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The Circle, February 26, 1998.xml

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 51 No. 4 - February 26, 1998

content

Stray animals running
rampant·in Gartland
Commons and
the
Townhouses.
Volume SJ, Issue 4
' ' Social Sm()ldng
~ali lead
to life-threatening
addic~
:
tion in young adults.
-page4
Women's Basketball coach
.
1'.'5igns unexpecte4Jy, after
disappointing..
.
-page12
. _· The studeritn~wspaper
ofivlarist
College
INSIDE--
Maristcommunity ..
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page
2 -
Features ....... · ........
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.... page

-, op•nionoo~.~ ...
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page
12
February 26,
J
998
WMc~·.an~I~lianne1·6·1ight•·O~er•.·frequencies
by J E N ~ L A . ' . . ·ity:ovetiduJ~t16riistatid~s.
.
p;oblein,:'.-he said. uoi-ie~tenth
\VMC1fi~r~ like a real station,
WMCR is on a waiting list for
Staff.Write<
\\TMCR'S new.fr~qu.en-cy ~as
ofa watt is less.than that
of'a .
but an FCC Hcerise is needed.
an FCC license, but in order to
-
· ··· · .. · ·- · • ·
close, ifnottiie same:asthe fre-
double A battery.'.'·
Theie licenses cost $10,000 and
obtain a license they need to
WMCR and 'Channel. 6are qtiency that Channel
6
.·comes
' Lawton said that increa~ing 'is ,out
of
the club ·s budget. .
buy out an existing station's fre-
having problems sharing air.
in over the televisio~ antennae.
WMCR's signal strength would
Boyd said he would like to get
quency. Thompson says he is
Last week, Channel 6 and
Lawton said that to combat ·· have an impact on Channel 6,
the Communications faculty
discouraged by the college
WMCR's frequencies crossed
this problem, a special fil(erwas
but this was not the prnblem
more involved in helping the
administration ·s attitude to-
resulting iri scramblecl picture
boughno separate the two_fre-
with the television receptio·n.
station get this FCC license like
wards the radio station.
and audio on Channel6 (CBS).
quencies. Lawton said this
rn~
"Regardless ofthe signal in-
Vassar and New Paltz.
"Admissions constantly
WMCR and Channel 6 both
terworks well most
of
the time,
crease, we have io keep main~
."I'd like WMCR to remain a
plugs WMCR to incoming
broadcast over a television an~
but periodically need_s tuning.
tainingtJ')is filter:'' Lawton-said.
club where people can ha~e fun
fre_shm.in, a11d yet we don't get
ten nae which. is located above
Last week, in an attempt to in-
Right now WMCR has a one-
playing music they like to hear.
much funding," he said.
Champagnat. Tim Lawton, Tele-
crease the signal to Gartland,
mile radius signal, which dis-
but I'd also like more serious-
There are solutions for the in-
communications analyst, said
WMCR turned its frequency
courages many disc jockeys,
ness and professionalism from
terference with Channel 6 and
that when two signalsare that
from one-tenth of a watt to two-
Boyd said._ Many DJs am also
the_ disc jockeys," he said.
WMCR.
close, they interfere and corrupt
tenths.
_..
discouraged by equipment
Scott Thompson, alternative/
A satellite dish can be bought
. eac~ :~~h~r: ;·_:. __ . _
_ .
. _
,: _; _:
_.
Greg Boyd, general manager
which is constantly in need of _techno music director, said he
specifically to receive the CBS
.This·year, WMCR was forced
of WMCR, said th_is was seen
repair, he said.
is concerned with the FCC
Ii-
frequency, or a new antennae
to ·s1tghtly cliange itsfrequency - as.a problem immediately; and
. "The station is like a clunking
cense as well.
can be bought for WMCR. Both
signal. Alicensedstationtook- _returned to the.one-tenth of a
oldcar;nothingeverworks,"he
"We're basically breaking the
these solutions are costly, and
.o:ver.its old .frequency. These
watt.
said.
law by being on the air every-
would result in an increased
J~~~n.'si{~t½ii'9hs•'1}teive:piior-
"I was surpris~d this was_ a
Boyd said he is trying to make
day," Thompson said.
cable bill for students.
Candida.tes cluk~ it
out in
presidential debate
byBEN.AGOES
. ?eh~s _tho~gh <:o,?pera~ion ~ith _ tration woul~ generate an S_GA
... New.~~Editor
!
>·• ,,.
_,;,in_d.JYJ.?,!!~l_B~c;,id~~\t :§tll~i!
_
nt ,J,~.~Y:~~t~~r..Lt~ ,fortller ,keep. _the
• - : .-~0
-i,U,,,':, · · · ··
•-_,,\,>.•~ ·--- ;·,-
Councils: ,The cum!nt SOAad::-·
,co111mumty1nTomieel~he'":ilso---
· --
.. Today 'Marist studeiltswill\ ministration headeci-1:iy student ' proposed .thats_orne SGA meet-
.
.
find out \Vhowill·be their next·
body president, Frank Madtiri,
ings be held in·different dorms
<.lid not communicate well with
on alternating weeks ..
students, Lee said, and he
. Having. meetings in
vowed to change· that. _. . .
<;hampagnatHal
I one week and
. : :· ':'.J'rrr!}Otsure thattheMa~uri
in Leo t~e next.week would bring
· administration dicfthe best
coin.,. -
SGA arid. student·! ife issues to
·m~.nicatfog
to.':stude~ts,'')_,;ee· those·pe?ple that normally
said .. "Students d,icin
'i
.know - _would no_t vent_ure _
out to hear
what. 'The
Year
-
of
Action'
about them; she said:
meant:···•-
Qn ttie)ssue of experience,
,,:,. -. >
bookstore pnces. .
· Thecoil~ge sh~uld e11cqur~ge
McColloc~ attacked. Lee, say-
. ·. · There was little descent be"'
more studerit\nvolvemencby
ing his three years as diversity
t,wee11 the two fandidates
Oil
the. . having campu_s-wide referen-
·awa·ren·ess chairman on the stu-
. '·1.s~ue
of _c::.ommunlcation •.
l>e-.,
:dlJITiS)o
_
Jackle\Iifficult• prob- -•d.entprograinming council (SPC)
t\Veen s.tudent government and · 1e·111s; he said,
is not enough to meet the chal-
students.
·
McCulJoch agreed there
Lee_ said his administration
should. be more student refer- .
would reach out more to stu-
endurris, and said her adminis-
Please see SGA. page 3 ...
Even In winter time, the view from the campus green overlooking the rotunda, the
Hudson River and beyond, Is breathtaking:
·;
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2
THE
CIRCLE
The Marist Community
February26, 1998
In Your Opinion
,Are you interested in the SGA elections?
Why
or wliy not?
''Yes, I am because specifically one
of the candidate's goals appeal to
what I feel is wrong with Marist Col-
"No, because the people on televi-
sion and the posters aHaround are
all crap."
,
lege."
SECURITY BRIEFS
Friday, February 20, 9:50 p.m. - Security no-
ticed that a screen to one of the windows of a
Gartland E apartment had been tampered with.
When they went to the door to make the mem-
, bers of the house aware that someone may
have tried to break in. they walked into what
was an unauthorized party of 25 to 30 people.
According to security, people started running
out of the doors and windows when they ar-
rived at
the
door. However; one of the mem-
bers of the house says that this wasn't so, and
that the party nor security's presence was not
a big deal.
Saturday, February 21, I :30 a.m. - A male stu-
dent was walking in, the City of Poughkeepsie
waiting for a cab, when an unauthorized ve-
hicle pulled up to_ him and a passenger asked
him if he wanted a.ride; One guy said he had a
· gun 'arid demanded the victim get in the car.
They drove around for a while, and before drop-
~ping him off they took his watch ano cash
totaling $!00. The victim reported the inci-
dent to his RD the next day. and was then
interviewed and transported to the City of
Poughkeepsie Police Dept. where they- are now
handling the case. In reference to any situa-
tion involving a strange car Joe Leary, head of
security states, "Don't get in the car no matter
what the circumstance. What do you do? Run!"
Monday, February 23, 12:00 a.m. - A patrol
responded to a complaint that a window had
broke in Marion Hall. While moving around
the outside of the building he found a metal
grape off of a drain hole, and two stone tops to
benches tossed aside. Security covered the drain
back up and took care of the stone tops. •·some
hero thinks that was funny," states Joe Leary.
Monday, February 23, 2:15 a.m.
a
Security re-
ceived a call from a Champagnat
RA
regarding
a water leak on the 9th floor. A faucet in the
sink of the. men·s room had been broken off
allowing water to fill the bathroo111 and spill
into ·the hall. An officer covered
it with a
garbage can and another officer stopped the
flow with some tools he had;
:C
"Some other
hero was playing that game,'.' said
Joe Leary of
theyerson \I/ho broke the (aucei. · ·
_
.,.
About weather conditions: Security is no longer
responsible for class cancellations. It is up to
individual teachers to leave -a message on their
phone mail to inform students about whether
or not class will
be
held.
MEN'S
&
-WOMEN'S
BASKETBALL
TOURNAMENT·
February 26th-March 2nd
"No,
I
just don't have an interest
in student government."
"How~sthe
weather?''
.
·,
-
-~--
,.
~ ~
....
· Thursday: Sun, mixed clouds.
39
°
53°
. Friday: Cool; cloudy:- ·
38".° 51
°
Saturday: Cloudy, light rain.
'3'/
o ':/Jo
T~e _Number one seed has hot won the MJ.\AC Tournament Championship
,n five years.
Come escort_your Cinderella
Team
.to
the
"Big Dance".
For More Information, call (518) 487-2000
or visit our website at:
www.maac.org or www.pepsiarena.com
PEPSI . . . .
RRENR
_______
.....____________~

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..
S.tra.ys rlln
.
.
.
rampant
OJl
the·
North:·
.
End
.
'
and cute-doesn't rtjean
_they
.
.
_
don't have
.
the capability" of
transmitting rabies
:
.
Students
·
·
should call security with any
It seems to be raining cats and
concerns."
-
'
·
dogs
·
on Marist cainpus ... quite
According to Director of Se-
literally.
.
·
curity, Joe Leary, there are over
There areseveral stray
.
cats
a dozen strays thiit call campus
and kittens, as well as a small
home.
.
brown dog named Abner roam-
-
Leary said the stray dog r~>am-
ing around. These animals may
ing campus just Jloes not want
be elite
<!nd
furry, but they may
to
.
be caught.
also serve athreatto M~rist"stu~
"Apparently
the dog is
dents' well being
.
wanted by its owner, but it won't
-:-
The primary concern here is
go with anyone," he
said.
whether any of these animals
.
Lisa Hamel; Security's office
have rabies. Five to seven years
manager, said
she
.
has made sev-
ago it was reported that a cat
eral calls to the dog warden re-
was fighting with a rabid skunk.
garding Abner.
The cat had to be caught and
"Students have called me
put down.
·
about him," Hamel said. "I've
About three years ~go a stu-
:
_ .
personally called the dog war-
dent was scratched by one of den at least three times.
the cats living around Gartland.
They!ve been more than coop-
Animal control caughtthe cat
erative, but they just can't catch
and it was detennined it did not
him."
have rabies.
The dog
will
not let
anyone
·
Director of Health Services,
get within
IO
feet of him and
Jane O'Brien
,
said rabies is al-
Midrise Resident

Assistant,
ways a concern with an open
Chris Macinnis, said Abner may
campus such as Marist.
not be wanted by his previous
.,;::
-:.
.
~
-
'
.,
·
.
.
:
.
..
.
·
-
"No
·
students have con-
owners and that they may have
tracted rabies,"
.
she said. "But
been abusive.
just because an animal is young
"I've heard tha~ Abner's own-
Student endures military training
... continuedfrom page
1
ter," she said.
"If
you put your
.
mind to it, you can do it."
involved.
·
. ·
Herjob is a systems signal~
Smith is a member of the New
-
York National Guard. She said
specialist, which basically deals
with communications .
.
,
After
she enlisted in the program be-
graduation
~
Smith is going irto
cause she wanted some
.
chal
-
the regular army for three years.
lenge in h~r life.
-
Walt Wheeler, spokesmen for
She said she is not sure of the
·
the Army and Air National
process for deciding which Na-
Guard for the State of New York,
tional Guard units will be mobi-
said the organization is prima-
'
lized, but when one is activated,
·
;
-they
;;
_
ha".e
:•.
got
'.
:
tq
:
go. •:
;
<
-:
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·
·
•·
··
_
Jjly ,!_sta~e.~oriefi!ed f9.
_
rce, deal-
I:Ytihng
th
'
e
"
summei
6(
her ing with
'
natural disasters and
other
_
emergencies, but it can
sophomore year
;
Smith went
·
resporid to a federal sir
.
uation as
·
thfgugh
,
.basj~ t~aining
.
at
-
Fort
Jati<idn-
":
S.c
:

