The Circle, October 1, 1998.xml
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 52 No. 3 - October 1, 1998
content
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Has Maristmet your•
expectations as a
Freshman
thusfar?
YES:
90%
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OCTOBERl;-1998
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Community ................. 2
Features ..... ; ...............
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A &E ....................... 11
Opinion ...................... 9
Sports ......................... 16
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crimes.
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On Oct. 5 and
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to comqat and
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contact: Lina
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Coretta Scott
King,
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the w.idpw
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coming to Marist College
bri
Monday,Oct. 5,
at7:30 p.m;in
·
the
James
J.
McCann Recre-
ation Center.
King's nie~sage
is one
of
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ljustice .
.
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Security recovered
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the stolen.property ~aslobked.
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morning afterit wasfound to be
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at th,e
Office of
College
Activities
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tickets
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sales and event information, call
College
Actirliies :at:(914) 575"-
3279.
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Three reports of bike theft 6JetandabottleofSambucaii:
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During th
.
e 1998-99
academic
year
Whether you Jive off campus or not
consideration for the good peopte of the area,
In their
homes
and in their neighborhood,
Is important.
The Marist tradition includes consideration
for
and
mitment to the well bein of our local
communitie
•
nabbed
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Looking
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for Mart~t
-
students
:
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.
model
fqr
the 13th
Annual
Siiver
N
·
eedle Fashion
·
:
. ·
-
Show and
Awards 011
Thursday,
April 28, 1999
·
.
'
'
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'
.
Requirements:
He~ht 5'9'
..
.
.
Weight
proportioned to height
·
Size
6-8
Onfy
TYROUTS ARE
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1411
a.m.
IN THE NELLIEGOLLETTI THEATER
INFORMATION-EXTENSION 2124
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PAGE3
Jl8irte~119,t~m~
:
n(!Wneighbor
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by
KRISfINABRITO
·
StaffWriter
Ma,rist will soon be getting a
new neighbor.
.
·
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·
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According to City
·
of
·
·
Poughkeepsie Town Planner,
WilsonShook,
a
Home Depot
and Super Stop
'
&
,
Shop wiII
movejnto
.
the
'
Mid..:Hudson
Business Park.
.
.
The site, rumored to· firs'i°be a
.
WaJ:-Mart,
is being demolished
and brought up to
:
code
:
.
.
"The buildings use has been
.
.
drastically reduced and
.
needs
'
to be,_brought
_
up t,o
.
new build~
.
ing standards," he said .
. ·
.:·
'
According to Shook,
.
wts
'
tern
Publishing owned the building
and abandoned ii:10 years ago.
Since the abandoned building
will now be,in use, there are
.
con-
cerns about how
.
these new
businesses would affect the
Marist community.
Chasin Engineering Company bought the Mid-Hudson Business Park.
scheduled to be complete in 1999.
"We inet with Marist and the
Department of Transportation
(DOT) to discuss important is-
sues," Shook said.
Roy Merolli, executive vice
president of Marist College,
said there was concern about
how the new businesses would
affect the campus and Route 9.
"We spelled out our concerns
at themeeting and I thirikthat
.all
parties were cooperative," he
said.
There was also aconcem with
preserving t~: aesthetics of
-
'
.
.
'
,
DISABLED: Seem""
Route 9 and the campus, ac-
cording to Mero
Iii.
"We asked that the environ-
ment development of Route
9
be
reflective in signage and land-
scaping of the new businesses,"
he said.
·
·
· ·
There is'also a difference in
appearancl to southern por-
tions of Route
9,
as opposed to
the northern portions, he said.
,
It
is this difference that they are
·
trying to preserve.
Besides ·the aesthetics of the
area;
-
traffic was also a big con-
cern.
Jeff Kane; director at Chasin
JEngineering,
said traffic w:as
.
a
.·
:<o,
..
_
:.
rify
escorts increased
·
.,
.
.
.
.
.
toaidstudents' needs
·
'we have1i't
.
made
·
.•.
continued from
pg.
1
.
C'
• •
any specific provi-
:
acce.ss to the library was always
.
acknowledged, but
:
a plan
.
was
never put into place until three
weeks ago.
JohQGildard, coordi
.
nator of
Human Re
-
sources and ADA
coordinator, said his job is to
look into access situations like
.
this.
Gildard said that as a tempo-
rary solutfori,
·
the curretfr es~ort
servid~·provided by security
,.
will be broadened:
·
·
.
..
~1f
sjust expanded its ~ssion
.
to include people with
_
disabili..:
ties," said Gildard.
However, Director of Safety
and Security, Joseph
Leary,
said
assisting students
.
with djsabili-
·
ties across the street is
·
not done
as a habit.
.
Leary
said Security has been
instructed to assist one visually
impaired student, but that the
student had been receiving as-
sistance from Security for a few
years,
.
''We haven't made any spe-
cific
provisiC>ns for other handi-
capped
·
students, and we are
not responsible for their assis-
tance,"
Leary
said.
He said the administration
feels when these students leave
college and are out on their own
they will not have this help.
Leary
said the administration is
mainstreaming them.
This is a temporary solution,
sions for other
handicapped stu-
dents, and we are
not responsible for
their assistance'
Joseph Leary
director
safety and security
he said, and security has not
received much infonriation con-
cerning the issue.
"Security will do what we are
instructed," Leary said. 'Those
instructions have not been
forthcoming
.
"
The new West Cedar housing,
and possibility of more expan-
sion across Route 9 could also
potentially be a problem for stu-
dents with certain disabilities.
Kalyoussef said that West Ce-
dar was not a housing option
for her this year because of her
problems crossing the street.
"I would be isolated ove~
there," she said.
Cooper said
.
as long as hous-
ing and the academic buildings
·
are accessible, the college is
within the ADA regulations.
Gildard said this is a safety is-
sue that the students must ad-
dress themselves.
concern arid was considered in
the modeling.
"We are concerned about traf-
fic, but there is adequate room
on Route
9,"
Kane said.
There has al~o been a complete
traffic study of the area. In or-
der to improve the q:affic situa-
tion, th
·
e traffic signals will be
modified and some new turn ar-
rows may be added, he said.
Although traffic is a concern,
Shook said, the site is in a good
location.
"It is accessible to a large
population of the City of
Poughkeepsie that will support
it," he said.
Although many more city resi-
dents are expected to come to
the area, there is rio threat to the
safety of the students, accord-
ing to Merolli.
"The people that come will be
there to shop," he said.
There will be trees and bushes
that will act as a barrier near the
businesses as well as serve aes-
thetic purposes, according to
Mcrolli.
The Home Depot is scheduled
to be complete the first quarter
of 1999, while the supermarket
is scheduled for the second
quarter of 1999, according to the
Chasin µngineering Company.
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OCTOBER 1
2
1998
-PAGE4
Stained
gl~,
new.pewS
pad
Of Cllllpelfac~Iift
by
THEA CIMMINO
Staff Writer
Marist's beautiful and serene
place of worship is about to be-
come exquisite. ·
.
·
Marist plans to renovate the
Our Lady Seat of Wisdom
Chapel sometime within the next
year. The renovations should ·
be completed by Fall 1999. The
enhancements that will be made
are part of the new library con-
struction project.
The preliminary cost for the
· project is $500,000 and will eri~·
tail refinisgimt'the pews,'replac- .
ing the carpets, revamping the
heatirig andiventilati<>n system
and renovating the ro·of.
·
. services or masses, but there
. -. are: alternatives if the. problem
arises.
' ."We can do services at the
field- house, the theater or resi-
,.
dent facilities," he said.
.
Marist has also taken .som~
steps to avoid certain problems.
"We haven't booked any wed-
dings until· renovations are
· complete," Cox said.
.. According
to
Cox there should
. be a tentative schedule for the
re~ovations· within· the next
mo~th.·
'
··
·
The Marist Brothers builtour
Lady Seat of Wisdom Chapel in
1952 .. Accordingilo"lfim Massie,
the chapel is
a 'very
unique
building.
Roy Merolli, executive vice . Renovations to the Our Lady Seat of Wisdom Chapel are priced at $500,000 and are scheduled to be
president, said the exterior of the completed by Fall 1999. the Chapel was built in 1952 by the Marist Brothers.
·
"The chapel is a historic build-
ing in its own right," he said,
"It's one of the first chapels in
the round in the country. The
Marist Brothers were about ten
years ahead of their time."
chapel will have the same ap-
pearance as the new library.
"Probably some walkways wiil
change in the front," Merolli
said. ''The building's exterior
. lighting may change. There is
even a possibility · the steeple
may · be lowered to keep · the
chapel in perspective with the
height of the new library!'
Tom Daly, director of Physical
Plant, said the colored plastic
windows currently in the chapel
·.will be replaced with real stained
glass windows.
Daly also said the bells will be
moved.
.
"We're looking to stained
glass windows," he said.
:''The
bells are being relocated to the
roof, soy'ouwon;t see them."
