tavares in the b~ck seat of a
one look bad, but Dean Amato
gold Honda and noti.fied the
is trying to control who stu-
Poughkeepsie police.
dents can and cannot associate
-The
TKE brothers received a
with."
letter from the Office of Student
According to the members of
Affairs signed by Peter Amato,
TKE, these sanctions are a di-
associate dean for Student
Af-
rect violation of the Freedom of
" ·
N ·
12
Association Provision under
1arrs, on ov.
.
_
According to the letter, the -Title I, Part B, Section 112 that
TKE members are ''banned from
states, "no student attending an
all our. residence halls, except
institution ofhighereducation ...
. your own.
If you are found in
should, on the basis of partici-
any residence halls, other than
pation in protected speech or
your own, you will be sus-
protected association, be ex-
pended, dismissed or arrested
eluded from participation in, be
for criminal trespass."
excluded from benefits of, or be
The letter also stated any at-
subjected to discrimination or
tempt on the TKE brothers part official sanction under any edu-
to contact the freshmen in-
cation program, activity, or di-
. volved in the incident via any
vision of the institution directly
Marist communication system , or indirectly receiving financial
would be "grounds for further
assistance under this Act,
action against you."
whether or not such program,
Amato said the college
will
activity, or division is spon-
protect itself in situations where
sored or officially sanctioned by
it is necessary to do so.
the institution."
''The college will protect its in-
According to the local TKE
terests and the best interests of chapter,. it-has contacted a law-
its students," he said.
yer and the American Civil Lib-
Rick Winters, a TKE brother
erties Union (ACLU) to uphold
said the fraternity is prepared to
its rights.
Mr.
Rogers
candidate
for
commencement
by
TIM SORENSON
Staff Writer
Do not get on the trolley to
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
quite yet because nothing is set
in stone.
Commencement is still a few
months off, but according to
Tim Massie, chief relations of-
ficer, a commencement speaker
has not yet been chosen.
At the moment, the only can-
didate is Fred Rogers from the
PBS program "Mister Rogers'
Neighborhood." According _to
Massie, Rogers would be a
prime candidate as commence-
ment speaker.
"Fred Rogers has a lot of the
qualities we look for in a com-
mencement speaker," he said.
When looking for a speaker,
Marist President, Dennis
Murray, and the Board of Trust-
ees look for four main qualities.
They are looking for a person
who is deserving of an honor-
ary degree, brings distinction to
the college, has a message for
the students and has a connec-
tion with the students.
... For the time being, the college
is' still waiting for a response
from Rogers. Ifhe declines, the
school
will
then have
to look
for
another candidate, Massie said.
"Right now, there's one (can-
didate), and that's·Mr. Rogers,''
he
said.
"We only
take one at
a time."
Accord-
ing
to
Massie, it
is also dif-
ficult for
the school
to get a
commencement speaker be-
cause no money is paid out for
their services. Some colleges
and universities pay thousands
of dollars for
a
speaker. Massie
said that Marist finds people
that will do it out of the kind-
ness of their heart.
Fred Rogers has dedicated
much of his life to children and
education. He started produc-
ing children's programming in
1953
and began his nationwide
show, "Mister Rogers' Neigh-
borhood,"in
1963.
Rogers has received honorary
degrees from over
30 colleges
and universities including Yale
University, Hobart and William
Smith, his alma matter Rollins
College, Carnegie Mellon Uni-
versity and Boston University.
He is also an ordained minister
and works as Chairman of the,;
Board of
Family
Communica-_
tions,
Inc., the nonprofit corpo-·
rationhefoundedin
1971
to pro-
duce a variety
of
materials
that
encourage the healthy emo-
tional growth of children and
their families.
PARKING: Additional parking a must
for West Cedar.Townhouse residents
. .. continued from
pg.
1
"(Security) said they could
only give out a certain amount,
West Cedar's Resident-i)irec-
and gave me a permit for Beck
tor, A~th~my Fusatj. has kn_own
Place instead," Higgins said.
about this problem/and-h~lped _: . NO:t all th~,~eJici~!,l~ feel the
the RSC get the ·added spoti{ ·same:aboufthfpru.:lgl)g·,_senior
. He said he hopes to see this
Jeff Sutphen-said lie'is'conteiit
matter fixed in the shortest
pe-
with the parking and feels no
riod of time.
changes are necessary.
Many West Cedar residents
"I've never had a problem with
are still weary·about the lack of it," he said.
parking and are waiting for
Senior John Tallardy echoed
something else to be done.
Sutphen's comments.
Junior Robert Higgins said he
"It's perfect for me. I literally
was not even able
to obtain a
parkrightinfrontofmyhouse,"
parking
permit
from security.
he said.
,,.
I
.,
DECEMBER 10, 1998
TH£
·
<GIR<Cli£
.News
PAGE4
Students:
·•
Cab~(>.
·
cares
..
Overpriced
byGINAMASULW
·
Staff Writer
High prices are keeping many
Marist students away from the
on-campus food shops.
Some students, including se-
nior Dana
.
Accardo, said they
feel that prices
.
at the Cabaret,
Dyson Cafe and Donnelly Cof-
fee Shop are just too expensive.
"I think the prices are high,
and I think Marist takes advan-
tage of the convenience of be-
ing on campus,'' she said.
"When I was
a
freshman,
-
I
didn't notice [the prices] be-
cau
'
se ljtisf swiped my card.
NoWth~tWi
·
doin.ing
hut
of
my
own pocket! notice it'irieire
·
.~•
;
• .:
·
Most juniors and seniors have
access to a car and a kitchen,
and prefer to shop at a grocery
store or deli to save money.
The managers of each of the
fast food establishments on
campus perform studies of com
~
petitive prices twice a year, said
Joe Heavey, director of dining
services.
"We determine our prices
based on what we pay for our
food and services and what the
competition in the area
charges{' he saidi
· •
--·-
-
-
_
.,,·
..
.
.
.
The Cabaret's· sandwich and
soup
prices
are
indeea compeci::
tive with local delis. Most com:
.
piaihts are about the prices
·
of
drinks. The smallest bottle of
water in the Cabaret cost $1.19,
while across the street K&D deli
had the same size bottle for 50
PRICE COMPARISONS
·
cents.
Senior Noreen O'Sullivan dis-
covered that an Ocean Spray
juice from the Lowell Thomas
·
vending machine costs a dollar.
The same drink is $1.34 in the
coffee shop.
·
"It's less expensive and easier
to just get it from the vending
machine," she said .
.
Heavey said
·
most Cabaret
prices have not increased in the
pa
.
st two
·
years. The 'most
.
no-
table increases
;
have
,
been
·
'.in
•
beverages and pizza prjces, ac-
cording to him.
"The prices in
·
the coffee
shops and the Cabaret more or
less remained static over the
·
past two years," he said .
.
.
Heavey explained that on-
campus shops do not rriake as
much profit
as
other delis, and
this affects pricing decisions.
"In delis, where you really
make a lot of money is on things
we can't sell at a college: beer,
cigarettes; and lotto tickets,-','ihe
sr1i& ·•
·
:
.
..
: _
:
,
.
~Ji
_
·
,
,
Profit is ari
'
issue
·
in the coffee
shops, since they act as inde-
pendent financial units
;
accord-
ing to Heavey:
_
''The coffee shops are more of
a service to the college than a
pyofit center," he said.
·
•
ircle staff
·
·
·
·
nkErnily
·
·
e~tb9
.
0
£t
ftime
·
as you
'
graduate
INTERESTED IN
MOVING
.
ON CAMPUS?
The Office of Housing and
Residential_Life currently has
a
few on-campus vacancies for
_
the spring
'99
semester.
Please contact the Housing
Office at
575-3307
before
12/18
to sign up.
s
ancun. *_Nassau* .Jamaica
*
Maza1"1an
*
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411
I
f
I
TllE
·
CIR.CL£
DECEMBER10; 1998
Fe&ltU·r
.
es
"
PAGES
A month
f
orholiday diversity
byEMILYKUCHAR.CZVK
Features Editor
.
It's time for a party
:
.
Or several for that matte
r.
.
The month ofDecember brings
:
.
·-
several holidays along with it.
Chanukah, Christmas, an
_
d
Kwanzaa all b~gin in December
with
celebrations worldwide.
.
Sunday ·nightJs the start of
Chanukah. Foreightdays,JeWs
everywhere will gathertogether
to celebrate this festival of
lights: and
to
celebrate a
miriiclf
WhatJewswiH be celebrating
_
,
is their successful lJattle against
.
the Syriari.~Greek
army.
.
:
In
175 BCE, Palestine was un-
der Syrian~Greek rule. Jews
were persec~ted by these
1111:
ers and· forbidden to practice
their religion ..
:. ,
This led tci a revolt' by-
Mattathias, a high priest, and his
sons, and a small army.
-
After
years of fighting,
.
the group suc-
ceeded at ov.erthrowing the
leaders.
·
. -
~
;
:
·
i
.
·
. .
.....
..
.
·-~
:
-
-:r
-
r
.
.
,
.
_
Mattatllias died
·
and his son,
unbrokeil
searof
tl:'ie
High
Pries(
Judah of Maccahee
..
tciok
-
Over---
to
"figfit tlie
-
·
c
·
a1i'delabrurii
·
or
and cleaned
.
up the Tempi~ of menorah, for one night.
'
Jerusalem, which had been des-
The ceremony lasted
.
eight
ecrated by the Syrian-Greek sol-
days. This was
seen
as a miracle
diers.
and is
·
why Chariukah is called
Judah wanted to rededicate
the festival oflights.
the Temple as well, however, in-
Chanukah means dedication
side the temple there was
.
only
and itis the rededication that is
enough of the pure oil with the
being remembered.
Jewish families come together
The day after Christmas, and
in joyous celebration to observe
ending on New Year's Day, is
the holiday.
·
On the first night
Kwanzaa. Kwanzaa is a nonre-
ofChanukah, one light is lit on
ligious holiday that celebrates
the menorah and on each of the
African-American heritage,
following nights. Another light
pride; community, family, and
is added until the eighth night
culture.
when all the lights are lit
.
Kwanzaa's roots lie in African
Prayers are said and hymns
first-fruit harvest celebrations.
are sung after the candles are
"Kwanzaa" comes from the
lit. Children play games and re-
Swahili phrase "matunda ya
ceive gifts.
kwanza," meaning "first fruits."
Also everyone eats foods that
Maulana Karenga, African
have a lot of
oil
in them, such as
American scholar and activist,
doughnuts and potato pan-
came up with the idea of
·
cakes, toremind them of the
Kwanzaa in
1966.
Kwanzaahas
miracle of the oil.
seven principles, Nguzo Saba,
On Dec
.
25 Christians will be
which are celebrated through
throwing a bash in honor of rituals, literature
,
and
music.
Jesus Christ.
The seve
_
n
.
principles
,
ar~•
-·
Christians from
;
all
,
over the
umpja (u
_
nity);kuji~hagtili~ (self-
world
,
will
·
be celebrating the
:
detemlil).ation), ujima ( collective
Christmas holiday by attending
work and responsibility), ujamaa
special services, exchanging
(cooperative economics), nia
gifts, and decorating homes. All
(purpose), kuumba (creativity),
this for a baby born in a manger
and imani (faith).
a long time ago.
A major part of the Kwanzaa
Jesus' story began in
celebration is lighting a candle
Bethlehem of Judea as the Vir-
on each day of its seven days.
gin Mother Mary' bore the soon
The candles, mishumaa, are the
to be Christian savior with Jo-
colors of the Black Liberation
seph by her side. Shepherds and
Flag; three of the candles are
wisemen came from all over to
red, three are green, and one is
see this baby in a manger
black.
:r • '
th
<
;
.
.
1
·
, ..
·
'
i
b
.
wrapped in swaddling cloths.
After the candlelighting, eel-
,
,
;
;
!
,
..
'!,IS
"1
,
,
;-1;~~:J.~
.
·,
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el:H•tSBasGoni'lrtl'
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~=~·~~t:;:::;,~;;.,·~~~
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·
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~~;:£r~~:~:,;:::
:~~z.~;:E?itv:f:;i
-
.
byKATRINA
.
FUCHSENBERGER
·
·
·
·.
Asst. Feat~res Editor
-
·
.
Th~
holiday season i~ sup-
.
posed to be ajoyful time buJat
.
the
.
same time it can
·
be
·
very
stressful especi
.
ally when ~t
comes Jo ,shopping.
.
. .
There are ways
t9
make holi-
day shopping go a lit
.
tie
smoother.
··
Before going shopping one
should try to make a list of ex-
actly what one wants to buy to
.
-
help stay mor~ focused.
. ,
.
This makes
.
shopping go
quicker and easier and it will also
·
prevent one from buying things
for oneself wh~n one should be
buying things for (>ther~.
Karin Butterfield, a sales as-
.
sociate at Annie Sez (women's
clothing store), said she thinks
one of the best gifts to buy is a
gift certificate if_ one does not
know what to get.
"If
you can't figure out what
gift to buy you should buy a
gift certificate to the person's
.
favorite store," she said.
The worst day to go shopping
is rumored to be the day after
Thanksgiving.
On this day stores open very
early and everything goes on
sale. This may
be
good for some
but for others it may be a little
chaotic.
.
.
_ .
.
.
.
tree.
large feast on Dec. 31.
Senior Dan Hahn said he likes
The holiday also includes gift
Butterfield said she thinks that
there ar~ actually good times to
g<> sllopp~ni
,,
,
.
.
.
~:
-
.
:
..
.
.
,
;
.
"The
}?~st tiµ1e to go
_'
ihopping
is around
_
5
p
:
m
:
on Sunday
when
everyone
is
}jome eating
dinner," sqe said. "Although,
.
during the holiday season most
store hours are increased and
the malls
.
are open later so
people can go shopping at their
own convenience."
'
.
.
If
som.eorie d,oes
_
nc,>t like go-
ing to the mall
.
because of the
crowds
.
and the lines;there are
other alternatives that will not
even make one leave
tlie
house.
Shopping
·
on the Internet is
one easy y.,ay. One example is a
website called
_
."Shop at Home",
a Reader's· Digestonline store,
which offers hundreds of gift
ideas .
Through this website one can
·
order music, books, magazines,
and videos.
Nadia Ennis, junior biology
major, said she thinks one
should take precautions before
shopping on the Internet.
"When you shop on the
Internet you should find a way
to secure your credit card num-
bers," she said.
"If
you use
Netscape there is a way to
.
do
that."
Ordering from a catalog is an-
other way. If one decides to or-
der from catalogs one should
chetk to see the exact descrip-
tion of the item (sometimes the
picture shows things that are
·
:
n
-
otinc}ude
_
d)
.
_ ,,
,
;
.
.
..
,
·
'
.Aiso
·
one
should
·
,:'heck the
:
shipp1ng time, prices,
anci
leniin
··
policies.
There are
alsq
tips for after the
holidays are over. Cards can be
saved to be used as ornaments
or gift tags .
.
Also, after the holidays is the
best time to buy holiday items.
Everything go~s on sale once
the season is over so one
should buy what one needs for
next year ahead of time.
In case one buys the wrong
gift
or a duplicate gift for a friend
or family member one should
always know a store's refund
an·d exchange policy before
shopping there/
·
These rules should be posted
near the cash register and if not,
one should ask the salesperson
to explain them.
A lot of people may try to re- .
tum their gifts but may not be
able to.
Butterfield said there are
things that should be done in
order to be able to return cer-
tain items properly.
"People should keep their tags
attached to their items, they
should save their receipts, and
they shouldn't return clothes
that are already worn," she said.
the family side of Christmas.
giving
.
Children might receive
"I usually spend Christmas
a book to further a goal or high-
with my family, at home," he
light black achievement, a heri-
said.
"Because
I have a large
tage
symbol,
and a toy. The
family this is the only time all
gifts are given on Jan
.
1, thus
y~
_
ar.we can really get together
ending the December holiday
and celebrate
;
ari'dTJike
being
season.
able to do that"
:
.>·
,
>
;.
-
,
·
·.
-
-.
'>
:
;---
-
.
·/
.,
.
·
>>
.
_
Law
_
school, an open
opportunity for all
byKATRINA
Fl.JCHSENBERGER
Asst. Features Editor
ence person as well as for a per-
son who is majoring in English,
history;political science, or com-
munications
.
Any major at all
Just when students thought
·
essentially js suited for the pur-
that there was no way they could
poses of maintaining that liberal
get into law school, an oppor-
arts background that law
tunity arises.
,
schools like their students to
According to Annamaria
have."
Maciocia, professional lecturer
Maciocia said there are tradi-
of law, Marist College follows
tional majors that students take
the American Bar Association
before going into law school.
guidelines in that there is no
"The traditional majors hap-
prelaw major at Marist.
pen
-
to be political science, En-
"We follow the belief of the
glish, and history. There's al-
American Bar Association that
ways a few from criminal justice
there is no one curriculum which
who do decide that they would
is inost beneficial to students
like to pursue the law," she said.
who are interested in going to
"There are many different ma-
law school. In fact law schools
welcome students from a diver-
sity' of backgrounds," she said.
"So, therefore, law school is
absolutely an option for a sci-
.
..
please see LAW, pg. 6
·
I
THE
·
cc1R:<CL£.
DECEMBER 10, 1998
Feat-_u,res
.. PAGE6
Photo courtesy of Jeanette Whcny
Wherry said she loves· kids.
Getting to know
Jeanette Wherry
byEMILYKUCHARCZVK
Features Editor
ness are important." ·
What is
your favorite thing to
do?
,
~
JeartetteWherry, senior
psyf,
chology special education ma.:
.c
jor from Vernon, New Jersey.
"I
like hiking because there'si
nobody out in the middle· of
Howwouldyoudescribeyour- ,
nowhere to bother you. It's
self?
'just you and whoever else you
"I
ain very outgoing and
I
tell
everybody exactly what
I
mean."
decided to bring with you if
you decided to bring anybody
with you."
What would be your dream
Whatdoyoulikeinaperson? job?
·
"I
like people who are self-as- · !'Teaching special ed. in
an
el-
sured, they know what they
ementary school because
I
want in life and they're not go-
love the kids .. They bring me
ing to let anyonestOJ? the_m
inorejoy.than·anything else."
,.:;; froh{getting
1
i(.
Peopl~~who
·1:,({fJ1~·n?. .
bir:n -~)~•
.
. don':t,know,whatl!th~fillt .
rWhat.W()Uldy()UOOtoinflu-
end up trying to be something_
ence the world?
·
for someone else."
-What don't you like in a per-
son?·
"I
don't like people who rely
on other people for support all
the time."
"I
personally want, when I'm
teaching, to be able to say that
I
made a difference in orie kid's
life, even if it's only one. I
want him or her to say she was
the one that:made the differ-
ence in my life."
What would be your perfect .. What have you learned about
day?
_
yourself?
"Sleeping past eight o'clock.
''Ican'thave.controlovercer-
Having no papers. Being able :•
)~1!1
!,lµpgl>:; ~P.~~times things
. , . , }q
ff:l~_,aq1:.R9, whatever! de- ;:,liapp~~ ~mtyou have no con- ··
_: ",phletq,~pJ.q~~
day. I wouldn't
trol over them." -, -
·
make any plans. I like to be
spontaneous. I would also
Whatadvicewouldyougiveto
definitely spend time with my
people?
·
friends."
What do you fear?
"Coming across something I
can't think my way through."
.
"Don't second guess your-
self. Be yourself."
How would youJike to be re-
membered?
Wbatisimportanttoyou?
"Someone who did whatever
they did to the best of their
"Family, friends, and happi-
abilities."
INTER BREAK
$11.25-$15.00
Work 1-6 weeks in special semester break pro
gra.m. No exp nee-excellent training. Solid re
sume builder for all majors! Can lead to PT o
Ff
in spring/summer 1999. ·Work for Oran·ge
Ulster or Dutchess co. students begin after
fl
nals, but must apply now.
Call 12-5- M-F, 298-1888.
.... continued from page 5
ing students aboti(the criteria
thihgth~t'hib}ivates the stude:rit
for law school admissions," she __ , ari_d
.
should also· tell about the
said. "All of these things are
students themselves.
.
jors where students may find out · what we like to do
as
part'of their
Fourth, letters. of reconunen-
they do have an interest in go-
prelaw advisement,"
· dation are needed:
ing on to law school."
_
Maciocia said. there are other
They can be·written by fac-
Maciocia said she thinks. stu- . things she d~es
as
an. advisor.
ulty members, advisors, -some_-
. dents who have an interest in
"I look at personal statements - one:that knows the· student re~
law school should pursue it.
that students have prepared as
ally ,well, or.an internship field
"I, myself, was
an
undergradu-
part of their application:
l
also
supervis_or.
_
.
ate at Vassar College as a biol-
review thestudent's wholepro~
The application
is.
also needed
ogy major and so therefore!
file and prepare the dean's·cer- _ along with the four criteria. Stu-
encourage students who 01ight
tifications which are then signed
dents should also try· to apply
have that interest certainly to go
by the acad·emic vfoe president
early. ·
_
:
explore it with
an
internship and .. and the dean
.if
faculty.," she
Maciocia said there are things
_ to gain -some type of practical · said. "We try to prepare a de-
students can do.to :help them
perhaps through a summer job .• ~~ed smµmary report for ou_r . decid~ if they want to go
to
law
as to what
it
is that lawyers do
students that are interested in
~~hooL.
.
_:,
. . -· .
and to make sure there is some-
going on to _law school.". .
. ·"lstrongly recommend a field
thing that they would. like to
There are four criteria that are - experience when.~_ the · student
pursue," she said. "They
needed to get irito iaw school.
would take some time to actu- _
shouldn't think that because
First, there.is the Law School
aJly pursue and.see what it is
they are a not a history or Eri- . Entrance Exam·or LSAT. This is
thatlawyers do,'' she said, "And
- glish major that
'they're
cut off ·
a
reading·colllpiehension test._
while ther~ arl- many courses
from that. No one should dis-
This test is offered four times
here at Marist that
I
think would
count themselves." -
a year at Marist.
It
can be taken
provide worthw~le insight to
Macio~i~_. .. said wh.at M.~rist · . it i1_1 September, Octoper, Febru-· ~e~s that \1/0uld help
a
student
likes to do fckstudents h~te
ft:
ary,
ofJuriJ{
;;;>. :, \:
;< . '. _·
pr~pare.Jor the processing of
to provide them with advisors. . ' it can also be'Tuketl-morfthafr.. applying 'to school: :
I
think in
"We' re available to speak with
once but no score 1s discourttect. this area in d~idtng_\l!.hether _or
students from freshman y"ear
Second, a student's grade
not this is for you, one should
throughout to their senior year
,.
point average is considered.
probably pursue an internship
and whether it's exploring pos- .
With these first two criteria,
type experience.''
·
sibilities forintemships, helping
students c·an u·se the Boston
She also, said taking a few
students locate law firms .back
College Range finder to find a
classes could not hurt ..
home, they may practice in
an
school where they·would have
"We also have courses, that
area of interest to them, or . a 50/50 shot at getting into or
we recommend, courses in pub-
whether it ii;tv?lves something _law schools tha'.t could be
lie speaking, logic, history and
thatpe~haP.~ might be more sp~- _ -· reached b~sed ·on those crite-
-political science and. these are
cifi:s ipJf
PH~,?f.ilJ-,
~et! ~enipr ...
r/-?;: ,, ,• __
:=
·
· .;, :.'.'; .·.
. _
reG6mmendt!d orily in the sense
,~W.V.~9.}Vi~:#R~lVP
th~qal ~:;!TWN;~t½t1~i:~9ial statement :.;,W~Lw~:~t4'.4e~.ir./xplore a ~ste
,:,P?I~~'
~~,,\o ,,~}~l:-~~w-sooo9ls ,:,mu~t;!'e ,',v~}~,en:p~;the student .. ··.'9f~~t_it~s·~~t~a'3/Yers all called
_
they sfiou_ld 1,lpply;;,andeducat- •·It'us\fally has'to't!].yolve some~ _ "to'do;"
she
said.''
_
.
'
.
.
'
.
~
'
.
Cash back for your books-just in time for the holidays!
r1us;
get a special
$5.00
Deal Bucks coupon, good toward any
purchase of
$25.00_
or more-in your bookstore..
.
MARIST COLLEGE BOOKSTORE
SAT. DEC.12
&
19
10 AM-4PM
MON-FRI DEC. 14 -19
9AM-SPM
·DECEMBER 10, 1998
· THE'i<GlR.<CLE -
Feat:Ures
http://www.~isney.com
Feel like you cannot get enough of Disney? ·
Well check out
littp:llwww.disney.com,
Disney's homepage. The site has links to ·almost every
Disney cartoon imaginable.
.
.
·
~lick on a_Disney character.and you are linkedto games involving that character. Keeping along
with the hohday season, there are links to holiday sites formaking Santa crafts where you can make
things such as Santa lollipops. _There are also links to Disney movies and Disney World.
.
Thinking about makingyour career at rnsney? The site also lists job opportunities at all the Disney
locations.
· ·
·
The best thing about the page is its graphics, which are a blast of color to the eye. The worst_ thing
about the p,1ge ~s all the advertisements for Disney merchandise, the very numerous advertisements.
Bu~ overall it is a good page for Disney lovers. So check out
http://www.disney.com
to satisfy that
Disney craving.
·
·.
·
·
'
·
·
,
.
If
you have any suggestions Jo~ this column, or would like to write a column, contact Katrina at
extension 2429 or email HZAL. Features Editor Emily Kucharczyk wrote this Searching the sites
column.
.
Horoscopes
~
·.
· ... · ARIES:
Something
have much time for
because you're about
that was planned to
discussion today.
to get going on some
go one way could
Something
you
whole new projects,
V{!er off in a differ-
thought was going to
and you don't want
.
ent direction.
If
go one way is going
to be slowed down.
you're on top of the
to go another way in- · ~ - VIRGQ:_Jb.eMoonis
...
.
: ....
· ... ,;, jjt,u~~io,n .. · thire ,,. , .,. ;; .. , sJead, ~o_all()»: your- · ·-~·. in yo~r' sign again,
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·
_
·Ifyou're-offsome-
. . , ... for.whatever.you.
, .
asatack.Youarevery
• . • .· ~here playi!)g, more . .
have in mind. . . . . .
.
. shrewc(and when the
.
,
• ,·'daibage•·col!ld be
[i'
.· .···
CANCER:
You're .
.
pressure'
"
is on, you
done than y
.. ou even . •
W
__ .• ·.·
jtudyi·n. g, lea.rnin.g
justgetshr~wder. Be-
want to think about. ,
~
and getting much
sides that, you've got
That's what hap,-
· ·
better
at
whatever it
aluckybreakcoming
pens when you're
is you're doing.
up. All the planning
going at really high
Hopefully,· you're .
and hoping and pfay-
speeds, and that's
pushing yoµrself ·to·
ing and sweating that
what you're prob-
try something that's
you've been doing
- ably up to today.
kind of difficult.
If
lately is going to pay
You've been having
that's the case; of
· off. You will all of a
cQmplications with
c,ourse yot,!'d haye
sudden know what
travel lately, but
· problem§-:
·If
yi:iu -.
. yo\l need to do, and
those are going to
weren't having prof?-·
·
.· th'e" rest will .be easy.
clearup.
.
lems, it wouldn't be
Just check stuff off
TAURUS:ThatRet-
difficult, right? Be-
your lists.
~ - -
· ·
__ ·. · rograde Mercury
sides,
h
also looks
~
LIBRA:
There's
~
has been causing
like whatever you're
somebody looking
complications con-
doing is going to pay
over your shoulder
•. ceming the· money
you very well for your
today, criticizing.your
you share with
efforts. That makes
every move. Isn't it
somebody
else.
the whole process
justwonderful when
.Things are going to
more fun. A lot of the
that happens? This
be inuch easierover
things you've been
person is trying to be
the next few weeks
dealing with will start
helpful, but you may
than they have been
to clear up aU by them-
think it's just annoy-
for the last few
selves.
ing. Well,
try
and stifle
weeks. Meanwhile,
I ~-.. ' I
LEO:
If
you've been
that comment
if
you
.. you may'have to do
noticing any dis-
can.
It
looks like the
a bit of fuggling:
agreements in your:
other pers~m's ideas
Schedule a meeting
lifeforthelastcoriple
could actually be
for today and a ro-
weeks, you can blame
quite helpful, and it
mantic interlude for
it on the Retrograde
might be something
sometime after to-
Mercury. You c·an
you need to learn.
morrow. You're
even blame a messy.
You're very good at
about to get even
house on it if you
learning right now,
luckier in love.
want. You can blame
and that's why you
GEMINI:
You've
disagreements be-
can afford to be so
probably noticed
tween siblings, a lov-
generous with your
some confusion
ers' spat or even
attention.
over there, and
breakage in the
~
SCORPIO:Mercury
maybe some hurt
kitchen. But blaming
~
is going
Direct
today,
feelings ora misun-
Mercury Retrograde
~
thank Heaven. It's
derstanding. Those
can only go so far.
been in your Solar
will all be cleared up
There does come a
Second House of
i]
within the next few
time when the messes
money, and it's been
days,
much
to
have to be cleaned up,
botching things up.
everybody's de-
and that is now.
It's been helping you
light. You may not
Clean them up,
make mistakes in your
PAGE7
Emily's Recipe of the
Week
S 'mores Treats
1/4 cup margarine
Package (10 oz.) regular marshmallows or 4 cups
miniature marshmallows
6
cups cocoa krispies cereal
3/4 cup graham crackers, cut or broken into small
1/2-
inch square pieces
1/2 cup semi-sweet chocolate chip morsels
1/2 cup miniature marshmallows
In a microwave-safe bowl, heat margarine and marshmal-
lows at high for three minutes, stirring after two minutes.
Stir until smooth. Add cereal and graham cracker pieces.
Stir until well coated. Put mixture into 13x9x2-inch pan .
coated with cooking spray. For topping: sprinkle
chocolate morsels and 1/2 cup miniature marshmallows .. •
on top. Makes-24.
·math, thinking you
convince the other
have more than you
person. Of course,
do. Sometimes it's
then you'll have to
been making checks
actually be that
get lost in tlie mail,
way from now on,
or having bills get
but that's OK.
get paid. Stran_g,er ,,,
":il:' · .
you,.focus. ..
on,
the
misl~dsotheydon't
~l·
AQUARIUS:
If
.,,n,--:,
,~t
'tn1iiifs!
1
h'avtf'hap-
Jr
r~
;,~'<ieta.ils
today,'
you
· pened.
·
can find the money
SAGITTARIUS:
you need.
It looks
Hopefully you were
like it's available;
not late for work this
it's just a matter of
morning.
If
you were,
filling out the right
you definitely heard
paperwork. You're
about it.It looks like
not quite sure ex-
somebody
was
actly what-that is,
watching for you to
but neither is any-
come in, but that's
body else. The way
not necessarily bad.
that you'll find out
It
could be good
is by calling some-
news, as in a promo-
body outside your
.
,
tion or a new assign-
circle of friends.