::-
there\vere
:
tWO
well.
.
.
co~
.
'-
pon~nts
·
_
tc
/
h
.
~r
.
)raining
'
--'-
.
"We come
al
the governor's
·
call unless
-
the pres
_
iderit
-
says
mental and physical.
·
we need you for a national emer-
·she said the mental part was
gency," he said.
more stressful
.
because of the
.
According to Wheeler, there
stressful regiment imposed by
are some National Guard mem-
senior officers.
bers in the Persian Gulf right
"They're basically'running
now.' He said the State has no
your life, telling you what you
say in which units are mobilize
can and can't do," she said.
"The Pentagon
will
determine
.
However, Smith said she was
which 'Units will be needed," he
able to face the challenge.
. d
said
.
.
"I
believe it's
-
mm over mat-
SGA
:
candidates debate.
... c01itinuedfro1;1 page
1
lenges of SG..I\ president:
Hands-ori experience is essen-
tial
,
she said.
.
. ·
·
"Are you aware of the _work-
ing relations you need to
do
this
job?" she asked Lee during the
open session of the debate.
"More important than the meet-
ings, it is the negotiating and
compromising."
Lee came back later with the
security
issue,_
blasting
McColloch's personal security
devices plan
,
calling it impracti-
cal and too costly.
McColloch
'
s plan calls for
each resident and commuter stu-
dent to be equipped with a key-
chain panic alarm that would
notify security of trouble when
the button
is
pushed.
Lee said he would rather see
the current blue-light system
,
,vhich is a network of phones
around campus directly con-
nected to security, expanded.
Each of these phones has a
distinct blue light above it mak-
ing it easy to see by any one in
trouble.
Lee sugg!!sted that the
phones be installed every
500
feet on campus, but he was not
able to say how cost effective it
would be.
On bookstore prices
,
McColloch said she sympa-
thized with students, but prices
were out of the bookstore's in-
fluence.
·
"Barnes
and Nobles' hands
are tied," she said. "They make
minimal profits
.
"
-
-
-
·
-··
--
-
-------------------~----------------
3
These
.
two cats
ll~e
outside Gartland
.
Commons. Students often feed them and try to play
with
them, although the cats could be potentlally dangerous.
·
ers live in Wappingers Fall and
that they don't want him. What
sense would it make
.
for a stray
dog to live on campusJor over
a
·
year and its owners never
show up?" he said. "Anin-ials
are like humans in that they re-
quire love and attention. When
tha't's denied, further contact
with others will result in fear and
distrust."
The cats around Gartland have
been living off student hand-
outs for
about
a year
.
It
must be
considered that one of these
felines could come in contact
with a rabid skunk or raccoon,
but Gartland residents do not
seem to be concerned about the
possibility.
Gartland
RA,
Steve Coogan,
said it is difficult to
turn
aw_ay a
starving cat at your doorstep
and no one is rushing to call the
American Society for the Pre-
vention of Cruelly toward Ani-
mals (ASPCA).
"I
know the ASPCA was called
Announcing our new
once about the stray cats. What
I heard is that they picked them
up and rather than finding them
homes. they were killed,
"
Coogan said. "Whether this be
the case or not
I
don't know, but
other people have heard the
same thing.
I
doubt anyone will
·
call the ASPCA about anymore
strays."
Health
services
and security
warn not
lo
feed or approach
any of the
stray
animals on cam-
pus as
a
safety
precaution.
International
.
.
Internship
PtogfiiiilS!
Did you know that you can
now combine study abroad
with
an
internship
in
Australia
England
Ireland
Italy
Russia
Spain
I?
.
.
.
Marist Abroad Facts:
42 of your Marist friends and classmates are abroad this spring.
17 are gaining global wo~k experience by interning in England, Italy, and Spain
.
Costs are roughly equivalent to the tuition/room costs you pay on campus.
Y.ou are eligible for grants, loans, and scholarships as if you were on campus.
It doesn't cost you anything to find out more! Ask for a Program Guide.
Applications are due by March 15 for intern/study abroad in Fall '98
.
Contact the
Office of International Education
Donnelly 220, -ext.
3330
.
Don't be left behind!


















































4
THE CIRCLEF
ea tures
F~bfllarl
26,
1998
t?~
·-
/
I
-
·-
·
lead
to
--
addiction
JANINESZAL
Staff Writer
Sara Zlzzl (left) with
Lisa
Henderson, kidding around In the green room befor~ MCCTA's Moon
Bob Bamrriann
·
once thought
he was invincible. He knew he
had t~ quit smoking when he
woke in the night with a hack-
ing cough. He was one of the
millions of teenagers who are
blind to the dangers of smoking
a
·
nd cancer because
.
they feel
Over Buffalo
last fall.
·
·
Student shows theaterical Side
-invincible.
_
.
SCOTITHOMPSON
Staff Writer
Lee Orthmann, Zizzi
's
co~star
in The Real Estate, said she has
_
a lot of potential for a freshman.
"Sara is very talented,"
Orthmann said. "When you
The crowd sat in disbelief as
combine her work ethic with her
Helen, the lead character in
unlimited love for theater, I'm
MCCTA's Machinal. spontane-
sure that she will tap into what
ously burst into a frenzy of per-
at times appears to be an unlim-
fectly delivered free verse.
ited level of potential."
_
The crowd was even !llOre
Offstage Zizzi, who is an En-
stunned when, after checking
glish major with a concentration
the bios in the program, it saw
in Theater, stands out as well.
the lead was only a freshman,_ Freshman Jen• Rotolo, Z1zzi's
SaraZizzi.
roommate, said she
_
is
-
a
Zizzi is an 18-year-old Aries
hardworking and friendly per-
from New Hartford, NY, and she
son.
is all about theater. Machinal
"Sara's notonly a good room-
was her third production this
mate but a good friend," she
year. Zizzi portrayed Helen, a
said. "She's really funny and
woman tom between needing
_
smart and a good person to be
the income her marriage to her
.
around, notto mention ah out-
boss gives her and the fact that
standing act_ress.''
,
_.
.
.
her husband repulses him. Af-
Sophomore 'John
·
Shibles,
ter an extramarital affair, Hel<:n
_
Zizzi 's boyfriend, said she has
kills her husband, and is later
the determination to achieve all
sentenced to the death penalty.
her goals.
_
.
This performance came after
.-
"Sara alw;iys succeeds," lie
she wowed the crowds as Roz
-
said.
"Whenslie
puts her mind
in her mainstage debut, the
to do things, they get done."
MCCTA fall comedy Moon
Over
·
·
·
Zizzi, according to Shibles, is
Buffalo
and turned in an honest
-
a bright part of his life.
.
portrayal of the modem woman
"She is always there for me and
as June in
The Rea/Estate,
part
-
·
feels what I feel. When I'm
of the Experimental Theater
down, she's down, and when I'm
Guild's Evening of One Acts.
happy she's happy," he said.
According to a recent pam-
phlet by the American Cancer
"Sara is an understanding,fun-
Society, ifan individual begins.
loving, beautiful girlfriend.
If
I
smoking between the ages of 15
ever need a laugh, I call her."
and 24, he or she is more likely
Shibles said Zizzi always
to die of lung cancer. Since
shows her deep love for acting.
199 I, the number of 8th, IO.th,
"She is a talented actress who
and 12th graders
·
who
.
smoke
devotes much of her time to the-
has risen an average of 8 per-
ater," he said.
·
"It is her love,
cent.
and she
is
great at it"
-
Kippi Brown, cancer informa-
Zizzi said if she could name
tion specialist for the American
herself something else, it would
Cancer Society, said although
be Zaria because of the double · our legislation has taken steps
Zeffect.
such as not selling· tobacco
"Because it's a pretty name
products to minors and banning
and then my initials would be
billboard advertisements, teen-
Z.Z., and that would be cool,"
agers are not making the con-
she said.
nection between cancer and
If
she could be one person for

smoking
.
.
a day
,
she
said
it would be
"We
have lectures at high
Katherine Hepburn. She listens
schools
·
and middle schools in
to Broadway soundtracks,
the area about
.
the dangers of
Tracy C_hapman, and Sarah
smoking and cancer,". Brown
McLachlan; Her favorite mov-
said. "The d
_
angers should not
ies include Titanic, Steel Mag-
only he taught)n tbe
.
schools,
nolias,-and Chaplin.
they should
·
alsd be enforced in
Zizzi said
·
the word that best · the home and society as a
describes her
is
dramatic. She
whole."
_
_
said her favorite thing to do on
.
'
Btown said it is difficult for
Friday
.
nights
'
is to go
to
re..:
t~ens to recognize tile danger~
hearsal or hang out with her
of smoking when they 11re asso-
boyfriend
.
Besides acting, she
ciated wi
_
th family members who
said she
.
also enjoys cooking
smoke arid cartoon characters
and writing: LookforZizzi in
such ~sJoe Camel.
Stone Soup
in
April.
.
"Our legisl~turelook action to
eliminate Joe Camel cartoons
from popular sites after 98 per-
cenfof
.
t~ehagers who were sur-
veyed said
:
they were
_
fami)iar
with hiin/ she said.
''With
some
teenagers
:
Joe Callle) \.\l
·
asn16re
Top 10 Ways to Annoy Your Roommate
-
popoiar
:
than Mickey Mouse.
"
·
·
Brown said teenagers are am~
bivalentto the da~gers of smok-
ing bec:ause they°
'
do
_
110~ realize
'the
·
~0!}Sequences as m!-'ch as
I 0. Make your roommate answer the phone every time it
rings.
9. Change all the clothes in your roomII1ate's closet and
drawers.
,
-
8. Let your pet
-
roam around the room.
7. Keep hitting snooze
.
on your alarm ·clock
·
so it keeps
·
on
,
going off.
.
older
·
people do.
.
·
·
'They
.
think they are invin-
cible," she
_
said;

<'They see
smoking as a fad arid do not re-
alize the addiction and the
health risks."
.
..
B<>b Bammann,
·
~ophomore,
said he won his fight against
cigarette addiction and quit
three months ago. Bammann
said th~ lack of impact that mes-
sages have on
·
teenagers is n~t
due
to.the
ineffectiveness of the
messages themselves.
"Many teenagers, young and
more mature, aren't going to lis-
ten to
_
the messages until they
-
e~perience smpking and se~ the
consequences themselves," he
_
said
.
_
~ammann sai9 the connection
between
.
cancer and
-
cigarettes
is
-
unclear.
He said teenagers have to be
shown
.
what smoking does to
the body
.
_
_
"They have to be shown how
and why it causes cancer," he
said. "S~atistics aren't as pow-
erful as images."
Bammann said teenagers are
ambivalent to the
_
dangers of
smoking because they see them-
selves as invincible.
"They have the attitude that
it will happen
to
someone else
not them," he said. "It has to be
.
made known that cancer is a dis-
;}
case that could happen to any.:~
·
one."
Heather Baughman, sopho-
--"
.,
.
more
;
is a' current smoke_r.
~
Ji<
_j
streams of grey smoke billowed
t
from her Marlboro Light ciga-
rette

she
said
·
the messages
deterring teenagers from smok-
ing are not having animpact.
"I think that the impact is
greater in people ":ho are older,"
shesaid.
··
..
Baughman started
·
to smoke
because of the influence of her
friends. She said that one day
there were cigaret
_
tes in fron(of
.
.
her arid
evetypne
'
was
'
smokinf
'•)i
·
so
:
she did
·
too
>
and has been
·
·
smoking ev.er
'
sirice .
.
·
A
recent
surVey conducted
·
by the
:
A_mericari
·
Cantef Socf.: '
'-'
ety states
'.
tharif an individual
·
begins smoking before age I 5,
he or she is 19 times more likely
to die than a nonsmoker.
Baughman said teenagers
who SQloke have the mentality
·
that they are invincible.
She
said that
·
as teenagers start to
smoke, they do not-think they
will became addicted to nicotine
or be affected
'.
by cancer.
.
"I think if you start young, you
do not recognize
--:
the
·
dangers
associated with
'.
it,"
she said.
.
"As an
.
individual matures,they
gairi more common sense and
realize the dange~ous effects of
smoking and cancer
.
"
6. Stand over your roommate while he/she is sleeping and
stare until he/she
.
wakes up.
5. Accidentally delete any phone messages for your
toom-
-
mate.
4. Make strange noises in your sleep.
3. Change the phone password.
Confused? Upset? Lonely? Need
some help with. your life? Anna
would love to help you out! Send
her letters addressed to Ask Anna.
2. Talk loudly on the phone
at
odd hours of the night.
1. Use all your roommate's things like they are your own.
-
Letters can be placed in The Circle
mailbox in the Student Center or
-
e-mail at Hzal. Please keep letters
anonymous.






