Tim Massie, Marist's chief re-
lations officer, said the new en-
. .
.
... .
Photo courtesy
of
Katy
Silbcrger
This picture is of the former Fontaine
bbildirig
a~ it Was b~ing
destroyed this sumer to make
room for
the 11ew library. ·
FACULTY:
Stud'ent cdnta.ct
easier,. work productivity ba.rcler
... continued from
pg.
I
Th<>mas Wermuth, assistant
professor of history, said the
location may be ideal being at
the heart ofthe busiest part of
campus, but the surroundings
are not satisfactory.
''This move will have implica~
tions. It will be hard to get work
done," he said. "We are always
out in the open, making contact
for the students easier, but it will
also impact our productivity."
Sue Gronewold, assistant pro-
fessor of history and Asian
Studies, has returned to Marist
from a year
in
Asia on sabbati-
cal. She said she is optimistic
about the situation.
She said there is a new unity ..
between the staff working
in
the
Student Center.
"We
are more together here,
more adhesive," shesaid.
Groriewold :also said the
Marist coordinators did a good
job converting the old fitness
center into office space.
"With
the space provided,
they did well and it is all for a
good cause," Gronewald said.
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hancements will complement the
chapel and thecampus.
"We' re looking for a more clas-
sic look in a contemporary
building," he said .
It
is necessary to redesign the
entire back of the chapel since
it was previously c,pnnected to
the library. The designing ar-
chitects for the project is Perry
Dean Rogers and Partners from
•;
Boston. Pavarini, the construc-
tion company building the li-
brary, will do the chapel reno-
vations as well.
There is not yet a set sched-
ule for the project, but construc-
tion is expectedto begin in late
spring and into the summer.
Gerald Cox, vice president and
dean for student affairs, said the
project should not interfere with
. Gerald Cox said the building
is an important part of Marist's
history .
"The chapel is one of the most
significant buildings on. our
campus," he said, "We're look-
ing forward to enhancing the
interior and the exterior."
· - A L :
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I
. OCTOBER l,1998
Coretta Scott
King to speak of
husband's legacy
' :· '. "" ·~ J. ,- '
byiµ.TRINA
Sudan said she· thought the
King founded The Martin
FUCHSENBERGER
Staff Writer
students would benefit from the
Luther King, Jr. Center for Non-
program.
violent Social Change, Inc. in
"It
will be a living piece of his-
Atlanta, Georgia and is also the
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. is
tory because people will be able
Chief Executive Officer. The
coming to Marist- through the
to listen to the widow of Dr.
Center was established as a
words of his wife:
Martin Luther King, Jr. speak,"
memorial to Dr. King, and pre-
Coretta Scott King will hold a
she said. "Listening to her first-
serves the legacy of what the
program called "The Dream of hand experience will be benefi-
human rights movement accom-
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr." at the
cial for students."
plished under his leadership.
McCann Center on Oct 5 at 7 :30
Cassandra Giarusso, a board
After receiving her Bachelor
p.m. In her program she will dis-
member of the student program-
of
Arts
degree in music and edu-
cuss the ongoing civil rights · ming council, thinks King'.s pro-
cation at Antioch College, King
struggle and some of the roles
gram will make an impact on
went on to study as a concert
she has played since her
Marist College students:
singerat the New England con-
husband's death.
"It wilrmake [Marist College]
servatory of Music in. Boston.
Heather Sudan, president of more worldly and it
will
decrease
There she met Dr; King who was
the student programming coun-
ignorance," she said.
studying for his doctorate in
cil and vice president of student
Giarusso said she thinks it is
theology at Boston University.
programming for the student. important for students to go to
They then got married and had
government association, said
King's program..
four children.
King was chosen t<> come
:to
"I
think th~ progr.am, will in-
King occasionally substituted
Marist because she sends out a
crease awareness and not only
for her. husband during his ca-
good ~essage,to"students.
, _is the. progrlµlljnt~resting,'but ·. r,eer,,aFa speaker and also ap-
' "We\vanted to have
'£i1ei:'bii-~ii
ii,tziJ!!~ticatJ.oriaj:l}fy.,~il:fi,~lp:!!Je:: iP~&/g0a1>,,a: _speaker• l?efore
with a message of social justice?·
·
Marist commuriity gfow,''.'.she · '-' chtitch/civic; college, fraternal
she said. "We felt her message
said. · ''It's something'that you · and peace groups throughout
would be pertinent to the com-
c~m tak.e away from college
the United States and beyond.
munity as well as Marist stu-
that's not pai:t of the curricu~
She performed a series of Free-
dents.:• .
lum."
dom Concerts, which were
fa-
History
w
i-t-.h·-
·
height
byRICHSHUTiqN
Staff Writer
Dormifones .are a necessary
element at Marist College.
One of those important ele-
ments is Champagn_~t Hall.
Champagnat Hall was built in
·
1964 and named after Marcellin
Champagnat, a· Frenc~ priest
who was the founder of the
Marist Brothers in 1817.
With nine floors inhabited by
students, Champagnat exists as , -
the tallest building at Marist
College. Its height enables it to
occupy students of all four
years, freshmen to seniors. The
dormitory houses ov~r
400
stu-
dents.
PAGES
Photo courtesy of Tim Massie
Coretta Scott King will hold a program, "The Dream of Dr.
Martin Luther King, Jr." Oct. 5 in the McCann Center at 7:30p.m.
vorably reviewed. These con-
tin boards and videos will be
certs com.b_ined pr()se and po-
displayed. Sudan said there are
etry .. narrationy.iith musical se-
many people who do not know
de4fipn~:~t9.,w~~P~t,~e.,history
0
•
..
aJota!JoJ,Jt Coretta Scott King.
of the movenient'lier husband
.· "There's.a
fot
of
people
that
led, aswell as raise funds for
don'tknow who
[King] is
and
the cause.
they shouldn't be afraid to ask
In· order to educate students
about her," Sudan said.
about King, "informative bulle-
Cin:lc
pho!o/Bric
Casazza
be a very social atmosphere;"
he said. "In fact, many sopho-
mores request Champagnat so
that they will be socially con~
. tent. It's size and large variety
of students contributes to
this."
Junior James Rusch said the
dorm is his favorite.
"I love it," Rusch, who has
lived in Champagnat for three
years, said. "Champagnat has
greatRA'sandgreatRD's. The
large amount of students there.
makes it a very sociable dorm."
Brian Lacher, a second-year
resident of Champagnat, said
he likes the convenience of the
dormitory.
"One terrific thing about
Champagnat Hall is the fact
that it is connected to so many
different places on campus,"
he said.
"If
you live in
Champagnat, you are able to
check your mail or even go to
the cafeteria without having to
go outside."
Lacher said he likes the view
he gets from his room.
There are also other, nonstu-
dent residents of Champagnat
including three Marist Brothers,
Brother Richard Rancourt,
Brother Joe Belanger_ and
Brother Frank Kelly. · ·
Built _in 1964, Champagnat Hall is the tallest building on campus. Champagnat was named
after Marc"ellin Champagnat, a French priest who was the founder of the Marist Brothers .
"I also enjoy living on the
seventh floorof Champagnat,"
he said. "I have the most beau-
tiful view of the Hudson River
from my window."
With its grandiose height,
sociability and convenience,
Champagnat Hall is not merely
The building is also the loca-
tion of Special Services, the of-
fice
geared towards aiding stu-
dents with disabilities. In addi-
tion, Champagnat is physically
linked to the campus' post of-
fice and student center, making
it one of the most convenient
residence halls at Marist Col-
lege.
Brother Frank Kelly said he
likes the sociability he sees
among
students
within
Champagnat.
"Champagnat Hall is set up to
-another campus dorm, but also.
a reason why so many stu-
dents are enjoying their stay
at Marist College.
/
.....
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I
·
OCTOBER 1
7
1998
THE CIRCLE
Features
--
-
Students ID.ake
·
friends
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
·
.
-·.
.
on Intentet chat
groups
by
ELIZABEl'H CARRUBBA
Staff Writer
Meeting new people is as easy
as a click of a button.
Internet chat rooms seem as
though they are becoming a
more popular way for college
students to communicate.
They offer the opportunity to
talk with new people from all
over the world and also keep in
touch with distant friends with-
out having to pay phone bills.
From age
·
and location, to life-
style and hobbies, there are chat
rooms designated for every
topic and type of person imag-
inable.
The Internet is also a place
where some people are meeting
·
their significant others.
Chat rooms are accessible for
college students because they
are not limited to America On-
Line users. Many of the search
engines found on
.
the World
Wide Web have chat rooms that
anyone can talk on, even with-
out downloading the software.
Lisa Douglas, junior biology
major, and her roommate, Dawn
Catino, junior chemistry major,
·
said they frequently chat on
Excite, which is the same as the
·
search engine, Webcrawler.
They said they
_
usually chat
about once a week in the room
titled, "20ish,'' and meet many
·
people who are also in college.