· '
.
'
:,
" menL People:have
You guys have
been thinkin'g:about
·fried· everything
you lately because
'you·
·kn.ow a.bout,
you've been looking
and that's OK. This
so good. You're
looks like some-
looking absolutely
thing you didn't
marvelousrightnow,
.,.,,,...
know about. Just
incidentally. The bar-
· look some place
rier to communica-
you've
never
tion you've been
looked before!
struggling with is
II
I
PISCES:
Some-
starting to dissolve.
- ~ thing you've been
CAPRICORN:
-
saying over and
Don't stress about
over is finally start-
money today. What
ing to get through.
you need is avail-
Don't be dismayed
abie, and you'll have
ifit seems to be tak-
to go to a little bit of
ing a while. An idea
work to get it. How
that looks obvious
aboutofferingsome-
to you could be
thing you could
practically incon-
build to someone
ceivable to some-
who'd like tohave it?
body else. That's
You'redoingallright
hard for you to
as a seller or as a per-
imagine, since you
son who'll trade ser-
have a tendency to
vices for what you
think other people
need. Do that on a
know it all. Well,
larger scale than
guess what? Pisces
usual today and
is the sign of ge-
you'll be amazed at
nius, so the odds
the results. Pretend
are pretty good.that
you're bigger than
they don't know it
you thought you
all and you do
were, and you could
know it all.
I
·
DECEMBER 10,1998
.
.
-
·
:
PAGE9
The views expressed on these pages are not nec~ssilily those of
The Circle
.··
Marist
.
has social
scene,
needs
by CHRISKNUDTSEN
·
•
byCARLITO
•
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ssfon
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·
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·
.:,
·
.
,
,
,
,·
wonien; Womeri arejtist as ca-
.
pable as men at perfonning any
occupation, ranging from medi-
cine to professional wrestling.
Giant strides have been made in
discarding gender equality
throughout the years but one
stride has been taken that needs
to
be
displaced: a woman's
right
to have
an
abortion.
_
I agree unequivocally that a
woman deserves every
.
right
that a man does including the
control over her body
and
her
life. But who are women to de-
termine the course of a life grow-
ing inside them that is incapable
of objecting to any decisions
that may be made regarding their
·
fate? A
fetus
can not exactly
pick up the phone, call their
mother and
·
request that they
not be aborted.
People can object and say that
a fully functioning human is not
~ng murdered, only a bundle
oflifeless cells, but who are you
kidding? Does this rationaliza-
.
tion help you sleep at night?
Well, if you fancy something to
catalyze insomnia, I recommend
the film The Silent Scream.
-
•
.
,
.
.
social
CO n-S CI en Ce-
Harasslllent
-
policy
'
iS
not
Source: "Abortion Patients
_
in 1994-1995: Characteristics and Contracep-,
live use,"
·
by Stanley K
.
Henshaw and Kath,ryn Ko{it, Family Planning Per-
spectives, July/August 1996
In this film, you witness the
aborting of
a
fetus via ultra-
sound .
.
You witness the removal
of each minuscule limb and the
decapitation of the baby's per-
fectly miniaturized head. You
even see the mouth open, un-
leashing a scream that will never
be heard. Watch this movie and
then tell me that it is just a cha-
otic tissue mass that is being
extracted.
Obviously, there are excep-
tions. A woman that is raped
crui"not be held accountable for
being impregnated because the
pregnancy was neither planned
nor preventable. But woman
that have unprotected sex
should not be allowed to use
abortion as
a form
of birth con-
trol. I am not going to lecture
on the myriad forms of birth
control that are available be-
cause I am sure that you are well
aware. I hate to place the bur-
den of responsibility on women,
. but the decision of whether or
not to have safe sex or sex at all
for that matter,
is
ultimately up
to the woman. Men can insti-
gate but the act itself must re-
ceive final verification by the
woman. Men will usually not
bring up the topic of birth con-
trol because they don't care if
adequate
by
KRIS HARl'
.
..
TH£ <CIR.CLE
D_
·
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___ E;;;:,;R_. __
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PAGES
C(?,NGRE.§SHALLMAKENOLAW~ABRIDG~GTIIEFREEDOMOFSPEECH,OROFTHEP~-
;ir"i""--;::==========
... wishes every-
one a great end of
the semester and
best wishes for a
great holiday!!
Good luck in the
new year!
/{ave a great
break! See you
all next year!!
IE,DITORIALSI
An opinion is not fact
,·
·
·
'· .
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.
1
·
,
.
For
the-
second semester
iii
a row, I firtd riiyseff Wntirig'
to
'
The
.
Circle in disgust.
.
E~di
section maintains their own staff of writers. The. Opinion/Editorial pages
·
Ih~ve
:
n<>_tice4,
·
~~peci~lf(?f
_
la't~:
·
tha~ your'OP-ED
_
~ec:tion
·
~e~ms
_
to be growing
.
are op:en
.
to readers, as
·
well as staff writers, to~ontribute to. The Opinion pages
larger. Since when diifa newspaper allow rep
·
ortet"s to voice their own opinionsin
are a public fQrum to service those who wish to submit pieces. This section
a:
supposedly unbiased publication? I see
·
that staff writersMikal Amin Lee and
· .
always serves
'
the same traditional function
in
all mainstream newspapers alike.
Michelle Co
,
rinne
·
White were allowed to do_ so. Again, as in my last letter, I say
_
The Opinion section is where writers and outside contributors to the paper are
that
you
claiin
t9 be striving for professionalism, butwhat ls
.
ee in your paper is
abl
_
e to express their opinions based on their own views and experiences. There
.
vefy frnpr:,ofessional.Tiilceto'
,
~'ot,npare your paper with professional papers, and
is no factual research behind their pieces and it is-solely based on their personal
the
'
'd
_
ifferen~eis appallirig
'.
'
I wa(taughtin
'.
thefourth grade that newspapers were
opinions. The newspaper does r10thing more than supply a page and a half to
.
'i
ri publjcatiori as
a
means of dfspensiilg tinb_iase4_infonp.atiori to the general
ariyqne who would like to share their views with the campus, as well as an
pubiic
!
Ifl
wanted toread
tll~
·
opfoiof! of.µie staff writer~\ lwouid
_
ask it of them. I
edjtorial page foiletters to the ~qi tor.
.
.
.
would much rather
.
read the news
·
.
·,
·
.
·
:-•
·
·
·
'
'
'·
·
The News section is unlike the Opinion section. In this section, News staff
.
You
'
might
defdnd
"tlie
'
a~tions of your writers by saying that they had articles in
writers are assigned stories to report on. These stories are factual situations and
· the Op.:.Ed secti
.
on of the paper. Why is this? Why are they, as news reporters;
-- -
eve~t~
.
op::~qi~g ~n c::~plls and in the local community. They rely on interviews
aUo'wecHo
voice
·
an
opinion in a section thati wasledto beli~ve i~ designated for
.
of pe'6pl1rinvolyedifi the
:
stp~ and are based on hard news facts to be reported
.
..
the MaristCollege reader?
·
~ am insulted by
.
this entire situation, and enraged that
to the paper's readership
J
The writer's opinion is ~n no way part
_
of the story.
·
you contiri'ue ~is behavior:
.
! was even more insulted when
I
saw an article
Thus, there is a distinct difference between an opinion piece and a news
.
aJ1~cle.
_
written by orie of your writers which attack~d another w
_
riter
,
I
ask you, is this
A newspaper attempts to meet the ne~ds of a diverse community consisting of
proft:ssional?l
run
now less
.
likely to pick i.Ip and read a copy of your paper. Your
readers and writers. Some value news, while others always
turn
to the sports
paper
_
is insulting to the Marist community, and I will not tolerate this lack of .
pages. Still others may read just Arts
and
Entertainment and Feature stories. A
professionali~m. ltherefore encourage anyone who agrees with me to let the
newspafer's purpose is to reach out to a variety of people's tastes and views.
editors of The Circle know.
-
.
.
.
.
.
That is why there are numerous sections to a paper, differing greatly from one to
Jwould aiso liJ<e to address this debate oyer
_
the alcohol policy at Marist. Again
the other.
in the Op-'-EQ, section
I
read a letter from Freshman Joseph DeMatteis, which
_
As an editor and an aspiring professional journalist, I will defend the First
accu~ed the
'
college
;
of acting too much like our parents. In his letter, he states
Amendment for as long as I work in this profession.
I
will
continue to oppose
that,
"If
we
neede~ parents ar~und
ali
thedme
_
in this phase.. ofour lives we would
anyone who tries to suppress these freedoms we have all been granted. Whether
.
have stayed home
:
;, Why tiidn;t you stay
,
homefYou·were weUaware ofthe
.
someone is a staff writer for a paper or writes something
as
a contributor, the
alcohol policy\viien
'
you were accepted to this _schq9l. Toe last I recall, it was
Opinion section is for people who want to have their voices heard.
illegal in the Stai~ of NewYork, as well as niost of.this country, for a person under
the age
of
21
to possess any alcohol unless accompanied by
a
parent or guard-
fan;
He believes that we should be treated like adults.' Here is
a
little slice of reality
for you· Mr. DeMatteis:
We
are
being treated
as
adults.
ff
you, as a person under
the
:
age of
21,
were to be
.
faught possessing alcohol anywhere off campus, you
would, by law,.
be
incarcerated and prosecuted.
If
anything, you get a slap on the
wrist and a stem warning
at
this
school.
.
Editors, If you even care to
be
professional and be treated with the respect you
believe you deserve,
I
would suggest that you treat your readers with the respect
and
dignity they so rightly deserve. So far, you have proven unable
.
to accom-
plish this. I believe you owe your readers an apology.
If
one reader can be so
greatly insulted, many others may share the same feelings.
Christopher A. Cavallari
sophomore
Amanda Bradley,
Editor-in-chief
-
TH£ <CIR.CLE
Amanda
Bradley·
Editor-in-chief
Emily Kucharczyk
Features Editor
Elimbeth Carrubba
Managing Editor
ThomasRyan
Sports Editor
BenAgoes
News Editor
TaraQuinn
Opinion Editor
Patrick Whittle
Joe Scotto
Toni Constantino
Arts
& Entertainment
Photography Editor
Business Manager
G. Modele Clarke,
Faculty Advisor
Tize
Circle is the student newspaper of Marist College, Poughkeepsie, NY.
Issues are published every Thursday.
We welcome letters to the editor, club announcements and story ideas. We can-
not publish unsigned letters to the editor.
The Circle staff can be reached at
575-3000 x2429
or by email at HZAL.
(
i'
i
,
(
,
.
I
DECEMBER 10 1998
1£D
ITORJALSl
i
Fite safety procedures
-
are
;
a~eq~ate
Editor:
toward the safest and most ef.:
I write in response to your ar-
fective exit during
·.
an emer-
ticle in theNov. 19 edition ofThe
gency. Should the designated
Circle regarding the fire alarm
exit be blocked for some reason,
·
activation in
the
Dyson class-
an alternate exit should be
room on Tuesday, Nov. 17, 1998.
sought. A person who, for any
The mission of the Office of reason, caimot negotiate a stair-
Safety and Security is to pro-
way should remain at the land-
vide students, faculty, staff
and
ing of the predetermined exit
• ·
guests with a safe environment
stairway or alternate stairway
in which to study, work of oth-
and await
.
the arrival of the Fire
erwise enjoy the variety of ac-
Marshal oFsecurity staff who
·
ti vi ties and events that the Col-
·
wilr advise
:
as
·
fo
whether an
lege offers. When an emergency
evacuation is necessary. Enier-
situation arises, Safety and Se-
gency
·
personnel w11l make any
curity staff are trained to make
required eVacuation(s)
;
an
immediate assessment of the
Personal safety is
an
institu-
.
. .
nature of the emergency and
tional and individual responsi-
.
·
1r:
·
d
·
· ·
d
.
<
•
_
,
t
·
.
1
d
·i·
·.·
.
d
·
·
·
•
1
are
a ea y un erway omc u e
then execute their response
b1 ity an
.
an
evacuation p an
.
th
F
M
hal
traini
.
.
has both institutional and in.di-
10
e
rre . ars
.
~g pro-
based on predetermined proce-
.d
·
1
.
·
.
·.
·
.
. ·
ts
St d
·
·
t
.
.
gram a review of specific re-
d
.
v1 ua componen
.
u ens,
·
.th
.
·
d
·
,.
·
·
:
ures.
.
.·
·.·
•
.
ff
·
·
·
·
_
_
sponses w1
.
:
rega.r
.·
to persons
·
Dun·ng the
x·
ncident in the
faculty, and sta
.
are encour
.th
·
d. b.liti.
;-
In
.
dd·ti·
.
th
·
d
·
·.
·
· ·
·
··
th
•
·
w1
1sa i
es.
.
a
.
i on, e
•
Dyson building, the security
_
age to
i:~view
.
e evac~at;ion
Office of Safef and Security
·
officer.on outy
.
was directed
_
i:o
_-
pl~n
..
a nd
,-
pos
,
ted
,
e~
_
ac~llt~on
·.
•
·
y
·
1
·
d
.
.
f-
;
·,
.
..,-
.
.
,
1
..
.
,
·.
:
1n"'-l·
..
.
d
··
·
.,.;
1
.
h
...
ldkn
.
.
.
.
V'{Ill.address each c ass an o
the
'
coffee shop
'
to
)
i'nvestigate
.
;
rou es.
·
ulVl UiUS
.
S OU
.
ow
'
·
fi
•:. ·.:
..
·
th
be
.
.
. .
. ,
f th
.
·
the nature of
a
fire alarm activa-
'
Whe~e
~
inif~
lcic~tfcf~iict
'·
a
6:.
:
.
t,
~~:t!~
"
cince~fuf
!
·
~
·
spe~i~~
·
tion. He found the situation to
te~me
·
e pnmary e~ergency
procedures
·
and evacuation
.
b
.
e under control·, smoke from a
exit route
for
that locat10n. Pre-
ti
h
.
b
·1d·
.
.
I
It
t
•t
t
routes or eac
UI
mg, area,
bagel in
.
the toaster had caused
-
P
an an a erna e ex1 rou e
·
·
·
Should the prim
.
ary
·
route
.
_
·
be
orroom.
·
the alarm. The officer then made
If
·
·
h
·a1
n
·
e
·
ed i·n
blocked. Ascertain from the stu-
you ave a speci
. ·
the pre-planned inspection of
dent handbook who the
.
Fire
regard to a building evacuation,
the building. It was dunng this
need to obtain a copy of the
inspection tour that he found
MarshaJ is for the building you
evacuation plan,
orif
a build-
Mr.
Qui
.
no and his professor, Dr.
are
in.
If
you have
.
any individual
.
ffi
. .
1
.
concerns or needs regardin
'
g the
mg,
O
ice area or
C
assroom
Whitley, on the second floor
does not have an evacuation
.
and advised them that they
evacuation of
a
particular:build-
·
route placard conspicuously
could remain at their present Io-
ing, bring them to the
.
;itiention
·
d
1
·
a1
·
·
J
h
'
Offi
·
f
of the Office of Safety
.
arid Se-
poste
'P
ease c
t e
ice
0
cation because evacuation
_
was
curity or Ute building
Fire
Mar-
Safety
.
and Security on ex ten.:.
not warranted. Had it been need:.
sh.
al ih ad
.
.
v
.
anc
.
e
.
. ·
..
_
_
s
.
P_
,.
~
.
cifiC
s
.
.
··
~
.
tu·~ a-
·
sion
22.82.
immediately
.'
:
S:
.
essary, the officer was pr~p~~
-
..;
•
·
..
1'h~
Cc~llege
:
js c9~mitted
tp
.
.
fy>
i~plemei:fy;iw
~~u,~ti,b~#'
.
'
t10ns
~
t h ~ e
:}JlCOrpOiJl\ed
28q
_
fitinu'al1Yi~valiia\'ihg1i~
UP,-
'
The '98-99StudentHaridbook
i~tfielv'i&atiorl'proce
.
dtires.
'
gradirig
~
its_'safetf'plans. Yo'ur
discusses
evacuation proce-
As
with anypJan, time an~ cir-
comrrients'and suggestion
'
s' are
d
d th
.
a
·
·
f b ·1d
cu
.
mstan
.
ce may dete
.
rm
.
ine that
.
.
.
ures an
e ut1es
·
o
ui -
·
a review
.
.
and lipdate
.
is
·
.
ap
·
pr
_
o-
encour:aged
:
arid appreciated;
ing Fire Marshals:
_
In addition,
.
:
• .
.
buildings have posted evacua-'
priate. The College's evacuation
John T~
/
Glldard
tion routes that direct persons
plan is updated annually. Plans
ADA Coordinator
.
.
·
.
·
.
.
.
3.4:,1),,tf:,
·
Griaranteed · C;etiit Cards_wi_th Credit Limits
·
~ ~
··
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Up
19
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No
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REDI-T,
·
No
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Qtt~
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)
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·
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'
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DE,
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'
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Think
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Want VISA & MasterCard Credit Cards?
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ORDER FORM
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-
J?ECEMBER
10; 1998
Find
;
oµt:whyReelBig
Fish
rock so
hard
by
MKBONOPARTIS
:
Staff Writer
.
.
.
.
When Reel 1'ig Fish released
their sophomoie
;
aJ.buin; titled
.·
Why
D_o
_
Thef Ro"ck_
·
so
Hard?,
_skeptics
-
figured
-
-
the band had
f?ec9nie official ''r<>ck stars," in;_
-fatuated with themselves and
tootlng
_
their own
horns (
excuse
"
·
the pun;fBut tlie title
.
only
.
proves what Ree/Big Fish
_
have
._
been singing all along
.
-, they are
··
·
. a fun band that'thrives on· hi-
·
l~ous lyrics,:everyday circum--
·
stances,
and
iriostof all
,.
the abil::
ity to laugh at themselves.
·
_
__
.
W.hyDoTheyRockSoHard
_
·
picks offwhere
Tum
The
Radio
.
rich and famous. That would be
fun."
"So would dating an ac-
tress," Wert agrees .
. 0jfleftoff ayearancfahalfago.
Enjoying the sticcesS.ofthe ex-
•.
tremely sar_castic singles Sell
Oii
_
i and'Treizdy
/
Reel Big Fish
say th
_
ey loveto give
:
-the
.
fans
."
·
.
.
-
.-:
'·
.
:
.
;
.
;
.,
·
i,
._.,:,.
·
.
'
:
. ;
.
.
_ . . .
;'.;
(•
'
.
,
·
:_;
.-.:
,,•:
;
<
-
1
0-:
·
,
,
:
photorromRu/Bi
gF
uhonline
what they want. Unlike so many
Reef Big Fish
rnayjipencf a lot of
,
time clowning around, but they spend all of their new CD
Whatever effects fame may
have had, the Reel
Big
Fish
boys are not seriously divulg-
ing. The new record keeps that
sense of sarcasm going, but the
band proved they can be both
serious and silly at the same time
with
Thank You For Not
Moshing,
an ode to the overag-
gressive fans who show up at
shows. Barrett sings: "When
I'm in the pit, I'm gonna punch
and kick/When I'm in the pit,
don't ya know - I'm gonna f---
up sh--
.
" On the extremely
catchy Down In Flames the
band considers their overnight
success, and on the revved"up
reggae
.
track;.Song #J,
,
Jamaican
ska legend Coolie Ranx lends his
vocal talents to the Orange
County band. With The Setup
(You Need This),
the fifth track
on Why Do They Rock So
Hard?,
Barrett and company
tread new ground and forego
their ska roots to create one of
the more memorable pop tunes
currently getting airplay. As the
video for The Setup gains expo-
sure on MTV, fans everywhere
cannot help but sing along.
Check out www.reelbigfislz.com
for more into.
bands thai
·
release
'
energetic
l1'_hydo !ht;! rock s_o
hard?(UNI/Universal) rocking out.
debu~ only to
foll6w
up with · matured."
.
.
the catchy hooks, I steal 'ein and
·
mellowed out, watered dowri
_
But what about the more
✓
put
'em in my own songs."
·
s~cond efforts touted as "inore
·
:
complicated ~ongs; the catchier
While Barrett is joking, it is
mature" by critics.Reel
Big
Fish
-.
hooks, and the more memorable
easy to see how Reel
Big
Fish
refuse to grow up
:
anth
.
ems of the second album?
convey a good time in their al-
"Maturity?"· trumpeter Tavis
· ·
· •
"What I do is; I listen to the
bums and their Jive shows. Their
·
··
Werts said laughing at a press
.
radio for all the good songs,"
Hve
energy has spread to alJ
release
:
''fhad
to
go
'
from shav-
lead singer/guitarist Aaron
.
genres of music~
and
the band
ing once
a
week to shaving
BarretsaidinaWRRVinterview
.
has no qualms
.
about playing to
twice
·a
week,_ that's howI've
.
>
"ThenitakeaU
the melodies
.
all
audienc~s tpa_t" IIii~ht,con~ider
1
'~Veli@tif16Iff®tt@~'
·
.
"
~~~i~~~~~t:~1~~
.
ska foreign territory. They have
had the pleasure of opening for
such renowned acts as Kiss, The
Cure, The Blues Brothers,
and
even Coolio. But what about the
aftereffects of
life
on the road
and screaming fans?
"F~e has only br9ught me
heartache and
_.
woe," Barrett
jokes'.
'.'l
want to be really super
h~~~;lCpn
~
Qro:
;
lp;,,e.
;I
s
-:
tt
·
·
··o
.
·
w
·
---•
a
·
_
·
t
-
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•
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r
J....I
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.:
,
•
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;
'
.~
r;
I
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I
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I
;
.
'.
t
-.,c
•
;
the Civic Center
· too
long
on
glitter
.
.
.
.
imalgan_iation <>(K~r{cob~n
and Oscar Wilde than an Iggy
Pop-esque character by t~e
film's end.
·
(Get it? Curt Wild/
Kurt Wilde?) Bale also sue-
byCHRISKNUDTSEN
ing one word, "drugs." The
. .
.
l
{
fA:
_
--
_
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_
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·
&
·
CKE
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EWHfITLEd::,
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, o
:
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_
-
_
._
·
_
.
-
._
-.
_
_
.
.
with 1qls Glam~rock; as he drallwls
ceeds as Stuart, an English as
Staff Writer
uMpan.
Isthonoiutgeshts1~tewmaesdatmouesa1_nt gth' 11: sf
_
_;_
some
!l
mo_st unca110y para es fis,h n' cllips character who
:'
.
<<•::
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.
__ ._
...
>
betw~n.Slao.¢inclD
_
avic!BoWie
seems likehe
_
was
·
bom to say
Wh
_
at is that thing in
done as a joke but people took
: ',
.
:
·
'-'Velvet Goldmine" is
a'siri~
'-
a:nd
·
Wild and Iggy
.
Pop. · The
the line "!write fuh the 'Erald."
McCoys prancing around in a
it seriously, oh well. He came
c~r~attem~t
_
atip~~g
_
arienter-
_
.
film
:
~m~st ~e~~mes
,
Haynes'
;
Wher,ethefilm
·
reallyfallsapart. thong? It
'
s a crow, it's the
staggering out on tall stilts for
tammg ~pm
-
on
.
the--70s Glam-
own what
1(,-
_
_
~tory
-
~
.
bout
_
-·
is injts
·
attempt to recreate, or devil..
..
no, it's Marilyn Manson
Mechanical Animals.
The set
rock sceri~~
·
but'it falls into the
YJhatwouldhapp.e!J-
_
µ-~p~\~~1
i
:
f
pei:l)aps
f
riv!l.i the excess of the
·
and not only d_id he ~how up at closed with
_
The Beautiful
s~me
ixcess that proved fatal to
Pop had collaborated on a
Glam-rock scene itself. This is a
McCoys on Fnday mght, but he
·
People
but anyone who rushed
that craze;
.
.
,.J
.
.
project_of monu~e_ntiy exces~ at
•
very:strbng
;
R,
_.
tatipg:irdie~, as
-:
\,\\'.as i11;
:
~e Fivi~ c~!lt~r o
_
n
,_
sa
_.
!- _
out after that missed the encore
'!VelvetGoldmine"isanew
the height of their respective
·
deviant sexuafsituationsand
·
urdaymght.
·
·
·
'·
·
:
_.
··
.. song
.
Irresponsible Hate An-
fi_lm distri_buted b~ independent
.
c~eers in
.
the 70s
;
Sla~e begins
_
.
Oct'rug
use become the norm soon
_.
The shoV:7 had
_
a slow start
them.
For this he came out with
cmema: tltans,}vftra
.
~ax'.
.·
Set
;;
his
-
caree:
~~
-
a strugglmg ne~:.
·
after
the opening credits. This
with a god::~wfulband called
J2
.
the podium
.
similar to the pe;-
mo
_
stly 1!1 early-197os L?ndon,
wave artist m England who 1s
-
wouldnotbeaproblemforafihn
Rou~swh1ch
would have been
formance at
··
the MTV Music
_ the rnoy1~ conce_ms the nse and
booed off stage after stage be-
such as this
if
it were not for the
bettenf it was 12 Seconds. The
Awards .
. falI_oqi
.
cti?nal Glam~rock star fore
_
hescores thef!ghtmanager
.
_
;
fact that Haynes; lets absurd
only interesting thing about the
Manson continues to enjoy
Bram Sla~e
(an
?verthe top per-
for
,
the job.
:
Sladf s glitz-n-glit-
.
makeup jobs and potentially · band was !he fact that ~ere w~s
the performances by fondling
fom:i:ance
.
by
.
Vlrtll~l: unkno~n.
'
tei: stage_
c
show IS thoroughly
"hot" scenes overshadow the
a female smger .... that IS about It
himself in front of the entire
!o,nath~n .Rhys
.
)vfey~rs)
,
a?d
.
__
upspiged at a_n ~nglish·music
_
strong script and performances
thou?h, the i:est of the band was
crowd and then sucking on the
JournalistArthur S.tuart5 (Chris-
festival by Wild s drugged-out
he has to work with. For some
relatively weak and made me
hand he used (is that not
tianBale)taskpfs~~gSlade's
·
on
7
stagespasmroutine(shame-
_ ·
·
reason I doubt David Bowie
wish I_had shown up late: sweet?) Healsoplayedoffthe
formerfriends fora news story.
lessly stolerdrom Iggy Pop's
strutted around his house in an
Maybe ifl had a needle jutting
crowd well, encouraging them
·.
It
•
is the tentti anniversary C?f
antics with his former band The
electric blue wig twenty-four out of my arm I would have en-
to
·
spit at him as well as at each
Slade's staged a~sassination
Stooges)._Slad~'.s new manage-
hours a day.
joyed their performance a little
other, which kind of sucked be-
s~nt that res~lted
m
the
_
loss of
.
?1ent_ d_ec~des, 1f you can't beat
Theftlm won the 1998 Carnies more ... They only stayed on th~ cause I almost got hit by a nice
hi~ f~s and dis~~ce from
. .
e~JOIO em_. Sl~de
.
on the other
Film Festival award for "Best stage for about a half hc;,ur so 1t
wad of phlegm from one of the
the
.
pop c
.
ulture w9rld1n 1974.
hand falls head ovt:r heals for Artistic Contribution" and de-
was not a huge inconvenience
Mansonites
behind
me.
Bale's character is particularly
Wild; This is portrayed in clas-
·
.
buted in theatres recently. 1 truly though.
Manson also demanded the
intriguing as heis afonner<31am-
_
·
sically hammy indie~flick fash-
wanted to like this movie but I
Manson had the Civic Cen-
crowd to pelt him with their
rock
fan
f!imself, anq pur;ming
.
}on in a scene in which Slade's
can not say I enjoyed it ~hen I ter packed for his "shock rock"
·
shirts, leaving many of the
the story of ~hat becam~ of eyes ligh! u~ with h ~ and his
know I could not possibly bring
~how. Despite h!,s new image,
Mansonite
girls
Slade takes its toll on him.
manager s hght up with dollar
myself to watch it again. I can
waddup breasts , they played
topless ... nothing wrong with
Stuart tracks d~wn Slade's signs when Wild accepts the
say I am glad I watched this
a set with some ~ongs from ev-
that.
fonnermanager,
wife,
and finally
deal.
movie and Iknow a lot of crit-
ery album. The mght was started
The show was a surprise, I
co-star and l~ver, C~rt ~ld, to
There are some first-class
ics
and
moviegoers will
be
able
wi~ T~e Reflecting Go1 off of was expecting much less out of
retel!, the sto~es of ~1s l,!fe.
performances in this movie, es-
to look beyond or possibly even
A11t1cnst Supe~star
_
which got
it. After seeing the band play a
Velvet Goldmme serves
pecially Toni Collette as Slade's
enjoy the excess. Personally
everyone movmg nght away.
few times about three years ago,
primarily as a vehicle for Ewan
ex-wife Mandy.
·
She becomes
when I am in the mood forGlarn~
Other highlights of the night
and based on my expectations
~~Gre~or (f8?1o~s for his role
unable to keep up with Slade's
rock I think I will just throw on
were when the band played of them focusing on the new
1~ 'Tnunspotung ) to ~how
.
off indulgent lifestyle arid leaves
my old
Kiss tape. As far as I Lunc~box from_ Portrazt cf a~ look, I was predicting a weak
his tale?ts, not
t?
menu on more
_
him shortly
·
after his faltering
know, Gene Simmons never got A?1encan Family. For
I Don_t
show but I was proved wrong.
than a httle ofh1s flesh, as Curt
"relationship" with Wild be-
caught up in any torrid love af-
Li.ke
the Drugs,
off of Mecham-
While not my favorite band in
Wild. Direct?r Todd J:Iay?es
comes more important to him
fairs, but maybe that will
be
the
~al Animals,
a huge lit sign rose
the world, I have to admit that
must have quite a fascmauon
than their marriage. McGregor
subject of Haynes' next piece...
m the back of the stage, flash-
Manson put on a hell of a show.
....
I
i
.
;
·
THE CIRCLE
DECEMBERl0,1998
,.__
A
,
·
&
·
E
.
~
.
.
~
.
·
PAGE12
EafSliibif'
1
~
·
fto-WnWard
spir
-
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·
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.
·
.
.
.
•
.
·•
·
·.
.
. ·.
·
.
.
:
.
.
.
.
.
·
.
.
.
•
.
. .
.
..
•
.
.
•• .
.•
.
.
;
:·
byC~ITO
·
..
.
fog
:
l~gi
"
quantities of e6stasy.)
.
as
_
foUbowsd. ~n~
.
wf~uldlbe,p1e
.
·
w
.
.
hy
·
.
d,oravers needsun
.
·
glasses
overa un ance
.
..
o
·
s
.
cu ptmg
·
Staff Fashion Victim
.
. ,when they are nocturnal? Does
products that render the hak
it help bl
_
ock o~t the strobe light
helmet impervious to the
·
on-
.
In a cuiturai melting pot such
or further assist it in its perme-
slaught of the elements ( earth,
as the United States; a whole
.
ation of the brain?