;
.
"
..
,
....

:
.
.
.
,
·,, THE CIRCLE, February
26,1998
5
Food Dude finds true meaning of St.Patrick's Day
TOMNARDI
Food Dude
Saint Patrick's day is a holi-
day I do not understand (maybe
that is because I am ItaHan.)
Maybe that is because I do not
know what is being celebrated.
Saint Patrick ... what exactly did
he do? Was he the one who
drove the snakes out of Ire-
land? Or was that the Pied
Piper? Or are they one in the
same? I decided I should go to
Smalley's to try and find out
who St. Patrick really was.
Smalley's is located on Route
55, ·near the outskirts of the
town of Poughkeepise. The bar
is very hard to miss since it
looks like a castle. Another land-
mark is the large knight on the
roof.
The inside of Smalley's also
resembles an ancient castle.
Coats of arms adorn the stone
walls. One really gets the feel~
ing of being in the movie
Braveheart. When I was there,
I kept waitiQg for a sword wield-
ing Mel Gibson to show up.
Their menu is fairly extensive.
They have a couple of sand-
wiches that sound very good.
The T-N-T burger ($6.50)
is
· topped with onions and mush-
·rooms. The Town Mess ($6.75)
is ham and Swiss on garlic
bread. The Smalley's Mess
($7 .50) is roast beef and melted
Swiss on garlic bread. The rea-
son they call them "Mess" is
because the meat is piled high
on top of a large wedge of bread.
The sandwiches are too unman-
ageable to pick up with your
hands. A knife and fork are defi-
nitely helpful. One complaint
about the sandwiches is that
french fries do not come with
the meal. If you want them you
have to pay an extra $1.75. This
brings the price of the sand-
wiches up to nearly $10, which
is too much for most college stu-
dents.
In addition to sandwiches,
they have many other items in-
cluding a few vegetarian dishes:
vegetable lasagna ($6.95),
ravioli ($7.25}', and manicotti
($7.25). They also have some
items which are definitely not
vegetarian, including shrimp
scampi ($18), surf and turf ($22)
and Pasta Dorro ($14.50) which
is scallops, shrimp, and
crabmeat in a garlic wine sauce.
For those who are daring you
can order frog legs ($11.25)
sauteed in an onion wine sauce
with cheese, served over spin-
ach. Most of the items are priced
on the high side, especially
since Smalley's is more of a bar
than it is a restaurant.
I was going to start my meal
off with ail appetizer, but there
was nothing on the menu that
sounded interesting, just the
same old wings, stuffed mush-
rooms and fried mozzarella that
you can get anywhere.
For my meal I chose the egg-
plant parrn wedge.
It
was so thick
with eggplant and cheese that I
was glad I skipped the appetizer.
The bread was covered in but-
ter, was greasy and was
Volunteer community service
program lends helping hand
JENMATARAZW
Staff Writer
The Spirit of Champagnat is
alive on campus through the
Volunteer Community Service
Program.
.
F,~th_er ~hampagnat, the
founder of, the Mari~t. brothers,
always saw the real needs of
people. He said if there was a
neeµ, .society should respond.
Stud;nt; ofMarist College have
the opportun.ity to·f~ilow Father
Champagnat's tradition, partici-
pating in community service.
Brother Michael Williams, the
assistant director of Campus
, Ministry, said he believes
people should not be afraid to
get their hands dirty.
"Father Chanipagnat's spirit is
look to th~se · who are
marginalized and you take care
of them," he said. "Because that
is what Jesus came to do."
The Volunteer Community
Service Program falls under the
same umbrella as Campus Min-
istry, but is a separate program.
There are many outlets that are
available to meet the requests
of the students who would like
to participate, within the com-
munity. Some of these outlets
range from working within the
public and private grammar
schools, working in a nursing
home, one-on-one tutoring,
BOCES-special needs, Astor
Head Start (3 to 5-year-olds), St.
Francis_ Hospital, and daycare
centers:
John Sellinger, senior psychol-
ogy major and an administrator
on the community service
board. worked in one of the
public grammar schools, and
said he has had only positive
experiences.
"I come from a rural town and
this gave me the opportunity to
work in an inner-city school,"
he said.
Jessica DeCicco, sophomore
psychology special education
major, also volunteered in a
public grammar school. She
worked with second graders and
said she feels it is an asset for
her career.
"I wanted to experience work-
ing with children because I plan
to be a teacher in the future,"
she said.
-DeCicco said that it is nice to
· get off campus once in a while.
"Just giving two hours of your
time, one day a week, really
makes a difference to the kids,"
she said. "You can see it."
Kathryn Haberman, sopho-
more psychology special edu-
cation major, went for the first
time last week to a school.
"I was nervous at first, but the
kids made me
feel
welcome,"
Haberman said.
According to Brother
Michael, students who cannot
volunteer once a week may par-
ticipate in special one-day
events.
"This applies to students with
busy schedules," Brother
Michael said. "Special one-day
events can involve students
to
give up a few hours of their time
on a certain day when help is
needed."
Another event that falls un-
der Campus Ministry, are the
city plunges. They are held on
weekends around Christmas
and Spring Break. Student<; will
travel to towns or cities that are
in need of help.
Vanessa Tamarra, sophomore
social work major, had the op-
portunity to attend one of the
city plunges, and said she would
do it again in a second.
"It was one of the mosteye-
opening experiences of my life,"
she said.
"I experienced
homelessness for the first time
and I felt good knowing that I
was helping those in need."
Sellinger said they are always
looking for more help.
"There are always openings,"
he said.
The major times to sign-up for
community service are at the
activities fair at the beginning
of each semester. Brother
Michael said he accepts appli-
cants at all times, though.
"If
people would like to get
involved, call extension 2275,"
he said. "We have a wide vari-
ety of outlets to suit people's
needs."
Brother Michael said priority
points are given out based on
attendance.
"Priority points are given out
to recognize the work the stu-
dents have done," he said.
Sellinger said he encourages
students to get involved.
"It is a chance to get away
from school work and do some
service to the community," he
said. "Once you give it a
chance, you'll realize it is defi-
nitely for you."
Brother Michael said he feels
a great majority of the campus
is generously hearted.
"If
you work with the elderly,
you will discover you have an-
other set of grandparents," he
said. "You work with children,
be careful, because they may
steal your heart."'
sprinkled with too much garlic
salt. Other than that, the sand-
wich was pretty good. The
sauce was zesty and sweet.
The sandwich sat in my stom-
ach like lead so I avoided des-
sert (In retrospect it is probably
better not to order Italian food
in an Irish bar.)
If
you are not going to order
the food at Smalley·s what
should you order'? In an Irish
bar ... Guinness, of course ..
Guinness is a rich, creamy dark
beer, almost like a milkshake for
adults. Most people assume
that dark beers have more alco-
hol than regular beers, however,
this is not always true. In fact.
Draught Guinness (the stuff
you get on tap) is only 3.4 per-
cent alcohol. A pint of Guinness
has
IO
less calories than a pint
of orange juice (210 as opposed
to 220.) Guinness is also high
in iron, which is why doctors in
England used to give it to pa-
tients who had lost a lot of
blood.
Drinking a Guinness among
friends is a great' way to bond.
On Friday Feb. 27 Guinness is
sponsoring what they hope will
. be the world's largest simulta-
neous toast in bars across North
America, a pint of Guinness will
be raised at the same moment
(about 11 :00 p.m. in our time
zone.) Smalley"s will join in the
festivities with $2 pints and a T-
shirt give-away.
Overall, I would give Smalley·s
two-and-a-half stars. The food
was okay; service was quick (al-
though I was the only person in
the dining room.) When it
comes to the atmosphere it gets
at least four stars.
It
is one of
those places you must go to
once in your Marist career. But
go forthe medieval environment
and the Guinness, not the food.
1
never did find out who Saint
Patrick was. but I did find out
what the leaves in the clover
represent: faith, love, hope. and
the fourth as we all know. luck.
'Till next time.
Emily's Recipe
of the Week
Pudding Pie Squares
20 squares graham crackers
I /3 cup margarine or butter
8-ounce carton sour cream
Package of instant chocolate or vanilla pudding mix
Cup of milk
21-ounce can of cherry pie fi\\ing
.
.
.
.
. .
'
.
.
Place graham crackers in plastic bag and crush with rolling pin.
Set aside 2 tbsp. of crushed graham crackers and then put rest in
8x8x2-inch baking dish. Melt margarine or butter and pour into
baking dish. Using fork, stir together with crackers. Pat mixture
evenly on bottom. Chill in freezer for
IO
minutes. Meanwhile,
mix sour cream, dry pudding mix, and milk in a bowl. Pour into
baking dish. Spoon piefilling over mixture and sprinkle with
reserved crumbs. Cover dish with plastic wrap and chill for 3
GREEK COUNCIL NEWS
reek Council plans for long road ahead
As the Spring semester takes off, it becomes more difficult fo,
tudents to concentrate on their work ahead. Soon. the weathe,
ill begin to change and nature will be-reborn. Everyone starts t<
ove outside to enjoy the warm weather, while homework an
apers are put on the back burner. However, some how or som
ay, students always seem to get their work done. The Greek Coun
ii is in the midsts of a rebirth of their own.
With the new semester taking shape, the Greek Council has al
eady begun planning events for the student body to take part in
ewly elected president Summer Haverly, of Alpha Sigma Tau, ha.
·et the wheels in motion to have the Greek Council become a mor
ecognized group on campus. "The Greek Council wants to mak
tudents aware of who we are and what it is we do here on cam
us," said Haverly. "By doing this, we will have a better chance a
rying to recruit new members."
Currently, the Greek Council is made up of five sororities: Sigm,
igma Sigma, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Alpha Sigma Tau, Kappa Lamd,
si and Sigma Iota Alpha; as well as three fraternities: Alpha Ph
elta, Phi Iota Alpha and the newest fraternity on campus, Ph
appa Sigma. It is hoped that these fine organizations, awarenes.
fthe Greek Council and Greek life on campus will become a mor
alked about subject.
One of the major events which the council is planning for thi.
·emester is a scholarship luncheon for the outstanding academi
ecords acheived by members of Greek organizations. The date
fo
his luncheon is March 4, 1998 and will be held in the Cabaret.
The guest list for the event will be comprised of the members o
he Greek Council, the students receiving the honors, faculty an
-taff members invited by the organizations, as well as a possibl
ppearance by Dennis Murray. In addition, the Council has askec
·ome of the Academic Deans to speak at the luncheon.
All in all, it plans to be a fine example for the fraternities an
·ororities on our campus to show that they are not only social, bu
hey are also committed to their academics here at Marist.
Vri((e11
hy Terry Duane.
