"Every now and then, I'll talk
to one ofmy friends from home.
We'Hpick a time to meet on a
chat line," Douglas said. "It's a
nice way fo talk to friends that
you
.
don't get to call on the
phone."
Douglas said she started chat-
ting last year and did not know
anything about it at first. She
said now she
·
could see chat
rooms being a large part of how
we will communicate in the fu-
ture.
.
.
.
"It
seems like everyone I know
chats now,'' she said.
Catino, Douglas' roommate,
said when they first started chat-
ting, the
-
maximum amount of
people on-line was about 5,000.
"Now, there are about 15,000
people on at any time of the
Time Check regroups
by
TARA SULLIVAN
-
·.
StaffWriter
The fall semester means re-
growth for Madst's male
accapella group; Time Check.
Due to the departure of six
members because of graduation
and internships, the remaining
·
members
·
of the group, sopho-
mores Graig Corveleyn, Chris
Yapchanyk, and Ryan Kessler,
have spentthe past few months
searching for new music
-
and
new members.
·
1ime Check
was formed in 1995
by former Music
.
Department
chair Mark Lawlor as
a
group
featured in his Choral Singing
Ill
class. The group performed
at
-
the dedication of t
_
he Nelly
Goletti Theatre, and received
rave reviews
.
from those in at-
tendance. Beca~seoftbis, they
•
decided to audition for members
and branch off on their own.
The group tooko11 the name
:
.·
Full Throttle
Pop,
and spent the
.
·
next year establishing them-
selves as a fan favorite perform-
ing at Marist Singers concerts,
as well as 'functions on their
own. Last year, the group, made
up of mostly seniors, changed
its name to Time Check, took on
three new members, and
achieved its greatest success to
date, the recording of their own
CD.
"Fifteen Minutes Late", Time
Check's
first CD, had promising
sales, and gave the group the
popularity and exposure it
needed. Members of Time
Check started doing concerts all
over campus, and every time
drew a larger and larger crowd,
perfonning covers of popular
songs such as The Longest
Time
and Brown Eyed Girl.
·
.
,
·
Atthe end of the spring
·
se-
.
niester, five_
Qf
di¢
original mem-
.
bers graduated; arid
:
one
,
went
•.
off to
.
intein;iII
'
W~shington,
D.C.; leaving the three remain-
ing members, all freshmen at the
time, to rebuild the group.
1ime
.
Checkriow
consists of
eight membeis, all of whom are
underclassmen.
··
Along with
Corveleyri, Yapchanyk, and
Kessler,
-
the
.•
new members are
·
:
Joel· Cordenner,
'
Burt. Vllale,
MiclmelSeaman, Chris Nelson
and MattMcCiellan.
-
.
·
.
.
Fre
.
shina.n
·
inembeLChri~
Nelson said he is really glad to
·
be
involvedwith the group.
.
-
.
"I
saw
·
~
videotape of
t!iem
at
.
orientation and thoughFthey
sounded really good so I wanted
to join,'' he said.
"Everyone
in
the group is really great and we
all get along very welL"
Corveleynsaid he h
_
as seen a
lot of progress among group
members.
"I was apprehensive at first,
but now we're really where we
·
want and
need
to
be/'
he said .
.
''I'in really very pleased with
where the group is."
He said the fact that the group
consists completely
of
under-
classmen-is also a plus, giving
them more time to work together,
·
·
-
and achieve
'
greater success.
According to (::orveleyn, it
may be a while before anyone
sees the new Time Check in con-
cert. The group is working on
new music and there is talk
about recording another CD in
Dec.1999. TimeCheckmayap-
pear
at a coffeehouse in Octo-
ber.
Corveleyn said whenever the
group does get to play he
guar-
antees it will be a good show.
''We're growing and have a
great sound," he said.
_
"Come
spring, we'll ~nock
.
people
over."
day," she said.
She said there
·
are a lot of
people who knock chatting, but
once they try it, it can be a lot
of fun and, addicting.
Catino_ said what she likes
about chatting is that it is easy
for her to be herself, it is easier
thari spending
_,
money on
·
· ·
phone bills, and shecis able to
get
.
reactions to what she has
said much faster than through
email.
·
Another positive point is she
can talkto people nationwide
and experieµce different cul-
tures.
·
·
·
·
Catino said she found it
funny
how people
~ill
write
fn
the way that they speak, so
someone from the South will
use differentexpressions than
someone from our area.
"I've been talking to one per-
·
son from Georgia for probably
over a year now," she said.
Douglas said most of the
people who she and her room-
mate have chatted with are nice
and similar to them
.
.
.
"They are down to earth
people and you do actually meet
tionships developirtf_over the
a lot ofnormal people," she said.
·
Internet because
'
people who
"Ies just a good way to ineet
chat getto know a lot about
people who
·
yo
_
u normally
·
eachotherovertiine.
'
wouldn't."
Many people have been told,.
•
·
Chat rooms can also bring
_
us
however, to be cautious of some
closer to home; Catino said she
of the people Who we chat with
recently met a person in a chat
over the Internet.
-
Both students
room who livesjn Hyde Park,
agreed it can be difficult to tell
and Douglas met a student from
what kind of person you
are
talk-
the Culinary Institute of ing to.
.
.
..
America who knows her friend
.·
'.'Limit giving
011t
last names
that also attends there.
arid personalinformation
_
:
to a
Catino said she thinks the
few people who you have
:
been
Internet and chat rooms are_tak-
chatting with for a long time and
ing over the elating services and
have exchanged pictures with,"
newspaper personal ads. They
Catino said.
both said they could
·
see rela-
.
.
NATIONAL
DfflRFSSION
GDAY.
Depres1ion ~
-
an
illness
an~
~ffeeti
_
ve
,
tr~tments
are available.
Look for our Information Table
in Donnelly
Sponsored
by
Marist College
Office of Counseling Services
-
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'
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-
~
lx
.-
-
-
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OCTOBER 1,1998
"
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·
-
PAGE7
Searching
the site$
·
http:/
/ww'Y-Ieland~s~nford.edu/g~oup/kl~g/
-
·
With the
'
am
val
o{
Coretta tion ~ontainifig documents writ-
.
:
~Cott King to Marist oh
Oct
:
5,
.
ten by'Kini
.
Some of the inore
.
you mightwant to
.
learn more :"familiar papers
"
ava1lable are
·
about hethiispand,
Dr:
Martin
"Lette{from
:
the B·irrninghani .
-Lu~erKing
'1i.
'
"
}ittp://
WWW•
.
Jail," the Address atMarch on .
·
Ielari.d.stanf~rd.edu/group/
Washington
,
(the "I Have
:
a
•
ki,nglis
a p
_
age
~
dedic;ited to the
Dream" speech;) and "I've Been
civil
rights activist's life
;
The
to the Mountaintop,''
,
King's
.
:
site
is '
_
The M~iri Luther King,
last sermon.
·
Jr. Papers ·Project at Stanford
Pictures chronicling his life
are
·
University,''
:.
sreatecl
by
also available for viewing.
·
Stanford University.
_
.
So click on to
http://www-
-
The site contains documents
leland.stanford.edu/group/
written by and about King dur-
king/
and learn about one of the
ing and aft~fJJis)ife,
,
most famous civil rights a
_
ctiv-
.
High!igh
,
ts of the page include
ists ofour time.
a biography section which con-
tains a general biography of Dr
.
King from his birth to his death
.
There is also a chronology of
his life, articles written about
him, and suggestions pf places
to go
·
for further information.
·
One can also click on a sec-
if
you havf! any suggestions
for_
this column
,
_
or would like
to write
.
a column, contact
.
Emily at extension 2429 .or
email HZAL .
.
Features Editor
Emily Kucharczyk wrote this
Searchitig the sites column
.
IIoroscopes
•
•
ARIES:
You needto
GEMiNI:
This is a
could get kind of un~
be thinkingmore IMlfabulous day for you.
comfortable at times.
about
_
what y
.
?
.
.
ur
part-
.
You'.re especially for-
You're being asked to
ner needs
.
Tots will be
tunate regarding ro-
perform, but it's not a
-
-
noticeable over the
•
·
·
·
·
mance andtravel,
-
but
.
role of your choosing.
weekend and early i!}to
.
just~botfteverything
~
It's a little more pressure
nex~yieet-Yourp~
{'
'
shquld.$9 'Y.ell.Your
··
;t
'
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than you'd prefer, but
,
.
,
. .
.
mfr~hii
t
qiay prosp~r
-
~
.•
.
brain is~w9rkingov~r-
.
.
,
,
,
,
don't worry. You'll do
.
the supp_ort
.
you
···.·
·
need.
;
·
·•
.
•
lat
..
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inoneyis
··
.
c
·
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·
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...
in~ into
cially
.
ri~
.. ·
tnow.Youmay
·
That's
JUSt because
.