Why
do
wind, fire, and water). If styled
slew
of
cultures
lie
.
festering
ravers need
a
minimum of 60
properly, a jackhammer could
beneath the surface of foain-
·
grainsofsilyerprotrudingfrom
not mar ~he giiido
1
s
perfectly
stream society
,
Withiri these
•
eve1,ipossible bodily orifice? It
.
sculpted head of hair.
'
~n6ther
.
cultures, there
is
a\nyriad
'.
of
is obviously not:conifortable
key ingredient in the guido.
fashionstyles that are embraced
andit is a serious pi:oblem at
air~
.
Jifestyle is a shirt that accentu-
,
and I can not seem to figure out
port metal detectors s
.
o what
·
ates the biceps and pectorals.
why. The overall quiµ1ty ofhu-
benefits do they provide?
An-
Perhaps I
aJI1.
mocking .this be-
.
man .life has deteriorated
.
thropologists are
.
:w~rking vig-
c~use I personally lack both
throughout the years
·
andfash-
oro
_
usly
·
to answer these very
muscles, but that still does not
ion is no exception.
·
1n
a culture
·
questions;
'
·
·
·
.
justify tiie fact that grown inen
as diversified as ours, fashion
Preposterously loose clothes
strut around wearing clothes
.
takes numerous fonns and many
may look silly, but
ai
least they
that
.
wo
·
uld fit Simon· Birch
:
of them are detestabie. I ain
,
in
are c
'
omfortable. Personally,
I
Fellas, l know you spend courit-
,
no way a fashion connoisseur
prefer no
:
ciothes. When iso~
less hours in the gym and
lam
but since
I
have iny own col-
lated in my apartment lam na:..
really proud of you. But
fof
umn,
I
have the opportunity to . keel ~tever)' qppoftuqity
,
and if God's sake,·give youruppertor~
critique or
.
devour
any
topic I
the threat of incarceration were
sos the cir
.
culation they deserve.
~aritand
I have e~ery ipten~i?n
·
riot)res'ent; r:
·
would
'
.
have no
.
I feel
,
guilty because lhave
of doing:jus~
~att
ea
Piw
t>t-:::
t:'qiialfus·'whh 'Jfarading
'·'
aioimd
been focusing on the flaws
in
(Tel!
.
me about 1t:-~?J
·
,
.
·
.
:,
,
.
;
i, ,
,
ptiblit:'lcompletely
·
bare
lfi,
Of
;
m
·
ale fashion so
·
allowme
:
totee
Since there are so many re-
course
'
;!the
exposing
'.
of
\
Mt:
•
offon
tlie
1
opposite
,
sexi1'Girls;
.·
~olting fa~hion~ out there and
Happy's Jack of girth would
you
know
that:g'uys
are
1
sfobs
;
1t would be unfair to ~
.
nger only. most likely
·
have
~
negative im-
and that virtually every thought
one, I will a~ck everyfonn t~at
pact on my sex life, but corisid.;
and
·
action is orchestrated by
.
·
comes to mind. Let us staf! ~1th
ering its presenf state of hiber-
rampaging libidos
:·
With this
the rave scene.
¥Y
,editor
nation, things
.
would ,not be
knowledge, may I ask why so
touched briefly on this fashion
much different.
many of you parade around
..
movement last week, but l feel
The flip side of loose; com-
McCoys wearing
·
clothes
.
th
.
at
the need to reiterate in greater
fortable clothing is of course
actually increase the rate at
detail. The pri~ary question
tight,suffocatingclothing. This
which
.testosterone
is pro-
Car(jto's articlesrriay
;
ca,use_him to
be
l9ved_bY
.
d()zens cind
as~ed whe~ try mg to analyze
,
type of garb is most frequently
duced'?
By
plastering your bod-
loathe~
by hundreds, bu~
,
~is sens~
~f
,
styl~ is
,matched
~y
this style 1s V.:hY?
,.-
Why do
exhibited by gymnasts, super
-
··
ieswithtightslacksandlo.wcut
none. He is picture.d liere about to knock em de
.
ad at hrs
ravers shop atB1g and Tall? Do
heroes and of course.
,
;guidos.
tank
tops, you are eliminating
junior prom.
'
·
.
.·
.. ··
. ,
·
'
,
.
~
.
.
l~ger pan!£ help th~m
.
_.
~aq~e
FirstandforemOst,lwouldlike
· ·
thelikelihoodof,
.
m~
_
·actu
_
ally
'.
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.,
tei-state
fo
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·
the recordlthatlbe-
.
conversing
w
.
itlY~bu~for,inte\
Ci
·
.
a~p
'
}oVePD
... 9 n~'ttget'~~'Wr
,',-::
~hg
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H1;m8iap
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'f~Hs
{,
igt
tliliiill6iJii/
1
tecliniq~e is more
ofan
;ndless
in'g
a
guid6 doesildtrequife
·
Itak lecruaf;stiiriulatiori.
h
:Honestly;!
lfiiifftigh1;
i-evea.Iinifclbttie:s
'to{
ii~~nyr
_
ri
ffiit
60
;ta
le
;
'
t!Ne
'
·(
swim through the sixth dimen-
ian heritage
.
Sever~1 criteria
you dress like you are looking
·
be quite stimulating but in a spe-
Social Darwinism i~ G<>d so if
sion, which is a dimension that
must be met to constitute the
to get laidJ:>r ~oinethiiig apd:Ao
cial kind of way
t~
The onlyintel-
_
0
•
every,ene wquld
,
make
'
war
.
not
can only be
,.
reached by ingest-
archetypal guido
·
and they are
.
not thinl(j
,
our
.
p~rents would
.
lectual s.tiiiiulationlexpe~
_
~nte
'..
lQv~,
,
we
;_
c
p
uid-ev~lve with the
·
•
_-;
·
.
.
-
·
_
..
...
1
,
is vi
_
sualiZing
·
myself
-:
pealing
-
-
i~$t
or
·
capitalistic
society.
2
3
·
4
s
11
·
12
.
yourclothesofflikeanorange .
.
PlaidTrousers:-JustbecauseI
.
· .•
peal:
·
Perhaps this femaie fash-
.
raid myino
,
ther's wardrob
.
e, that
.
ion moyeµiep(pf9,Yes ~at gen-
does no~ give you . the
.
right to
1. Chinese societies
:
6._com
9.
One
WhO
lnsisls
. .
34
14,Marl(sfor~SWOfQS
,
15. Greek letter
,
.
.
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l!:3:=-7!'"'
.
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.
,
.
:
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40
........
,
t---+--
:
18. A
mtxture
of
N
and
0
19.Til!smaybecomrnon
·
20
,
Upright
bar
.
22.
·
Lowcaloric
food
23. One billion
years
24.MJmJcs
·
26.
Sand trap
30.
Seventh
commandement
34
,
Stupid
.
35.
Alf
the
parts
36.
Compete
,
·
37.Nearto
38. Oki
instrumentot WIJi1um
·
39. Romar,
dress
·
'
40. Yalie
41. Slivers
of
wood
42.
On&
\fdlo takes pleasure
in
(C)
1998 Collcgiale
PresswireFcawres
Syndicate•
Online
at
http://www
.
cpwire.com
Last week's answers
.
43.
Sitting of
justices
in
COUit
45.
Pepper
plants
.
46.
Prepare
·
.
·
47.
Liner's
sidekick
48.
Hot beverage
51.
Sincerestcomplinent
57.
As
a
companion
.
58.
In
a pig's_
59.
It
takes
two for
1his
60. A
layer
of
rock
6Ufindu
title
62.Caldgame
63.Glvesup
64.
&mimer
souvenir
65.
Lucy's
friend
1.Clolhes
2.
R\aJ noliC8
3.
Russianrtver
4.Sedudedvtilef
5.
Pure
and INdulleraled
6.
Tire
7.PhonetlcJapanesehello
8.Funnets •
9.
Hawaiian
guitar
.
10.
Oppose
·
11.
Annoying
insect
12.
Bonier
.
13. Fish
eggs
21.
Bod(
carrier
.
25.
Muscle
straln
26.Jerome_
.
Zl.
Gille
extremeunctiOn
28.Cef1alnaxls
29.BusyilSeet
30.
Allenllon
gel!etS
31. Callo
mind
32.
Pertaioing
to
Latvian
Republie
33.
Tme spans
35.
Moottalkative
hof$8
38. Tel
that
ho!'9e
to
slOp!
39._forfat
41. F«mentedfoddefs
in
a sno
42. Thewmerlnawtll
44.
Kn!
of
cake
45.C<qln:tion
47.CoMectlon
48.Phone
C O
I.
ovo
RAD
P L
AV
SE
T I
SRAW
AMUS
NOER
RALE
TOOO
Look
for
this
week's
answers on
pg.
13
49.
Butter
8Ub8tilute
54. _
worm
50.
Edibleftst,
55.
Monstef
52. _
Bmclclnrldge
56.
Christmas
song
53.Tense
. der
:,
e"qualityh~s
.
fiilally been
raidyourgrandfather's.
.
.
achieved. Now
,
J;,
_
oth males
.
and
White. Re~pok High Tops-with
females dr~ss.to broadc
_
ast the
Velcro~tnlp
,
...
U
:
you s!illown a
.
fact that they
;
are i9 heiit
·;
,
.
c'
/
·
pair
·
9fth~se, purchasy
.
a shot-
.:.:.Th
.
e.f~;~,tiIIJs,
;
~
.
~light cha11ce
gu
_
n,. ~sert the barrel into your
thatl have ri.<.>t !nsulted,the
.
~ty-
mouth and pullthe trigger.
ci
li~tic ~llteg~ty of the entirecam-
For sqrnepne as fashionably
pus
·
, so allow :µ1e
.
to per~ist
•
Al-
critical as inys~lf, you might be
though
so:m.e
people
under the impression thatl hav~
.
innovatively intel1:wine
.
several
·
an abung~nce qffashion sense
,
:
styles within
.
their ensemble,
,
\Vrorig.
I
qp
;
riotdi~ss fashion-
that does notjustifypoor
.
ded-
·
ably, Ldiess .comfortably
.
sion· making
:
If
you w
,
e¥ ~y
.
of
,
Weather permi_tting,
L
do
,
not
the following gannents, you are
·
wear shirts tiµles~ there is a sign
due for ~ithera
.
make~over
,
<?r a
requiring jt. My hair lpoksJike
backhand, which ever comes
.
Max Headrgom after
a
urine
first
.
·
.
.
shower. lani white and I sport a
.
Turtlenecks - These make you
.
·
Kangol with an
·
OI~Ie
·
EngHsh
looklike either a dork or a fruit-
·
\)ottle\iapaiound
my
neck.
·
But
cake ~d we must remember
.
that:
.
you
k!!
.
ow
what7
·
I d
.
on't give a
we are
.
.
.
,
,.
·
·
·f-
and I'm
still beautiful.
.
GOOD
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- ~
=
--
=··
==~-----,------,,,,-,-,,..,,..,...--.:-~-------~-~-------------------------
DECEMBER 10
2
1998
.
.
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.
.
.
t·
.
.
m1ss1ng1nac
•
ion
.
by
MANDYLILFS
'
discussed ra~ism, ho'in~sexual-
lined with one of the other most
Staff Writer
.
·
ity, and immigration.· '.flus song
·
powerful bands in rock for one
'
furtherignited their Iabelof~'the
of the largest.tours of all time.
band with attitude."
,. ·
i "··
·
This is where they proved
Manypeopleknowthatlam
.
1n
·
1991; GN'R°underwenta
:
their creativity and also where
the most dedicated fan around.
·
charig~
·
in their lineup. Adler
their original work halted for
Wh~n the subject qf
.
m~sic ap- . was fired for his drug habit and
now.
peai:siria conv~rsation, I
am
al-
Strad)in left the band, not want-
;
In -1993, they released
The
ways getting asked the ques
.
~ ing to do
.
stadium \qurs .
.
This
,
Spaghetti Incident,
which was
tiori;
,
~
'What ever happened to
leftroomfornewcq!Jlers drum-
·
their album
,
of cover songs.
Guns N' Roses?"
·
rilerMattSorum,forrnerlyofThe
They dedicated it to
.
musicians
.
The bad boys
of
rock Qroke
.
Cult, rhythm gui~atist Gil!)y
who influenced
.
them through-
·
on theL:A. scene in
·1987;
,
Their
Clarke,
fromKillfor'[hrills
and
out the years
.
. ·
They recorded
firstalbum
reiefse;Appetitefor
Candy,
'
and key_poardi~t Dizzy
songs such as
Attitude
by
the
Destruction;
sqld 21 million cop-:
Reed, formerly
of-The
.
Wild.
Misfits, Blat;k Leather,
by
the
ies worldwide
,
.
This album by
During the same year, they re-
·
Sex Pistols,
and
Big Dumb Sex
;
Oeffen Records produced their
leased two albums,
Use Your
fl-
by
Soundgarden
.
In 1994,
GN'R
first three
.
hits, whichsparked
·
Oiu;io~
land
Use Your Illusion
did another remake. They tack-
their long-lived popularity. The.
II,
each selling
16
million
copies
led the
Rolling Stones' Sympa-
heavy
:
Welcomejo the Jungle,
worldwide. These albums
im-
.
thy for the Devil
for the "Inter-
the love sorig
Sweet
Child 0'
pacted today's generation with
view with the Vampire"
Mine,
and
the upbeat
Paradise
their unf<>rgettable
.,
singles
,
soundtrack
.
The-remake was
City
'
launched the
ii
care~r,
•·
Ap~
.
They release~ a trilogy
,
of power
'.
captivating and sent chills down
petiteforDestruction
contlined
ballads
from
.
these
,
albums,
the listener's back. After this
the band
'
s original lineup of which
ias
extensively played
song, the band began to split
frontman
Ax!
Rose
/
guitarists
over the airwaves and MTV
;
once again .
.
Slash went off to
.
·slash and Izzy Stradlih, bassist
[)on
't Cry, November Rain,
and
do another project called
Slash
s
Duff McKagan,
-
and
·
drt1mmer
Estranged
exemplified GN'R's
Snakepit
and continued his pro~
Steven Adle_r. The hat:d-hitting
mind blowing lyrics and ev'olu-
motion by playing at "The
group continued with'their sec-
tion of music. The three videos
House of Blues" and appeared
ond release,
Lies, Lies, Lies. ·_
all linked together with a com-
on shows such. as MTV's
This,
totally ac?ustic album sur-
mon
·
st<>ry lin~ to
_
mystify and
"Loveline,"
"Politically Incor-
prise
.
cJ the
.
w~.rl4,
Th
_
e first
·
intrigue th
_
eir
,
audience.
_
The
rect with Bill Mahr," and re-
single,
Patience,
opened the
bandlaunchedaworldtourwith
cently'TheDrewCateyShow."
eyes bf rnany
at1~
gave the fans
·
these tvio albums: They also
.
Sorum and McKaganjoined
a taste of
GN'R's
variety.
One
began touring with
Metallica
"'.ith
,Sex
Pistols
.
and
'Dur.fln
i'!
,.
rfl,M:HHRIT
-
xm~h,\~~i.f
e
9.i?1~{l=1
~tJ,;f(4tfJ.,Nqc.¥,
9J~
9l\~yj£,~~$:; D:ur.an·tmemb~i:Siito ~reate\Jtn.e:..
vers
_
tru smgle,
w
1cu
_'
c,a
_
sua,I1y.
Your/l{µs_ion~
tour
.
,
-
They he~o-:
·
baild
'
NeurotioOu'tsiders
J
ffhisr
photo by Robert John
'80s sleaze-rock kings
Guns N' Roses
have been in hiding
for several years now. MaY,be 1999 will be their year.
album was very successf~l
·
~~a
pation of th~ir new album with
contained
-
strong elements of work by possible
Nine Inch
punk. Stradlin did a few solo
Nails
members
Chris Vrenna and
projects, along with creating the
Robin Finck, along with other
band
Iv;y Stradlin and the Ju
rockers
.
On Tuesday, October
Ju Hounds.
Clarke, his oppo-
27, Geffen released a compila-
site, continues to tackle
solo
al-
tion of all
GN'R's
music videos.
bums. As the band split for
Simply named,
Welcome to the
musical differences, Rose is the
Videos;
this release gives hopes
only original member currently
to fans that an album make be
remaining. The major split be-
coming within the next year as
-
gan when Slash left the ban~.
the rumor goes.
He wanted to continue with
Knowing the imprint left on
their original rock sound and
music by the rebels of rock, the
Rose wanted to evolve.
,
· long awaited album will bring
--::,t,W.hat\is,J~ft
for; GN'R1fam;; much success, Ax\ Rose has
aiolind
:
the
,
•
globeis the
:•
antici~
·
s
'
oiiietht'n'ii'Jv hts
'
sle~v~
:
~
c
cc'''
'
"Ple~santVille'.' well-meaning and funny
·
by
JOHN SULLIVAN
.
:
Staff Writer
..
.
:
'
"Pleasantville/' directed by·
.
GaryRoss gofa
'
lotofbi.tzzwhen
it came out.Many critics praised
this film for its
'
high c9riceptidea
and witty script; Newspapers·
and· magazines alike awarded
the film
•
with
four stars and hy-
.
perbolit claims
of Oscar win--
nings.
·
First off, the film
:
is not
that good but
if is
•
one of the·
more good natured, better writ- ·
ten and well acted films
to
come
out in recent nionttis. And
·
i1f
this
'
particular movie season that
is saying
a
lot:
.
Tobe/Maguire ("The Ice
Stonn") and Reese Witherspoon
("Fear") play a brother and sis-
ter who
·
are magically zapped
·
into
a hokey '50s
tv
sliOw
called
"Pleasantvme.'' The brother is
a
;
bit
:
Jf
TV:jlinkie
1
UrbO
·
kri.ows
,
._w
..
•·.
·
•
. , :
,.
.·
...
,
·
··
r-'
; ·_·-.
the entire history of the show.
'
The
sister
is ... well
..
. very socially
advanced(tranipy) ahd r~ely
gets tlie
·
chance to
·
watch
·
TV.
When
they enter Pleasantville
-
they become
:
the
·
son and
daughter characters of the tele-
vision family,
played
excellently
by Joan AJlen
·
and William H
Macy. Now named Bud and
URGER
KEN DO
G I V E
---+--+-1-_+-~
U
S
A G E
I
i--1,~..;..+.;;;;..
I
E
N
_.,__._..._.
.
G A
E L
........
::::_+-.... ~.._-_~~
E A
ALON
~-➔---
ANGO
LEDG
--f..--t--
UCRE
LOSE
Mary
·
~ue, these visitors from
colors of reality. The more the
limited role and Tobey Maguire
another dimension have to ad-
locals of Pleasantville find out
is probably the best young ac-
j
ust to the cheesy sitcom
about things like sex, violence
tor working today. Mostimpor-
lifestyle of
_
this
"Leave
It To
and individuality, the more col- . tantly though was JT Walsh as
Beaver"-esque existence.Since
orful the town becomes. It is a
the stubborn town ald
.
erman
the brother is adept at picking
neat metaphor that Gary Ross
who rejects and fears the val-
out
·
19S0's entertainment con
-
comes up with
.
but, ultimately,
ues of the
"
real" '90s teams.
venticms, his
.
sis
'
ter
..
has to rely
"Pleasantville" spreads itself
Walsh, who has made unremark-
ori
hinn:b
deal with this odd tum
too thin.
able characters remarkable for
o( ev~'rits:
'
Thirig(siich'as
"·
in
. : -
·•'Aft'»'.ff~oui-s and IO minutes
the past decade, passed away
entire basketball team that never
one
.
get
s"'
i
the.
sense
·
that·t~e
,;c
-
;
last year of a heart
;
attack.
misses a sh9t, a mother who
writer found himself saying too
"Pleasantville''isthelast
.
fi!rn he
wears pearls while vacuuming
much
with a
script that
was
completed before
he died
and
it
and a father who says words
probably supposed to be
-
less
is
a
good testament to his act-
like "swell." The film parodies
than 90 pages. An attempt to
ing prowess. He will be missed.
the quaintness bf)950s televi-
tackle the issue of racisn:i came
Anyway, "Pleasantville"
sion
intelligently;
Twists like a
off a little hokey to this reviewer
starts off
strong
and for about
45 year old woman who has
and ended up taking the audi-
90 minutes it
is
an
enjoyable
never heard of
sex,
and a black
ence out o( the fantasy. Also,
commentary on the sterilized
and white community that re-
Williamfl.Macy'scharacterwas
moralityofpre-McCarthyenter-
jects the foreboding presence
a tad underdeveloped. The im-
tainment. "Pleasantville" drags
of color add
·
to
·
a clever script
age of a '50s TV dad slowly re-
a bit in the last twenty minutes
that, for some reason, never
alizing that dinner WILL NOT
or so but it can be forgiven be-
seems deliberately high concept
be on the table for him every
cause of its good intentions. It
(a criticism I had with such TV
night is a vivid one but I would
is rare to see such a well-mean-
themed movies as "Stay
have liked to know a little more
ing, gleeful comedy-fantasy
Tuned" and
"Natural
Born Kill-
about his personal life. Despite
these days. "Pleasantville" is a
ers~'.) Both Bud and Mary Sue
these criticisms, Pleasantville
nice break from the mean-spir-
begin to affect the sheltered
was quite entertaining and has
ited jerk comedies like
"The
comrnunitywhoseetheirworld a great cast. Macy, a versatile
Waterboy" and the all-out
slowly take on
the
unnatural
Mamet vet, made the most of his
gorefests such as
"Vampires."
.L
Circle photo/Joe Scatto
Marist's Bill Persson gets ready for his next shift
cm
the ice
during Marist's last home game. Marist is currently 6-8.
-PAGE14
IIoclcey .team'1ooking
for
Warzecha's returQ tospark
their
nm
at the SllpetEast
by
KAARENUMMEID · ·
In theii-
_
I~srgaine on the road
·
have won
.big
.. They
als◊
have
S~aff.Wd
_
ter
against .Wagner, the
·
Foxes
a-couple
_
9f tough losses.
•
One
fought ctll game long a fella go~
reason to their record is due to
Th~
~arin-
weather in D~cem-
·
short 6-5. Rinehart said he team
,
their five one-goal losses on th(?
ber is not the only thing thatis
:
played we)l:despite the los
·
s.
-
year.
-
-
.·
:_
unusual in
_
Pqughkeepsie right
.
':Vfe
played weJtmost of the
:
Marist has lookedi01pres~ive
now.
.
_
_
time but we broke down in the
this year and things are looki!}g
With
one·game left this semes-
-
last two minutes," he said.
good for BrianWarzecha's re:..
ter on December 11th against "Wagner is a good team and
tum next
.
semester, making a
C.W. Post, the Marist Men'§
converted our mistakes." .
potent offense look even more
Hockey Team finds themselves
This
time it was not the perial-
explosive, The spring semester
at 6-8.
·
ties
.
that hurt the Red Foxes, it will determine their fate. They
Losing four out of their last was two breakaway goals that
trail both Wagner and the Siena
six games; the Red Foxes find
lifted the Wagner attack.
Saints in the
.
Super East, and
themselves with their backs up
Rinehart said things like that
·
their remaining schedule is a
against the wall.
·
should neyer happen.
.
tough one.
_
.
_
Assistant Coach Kent
"There is never
an
excuse for
Their home games include
Rinehart said thafthis game
abreakaway,''Rinehrutsaid. :•1t
Rutgers; Rider, Western
.
CT,
could pick the momentum again.
helped them
win
a game in which
-
Siena and Princeton
all
of whom
''.We need
fo
get more inten-
neither t~am held more than a
-
will not go quietly into the night
sity from our guys," he said,
one goal lead."
The away games look like this;
"We need to control.-the slot
.
'Ine goal
-
scorers for, Mat;ist- Siena, Monmouth, Western CT
area in our own zont: and also
inclµded
.
Drew Bowden, Sean
and Scranton, which is a Divi-
dump the puck to allow our-
Powers, Ray
-
Kenehan, Ralph
sion 1 scqool.
speedto take over games."
Aiello and Carl ·Libby.
·
·
The New Year will bring in a
II b
.
II
k
Marist has had
·
success
Th~
:
five goals scored were
new sem~~fer .for the Marist
0
ey
a
.
ma
·
es
againstC.\V.
'
Postinprioryears,
rightin1inewiththeir4.92goa1s
Men's Hockey Team.
·
Their
-
.
_
.
_
.
.
. _
.. _
.
. . .
.
.
especially
·
in
_
Poughkeepsie,
per game
_
average
.
.
H9wever it
.
_
games wil!_ be challenging and
·
·
·
-
·
scoring over
10
goak against:
·
is tlieirdefense thatis
.
allowing
·
~ompetitive:
-
·
>.
. .
.
.
·
·
run
.·
at
·
.
MAA
.
·
.
'
.
.
c·
.
_
·
ti
..
.
·11
·
e
.
them.
.
.
.
4.28 goals per game
·
that
needs
.
.
Only time will show wliat"the
A win over Post will putMarist to be improved
fol."
the next se,-
Foxes hav~ left
for
the stretch
'
.
.
•.
.
one game under
·.soo
and set a
mester.
'.
.
.
'
.. ·.-
'
.
.
run towards
'.
a' second consecu-
but coll1es,u
.
p
.
,
.sh
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.
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rac~~
:
00.KS
:
byRYANMARAZI1_'1
' .
games
·
from the numbef seven
_
'
.
:
.
:
_
·
.
_
-
·
.
:, .
.
,
.
.
.
-·
-
SlajfWriter
~e:·~;;~~
1
J~~!:~!6iu
.
1
i·c~~
to
..
:
improve
.
,
their
dep
-
th
ill
The Marist women's volley-
trol taking the first game almost
,
·
-
~
·
_
.
~:;
1
~~A~a~i~l:d::~;e~~:i~ d!~
-
i
.
:
.
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.
t:t~;n~~~~
the u
.
-
p
·
co
m
.
lng
·
winter
Season
.- ..
where dreams come true.
stantly prov1dmg key plays to
•
·.
,-
_
·
..
· ..
.
-
•
·
-
,·.
_
.
.
.
.•
•
.
-
·
..
Orlando, Floridawas the site
keep the Red Foxes ahead ·
··
·
·
·
.
·
·
·
of the MAAC championship
throughout.
b y ~ 9 L 6 ~
;_
ence placing with added depth
:
t~
this
_
team; Galante,besides
'
.
that was being engulfed by a
Julee Cerda stands out
SiaffWriief
·
,. _ ;
·
to th
_
eir squad. In the past, the
competing
·
in the sprinting
resurgent Mari.st Red Fox vol.:.
amongst the tournaments lead:.
.
.
.
.
.
,
. .
.
.
women's track team has always
events, will hurdJe for the tea,.m,
leyball team.
ers sporting 38 kills to go along
The end i:>f
_
orte
se_aso,~ptjn~s
_.
:
'
r~J~ec(qn the strength of their
·
allowing the women to compete
ThecellardwellingRedFoxes
with44digs.
.
aboutthes~o(aj:f<>tJ:i~rfoi)lie
,
run"n:'eis to gather poirits in
.
for more pointsin the
-
field
entered the tournament as the
Marist played number nine
·_
Marist College
·
-meri'.s
~
ahd
'.
meets
."
'
.
:
_
-
events.
:
-
.
.
_
_
number lO seed and played like
seed Siena atJ
O
a.m. on Tues-
women's track teams.
.
However, Marist looks to be
Early season progress
'
shows
the number one or two seed.
day
:
after three
,
grueling
-
games
With theirrecentsuccesses on
stronger
."
with the greater:Vari-
that there is potential for this
·.
On Monday, November 16th,
the day befof~.
,
If
the
'
Foxes the
.
-
cross country cour~t!, both
·
ety
·
that
:
they pos"ses)1ofonly
.
team to continue to do well
Marist defeated
.
number 4 seed
won they\vould have been one teams look to continue the win-'-
on the track, but in·· the °field
·
throughout the winter track se_a-
Manhattan, 3 games to 1 (10-15,
win away from the champion-
ing ways on the indoor track;
·
events
,
as well.
·
_
son.
15-9, 15-14 and 15-9), continu-
ship gam,e.
·
,
However; the Red
Both teams have sent runners
.
Freshman· Jen Stewart is one
AtFDU, the women picked up
ing its torrid rampage through
Foxes"ioit.in
_
straightsets to the
to early sea~cm meets at West
·
persoriwho\Villmakeailimpact points ina couple
·
of events,
the MAAC tournament.
Saints
to
end their run .
.
-
·- -
Point and Fairleigh Dickinson
in the events where Marist has
despite §ending just a fewrun-
The victory was the third
Fairfield, who went undefeated
Univei;sity.
-
before g~ne without proper rep-
ners to the meet.
·
straight of the day for the Foxes
i~ the regular season in the
_
These meets
·
hav
,
e provided
resentation. Stewart, in just the
.
-
Junior Tara Quiqn ran to a first
defeating the number six seed
MAAC, went on to win the for the sprinters and field event
·
s~corid meet of the year, has
ai-
·
pl~ce
-
finish in the 3,000
-
-ineter
Rider and number seven seed
championship against
·
st.
competitors to ~gin their sea-
.
ready br
_
oken tl).e women's shot event and the two Distance
Niagara earlier on Monday
af-
Peter's.
son, while the cross country
.
put school record with her.throw
.
.
·
Medl~y Relay teams ran to s
·
ec,-
ter losing their first game to
runners ar~ concentrating on of3 f•3 1/4".
ond and
.
fifth place finishes, de-
Niagara on S~nday.
building
.
t~eir speed after ·
·
Shewi
.
11-also be ~ompeiing in
.
~pite not having trained for this
Marist defeated Rider in five
months of training for longer the triple jump, joining senior
·
·m~t'
·
·
·
games in a classic game of mo-
distances.
_
captain Dominque Pino in the
.
The track teams have a month
mentumexchangessettingupa·
·
This year's
.
wqmen's team· jumpingcompetitions.
:_.
·
·
'
·
offbeforetheiinextrace
Jarm-
spectacular finish
.
.
After win-
looks to improve"-c,n last year's
. Morgan Galante, another
·
ary
10th at Manhattari "ror the
ning the first t\_l/O games of the
Metro Atlantic Athletic Confer-
freshlpan, is ~so add_ing C,epth
_
)
_
asper Relays.
~~~~te~;~o:~b~~;/;ha~f:~
s
wi
.
m
.
ming:
:
M~
,
'
ri
aria
_':_
Wbm
_
·
__
.
en·
:_
co
_·
'.
ilict
be
on
the match at two games a piece;
.
::~~~~
a
spine tingling rally
their
way
;
·
to
'
a
:
three-peat_
of
the
MMe
title
.
TheRedFoxesandBroncsex-
...
c~ntinuedfrom
pg
15
Commis.sfoner'sCup
'
: · ·
·
on their
-
final standings in
.
the
changed furious rallies evoking
MAAC conference. The points
the true meaning of competi-
Blackwell
:
leads: the way;
·
- Now
~!!-t
the
ran·
season is
•
are theri totaJed among.all of a
tion. Amidst the sweat, blood
Blackwell has posted the three
over,itistimetotakealookba:ck sc~ool's sports
io
determine
and pride immersing each
best one meter scores~ and the
·
and see how
_
the Red
.