6
THE CIRCLE
ED
ITdRJAL
February
26,1998
Editorials
T(l;x,i
·drivers ~ause .greatconcein
Finishing my third year of school _here at Marist, I cari recoimtffiaily shadr°inci-
dents-involving taxicabs in Poughkeepsie. The stories are nothing new; as I am sure
everyone has a story to tell. Looking back on the years.I did not realize how naive
I was in believing ~hat the taxicabs were
a
relatively safe means of transportation.
My naivete was l)Ot°that I thought the drivers were good drivers, but it was because
I thought that 'the 'drivers were actually licensed, monitored, and regulated ..
My assumptions were quickly disproved in the beginning of the school year when
I heard the news of Tina Ball, the
17
year-old City of Poughkeepsie girl, who was
killed in an accident involving
a
taxicab in the beginning of the school year. After
the investigation of the accident, the driver of the cab was discovered to be operat-
ing under a suspended license. Neither the taxi company nor the Poughkeepsie
Police Department had any knowledge of this fact until after it was too late. Unfor-
tunately, this tragic accident exposed an extremely appalling problem in the city of
Poughkeepsie's regulations placed on taxicab owners and operators.
Although the city does not own and operate the taxicabs, it is the duty of the city
to regulate the companies that operate the cabs. It has to be the responsibility of city
officials to enact comprehensive regulation that would ensure a safer system upon
which many people depend upon daily. Taxis have to be held up to the highest
scrutiny in order to guarantee a protection for the general public. The facts sur-
rounding this accident have proved that the city has low, unacceptable procedures
in regulating taxicab operators and owners.
The requirements for a taxi driver license, in the City of Poughkeepsie is a New
York State
Class E (chauffeur's) license. Furthermore, the city requires the applicant to fill out
a form, provide a picture and give fingerprints, to be kept on record. The City.then
issues a one-year license to the driver.
So far, it would seem that the ordinances are adequate enough, but this is where the
effectiveness of the city's regulation ends.
THECIRCUE
..
StephanieMercurio.
Editor-in-chief
BenAgoes
· News Editor
ThomasRyan
Sports Editor
Christopher Thorne
Focus Editor
Joe Scotto
Chris Hogan
G. Modele Clarke
.
'
:Amanda
Bradley
Managing Editor ...
Emily Kucharczyk
Feature Editor
TimManson
Opinion Editor
. · Jim Dziezynski
Arts & Entertainment Editor
Photography Editor
Business Manager
Faculty Adviser
If
you have a story idea, would like
-
to publicize a club eyent or if you would
like to send a letter to the editor, you can e-mail The Circle at HZAL.
If
you are interested in advertising in The Circle, please leave amessage for
Chris Hogan at 575-3000ext. 2429.
·
Editor cites need for a
revision of Core classes
The incident involving Ball prompted City of Pougkeepsie Mayor Colette Lafuente
to make changes to the city ordinances that would improve the communication
between the taxi companies and the police department. In the amendments to the
city ordinances, Lafuente has proposed that.it is the
·
responsibility of the individual
taxi drivers to "report the suspension or revocation of his/her chauffeur's license to
While sitting in one of my classes, I was struck by how overwhelmingly
the police chief within 24 hours of suspension or revocation."
insignificant this information was to the rest of my life. This is not a class .
Lafuente's attempt at fixing this problem is futile. The proposal to add the
· required for my major, nor is it a class for my minor, it is a Core class.
preceeding text seems to be nothing more than lip-service to all who are asking for
Being an English major, and planning to go into some sort-of writing or
security in taxi cabs. It is highly disturbing that Lafuente's solution to this problem
editing career, I feel there are certain classes that I need to take, classes I _
is to make the taxi drivers police themselves. Allowing such a lenient regulation on
should have taken and many classes that were simply a waste of my time, .
taxi drivers is what caused the unfortunate accident in the first place. The continu-
However, most of those classes I was required to sit through in order to
ance of such sub-standard regulations poses a grave threat to the security and well
obtain my degree, yes, they were all Core classes.
being of everyone riding in poughkeepsie taxis.
Now, I think the concept of the Core is an excellent one, taking different
A further examination of the proposed ordinances unveils the intentions of the
subjects so that you may find your niche in life, but the actuality-of it needs
city to be that of inflexibility-when it comes to working with the taxi companies. Tpe
some major improvements.
·
city
is proposirig that t\)e:tl!Xi c9,mpanies police themselves, but .will not offer ~1~y ... .
.
fir~t of_ all, the. ent\-msi~sm.. of.the Pl'.Of~ssors teaching Core.c~asses neecls
assistance in keeping the companies informed of the infractions incurred by ·each · · to be jump-started. It almostseems thaf if you are a professor, and get stuck
driver.
lf
the city wants to enlist the help of the companies-in policing themselves,
teach_ing a Core or intro class, it is as 1f you were picked to clean.the bathroom .
they must be able to sho~ that they are willingt() provide the companies with
on chore day, You know it has to be done, but you really would father be the
information that can help the companies run a better, safer organization. Many
one who had to vacuum.

· .
.
times, the companies are not aware of traffic violations incurred by-their drivers, and
For the most part, the professors I have _had for ~y i.ntfO ~lasses
do
not
the city does not provide any notice of infractions to these companies whom are
seem to want to be there.anymore thanJ do, and do notrealiy,se_em tg·,be:.ih
expected to police themselves.
.
.
touch with the concept of anintroclais. I
feei
thabn'"_irfrro class
·
shouici'be
The_ only seemingly acceptable proposed change was a requirement for the com-
that-an introduction
to
a broad subject. · Somehow, it. turns. into what the
panics to provide a list of drivers to the city on a monthly basis. Unfortunately, even
. professor feels is his or her favorite aspect of the subject, i.e. theclass they
this proposal falls very short of providing a solution to the problem. The city would
really wailtto teach rathenhan the intro class-they are stuck teacµing:
then check the' background of each driver, in order to validate the standing of their
Another thing that really
_
bo,thers me abo_ut the Core ·is'the subjects
you' are,,
respective licenses. This is a good proposal, but it is not nearly enough. Firstly, it
supposed to, take; two classes
of
English, History, Social Science, Science
is something that should have been done by the city many years ago. The mere fact
and Math, as well as Philosophy; Ethics a_nd Religion. However, if you take a
that before this proposal, the city has made no attempt to monitor the taxi drivers, is
foreign language, you may substi.tute those classes for Core classes'.
..
shameful. Furthermore, the proposed monthiy check is not neady an adequate
What does that mean? l thqughtthfCore was necessary to take,.butJcan
remedy to the situation. Each taxi drive_r is required.to have a chauffeur's license,
substitute? What is the point of taking theCoie classes in the first ph1ce_ if I
which is controlled by the state. If !he license is suspended, then i,t is the responsi-
can substitute, anyway? Is there a bit ofa -mixed message here?
bility of the state to contact the city to ensure that the city
is
aware of any suspen-
Personally, I c_ame to college with.a pretty good idea of what fwanted to do
sion.
If
a city bus driver were to have his license suspended, the city would find out
in my life,or at least an idea of what my strengths and weaknesses were. I
immediately and the bus driver would be immediately suspended or fired. Why
know that Math is not my forte, nor is Science. And Jabsolutely detest Social
should itbe different for taxis? A thirty day periodic check is not acceptable be-
Sciences. There is nothing
-
wrong with any ·of these, I am just not suit~d for
cause action needs
to
be taken ·in a more hasty manner when a driver no longer
them at all, yet I was forced to sit through the four worst classes of my college
meets the requirements fora taxi license.
career (four is right, I substituted). I was especially upset in the Intro to
.
Psychology dass because I am an animal rights activist, and was forced to
Chris Hogan,
is
tl:ie Business Manager for The Circle ·
watch videos of mice. and. monkeys being subjected to cruel and unu;ual
Serving The Marist Cqmmvniiy Since 1918
FAST, EASY DIRECTIONS fROY IWUST:
Tm
Route
9 SClUlh
To Routes 44155 EAST
[he
Merial)
·
Conthle
Ori
The
Medal• We he
One Block
Pa.st
Raymond
J.VUMJl.
tests. I was not impressed \Vith this ..
If
i
could have had a say in my choice of <::ore classes, I would have gladly
taken more History, Philosophy, Ethics and of course, English classes.I would
have omitted completely theMath, Science and SocialSciences.There is no
need at an in my life to know about those animal tests, or to take an Intro to
Biology class that I had already taken in high sch_ool. Instead of taking those
classes and wasting my time, I could have been taking classes that would
relate to my life, or that I at least found interesting. I am paying for these
classes, after all.
I will say one thing in defense of the Core-I might not have taken Ethics,
which was one of the best classes I have taken here. I honestly feel it made me
really think about who and what I am and where my values are (a shameless
plug for Dr. Ellard's class). I only wish that all the other Core classes I took
affected me that much.
All in all, I think the Cpre is, as I said before, good in concept, yet poor 1n
practice.
If
students could have more say in the classes they took, there might
be less of the Mari st malaise. Imagine a class where everyone actually wanted
to be there, and cared about the subject. Unfortunately, a Core class is gener-
ally not where this is found.
Stephanie Mercurio
is
the Editor-in-Chief for
The Circle






















































THE CIRCLE
OPINION
February 26, 1998
What Wcls
_
Jhat title again?
I have noticed recently that my
.
tock, outside) or where your
·
The third stage.is telling sto~
memory has beeri failing meter-
wallet disappeared to (your
ries to people you have already
ribly. I tried the other day to
·
:
pants from the riight before) or,
told them to. For example, '.'Hey,
figure out exactly why this is,
my favorite
,
where your f-ing
the funniest thing happened the
but theri l forgot what l was try-, Stone
.
Temple
.
Pilots CD went
other night. Me and Tom went
ing te> figure out. This ~as when
(you sotd~it last semester so you
.
to ... " There are two possible
I realized I might have a prob-
could buy a pizza).
outcomes to these stories and
lem
:
.
.
_
.
· .
.
The second problem, re
-
they depend on the person
.
tell-
Once I remembered, a few
..
sponse time;
.
has two separate
ing the story
.
If
the story teller
days later, what my problem
criteria.
If
you respond two to
notices a bored, yet disbeliev-
was, I came up with a possible
_
three seconds after being ad-
ing look on their listener's face
reason for this infliction. Every
dressed, due to the inhalation
they will try to cover it up as
once in
a
while I drink a certain
of your friends' second hand
quickly as possible with some-
beverage, I am not going to say
smoke, t~is is natural. Smok-
thing like, "Oh, that's right
,
I
publicly what drink it is; (it is
·
ing, uh
,
I mean inadvertently
thought I already told you that."
not Coke, Pepsi, Sprite, 7-Up;
inhaling such smoke, will cause
In this case the storyteller has
Splice, Mountain Dew,Tab, or
·
sentences to reach your brain
saved face, at least a little bit.
milk) but it comes in a bottle and
two to three seconds later than
For those who are slower and
eats up a lot of my money. This
the average person
,
so it is no
furtheralong in the memory loss
.
beverage, I believe, h
_
as made
fault of your own_
If,
on the
stage, the scenario is quite dif-
me miss classes, mess up as-
other hand, your problem is with
ferent. They will never pick up
signments and make a fool of liquids rather than plant-life, the
on facial expressions and after
myself on more than one occa~
problem is not natural because
finishing the story will get an-
sion.
you need two to three seconds
gry with their listener for not
I tried to think of other reasons
to remember that someone has
paying attention (they must not
I might have memory problems
spoken to you.
have been paying attention if
when I remembered what some-
The next issue has three
they did not find that funny).
one once told me about being a
stages of memory deficiency
.
This is when the listener lashes
Pieces
.
Apparently, Pieces'
The first is when you have to
.
out, "You already told me that
have a tendency to daydream a
ask
.
your friends which night
story yesterday
,
you idiot!" At
lot, as well as having problems
·
you
·
went to The Foxhole and
.
this point I suggest putting tail
paying attention and, therefore,
\vhich
.
night you went to
between legs
,
foot in mouth and
remembering things. Though I
Brady's. This is often not the
walkingslowlyoffMid-Hudson
put no weight in any of this, I
fault of a bad memory, but rather
·
Bridge.
simply
,
offer it as a solution to
.
just a tired person who does not
If
you feel as though you fall
anyone
'.
who wants to believe it.
have the energy to think.
into any or all of these catego-
as it might make me look better
The
·
second stage is when
ries
,
you are probably a friend
in their eyes.
someone reminds you on Sun-
of mine. I am just kidding. l am
So what,, you wonder, might
day of a conversation the two
not really that bad with my
put you in the same category of of you had on Friday. The prob-
memory. I will say one thing
,
memory loss as the absent-
tern here is that you argue for
though. I had this great ending
minded writer of this article?
ten minutes because you are
to this story all worked out that
There are a number of well-
certain that that conversation
was really going to shock this
documented signals that one
could not have happened_ any
schoo\ once and for a\L Oh man
,
should be aware ofto try to pre-
later than Tuesday. You know
I cannot believe I forget the f-
ven
(
any' unnechsar/embar~
·
how
'
the ·conversation goes
:
ing ending to this story.
rassmerits.
·J:<
- .
·
.
.
.
i
·-