~
your account today,
be findmg more ways to
the support is coming
·
po~sibly from work
sell your services. It
'
s
.
in a way
-
you don'
_
t
·
do
_
ne
fo
the past. This
also a good time to call
quite recognize:- In-
.
is
•
a relatively good
in debts that other
stead of making
•
the
time to ask fora raise,
people owe to you ..
workload easier,
it
.
too.
·
.
.
.
~
·
.·
-
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LIBRA:Somethingthat
harde_r
.
D"on't com-
,.,,.
_
:
yot1'redra~ingalotof
caused a bit of a prob-
couid
-
be
·
getting
~
-
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.
_
LEO:
ItJooks like
n
happened before has
pl~n, Yci~'re actually
·
•
~
;
~Uenti~n. TJ:ie
_:
very
.
Je~-
Ins!ea~ oflettin~ it
bemg tramed to take
·
.
person you'd hke to
sbde,bnng1tupford1s-
onalittlemorerespon-
avoid is watching your
.
c
·
ussion. Make it
·
easy
_
sibility.
~very
·
move.
,
This
'-•
·
·
for theother person to
:
.
...:
.
.-
..
·
-
.
byEMILYKUCHARCZVK
Features Editor ·
Kevin McCurdy cannot seem
-
to get away from horror.
·
McCurdy, creator of Bowdoin
Park's Haunted Mansion and
Fright Trail is opening
.
up his
imaginative world of horror from
now through Nov.
L
Admis-
sion is $12.
·
McCurdy, who also co-owns
Adventures Cafe in Hyde Park,
said his unusual avocation/oc-
cupation began during child-
hood.
·
"I
started making haunted
houses in the basement for my
friends when
I
.
was a kid, and
when
I
was
I 5, I
started doing it
at Bowdoin Park. It's just
be
-
come pretty much my
life,"
he
said. "So many people come
back year after year and now
they bring their kids, so it's sort
of a tradition lwant to keep go-
ing."
·
·
What people will be coming'
to see
-
this year is "Kevin
McCurdy's Haunted Mansion
and Horrorwood: The Backlot."
'the theme
ka.
continuation
.
of last year's 20th anniversary
celebration of Ravenscroft
Manor, his haunted Halloween
mansion in the park.
The story begins when a sci-
entist builds a machine to con-
tact the spirit world. A few of
the spirits are let out by mistake
in the mansion. New inhabit-
.
ants of the mansion discover the
poltergeists and bring in ESP,
Electronic Surveillance of the
Paranormal
,
to get rid of them.
Guests will
be
taken on a scary
tour through the house with
a
parapsychologist to capture a
ghost.
There is a surprise ending, but
it is top secret.
''Let's Just say a ghost may fol-
low you home," Mccurdy said.
_participants are also encour-
aged to act out scenes from
movies such as "Tremors,"
''Halloween," and "Alien" while
iaking a walk down the fright
trail.
One parody, "Screech Three,"
continues from where the movie
"Scream 2" left off.
"I try to make it as funny as I
do scary," he said.
After 21 years of holding the
event, Mccurdy said it is some-
times difficult to think of new
ideas .
"We always try to come up
with something nobody has
ever done before," he said.
He said he likes the techno-
logical edge the show has this
year.
'The interaction of video and
animation effects and the actors
and the people is just a really
Entily's Recipe of the
-
Week
Spanish Omelet
_
1 large onion
Uarge red pepper
2 medium cooked potatoes
2
tbsp. sunflower oil
4
eggs
·
Salt and pepper
2
tbsp
.
butter
Peel the onion and chop it finely
.
Slice the potatqes .
.
Dice
the pepper
.
Heat oil in frying pan. Cook onion and
pepper until soft. Add potato and cook for two more
minutes. Beat eggs in bowl. Stir in onions, peppers, and
potatoes, and season
.
Melt butter in frying pan.
_
Pour
.
mixture into pan. Cook over low heat for about 10
minutes, and then cook the top under the broiler. Serves
two to three.
•
•
talk to you about it; ev-
~CAPRICORN:
It's not
erything will go more
n
.
ecessarily going to be
smoothly
.
easy to get, but the
~0c~:
.
1~~;=:~~!
:~=~/;;u;t;~a~!
~
1s m Aquarius. This
to pass a test, but that's
placement
.
of the Moon
·
OK. Show .you know
c
_
an \;le a
little difficult
your stuff.
:
'·
•-":"
forcyoii
'.
sometimes.<Jt
·
.
.
AQUARIUS:
You're
can
:
mean
!hat you may
1..,. ,
~u,mng
6ut the
month
have to slow down just
ICJ'I,,
m
a good mood. You
a
little; That's OK
.
·
,
·
JdveachaHenge,andto-
You'II do better in the
day you're liable to find
long run if you do the
one: Don't worry. Even
homework instead of
·
a tough job is not
going
taking action right now.
to be impossible for
SAGITTARIUS:
Your
you.
.
brain should be work-
§
PISCES:
There's
a
lot
ing well. Use it to figure
of tal~ going on today.
out how you're going
If you put your ear to
·
to make your life tum
the keyhole, you'll learn
out just the way you
more than you even
want it.
-
Don't spend
wanted to know. Some
time wishing you'd
ofitcouldhelpyouplan
done something other
your next move, so it's
than what you're doing.
best to stay informed.
go~d experien~e," he said.
McCurdy promises to offer
participants a safe way to cel-
ebrate Halloween.
"Halloween has had a bad
connotation the past
10
years
with trick or treating," he said,
"so places like this have taken
the place
6f
trick or treating and
made it safe to go and have fun
on Halloween."
The Details:
Kevin McCurdy's Haunted
Mansion and Horrorwood: The
Backlot ·
The entrance is on Sheafe Road,
about one mile past Bowdoin
Park, Town of Poughkeepsie,
The park is open now through
Nov. I; Fri. and Sat 6 to 11 p.m.,
Sun.
6
to 9 p.m
.
; Thurs., Oct 29,
-
6
to
10
p.n1.
Admission is
$12.
Call 297-BATI or on the Web at
www.frightek.com for more in-
formation.
:
vVor{c[
!
Jamous
Psycliic
Famous
;
Psychic
To the Stars
over
30
years
experience
;
can help you obtain
£<JVe
9-[eaCtn .
W.ealtn
antfLucfr.
Telephone
DBYJd:Guardfno
anyt;lina•at-
·
(423)§0~f()~p
·""
-
•··t\609'Jl9'Hl
~l~~:11s1
TQ,messee
.
.
Fax: (423)609-0921
tittp://User.tcx.netf-psychlc
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Jyiaristclai111s to ~c,co.rn,modate s~udepts t9 the b,~st9ptp abilities. This is h
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ard t~
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and tile
Arts:
She
_
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a
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brary:
:
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.
tely
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~"'pand Marist' s acade
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mic rescmrces, lmt for
·
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is one:of.the two existing ccnir,se:s
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a
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article
oithis e
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an alley in Po
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poorlighting a~ross from a popular evening hangou(
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M.H.Alderson
·
for
Poughkeepsie's finest Pedestrians
·
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,
alsoless visible to cars,atnight whilt
.
-
~::::::::::::;:::;;;::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::=:
.
crossing Route
9.
Many
:
students have resorted .to driving,
.
especially if they are
-
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alone and want i1pface to study or do researc.ti and do not have time during the day
·
·
· ·
·
.
·
·
.
· ·
·
·
.
to get <>Ver there.
'
Bi.It no sooner do you drive over and park your car in Beck Place
.
.
.·
TH£
-'
CIRCLE
·
and step outof
.
yotirvehicle, Securityis right behind
:
you
to
ticket your carfor
·
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Aman
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itor
.
Security has always discouraged students
.
from driving their cars across campus
.
during class times; but Marlst should make
an
exception f~r temporary library ar-
.
·
rangements
'.
~eek was expanded this
year
and there)s always more than enough
parking at any given time. Faculty have been told they can park in Beck to use the
library regardless of their parking sticker and I can not
see
how the students are
denied this same privilege.
.
.
.
An
argument from Manst's side is the fa~t that students would abuse this allow-
.
ance. This can be avoided if during the day and after the library closes Security can
patrol Beck and ticket cars that do not belong there. It is unfair, and unsafe for that
matter, to deny students the same right to use their car for such a purpose if it
provides them access to campus resources
.
· During evening hours, students are deterred from using the library because of the
parking situation. Security can not relax the parking enforcement when it comes
down to the safety of the students?
Amanda Bradley,
Editor-in-chief
BenAgoes
NewsEdiior
Patrick Whittle
A11s
& Enieriainment
TaraQuinn
Opinion Editor
•
EmilyKucharayk
Features Editor
.
.
Tho~Ryan
.
Sports
,
Editor
~
·
Toni
Constantino
Business Manager
Joe Scotto
G.
Modele Clarke
Photography Editor
Faculty Advisor
The Circle
is the student newspaper
_
ofMarist College, Poughkeepsie, NY.
Issues are published every Thursday.
·
.
.
.
·
We welcome leuers to the editor, club announcements and storyideas.