Foxes
.
~eir
,
standirig. Th;µi_ks in large
player, Marist came out on top,
two highest three meter scores
compared to
'the'
resl
·
of thi
·
part to the1r cross country and
winning 15-13.
.
for the Red Fox~.
.
.
Metro Atlantic Athletic Confer-
tennis teams,Marist is currently
Also on Monday,
t)1e
Foxes
_
Themen'sand
;
women'silext' ence.
·
•
.
.
thirdinthes~ndings. They trail
avenged their earli:et
·
1oss
t6
dual ~eet is· Friday '-against
-
The Cominissioiter's
·
cup
'.
only Fairfield and Loyola in the
Niagara by sweeping all three
Niagara at the McCann Center.
awards points to teams based
Cup
.
race.
Box Scores
Match 111/15
Marist
3
.
3
15 15
6
Niagara 15 15 10
11
15
Match2 11/16
Marist 15 15
5
9
15
--
Rider
17
3
15 15 13
Match3 11/16
Marist
15
17
16
l".'l~agai:a _
5
15
14
.
,
.
;
~-
Match 4 11/16
Marist
10 15 15 15
Manhattan 15
9
4
9
·
Match
:
5 11/17
. .
·
Marist
·
S
;;
O
8
Siena
15
15 15
1
DECEMBER 10,
1998
ff
campus
:Report-·~
.
_
:'
··
-
',
·
'.
,
.
:
;
.
·
.
·
{°·'
·.
by J~nBeighley,Jr .
.
.
:-
.
...
.
.
..
..
,
-:,
·
.
.
'-
.
•
..
.
Is R~dy Moss amazing, or
to out leap a cornej for the ball.
they h~ve had 30 to 40 more
wh~t?
•
·
.
·
·.
.
. ';,_
.
·
.
·
.
·
.
:
Mqst of the dthei J,ig receiy~rs
p~ss·es thrown their way.
.
He is not only the be'st rookie
,
·.
·
in the NFL lack the speed to burn
Factof the matteris people can
.
in the
NFL, th(?ugh surprisingly
a man deep, JJ Stokes runs a 4.6
not keep the ball away from
theie is competition iri Fred Tay-
·
40, Keyshawri Johnson' ruris in
Moss:
It does not seem that he
lor,'butheisthebestreceiverin
the
4.5,
4;6
range, Herman
can be overthrown and if he is
the
NFL.
.
·
·
;
·
·
·
Moore bas never been much of
underthrown he seems to have
This statement may seem like
·
a
·
deep threat. Goahead. Try to
this uncanny" ability to come
a possible overstatement, but
;
th!nlrof the big
·
r~ceivers with
back a
.
lid fight the defensive
ther
_
e are no flaws in his game
:
-I
the speed to get burn corners
back off for the ball or force the
know
_
what you'r~ thinking.
:
·
deep: Keep
'
thinking.
pass inter(er~nce call. He has
·
Jerry
·
Rice;
·
Antonio Freeman,
.
For
the season Moss has
'
had,
.
t120
yards on
55
catches and
Cris Carter, HerinanMoore
;
arid
there have not.been ~at many
14 touchdowns. The amazing
Carl- Pickens'are· all established
.
balls thrown his way. He has 55
thing is ~h~t Moss was not sup-
receivers that have ~een ·doing· rebeptions, ·that works out
to
·
posed, to'be doing this. He was
it
for
years. This is ·a:pointwell
ju
.
st over four catches
·a
game:
not eve_n suppo
_
sed
to
be a
tak:en and it is definitely valid;
Iri> his 13 career NFL games,
starter on the VikirigS: What we
but
·
the
·
·
things Moss
·
has done
there have been 86 bails thrown
nave seen is the start of the next
this
·
'year
i
art'! unheard of for a
·
his way, or 6.6 attempts a game.
gteat career in the NFL. He is·
rookie recei".er.
.
That leaves
3
·
1
:
·
uncaught
not going to be Jerry Rice, no
.
Moss is'6-5 anchveighs
·
·
210
passes:
Of
those
31
passes,
one ever Will be, but he will be
p6u~ds'. He
is
as big and as tal-
only
two
have been dropped
·
by
'
·
one of the best to ever play.
ented physically
C
as any other
Randy Moss .. Conversely, Rice
. How'.inany
teams
passed
'
up
receiver iri
_
the
NFL:
:
He was· an has
.
dropped eight
·
balls; blithe
·
on Mo
s's'
because
b(his'°'
his-
aU:,:state basketbalJ:player
fo
has had a bad year,Fieeinari
;
tory?
'·ph
yeah', fr'was
'·
abou't
West Virgirifa. He ru·ns a4340
1'
sorri'eotie·in ·his :prime and
'
dne
t\Vo~thirds ofthe league. Well,
yard· dash, He has the'speed
'
to
.
of the
best
recdvers in the game,
all opposing GM;s can do now
burr a cornerback d~ep, ~he
has also dropped_8 ~alls.
·
Each
is sit back and watch and hope
strength to muscle them out of of them has puf up numbers
that orie_day they can devise a
the way ano the:jumping ability
similar to those of Moss, but
way to stop
·
the unstoppable
.
PAGElS
-
~
,
hat's
on Tap?
Men's basketba,~ 12/12@ American University
5:30p.
_
m.
.
.
Women's basketball 12/12 Home vs. Colgate 2p.m.
.
12/20 @ Holy Cross 1 p.m.
.
.
.
Swimming and diving (M&W) 12/11 Home vs.
Niagara-University 4:30 p.m.
Indo6rtrack
(M&W)
1/lQ
@
·
Manhattan, Jasper
Relays
9
a.m'.
·
.
.
..
.
.
...
.
.
~
'
t
·
:
'
'
.•
·
.-.
T~ugh
Trivia
When
-
was the last time a MAAC team won a
game in
_
.
the
NCAA
tournament?
.
·
•
·
-
..
·-
~
~
j:
.
;Ji1;:?
.,
Last weekis
:
question
~
-When was the last time the Division I
·
tollege
·
ba:sketball national champi.:ni was undefeated?
Answer - The 1975-'76 Indiana Hoosiers went through the
entire season undefeated, finishing 32s0:
.
•
•
. . . . . . . .
•
·
L . . . . . .
~CC)mbinefor
9-lstartindtialmeeh;
by
THOMAS
RYAN
-
.
,
Joss t~
·
seton
Hitli
Univer~ity as
.
'
,
.. .
Sports Editor
-.
a ble
,
m
_
ish._on theirr~corf Both
teams are undefeated in confer-
.
T~
Marist~men:s and
·
ep.ce meets at 3-0.
t
.
..
•
0
\\l~me,
,
rJJs:.sv;.iriiiI}mg
anf
diving
-
?~
~ )
5~~tfrttJltW~
teams are off to fine starts once
<
defending
men
's-MAACchanf·
again this
,
•
.
pions comes as little surprise.
season~
·
....
.
<
:
:
,
;
.
~:·
:
~
-
·
,
La,try
Van,
Wagqer) Red I:1?xes
.
The m
_
en'steams are currently
'.
have
;
defeated
,
non:conference
5-0 in dual meets, while
·
the
foes Seton Hall and Central Con-
women
_sit,
~t
._
4., 1, with only a
•
riecticut
'
State, as \\'ell as MAAC
.
.
..
rivais Iona, Rid~r. and Fairfield.
Th
_
e.~on;ien also have ,not been
a surprise, as they a:re also two~
;i;;~~~~~~tJ~t
PJrates prevents them
'
from an
undefeated campaign
.
They
·
have
·
also beaten CCS, Iona:
-
.
Rider,
attd
F.rirfield
iri
dual
meets
·
this season.
Th~ men's squad top per-
former is sophomoreba~e Dob-
Also swim~irig well t'or
,
Marist
bins. Dobbins has posted
is sophomore Keith Nichols.
Marisff top thf¢e
times
in the , , ·Ntchols'has Marist's fastest two
100 freestyle, ii's
.
top
•
twptiriles -·'.times
fo
the 1000 freestyle and
in the 200 freestyle,
antfft's
first
200 meter backstroke. He also
and third top. times in the 50
has been a part of Marist's fast-
freestyle.
.
.
, .
.
·
.
est two relay teams
..
He has also been
a
key pai:t of
As
far as divers go, Chris
the Red Foxes fastest 400 meter
relay teams, which
came
against
..
please see
SWIMMING,
pg
.
14
CCS and Seton Hall.
;,,_.
:,
,
...
'.
"
:'.~
,
~
;
'.
. •
r
;-;·
_)
;
q
_
~-
·
.
f
~
:~
:
:.
['.·:i
i
.
!~~-
~
... ':
:
:
;
-
-~-
..
4;
:..·,
':.:;
~.
'.
:.•·
.
•.
.
.
-
..
:
II
I
IME
'
-'mllE
i
llEIIE&GT· G'l'FT
~.):'
.
~:.~_"
·."
,
.•..
:
.
.
"
.
,·
.
.
.
__
,
,
('
.
.
_
~
~rt~!d
\
~
a
:~
~iJft:
t~r
ji@Ql!
~
1
~
m~~iii~te,
,J
10~
_
~6niate, -
.
or
.
~riy
_
of
_
yo
~r
.
f~i
e~
d~?
\
~~0
:
fil
i
fai
:}
ljlt
·-:
f0r
:
:
M~iir
:
{~t~t~t!?118S'
:
IBist?
.
·
.
.
•
•,
,
.
. .
.·.
:
.
.
.
·
-
··::
· ..
fullci
;i
j~Jj&
,;
§~f!~~ij
g
!~lijj
'··
·
'
.'
'
i
·
ill!~li~
';
~~
~
qa:v~
,
a
,
cpuple
,
of
,
great_
gift
ideas ..
.
•
l:t~ffjJ
1
~j(t
t
~
f
~li~i(fff)~-f<~11
·
long
ai.Stance.
BiejijiiJ
f
f&i
1
1
1.ilJI
~21~1
• ,
. _
·
,
·
·
_
·
'
f
!!i~!tt,::tt~f
t~f
f
\
{!U[:Clii$?d
at
our
Foxnet Student Telephone
F0r
·
fi.u;tlier·
-
d~~iis
,,
aj14
,
pUfip4~i11g
illfonnation, give
us
a
can
at
.
(9l#l
:
51S
-
~4A
:
Q
:
Q;
.
M(:)n(iay
·
thr()ugh
·
Friday,
8:30-5:00.
.
..
·
~✓
:
~
.·-
M
.·
·
~
.
-
~
:
,L
.
·
tf?/1111l1·~A~~A
l11A~A~
JL
~
!!'!'!JA/U,.,..,,~
~tJll"Jt!"
e,.1'1AI
I
·
t!ff-,,;r'rT
·
·
·
·
~ ~
rwarr~
·
~
-
7~~
.;;>
I~
.
~~,
.....
Stat
of
the Week
note o _tbe·Week
Senior gaurd Bobby Joe'
TH£
CIR.CL£
Hc1tto#i,s~Oth
in
thecoun-
s· · -. .
· t ·
··
·.-
·
·
·.
o~!~!;::;!~·::m~:u~i~~•i
R~av.;:;:~:i..i:g:~:;;:;,:98~.;.;.;..,---------·-----\·
.
0
r
s
"We·
need
to
focufon our
jobs
7
as individ~ajs
t<>
form
as
~nerun;. Everybody has
to play _their role.''. -
B~th
Sluicke
womens
basketball
'PAGE-16;
Re£ord-bffllkjngstiJrt.formen's-h()()ps
by
JEFFD~CKE
..
Judging by the strong tum~ut . the_ fans att~nding the games
in .
best teru.ns.
f:1
: e league
I(::
·s:f
!t~
1
::!rd~~~~i:e;:n1
. Staff Writer
for Friday night's game at the .
full
force.
. : . ·_
. .
··..
knew,,we .
~
to attac
.
Peen
was
limited to
H
minutes
James_ J. Mccann ~~nter, stu-
. "It means afot to ,?s that ~e early, he said. . . . . ·
·
of
·a!tion
and was .later diag-
The Denver Broncos are not
the only undefeated team out
there.
dents seem to be excited about · students . are here, he said.
The game remm~ed ,close
- . · d
w·th
a
heart ailment that
this teain
_
_
__ .
'.'That helps us a lot and gets us
throughoutthe first
l
mmutes
n~se
-1 . .
.
.
.
d fi
The Marist men's basketball
team, at 6-0; is off to its best start
in it's· Division
I
history. The
Foxes-defeated Manhattan, 60-
58, last Sunday to remain un-
Head ~oach Dave Magarity. pumped upt
_ .. ,.,
ofthefir~thalf,asSienatiedthe
~
1
11
keep him stdelmed
1ll el-
and the rest·ofthe Foxes were . _ Siena carneto Poughkeepsie
score at 36 on a Scott Knapp
rutely.
.
. . _ .
l d
sopleasedwiththe_studenisup-
with an u~blemished record of -~ee-pointerwith 1:18_t~pla_r .. sunday
:rv~~;~
tra:ee fir~i
port thafthey remained on the' their own notto mention a 2-0
W1th
4~
seconds remammg m
Manhattan, mar ng
court after the final buzzer to
mark against the Foxes last sea-
the half, freshman _POintguard
road g~e of the youngf seasthon
beaten.
.
.
thank
the
fans.
son ... · _
.
·
_ ·
.
-Sean Kennedy regained the lead · after,gomg 3-12 away ~om e
"Hopefully this is~the start of
Marist carrie out'looking to at-
forMarist with a 30-foot heave
Mccann _Center last ye_ar.
kn
. The victory over the Jaspers.
came after a 93-8Twin over the
Siena Saints on Friday and a 72-
55
triumph over Harvard on
Tuesday.-
a ·great year,'' Magarity an-
tack the Saints' full-court pres-
that banked in to beat the shot
. That being so, Maganty
ew
· ·
d·t _th-
d
·
thi.
· ·
fi · ·
d
clock
.
_
it-would be a test..
nounce o e crow .
sure, some . ngJumo~ orwar
.
. .
. . -.. -d·th··
"I ,
.
t b a tough situ
After the high-energy contest,
Joe McCurdy· said was key to '
Kennedy's prayer s~fte
e
. t s gomg
o
«;,
.
. -
senior guard Bobby Joe Hatton
their
success:
.
momentum back to the reener-
ation do~n there; he said ~;i~r
emphasized the importance of
"Siena is probably one of the
gized Red Foxes, as they tacked · to the
trip
to _Manl:)-attan.
I,t s
· on three free throws in the final
usually the time when you re
30 seconds, going ·to the locker . most vulnerable ~o_get b~at."_
Lamb off to
a
slow start .in
her first season
at
MaFist
by
RYANMARAZITI
Staff Writer
shots, but it was not enoughas
uted a lot," Hollister said.
they fell short 63-53. For the
"They're 'a vital part of the
game, the Foxes shot37% from
team."
·
Women's Basketball at Marist
the field, 21 % from three-point
Lamb's roster boasts six new
is underway and new head
landandameager9-of-18from
players. At6'3",DiesdaSiedel
coach Kristin Lamb -may be in
the line.
has jumped into the starting ro- ·
·fora rough ride in her first sea-
Vallery netted 16 points and
tation at center and has played
sori.
. freshman Antoinette S_aitta
solid averaging six points and
The former UCONN co-cap-
scored 12 and. grabbed
4
45
rebounds per contest.
tain has celebrated once ttµ-ough
boards_. Lehigh held Shackel tQ
Against Boston U,niversity, the
the team's first
4
games ofthe
only
3
points on l~of-5 shoot-
RedHookNYnativegrabbeda
'98-'99 season. That lone vie""
ing despite her grabp~ng; 6
per_s~maL. §~ason highlP re-
tory came on December 2rid at boards anddishing.out4'assists;
b_o_q_µ,ds_
'J.J,•j1_1{(;_'
:_J_!J_q _'./UlV_TJt,_nr;
AmiyWl1trelli~t,iidyRelif6{e§ .
S_hiitkeGaida
latic.~Hiiiiaa=
:;r;;foni-White and Antoinette
shot a'blistering .500 from -be-
~entil.ls was a major'factbr con-
Saitta '.have also been cast;irito
hind the arc and .762 from the
tributing to the foss.
.· , '
tlles~~g I"ole at
.
times. White
charity strip!!. Co-captain Beth
· "We didn't do the litt.le things
robi~es w1th.sophomore _Cortnie
·shackel, who was unconscious
likeboxing out," Shackelsaid.
Ciaccio aqhe two-guard and
drilling 5-of'-Ttreys,Jed the Red
~'Their guards had too many re-
Saitta.rotates with sophomore
Foxes. Shackel also added 7 re-
hounds.'!
. ,
_
_
pow~rhouse,Tara Knight ..
bounds and
2
assists. Forward
As for the s}ow start, Shackel
White's twin sister, Lashonalso
Sabrina Vallery als9 contributed
said the Lady-Red Foxes defi- , plays fqr theRed Foxes.
15,points while hitting 7-of-9
-
nitely need to step up and score
Frosh Maii.e, Fusciregi§tered
frmn the stripe. Sophmnore Tara
more.
. _
.
the· highest singl
,
e-game point
Knight grabbed
8
boards fgrthe
~'We can't win shooting only . fotalfor the.season; blazing-the.
Red Foxes:
28% and scoring 17 points in a., nyion foc30 against Bost9n,··
· Assistant coach· Casey half,','. Shackel said.
_
.
_ University. Fusc.i sh9tJQ-for-
Hollister said the vkt9ry wasa
.fhristinaHenry'.yii$ the bigµ;-= [f2rfron{tlfe'.ijeldr.drijniµg7:of-
result. of.a co,tp.bination:
ijf
b'~t'&ihifoiit:playeft·iii'dotibie
t}
16 ffdrni{owrhownwhlle grab-
things. .,
?..:
7
:.S _
_
·
·
figui:es :f9r Lehigh (5-2) netting · · .. bing sev~n .rebounds,
:.;-;A.ijµy,W'k5
~tqughgame.
lJt1t
.
·
P
along "Yith ,'.\.lc::xis Be:vingtgn; . ·, M:.tiist
~ill
hos_t Colgate tllis
ourcaptains:stepped up and w.e ··tehigh::9ut-rebounded'Manst
Saturday, Qecember.'lith at
piayed great team defense," said
48-35, providing the margin for
McCaim:. Mari.st lost to Colgate
Holli_ster.
.
victory. It was tlle fir:Sttime all
lastyear76-7L
_ _ _
.
_
Marist sports a man:-to-inan. year that Marist had been out-
·
Shack~l "'said perfe,cting the
-• .defensive scheme but rotates it · rebounded: ·
·
_ ·
.
fundamentals is·a key to being
with
a
i
:..2-2 zone. The zoneal-
This year's freshman have
successful on both offense and
lows Marist to utilize its quick-
b_een v:iajor contributors and .defense against Colgate.
ness as a help~defense, which · Hollister said their play wiH be
"We need to focus ori our in..,
is very effective against teams
instrumental throughout the
dividualjobs to
form
as a team,"
with.a strong outside garqe.
season.
Shackel said, "Everybody has
Unfortunately, Marist has had
''The· freshman have contrib-
to play their role.''
a tough -•time •controlling.the _ _ _ _
;__ _ _ _ _ _
- - , - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - - - - ,
tempo of a· game .. A concern
Hollister says they need to im-
BoxScore:
prove on._ .
.
12
-6-
98
"We need to take care of the
ball a little \;letter," Hollister said.
The Red Foxes faltered in the
same department last year, un-
able to consistently· work -the
ball aroun9 and wear do.wn the
- clock en-route to a 3-15 confer-
ence record.
.
.
Marist trav~led to Bethlehem,
PA" to face LeQigh. University
this past Sunday. ,An 8-for-28
start for the Red Foxes put them
in a deep hole, trailing 38-17 at
the half.
Valle
Saitta
Seidel
Whit
· Shae
Cia
Anderson
Fusci
WhiteL.
Knight
Stephens
TP
16
12
2
4
2
9
6
3
1
0
2
0
6
0
1
·3
5
0
0
0
1
4
2
0
2
0
The second half was more
successful for the Red.Foxes as
they connected on 12 of 26
L-----------------------1
room with a 42-36 half time ad-
Led by Hatton s 11. pomts m
vantage.
the first half, Marist held a 28-
In_ the. second half, consecu-
26 advantage at the break. They
tive three's by Bo Larragan,
would go up by as many as nine
playinghisfirstgameaftermiss-
points in the second, before
. ing the._first four with a shoul-
sophomore Mars Mellish's two
derinjury, and Hatton extended
three's sparked a 12-3 Manhat-
. the Marist lead to eight with
tan run.
12:23 remaining. Hatton then
With 43 seconds left in regu-
tipped in a Donald Vale miss,
lation, the Jaspers tied the score
capping off an
s~o
Il]n and giv-
at 58 on a three-point play by
ing the Foxes a comfortable
60-
Durelle Brown, the third tie of
50 cushion.
the game. .
Siena- did not get any closer
Marist had the answer,
than five points the rest of the
though; as Hatton hit a 12-foot
way. Hatton·banked a three off fade away jumper with 1.9 sec-
an inbounds pass with a minute
onds to play to give the Foxes
_ t<?
go _to be~t tpe ,shm ~,lgck\ a
the "'.in. . , ... __ .
s'tiodhtit'"
rcfoed
to
be'
the' final
.
H
tt
n. 20th .
n'
the' country in
;,11.;1r.n<«(
R,.o-•~~
f('
"C.
r"~-~I'(:"
,.,l«Bn•·;.,,,,;t,
1•:c
!.'1:u·,,, , ..
nrutm·me coffin of tlie Saints. ·
assists, said he Just dtd what he
Hatton led Marist with 16
was supposed to do as a leader
points .. -Vale was hiig~ off the
of the Red Foxes.
bench with 14 points in 21 min- ·
"This is my• senior year,"
lites. Kennedy proved invalu-
Hatton told the Poughkeepsie
able against the tough· Siena
Journal.
"I
have to make those
defense, -committing only one
kinds of plays for us. to win."
turnover. Ma:rist's only down-
Earlier in the week Marist used
fall of the game was their free
a huge effort: by McCurdy, a
throw.shooting; as the !_led- gameMagaritysaidwasthebest
Foxes converted on "arely half o_ne Mccurdy has had in his
of-their auempts, while the career at Mari st, to defeat
Saints went 33-of~37 from the
Harvard. . - .
.
Iii}~. '.".: _-.
.
. _
.. ____ ... _
·
McCurdy scored 15 points,
··'1\1.c.Curdy,Larragan,andfresh-
grabbed
12·
rebounds and
man gaurd Richard Smith all
blocked three shots in the win.
scqred in double figures for the
Cielebak and. Jason Hastings
. RedFoxes..
... each added 12pointsfortheRed
After the game,Magarity said
Foxes.· The win looks even more
that the victory over the Saints
impressive considering Harvard
· proved the Red Foxes were a
had !:!eaten the Boston College
· go6d team.
.
.
_
.
·
Eagles of the Big East-Confer-
i•aoing into tonight every-
ence earlier in the season.
b9dy still was a little leery or
Marist will be in action this
skeptical as to how good we
Saturday when they trav~l to
·were,",
he
said. "Tonight sort of · Cornell, their final stop before
,validated this team." .
heading out. west to take on the
Qrie unfortunate piece of ne\Vs
Arizona State Sun Devils on De-
that came out of Marist's win
cember22.
52.9.1
52.9.2
52.9.3
52.9.4
52.9.5
52.9.6
52.9.7
52.9.8
52.9.9
52.9.10
52.9.11
52.9.12
52.9.13
52.9.14
52.9.15
52.9.16
· ..:.FEATURES~ ..
December
is
a
month of
. many
ce.1e6ratlo11s, pg~
s
-i-~
·1spo'.R.Ts2
The Ivlarist
hockey
te,aril'
s_
showdownwith:Wagner
did ·nor
turn out
as
they
h~d_ 1.J.<>ped, pg.J6,.
VOLUME#52
ISSUE#9
Happy Holidays!
t
DECEMBER 10, 1998
"W~~t<C~dar parkillg ·
lilliited
for
resid.ents
..
'
.
,,
. · by
JAIMETOMEO
Sta}f Write_r
thei-e;yetwhenthiscomplexwas
keep it open because wehave
· b~ili:, parking for only 116 ve-
·receiv~d complaints from the
· hides was made available to resi-
students who live over there,"
West Cedar offers hiiic:Hin
the
dents.
he said:
.
.
.
\Vay
of
ru:nenities tostud~nts,
Simon Hecht,
a
senior resid~nt
·
The
Resident Sttident Coun-
. . yetJti.~
·
lacking in a crus~al _area
assistan.t at West Cedar, s_aid.
the ..
cil bver ih West. Cedar has also
. -:.parking:t:<:< . . · ..
•.i.:.'X
t
.
.. /·
·problem:is
·
not only thafthe~e beenworkingonrectifyingthis
Joe-Leiuy,"director of safety
was not enough_spots· created.
problem. They worked with
and security, said thitthe
"People with.permits.from
Marist security to get 12 more
amount of spots needed:is un- . other lots park
in
West Cedar,-
·spots added on the eastern end
predictable.
·
taking our spots," Hecht said. _ of the lot.
'.'.We don't know how many
Another dilemma, besides the
Security was hoping to create
people o·ver there are\ going;
·
to · lack of parldng, is the misuse of even more parking after the con-
want
fo
bring cars inr
Ile
said. . the lot 'its
.
elf.
·
Students have
struction crew cleaned up and -
"Thej.:e is no-way th.at we can
guests stay with therri and their
vacated the premises. However,
supply parking'. spaces for(ev--=
guests park in spots· that are
the blacktop manufacturers are
. ery sfoden.i":ov~r there that designated for residents.
.
closed for the winter, which
wishes to bringJ.car\
·
Leary said secudty has been - means these spots will not be
· West Cedar is tlie)1ewest ad-
tryit_:1g to curb :utegal parking . available until spring.
· d_ition toMaristCoJlege's hous- ·, there .. -
. :, ' •
.
. ·
•
··.' -
:
·• · .. ) ::·····•,·)"''' -::
·
<
i;,-,·
•
. ·:
-·c~,•:,,,:,~,:.;'~f:0?£',,.:fc;':"-'9.irclw~!>ll'/'J'?'i~~l!O.
;;ing:rit'ogram,;.Whi}eiitJias
aJiv-:-: ... -'
,;:•.we:ha'le;beenputting a.full
- A West,Gedaq:>,arkmg lot fire zone ha:s recently been~-:· ~
~
.,:;:~.~---·~ ... ,,. . ••;,,
·-°ti'4-"
"'·''t-:-t
1
:s--"•
-
,_ ·· --,
r·--··- .. •). -· .. , .. -" .... ·
'f -···
please.see.PARKING.pg. 3
··, ··•relTl?~ea,JdYpro~id~\~xtr~?p_?i~i_nij~foFf~'sfci~~t~:t:pr,:y:;r:
·
\;'C
:
jf/4~1fJa}Af1ii~;;flfi~;f~i1ci2\;(tlWJi~i:lt?:flleir·::~-;o
-
·
mtz{:Ef·:,::t-~-a··-.>:i;_~:.l'!l·i,~::Jis:r~?~··
.
~-
-:.1.}~fi-----.1r.a:: -
~t
·Ji1e11~ -._,
.
···.·c(JJl~i~t~a:i~no~ .
.
-
. bytJm.ACIMl\.flNO
_· Staff Writer. .
'~SJµndiiig' .
a .. ••
up.-,,
... · _
..
.
:::-.agqfnstthis
is~uf"is·.
. . Mari~.t College.: h~s Jane-. .
in
the
besi
interest<Jf
·.
'.
tioned seven freshmen and the ..
·
. .
·
, . . . . ,, .
.
_
members of thenon-Marist af.:
eyeryone
filiated locaLTau Kappa Epsi-
. -
Ion (TKE) fraternity chapter in -
lieu. <:>fevents that took,_place
.·Rick:. Winters.
TKEBrother ..
on Nov. 6.
. _ ·_ · . .
.
The sevenfreshrrien involved
untilDe6:j1,
t999>'
Stoddard
rec~iveci letters from Marist's .said, ·"IM violate any code of
OfficeofHotisingandResiclen~
conduct; it's immediat~ dis~
tialUfeNov. 12: Thelettersin-
missal, (aJ!d)lh~ve to'clo
100
. formed the students
of
di~ciplin-
hours of community. service·
ary actions.taken upon them by
.
·v.ri.th
campus
~nistry by mid-
the college.
. •• ·· '
term ofnext semester.".,
...
Larry
Stoddard, one_ofthe
. J\ccordin}fto thelett~f from
seven freshmen· involved, said . Sarah English; qfrector ofHous.: .
he has been put on probation:
ing,
th~
fre~hmen · are also «re-
"l'
m on disciplinary probation
quired t()Hve in MaristCollege
·
· residence halls for the remain-
WUKLYPOLL
~ -
·
~
Do you think r.
Rogers should be
this year's
commenc~ment
speaker?
YFS
NO
44
81
SEE RELATED STORY, PG. 3
Tms
is on
,mscimtifie
sur.q
u,J;mfrom
125
Marist
studmts.
der of your stay at
M~si
µp to
arid including your senior year.'?
English said slJ.e cannot c:om:.
· ment on the letter.
''That's a personal letter, so I
can't talkat?out it," site said.
The freshmen, who were as-
sociate members pledging the
· TKE ·
fraternity, took part in a
unity event where they at-
tempted to "kidnap" James
·Tavares, a TKE brother. Tavares
was a willful participant, accord-
ing to the members ofTKE.
... please see
TKE,
pg. 3
Circle photo/Joe Scono
Jen Bowen picks out an ornament from the Giving Tree located in Lowell Thomas.
· ·
GivingT~aidsneedy
by
JESSICA SMITH
·
"I think people are aware that
StaffWriter
this is an opportunity to care
about the poor and that's what
·It is almost Christmas and the
Christmas is about," he said.
Giving Tree Project is keeping
The
Giving Tree is beinirun
the spirit alive by helping those
for the eighth year at Marist, and
in need,
is being sponsored for the first
Brother Frank Kelly, director · · time by Campus Ministry, which
of Campus Ministry, sa!d the
has
1J2
members. ·
·
entireMaristcoininµnityis:get~ . There
are
25 families being
ting fovolved and realizing the
sponsored this year.
deeper.meaning of the holiday
because of the Giving Tree.
•··
please see
TREE, pg. 3
INSIDE
TODAY:
Partly Cloudy
hi:42°
. lo:23°
Conununity ................. 2
Features ..................... 5
A&E ........ ; .............. 11
Opinion ...................... 9
Sports ........................ 16
"
,!
,,
·'
I.
..
■
.
Awaterand power outage dis-
.
rupted the South End
.
's
.
McCann,
.
Leo,
.