<<
·
'c
'
You mean we talked about that
The
.
firstprtiblein is forgetting
:
''
F~iday night? Are you sure? I
:
Tim Manson is
the
Opinion
simpleJittle things like where
could have sworn it had been
Editor for The Circle
you left your keys (in the door
at least four or five days ago.
"
.
D~ij~ Qµ~n.
.
cons1ders herself chicken ofthe sea
Earli~r t.oday,
·
1his very col-
.
·
sode, in which a boy was teased
umn was npt quite wordy
_
and called "salad bowl head." I
enougl) to
.
be~ brief desc:ription
then consoled
:
myself by re-
of the contents of a sack of un-
memberingthat bowls do come
bleached flour
;
It
was about as
·
in a vast array of shapes and
bland too.
J
dedicate this fin-
.
'
sizes, and perhaps my haircut
.
ished
·
column to the student,
was perceived as a more flat-
unbeknownst to
-
ine
,
who may
tering type of bowl.
or may not have described me
.
However, my haircut was not
as "drab" in class
·
this morning.
really an issue.
If
I-was look-
Thanks, Pal.
·
·
ing for raves
;
i
would nothave
In this particular class, we
had it trimmed at "The
were each instructed
fo
write a
Cuttery," across the street, by
description of one
:
other
,
stu-
some
_
lady who made Elvira
dent and hand it in anonymously.
look like Marilyn Quale. No,
The
,
first two that were read
it
was the "drab
"
part. I imme
-
aloud sounded like flattering
diately associated it with the
odes to
·
secret crushes. Then
·
old dust ridden tan Dacron cur-
there was the third cine.
.
tains that hung in my parents'
The writer described a drab
living room when I was little.
girl with bad posture that he or
Despite my less than lovely
she deemed to be indicative of haircut, it was my posture that
some sort of internal
.
misery. l
was most incriminating. I carry
looked around for the poor, pa-
myself as well as
·
Jimmy Du-
thetic soul, and was pretty
rante carries a tune- in his
stumped. The class looked
present state of course- which
around until someone pointed
is not only California
,
but also
me out and said, "I think it's
very much dead.
her.
"
I have been called a variety of
"Me?" I thought aloud.
things, some more flattering
"Uh, only_ because of the hair
than others, but "drab"
·
really
part
,
" he said. He sounded
made me stop and think
.
I
more polite than honest.
mean, here I am
,
trying to write,
I recalled the hair was de-
thinking to myself,
"Me?
scribed as "bowl shaped." At
Drab?"
Also, what is the in-
first, I could not think of a less
temal misery thing? I think I
flattering way to describe just forget to smile sometimes.
someone
'
s hair. I would have
I also forget my keys. Hell
,
I
preferred "mop," "toilet brush,"
may forget stuff, but I enjoy
or even "Don King
,
" I recalled
life, right down to the tuna fish
the plot of a "Full House" epi-
sandwich.
.
Sometimes
,
people do not ap-
preciate little things like tuna
fish sandwiches. A mere 200
years ago, I would have to go
over to
.
the Atlantic, catch a
tuna, kill it, take the bones out,
cook it, and chop it up. Then I
would have to grow some let-
tuce and tomatoes, and keep
chickens to lay the eggs to
make mayo
.
Then I would have
to figure out how to make
bread. This whole process
would take months. Today
,
just
about anyone can walk across
the street to the deli and get a
-
tuna sandwich in a matter of
minutes, which is pretty amaz-
ing. Of course
,
there is still no
perfect solution to extinguish
that lingering smell .
..
Some may think a tuna sand-
wich is merely a drab lunch
staple, but sometimes, you just
have to look beyond what you
see. Heck, it did not matter who
that "drab" description was
about- there were twenty other
students not too much differ-
ent from me in the class. The
whole issue is not about me in
particular. Though, I may sound
SLIGHTLY
defensive. Every-
one is unique.
Maybe my
whole life is drab to some. To
me, it is about as fascinating as
a tuna fish sandwich.
Tara Quinn is
The Circle's
Humor Columnist and is in
the process of changing her
name
to Tara Laquinnski, in
an
attempt to sound less
"drab."
ublic realtions
01ak
he world go 'round
Public relations are essenti~I.
If
something is not presented
correctly, its acceptance is
greatly diminished. Imagine a
pill that cured cancer came out,
but the package said that it
"May cause you to have a huge
ass". People would still take it,
but, they would be happier if it
said "now with flavor crystals".
Today, public relations have
gone crazy. Consider President
Clinton's popularity
,
in spite of
a list of allegations that would
make
0.1.
Simpson blush.
At the same time
,
there have
been protesters at a number of
events where members of the
President's cabinet have spo-
ken in favor of taking military
actions against Iraq_ And I
thought this was a country that
liked to fight wars over oil.
Now, we have renewed con-
cerns regarding anthrax, the
hazardous chemical that is fun
anywhere that vomiting blood
and severe diarrhea are party
favors
.
Most troubling is that
anyone would use anthrax,
when an Arby's roast beef
sandwich would more than do
the trick.
Three men in Las Vegas were
found to possess military
grade anthrax (the good stuff,
like you get on the streets). But,
the case seemed to take a good
tum, as the three hillbillies with
bio-chemical weapons in the
trunk of their pickup truck were
conducting legitimate tests.
Not
_
surprising\y, anthrax is
·now more
.
popular than ever.
As an unexpected bonus, the
forgotten heavy metal group of
the same name has experienced
a surge in popularity. A mem-
ber of the band says that he
has never been happier to be
associated with a known con-
taminant. Except for his affair
with Pamela Anderson.
·
Speaking of whom, her hus-
band rommy Lee, who
is
part
of something called Motley
Crue, was seen at the Center
for
Disease Control in Atlanta.
In addition
to
the weekly purge
of his bloodstream, he was pe-
titioning tci have deadly toxin
after HIS band, with the hope
that this would make people
stop laughing at them long
enough to notice that they are
still around.
While anthrax's popularity is
on the rise, the Queen of En-
gland has had to hire a spin
doctor
.
This is not to say that
she hired some worthless pop
band packaged by their record
company to ride on the coat
tails of real musicians.
Instead, Queen Elizabeth has
hired a media consultant in or-
der to improve her public im-
age. Things are bad when your
face is on the money, and yet
people still do not like you.
According to a Times of
um-
don
survey, many Britons feel
the Royals are om of touch
with the people. They are also
viewed as wasteful, and a poor
value, especially when you
consider how inexpensive dic-
tators are these days.
The Queen's new director of
communications, who stands
to earn upwards of $240,000 a
year
,
has already suggested
that Queen Elizabeth buy her-
self a new dog
,
threaten to
bomb the hell out of Iraq, and
have an affair with a
Buckingham Palace intern.
But, it does not stop there for
the royal family. Things are so
bad that they had what was es-
sentially a yard sale over the
weekend. Sure, all of the pro-
ceeds did go to a charity for
Princess Diana
,
but, that was
probably a public relations
stunt in and of itsett
:
(Maybe
Motley Crue might not do bet-
ter to change th
e
ir name to
"Princess of Wales". Of
course
,
that would again make
people immediately think of
Pamela Lee.)
Some personal eff
e
cts for the
Duke and Dutchess of Windsor
were put up for auction at
Sotheby's. The duke flirted
with being king before he flirted
!
with a common American
i
woman who was twice di-
\
vorced. 'The desk where he ab-
\
dicated his throne sold for
/
$415,000
.
Surpri
s
ingly
,
nearly $30,000
was paid for a piece of wed-
ding cake preserved from th
e
couple's marriage.
It
was ex-
p
e
cted to only fetch a couple
hundred dollars
,
but the ask-
'
in
g
price went through the roof
when it was revealed that the
cake had simply been stuck to
the side of Rosie O'Donnell's
face for all that time
.
Which i
s
what you need to
take away from all of this. You
might lose more th
a
n your shirt
in Vegas. Mayb
e
Tommy Lee
did have film in the camera that
night. Perhaps the Queen
should reinvent her
s
elf for her
next album. Is it r
e
ally a sur
-
prise that President Clinton is
all about tail (getting' ic and
kickin' it)?
It
all shows that you
can never let your guard down
,
because you never know what
is right around th
e
comer_
-Christian Bladt's column has
been proved to cause severe
depression among laboratory
rats. But, it is the paper of
choice among newly housebro-
ken puppies.
Quote of the Week:
Ambition is a poor excuse for not
having sense enough to be lazy.
---Charlie McCarthy



















































I
I
,,:
;
.
-
-~
,.,
.
.
-
8
-- THE CIRCLE
Febr-uary 26, 1998
Taking
a
Closer Look
·
at
News and
:
Reviews·
The man with no Soul: Ajoumey into the world of a white boy
byCARLITO
Staff Writer
I have two loving parents, an
aquarium full
.
of healthy sea
monkeys and an
IQ that, when
functioning, propels me to an
intellectual level slightly exceed-
ing moderate retardation. God
has blessed me with all of these
attributes but one thing he has
failed to provide me with is soul.
Contextually,
I
do not mean soul
as a celestial entity but as the
ability to cut up a rug. Or, as
Phil Collin
'
s once said,
"I
can't
dance."
I
would use the color of my
skin (which despite my deceiv-
ing
alias
is
as
white
as
...
something that is
·
really
white) as an excuse, but
several
people have defied the stereo-
types. Vanilla Ice, Snow { remem-
ber Informer?) and Mike Corvi,
who does a darn good running
man after consuming a twelve
pack, are
just
a few names that
come to mind. Having been
raised on a steady diet of Iron
Maiden and pre-sold-out
Metallica, moshing came as eas-
ily to me as inhaling carcino-
gens. Moshing, however, does
not qualify as dancing, though.
It
is merely a testosterone in-
duced full body hemorrhage.
I
perfected the underrated and
rarely
praised
art
of
slamdancing, and just when my
.
confidence was starting to blos-
som,
I got expelled from high
school for initiating a mosh pit
at a pep rally. My breakdancing
exhibition during
.
mass (at what
.
would become the third stop on
my east coast high school tour)
.
was met with the same level of
discouragement. The nuns at
my school had obviously never
seen Breakin'
2:
·
Electric
Boogaloo.
The effort has always been
there throughout my life, just
not the ability. After the
moshing and breakdancing
phases of my life had been di-
gested
,
the rave scene was next.
To be a raver, there are two re-
quirements. You must be will-
ing to voluntarily consume mind
expanding (usually more sue-
..
.
cessful in mind erasing) drugs,
and you must be capable of
dancing for eight hours straight.
Since
.
I played high school bas-
ketball, I had to do some priori-
tizing; aihletic devotion or bet-
ter living through chemistry.
I
have not picked up a basketball
in four years.
.After six months as a raver, I
developed an auditory disorder
known as auditory driving
which is characterized by a per-
petual drumming of
a
hallucina-
tory nature. This is a side effect
from the deafening bass that can
be heard at any rave.
·
Behavioral psychology
teaches us that we act in ways
that will result in either rein-
forcement (a cookie) or punish-
ment (a spanking).
B.F.
Skinner
·
(the founder of behavioral psy-
chology who has long since
passed a\1/ay) was probably
laughing at my inability to learn
from the series of spankings that
I
endured. But perhaps
I
was
being reinforced by satisfying
my unquenchable desire to
sweat. And ifC
&
C
Music Fae-
It may not be a mere coinci-
dence that the Ides of March fall
around the same time as spring
break; tropical climates, large
volumes of alcohol, and thou-
sands of wacky college kids
have contributed to the down-
fall
of quite a few livers and other
organs. Still, the focus of our
weeklong exodus is to enjoy
ourselves as much as financially·
·.
possible. A few lucky stuclents
get to go away to exotic lands
and foreign shores to experi-
ence the standard-issue-like-on-
TV
spring
break. Such locations
.
·
as Daytona Beach, Cancun, and
the Bahamas are
·
the ol_d
reliables. A lot of us stick
around ( or go home) to work our
wonderful jobs and make
money to stay alive. Myself,
I
plan to visit the splendid back-
woods and mountaintops of the
Mid-Atlantic States. Sure, there
will not be any scantily clad co-
eds or raging party animals but
that does not mean
I
will not
have the chance to spend three
days broken down in Appala-
chian country. Much like my
friends who will experience the
rite-of-passage spring break,
l
will be embarking on the epic
road trip that is typical of col-
lege students in America.
fantastic places, like this Sheetz_ gas
·
.
.
The definition of "roadtrip"
varies from person to person.
For some it is a 3-hour drive to a
concert, for others it is
a
month
long journey to far away places.
One of the best aspects of road
trips are the tourist traps that
line the backroads in otherwise
isolated locations. Anyone who
has ever driven down south
knows what I mean; those
"South
of the Border" signs
start
I
13 miles ( or something
like that) away and announce
that you are only 84 miles away
from this wonderful, magical,
land of sombreros and neon
lights. When you actually get
to South of Border, it is kind of a
disappointment.
I
am not going
to ruin the surprise for those of
you who haye never been there,
but
I
will say if they t!Verbuilt a
casino out of styro-foam and put
a billion strings of Christmas
lights on it, you would have
South of the Border. I think all
they sell is South of the Border
bumper stickers. But
I
digress.
The roadtrip is an AII-Ameri~
can phenomenon, wherein a
group of filthy young people get
to experience the freedom of the
roads and break down in a far
away state. Along the way, you
get to absorb the local color of
where ever yot• may be. Some
of my favorite local attractions
are:
*Santa's
Village in Vermont
*
The World Famous Boot and·
.
.
.
.
Wig Museum in Texas
* The World's Biggest Ball of
String in Minnesota
*
The International Dove and
D
_
~ntistry Museum
fo
New
.
York
*Wayne's Hair in Virginia
.
*
Amar's Exotic Dancers and
Bowling Alley Supreme in
West Virginia
*
The Enchanted Mitten in
Massachusetts
These are all real places!
These exciting and wonderful
locations off er an oasis of es-
cape from the tireless hours of
driving. I am sure there are
much better and exotic tourist
traps out there. Perhaps on my
spring break I
will
come across
some new, wild place like:
*
The international Gerbil Ge-
Please see
BREAK. ..
page
9.
tory is there to help along the
way, than why fight it?
Last weekend ltook my girl-
friend upstate to the quaint town
of Hunter (population: 24) for
dinner, dancing and.skiing: By
the way, quaint is a synonym
for small and boring. This time,
I
abstained from attacking
.
the
dance floor but as I stood along
its outskirts nursing a bottle of
O'douls .. .I saw him. He was
·
roughly 36 years old,
.
middle
class, poorly dressed and hous-
ing a BAC of
,6 ..
He was white
and he could not dance, but he
did not care. His style re-
sembled a cross between Pee-
Wee Herman and Barney. The
dinosaur,
.
not the Flinstone.
Possessed by the pulsating
bass line of "Don't Turn
Around"(Ace of Base just
reached number one on the
charts iri Hunter), he ignored
the jeers emanating from the
·
crowd as he frantically searched
for anything that even remotely
resembled a dance step. After
nearly barreling over several in-
nocent bystanders (that were
coincidentally mocking him), the
·
bouncers attempted
'
to pur an
end to his tenacious rampage.
He refused to go down without
a fight, though. On several oc-
.
casioris; he
;
broke free from
.
security's grasp in
.
attempts to
woo the crowd with his mysti-
cal footwork. Finally he was
escorted out of the dub, and out
ofmylife.
I
know
I
will never see him
again, but I will.cherish his
memory till my last breath es-
capes me. Out of the nightclub
fog came
a
man. A man with no
name. A man with no soul. A
man that should not be allowed
within 200 feet of a dance floor,
but never the less, a man with a
message.
·
Although a majority
of the Caucasian race is rhyth-
mically handicapped, that does
not make us inferior. We have a
God given right to get down no
matter how severely we humili-
ate ourselves and even though
people might laugh
·
at us, we
must exercise those rights. With
the exception of Michael Flatley.
l
J
l
l
l
I
I
l
i
)
i
\•



