The Circle staff can be reached at
575-3000 x2429
or by email
.
at
HZAL.
mass of people will.. ~o.
~
'fhe
g<>vemment is a direct exten-'
sion of what we do as citizens,
. whether we vote cirdon't vote,_
make a national scene about
an
issue or decide to forget an is'-
. sue quickly. The science, or
mathematics, of it all comes into
• play when political scientists
·
and ad agents (might this be
· In
a very delibbrate atteriipt to
developing into the same dis-
steer away from Congress's ir-
cipline?) predict what issues
responsi~le
·
quest for impeach-
they can win a political battle
ment, I thoughtitmight be re-. with.'Itisanacademicwar;and
-
fi-eshing to aJso avoid any
wearlsimplypieceson·acom-
pressin_g P.oliti¢al
.()f
intema-
plicated game board.
:the original:ide;: I-proposed,
(which; inca~e:anyone under-
standably forgoi,-as· to break
avyay from everyday politics).
'It is·as
if
weturn our
noses up ti/''the idea
of comi!Jg down off
our pedes(al to plq,y
a dirty
little_
game
,with the UJJ,fortunate
rabble iha{_f orms
_around our feet. __ _
tional developments;,c'.(he nice
. · Clinton and Carvell won be-
thing aboutour goverrurient is :_ cause*ey·correctlyused their
that academicTeview is:hardly . "bitch{about the economy
I want to discuss_ soccer. My
necessary,';though e~tirely im:..
card." Of course, this was just
friends will tell you this is odd
portanf.if~e wish to unde~tartd
a trick of a};killfully played
because even tinder the most
our world,:~".
.
.. __
.
.,,
. . game~. becauseJliany academ-
strange of circumstances, I
_ ~7,er •<?r. notClniton
re-:
_ks
will
argue that protecting
would rarely decide to d~scuss
m~~
m 91'.fl~ts COlJlpletely our·<· our for~ign concerns first will
soccer.
Everyone has his-or
:d~!~ton ~-ci~tze°:s.,,~very Con-_
?
gu~antee a healthier domestic
her favorite sport, and it just
. gresslll~n wil,l a~?(J~usly ~b-
economy in the
future.'
Neglect
so happens that mine is Ameri-
serv~ _,p~U~.: tr:~tyfedict !which
of world concerns has created
can football.· Bu~ while
I
spent
_ ~~tc<>~~ i~-most favorable to its
. great world animosity towards
myjunior year in England, I be-_
:constituen~s;_ - ..
.
·.
theU.S.A.
·
came aware ofan unfortunate
It is impos~ible to predict what
__ .:Which,_ in. an admittedly .. prejudice. Americans are tragi-
one pe'rsonwilldo,-but entjfely :· ·round 'about way gets me to
cally
isolated, ~d_ the 11pswing
.
..
possiblet<>pn:dictwhataJ~f!!at;,_ -,-" . --~. _ _
' . ·.
> >
-
.•<1§t9~ti~c~JJii~$
1
·P~cJ.¢~cn:9tjl1;~j;lJ.c1jce.•.
--·to Ward\_-~
Marls·t:
_constriictfon·
site
-'.
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-: ... ·
__ .: . - :; ;- . ::·- .. · . , .--· .' .. ,: _,: _., ·r :: ::_ ~·---. ,._-_. :.:
- . . .. ;. . -• ·;. _,. .. ,
by CARTER
RANDOLPH
' . s · · · ~
- . '/- StaffW,:tJ/r.,:c,:,'•
. _ -.. Everycme is e11titled to;Jiis
orJer ow11 opiriioii: Isuppo~e I
. _
.
.. ¥ii
require_d to state that righta.t
·etiie, ~eginnihg._ Far is it from: µie
· to
try.to
stop the free thinking_·
pi:oce~s' th~t g6e(9_n
.on
these
pagei However,
r
feel obligated
as
ai1
ol~er (ancJ possiblfwiser)
·Red Fox to.address some.of the
issues brought forth in last
week's opinion article "Fresh-
man Comes to Terms with Col"
· lege Life and.Laundry''. .:
- 11iis_year's sloganis
_
''Bu_il_d~ ·
irig With.Vision".It is:thatyi-
sion that makes this institution-•'
. among. the
.
finest · aroun_d·. · So•··•·
many schools are willing to sit
back and say that they have
done their _be~t already to make
the youth of. this ,_country pre-
pared for the next level in their ·
lives. Marist College is not sat-
. isfied. Thatis why I chose this -.
college verse the five others that
were in the running.
Ari
institti-
'
tion that is Willing tO put forth
Circle pholoffata Quinn
the effort to make their campus
Sophomore Joe Scelia walks
by
the
library
construction
site:
and
learning environment more
·
-
advanced and better' able io have a token card
_than
wait.for
~
meet the changing needs of. dial up tirp,e and sit thought
today's society is where I want· ··busy signals as many of my mo-
to be. I imagine this thought dem toting friends from other
also crossed the mind of our au-
schools do.
thor: even as he wrote the ar-
The pathway in front of the
ticl~. As far as the other li?rary site has been ma?~ inti-
quibbles the student had some : rutely better by the add1t1on of
were probably better addressed
overhead lights._ This was a
byaResidentDirectororamem-
concern that went up through
ber of the student government
the regular ranks and v:as
association than on the pages
solv~. The thoug?t of pavmg
of
The
Circle.
or laymg concrete m an area of
In response to the internet
ob~ious cons~ction is not in-
qualms, I would much rather
telhgent or feasible.
In general, I would suggest
that the author simply spend
more time at the college. Possi-
bly two months or a whole se-
mester instead· of the three
weeks that it took him to dis-
cover and label everything that
might be wrong with Marist
College. Maybe somewhere
along the line there will be an
article praising the school for
all its accomplishments and for
... pleaseseePRIDE,pg.10
:PAGE9
to living in a comparatively
country was not even remotely
small country like England is the
be):iind them in this truly inter-
. level of importance placed: on
national test of athleticism.
world
affairs.
The politics of tile
The U.S.A. did not even look
globe seem that much closer to
like they were worth rooting for.
them, and they are that much · I saw the game· we}ost to Iraq
more aware of their surround-
frqrn beginning to end. They
ings'. In tum, it seems they are
looked like the Giants under Ray
that much more acceptedas_an
Han9ley. Theywanted no.thing
acti\'ememberoftheworldcom-
to.~o.with this gajhe, while the
muruty/
Iraqi's, who wereplaying for
•.When the U.S.A\vas embar-
worldpride-foreverylraqi-left
rassed ·in the worlcl cup,
l
was
their hearts on the field, and had
sitting vyith some English, Scot~
broad, unassuming grins ofvic-
tish, Pakis-tani, and German · tory.
friends;' who each feverishly.
It made me sick. We are the
supported their· cotiritry. · I_ world's dominant nation? It is
couldn't help but yearn-to be as ifwe turn ournoses up to the
on an equal level of apprecia-
ic:lea of coming down off our
tion 'with them .. The American pedestal to. play a dirty little
team looked sluggish, as if they
game with the unfortunate
were certain that the whole of
I -- . - '.
SOCCER
JO
. -
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.
.
.
... -p
easesee
,pg.
their entfre,,large; prosperous
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October 1 1998
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I sat alone on
a
swing in Cen-
tral Park. A boy
:
about iny age
wandered out from
•
.
under
•
an
overpass
-
in the distance
.
and
.
tookthe swing next to
'
me
'.
Suddenly
;
it felt as though the
park behind
·
.ine was cardboard
and there.was an orchestra
-
hid-
den in a pitahead of nie; It was
s?mf:thing out of a cheesy mu-
sical.
.
. .
.
•
·
.
.
·
,
.
I silently laughed at' the sce-
nario, and how much I hate mu~
sicals.
·
I usually' spend the first
half calculating the time until in-
termission, and the second half
figuring out when it will let out.
In the meantime, I flash the
Indiglo on my watch at such
a
frequency that it resembles
a:
miniature strobe light.
.
·
Anyway, this particular scene
was probably too·quietto be a
·
musical. Granted I could not say
for sure, because I was wearing
a Walkman. Had it really been a
musical, l would not have been
·
wearing aWalkman,
'
,
..
.
. ·
The mu~ic
b.l~i:ing
.
~n
IUY
eaI"s
madethe
scenario seem sun:eal.
·
·
I
0
flippeci:thf6Jgh
·
thefadi6
stri-
.
tions.
·
Tara
,
you arrogant [expJeti;eJ !
my Walkman
·
smothered· the
sound.
:
I
.
thought
th~t. maybe
.
the boy would trY:to
talk
to me.
.
Maybe he would throw soine
ci°lieesy. line
.
Then that sober-
!ng inner voice began
·
to mock
.
.
~e all <?Ver again.
,
. ·
.
•
.
.
.
.
):'gu royal winner. Sure he is
goJri_gfo ~k to
.
YC?