Sheahan and
'
Byrne buildingsNov.19.':fhe
w
·.
h
'
·
·:
·
i
·
,
.,.
d
'
..
· .
.
h
·
.:
·
t
ThreeWestCedarresiden~
;ir:~;f~~!{~;;;;;;~;
.
.
.
..
a
.
.
·
·
·
..
..
.
.
Q
you
Ope .
'
o
.
werewatchingtelevisionintheir
throughout
.
the
-
day'. in
.
.
-
-
·-.e-~
.
·
.
h
'
h 1
• d
'
.
..
?
"
~j'.~f=~:s::n!f.E~
~lr£!:~~~~~~~~'.
get.or. t e
01 .
ays.
female talking with one another.
·
tioning transfonner off campus.
The two· residents
.
climbed the
Repairs were made arid the lights
stairs after hearing the two
were restored by 3:30 p
.
m.
·
A
voices move into the shower.
.
non-related water outage
.
oc-
About
45
minutes after the
curred around the same time,
voices were heard, the bath-
disrupting the SouthEnf aiid
room door opened and an -un-
the Dysoq and L
_
oweJl Thomas
known male and female, mini-
buildings. Central H~dson also
,,
mally clad, ran from the house
dealt with this problem, finding
as the three residents stood
the malfunction on Fulton
stunned. The residents
fol-
Street. The ~ater was ~estored
low~d the. unknown
.c:Ollple
out
CaJTlpus-wide by 4:30 p.m.
"·
,
the door, but~:the: tW.<11 disap:r;
.'.':
'piJH1is/e
SECURITY;
'
pg
:
1
,
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·
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:
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.
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.
.
,
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'
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,
.'
.
:
.
.
.
FRIDAY:
SATURDAY:
SUNDAY:
'
-
'Spend
·
soff!-e_
,
quality
:·
.
time
with
'frierids q,nd
family at home
.
. And
rest because classes
·
"Time-tobe
•
with my
.
;}amlif"'
·
_,,
.
.-:
·-
;
.·.
partly
cloudy
partly cloudy
hi:
44°
lo:
28°
'
hi:
44°
lo:
24°
partly cloudy
.
hi:44°
.
'
,
'
.
"I want the Mets to
·
sign Roger Clemens
so al[the Yankee fans
can
get
off my
back!"
.
arid
MCTV
-
:liave
.
:·
_
be~n
.
redl1y-
·
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·
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Up
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Graduate
,
ctassesmeet
January
4,
s,
6, 1,
11, 12,
13,
14, 19,
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untess
o~rwise
noted.
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MORNINGS
·
- 9:00
a.m
-12:45
plm.
_
.
.
i
ART
·
·
\12sL:.111
ArtiiandValues
·
'.;
..
·
.,
·,.
Virg!nia
~~rquarctt
'
COM
.
202L-.-111
,
Corrimunication
Ethics·
_
DarreURoe
.
.
.
__
>
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.
~oM
i
,;
310L-.-111
.
·
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Chfi~f
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ECO.N
.
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Pri.n~iples
ot!Vl_i
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c_r~·~c;on.qrnics
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'
Greg·Mach~cek
·
.
·
, ... J
HISTJBQ~~}~).\11f
.
:,,
,
,
History
.
Qf
Ameri~n,Presiden
_
cy
Martin
Sl')a,
_
ffE!r
(Dual
List~d,)
·-.-
,·
.' :
MATH
:
,
13
.
0L"'.'111
.
)ntroductory
Statistics I
_
·
Kathi
Timm
·
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PHIL
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300l~111 ·
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Et~ics
:
·
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Melley
.,-s,
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PSYC
.
: 101L-.-111
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lntrqducfory P~yphology
.
Lon
Cnspifll_eter
delRosa~lo
PSYC
.
317l•111
.
..
.
·.
Child Development
.
.
Linda
Dunlap
·
··
....:·.
·
.
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' ,
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·
.
.
.
.
.O.FTERNOONS -1:00
p.m.
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pJn:
·
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' ' '
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COM
·
25-5L'--112
.
·
Communicating
·
ori
the
lntem'et
:
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pennings
:
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·
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289L-112
·
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Writing (Diial
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as
ENG327)Dc>1.iglas Cole
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.
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REGISTRATl~N:
:
Registrations
for_Mar.i$(Qpllege'
'.
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.
_
EC
.
ON
·
·101L-J12.
·
·
,.
pririciplesof_Macroeconoinics
'
·
Nor~
VanValkenburgh
..
. ·
..-,~
·
and
visiting
students
wiR
·
be
accepted
'
evetfwork~
.
·
MATH· 108L~112
lntermed~t~Afgebra
.
·.
·,
·
Bro.
Ra~saurL
:;,
:
.
·
:_,,
.
,
·
day
thi'oughbctobe"i-19-
becifrntier
1
Sat th~ Gradu"'.
REST · 209L~112
Worfd Reltgtons
·
·
·
:
Evan
Pritchard
·
ate and c;o111:1nu\ng Education Office,
Dyso11
ce
_
nter
127
or'
at
ttitf
extension
.
centers
'
in
.
Fishkill
and
Goshen.
EVENINGS -
6:00
p.m. •
9:45 p.m.
.
ART
145N-234
Basi<i
Photography
Dan McCormack-
~
·
·
-
.
COM
270L-234
·
OrQaniZational CommiJnication
·
leo
_
McK8nzie
.
.
•
·
· : .
.
.
TUITION: $315
per
credit,
total
cost
fora tllree credit
'
.
COM
287L-234
TV
Production
Michael
McCartney
course
is
$9r~-
lJ1e ~~ratiort fee
($30)
is
~ue
at
_
CSIS
152L•365
·
MS-Excet (1cr
.
, 1
-
week only)
.
Tom Rhode
Goshen
·
registration;
the
balance
($945)
is
DUE NO LATER
CSIS
153L-365
.
Exploring Internet
(1cr., 1
week
only)
Tom Rhode
.
Goshen
THAN DECEMBER 18. Tuition for High School
Stu-
ENG
235L-234
Literary Genres: Fiction
Kathi
Norklun
dents
is
$300
for
a
3-Credit
class.
ENSC
101
L-234
Introduction to
.
Environmental lss Tom
Lynch
.
HIST
228L-234
America Since
1945
Lucien Mott
HOUSING:
If
you
rurrently
reside
on
campus
and plan
HIST
249L-234
Eal1y
Modem Europe
John
White.
on
ta~ng
a
winter Intersession
course the
cost
of
PHrL
103L-234
WortdViews
and Values
Mar Peter-Raoul
housing
will
be
_
$35.00
per
week
for two
weeks.
For
REST
201 L-365
Religion in America
Don Drewitt
Goshen
additional
infonnation contact
the Housing Office
at
575-3307.
TRAVEL COURSE (Barbados)
MARI ST
PSYC 215L-235
Psychology
of Interpersonal Communication
John Scileppi
( January 4 - January 17) permission of instructor required. Fee: $1040 - $1170
+ tuition
THECCIR<CLH
DECEMBER 10- 1998:r--_ _ _ _
.;..,__·
N
.
ews _· ____________
P
.....
'.A __
G __
E ___
3
TREE:
.Gift
donations aid
1ocalfamilies·
· ... continuedfrompg. 1
Richard Tollen, -head of the
Giving Tree conunittee, said the
, families were compiled by four
local agencies
·
including
Dutchess Outreach, the Grace
.
,
~mith House, Family Services
)ind.
.
tpe C~tli.erine Street Con1-
munity Center.
·
-,,• The project entai_ls students
picking_ ornaments off various
-__ trees··lo"ii,t~djn Qonnelly, ·
::Dyson; the Student.Center and
-the Cabaret! Onthe ornaments
is ,written'the ag~. Se?( and.de-
• sired giftoftheJarnily member ..
The gifts fit one of three catego- ·
ries: household needs, personal
needs and wish list. The last
category covers toys, bikes and
. thing~ that are not vital.
People make the choice of
which present they choose to
buy and bring the wrappe_d gift.
to the Christmas Mass on-Dec.
13 in the chapel. The gifts are
blessed and brought to Lowell
Thomas where Social Services
will
pick
them up later in the
week, according to Kathleen
:rvloylan, Campus Ministry
board member.
Toll en said the Giving Tree has
been successful in the past and
it is expected to be a success
this' year as welL
"We're trying to get support
from thy;e»tir.~'.l<;:1,l.).rj.f?,t;.f.Q.mmu-
nity," she sai~b:n.H
To accomplish this· goal, Cam-
· _
CiJclc photo/Joe Scotto
Gift donations can be brought
to the chapel on Dec. 13
wt)ere. they are then picked
up
by
Social Services.·
pus Ministry has been doing a
. lot of public relations to in-
crease awareness. Advertise-
ments ha~e bee,n put
,iip
fo>ei-:
forts to expand the promotional
side this year. Already, many
ornaments have been taken
from the trees, according to
Kelley;
Participants involved get a lot
out of the Giving Tree, in terms
of Christmas spirit, and are well
aware of the objective.
It
is a
way to help out those in need
this holiday season; according
to Moylan.
"I think it's a wonderful cause
and
I
t\µ._\l\(.;i,t;~~ gr~AA,t!lflt stu-
dents want t9dJ#Jhothers who
aren't as fortunate,'' she said.
TKE:
·
pr~temity maytake
legal action against college,
... continued from
pg.
1
take action against these sane-
According to a TKEspokes-
tions.
man, the unity event was a tra- _
"Standing up against this is-
dition upheld for eight years, but·· sueis in the best interest of ev-
thatit is not required.
·
eryone," Winters said; "We _
A town resident witnessed the
don't want to give Marist a bad
; freshmen struggling witl].
image because it makes every-
Tavares in the b~ck seat of a
one look bad, but Dean Amato
gold Honda and noti.fied the
is trying to control who stu-
Poughkeepsie police.
dents can and cannot associate
-The
TKE brothers received a
with."
letter from the Office of Student
According to the members of
Affairs signed by Peter Amato,
TKE, these sanctions are a di-
associate dean for Student
Af-
rect violation of the Freedom of
" ·
N ·
12
Association Provision under
1arrs, on ov.
.
_
According to the letter, the -Title I, Part B, Section 112 that
TKE members are ''banned from
states, "no student attending an
all our. residence halls, except
institution ofhighereducation ...
. your own.
If you are found in
should, on the basis of partici-
any residence halls, other than
pation in protected speech or
your own, you will be sus-
protected association, be ex-
pended, dismissed or arrested
eluded from participation in, be
for criminal trespass."
excluded from benefits of, or be
The letter also stated any at-
subjected to discrimination or
tempt on the TKE brothers part official sanction under any edu-
to contact the freshmen in-
cation program, activity, or di-
. volved in the incident via any
vision of the institution directly
Marist communication system , or indirectly receiving financial
would be "grounds for further
assistance under this Act,
action against you."
whether or not such program,
Amato said the college
will
activity, or division is spon-
protect itself in situations where
sored or officially sanctioned by
it is necessary to do so.
the institution."
''The college will protect its in-
According to the local TKE
terests and the best interests of chapter,. it-has contacted a law-
its students," he said.
yer and the American Civil Lib-
Rick Winters, a TKE brother
erties Union (ACLU) to uphold
said the fraternity is prepared to
its rights.
Mr.
Rogers
candidate
for
commencement
by
TIM SORENSON
Staff Writer
Do not get on the trolley to
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
quite yet because nothing is set
in stone.
Commencement is still a few
months off, but according to
Tim Massie, chief relations of-
ficer, a commencement speaker
has not yet been chosen.
At the moment, the only can-
didate is Fred Rogers from the
PBS program "Mister Rogers'
Neighborhood." According _to
Massie, Rogers would be a
prime candidate as commence-
ment speaker.
"Fred Rogers has a lot of the
qualities we look for in a com-
mencement speaker," he said.
When looking for a speaker,
Marist President, Dennis
Murray, and the Board of Trust-
ees look for four main qualities.
They are looking for a person
who is deserving of an honor-
ary degree, brings distinction to
the college, has a message for
the students and has a connec-
tion with the students.
... For the time being, the college
is' still waiting for a response
from Rogers. Ifhe declines, the
school
will
then have
to look
for
another candidate, Massie said.
"Right now, there's one (can-
didate), and that's·Mr. Rogers,''
he
said.
"We only
take one at
a time."
Accord-
ing
to
Massie, it
is also dif-
ficult for
the school
to get a
commencement speaker be-
cause no money is paid out for
their services. Some colleges
and universities pay thousands
of dollars for
a
speaker. Massie
said that Marist finds people
that will do it out of the kind-
ness of their heart.
Fred Rogers has dedicated
much of his life to children and
education. He started produc-
ing children's programming in
1953
and began his nationwide
show, "Mister Rogers' Neigh-
borhood,"in
1963.
Rogers has received honorary
degrees from over
30 colleges
and universities including Yale
University, Hobart and William
Smith, his alma matter Rollins
College, Carnegie Mellon Uni-
versity and Boston University.
He is also an ordained minister
and works as Chairman of the,;
Board of
Family
Communica-_
tions,
Inc., the nonprofit corpo-·
rationhefoundedin
1971
to pro-
duce a variety
of
materials
that
encourage the healthy emo-
tional growth of children and
their families.
PARKING: Additional parking a must
for West Cedar.Townhouse residents
. .. continued from
pg.
1
"(Security) said they could
only give out a certain amount,
West Cedar's Resident-i)irec-
and gave me a permit for Beck
tor, A~th~my Fusatj. has kn_own
Place instead," Higgins said.
about this problem/and-h~lped _: . NO:t all th~,~eJici~!,l~ feel the
the RSC get the ·added spoti{ ·same:aboufthfpru.:lgl)g·,_senior
. He said he hopes to see this
Jeff Sutphen-said lie'is'conteiit
matter fixed in the shortest
pe-
with the parking and feels no
riod of time.
changes are necessary.
Many West Cedar residents
"I've never had a problem with
are still weary·about the lack of it," he said.
parking and are waiting for
Senior John Tallardy echoed
something else to be done.
Sutphen's comments.
Junior Robert Higgins said he
"It's perfect for me. I literally
was not even able
to obtain a
parkrightinfrontofmyhouse,"
parking
permit
from security.
he said.
,,.
I
.,
DECEMBER 10, 1998
TH£
·
<GIR<Cli£
.News
PAGE4
Students:
·•
Cab~(>.
·
cares
..
Overpriced
byGINAMASULW
·
Staff Writer
High prices are keeping many
Marist students away from the
on-campus food shops.
Some students, including se-
nior Dana
.
Accardo, said they
feel that prices
.
at the Cabaret,
Dyson Cafe and Donnelly Cof-
fee Shop are just too expensive.
"I think the prices are high,
and I think Marist takes advan-
tage of the convenience of be-
ing on campus,'' she said.
"When I was
a
freshman,
-
I
didn't notice [the prices] be-
cau
'
se ljtisf swiped my card.
NoWth~tWi
·
doin.ing
hut
of
my
own pocket! notice it'irieire
·
.~•
;
• .:
·
Most juniors and seniors have
access to a car and a kitchen,
and prefer to shop at a grocery
store or deli to save money.
The managers of each of the
fast food establishments on
campus perform studies of com
~
petitive prices twice a year, said
Joe Heavey, director of dining
services.
"We determine our prices
based on what we pay for our
food and services and what the
competition in the area
charges{' he saidi
· •
--·-
-
-
_
.,,·
..
.
.
.
The Cabaret's· sandwich and
soup
prices
are
indeea compeci::
tive with local delis. Most com:
.
piaihts are about the prices
·
of
drinks. The smallest bottle of
water in the Cabaret cost $1.19,
while across the street K&D deli
had the same size bottle for 50
PRICE COMPARISONS
·
cents.
Senior Noreen O'Sullivan dis-
covered that an Ocean Spray
juice from the Lowell Thomas
·
vending machine costs a dollar.
The same drink is $1.34 in the
coffee shop.
·
"It's less expensive and easier
to just get it from the vending
machine," she said .
.
Heavey said
·
most Cabaret
prices have not increased in the
pa
.
st two
·
years. The 'most
.
no-
table increases
;
have
,
been
·
'.in
•
beverages and pizza prjces, ac-
cording to him.
"The prices in
·
the coffee
shops and the Cabaret more or
less remained static over the
·
past two years," he said .
.
.
Heavey explained that on-
campus shops do not rriake as
much profit
as
other delis, and
this affects pricing decisions.
"In delis, where you really
make a lot of money is on things
we can't sell at a college: beer,
cigarettes; and lotto tickets,-','ihe
sr1i& ·•
·
:
.
..
: _
:
,
.
~Ji
_
·
,
,
Profit is ari
'
issue
·
in the coffee
shops, since they act as inde-
pendent financial units
;
accord-
ing to Heavey:
_
''The coffee shops are more of
a service to the college than a
pyofit center," he said.
·
•
ircle staff
·
·
·
·
nkErnily
·
·
e~tb9
.
0
£t
ftime
·
as you
'
graduate
INTERESTED IN
MOVING
.
ON CAMPUS?
The Office of Housing and
Residential_Life currently has
a
few on-campus vacancies for
_
the spring
'99
semester.
Please contact the Housing
Office at
575-3307
before
12/18
to sign up.
s
ancun. *_Nassau* .Jamaica
*
Maza1"1an
*
Acapulc
*
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Travel Free and make lots of Cash
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411
I
f
I
TllE
·
CIR.CL£
DECEMBER10; 1998
Fe&ltU·r
.
es
"
PAGES
A month
f
orholiday diversity
byEMILYKUCHAR.CZVK
Features Editor
.
It's time for a party
:
.
Or several for that matte
r.
.
The month ofDecember brings
:
.
·-
several holidays along with it.
Chanukah, Christmas, an
_
d
Kwanzaa all b~gin in December
with
celebrations worldwide.
.
Sunday ·nightJs the start of
Chanukah. Foreightdays,JeWs
everywhere will gathertogether
to celebrate this festival of
lights: and
to
celebrate a
miriiclf
WhatJewswiH be celebrating
_
,
is their successful lJattle against
.
the Syriari.~Greek
army.
.
:
In
175 BCE, Palestine was un-
der Syrian~Greek rule. Jews
were persec~ted by these
1111:
ers and· forbidden to practice
their religion ..
:. ,
This led tci a revolt' by-
Mattathias, a high priest, and his
sons, and a small army.
-
After
years of fighting,
.
the group suc-
ceeded at ov.erthrowing the
leaders.
·
. -
~
;
:
·
i
.
·
. .
.....
..
.
·-~
:
-
-:r
-
r
.
.
,
.
_
Mattatllias died
·
and his son,
unbrokeil
searof
tl:'ie
High
Pries(
Judah of Maccahee
..
tciok
-
Over---
to
"figfit tlie
-
·
c
·
a1i'delabrurii
·
or
and cleaned
.
up the Tempi~ of menorah, for one night.
'
Jerusalem, which had been des-
The ceremony lasted
.
eight
ecrated by the Syrian-Greek sol-
days. This was
seen
as a miracle
diers.
and is
·
why Chariukah is called
Judah wanted to rededicate
the festival oflights.
the Temple as well, however, in-
Chanukah means dedication
side the temple there was
.
only
and itis the rededication that is
enough of the pure oil with the
being remembered.
Jewish families come together
The day after Christmas, and
in joyous celebration to observe
ending on New Year's Day, is
the holiday.
·
On the first night
Kwanzaa. Kwanzaa is a nonre-
ofChanukah, one light is lit on
ligious holiday that celebrates
the menorah and on each of the
African-American heritage,
following nights. Another light
pride; community, family, and
is added until the eighth night
culture.
when all the lights are lit
.
Kwanzaa's roots lie in African
Prayers are said and hymns
first-fruit harvest celebrations.
are sung after the candles are
"Kwanzaa" comes from the
lit. Children play games and re-
Swahili phrase "matunda ya
ceive gifts.
kwanza," meaning "first fruits."
Also everyone eats foods that
Maulana Karenga, African
have a lot of
oil
in them, such as
American scholar and activist,
doughnuts and potato pan-
came up with the idea of
·
cakes, toremind them of the
Kwanzaa in
1966.
Kwanzaahas
miracle of the oil.
seven principles, Nguzo Saba,
On Dec
.
25 Christians will be
which are celebrated through
throwing a bash in honor of rituals, literature
,
and
music.
Jesus Christ.
The seve
_
n
.
principles
,
ar~•
-·
Christians from
;
all
,
over the
umpja (u
_
nity);kuji~hagtili~ (self-
world
,
will
·
be celebrating the
:
detemlil).ation), ujima ( collective
Christmas holiday by attending
work and responsibility), ujamaa
special services, exchanging
(cooperative economics), nia
gifts, and decorating homes. All
(purpose), kuumba (creativity),
this for a baby born in a manger
and imani (faith).
a long time ago.
A major part of the Kwanzaa
Jesus' story began in
celebration is lighting a candle
Bethlehem of Judea as the Vir-
on each day of its seven days.
gin Mother Mary' bore the soon
The candles, mishumaa, are the
to be Christian savior with Jo-
colors of the Black Liberation
seph by her side. Shepherds and
Flag; three of the candles are
wisemen came from all over to
red, three are green, and one is
see this baby in a manger
black.
:r • '
th
<
;
.
.
1
·
, ..
·
'
i
b
.
wrapped in swaddling cloths.
After the candlelighting, eel-
,
,
;
;
!
,
..
'!,IS
"1
,
,
;-1;~~:J.~
.
·,
.·
.
.
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el:H•tSBasGoni'lrtl'
.:fliJ;
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ca;;:;to~~.~::getupearly
~=~·~~t:;:::;,~;;.,·~~~
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·
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:~~z.~;:E?itv:f:;i
-
.
byKATRINA
.
FUCHSENBERGER
·
·
·
·.
Asst. Feat~res Editor
-
·
.
Th~
holiday season i~ sup-
.
posed to be ajoyful time buJat
.
the
.
same time it can
·
be
·
very
stressful especi
.
ally when ~t
comes Jo ,shopping.
.
. .
There are ways
t9
make holi-
day shopping go a lit
.
tie
smoother.
··
Before going shopping one
should try to make a list of ex-
actly what one wants to buy to
.
-
help stay mor~ focused.
. ,
.
This makes
.
shopping go
quicker and easier and it will also
·
prevent one from buying things
for oneself wh~n one should be
buying things for (>ther~.
Karin Butterfield, a sales as-
.
sociate at Annie Sez (women's
clothing store), said she thinks
one of the best gifts to buy is a
gift certificate if_ one does not
know what to get.
"If
you can't figure out what
gift to buy you should buy a
gift certificate to the person's
.
favorite store," she said.
The worst day to go shopping
is rumored to be the day after
Thanksgiving.
On this day stores open very
early and everything goes on
sale. This may
be
good for some
but for others it may be a little
chaotic.
.
.
_ .
.
.
.
tree.
large feast on Dec. 31.
Senior Dan Hahn said he likes
The holiday also includes gift
Butterfield said she thinks that
there ar~ actually good times to
g<> sllopp~ni
,,
,
.
.
.
~:
-
.
:
..
.
.
,
;
.
"The
}?~st tiµ1e to go
_'
ihopping
is around
_
5
p
:
m
:
on Sunday
when
everyone
is
}jome eating
dinner," sqe said. "Although,
.
during the holiday season most
store hours are increased and
the malls
.
are open later so
people can go shopping at their
own convenience."
'
.
.
If
som.eorie d,oes
_
nc,>t like go-
ing to the mall
.
because of the
crowds
.
and the lines;there are
other alternatives that will not
even make one leave
tlie
house.
Shopping
·
on the Internet is
one easy y.,ay. One example is a
website called
_
."Shop at Home",
a Reader's· Digestonline store,
which offers hundreds of gift
ideas .
Through this website one can
·
order music, books, magazines,
and videos.
Nadia Ennis, junior biology
major, said she thinks one
should take precautions before
shopping on the Internet.
"When you shop on the
Internet you should find a way
to secure your credit card num-
bers," she said.
"If
you use
Netscape there is a way to
.
do
that."
Ordering from a catalog is an-
other way. If one decides to or-
der from catalogs one should
chetk to see the exact descrip-
tion of the item (sometimes the
picture shows things that are
·
:
n
-
otinc}ude
_
d)
.
_ ,,
,
;
.
.
..
,
·
'
.Aiso
·
one
should
·
,:'heck the
:
shipp1ng time, prices,
anci
leniin
··
policies.
There are
alsq
tips for after the
holidays are over. Cards can be
saved to be used as ornaments
or gift tags .
.
Also, after the holidays is the
best time to buy holiday items.
Everything go~s on sale once
the season is over so one
should buy what one needs for
next year ahead of time.
In case one buys the wrong
gift
or a duplicate gift for a friend
or family member one should
always know a store's refund
an·d exchange policy before
shopping there/
·
These rules should be posted
near the cash register and if not,
one should ask the salesperson
to explain them.
A lot of people may try to re- .
tum their gifts but may not be
able to.
Butterfield said there are
things that should be done in
order to be able to return cer-
tain items properly.
"People should keep their tags
attached to their items, they
should save their receipts, and
they shouldn't return clothes
that are already worn," she said.
the family side of Christmas.
giving
.
Children might receive
"I usually spend Christmas
a book to further a goal or high-
with my family, at home," he
light black achievement, a heri-
said.
"Because
I have a large
tage
symbol,
and a toy. The
family this is the only time all
gifts are given on Jan
.
1, thus
y~
_
ar.we can really get together
ending the December holiday
and celebrate
;
ari'dTJike
being
season.
able to do that"
:
.>·
,
>
;.
-
,
·
·.
-
-.
'>
:
;---
-
.
·/
.,
.
·
>>
.
_
Law
_
school, an open
opportunity for all
byKATRINA
Fl.JCHSENBERGER
Asst. Features Editor
ence person as well as for a per-
son who is majoring in English,
history;political science, or com-
munications
.
Any major at all
Just when students thought
·
essentially js suited for the pur-
that there was no way they could
poses of maintaining that liberal
get into law school, an oppor-
arts background that law
tunity arises.
,
schools like their students to
According to Annamaria
have."
Maciocia, professional lecturer
Maciocia said there are tradi-
of law, Marist College follows
tional majors that students take
the American Bar Association
before going into law school.
guidelines in that there is no
"The traditional majors hap-
prelaw major at Marist.
pen
-
to be political science, En-
"We follow the belief of the
glish, and history. There's al-
American Bar Association that
ways a few from criminal justice
there is no one curriculum which
who do decide that they would
is inost beneficial to students
like to pursue the law," she said.
who are interested in going to
"There are many different ma-
law school. In fact law schools
welcome students from a diver-
sity' of backgrounds," she said.
"So, therefore, law school is
absolutely an option for a sci-
.
..
please see LAW, pg. 6
·
I
THE
·
cc1R:<CL£.
DECEMBER 10, 1998
Feat-_u,res
.. PAGE6
Photo courtesy of Jeanette Whcny
Wherry said she loves· kids.
Getting to know
Jeanette Wherry
byEMILYKUCHARCZVK
Features Editor
ness are important." ·
What is
your favorite thing to
do?
,
~
JeartetteWherry, senior
psyf,
chology special education ma.:
.c
jor from Vernon, New Jersey.
"I
like hiking because there'si
nobody out in the middle· of
Howwouldyoudescribeyour- ,
nowhere to bother you. It's
self?
'just you and whoever else you
"I
ain very outgoing and
I
tell
everybody exactly what
I
mean."
decided to bring with you if
you decided to bring anybody
with you."
What would be your dream
Whatdoyoulikeinaperson? job?
·
"I
like people who are self-as- · !'Teaching special ed. in
an
el-
sured, they know what they
ementary school because
I
want in life and they're not go-
love the kids .. They bring me
ing to let anyonestOJ? the_m
inorejoy.than·anything else."
,.:;; froh{getting
1
i(.
Peopl~~who
·1:,({fJ1~·n?. .
bir:n -~)~•
.
. don':t,know,whatl!th~fillt .
rWhat.W()Uldy()UOOtoinflu-
end up trying to be something_
ence the world?
·
for someone else."
-What don't you like in a per-
son?·
"I
don't like people who rely
on other people for support all
the time."
"I
personally want, when I'm
teaching, to be able to say that
I
made a difference in orie kid's
life, even if it's only one. I
want him or her to say she was
the one that:made the differ-
ence in my life."
What would be your perfect .. What have you learned about
day?
_
yourself?
"Sleeping past eight o'clock.
''Ican'thave.controlovercer-
Having no papers. Being able :•
)~1!1
!,lµpgl>:; ~P.~~times things
. , . , }q
ff:l~_,aq1:.R9, whatever! de- ;:,liapp~~ ~mtyou have no con- ··
_: ",phletq,~pJ.q~~
day. I wouldn't
trol over them." -, -
·
make any plans. I like to be
spontaneous. I would also
Whatadvicewouldyougiveto
definitely spend time with my
people?
·
friends."
What do you fear?
"Coming across something I
can't think my way through."
.
"Don't second guess your-
self. Be yourself."
How would youJike to be re-
membered?
Wbatisimportanttoyou?
"Someone who did whatever
they did to the best of their
"Family, friends, and happi-
abilities."
INTER BREAK
$11.25-$15.00
Work 1-6 weeks in special semester break pro
gra.m. No exp nee-excellent training. Solid re
sume builder for all majors! Can lead to PT o
Ff
in spring/summer 1999. ·Work for Oran·ge
Ulster or Dutchess co. students begin after
fl
nals, but must apply now.
Call 12-5- M-F, 298-1888.
.... continued from page 5
ing students aboti(the criteria
thihgth~t'hib}ivates the stude:rit
for law school admissions," she __ , ari_d
.
should also· tell about the
said. "All of these things are
students themselves.
.
jors where students may find out · what we like to do
as
part'of their
Fourth, letters. of reconunen-
they do have an interest in go-
prelaw advisement,"
· dation are needed:
ing on to law school."
_
Maciocia said. there are other
They can be·written by fac-
Maciocia said she thinks. stu- . things she d~es
as
an. advisor.
ulty members, advisors, -some_-
. dents who have an interest in
"I look at personal statements - one:that knows the· student re~
law school should pursue it.
that students have prepared as
ally ,well, or.an internship field
"I, myself, was
an
undergradu-
part of their application:
l
also
supervis_or.
_
.
ate at Vassar College as a biol-
review thestudent's wholepro~
The application
is.
also needed
ogy major and so therefore!
file and prepare the dean's·cer- _ along with the four criteria. Stu-
encourage students who 01ight
tifications which are then signed
dents should also try· to apply
have that interest certainly to go
by the acad·emic vfoe president
early. ·
_
:
explore it with
an
internship and .. and the dean
.if
faculty.," she
Maciocia said there are things
_ to gain -some type of practical · said. "We try to prepare a de-
students can do.to :help them
perhaps through a summer job .• ~~ed smµmary report for ou_r . decid~ if they want to go
to
law
as to what
it
is that lawyers do
students that are interested in
~~hooL.
.
_:,
. . -· .
and to make sure there is some-
going on to _law school.". .