THE CIRCLE, Febru~ry 26, 1998
Wh~re have allthe'..go~~
Mickey
R~1:1;rke role~
_gone?

b JOHN SULLIVAN .
.~an.expect ~ore t~o~ him m later
Ele1!1e1~t
~II match W1lhs s _la-
loi;es most of his matches with
Y
.
roles as his criminal ·record
·
come, squmty~eyed pers~mahty.
one or two knockouts. He once
St
affWnter
lengthens.
.
Stars like Pitt and .Roberts and
stalked his ex-girlfriend, Carre
. As a movie
.
critic and a movie
even the dynamic Denzel Wash-
Otis, beat her up and then a few
I
have always been somewhat
buff I have been a •fan of the
.ington are pigeonholed in roles
months later they were married.
disappointed about the "good-
unshaven, hard drinking, pugi-
that are a little too squeaky
He hits a new press guy every
ness,'; inheritto i:nany, Holly-
Jistic actors. Actors who take the
clean, therefore boring. But bor-
few weeks and goes club hop-
wood stars. ~tars like Wil Smith,
tough mies not only to expand
ing is exactly how to describe
ping with such other classy
Julia Roberts, and Brad Pftt
their acting experience; they get
the above mentioned actors'
Hollywood players like Jean
seem to have this white-bread,
a chance to showcase their real
personal lives. Julia Roberts is
Claude Van-Damme and body-
angelic quality about their on · life personalities. Robert
having an affair with Ethan
guard from hell Chuck Zito.
and off screen personalities. It
1;:>ow11ey Jr. has joined the ranks ·Hawke-who-cares'? Denzel
Mickey Rourke does not re-
is
rare that you will see some-
•of some of my favorite jerk/ Washington is getting fat-big
ally gel the great roles anymore.
thing iri the paper about Julia
method actors· with his recent
deal, so am I. Brad Pitt broke up
His off screen persona has
Roberts going into rehab or Brad
(but not new) run-ins with the
with that chick who got her head
haunted him for quite a few
Pitt punching out
a
cameraman.
law. After hearing about
cut off at the end of Seven. Oh
years and I am pretty sure Hol-
l like my actors to be morally
Downey's drug problems, I re-
well, these actors are fine, but
lywood is scared of him. That is
ambiguous and foul-tempered.
viewed some of his past efforts
dull.
the price you pay for not selling
I think it enhances their perfor-
like
True
Believer, Chapliiz, One
Which brings me to Mickey
out
to
Hollywood's perception
mances and it gives me hope to
Night Stand,
and The Pick-Up
Rourke. Mickey Rourke is the
of a good guy. What I would
know that there is room in Hol-
Artist.
I realized Downey i~ not · eccentric actor from such great
really like to see is Rourke pilot-
lywood
fo;
bad attitudes and
only a good performer but he
films as The Dine,; The Pope of ing Air Force One into the side
alcoholic debauchery. Now Wil
lives emotionally tortured roles
Greenwich Village, A Prayer
of a mountain with Wil Smith.
Smith is a decent actor, although
off screen as well. His severely for the Dying, and most re-
Harrison Ford. Julia Roberts,
I am inclined to believe thatev-
bad habits ·1end his perfor-
cently, The Rainmaker. l love
Gwyneth
Paltrow,
John
ery role he takes turns him into
mances an even more substan-
Mickey Rourke. Mickey is the
Tmvolta,andESPECIALLYTom
another version of the Fresh
_tial aura of believability. I trust
perfect example of one of those
Hanks on board. Maybe Robert
Prince. Imagine Smith in
Robert Downey Jr. because I
fascinating
stars
whose
DowneyJr.wouldbeinthecon-
... Schindler's List,
"Damn G, I
know he knows what he is try-
troubled persona.I life matches
trol. tower giving the thumbs up
coulda done more. I coulda
ing to convey in his roles.
the basic scuziiness of his
to the flaming wreck.
saved more of them lives up in
Downey is a jerk and a drug ad-
movie roles. In films, Mickey is
When it comes to movies and
here!"Nevertheless, Will Smith
diet; I do not have·to like him as
a misogynist, a hitman,. a
actors, I am a bitter person. I
is a competent thespian who
a person to like him as anactor.
smoker,adrinker,acriminal,and
hate most everything I see and
knows how to take the block-
As an actor, he is the real thing.
a gangbanging heroin addicted
I arri pretty sure that Hollywood
buster roles. However, he is too
.I
am not saying in order to be
ex-boxer. Guess what? In ,~allite
producers think we are all a
much of a saint to really be an
a good actor (in my humble
Mickey is all these lovely
bunch of slack-jawed idiots who
interesting actor. To me, I think
opinion) you have to be an al-
things. He has perfected the
will pay anything as long as the
themorecomplicatedtheactor's
coholic, violent, substance
characterofa world-weary guy
nameabovethetitleisinallcaps.
motives, the more dramatically
abuser; But if a star is going to
angry at the world and tiimsel(
But once in a while a perfor-
·complex the actor. To tell you
take a dark, tortured role usu-
I believe Mickey Rourke and
mance by Rourke, Willis, or
the truth, the.only reason
r
saw
ally ·shunned by most Holly-
trust him, not with my girlfriend
Downey and sometimes Robert-
Hard Rain
was because on the
wood agents I think.,the person
but with my eight dollars at a
DeNiro (who punched out some
day th~ film opened Christian
in question sho1;1ld have a per-
movie theater. He is not Harrison
guy last week. might be in-
Slaterbegah servinghisjail time
sonality that matches the char-
Ford playing the President of
volved in a call girl ring in
for 91_ days.1- thought that
acted KNOW Bruce Willis is a
the United States; he is Mickey
France) will strengthen my faith
·maybe Slater. obviously has a
beer:swilling, male chauvinist,
Rourke playing Mickey Rourke.
in film as an art. When art imi-
darkside; so maybe that part of -, heayy smoker;and those are the ; He has got the best stories in . tates life art is enhanced. Where
hirri_.;mighrfin4Jts·wayihtohis. roles he is most successful in.
the news too. He fights in
haveallthegoodMickeyRourke
usually uninspired acting,-it did
Characters in Die-Hard, The • Bogota as a legit boxer but
roles gone? Check the video
no(But who knows, maybe we
Last·Boy Scout,
and .The Fifth
fights under a different name. He
store-they are all still there.
NAME:
Trisha Ptasznik
YEAR:·
Sophomore
MAJOR:
_Psychology/Special Education
HOMETOWN:
Brooklyn, NY
FAVORITE BAND:
Letters to Cleo
FAVORITE MOVIE:
Pre_tty Woman
ROLE MODEL:
Her parents and her big sister
9
ft@/
ifl61fll~ifififl
1
?11if
lillili1~il
-~IT~ijf
ii~11~af
Bi&tI[~iB
1
~b
ililtJiftt
"Time management is an essence," said Trisha Ptasznik. Ptasznik is the Vice President of Academic Affairs in the Student Government Association. As VP, she mus
ttend Academic Affai'fs Committee m_eetings. This committee addresses pertinent student issues concerning academics. Ptasznik also holds student academic counci
eetings every other week and is in charge of organizing Faculty of the Year Awards and the College Bowl. As a Psychology/Special Education major. Ptasznik wants t
et her Ph.D. in Child Psychology. "I eventually want to be a child psychologist," said Ptasznik. However, after completing Marist's five-year Psychology/Specia
ducation program, Ptasznik plans on teaching until she gets her Ph.D. During her remaining two years on campus, Ptasznik wants to stay involved on campus and kee
er academics up. Her most memorable moment from Student Government was meeting her best friend, Resident Senator Ryan Hunter. Many rumors have been circlin
bout these two beino involved. However, all the rumors are false. •~we are both very single!" said Ptasznik. Ptasznik favors two different aspects of Mari st College. First
he loves the friends°she has made here. Secondly, she loves the five-year program for Psychology/Special Education majors. "The five year program is why I came t
arist," said Ptasznik. In the Psychology/Special Education major there is the five-year accelerated program. To remain in the program. students need to maintain a 3 .
. P.A-:-In addition to her responsibilities for Student Government, Ptasznik is a first year Resident Assistant in Marian Hall, the co-chair for the Peer Support Line, an activ
ember of Peer Mediation, and she is also pledging Alpha Sigma Tau. Ptasznik would also like to say hi to Ryan, "No, he's not my boyfriend!", Nerissa, Jason, her big siste
iz, and everyone in Alpha Sigma Tau.



































































































