,
U
:
Something
stupid. ~e, 'Do I know you from
somewhere?' Or-
.
.
"DOYOUHAVETHETIME?''
,
!glanced aqhe boy and real-
-
i~d that
·
be
h
~
~
al
.
ready asked
.
several times
,
slightly amplify-
.
ing el}ch inqui
_
ry
:
I furn.bled with
·
the dial on my Walkman.
.
·.
·
·
·
Just tli~n.
·
the wonian with the
·
tiara shouted from
a
distant
swing
;
'
.
'If
we c~ed about time,
·
w~ y.,~uld not be on the swings! _
Who needs time?"
The
_
not pa_rµc~larly p~tij~hal
older man grumbled that it was
quarter after three.
. ,
. .
He
walked back
under
the
-
011erp~ss
an~
into
,
th~ city. I ran
.
the scene th,roug~ ¢y
.
min~. as
.
·
Pink Floyd
playe
·
d
·
on
.
.
theradio
.
·
and l pondered the pros and
cons ofrny,Wall(kmat1).
:
·
.
'
..
:
·
.
,-'
'
.
,
.
._-
:
.·
?
;
, :
.
'
.
}
..
. :
·
.
,
-
:
·
,:
.,
J'llra
,
Q
_
uinri is
.
*e
,
Qpi~ion
.
Edi-
.
t
.
or
'
of
.
The
.~
Circle
~
•·:
Size
·
isfrpm
Teaneck,
N
~
w?erse
f
.
·.
. .,
..
I thought to Inyself.
·
That guy
prob~bJyjust
:
sat next
.
to
you
because there
,
was bird crap
on
-
.
s
0
.
·
c
·
.:
c
·
·
.
·
.
..,.
.
.
the other six swings
.
_
You really
·.
.
.
.
.·
'
.
·.
E R :
think that you are the center of
'
.
.
·
.
italL Heck,thi~swingsetwas
-
·
U.S
.
.
/
shoul
.
d
built specifically for you
and
the
.
~~~!t~:~::f;;u;e;!~~y~ci
.
gef
,
i9volved
Painted
-
Black
is ~n
.
the radio.
.
Sure that guy is sitting
.-
right
'
-
there on the riext swi
_
ng because
you are her
~
;
It is all you. You
are a royal champ
,
.
·
·
,
·
"Do you have the time?
n
. Asnet my th<:mghtsmn by, I
-
continued to
.
stare out forward,
ignoring
.
the boy,
• ·
A
young woman wearing a ti.,.
_
ara ran to the swings followed
-
by all older manviith shopping
'
bags
:
from women
~
s
.'
dothing
stores· in tote
,
:-
He djd
·
not
ap~
.
:
pear
particularly patriarchal
;
out
onewould politeli( or more cor-
rectly, wrongiy) assume
·
that he
was her father.
·
. ·
.
"Do youhave
:
the time?
~
'
-
·
,
My mind drifted back from the
couple to the boy.
.
.
,
'
~:
.
.
'
.
.
.
rabble iha
C
fornis around ou{
-
feet. This is a :matter
of
true
na-
tional pride. lthink
~
thatif the
U
.
s:k
took
its
run
'
at
the
World
,
Cup
_
inore
·
seri<>iI~lj; i(~ould
genera
_
te gre
}
1t respect
·
from our
very irµportant neighbors
iri
the
'Yorld coinmunity
J
·
: ·
·
_
.
..
Iti~
part
qfworld diplomacy,
every bit
as
much
.
as the deci-
sion to placc0 s
'
anctions; or
:
to
send monetary
.
ai9.
Weneedto
.
be
:
less
·
full
,
of ourselves,
.
and
play a game with the kids on the
· -
·
block.
_.
..
.
-
B,ll
Mekrut
i~
·
a
senio:,,
P~Uti-
cal
Sde.nce
and English
doubl~ 111aJ<?r from Lincoln, RI.
you,re
dovitiif
. :
~
·.
friends.:Jl~rtk
'.
;
.
.
on~
'
iifdt~"idr
.
the
road .
.
•
.
·
'
:
•
<
·
:
:
"
~
-
.
.
_;_
·
.-
.
_
:-
-"!~
-
; .
. •
·
•
•
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·
.
·
.
~
-
·
ru~
·
ii
'
::
thk
.,
Piisli
:
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·
·
.
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.
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.
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-
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,
.
,
~~c~l~tatitn,
.
.
.
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··
·
:
burn111g
~
rubl}e
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:
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blind .
.
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screeching
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bte~th.
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life'~
:
regret
,
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cail't
·
~
hange
<~hat'
lti~ri
-
~
·
..
and
c~n't
·
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forget,
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t
I
OCTOBER 1, 1998
PAGEll
An
evening with Lisa McCormick
bySTEPHENMERCIER
Staff Writer
·
singer/songwriter
·
Lisa
McConnick performed an hon-
est and heartfelt show, which
displayed both her powerful
vocals and distinct guitar style.
McCormic!(, a stylistic folk
artist who
_
has been touring in
support of her late 1996 release,
-
0
Right
Now'
_
' (Rising Records)
played in the I>erforming
Arts
Room
at
Marist College on
Wednesday, September23, 1998
.
In front of the small crowd, all
she needed was her voice and
her acoustic guitar to win over
the hearts of the audience dur-
ing ~e 70-minµte
.
performance.
_
She first started the concert
with ".All
I
See Is You", a cut
from her new album. It was an
excellent choice
.
to begin the
show with. "All I See Is You", a
very poppy love song, dis-
played flowing chord progres-
sions and Jewel-like mid ranged
harmonies.
photo c:ourtesy Bob Lynch
"Holy Water" is a song that
-
Rising Records recording artist Lisa McCormick treated
was inspired by
-
Canadian
Marist to a concert in the Performing Arts Room this past
singer, Jane Siberry; an artist
Wednesday
featured on "The Crow
ited vocals. McCormick's pleas-
Soundtrack" a couple of years
ing voice was a perfect supple-
ago
>
-
This ~xtremely catchy
rrient to the majestic sound that
song,just like all of h~r
.
better
·
·.
came from her instrument. Lyri-
;
.
fu~es
;
.
had
:
'
i
r
b.il
,
anc:~,.b,~tweer
j:
{i::ajJy,
_
th~
SOilg
was lllso
_
inter-
.. powe
_
rful guitar ~ound
-
~nd
spir
f
,)
e
·
s~ng.
-
The song
-
was· written
before the Clinton Scandal, but
she now thinks that the song
has relevance. The words "cau-
tion where you place your faith"
·
_
-
can
.remind
one of all of the ma-
jor
hlict' nifoo~
pfayers of the big
mess.
.
Another highlight was the
song, "Gotta Go". The Dino-
saur Jr. sounding ballad featured
some of the rriore simplistic play-
ing of the evening, but it fit the
songwriter's mellow, yet grace-
ful crooning. "I Would Tell You
How I Feel, But
I
Forgot"
,
came
from the opposite side of the
spectrum compared to "Gotta
Go". Leaving away her folk in-
fluences for a couple of minutes,
McCormick showe
·
d the crowd
that she could also rock.
·
The playful
,
carefree lyrics and
the strong, hard playing created
a well-balanced rock tune.
The performer also played a
few other strong tunes that
showed us that she can defi-
nitely play some
'
good folk, but
also has funk, rock, and even
some waltz in her repertoire.
She also was able to include
some mellow guitar work and
even a little guitar slapping and
banging.
She played a fantastic set, but
it did contain a couple of flaws.
These mistakes did not occur
because of a lack of talent or
ability.
Some of the songs really
seemed like they might have
been
·
good ideas, but when per-
formed;
'
they just
didn't work.
"Purgatory
Cafe;; just reminded
me of another version of The
Squirrel Nut Zippers' song,
"Hell", but just didn't have the
catchy-ness and distinctive-
ness that the latter had.
"Do Something Stupid To Get
You Off Of My Mind" and a
song that made the board game,
"Monopoly" a metaphor for life,
just didn't work. The silly lyr-
ics just didn't fit the sincere and
focused music that was being
played during these two songs.
-
Despite these
few
songs,
overall, McCormick performed
an excellent show. She basically
plays folk music, but no one
should feel that means that the
music can only be enjoyed by
folk fans
.
Her guitar playing could be
compared to popular artists
such as Ani Difranco and Dave
Matthews and her vocals can
easily remind one of Jewel.
She also easily fit pop, rock,
and funk into her style of music
to create a good balance. The
only negative aspect about the
night is that hardly anyone came
to the show.
Hopefully, next time when
Marist brings a free concert to
the campus with a skillful per-
former or a good band, more
people will take a chance and
maybe
see
something thatthey
really like.
•
Theatre columnist gets
intothe swing of things
Two new cd's on
their
--
w3Y
.
tO
yourstereo
..
•.
·
.
by
RACHAEL VOLLARO
Staff Writer
A
moment away from the
stage
...