. ·"lstrongly recommend a field
thing that they would. like to
There are four criteria that are - experience when.~_ the · student
pursue," she said. "They
needed to get irito iaw school.
would take some time to actu- _
shouldn't think that because
First, there.is the Law School
aJly pursue and.see what it is
they are a not a history or Eri- . Entrance Exam·or LSAT. This is
thatlawyers do,'' she said, "And
- glish major that
'they're
cut off ·
a
reading·colllpiehension test._
while ther~ arl- many courses
from that. No one should dis-
This test is offered four times
here at Marist that
I
think would
count themselves." -
a year at Marist.
It
can be taken
provide worthw~le insight to
Macio~i~_. .. said wh.at M.~rist · . it i1_1 September, Octoper, Febru-· ~e~s that \1/0uld help
a
student
likes to do fckstudents h~te
ft:
ary,
ofJuriJ{
;;;>. :, \:
;< . '. _·
pr~pare.Jor the processing of
to provide them with advisors. . ' it can also be'Tuketl-morfthafr.. applying 'to school: :
I
think in
"We' re available to speak with
once but no score 1s discourttect. this area in d~idtng_\l!.hether _or
students from freshman y"ear
Second, a student's grade
not this is for you, one should
throughout to their senior year
,.
point average is considered.
probably pursue an internship
and whether it's exploring pos- .
With these first two criteria,
type experience.''
·
sibilities forintemships, helping
students c·an u·se the Boston
She also, said taking a few
students locate law firms .back
College Range finder to find a
classes could not hurt ..
home, they may practice in
an
school where they·would have
"We also have courses, that
area of interest to them, or . a 50/50 shot at getting into or
we recommend, courses in pub-
whether it ii;tv?lves something _law schools tha'.t could be
lie speaking, logic, history and
thatpe~haP.~ might be more sp~- _ -· reached b~sed ·on those crite-
-political science and. these are
cifi:s ipJf
PH~,?f.ilJ-,
~et! ~enipr ...
r/-?;: ,, ,• __
:=
·
· .;, :.'.'; .·.
. _
reG6mmendt!d orily in the sense
,~W.V.~9.}Vi~:#R~lVP
th~qal ~:;!TWN;~t½t1~i:~9ial statement :.;,W~Lw~:~t4'.4e~.ir./xplore a ~ste
,:,P?I~~'
~~,,\o ,,~}~l:-~~w-sooo9ls ,:,mu~t;!'e ,',v~}~,en:p~;the student .. ··.'9f~~t_it~s·~~t~a'3/Yers all called
_
they sfiou_ld 1,lpply;;,andeducat- •·It'us\fally has'to't!].yolve some~ _ "to'do;"
she
said.''
_
.
'
.
.
'
.
~
'
.
Cash back for your books-just in time for the holidays!
r1us;
get a special
$5.00
Deal Bucks coupon, good toward any
purchase of
$25.00_
or more-in your bookstore..
.
MARIST COLLEGE BOOKSTORE
SAT. DEC.12
&
19
10 AM-4PM
MON-FRI DEC. 14 -19
9AM-SPM
·DECEMBER 10, 1998
· THE'i<GlR.<CLE -
Feat:Ures
http://www.~isney.com
Feel like you cannot get enough of Disney? ·
Well check out
littp:llwww.disney.com,
Disney's homepage. The site has links to ·almost every
Disney cartoon imaginable.
.
.
·
~lick on a_Disney character.and you are linkedto games involving that character. Keeping along
with the hohday season, there are links to holiday sites formaking Santa crafts where you can make
things such as Santa lollipops. _There are also links to Disney movies and Disney World.
.
Thinking about makingyour career at rnsney? The site also lists job opportunities at all the Disney
locations.
· ·
·
The best thing about the page is its graphics, which are a blast of color to the eye. The worst_ thing
about the p,1ge ~s all the advertisements for Disney merchandise, the very numerous advertisements.
Bu~ overall it is a good page for Disney lovers. So check out
http://www.disney.com
to satisfy that
Disney craving.
·
·.
·
·
'
·
·
,
.
If
you have any suggestions Jo~ this column, or would like to write a column, contact Katrina at
extension 2429 or email HZAL. Features Editor Emily Kucharczyk wrote this Searching the sites
column.
.
Horoscopes
~
·.
· ... · ARIES:
Something
have much time for
because you're about
that was planned to
discussion today.
to get going on some
go one way could
Something
you
whole new projects,
V{!er off in a differ-
thought was going to
and you don't want
.
ent direction.
If
go one way is going
to be slowed down.
you're on top of the
to go another way in- · ~ - VIRGQ:_Jb.eMoonis
...
.
: ....
· ... ,;, jjt,u~~io,n .. · thire ,,. , .,. ;; .. , sJead, ~o_all()»: your- · ·-~·. in yo~r' sign again,
.J,V.!.•
lJ
:.Jh.1~:1-".J
.d,:=·oJ.J~
--.;.dJ
i~J.lj
Jtl~J~~--'-~-1~. ,;,hd)f1;J;-'
d
'!'!.ll,,,
i
•
lh
'l'
•"Ji
1,,
1
·n1,
';'.1"1\}J[fl>[i"~
·!sfi'·•
'· ·,:;i;·)
i!r;
;,-::>\"Wi2%fi,
~.1il.i~·mR-_.
r,IP·
.Jlt:JUUI<- CJll ..
lsA,
l~
..
d\.
n
.e,~.
,u;~Jnpe
cl ' . ''· 'N
JifiP,111.&
1,0_,
'4,,P{J ..
,,J~
·
_
·Ifyou're-offsome-
. . , ... for.whatever.you.
, .
asatack.Youarevery
• . • .· ~here playi!)g, more . .
have in mind. . . . . .
.
. shrewc(and when the
.
,
• ,·'daibage•·col!ld be
[i'
.· .···
CANCER:
You're .
.
pressure'
"
is on, you
done than y
.. ou even . •
W
__ .• ·.·
jtudyi·n. g, lea.rnin.g
justgetshr~wder. Be-
want to think about. ,
~
and getting much
sides that, you've got
That's what hap,-
· ·
better
at
whatever it
aluckybreakcoming
pens when you're
is you're doing.
up. All the planning
going at really high
Hopefully,· you're .
and hoping and pfay-
speeds, and that's
pushing yoµrself ·to·
ing and sweating that
what you're prob-
try something that's
you've been doing
- ably up to today.
kind of difficult.
If
lately is going to pay
You've been having
that's the case; of
· off. You will all of a
cQmplications with
c,ourse yot,!'d haye
sudden know what
travel lately, but
· problem§-:
·If
yi:iu -.
. yo\l need to do, and
those are going to
weren't having prof?-·
·
.· th'e" rest will .be easy.
clearup.
.
lems, it wouldn't be
Just check stuff off
TAURUS:ThatRet-
difficult, right? Be-
your lists.
~ - -
· ·
__ ·. · rograde Mercury
sides,
h
also looks
~
LIBRA:
There's
~
has been causing
like whatever you're
somebody looking
complications con-
doing is going to pay
over your shoulder
•. ceming the· money
you very well for your
today, criticizing.your
you share with
efforts. That makes
every move. Isn't it
somebody
else.
the whole process
justwonderful when
.Things are going to
more fun. A lot of the
that happens? This
be inuch easierover
things you've been
person is trying to be
the next few weeks
dealing with will start
helpful, but you may
than they have been
to clear up aU by them-
think it's just annoy-
for the last few
selves.
ing. Well,
try
and stifle
weeks. Meanwhile,
I ~-.. ' I
LEO:
If
you've been
that comment
if
you
.. you may'have to do
noticing any dis-
can.
It
looks like the
a bit of fuggling:
agreements in your:
other pers~m's ideas
Schedule a meeting
lifeforthelastcoriple
could actually be
for today and a ro-
weeks, you can blame
quite helpful, and it
mantic interlude for
it on the Retrograde
might be something
sometime after to-
Mercury. You c·an
you need to learn.
morrow. You're
even blame a messy.
You're very good at
about to get even
house on it if you
learning right now,
luckier in love.
want. You can blame
and that's why you
GEMINI:
You've
disagreements be-
can afford to be so
probably noticed
tween siblings, a lov-
generous with your
some confusion
ers' spat or even
attention.
over there, and
breakage in the
~
SCORPIO:Mercury
maybe some hurt
kitchen. But blaming
~
is going
Direct
today,
feelings ora misun-
Mercury Retrograde
~
thank Heaven. It's
derstanding. Those
can only go so far.
been in your Solar
will all be cleared up
There does come a
Second House of
i]
within the next few
time when the messes
money, and it's been
days,
much
to
have to be cleaned up,
botching things up.
everybody's de-
and that is now.
It's been helping you
light. You may not
Clean them up,
make mistakes in your
PAGE7
Emily's Recipe of the
Week
S 'mores Treats
1/4 cup margarine
Package (10 oz.) regular marshmallows or 4 cups
miniature marshmallows
6
cups cocoa krispies cereal
3/4 cup graham crackers, cut or broken into small
1/2-
inch square pieces
1/2 cup semi-sweet chocolate chip morsels
1/2 cup miniature marshmallows
In a microwave-safe bowl, heat margarine and marshmal-
lows at high for three minutes, stirring after two minutes.
Stir until smooth. Add cereal and graham cracker pieces.
Stir until well coated. Put mixture into 13x9x2-inch pan .
coated with cooking spray. For topping: sprinkle
chocolate morsels and 1/2 cup miniature marshmallows .. •
on top. Makes-24.
·math, thinking you
convince the other
have more than you
person. Of course,
do. Sometimes it's
then you'll have to
been making checks
actually be that
get lost in tlie mail,
way from now on,
or having bills get
but that's OK.
get paid. Stran_g,er ,,,
":il:' · .
you,.focus. ..
on,
the
misl~dsotheydon't
~l·
AQUARIUS:
If
.,,n,--:,
,~t
'tn1iiifs!
1
h'avtf'hap-
Jr
r~
;,~'<ieta.ils
today,'
you
· pened.
·
can find the money
SAGITTARIUS:
you need.
It looks
Hopefully you were
like it's available;
not late for work this
it's just a matter of
morning.
If
you were,
filling out the right
you definitely heard
paperwork. You're
about it.It looks like
not quite sure ex-
somebody
was
actly what-that is,
watching for you to
but neither is any-
come in, but that's
body else. The way
not necessarily bad.
that you'll find out
It
could be good
is by calling some-
news, as in a promo-
body outside your
.
,
tion or a new assign-
circle of friends.
· '
.
'
:,
" menL People:have
You guys have
been thinkin'g:about
·fried· everything
you lately because
'you·
·kn.ow a.bout,
you've been looking
and that's OK. This
so good. You're
looks like some-
looking absolutely
thing you didn't
marvelousrightnow,
.,.,,,...
know about. Just
incidentally. The bar-
· look some place
rier to communica-
you've
never
tion you've been
looked before!
struggling with is
II
I
PISCES:
Some-
starting to dissolve.
- ~ thing you've been
CAPRICORN:
-
saying over and
Don't stress about
over is finally start-
money today. What
ing to get through.
you need is avail-
Don't be dismayed
abie, and you'll have
ifit seems to be tak-
to go to a little bit of
ing a while. An idea
work to get it. How
that looks obvious
aboutofferingsome-
to you could be
thing you could
practically incon-
build to someone
ceivable to some-
who'd like tohave it?
body else. That's
You'redoingallright
hard for you to
as a seller or as a per-
imagine, since you
son who'll trade ser-
have a tendency to
vices for what you
think other people
need. Do that on a
know it all. Well,
larger scale than
guess what? Pisces
usual today and
is the sign of ge-
you'll be amazed at
nius, so the odds
the results. Pretend
are pretty good.that
you're bigger than
they don't know it
you thought you
all and you do
were, and you could
know it all.
I
·
DECEMBER 10,1998
.
.
-
·
:
PAGE9
The views expressed on these pages are not nec~ssilily those of
The Circle
.··
Marist
.
has social
scene,
needs
by CHRISKNUDTSEN
·
•
byCARLITO
•
-
,.
_
-
;.
~
.} :
: G :~
.
r:
.;
...
~:!
.,,•
-
·
.,,
·
_
.
.;:"H
,
1
F
1
r
:
•~
-""
,• -
..
·
-·
··
·
.
_. ,:
1.abhot"the
"
o
.
,
re
·
ssfon
"
M
··
.
,,. ,
,,o
,:•,;.,
·
:
·
pp
·
.:,
·
.
,
,
,
,·
wonien; Womeri arejtist as ca-
.
pable as men at perfonning any
occupation, ranging from medi-
cine to professional wrestling.
Giant strides have been made in
discarding gender equality
throughout the years but one
stride has been taken that needs
to
be
displaced: a woman's
right
to have
an
abortion.
_
I agree unequivocally that a
woman deserves every
.
right
that a man does including the
control over her body
and
her
life. But who are women to de-
termine the course of a life grow-
ing inside them that is incapable
of objecting to any decisions
that may be made regarding their
·
fate? A
fetus
can not exactly
pick up the phone, call their
mother and
·
request that they
not be aborted.
People can object and say that
a fully functioning human is not
~ng murdered, only a bundle
oflifeless cells, but who are you
kidding? Does this rationaliza-
.
tion help you sleep at night?
Well, if you fancy something to
catalyze insomnia, I recommend
the film The Silent Scream.
-
•
.
,
.
.
social
CO n-S CI en Ce-
Harasslllent
-
policy
'
iS
not
Source: "Abortion Patients
_
in 1994-1995: Characteristics and Contracep-,
live use,"
·
by Stanley K
.
Henshaw and Kath,ryn Ko{it, Family Planning Per-
spectives, July/August 1996
In this film, you witness the
aborting of
a
fetus via ultra-
sound .
.
You witness the removal
of each minuscule limb and the
decapitation of the baby's per-
fectly miniaturized head. You
even see the mouth open, un-
leashing a scream that will never
be heard. Watch this movie and
then tell me that it is just a cha-
otic tissue mass that is being
extracted.
Obviously, there are excep-
tions. A woman that is raped
crui"not be held accountable for
being impregnated because the
pregnancy was neither planned
nor preventable. But woman
that have unprotected sex
should not be allowed to use
abortion as
a form
of birth con-
trol. I am not going to lecture
on the myriad forms of birth
control that are available be-
cause I am sure that you are well
aware. I hate to place the bur-
den of responsibility on women,
. but the decision of whether or
not to have safe sex or sex at all
for that matter,
is
ultimately up
to the woman. Men can insti-
gate but the act itself must re-
ceive final verification by the
woman. Men will usually not
bring up the topic of birth con-
trol because they don't care if
adequate
by
KRIS HARl'
.
..
TH£ <CIR.CLE
D_
·
E:;;;i.C.;.,E
__ MB
___ E;;;:,;R_. __
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C(?,NGRE.§SHALLMAKENOLAW~ABRIDG~GTIIEFREEDOMOFSPEECH,OROFTHEP~-
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... wishes every-
one a great end of
the semester and
best wishes for a
great holiday!!
Good luck in the
new year!
/{ave a great
break! See you
all next year!!
IE,DITORIALSI
An opinion is not fact
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Throughout the duration of this semester, there has been some confusion about
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pi:ma~on on
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1versetop1cs.
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.
For
the-
second semester
iii
a row, I firtd riiyseff Wntirig'
to
'
The
.
Circle in disgust.
.
E~di
section maintains their own staff of writers. The. Opinion/Editorial pages
·
Ih~ve
:
n<>_tice4,
·
~~peci~lf(?f
_
la't~:
·
tha~ your'OP-ED
_
~ec:tion
·
~e~ms
_
to be growing
.
are op:en
.
to readers, as
·
well as staff writers, to~ontribute to. The Opinion pages
larger. Since when diifa newspaper allow rep
·
ortet"s to voice their own opinionsin
are a public fQrum to service those who wish to submit pieces. This section
a:
supposedly unbiased publication? I see
·
that staff writersMikal Amin Lee and
· .
always serves
'
the same traditional function
in
all mainstream newspapers alike.
Michelle Co
,
rinne
·
White were allowed to do_ so. Again, as in my last letter, I say
_
The Opinion section is where writers and outside contributors to the paper are
that
you
claiin
t9 be striving for professionalism, butwhat ls
.
ee in your paper is
abl
_
e to express their opinions based on their own views and experiences. There
.
vefy frnpr:,ofessional.Tiilceto'
,
~'ot,npare your paper with professional papers, and
is no factual research behind their pieces and it is-solely based on their personal
the
'
'd
_
ifferen~eis appallirig
'.
'
I wa(taughtin
'.
thefourth grade that newspapers were
opinions. The newspaper does r10thing more than supply a page and a half to
.
'i
ri publjcatiori as
a
means of dfspensiilg tinb_iase4_infonp.atiori to the general
ariyqne who would like to share their views with the campus, as well as an
pubiic
!
Ifl
wanted toread
tll~
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opfoiof! of.µie staff writer~\ lwouid
_
ask it of them. I
edjtorial page foiletters to the ~qi tor.
.
.
.
would much rather
.
read the news
·
.
·,
·
.
·
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The News section is unlike the Opinion section. In this section, News staff
.
You
'
might
defdnd
"tlie
'
a~tions of your writers by saying that they had articles in
writers are assigned stories to report on. These stories are factual situations and
· the Op.:.Ed secti
.
on of the paper. Why is this? Why are they, as news reporters;
-- -
eve~t~
.
op::~qi~g ~n c::~plls and in the local community. They rely on interviews
aUo'wecHo
voice
·
an
opinion in a section thati wasledto beli~ve i~ designated for
.
of pe'6pl1rinvolyedifi the
:
stp~ and are based on hard news facts to be reported
.
..
the MaristCollege reader?
·
~ am insulted by
.
this entire situation, and enraged that
to the paper's readership
J
The writer's opinion is ~n no way part
_
of the story.
·
you contiri'ue ~is behavior:
.
! was even more insulted when
I
saw an article
Thus, there is a distinct difference between an opinion piece and a news
.
aJ1~cle.
_
written by orie of your writers which attack~d another w
_
riter
,
I
ask you, is this
A newspaper attempts to meet the ne~ds of a diverse community consisting of
proft:ssional?l
run
now less
.
likely to pick i.Ip and read a copy of your paper. Your
readers and writers. Some value news, while others always
turn
to the sports
paper
_
is insulting to the Marist community, and I will not tolerate this lack of .
pages. Still others may read just Arts
and
Entertainment and Feature stories. A
professionali~m. ltherefore encourage anyone who agrees with me to let the
newspafer's purpose is to reach out to a variety of people's tastes and views.
editors of The Circle know.
-
.
.
.
.
.
That is why there are numerous sections to a paper, differing greatly from one to
Jwould aiso liJ<e to address this debate oyer
_
the alcohol policy at Marist. Again
the other.
in the Op-'-EQ, section
I
read a letter from Freshman Joseph DeMatteis, which
_
As an editor and an aspiring professional journalist, I will defend the First
accu~ed the
'
college
;
of acting too much like our parents. In his letter, he states
Amendment for as long as I work in this profession.
I
will
continue to oppose
that,
"If
we
neede~ parents ar~und
ali
thedme
_
in this phase.. ofour lives we would
anyone who tries to suppress these freedoms we have all been granted. Whether
.
have stayed home
:
;, Why tiidn;t you stay
,
homefYou·were weUaware ofthe
.
someone is a staff writer for a paper or writes something
as
a contributor, the
alcohol policy\viien
'
you were accepted to this _schq9l. Toe last I recall, it was
Opinion section is for people who want to have their voices heard.
illegal in the Stai~ of NewYork, as well as niost of.this country, for a person under
the age
of
21
to possess any alcohol unless accompanied by
a
parent or guard-
fan;
He believes that we should be treated like adults.' Here is
a
little slice of reality
for you· Mr. DeMatteis:
We
are
being treated
as
adults.
ff
you, as a person under
the
:
age of
21,
were to be
.
faught possessing alcohol anywhere off campus, you
would, by law,.
be
incarcerated and prosecuted.
If
anything, you get a slap on the
wrist and a stem warning
at
this
school.
.
Editors, If you even care to
be
professional and be treated with the respect you
believe you deserve,
I
would suggest that you treat your readers with the respect
and
dignity they so rightly deserve. So far, you have proven unable
.
to accom-
plish this. I believe you owe your readers an apology.
If
one reader can be so
greatly insulted, many others may share the same feelings.
Christopher A. Cavallari
sophomore
Amanda Bradley,
Editor-in-chief
-
TH£ <CIR.CLE
Amanda
Bradley·
Editor-in-chief
Emily Kucharczyk
Features Editor
Elimbeth Carrubba
Managing Editor
ThomasRyan
Sports Editor
BenAgoes
News Editor
TaraQuinn
Opinion Editor
Patrick Whittle
Joe Scotto
Toni Constantino
Arts
& Entertainment
Photography Editor
Business Manager
G. Modele Clarke,
Faculty Advisor
Tize
Circle is the student newspaper of Marist College, Poughkeepsie, NY.
Issues are published every Thursday.
We welcome letters to the editor, club announcements and story ideas. We can-
not publish unsigned letters to the editor.
The Circle staff can be reached at
575-3000 x2429
or by email at HZAL.
(
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.
I
DECEMBER 10 1998
1£D
ITORJALSl
i
Fite safety procedures
-
are
;
a~eq~ate
Editor:
toward the safest and most ef.:
I write in response to your ar-
fective exit during
·.
an emer-
ticle in theNov. 19 edition ofThe
gency. Should the designated
Circle regarding the fire alarm
exit be blocked for some reason,
·
activation in
the
Dyson class-
an alternate exit should be
room on Tuesday, Nov. 17, 1998.
sought. A person who, for any
The mission of the Office of reason, caimot negotiate a stair-
Safety and Security is to pro-
way should remain at the land-
vide students, faculty, staff
and
ing of the predetermined exit
• ·
guests with a safe environment
stairway or alternate stairway
in which to study, work of oth-
and await
.
the arrival of the Fire
erwise enjoy the variety of ac-
Marshal oFsecurity staff who
·
ti vi ties and events that the Col-
·
wilr advise
:
as
·
fo
whether an
lege offers. When an emergency
evacuation is necessary. Enier-
situation arises, Safety and Se-
gency
·
personnel w11l make any
curity staff are trained to make
required eVacuation(s)
;
an
immediate assessment of the
Personal safety is
an
institu-
.
. .
nature of the emergency and
tional and individual responsi-
.
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are
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then execute their response
b1 ity an
.
an
evacuation p an
.
th
F
M
hal
traini
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has both institutional and in.di-
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rre . ars
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~g pro-
based on predetermined proce-
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faculty, and sta
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are encour
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es.
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a
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Dyson building, the security
_
age to
i:~view
.
e evac~at;ion
Office of Safef and Security
·
officer.on outy
.
was directed
_
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_-
pl~n
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a nd
,-
pos
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ted
,
e~
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ac~llt~on
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V'{Ill.address each c ass an o
the
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coffee shop
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)
i'nvestigate
.
;
rou es.
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ow
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be
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the nature of
a
fire alarm activa-
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lcic~tfcf~iict
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a
6:.
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cince~fuf
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spe~i~~
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tion. He found the situation to
te~me
·
e pnmary e~ergency
procedures
·
and evacuation
.
b
.
e under control·, smoke from a
exit route
for
that locat10n. Pre-
ti
h
.
b
·1d·
.
.
I
It
t
•t
t
routes or eac
UI
mg, area,
bagel in
.
the toaster had caused
-
P
an an a erna e ex1 rou e
·
·
·
Should the prim
.
ary
·
route
.
_
·
be
orroom.
·
the alarm. The officer then made
If
·
·
h
·a1
n
·
e
·
ed i·n
blocked. Ascertain from the stu-
you ave a speci
. ·
the pre-planned inspection of
dent handbook who the
.
Fire
regard to a building evacuation,
the building. It was dunng this
need to obtain a copy of the
inspection tour that he found
MarshaJ is for the building you
evacuation plan,
orif
a build-
Mr.
Qui
.
no and his professor, Dr.
are
in.
If
you have
.
any individual
.
ffi
. .
1
.
concerns or needs regardin
'
g the
mg,
O
ice area or
C
assroom
Whitley, on the second floor
does not have an evacuation
.
and advised them that they
evacuation of
a
particular:build-
·
route placard conspicuously
could remain at their present Io-
ing, bring them to the
.
;itiention
·
d
1
·
a1
·
·
J
h
'
Offi
·
f
of the Office of Safety
.
arid Se-
poste
'P
ease c
t e
ice
0
cation because evacuation
_
was
curity or Ute building
Fire
Mar-
Safety
.
and Security on ex ten.:.
not warranted. Had it been need:.
sh.
al ih ad
.
.
v
.
anc
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22.82.
immediately
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essary, the officer was pr~p~~
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Cc~llege
:
js c9~mitted
tp
.
.
fy>
i~plemei:fy;iw
~~u,~ti,b~#'
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:}JlCOrpOiJl\ed
28q
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fitinu'al1Yi~valiia\'ihg1i~
UP,-
'
The '98-99StudentHaridbook
i~tfielv'i&atiorl'proce
.
dtires.
'
gradirig
~
its_'safetf'plans. Yo'ur
discusses
evacuation proce-
As
with anypJan, time an~ cir-
comrrients'and suggestion
'
s' are
d
d th
.
a
·
·
f b ·1d
cu
.
mstan
.
ce may dete
.
rm
.
ine that
.
.
.
ures an
e ut1es
·
o
ui -
·
a review
.
.
and lipdate
.
is
·
.
ap
·
pr
_
o-
encour:aged
:
arid appreciated;
ing Fire Marshals:
_
In addition,
.
:
• .
.
buildings have posted evacua-'
priate. The College's evacuation
John T~
/
Glldard
tion routes that direct persons
plan is updated annually. Plans
ADA Coordinator
.
.
·
.
·
.
.
.
3.4:,1),,tf:,
·
Griaranteed · C;etiit Cards_wi_th Credit Limits
·
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Up
19
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•
can't-
.
Get
A Credit
'
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Think
Again.
Want VISA & MasterCard Credit Cards?
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ORDER FORM
~
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-
YES!
I
want
Credit Cards immediately~
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-
J?ECEMBER
10; 1998
Find
;
oµt:whyReelBig
Fish
rock so
hard
by
MKBONOPARTIS
:
Staff Writer
.
.
.
.
When Reel 1'ig Fish released
their sophomoie
;
aJ.buin; titled
.·
Why
D_o
_
Thef Ro"ck_
·
so
Hard?,
_skeptics
-
figured
-
-
the band had
f?ec9nie official ''r<>ck stars," in;_
-fatuated with themselves and
tootlng
_
their own
horns (
excuse
"
·
the pun;fBut tlie title
.
only
.
proves what Ree/Big Fish
_
have
._
been singing all along
.
-, they are
··
·
. a fun band that'thrives on· hi-
·
l~ous lyrics,:everyday circum--
·
stances,
and
iriostof all
,.
the abil::
ity to laugh at themselves.
·
_
__
.
W.hyDoTheyRockSoHard
_
·
picks offwhere
Tum
The
Radio
.
rich and famous. That would be
fun."
"So would dating an ac-
tress," Wert agrees .
. 0jfleftoff ayearancfahalfago.
Enjoying the sticcesS.ofthe ex-
•.
tremely sar_castic singles Sell
Oii
_
i and'Treizdy
/
Reel Big Fish
say th
_
ey loveto give
:
-the
.
fans
."
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,
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photorromRu/Bi
gF
uhonline
what they want. Unlike so many
Reef Big Fish
rnayjipencf a lot of
,
time clowning around, but they spend all of their new CD
Whatever effects fame may
have had, the Reel
Big
Fish
boys are not seriously divulg-
ing. The new record keeps that
sense of sarcasm going, but the
band proved they can be both
serious and silly at the same time
with
Thank You For Not
Moshing,
an ode to the overag-
gressive fans who show up at
shows. Barrett sings: "When
I'm in the pit, I'm gonna punch
and kick/When I'm in the pit,
don't ya know - I'm gonna f---
up sh--
.
" On the extremely
catchy Down In Flames the
band considers their overnight
success, and on the revved"up
reggae
.
track;.Song #J,
,
Jamaican
ska legend Coolie Ranx lends his
vocal talents to the Orange
County band. With The Setup
(You Need This),
the fifth track
on Why Do They Rock So
Hard?,
Barrett and company
tread new ground and forego
their ska roots to create one of
the more memorable pop tunes
currently getting airplay. As the
video for The Setup gains expo-
sure on MTV, fans everywhere
cannot help but sing along.
Check out www.reelbigfislz.com
for more into.
bands thai
·
release
'
energetic
l1'_hydo !ht;! rock s_o
hard?(UNI/Universal) rocking out.
debu~ only to
foll6w
up with · matured."
.
.
the catchy hooks, I steal 'ein and
·
mellowed out, watered dowri
_
But what about the more
✓
put
'em in my own songs."
·
s~cond efforts touted as "inore
·
:
complicated ~ongs; the catchier
While Barrett is joking, it is
mature" by critics.Reel
Big
Fish
-.
hooks, and the more memorable
easy to see how Reel
Big
Fish
refuse to grow up
:
anth
.
ems of the second album?
convey a good time in their al-
"Maturity?"· trumpeter Tavis
· ·
· •
"What I do is; I listen to the
bums and their Jive shows. Their
·
··
Werts said laughing at a press
.
radio for all the good songs,"
Hve
energy has spread to alJ
release
:
''fhad
to
go
'
from shav-
lead singer/guitarist Aaron
.
genres of music~
and
the band
ing once
a
week to shaving
BarretsaidinaWRRVinterview
.
has no qualms
.
about playing to
twice
·a
week,_ that's howI've
.
>
"ThenitakeaU
the melodies
.
all
audienc~s tpa_t" IIii~ht,con~ider
1
'~Veli@tif16Iff®tt@~'
·
.
"
~~~i~~~~~t:~1~~
.
ska foreign territory. They have
had the pleasure of opening for
such renowned acts as Kiss, The
Cure, The Blues Brothers,
and
even Coolio. But what about the
aftereffects of
life
on the road
and screaming fans?
"F~e has only br9ught me
heartache and
_.
woe," Barrett
jokes'.
'.'l
want to be really super
h~~~;lCpn
~
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· too
long
on
glitter
.
.
.
.
imalgan_iation <>(K~r{cob~n
and Oscar Wilde than an Iggy
Pop-esque character by t~e
film's end.
·
(Get it? Curt Wild/
Kurt Wilde?) Bale also sue-
byCHRISKNUDTSEN
ing one word, "drugs." The
. .
.
l
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with 1qls Glam~rock; as he drallwls
ceeds as Stuart, an English as
Staff Writer
uMpan.
Isthonoiutgeshts1~tewmaesdatmouesa1_nt gth' 11: sf
_
_;_
some
!l
mo_st unca110y para es fis,h n' cllips character who
:'
.
<<•::
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betw~n.Slao.¢inclD
_
avic!BoWie
seems likehe
_
was
·
bom to say
Wh
_
at is that thing in
done as a joke but people took
: ',
.