10
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26,
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The Dean and
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Facultywaritto
hear.J,'ouY -
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opinion of the Marist Communication Program.
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Your advice
will help us
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THE CIRCLE, February 26, 1998
port
savvy · _______
by-RY_J\N_MARAZ_m
_ _ _
_
as the other way around., With
an' of those ingredients and a
shot to the knee, ahkle,hip, leg
or arm, they h_ave concocted
quite a mind-altering mix. One
thing that- has not been lacking
or questioned about these
women is their heart.
If
every
team could have the amount of
heart they have, sports would
be extremely intense.
I would now like to acknowl-
edge the men's and women's
cross country and track team's
efforts at the MAAC meet this
week. I would also like to con-
grat u
I
ate those who set
records and qualified for high
level events.
I
may not be very
knowledgeable on this sport I
do recognize the unequaled ef-
.
fort put forth by this team in
practice. How many times do
you see these athletes run-
ning around campus in this
numbing weather? Its unfortu-
nate that other sports do not
have room to compete on.cam-
pus and perhaps this should
be taken up with the athletics
department which can be
reached at FOXX or x3699.
In a look ahead, "I see skies
of blue ... " and fields of dreams
as the baseball and softball
leari1s gear up for their respec-
tive seasons. After the baseball
team's almost invisible, to the
eyes of the Marist community,
charge to the NEC regular sea-
son and tournament champion-
ship, which led to an eventual
NCAA tourney birth, the stan-
dards are now higher for coach
Szefc 's Red Foxes. Good luck and
"Get Some!"
In softball, I see a strong sea-
son behind good defense and
enormous hitting. Perhaps they
will make a run at the title too.
Good luck to them also.
First,'congrats to the men's
backbo.ards and too many
and women's. swimming and
guards seem to have contrib-
diving tea~s for dC>ing every-. uted to the lackluster record/'
thing just short
·.of
running the
This team, like the old diche
MAAC
championships.
states, is better than its record
Wait...they hosted it,
·So
I
guess · shows. This hustling team is
they ran it in that sense as well.
one of the best in the MAAC,
Seems like these talented male
physically and mentally. There
and female athletes have created · may be a chance, .shoot Danny
quite a name for Marist College
Schayes still has a chance with
in swimming and diving. I was
the Magic, for this team to do
especially amused with the
some damage
in
the MAAC
team's, Sy Sperling, "I'm not
tournament. Win or lose, these
only the president, but I'm also
guys will be a team of runners
a client" look. · That's a great
and gunners, dishers and
way to generate comradery. I
swishers, glass cleaners and
was close to going out and
clutch leaners next year.
gettin' me a Bic job: .. well, _not
As for the women, they seem
really.
Just one question
to be reliving the men's night-
though. How come the girls did
mare oflastyear. It is like watch-
not shave their heads?
ingaFridaythe 13thmovieone-
Menoxydle patients or not,
day, and running from that knife-
these guys and girls
·proved
fingered freak the next.". ·Al-
thyy are the best in the MAAC.' · though their clock management
Women's hoops ends season with
win over Canisius; finishes 5-21
by JEFFDAHNCKE
StaffWrit~r
Like the Siena game, the
out the half strong to take a one
Foxes would fall behind early.
point lead at the break.
The story's been a little differ- .: was not the best, this team can
erit
on 'the parquet ·however .. · drai~ '.buckets inside· ~nd out-
Boih meti's and women's bas-
side, and ha\'e proven iton mor~
ketball have crossedmore:than .. than~cin.e occasion:-
.
The season
one·bridge ·over troubled water
has been such. a roller. coaster
this year. Coach Magarrity's
that Six Flags is calling for the
team has been lighting the ny-
blueprints. There have been
Ion lately but not after tantaliz-
games people say they should
ing tastes of defeat. Dirty
have won and have not as well
Niagra opened up a 15-_6 lead
The second half was a seesaw
In a year where th~re was not
at the ~tart; as they-go(nine
cif'
battle before the Foxes would pull
muchto_cheerabout{\heMarist
those points.,off Sheryl Klick '. away: The lead changed hands
women•~ basketball team 3-point~rs.- Marisf
did
not take . , 13.times prior to another Lesko
wrapped up the regular season . . care of the ball in the first half
t~ree that gave Mari st a 63-61 ad-
last Sunday with a win in Bu( - as they went to the locker room
·vantage that they would not re-
falo over Canisius.
trailing 34-21.
linquish.
The win, which was just their
In what has been a recurring
The Lesko three was her fourth
Ra_gu·etball ··einerges
frdlll the shadows
fifth of the season, came after
pattern all year, Mari st could
of the ha)
f,
as she scored 18 of
consecutive losses earlierin the
_not escape the large hole they
her2 I in the second. Tara Knight
, week to Niagara and conference
.
dug themselves after a slow
converted a jumper on the next
powerhouse Siena. The Foxes:, start.
They were only
possession. Cortney Blore
finished the season with a 5-21
outscored 37-34 in the second,
scored and then Knight added
·-mark,whilegoingjust3-15inthe
but never made a run at
anothertwoandMaristhadan
first season in the MAAC.
Niagra.
eight-point advantage.
It
was all
The week began last Tuesday,
Sabrina Vallery led Marist
Foxes from that point on as they
as Marist traveled to Siena to
with 16 points. Klick led the
headed home with an 84-74 vie-
by
Peter Moylan
Staff Writer
member of the team for three
take on the Saints, who came in
Purple Eagles with 21.
tory.
years, and is the glue that holds
with just one setback in the.con-
The regular season finale was
Babineau considered the sec-
. , thi,s talented tea!Il together.
ference. Siena won the opening
Sunday against Canisius, a
ond half of the Canisius game
They can be seenentering_or,, .. ~,!l).CeJac.quetball.isa1::!ub'.~P,ort,
.~,tip
and Erin J½lland.quickly
team ,Marist had,already·,.de-, . perhaps their best twenty min-
leaving the McCann center on
rio'athleiic scholarships can be
converted on a layup to take a
feated earlier in the year.
It
utes of the season, as they scored
any given Tuesday, Wednes-
offered, so all of the players on
2-0 advantage. That proved to
looked like the Red Foxes could
54 points.
day, or Thursday.
the team are just regular stu-
be an insurmountable deficit, as
get blown away early, as
Shackel led the way with 24
There are only about ten to fif-
dents with both a tremendous
the Foxes would never lead in
Canisius opened up an 8-0
points, 8 assists, and 4 steals.
teen of them, depending on the
talent and love for the, sport.
the game.
. lead.
Vallery chipped in with 16 points
• day, but they all posses a skill -
This pastweekend,.the Nqrth-
Siena used a 9-1 run,in the first · Marist would pull within four
and Knight added
IO
off the
'which has brought them to-
east Regionals were held to de-
four minutes to set the tone.
on a Beth Shackel three, but
bench. Marist shot 51 percent
gether for one common goal, to
cide which teams would be head-
Then the Saints, who shot 56
then Canisius went on a 15-7
from the floor and, more impres-
win,
.
ingtotheNationals. Some of the . percent.from behind the arc for
run to take a twelve-point lead
sively, 53 percent from beyond
\Vho is this group? It is the
bright spots of the tournament
the game, put on a 3-point exhi-
with 6:56 in the half. But the
the arc. Combined with 23 points
Marist Racquetball team, pos-
were Cara DaMato anp, Alex
bition. They connected
on
three
Foxes went on a run as Shackel
off Canisius turnovers, Mari st
sibly the most unknown, yet .. DePillis's fourth place fipish in· · bombs from downtown in the·. led !he comeback with eight
had a winning formula.
successful. teams on campus.
the consolation bracket, Lisa
next eight minutes to force
points in the final six minutes.
The Foxes will make their
To fully appreciate the rise of Tramazzo'a second place finish
Mari st· head coach Ken
Lesko connected on a 22-
MAAC tournament debut today
racquetball here at Marist, one
in the consolation bracket, Mark
Babineau to take a time-out at
footer
at
the I :32 mark to give
as they take on former NEC foe
mu·st first understand .the bond
Deluccia's second place finish
the 8:08 mark.
Mari st a five-point lead. The
Rider, a team that has already de-
that the school and the sport
in the Men's. I ,consolation
But the time-out did little to
Golden Griffins would close
feated Marist twice this season.
share, Back in the 80's and early
bracket...:_the highest bracket of · slow down Siena. Bolland, who
90's, Marist was a b_ig·name in ,competition. The shining mo-. had 17 in the half, came out and
the college racquetball circuit.
ment of the day for Marist which
nailed two more treys
to
give the
Over the years however, the Red
was Nick Kost's third place fin-
Saints an 18-point cushion. By
Fox's prominence in theECRC,
ish 9v_erall in the Men's I
halftime that cushion had ex-
Eastern Collegiate Racquetball
bracket.
..
panded to 25, as Marist trailed
Conference, has been cha!-
One other pleasant surprise
44-19 at the break.
lenged by such schools as
was the battle waged between
Even though they played a
Army, Penn State, Providence,
Jette/Kost and Shane Wood/
pretty even second half, the
Siena, RPI, anci, especially
Erik Eckman, the junior Olympic
Foxes had dug themselves too
Nichols, the national champs in
standouts from· Nichols. Al-
big of a hole. The Saints would
1996 which boasts junior Olym-
though the Mari st pair lost 15-
open up as large as a 34-point
pie racquetball players.
·
7, their play reflected just how
lead, before finally taking an 88-
Some said Marist's time in the
far Marist racquetball has come.
60 decision.
limelight was over, but like any
· "Last year we graduated eight
"They were on all cylinders
true competitors, the Red Foxes
seniors, and early on our team
and playing very well," said
were just waiting to make an-
struggled," said Jette. "But we
Babineau. "You can't get down
other championship run. This
have
a
lot of talented freshman
to a team like that."
brings us to Marist racquetball
and upperclassmen, so our
fu-
Erin Bolland led Sienna with
today.
ture looks bright."
22, including the I 000th of her
For starters, the ECRC is con-
Just how good the Mari st
career. For Marist, Jean-Marie
sidered the biggest conference
Racquetball team will be in
Lesko had 21.
in the nation and arguably has
anybody's guess, but Jette said
Three days later Marist was at
the most talent. With a lot of he remains positive.
Niagra to take on the Purple
the players in the conference
"Next year Nick Kost will take
Eagles. This was a tough game
gaining sponsorship and either
over as captain, and with the
for the players, as they learned
goingproor~ecomingOlympic
talent I'm leaving behind and
before they boarded the bus
hopefuls, Marist has found it-
hopefully more coming in, we
that their coach would not be
self having to put forth a team
will be just as good if not bet-
returning
next
season.
that can match up to the best
ter," said Jette.
Babineau said this could have
players in the country. In charge
In other words, the Marist rac-
affected their play.
of this task is the player-coach
quetball team is ready to not
"We struggled emotionally,"
of the Red Fox racquetball team,
only succeed, but turn a few
he noted. "They seemed very
Chris Jette. Jette has been a
heads in the process.
preoccupied in their minds."
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Valley·s
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4.PS
11


























































































r
STAT OF
.
THE WEEK
-
:
Freshman Jeremy
Smith
broke)he
t1:::~:t;~;:::::::i
SPORTS
.
QUOTE OFTHE
·
WEEK
"He has always represented
Marist
~ith
tremendous_~1~: ....
·
-Athl~tic Director'fjni
l\1~rr~y6it
women
1
s basketbaJI c~ach Ken
inches
·
·
·
,
·-.
·
.
Babineau
.
.
.
.
12
THE
cmCLE, Februaury 26; 1998
.
·
..... ·
Women's baSketballcoach calls it (}1.lits after l4Ye.ars
by JEFFDAHNCKE
Staff Writer
coach some outstanding people
ated with the women
'
s program
like to tl11nk Kenny is still afriend
and although I leave with a
as an assistant
.
coach in
·
f984.
of mine," said Murray.
.
.
also sai
.
d that if:he does not re-
.
tum to the
.
hardwood, he may
get
.
back into teaching, some
_
-
thing he did for thirteen years.
Mansi College head women's
basketball
.
coach Ken Babineau
resigned his position _iast Friday
..
after fourteen seasons with the
Foxes.
heayyheart, I
.
take with me some
He
'
took over as
:
the head coach
.
, ..
Babineau would riot comment
fond memories."
in 1986. He had hi
s
best season
.
-
on the exact circumstances sur-
Director of athletics Tim
during the 1992-9
,
3 campaign
.
rounding the resignationand is
Murraycomplimented Babineau
when he directed the Red Foxes
·
not sure yet whatthe fut
_
ure
for what he has done as head
to a 19-10 mark and an appear-
holds
.
.
, ·
.
·
.
·
The coach leaves a year be-
fore a very strong recruiting
class arrives at Marist. Marist
w
·
ill welcome four
USA Today
honorable mention All-Ameri-
cans nextseason, a group that
inay
.
be the best recruiting class .
ever at
.
Mari st. Babineau said
he feels that two years from
now, the Red Foxes could
.
be
right at, or near, the
·
top of the
coach.
.
.
.
.
·
.
ance in the Northeast
.
Confer-
"It's premature for me to say,"
, ."Kenny
_
has made great con-
ence Championship
.
Game.
said Babineau of whether or not
The resignation comes after
Maris! strnggled through their
first
.
season inthe MAAC, fin-
ish
0
ing o~ly5
._
2 I. S1~ce he be-
.
came head coach twelve years
ago, Babineau
_
is 140-194.
tribution~ in leading this pro,
· Murray and Babineau met last
he
.
wiH
pursue other coaching
gram over the past twelve sea-
week to talk about how things
positions .
.
'.
'.
I have loved the last
sons and I
.
wish him the best
.
in
were going and it was during that
twelve years here
.
.
Part of me
air his
·
fut~re endeavors;" said
.
meeting that: the decision the
would like to stay in coachi11g,
·
Murray. '
.
'He
has
always ~epre-
.
coach w
·
ould
'
resign was
but part ofme says it might be
sented Marist with tremendous
reached.