"It
don't mean a thing,
if it ain't got that swing."
by
BOB ROTH
'
·
Staff Writer
Although there are things go-
Swiching gears al!}lost com-
ing
in
the theatre,
I
wantto share
,
pletely is ne:wEarth Crisis CD,
.
.
something I experienced. Some-
.
-
/'Breed
the Killers." Earth Cri-
..
thing that has become the lat-
••
-·
NoLimitRecords is one of the
<sis
have become the
_
_
driving
.
est fad.
premier rap labels of the .late
force of the straightedge and
This past weekend I went
·
199o•s. First there was
.
Death
anirrial
liberation movements in
swing dancing for the first time,
Row, then Bad Boy, and it know
hardcore music in the 90's.
Us-
andno it was not like the Gap
looks like No Limit his number
ing music and
_
lyrics astheir
..
commercial. ·
one.
· .
.
_
_
_
weapons, they
are
not a band
·
Hudson Valley Country Dane-
there?). I don't know how to
describe it except as your old
elementary school gym. It had
'the
huge wooden floor except
with a stage in front and a bar
outside the dance area.
The eight of us in arrived at
7:30 PM for our hour beginner's
lesson.
A
short man, in black
pants,
a
1980's silk shirt, and
black dancing shoes, was our
instructor. He told us to get into
a circle, and taught us the:'ba-
sic". It was easier than I
thought it would be.
While we were in the circle I
looked around to try to get a
feel for who was there. It had to
be one of the most diverse
groups of people I've ever been
a part of. There were college
kids, our group from Marist, and
a group froQl Vassar. I have to
say that it was easy to tell the
difference between the two
groups. There were locals vary-
ing in age and style. People in
their twenties to people in their
sixties. A look that seemed
popular was
a
vintage forties
dress or skirt with Converse
sneakers. Very interesting.
After everyone had gotten the
basic, we learned some twists
and turns. This is where the real
fun began.
I
have to give my
dance partner credit. He already
knew what he was doing and
that made it a lot easier for me .
A couple more practice moves
and then we were dancing.
_
The live band started at 8:30
PM. They were a trio consist-
ing of a guitar, a string bass and
a drum set. They played mostly
a fifties-style swing. They
didn't have the instrumentation
for a forties Big Band style. The
dance floor was packed but ev-
eryone, including me, had a
great time.
I have to admit that it took
some convincing to get me to
go, but I can't wait to go again.
-
Now they give rap another
to be ignored. Being on shows
ers sponsored the event. They
great record in Big Ed: "The
like"MfV:Smashed"andCNN,
sponsor a variety of dancing
Assassin." This record features
they have used mass markets to
events throughout the Mid-
the No Limit family on almost
promote their message.
Hudson valley. The dance it-
every song. ComprisedofMas-
Since then they have jumped
self was held at Germania.
ter
P,
Mystikal, Silk the Shocker,
labels from Victory to Roadrun-
Wllere and what is Germania?
Mia X,
·
and Snoop
·
Dogg this
ner and are back with 12 songs
It
is located on the Artiaral in
group helps make this record
of fury and metal with, "Breed
between Cactus Club and
stand out Big
Ed
actually uses
the Killers." Comprised of a 5-
Confetti's (remember going
his vocals to make this record
piece, Earth Crisis combine _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
...,......, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
,,
great. From song to song, Big
hardcoreandmetaltomakethis
ATTENTION ALL PLAYWRIGHTS:
Ed
uses the No Limit family to
record a masterpiece. The gui-
help. out but takes his own parts
tar
work of
Scott
Crouse and Erik
MCCTA is looking
for
original one-act plays
for an
"Evening of One-Acts".
If you're
to make each song different and
Edwards combined with the
interested, plays must
be
submitted by
midnight
Friday
Oct
9, 1998. For infonnation
better than the previous. Pro-
moving bass and drums of Ian
contact
Sara Zizzi x4773.
duction by Beats By the Pound
EdwardsandDennisMerricklay
l - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
helps keep the songs fresh so
the fo.und~tion for Karl
RESERVE YOUR TICKETS NOW.
Big Ed can use his lyrics and
Beuchner's lyrics and music.
·
MCCTA presents Noel Coward's Present Laughter, Oct. 8-11, 1998. Perfonnances
message.
With a switch to a bigger Ia-
are in the Nelly Goletti Theater. Tickets cost: $3 Students, $5 Faculty/Seniors, and
Big Ed:
"'The As~assin" is the
bel, EC can get their musi
.
c and
$7 General Ad.mis.gon. For ticket reservations call the MCCTA Box Office at x3133.
record No Limit needs to
·
stay
message to the masses.
strong in the coming years.
_
j
,
.
OCTOBER 1
2
1998
phoro
courtesy
Nik Bonopartis
Blink 182 played at the Chance on Sunday night, but
thankfully everyone could still breathe.
Blink 182 and friends
rip it up at
,
TbeCmmce
by NIK
BONOPARTIS
Staff Writer
Blink 182,
coming
off
the ra-
dio success of their hit singles
"Dammit" and "Apple Sham-
poo", brought their tour to
Poughkeepsie Sunclay night for
an all-ages show at the Cpance;.
The punk rock trio were virtual
unknowns a· year
_
ago before
they were
"discovered"
by ra-
.
dio and MTV, but nowadays
they're selling out nearly every
venue they play.
.
.
· ·
.
Being a longtime fari of Blink
182
since high school,
i
,Vas
.
at
first
.
iiisappointed
.
to
SI!~
·
\vhat
seeme'cf
to
·
be a predonumuitly
MTV
·
crowd.
·
·
Trendy
alternateens lined the club with
Nirvana apparel
and
large
JNCOs, but that didn't stop ev-:-
eryorie from having a good time.
drowning in
a
sea of people ancl
sweat and getting
.
tossed
around for a few hours,
.
but
Blink 182
definitely is. Just
when
.
the crqwd was getting
antsy after the long delay, Blink
182
appeared.
When the cheers died
.
down,
guitaris.t Tom Delonge ex-
plained the band's tardiness and
apologized to the
.
crowd.
"Sorry
we►re
late,.,he said,
"I.
had to.take a poop."
.
·
When
·
·
Blink
·
'l
82
jin(liiy
;
:
io6k
ihe
stage
the
·
Chance
·
was so packed
there was barely
breathing room.
Later on in the show, Blink
They launched into their set,
would address the MTV issue
playing seve
.
ral cuts from ''Dude
by singing, "And if y_ou only
Ranch", and continued their
know us for this one song, then
slapstick h~m~r between
@#$%
you!"
.
songs. A really strong indica-
The first two bands, River tion that a band
·
has reached
Fenix a.op.Assorted Jellybeans,
"rock star" status is when the
played a hyped up mix of punk
women are
·an
-
over the
•
band
rock'and ska to warm things up .
. •
members .
.
Blink I
82
certainly
One
·
would
-
expect a band
ei:ijoy~cl their
'.
~ewfound star-
named after River.Phoenix to
dom
.
when all
•
the
.
ladies in the
have~ ol
,
d-time, n,os~gic pu~ crowd bombarded them with
rock
·sound,
0
bur the
,
Houston,
th~irbras, which they hung from
'(exas four~piece was loud, fast,
their mic stands. Bassist/ vocal-
.
ap.d vulgar. Among the notable
ist Mark Hoppus pursued the
.
tunes were· a cover of
Duran
matter even further, calling for a
Dur(ln;s "Ordinary World;' arid
·
contestfqr th~ bigge~t bra in the
the closer/ which will
'
remain
-
Chance
'
to be
"'
thrown at him.
~~l~s,s
.
in ~is newspaper col-
Sure
.
'
enough he was
.
hit in the
umn
for
the sake of keeping
face
with one
a
minute later, to
things
clean.
Assorted appl;ms~fyQmJhecrowd. While
Jellybea.11~,
,
WhO'had tfie lookof . the band aclaiowedged the ra-
a bunch of high-schoolers and
dio crowd, they also honored
the musical talent of
Hanson,
their longtime fans by playing
took the stage next. Each song
fan favorites
"M&Ms"
and
blended too well into the next,
"Carousel" from their first al-
making it sound Hke one bigjam
bum. They also played brand
session. They were too random
new, unreleased material, ex-
for my tastes but the crowcl
plaining that they were, "sick of
warmed up to· them midway
the old stuff." Blink 182 also
through the set.
sponed a new drummer,
to
the
Unwritten Law
was the big-
dismay of some fans who
nameopener. 'IJleS~uthem<::ali-
hoped to hear fayorit~s like
fomia five-piece played a brarid
"Touchdown Boy" and
"Wast-
of powerful punk rock al9ng the
ing Time", a previous single.
lines of
Pennywise
·
and No Use
·
Nevertheless the rest of the
For A
Nq.me. Thipg~ really got
songs
·
sound~d great, ~ven
rolling in the mosh pit at this
when getting my head srepped
point. When
.
Blinl(
.
182 finally
on by crowd surfers.