:
·
'-'Velvet Goldmine" is
a'siri~
'-
a:nd
·
Wild and Iggy
.
Pop. · The
the line "!write fuh the 'Erald."
McCoys prancing around in a
it seriously, oh well. He came
c~r~attem~t
_
atip~~g
_
arienter-
_
.
film
:
~m~st ~e~~mes
,
Haynes'
;
Wher,ethefilm
·
reallyfallsapart. thong? It
'
s a crow, it's the
staggering out on tall stilts for
tammg ~pm
-
on
.
the--70s Glam-
own what
1(,-
_
_
~tory
-
~
.
bout
_
-·
is injts
·
attempt to recreate, or devil..
..
no, it's Marilyn Manson
Mechanical Animals.
The set
rock sceri~~
·
but'it falls into the
YJhatwouldhapp.e!J-
_
µ-~p~\~~1
i
:
f
pei:l)aps
f
riv!l.i the excess of the
·
and not only d_id he ~how up at closed with
_
The Beautiful
s~me
ixcess that proved fatal to
Pop had collaborated on a
Glam-rock scene itself. This is a
McCoys on Fnday mght, but he
·
People
but anyone who rushed
that craze;
.
.
,.J
.
.
project_of monu~e_ntiy exces~ at
•
very:strbng
;
R,
_.
tatipg:irdie~, as
-:
\,\\'.as i11;
:
~e Fivi~ c~!lt~r o
_
n
,_
sa
_.
!- _
out after that missed the encore
'!VelvetGoldmine"isanew
the height of their respective
·
deviant sexuafsituationsand
·
urdaymght.
·
·
·
'·
·
:
_.
··
.. song
.
Irresponsible Hate An-
fi_lm distri_buted b~ independent
.
c~eers in
.
the 70s
;
Sla~e begins
_
.
Oct'rug
use become the norm soon
_.
The shoV:7 had
_
a slow start
them.
For this he came out with
cmema: tltans,}vftra
.
~ax'.
.·
Set
;;
his
-
caree:
~~
-
a strugglmg ne~:.
·
after
the opening credits. This
with a god::~wfulband called
J2
.
the podium
.
similar to the pe;-
mo
_
stly 1!1 early-197os L?ndon,
wave artist m England who 1s
-
wouldnotbeaproblemforafihn
Rou~swh1ch
would have been
formance at
··
the MTV Music
_ the rnoy1~ conce_ms the nse and
booed off stage after stage be-
such as this
if
it were not for the
bettenf it was 12 Seconds. The
Awards .
. falI_oqi
.
cti?nal Glam~rock star fore
_
hescores thef!ghtmanager
.
_
;
fact that Haynes; lets absurd
only interesting thing about the
Manson continues to enjoy
Bram Sla~e
(an
?verthe top per-
for
,
the job.
:
Sladf s glitz-n-glit-
.
makeup jobs and potentially · band was !he fact that ~ere w~s
the performances by fondling
fom:i:ance
.
by
.
Vlrtll~l: unkno~n.
'
tei: stage_
c
show IS thoroughly
"hot" scenes overshadow the
a female smger .... that IS about It
himself in front of the entire
!o,nath~n .Rhys
.
)vfey~rs)
,
a?d
.
__
upspiged at a_n ~nglish·music
_
strong script and performances
thou?h, the i:est of the band was
crowd and then sucking on the
JournalistArthur S.tuart5 (Chris-
festival by Wild s drugged-out
he has to work with. For some
relatively weak and made me
hand he used (is that not
tianBale)taskpfs~~gSlade's
·
on
7
stagespasmroutine(shame-
_ ·
·
reason I doubt David Bowie
wish I_had shown up late: sweet?) Healsoplayedoffthe
formerfriends fora news story.
lessly stolerdrom Iggy Pop's
strutted around his house in an
Maybe ifl had a needle jutting
crowd well, encouraging them
·.
It
•
is the tentti anniversary C?f
antics with his former band The
electric blue wig twenty-four out of my arm I would have en-
to
·
spit at him as well as at each
Slade's staged a~sassination
Stooges)._Slad~'.s new manage-
hours a day.
joyed their performance a little
other, which kind of sucked be-
s~nt that res~lted
m
the
_
loss of
.
?1ent_ d_ec~des, 1f you can't beat
Theftlm won the 1998 Carnies more ... They only stayed on th~ cause I almost got hit by a nice
hi~ f~s and dis~~ce from
. .
e~JOIO em_. Sl~de
.
on the other
Film Festival award for "Best stage for about a half hc;,ur so 1t
wad of phlegm from one of the
the
.
pop c
.
ulture w9rld1n 1974.
hand falls head ovt:r heals for Artistic Contribution" and de-
was not a huge inconvenience
Mansonites
behind
me.
Bale's character is particularly
Wild; This is portrayed in clas-
·
.
buted in theatres recently. 1 truly though.
Manson also demanded the
intriguing as heis afonner<31am-
_
·
sically hammy indie~flick fash-
wanted to like this movie but I
Manson had the Civic Cen-
crowd to pelt him with their
rock
fan
f!imself, anq pur;ming
.
}on in a scene in which Slade's
can not say I enjoyed it ~hen I ter packed for his "shock rock"
·
shirts, leaving many of the
the story of ~hat becam~ of eyes ligh! u~ with h ~ and his
know I could not possibly bring
~how. Despite h!,s new image,
Mansonite
girls
Slade takes its toll on him.
manager s hght up with dollar
myself to watch it again. I can
waddup breasts , they played
topless ... nothing wrong with
Stuart tracks d~wn Slade's signs when Wild accepts the
say I am glad I watched this
a set with some ~ongs from ev-
that.
fonnermanager,
wife,
and finally
deal.
movie and Iknow a lot of crit-
ery album. The mght was started
The show was a surprise, I
co-star and l~ver, C~rt ~ld, to
There are some first-class
ics
and
moviegoers will
be
able
wi~ T~e Reflecting Go1 off of was expecting much less out of
retel!, the sto~es of ~1s l,!fe.
performances in this movie, es-
to look beyond or possibly even
A11t1cnst Supe~star
_
which got
it. After seeing the band play a
Velvet Goldmme serves
pecially Toni Collette as Slade's
enjoy the excess. Personally
everyone movmg nght away.
few times about three years ago,
primarily as a vehicle for Ewan
ex-wife Mandy.
·
She becomes
when I am in the mood forGlarn~
Other highlights of the night
and based on my expectations
~~Gre~or (f8?1o~s for his role
unable to keep up with Slade's
rock I think I will just throw on
were when the band played of them focusing on the new
1~ 'Tnunspotung ) to ~how
.
off indulgent lifestyle arid leaves
my old
Kiss tape. As far as I Lunc~box from_ Portrazt cf a~ look, I was predicting a weak
his tale?ts, not
t?
menu on more
_
him shortly
·
after his faltering
know, Gene Simmons never got A?1encan Family. For
I Don_t
show but I was proved wrong.
than a httle ofh1s flesh, as Curt
"relationship" with Wild be-
caught up in any torrid love af-
Li.ke
the Drugs,
off of Mecham-
While not my favorite band in
Wild. Direct?r Todd J:Iay?es
comes more important to him
fairs, but maybe that will
be
the
~al Animals,
a huge lit sign rose
the world, I have to admit that
must have quite a fascmauon
than their marriage. McGregor
subject of Haynes' next piece...
m the back of the stage, flash-
Manson put on a hell of a show.
....
I
i
.
;
·
THE CIRCLE
DECEMBERl0,1998
,.__
A
,
·
&
·
E
.
~
.
.
~
.
·
PAGE12
EafSliibif'
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fto-WnWard
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byC~ITO
·
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.
fog
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l~gi
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quantities of e6stasy.)
.
as
_
foUbowsd. ~n~
.
wf~uldlbe,p1e
.
·
w
.
.
hy
·
.
d,oravers needsun
.
·
glasses
overa un ance
.
..
o
·
s
.
cu ptmg
·
Staff Fashion Victim
.
. ,when they are nocturnal? Does
products that render the hak
it help bl
_
ock o~t the strobe light
helmet impervious to the
·
on-
.
In a cuiturai melting pot such
or further assist it in its perme-
slaught of the elements ( earth,
as the United States; a whole
.
ation of the brain?
Why
do
wind, fire, and water). If styled
slew
of
cultures
lie
.
festering
ravers need
a
minimum of 60
properly, a jackhammer could
beneath the surface of foain-
·
grainsofsilyerprotrudingfrom
not mar ~he giiido
1
s
perfectly
stream society
,
Withiri these
•
eve1,ipossible bodily orifice? It
.
sculpted head of hair.
'
~n6ther
.
cultures, there
is
a\nyriad
'.
of
is obviously not:conifortable
key ingredient in the guido.
fashionstyles that are embraced
andit is a serious pi:oblem at
air~
.
Jifestyle is a shirt that accentu-
,
and I can not seem to figure out
port metal detectors s
.
o what
·
ates the biceps and pectorals.
why. The overall quiµ1ty ofhu-
benefits do they provide?
An-
Perhaps I
aJI1.
mocking .this be-
.
man .life has deteriorated
.
thropologists are
.
:w~rking vig-
c~use I personally lack both
throughout the years
·
andfash-
oro
_
usly
·
to answer these very
muscles, but that still does not
ion is no exception.
·
1n
a culture
·
questions;
'
·
·
·
.
justify tiie fact that grown inen
as diversified as ours, fashion
Preposterously loose clothes
strut around wearing clothes
.
takes numerous fonns and many
may look silly, but
ai
least they
that
.
wo
·
uld fit Simon· Birch
:
of them are detestabie. I ain
,
in
are c
'
omfortable. Personally,
I
Fellas, l know you spend courit-
,
no way a fashion connoisseur
prefer no
:
ciothes. When iso~
less hours in the gym and
lam
but since
I
have iny own col-
lated in my apartment lam na:..
really proud of you. But
fof
umn,
I
have the opportunity to . keel ~tever)' qppoftuqity
,
and if God's sake,·give youruppertor~
critique or
.
devour
any
topic I
the threat of incarceration were
sos the cir
.
culation they deserve.
~aritand
I have e~ery ipten~i?n
·
riot)res'ent; r:
·
would
'
.
have no
.
I feel
,
guilty because lhave
of doing:jus~
~att
ea
Piw
t>t-:::
t:'qiialfus·'whh 'Jfarading
'·'
aioimd
been focusing on the flaws
in
(Tel!
.
me about 1t:-~?J
·
,
.
·
.
:,
,
.
;
i, ,
,
ptiblit:'lcompletely
·
bare
lfi,
Of
;
m
·
ale fashion so
·
allowme
:
totee
Since there are so many re-
course
'
;!the
exposing
'.
of
\
Mt:
•
offon
tlie
1
opposite
,
sexi1'Girls;
.·
~olting fa~hion~ out there and
Happy's Jack of girth would
you
know
that:g'uys
are
1
sfobs
;
1t would be unfair to ~
.
nger only. most likely
·
have
~
negative im-
and that virtually every thought
one, I will a~ck everyfonn t~at
pact on my sex life, but corisid.;
and
·
action is orchestrated by
.
·
comes to mind. Let us staf! ~1th
ering its presenf state of hiber-
rampaging libidos
:·
With this
the rave scene.
¥Y
,editor
nation, things
.
would ,not be
knowledge, may I ask why so
touched briefly on this fashion
much different.
many of you parade around
..
movement last week, but l feel
The flip side of loose; com-
McCoys wearing
·
clothes
.
th
.
at
the need to reiterate in greater
fortable clothing is of course
actually increase the rate at
detail. The pri~ary question
tight,suffocatingclothing. This
which
.testosterone
is pro-
Car(jto's articlesrriay
;
ca,use_him to
be
l9ved_bY
.
d()zens cind
as~ed whe~ try mg to analyze
,
type of garb is most frequently
duced'?
By
plastering your bod-
loathe~
by hundreds, bu~
,
~is sens~
~f
,
styl~ is
,matched
~y
this style 1s V.:hY?
,.-
Why do
exhibited by gymnasts, super
-
··
ieswithtightslacksandlo.wcut
none. He is picture.d liere about to knock em de
.
ad at hrs
ravers shop atB1g and Tall? Do
heroes and of course.
,
;guidos.
tank
tops, you are eliminating
junior prom.
'
·
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.
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.
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l~ger pan!£ help th~m
.
_.
~aq~e
FirstandforemOst,lwouldlike
· ·
thelikelihoodof,
.
m~
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tecliniq~e is more
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guid6 doesildtrequife
·
Itak lecruaf;stiiriulatiori.
h
:Honestly;!
lfiiifftigh1;
i-evea.Iinifclbttie:s
'to{
ii~~nyr
_
ri
ffiit
60
;ta
le
;
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t!Ne
'
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swim through the sixth dimen-
ian heritage
.
Sever~1 criteria
you dress like you are looking
·
be quite stimulating but in a spe-
Social Darwinism i~ G<>d so if
sion, which is a dimension that
must be met to constitute the
to get laidJ:>r ~oinethiiig apd:Ao
cial kind of way
t~
The onlyintel-
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•
every,ene wquld
,
make
'
war
.
not
can only be
,.
reached by ingest-
archetypal guido
·
and they are
.
not thinl(j
,
our
.
p~rents would
.
lectual s.tiiiiulationlexpe~
_
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,
we
;_
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uid-ev~lve with the
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·
capitalistic
society.
2
3
·
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s
11
·
12
.
yourclothesofflikeanorange .
.
PlaidTrousers:-JustbecauseI
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·
Perhaps this femaie fash-
.
raid myino
,
ther's wardrob
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e, that
.
ion moyeµiep(pf9,Yes ~at gen-
does no~ give you . the
.
right to
1. Chinese societies
:
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9.
One
WhO
lnsisls
. .
34
14,Marl(sfor~SWOfQS
,
15. Greek letter
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19.Til!smaybecomrnon
·
20
,
Upright
bar
.
22.
·
Lowcaloric
food
23. One billion
years
24.MJmJcs
·
26.
Sand trap
30.
Seventh
commandement
34
,
Stupid
.
35.
Alf
the
parts
36.
Compete
,
·
37.Nearto
38. Oki
instrumentot WIJi1um
·
39. Romar,
dress
·
'
40. Yalie
41. Slivers
of
wood
42.
On&
\fdlo takes pleasure
in
(C)
1998 Collcgiale
PresswireFcawres
Syndicate•
Online
at
http://www
.
cpwire.com
Last week's answers
.
43.
Sitting of
justices
in
COUit
45.
Pepper
plants
.
46.
Prepare
·
.
·
47.
Liner's
sidekick
48.
Hot beverage
51.
Sincerestcomplinent
57.
As
a
companion
.
58.
In
a pig's_
59.
It
takes
two for
1his
60. A
layer
of
rock
6Ufindu
title
62.Caldgame
63.Glvesup
64.
&mimer
souvenir
65.
Lucy's
friend
1.Clolhes
2.
R\aJ noliC8
3.
Russianrtver
4.Sedudedvtilef
5.
Pure
and INdulleraled
6.
Tire
7.PhonetlcJapanesehello
8.Funnets •
9.
Hawaiian
guitar
.
10.
Oppose
·
11.
Annoying
insect
12.
Bonier
.
13. Fish
eggs
21.
Bod(
carrier
.
25.
Muscle
straln
26.Jerome_
.
Zl.
Gille
extremeunctiOn
28.Cef1alnaxls
29.BusyilSeet
30.
Allenllon
gel!etS
31. Callo
mind
32.
Pertaioing
to
Latvian
Republie
33.
Tme spans
35.
Moottalkative
hof$8
38. Tel
that
ho!'9e
to
slOp!
39._forfat
41. F«mentedfoddefs
in
a sno
42. Thewmerlnawtll
44.
Kn!
of
cake
45.C<qln:tion
47.CoMectlon
48.Phone
C O
I.
ovo
RAD
P L
AV
SE
T I
SRAW
AMUS
NOER
RALE
TOOO
Look
for
this
week's
answers on
pg.
13
49.
Butter
8Ub8tilute
54. _
worm
50.
Edibleftst,
55.
Monstef
52. _
Bmclclnrldge
56.
Christmas
song
53.Tense
. der
:,
e"qualityh~s
.
fiilally been
raidyourgrandfather's.
.
.
achieved. Now
,
J;,
_
oth males
.
and
White. Re~pok High Tops-with
females dr~ss.to broadc
_
ast the
Velcro~tnlp
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you s!illown a
.
fact that they
;
are i9 heiit
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·
pair
·
9fth~se, purchasy
.
a shot-
.:.:.Th
.
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;
~
.
~light cha11ce
gu
_
n,. ~sert the barrel into your
thatl have ri.<.>t !nsulted,the
.
~ty-
mouth and pullthe trigger.
ci
li~tic ~llteg~ty of the entirecam-
For sqrnepne as fashionably
pus
·
, so allow :µ1e
.
to per~ist
•
Al-
critical as inys~lf, you might be
though
so:m.e
people
under the impression thatl hav~
.
innovatively intel1:wine
.
several
·
an abung~nce qffashion sense
,
:
styles within
.
their ensemble,
,
\Vrorig.
I
qp
;
riotdi~ss fashion-
that does notjustifypoor
.
ded-
·
ably, Ldiess .comfortably
.
sion· making
:
If
you w
,
e¥ ~y
.
of
,
Weather permi_tting,
L
do
,
not
the following gannents, you are
·
wear shirts tiµles~ there is a sign
due for ~ithera
.
make~over
,
<?r a
requiring jt. My hair lpoksJike
backhand, which ever comes
.
Max Headrgom after
a
urine
first
.
·
.
.
shower. lani white and I sport a
.
Turtlenecks - These make you
.
·
Kangol with an
·
OI~Ie
·
EngHsh
looklike either a dork or a fruit-
·
\)ottle\iapaiound
my
neck.
·
But
cake ~d we must remember
.
that:
.
you
k!!
.
ow
what7
·
I d
.
on't give a
we are
.
.
.
,
,.
·
·
·f-
and I'm
still beautiful.
.
GOOD
:
WEEKLY INCOME
ProcessiIJg ril~ilfor
nati~naJ company!
Freesupplies, postage! No
.
selling! Bonuses!
Start Immediately, Genuine Opportunity!
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2045 Mt. Zion Rd.
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- ~
=
--
=··
==~-----,------,,,,-,-,,..,,..,...--.:-~-------~-~-------------------------
DECEMBER 10
2
1998
.
.
G
-
/:
1\1
-
,
R.
:-u
.
ns-,
..
·
9_
1-~
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es
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.
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.
.
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'.
.
.
.
. .
.
.
.
.
.
t·
.
.
m1ss1ng1nac
•
ion
.
by
MANDYLILFS
'
discussed ra~ism, ho'in~sexual-
lined with one of the other most
Staff Writer
.
·
ity, and immigration.· '.flus song
·
powerful bands in rock for one
'
furtherignited their Iabelof~'the
of the largest.tours of all time.
band with attitude."
,. ·
i "··
·
This is where they proved
Manypeopleknowthatlam
.
1n
·
1991; GN'R°underwenta
:
their creativity and also where
the most dedicated fan around.
·
charig~
·
in their lineup. Adler
their original work halted for
Wh~n the subject qf
.
m~sic ap- . was fired for his drug habit and
now.
peai:siria conv~rsation, I
am
al-
Strad)in left the band, not want-
;
In -1993, they released
The
ways getting asked the ques
.
~ ing to do
.
stadium \qurs .
.
This
,
Spaghetti Incident,
which was
tiori;
,
~
'What ever happened to
leftroomfornewcq!Jlers drum-
·
their album
,
of cover songs.
Guns N' Roses?"
·
rilerMattSorum,forrnerlyofThe
They dedicated it to
.
musicians
.
The bad boys
of
rock Qroke
.
Cult, rhythm gui~atist Gil!)y
who influenced
.
them through-
·
on theL:A. scene in
·1987;
,
Their
Clarke,
fromKillfor'[hrills
and
out the years
.
. ·
They recorded
firstalbum
reiefse;Appetitefor
Candy,
'
and key_poardi~t Dizzy
songs such as
Attitude
by
the
Destruction;
sqld 21 million cop-:
Reed, formerly
of-The
.
Wild.
Misfits, Blat;k Leather,
by
the
ies worldwide
,
.
This album by
During the same year, they re-
·
Sex Pistols,
and
Big Dumb Sex
;
Oeffen Records produced their
leased two albums,
Use Your
fl-
by
Soundgarden
.
In 1994,
GN'R
first three
.
hits, whichsparked
·
Oiu;io~
land
Use Your Illusion
did another remake. They tack-
their long-lived popularity. The.
II,
each selling
16
million
copies
led the
Rolling Stones' Sympa-
heavy
:
Welcomejo the Jungle,
worldwide. These albums
im-
.
thy for the Devil
for the "Inter-
the love sorig
Sweet
Child 0'
pacted today's generation with
view with the Vampire"
Mine,
and
the upbeat
Paradise
their unf<>rgettable
.,
singles
,
soundtrack
.
The-remake was
City
'
launched the
ii
care~r,
•·
Ap~
.
They release~ a trilogy
,
of power
'.
captivating and sent chills down
petiteforDestruction
contlined
ballads
from
.
these
,
albums,
the listener's back. After this
the band
'
s original lineup of which
ias
extensively played
song, the band began to split
frontman
Ax!
Rose
/
guitarists
over the airwaves and MTV
;
once again .
.
Slash went off to
.
·slash and Izzy Stradlih, bassist
[)on
't Cry, November Rain,
and
do another project called
Slash
s
Duff McKagan,
-
and
·
drt1mmer
Estranged
exemplified GN'R's
Snakepit
and continued his pro~
Steven Adle_r. The hat:d-hitting
mind blowing lyrics and ev'olu-
motion by playing at "The
group continued with'their sec-
tion of music. The three videos
House of Blues" and appeared
ond release,
Lies, Lies, Lies. ·_
all linked together with a com-
on shows such. as MTV's
This,
totally ac?ustic album sur-
mon
·
st<>ry lin~ to
_
mystify and
"Loveline,"
"Politically Incor-
prise
.
cJ the
.
w~.rl4,
Th
_
e first
·
intrigue th
_
eir
,
audience.
_
The
rect with Bill Mahr," and re-
single,
Patience,
opened the
bandlaunchedaworldtourwith
cently'TheDrewCateyShow."
eyes bf rnany
at1~
gave the fans
·
these tvio albums: They also
.
Sorum and McKaganjoined
a taste of
GN'R's
variety.
One
began touring with
Metallica
"'.ith
,Sex
Pistols
.
and
'Dur.fln
i'!
,.
rfl,M:HHRIT
-
xm~h,\~~i.f
e
9.i?1~{l=1
~tJ,;f(4tfJ.,Nqc.¥,
9J~
9l\~yj£,~~$:; D:ur.an·tmemb~i:Siito ~reate\Jtn.e:..
vers
_
tru smgle,
w
1cu
_'
c,a
_
sua,I1y.
Your/l{µs_ion~
tour
.
,
-
They he~o-:
·
baild
'
NeurotioOu'tsiders
J
ffhisr
photo by Robert John
'80s sleaze-rock kings
Guns N' Roses
have been in hiding
for several years now. MaY,be 1999 will be their year.
album was very successf~l
·
~~a
pation of th~ir new album with
contained
-
strong elements of work by possible
Nine Inch
punk. Stradlin did a few solo
Nails
members
Chris Vrenna and
projects, along with creating the
Robin Finck, along with other
band
Iv;y Stradlin and the Ju
rockers
.
On Tuesday, October
Ju Hounds.
Clarke, his oppo-
27, Geffen released a compila-
site, continues to tackle
solo
al-
tion of all
GN'R's
music videos.
bums. As the band split for
Simply named,
Welcome to the
musical differences, Rose is the
Videos;
this release gives hopes
only original member currently
to fans that an album make be
remaining. The major split be-
coming within the next year as
-
gan when Slash left the ban~.
the rumor goes.
He wanted to continue with
Knowing the imprint left on
their original rock sound and
music by the rebels of rock, the
Rose wanted to evolve.
,
· long awaited album will bring
--::,t,W.hat\is,J~ft
for; GN'R1fam;; much success, Ax\ Rose has
aiolind
:
the
,
•
globeis the
:•
antici~
·
s
'
oiiietht'n'ii'Jv hts
'
sle~v~
:
~
c
cc'''
'
"Ple~santVille'.' well-meaning and funny
·
by
JOHN SULLIVAN
.
:
Staff Writer
..
.
:
'
"Pleasantville/' directed by·
.
GaryRoss gofa
'
lotofbi.tzzwhen
it came out.Many critics praised
this film for its
'
high c9riceptidea
and witty script; Newspapers·
and· magazines alike awarded
the film
•
with
four stars and hy-
.
perbolit claims
of Oscar win--
nings.
·
First off, the film
:
is not
that good but
if is
•
one of the·
more good natured, better writ- ·
ten and well acted films
to
come
out in recent nionttis. And
·
i1f
this
'
particular movie season that
is saying
a
lot:
.
Tobe/Maguire ("The Ice
Stonn") and Reese Witherspoon
("Fear") play a brother and sis-
ter who
·
are magically zapped
·
into
a hokey '50s
tv
sliOw
called
"Pleasantvme.'' The brother is
a
;
bit
:
Jf
TV:jlinkie
1
UrbO
·
kri.ows
,
._w
..
•·.
·
•
. , :
,.
.·
...
,
·
··
r-'
; ·_·-.
the entire history of the show.
'
The
sister
is ... well
..
. very socially
advanced(tranipy) ahd r~ely
gets tlie
·
chance to
·
watch
·
TV.
When
they enter Pleasantville
-
they become
:
the
·
son and
daughter characters of the tele-
vision family,
played
excellently
by Joan AJlen
·
and William H
Macy. Now named Bud and
URGER
KEN DO
G I V E
---+--+-1-_+-~
U
S
A G E
I
i--1,~..;..+.;;;;..
I
E
N
_.,__._..._.
.
G A
E L
........
::::_+-.... ~.._-_~~
E A
ALON
~-➔---
ANGO
LEDG
--f..--t--
UCRE
LOSE
Mary
·
~ue, these visitors from
colors of reality. The more the
limited role and Tobey Maguire
another dimension have to ad-
locals of Pleasantville find out
is probably the best young ac-
j
ust to the cheesy sitcom
about things like sex, violence
tor working today. Mostimpor-
lifestyle of
_
this
"Leave
It To
and individuality, the more col- . tantly though was JT Walsh as
Beaver"-esque existence.Since
orful the town becomes. It is a
the stubborn town ald
.
erman
the brother is adept at picking
neat metaphor that Gary Ross
who rejects and fears the val-
out
·
19S0's entertainment con
-
comes up with
.
but, ultimately,
ues of the
"
real" '90s teams.
venticms, his
.
sis
'
ter
..
has to rely
"Pleasantville" spreads itself
Walsh, who has made unremark-
ori
hinn:b
deal with this odd tum
too thin.
able characters remarkable for
o( ev~'rits:
'
Thirig(siich'as
"·
in
. : -
·•'Aft'»'.ff~oui-s and IO minutes
the past decade, passed away
entire basketball team that never
one
.
get
s"'
i
the.
sense
·
that·t~e
,;c
-
;
last year of a heart
;
attack.
misses a sh9t, a mother who
writer found himself saying too
"Pleasantville''isthelast
.
fi!rn he
wears pearls while vacuuming
much
with a
script that
was
completed before
he died
and
it
and a father who says words
probably supposed to be
-
less
is
a
good testament to his act-
like "swell." The film parodies
than 90 pages. An attempt to
ing prowess. He will be missed.
the quaintness bf)950s televi-
tackle the issue of racisn:i came
Anyway, "Pleasantville"
sion
intelligently;
Twists like a
off a little hokey to this reviewer
starts off
strong
and for about
45 year old woman who has
and ended up taking the audi-
90 minutes it
is
an
enjoyable
never heard of
sex,
and a black
ence out o( the fantasy. Also,
commentary on the sterilized
and white community that re-
Williamfl.Macy'scharacterwas
moralityofpre-McCarthyenter-
jects the foreboding presence
a tad underdeveloped. The im-
tainment. "Pleasantville" drags
of color add
·
to
·
a clever script
age of a '50s TV dad slowly re-
a bit in the last twenty minutes
that, for some reason, never
alizing that dinner WILL NOT
or so but it can be forgiven be-
seems deliberately high concept
be on the table for him every
cause of its good intentions. It
(a criticism I had with such TV
night is a vivid one but I would
is rare to see such a well-mean-
themed movies as "Stay
have liked to know a little more
ing, gleeful comedy-fantasy
Tuned" and
"Natural
Born Kill-
about his personal life. Despite
these days. "Pleasantville" is a
ers~'.) Both Bud and Mary Sue
these criticisms, Pleasantville
nice break from the mean-spir-
begin to affect the sheltered
was quite entertaining and has
ited jerk comedies like
"The
comrnunitywhoseetheirworld a great cast. Macy, a versatile
Waterboy" and the all-out
slowly take on
the
unnatural
Mamet vet, made the most of his
gorefests such as
"Vampires."
.L
Circle photo/Joe Scatto
Marist's Bill Persson gets ready for his next shift
cm
the ice
during Marist's last home game. Marist is currently 6-8.
-PAGE14
IIoclcey .team'1ooking
for
Warzecha's returQ tospark
their
nm
at the SllpetEast
by
KAARENUMMEID · ·
In theii-
_
I~srgaine on the road
·
have won
.big
.. They
als◊
have
S~aff.Wd
_
ter
against .Wagner, the
·
Foxes
a-couple
_
9f tough losses.
•
One
fought ctll game long a fella go~
reason to their record is due to
Th~
~arin-
weather in D~cem-
·
short 6-5. Rinehart said he team
,
their five one-goal losses on th(?
ber is not the only thing thatis
:
played we)l:despite the los
·
s.
-
year.
-
-
.·
:_
unusual in
_
Pqughkeepsie right
.
':Vfe
played weJtmost of the
:
Marist has lookedi01pres~ive
now.
.
_
_
time but we broke down in the
this year and things are looki!}g
With
one·game left this semes-
-
last two minutes," he said.
good for BrianWarzecha's re:..
ter on December 11th against "Wagner is a good team and
tum next
.
semester, making a
C.W. Post, the Marist Men'§
converted our mistakes." .
potent offense look even more
Hockey Team finds themselves
This
time it was not the perial-
explosive, The spring semester
at 6-8.
·
ties
.
that hurt the Red Foxes, it will determine their fate. They
Losing four out of their last was two breakaway goals that
trail both Wagner and the Siena
six games; the Red Foxes find
lifted the Wagner attack.
Saints in the
.
Super East, and
themselves with their backs up
Rinehart said things like that
·
their remaining schedule is a
against the wall.
·
should neyer happen.
.
tough one.
_
.
_
Assistant Coach Kent
"There is never
an
excuse for
Their home games include
Rinehart said thafthis game
abreakaway,''Rinehrutsaid. :•1t
Rutgers; Rider, Western
.