time to fade away into the sun-
class and has been a loyal sup-
The athletic director did not
set. I'injust taking itone day at
'This has been a difficult de-
cision for me," he said in
a
p~ess
releaseissued Friday afternoon.
1
'Throughout
·
my tenure l have
been fortunate to work with arid
porter of the
.
students through-
feel there was any hostility fol-
a time.'
'
·
·
.
MA.AC standings.
_
Murray said that a national
·
search for a replacement will
begin immediately.
out his tenure here."
·
lowing the resignation.
.
Babineau said a few schools
Babineau first became associ-
"I can't speak for him, but I'd
have already contacted him. He
Seniors help men's b-baUpick up big win before tourney
by1HOMASRYAN
Sport.~ Editor
.
Berggren, Joe Taylor, Bryan
Whittle and Dennis Keenen got
·
the starting
·
·
assignments
The Metro Atlantic Athletic
against the Golden
-
Griffins.
Conferenc~ championships will
Theyjumped out to a quick
s~o
officlally end the careers offive
:
1ead
·
on a baseline drive by)oe
men's basketb
'
all players, but
Taylor arid the first of three
.
Senior Day provided anemo-
Manny Otero 3-pointers.
tional finale that
·
:
will not
.
be
Canisius came back to take
a
12-
matched.in Albany
:
10
lead before the seriiorsieft to
Marist will more than likely
a standing
.
oyation from the
end their season
wfrh
a loss at McCaiui center crowd.
.
...
·
the MAJ\CChampi<>nsh
_
ips,
. ;
With six
·
minu
_
tes gone in the
barring a run
;
like the
·
Fairfield
gaine, the torch
·
w~s passed as
Stags (!'lade last season that g<>t
Jh~
n
ve seniors were replaced
them into
..
the NCAA Touma-
.
_
bywh~tisJikely to be next year
'
s
mentwith an 8-1
_
8 i
·
ecord: That
starting lineup
of
Bo Larragan
is why the Red Foxes 73-57 'Yin
and
·
Bobby Joe Hatton at guard,
over.Canisius on Sunday after-
Joe McCuroy at
,
swingman,
·noon will pmvide a more
-
fit.ting
Thomasz
.
Ciele
.
bakat
,
forward,·
ending.
.
.
. ·
· ..
·
and Thomas Kenney
at
center.
Seniors Manny Oter<>, 'Dan
The new five did pot
_
appear ·
.
.
.
.
.
.
to be fully ready for their en-
Jul pass from Hatton and
delighted the fans with
a
jam,
tra!}ce, as Canisius used some
slammed it home to put Marist
and Berggren nailed a 3-p'oiriter
quick cuts to the basket and ex-
up 59-53 at the 2: 16 mark. For
as time expired to cap off Senior
cellent passing to build a 23-16
the next two minutes Marist put
Day.
.
lead.with
-
four minutes to go in
on a free throw exhibition.
The win did
.
n<>f do too much
the half.. The
.
rest of the
.
half
.
.
Trying
'
to
stay
in't_tje
"
gailie,
to change Mari
_
st's
·
seeding
;
belonged to
'
the
.
Red Foxes,
Canisius fouied every ·chance
however. At 10-16 overall and
however, as

a
·
3-pointer by
they got
.,
bucthe
.
Re~ I-9,~es
7~11 in the conference, the Red
Mccurdy cur the lead
_
to four
would riot leftheir strategy pay
Foxes finished 'up eighth; 'and
and Cielebak hira trey with, a
off, Larragan, the second 'best
will play ninth-seeded Fairfield
.
minute to go

tb
Cut

the lead to
free throw

shooter in ·the con-
on Friday at 4:00 .
.
29-28 atthe b
'
reak
:

·
·
.
.
ference, went 4-foi-~4 in the last
Thanks to the ~tags run last
'
Cielebak then opened
.
the sec
_
:..
·
tW() minutes, and
.
Otero
'.
and
yea
'
r,
no
team is going to
,
gq
into
ond halfJUSt as
-
h~
:
had
·
closed
Taylor each werit i
~
for-2 down
.
this tournament
-
thinking
-
they
the first
;
with a!)otijer)~pointer
the stretch fromthe line
:
.
can noi
\
vin .
.
M!1ristand th~ir
.
fo
give Marist a twp~point lead.
'
Marist's comfortable cushion
· ..
head coach Dave Magarfty feel
The
'
teams
·
battled
_
back and

with 0:30
.
seconds left enabled
_
no different.
.
·
.
fourth fortherestofthehalfuntil
·
them to gettheir senior back in
·
"We are not going to go into
Marist finally broke it open with
the
.
game, along with freshman
this
·
tournament just trying
.
to
two minutes to
.'
go,
.
and again
Sean Stellato,
-
who entered to a
compete," Magarity said. "We
Cielebak
was
righ~ in themiddle.
huge ovation from
_
the cro·wd.
,
are going to try to win as·many
The 6-9.forward took
·
a beau ti-
Whittle, a Poughkeepsie native,
games as possible."
JndOot
trac~
.
picks ~P
'
clPaif offourthplace finishes
by
JAN
BEIGHLEY,J.R.
.
·.
high ~urdles, running it in 8
.
1
~
a
·
sophomore; finished seventh
womeri\ track
-
and field
'
cham-
..
Pieper, lfalstead, Flanigan and
.
st
aff~
~
~~
\
.
.
:
':
:
:
)
.
?
:-,
.
.
.
··•-~
t7:Wh~~{
-
nq
t
everyo~e
~
broke
.:
~;t~j
;~;:~;r;j;t~~
~~~
.
~i~:~~~~~~es~£~1th~~i~;

~~~M:
0
ri~!htf~f!~~°t~;~::
.
The Maris(C;ollege
J
ndoor
.
school
.
records
-
in
:
the MAAC
time he has broken the 16-minute
of! 9:03
:
32
,
·GJoveralsofinished
·
tan~e medley relay, adding an-
trackand fi~l~t~ams
-
conipeted
.
-Championship~
i:,
tjlany others ·barrier. McManus, a freshman,
fifth in the
_
30(}0, capping a ca-
other highlight to the meet for
in '_the MAAC
:
champiC>nships
hctd
>:
break.th
.
roµgh
y
perfor-
achieved
a
persomil rec:ord of
ree(day
,
·
· ·
·
.
.
.
.
.
_
Marist.
.
.
on Saturday;Feb
,
21
_
~nvtanhiit.-
manc~s .
. ,
Ma9y ihc!ii,~ing Greg · 40
1
9
f/2_''in
the ~riple jump in
Women's coach Phil Kelly was
.
Freshmari Young finished
tan Ce>Hege in Riyei:dale
;-
New
.
'
Salamoiie
/
M.ike Melfi, Steve taking seventh in the MAAC.
·
not surprjs~d
_
l>y
:
his teain's sue-
third in the 55,.meterdash with
.
York. Both
t
he men arid
,
women
·
,
'Palmer arid Denis
'
McManus
Hagendom scored twice for the
cessin the meet.
.
a time
of7.68
secC>nds; her per-
teams fini
~
hed
-
in fpt1rth

pla~e.
·
sh~
!
t~
_
red
,
personal
.
~
e~t
s
,
.
Red Foxes \Vith
a
third place fin-
.
,
"We
·
have
'
been running well
form,mce
·
was only .2
.
seconds
with bothJosing to the hostJas~
·
.
.
Salamone
,
a freshman
,
came
ish in the 55-meter dash
,
and a
·
fora cs>Uple wee
_
ks now,"Kelly
behind the winrier .
.
pers.
;
Even so; therewere
0
s()m
f
up
,
big

Jor the
·.
cham~i9iiships:
·
fifth place finish in the 200
~
meter
saiq .
.
"I was kirid of expecting
Other perform~nces of note
outstaridirig performances that
·
finishing in sixth
:
pJace
j
vith a -dash. The distance medley re-
this
.
"
.
·
were those of Heather Perrine
,
served as highlights for the
·
Red .perso_nal
'
best in the 5000~meter
lay teain of Melfi, Palmer, Pete
_
In addition to Glover, -Kate
Kerrie Cleeland, and Erin Minor.
Foxes.
.
. . . .
nm with a time of 15
:
3?.36, beat-
Startz, and Ben Hefferon took
Pieper, Meredith Halstead, and
Perrine,

a freshman, finished
Marist men's head coach Peie
_
.ing·his personal best by)7 sec-
third place with a time of AmYYoung had excellent per-
fourth in the5000,justone place
Colaizo was happy with his
onds. Salamone alsP
-
finished
10:35.78.
-
forinances
.
.
·
aheadofCleeland, who finished
team's performance, saying that
in thirclplace in the 3
.
000 meter
All in all, it was a good finish
Pieper, a freshman, ran for
seconds ahead of Minor. Those
they gave awe II-rounded effort.
run, with a time of9:0~.3S.
to the
·
indoor season for the
school records in the 200 and
.
contributions made for a very
"We had a great. season,"
Melfi, ajunior, finished in third
men's track team
,
but for some,
4O0-meter races
,
finishing
strong showing for the Mari st
Colaizosaid
.
"I am very pleased
place in the 5000-meter run with
it still goes on
.
A small contin-
fourth and third respectively.
distance
-
program
.
.
withourperformance.
"
a time of 14:56.88, a personal
gent will
·
travel
·
to the West
Halstead ran a 5:25.81 mile
,
.
The Foxes will send the DMR
Th
_
~ most noticeable contribu-
best by 14 seconds
.
Melfi
;
with
Point Last Chance Invitational
good for fifth in the champion
-
team of Pieper, Flanigan
,
tions were the record-breaking
-
his performance on Saturday,
on Feb. 28 and then Mike
.
Melfi
ships, her personal best and the
Halstead and Johnson to the
performances by freshman Jer-
became only
·
the third Marist
will be off to che
_
lC4A's taking
second best in the program~s
Last Chance Invitational,
emy Smith and Eric Deshaies.
runner to finish in less than 15
place at Cornell in Ithica, New
history
.
In addition to that,
though they likely will run indi-
Smith, a freshman,
.
broke a 22-
minutes in the 5000
.
York on March 7 and 8.
Halstead also ran an excellent
vidual events. Following the
year-old record in the shot put,
Other standouts for the Red
Marist's women's indoor track
leg in the distance medley relay.
Last Chance, the team
will
move
throwing44'4 l/4",breakingthe
Foxes included
.
Steve Palmer,
and field team also had some
Debby Flanigan also had a
onto the ECAC regional meet
old record of 44'. Senior captain
·
Denis McManus
,
and Dan
excellent performances, led by
solid meet
,
finishing sixth in the
that takes place on March 7th
Eric Deshaies broke his own
Hagendom, as well as the dis
-
sophomore Jen Glover. Glover
400-meter dash, while running a
and 8th, where they will resume
school record in the 55-meter
tance medley relay team. Palmer
,
captured Marist's first ever
leg in the distance medley relay.
running the DMR.


51.4.1
51.4.2
51.4.3
51.4.4
51.4.5
51.4.6
51.4.7
51.4.8
51.4.9
51.4.10
51.4.11
51.4.12