CT,
could pick the momentum again.
helped them
win
a game in which
-
Siena and Princeton
all
of whom
''.We need
fo
get more inten-
neither t~am held more than a
-
will not go quietly into the night
sity from our guys," he said,
one goal lead."
The away games look like this;
"We need to control.-the slot
.
'Ine goal
-
scorers for, Mat;ist- Siena, Monmouth, Western CT
area in our own zont: and also
inclµded
.
Drew Bowden, Sean
and Scranton, which is a Divi-
dump the puck to allow our-
Powers, Ray
-
Kenehan, Ralph
sion 1 scqool.
speedto take over games."
Aiello and Carl ·Libby.
·
·
The New Year will bring in a
II b
.
II
k
Marist has had
·
success
Th~
:
five goals scored were
new sem~~fer .for the Marist
0
ey
a
.
ma
·
es
againstC.\V.
'
Postinprioryears,
rightin1inewiththeir4.92goa1s
Men's Hockey Team.
·
Their
-
.
_
.
_
.
.
. _
.. _
.
. . .
.
.
especially
·
in
_
Poughkeepsie,
per game
_
average
.
.
H9wever it
.
_
games wil!_ be challenging and
·
·
·
-
·
scoring over
10
goak against:
·
is tlieirdefense thatis
.
allowing
·
~ompetitive:
-
·
>.
. .
.
.
·
·
run
.·
at
·
.
MAA
.
·
.
'
.
.
c·
.
_
·
ti
..
.
·11
·
e
.
them.
.
.
.
4.28 goals per game
·
that
needs
.
.
Only time will show wliat"the
A win over Post will putMarist to be improved
fol."
the next se,-
Foxes hav~ left
for
the stretch
'
.
.
•.
.
one game under
·.soo
and set a
mester.
'.
.
.
'
.. ·.-
'
.
.
run towards
'.
a' second consecu-
but coll1es,u
.
p
.
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00.KS
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byRYANMARAZI1_'1
' .
games
·
from the numbef seven
_
'
.
:
.
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_
·
.
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SlajfWriter
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1
J~~!:~!6iu
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to
..
:
improve
.
,
their
dep
-
th
ill
The Marist women's volley-
trol taking the first game almost
,
·
-
~
·
_
.
~:;
1
~~A~a~i~l:d::~;e~~:i~ d!~
-
i
.
:
.
::~
-~:n~
.
t:t~;n~~~~
the u
.
-
p
·
co
m
.
lng
·
winter
Season
.- ..
where dreams come true.
stantly prov1dmg key plays to
•
·.
,-
_
·
..
· ..
.
-
•
·
-
,·.
_
.
.
.
.•
•
.
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·
..
Orlando, Floridawas the site
keep the Red Foxes ahead ·
··
·
·
·
.
·
·
·
of the MAAC championship
throughout.
b y ~ 9 L 6 ~
;_
ence placing with added depth
:
t~
this
_
team; Galante,besides
'
.
that was being engulfed by a
Julee Cerda stands out
SiaffWriief
·
,. _ ;
·
to th
_
eir squad. In the past, the
competing
·
in the sprinting
resurgent Mari.st Red Fox vol.:.
amongst the tournaments lead:.
.
.
.
.
.
,
. .
.
.
women's track team has always
events, will hurdJe for the tea,.m,
leyball team.
ers sporting 38 kills to go along
The end i:>f
_
orte
se_aso,~ptjn~s
_.
:
'
r~J~ec(qn the strength of their
·
allowing the women to compete
ThecellardwellingRedFoxes
with44digs.
.
aboutthes~o(aj:f<>tJ:i~rfoi)lie
,
run"n:'eis to gather poirits in
.
for more pointsin the
-
field
entered the tournament as the
Marist played number nine
·_
Marist College
·
-meri'.s
~
ahd
'.
meets
."
'
.
:
_
-
events.
:
-
.
.
_
_
number lO seed and played like
seed Siena atJ
O
a.m. on Tues-
women's track teams.
.
However, Marist looks to be
Early season progress
'
shows
the number one or two seed.
day
:
after three
,
grueling
-
games
With theirrecentsuccesses on
stronger
."
with the greater:Vari-
that there is potential for this
·.
On Monday, November 16th,
the day befof~.
,
If
the
'
Foxes the
.
-
cross country cour~t!, both
·
ety
·
that
:
they pos"ses)1ofonly
.
team to continue to do well
Marist defeated
.
number 4 seed
won they\vould have been one teams look to continue the win-'-
on the track, but in·· the °field
·
throughout the winter track se_a-
Manhattan, 3 games to 1 (10-15,
win away from the champion-
ing ways on the indoor track;
·
events
,
as well.
·
_
son.
15-9, 15-14 and 15-9), continu-
ship gam,e.
·
,
However; the Red
Both teams have sent runners
.
Freshman· Jen Stewart is one
AtFDU, the women picked up
ing its torrid rampage through
Foxes"ioit.in
_
straightsets to the
to early sea~cm meets at West
·
persoriwho\Villmakeailimpact points ina couple
·
of events,
the MAAC tournament.
Saints
to
end their run .
.
-
·- -
Point and Fairleigh Dickinson
in the events where Marist has
despite §ending just a fewrun-
The victory was the third
Fairfield, who went undefeated
Univei;sity.
-
before g~ne without proper rep-
ners to the meet.
·
straight of the day for the Foxes
i~ the regular season in the
_
These meets
·
hav
,
e provided
resentation. Stewart, in just the
.
-
Junior Tara Quiqn ran to a first
defeating the number six seed
MAAC, went on to win the for the sprinters and field event
·
s~corid meet of the year, has
ai-
·
pl~ce
-
finish in the 3,000
-
-ineter
Rider and number seven seed
championship against
·
st.
competitors to ~gin their sea-
.
ready br
_
oken tl).e women's shot event and the two Distance
Niagara earlier on Monday
af-
Peter's.
son, while the cross country
.
put school record with her.throw
.
.
·
Medl~y Relay teams ran to s
·
ec,-
ter losing their first game to
runners ar~ concentrating on of3 f•3 1/4".
ond and
.
fifth place finishes, de-
Niagara on S~nday.
building
.
t~eir speed after ·
·
Shewi
.
11-also be ~ompeiing in
.
~pite not having trained for this
Marist defeated Rider in five
months of training for longer the triple jump, joining senior
·
·m~t'
·
·
·
games in a classic game of mo-
distances.
_
captain Dominque Pino in the
.
The track teams have a month
mentumexchangessettingupa·
·
This year's
.
wqmen's team· jumpingcompetitions.
:_.
·
·
'
·
offbeforetheiinextrace
Jarm-
spectacular finish
.
.
After win-
looks to improve"-c,n last year's
. Morgan Galante, another
·
ary
10th at Manhattari "ror the
ning the first t\_l/O games of the
Metro Atlantic Athletic Confer-
freshlpan, is ~so add_ing C,epth
_
)
_
asper Relays.
~~~~te~;~o:~b~~;/;ha~f:~
s
wi
.
m
.
ming:
:
M~
,
'
ri
aria
_':_
Wbm
_
·
__
.
en·
:_
co
_·
'.
ilict
be
on
the match at two games a piece;
.
::~~~~
a
spine tingling rally
their
way
;
·
to
'
a
:
three-peat_
of
the
MMe
title
.
TheRedFoxesandBroncsex-
...
c~ntinuedfrom
pg
15
Commis.sfoner'sCup
'
: · ·
·
on their
-
final standings in
.
the
changed furious rallies evoking
MAAC conference. The points
the true meaning of competi-
Blackwell
:
leads: the way;
·
- Now
~!!-t
the
ran·
season is
•
are theri totaJed among.all of a
tion. Amidst the sweat, blood
Blackwell has posted the three
over,itistimetotakealookba:ck sc~ool's sports
io
determine
and pride immersing each
best one meter scores~ and the
·
and see how
_
the Red
.
Foxes
.
~eir
,
standirig. Th;µi_ks in large
player, Marist came out on top,
two highest three meter scores
compared to
'the'
resl
·
of thi
·
part to the1r cross country and
winning 15-13.
.
for the Red Fox~.
.
.
Metro Atlantic Athletic Confer-
tennis teams,Marist is currently
Also on Monday,
t)1e
Foxes
_
Themen'sand
;
women'silext' ence.
·
•
.
.
thirdinthes~ndings. They trail
avenged their earli:et
·
1oss
t6
dual ~eet is· Friday '-against
-
The Cominissioiter's
·
cup
'.
only Fairfield and Loyola in the
Niagara by sweeping all three
Niagara at the McCann Center.
awards points to teams based
Cup
.
race.
Box Scores
Match 111/15
Marist
3
.
3
15 15
6
Niagara 15 15 10
11
15
Match2 11/16
Marist 15 15
5
9
15
--
Rider
17
3
15 15 13
Match3 11/16
Marist
15
17
16
l".'l~agai:a _
5
15
14
.
,
.
;
~-
Match 4 11/16
Marist
10 15 15 15
Manhattan 15
9
4
9
·
Match
:
5 11/17
. .
·
Marist
·
S
;;
O
8
Siena
15
15 15
1
DECEMBER 10,
1998
ff
campus
:Report-·~
.
_
:'
··
-
',
·
'.
,
.
:
;
.
·
.
·
{°·'
·.
by J~nBeighley,Jr .
.
.
:-
.
...
.
.
..
..
,
-:,
·
.
.
'-
.
•
..
.
Is R~dy Moss amazing, or
to out leap a cornej for the ball.
they h~ve had 30 to 40 more
wh~t?
•
·
.
·
·.
.
. ';,_
.
·
.
·
.
·
.
:
Mqst of the dthei J,ig receiy~rs
p~ss·es thrown their way.
.
He is not only the be'st rookie
,
·.
·
in the NFL lack the speed to burn
Factof the matteris people can
.
in the
NFL, th(?ugh surprisingly
a man deep, JJ Stokes runs a 4.6
not keep the ball away from
theie is competition iri Fred Tay-
·
40, Keyshawri Johnson' ruris in
Moss:
It does not seem that he
lor,'butheisthebestreceiverin
the
4.5,
4;6
range, Herman
can be overthrown and if he is
the
NFL.
.
·
·
;
·
·
·
Moore bas never been much of
underthrown he seems to have
This statement may seem like
·
a
·
deep threat. Goahead. Try to
this uncanny" ability to come
a possible overstatement, but
;
th!nlrof the big
·
r~ceivers with
back a
.
lid fight the defensive
ther
_
e are no flaws in his game
:
-I
the speed to get burn corners
back off for the ball or force the
know
_
what you'r~ thinking.
:
·
deep: Keep
'
thinking.
pass inter(er~nce call. He has
·
Jerry
·
Rice;
·
Antonio Freeman,
.
For
the season Moss has
'
had,
.
t120
yards on
55
catches and
Cris Carter, HerinanMoore
;
arid
there have not.been ~at many
14 touchdowns. The amazing
Carl- Pickens'are· all established
.
balls thrown his way. He has 55
thing is ~h~t Moss was not sup-
receivers that have ~een ·doing· rebeptions, ·that works out
to
·
posed, to'be doing this. He was
it
for
years. This is ·a:pointwell
ju
.
st over four catches
·a
game:
not eve_n suppo
_
sed
to
be a
tak:en and it is definitely valid;
Iri> his 13 career NFL games,
starter on the VikirigS: What we
but
·
the
·
·
things Moss
·
has done
there have been 86 bails thrown
nave seen is the start of the next
this
·
'year
i
art'! unheard of for a
·
his way, or 6.6 attempts a game.
gteat career in the NFL. He is·
rookie recei".er.
.
That leaves
3
·
1
:
·
uncaught
not going to be Jerry Rice, no
.
Moss is'6-5 anchveighs
·
·
210
passes:
Of
those
31
passes,
one ever Will be, but he will be
p6u~ds'. He
is
as big and as tal-
only
two
have been dropped
·
by
'
·
one of the best to ever play.
ented physically
C
as any other
Randy Moss .. Conversely, Rice
. How'.inany
teams
passed
'
up
receiver iri
_
the
NFL:
:
He was· an has
.
dropped eight
·
balls; blithe
·
on Mo
s's'
because
b(his'°'
his-
aU:,:state basketbalJ:player
fo
has had a bad year,Fieeinari
;
tory?
'·ph
yeah', fr'was
'·
abou't
West Virgirifa. He ru·ns a4340
1'
sorri'eotie·in ·his :prime and
'
dne
t\Vo~thirds ofthe league. Well,
yard· dash, He has the'speed
'
to
.
of the
best
recdvers in the game,
all opposing GM;s can do now
burr a cornerback d~ep, ~he
has also dropped_8 ~alls.
·
Each
is sit back and watch and hope
strength to muscle them out of of them has puf up numbers
that orie_day they can devise a
the way ano the:jumping ability
similar to those of Moss, but
way to stop
·
the unstoppable
.
PAGElS
-
~
,
hat's
on Tap?
Men's basketba,~ 12/12@ American University
5:30p.
_
m.
.
.
Women's basketball 12/12 Home vs. Colgate 2p.m.
.
12/20 @ Holy Cross 1 p.m.
.
.
.
Swimming and diving (M&W) 12/11 Home vs.
Niagara-University 4:30 p.m.
Indo6rtrack
(M&W)
1/lQ
@
·
Manhattan, Jasper
Relays
9
a.m'.
·
.
.
..
.
.
...
.
.
~
'
t
·
:
'
'
.•
·
.-.
T~ugh
Trivia
When
-
was the last time a MAAC team won a
game in
_
.
the
NCAA
tournament?
.
·
•
·
-
..
·-
~
~
j:
.
;Ji1;:?
.,
Last weekis
:
question
~
-When was the last time the Division I
·
tollege
·
ba:sketball national champi.:ni was undefeated?
Answer - The 1975-'76 Indiana Hoosiers went through the
entire season undefeated, finishing 32s0:
.
•
•
. . . . . . . .
•
·
L . . . . . .
~CC)mbinefor
9-lstartindtialmeeh;
by
THOMAS
RYAN
-
.
,
Joss t~
·
seton
Hitli
Univer~ity as
.
'
,
.. .
Sports Editor
-.
a ble
,
m
_
ish._on theirr~corf Both
teams are undefeated in confer-
.
T~
Marist~men:s and
·
ep.ce meets at 3-0.
t
.
..
•
0
\\l~me,
,
rJJs:.sv;.iriiiI}mg
anf
diving
-
?~
~ )
5~~tfrttJltW~
teams are off to fine starts once
<
defending
men
's-MAACchanf·
again this
,
•
.
pions comes as little surprise.
season~
·
....
.
<
:
:
,
;
.
~:·
:
~
-
·
,
La,try
Van,
Wagqer) Red I:1?xes
.
The m
_
en'steams are currently
'.
have
;
defeated
,
non:conference
5-0 in dual meets, while
·
the
foes Seton Hall and Central Con-
women
_sit,
~t
._
4., 1, with only a
•
riecticut
'
State, as \\'ell as MAAC
.
.
..
rivais Iona, Rid~r. and Fairfield.
Th
_
e.~on;ien also have ,not been
a surprise, as they a:re also two~
;i;;~~~~~~tJ~t
PJrates prevents them
'
from an
undefeated campaign
.
They
·
have
·
also beaten CCS, Iona:
-
.
Rider,
attd
F.rirfield
iri
dual
meets
·
this season.
Th~ men's squad top per-
former is sophomoreba~e Dob-
Also swim~irig well t'or
,
Marist
bins. Dobbins has posted
is sophomore Keith Nichols.
Marisff top thf¢e
times
in the , , ·Ntchols'has Marist's fastest two
100 freestyle, ii's
.
top
•
twptiriles -·'.times
fo
the 1000 freestyle and
in the 200 freestyle,
antfft's
first
200 meter backstroke. He also
and third top. times in the 50
has been a part of Marist's fast-
freestyle.
.
.
, .
.
·
.
est two relay teams
..
He has also been
a
key pai:t of
As
far as divers go, Chris
the Red Foxes fastest 400 meter
relay teams, which
came
against
..
please see
SWIMMING,
pg
.
14
CCS and Seton Hall.
;,,_.
:,
,
...
'.
"
:'.~
,
~
;
'.
. •
r
;-;·
_)
;
q
_
~-
·
.
f
~
:~
:
:.
['.·:i
i
.
!~~-
~
... ':
:
:
;
-
-~-
..
4;
:..·,
':.:;
~.
'.
:.•·
.
•.
.
.
-
..
:
II
I
IME
'
-'mllE
i
llEIIE&GT· G'l'FT
~.):'
.
~:.~_"
·."
,
.•..
:
.
.
"
.
,·
.
.
.
__
,
,
('
.
.
_
~
~rt~!d
\
~
a
:~
~iJft:
t~r
ji@Ql!
~
1
~
m~~iii~te,
,J
10~
_
~6niate, -
.
or
.
~riy
_
of
_
yo
~r
.
f~i
e~
d~?
\
~~0
:
fil
i
fai
:}
ljlt
·-:
f0r
:
:
M~iir
:
{~t~t~t!?118S'
:
IBist?
.
·
.
.
•
•,
,
.
. .
.·.
:
.
.
.
·
-
··::
· ..
fullci
;i
j~Jj&
,;
§~f!~~ij
g
!~lijj
'··
·
'
.'
'
i
·
ill!~li~
';
~~
~
qa:v~
,
a
,
cpuple
,
of
,
great_
gift
ideas ..
.
•
l:t~ffjJ
1
~j(t
t
~
f
~li~i(fff)~-f<~11
·
long
ai.Stance.
BiejijiiJ
f
f&i
1
1
1.ilJI
~21~1
• ,
. _
·
,
·
·
_
·
'
f
!!i~!tt,::tt~f
t~f
f
\
{!U[:Clii$?d
at
our
Foxnet Student Telephone
F0r
·
fi.u;tlier·
-
d~~iis
,,
aj14
,
pUfip4~i11g
illfonnation, give
us
a
can
at
.
(9l#l
:
51S
-
~4A
:
Q
:
Q;
.
M(:)n(iay
·
thr()ugh
·
Friday,
8:30-5:00.
.
..
·
~✓
:
~
.·-
M
.·
·
~
.
-
~
:
,L
.
·
tf?/1111l1·~A~~A
l11A~A~
JL
~
!!'!'!JA/U,.,..,,~
~tJll"Jt!"
e,.1'1AI
I
·
t!ff-,,;r'rT
·
·
·
·
~ ~
rwarr~
·
~
-
7~~
.;;>
I~
.
~~,
.....
Stat
of
the Week
note o _tbe·Week
Senior gaurd Bobby Joe'
TH£
CIR.CL£
Hc1tto#i,s~Oth
in
thecoun-
s· · -. .
· t ·
··
·.-
·
·
·.
o~!~!;::;!~·::m~:u~i~~•i
R~av.;:;:~:i..i:g:~:;;:;,:98~.;.;.;..,---------·-----\·
.
0
r
s
"We·
need
to
focufon our
jobs
7
as individ~ajs
t<>
form
as
~nerun;. Everybody has
to play _their role.''. -
B~th
Sluicke
womens
basketball
'PAGE-16;
Re£ord-bffllkjngstiJrt.formen's-h()()ps
by
JEFFD~CKE
..
Judging by the strong tum~ut . the_ fans att~nding the games
in .
best teru.ns.
f:1
: e league
I(::
·s:f
!t~
1
::!rd~~~~i:e;:n1
. Staff Writer
for Friday night's game at the .
full
force.
. : . ·_
. .
··..
knew,,we .
~
to attac
.
Peen
was
limited to
H
minutes
James_ J. Mccann ~~nter, stu-
. "It means afot to ,?s that ~e early, he said. . . . . ·
·
of
·a!tion
and was .later diag-
The Denver Broncos are not
the only undefeated team out
there.
dents seem to be excited about · students . are here, he said.
The game remm~ed ,close
- . · d
w·th
a
heart ailment that
this teain
_
_
__ .
'.'That helps us a lot and gets us
throughoutthe first
l
mmutes
n~se
-1 . .
.
.
.
d fi
The Marist men's basketball
team, at 6-0; is off to its best start
in it's· Division
I
history. The
Foxes-defeated Manhattan, 60-
58, last Sunday to remain un-
Head ~oach Dave Magarity. pumped upt
_ .. ,.,
ofthefir~thalf,asSienatiedthe
~
1
11
keep him stdelmed
1ll el-
and the rest·ofthe Foxes were . _ Siena carneto Poughkeepsie
score at 36 on a Scott Knapp
rutely.
.
. . _ .
l d
sopleasedwiththe_studenisup-
with an u~blemished record of -~ee-pointerwith 1:18_t~pla_r .. sunday
:rv~~;~
tra:ee fir~i
port thafthey remained on the' their own notto mention a 2-0
W1th
4~
seconds remammg m
Manhattan, mar ng
court after the final buzzer to
mark against the Foxes last sea-
the half, freshman _POintguard
road g~e of the youngf seasthon
beaten.
.
.
thank
the
fans.
son ... · _
.
·
_ ·
.
-Sean Kennedy regained the lead · after,gomg 3-12 away ~om e
"Hopefully this is~the start of
Marist carrie out'looking to at-
forMarist with a 30-foot heave
Mccann _Center last ye_ar.
kn
. The victory over the Jaspers.
came after a 93-8Twin over the
Siena Saints on Friday and a 72-
55
triumph over Harvard on
Tuesday.-
a ·great year,'' Magarity an-
tack the Saints' full-court pres-
that banked in to beat the shot
. That being so, Maganty
ew
· ·
d·t _th-
d
·
thi.
· ·
fi · ·
d
clock
.
_
it-would be a test..
nounce o e crow .
sure, some . ngJumo~ orwar
.
. .
. . -.. -d·th··
"I ,
.
t b a tough situ
After the high-energy contest,
Joe McCurdy· said was key to '
Kennedy's prayer s~fte
e
. t s gomg
o
«;,
.
. -
senior guard Bobby Joe Hatton
their
success:
.
momentum back to the reener-
ation do~n there; he said ~;i~r
emphasized the importance of
"Siena is probably one of the
gized Red Foxes, as they tacked · to the
trip
to _Manl:)-attan.
I,t s
· on three free throws in the final
usually the time when you re
30 seconds, going ·to the locker . most vulnerable ~o_get b~at."_
Lamb off to
a
slow start .in
her first season
at
MaFist
by
RYANMARAZITI
Staff Writer
shots, but it was not enoughas
uted a lot," Hollister said.
they fell short 63-53. For the
"They're 'a vital part of the
game, the Foxes shot37% from
team."
·
Women's Basketball at Marist
the field, 21 % from three-point
Lamb's roster boasts six new
is underway and new head
landandameager9-of-18from
players. At6'3",DiesdaSiedel
coach Kristin Lamb -may be in
the line.
has jumped into the starting ro- ·
·fora rough ride in her first sea-
Vallery netted 16 points and
tation at center and has played
sori.
. freshman Antoinette S_aitta
solid averaging six points and
The former UCONN co-cap-
scored 12 and. grabbed
4
45
rebounds per contest.
tain has celebrated once ttµ-ough
boards_. Lehigh held Shackel tQ
Against Boston U,niversity, the
the team's first
4
games ofthe
only
3
points on l~of-5 shoot-
RedHookNYnativegrabbeda
'98-'99 season. That lone vie""
ing despite her grabp~ng; 6
per_s~maL. §~ason highlP re-
tory came on December 2rid at boards anddishing.out4'assists;
b_o_q_µ,ds_
'J.J,•j1_1{(;_'
:_J_!J_q _'./UlV_TJt,_nr;
AmiyWl1trelli~t,iidyRelif6{e§ .
S_hiitkeGaida
latic.~Hiiiiaa=
:;r;;foni-White and Antoinette
shot a'blistering .500 from -be-
~entil.ls was a major'factbr con-
Saitta '.have also been cast;irito
hind the arc and .762 from the
tributing to the foss.
.· , '
tlles~~g I"ole at
.
times. White
charity strip!!. Co-captain Beth
· "We didn't do the litt.le things
robi~es w1th.sophomore _Cortnie
·shackel, who was unconscious
likeboxing out," Shackelsaid.
Ciaccio aqhe two-guard and
drilling 5-of'-Ttreys,Jed the Red
~'Their guards had too many re-
Saitta.rotates with sophomore
Foxes. Shackel also added 7 re-
hounds.'!
. ,
_
_
pow~rhouse,Tara Knight ..
bounds and
2
assists. Forward
As for the s}ow start, Shackel
White's twin sister, Lashonalso
Sabrina Vallery als9 contributed
said the Lady-Red Foxes defi- , plays fqr theRed Foxes.
15,points while hitting 7-of-9
-
nitely need to step up and score
Frosh Maii.e, Fusciregi§tered
frmn the stripe. Sophmnore Tara
more.
. _
.
the· highest singl
,
e-game point
Knight grabbed
8
boards fgrthe
~'We can't win shooting only . fotalfor the.season; blazing-the.
Red Foxes:
28% and scoring 17 points in a., nyion foc30 against Bost9n,··
· Assistant coach· Casey half,','. Shackel said.
_
.
_ University. Fusc.i sh9tJQ-for-
Hollister said the vkt9ry wasa
.fhristinaHenry'.yii$ the bigµ;-= [f2rfron{tlfe'.ijeldr.drijniµg7:of-
result. of.a co,tp.bination:
ijf
b'~t'&ihifoiit:playeft·iii'dotibie
t}
16 ffdrni{owrhownwhlle grab-
things. .,
?..:
7
:.S _
_
·
·
figui:es :f9r Lehigh (5-2) netting · · .. bing sev~n .rebounds,
:.;-;A.ijµy,W'k5
~tqughgame.
lJt1t
.
·
P
along "Yith ,'.\.lc::xis Be:vingtgn; . ·, M:.tiist
~ill
hos_t Colgate tllis
ourcaptains:stepped up and w.e ··tehigh::9ut-rebounded'Manst
Saturday, Qecember.'lith at
piayed great team defense," said
48-35, providing the margin for
McCaim:. Mari.st lost to Colgate
Holli_ster.
.
victory. It was tlle fir:Sttime all
lastyear76-7L
_ _ _
.
_
Marist sports a man:-to-inan. year that Marist had been out-
·
Shack~l "'said perfe,cting the
-• .defensive scheme but rotates it · rebounded: ·
·
_ ·
.
fundamentals is·a key to being
with
a
i
:..2-2 zone. The zoneal-
This year's freshman have
successful on both offense and
lows Marist to utilize its quick-
b_een v:iajor contributors and .defense against Colgate.
ness as a help~defense, which · Hollister said their play wiH be
"We need to focus ori our in..,
is very effective against teams
instrumental throughout the
dividualjobs to
form
as a team,"
with.a strong outside garqe.
season.
Shackel said, "Everybody has
Unfortunately, Marist has had
''The· freshman have contrib-
to play their role.''
a tough -•time •controlling.the _ _ _ _
;__ _ _ _ _ _
- - , - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - - - - ,
tempo of a· game .. A concern
Hollister says they need to im-
BoxScore:
prove on._ .
.
12
-6-
98
"We need to take care of the
ball a little \;letter," Hollister said.
The Red Foxes faltered in the
same department last year, un-
able to consistently· work -the
ball aroun9 and wear do.wn the
- clock en-route to a 3-15 confer-
ence record.
.
.
Marist trav~led to Bethlehem,
PA" to face LeQigh. University
this past Sunday. ,An 8-for-28
start for the Red Foxes put them
in a deep hole, trailing 38-17 at
the half.
Valle
Saitta
Seidel
Whit
· Shae
Cia
Anderson
Fusci
WhiteL.
Knight
Stephens
TP
16
12
2
4
2
9
6
3
1
0
2
0
6
0
1
·3
5
0
0
0
1
4
2
0
2
0
The second half was more
successful for the Red.Foxes as
they connected on 12 of 26
L-----------------------1
room with a 42-36 half time ad-
Led by Hatton s 11. pomts m
vantage.
the first half, Marist held a 28-
In_ the. second half, consecu-
26 advantage at the break. They
tive three's by Bo Larragan,
would go up by as many as nine
playinghisfirstgameaftermiss-
points in the second, before
. ing the._first four with a shoul-
sophomore Mars Mellish's two
derinjury, and Hatton extended
three's sparked a 12-3 Manhat-
. the Marist lead to eight with
tan run.
12:23 remaining. Hatton then
With 43 seconds left in regu-
tipped in a Donald Vale miss,
lation, the Jaspers tied the score
capping off an
s~o
Il]n and giv-
at 58 on a three-point play by
ing the Foxes a comfortable
60-
Durelle Brown, the third tie of
50 cushion.
the game. .
Siena- did not get any closer
Marist had the answer,
than five points the rest of the
though; as Hatton hit a 12-foot
way. Hatton·banked a three off fade away jumper with 1.9 sec-
an inbounds pass with a minute
onds to play to give the Foxes
_ t<?
go _to be~t tpe ,shm ~,lgck\ a
the "'.in. . , ... __ .
s'tiodhtit'"
rcfoed
to
be'
the' final
.
H
tt
n. 20th .
n'
the' country in
;,11.;1r.n<«(
R,.o-•~~
f('
"C.
r"~-~I'(:"
,.,l«Bn•·;.,,,,;t,
1•:c
!.'1:u·,,, , ..
nrutm·me coffin of tlie Saints. ·
assists, said he Just dtd what he
Hatton led Marist with 16
was supposed to do as a leader
points .. -Vale was hiig~ off the
of the Red Foxes.
bench with 14 points in 21 min- ·
"This is my• senior year,"
lites. Kennedy proved invalu-
Hatton told the Poughkeepsie
able against the tough· Siena
Journal.
"I
have to make those
defense, -committing only one
kinds of plays for us. to win."
turnover. Ma:rist's only down-
Earlier in the week Marist used
fall of the game was their free
a huge effort: by McCurdy, a
throw.shooting; as the !_led- gameMagaritysaidwasthebest
Foxes converted on "arely half o_ne Mccurdy has had in his
of-their auempts, while the career at Mari st, to defeat
Saints went 33-of~37 from the
Harvard. . - .
.
Iii}~. '.".: _-.
.
. _
.. ____ ... _
·
McCurdy scored 15 points,
··'1\1.c.Curdy,Larragan,andfresh-
grabbed
12·
rebounds and
man gaurd Richard Smith all
blocked three shots in the win.
scqred in double figures for the
Cielebak and. Jason Hastings
. RedFoxes..
... each added 12pointsfortheRed
After the game,Magarity said
Foxes.· The win looks even more
that the victory over the Saints
impressive considering Harvard
· proved the Red Foxes were a
had !:!eaten the Boston College
· go6d team.
.
.
_
.
·
Eagles of the Big East-Confer-
i•aoing into tonight every-
ence earlier in the season.
b9dy still was a little leery or
Marist will be in action this
skeptical as to how good we
Saturday when they trav~l to
·were,",
he
said. "Tonight sort of · Cornell, their final stop before
,validated this team." .
heading out. west to take on the
Qrie unfortunate piece of ne\Vs
Arizona State Sun Devils on De-
that came out of Marist's win
cember22.
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