Blink 182
tQok
·
stage the Chance was so
left the stage to chants from ra-
packed there was barely breath-
bid fans, promising another tour
ing room. I decided to venture
stop in Po.!gkeepsie. Maybe
into the sweaty
.
mosh pit at this
_
next time they' II have to take it
point Not many bands are worth
to the Civic Center.
..,.
.
,
.
.
-
~
-
.
PAGE12
Tfi,t~e
R~Jtnyt>{J~ra
,
Alfia7:~s
.
,
-
.
.
,
..
·
,
.,.
_..
.
-
_.#4
.
.
.
.
·
·t
·-
.-
_;..;,.
.
.
by
PATRICKWlil'ITLE
·
;
·
,
Mudge
.
Tucker),
.
daughter:of
vorable conclusion; MacHeath
Ai,.
E
Editor
· · ·
·
.
unscrupulous businessm~ Mr.
isn'tportrayed as a blo~dthirsfy
·
·
·
·.
·
·
·
•
·.
-
·
·
<
,
.
·
Peachum (Brian McEleriey).
villain in Trinity's "Three-Penny
The T~nity Rep~rtoryCom~
MacHeath entrusts his own
Opera" but instead as some-
pany in Proyiderice, Rhoqe
·
"business" to Polly when he"is
thing of an anti-hero. The
Island's r¢prisatof Bert9lt brought up on charges and tries
viewer develops such
.
an affin-
Brecht's
·classic
musical
•
''The
·
· ·
·
·
·
·
.
·
·
·
to escape
·
the
·
law. His connec-
ity for him
.
by the denouement
Three Peni;ly
0
.. P· e
·
~a", su.ccess
..
.:.
·
·
tion·
.
•
to
·
Scotland Yard/ Tiger
that killing him would be
ill
ad-
fully modet'nizes a seventy-year
·
Brown
(Barry
Press) betrays
him
·
d
·
old masterpiece:
'.
,
_'
.
· .·
·
·
·
along the way~and brings him in
vi:n~ther
.
thing that
.
m
..
akes the
While the
.
fact that TririitY
.
·
is
·
· ·
after receiving atip from Jenny
musical succeed are the perfor-
,
located two states easi'of New
.
York may prevent many
.
o
..
fyou
(a wiry Ellen McLaughlin), one
mances by the lesser characters.
of MacHeath's former mis-
MacHeath's gang; particularly
·
from witnessing the prodµction,
I feel that th
'
e Comp
'
any's adap-
tresses.
Matt (Eric Tucker) almost steal
tation is outstanding erio:ugh to
Music is the axis of the play,
the show. The one major char-
deserve our attention.
I
enc·our-
anditis delivered perfectly. The
acter whose perfonnance lfelt
·
ageail.y theatre~
.
ori~nted Mari.st
standout
·
is McLaughlin's im.:
was
.
a bit
:
1a:cking
,
was Jenn
studentsfrom'the eastern
New
peccable solo performance of Schulte's take'onLucy Brown,
England iirea to:considei ta!4i:ig
"The F:}ick Knife Song."
;
The
Tiger's daughter. Her wrangling
the trip ho~e
·
to check'
out
thi
...
·
s
music will be familiar to anyone
with Polly" over MacHeath's af-
.
who
favors oldies
.
stations,
'
as
fection serves as little more than
pe1~~;cbistoricall;
.
dabbles
.
th~
,thenie
wa~
·
adapted iI).tO a
good subject matter fora good
with the traditiori~I sqripts of popu_lar song ir1 the 1950's. The
song or two.
their performances to make them
musicians
·
do
not miss
'
a
note
Trinity's reprisal of "The
.
·
appear more up to date,
qotl]
in
thfc;,ughout. the
.
·
entire perfor-
Three-'Penny Opera" succeeds
dress and in dialogue. Their
.
m,ance,and are perhaps the real
because of the changes in the
rendition of''The 'I)lre~_PennY,
stars
.
of the show.
•
.
.Chcireogra-
adaptation, but it also suffers a
Opera" is no excep~ipn, a~ ~er-
.
pQe~
Kelli Wicke Davis also rises
little from therri. Anyone expect-
tain lines Jrorri the new script
to
'
the occasion, particul
,
arly
ing to see a traditional off~
would make any self-respecting
during «The Squaddies' Song."
Broadway musical shmild either
resident of l 920's
·
Londmi
The writers took a lot ofliber::
look
.
elsewhere or wait
'
for
-
a
blush.
If
the original was rau-
ties with the plot of the musical,
Broadway rendition of the origi~
cous, Trinity's version is down~
'
right d~\Vn to adding a
·
happy
nal. However, this
-
production
·
right ribald.
·
.
.
.
,
,
ending. ''TheThree-~enny Op-
is definitely an
,autonomous
The plot centers around the
·
era" is a decidedly light-hearted
success by any theatre major's
fall of notorious London gang-· affair to
.
begin' \Vhh,
.arid
,
this
standards.
I think•~'The
•
Three.:.
;
ster MacHeath (a Tommy Lee. gr_oup tikes that
'
a step further.
Penny Opera"-.would make·a
J ones-esque
.
'
·
William Tiie story "traditional ends \vith
great project forMCCTA
in
the
~
Damkoehl~r)~ bett~r
Irnown
·
as
MacHeath a~aitiilg execiitio11,
future.
,
To
learn
more aboutTrin-
Mack thc(Knife. Be.sec:r~tly
butDainkoehle~•s
'
chap11ing
'
per'.'
ity Rep; check out http://
marriesPollyPeachum{iennuer formance demancis'a morefa-' www.trinityrep'.com·
IJonl
trvrgel lo
.
'
'
•
.
.
.
~
.
'
.
vo1e111
.
.
tudent
Elections
will
be
held
on:
·
.
.
-Monday,
Sept:28
·
-Tuesday,
Sept~9
,
·
~
-Wedn4!s~ai, Sept.
'
~o
.
.
.
,
,
.
Ballots
can be
;
cast
in both Dyson and
Donnelly
'
.
.
President:
.
"'
·
Michael
.
Caponegro
.
,
Kevin
C.
}Jogan
·
'
Nicholas Adclfrinola
·
Justin Haight
'
·,
.
.
;.
.. : .
~
•:
•
I
Vice President:·
Melissa Santanello
.
:J¢f
Patterson
,
Eric
M.
Deabill
.
.-
:"!
·
·
•·
.•
StudenfGovernme11t
Public
Relations Com,;ni,.eejs' loo,Cing
-
•
.
..
:
'
- .
: .
for
Studentsii ,:-
. .
J
.
.
~Build Your Portfolio
·
*SLipp_lement Youi Resume
.
_-
·
*Earn Priority Pointsf, . ,
..
~
(-
:.
,
.
.
All Co_inmunications
,
fields
,
neededl
··
·
·
Adv.ertising;
Event
Qrganization~
.
Joumalism,
_
.
,
Publi~ R~latioris~·and Radio, TV, Film!
:
'
··
._
:1
·
•
i
interes~ed, please call Sara Bergeron, SGA
Director of Public Relations at
x.
2699.
tudent Speaks ..
X.
2206
Let Student Government know what
you
think!
Sifcoin
.
St?,rS
Pf
.
Yester-
yC?t:
where
·
arethey
now?
·
.
byCARLITO
StaffLiar
.
standing
.
Jnder five feet in
form itself." Someone told Joe
height, Lewis now 68 years of that spontaneous gender polar-
age, and Coleman who is now
ization is physically and ana-
89, were
.
both the subject of ridi-
tomically impossible without
cule throughout their
lives. In
a
the aid of medical science.
·
.
Back in the day, comedy was
press conference, Lewis com-
Trudy dropped out of society
as pure and wholesome as ho-
mented on
.
how George
afterpeoplekepttellingherthat
mogenized milk. Punch lines
Poppodopelis constantly ha-
she was annoying and hated by
revolved around family
:
values,
rassed and degraded him about
all of western society. She's
unlikely situations and lovable
his height. ''He'd grab my face
presently unmarried, 56 years
characters. To my dismay, I've
and push me to the floor while
old and she still has braces.
watched this
.
type of comedy
calling me names like rabbit turd
Remember
ALF,
the fuzzy little
slowly evaporate before my
and poopstain. He once told me
alien that stole our hearts and
very eyes.
that my mot~er mated with a
our cats? Two years ago he was
Prime time
.TY
is presently
ground
_
hog ancl I was the re-
ho
'
spitalized after getting a kit-
dominated by pitiful shows that
suit." ·
·
·
.
,
ten lodged in his large intestine.
are orchestrated
,
by horrendous
George
·
PoppodC>polis died
in
Apparently Melm2cian diges-
actors making sad attempts at
1989 in
a
myste_rious car bomb-
tive systems deteriorate at
a
humor. Shows like "Homeboys
ing. P.I.P.9.A.W. was
·
formed to
quicker pace than humans' do
.
in Outer Space"
·
and "Two
defend
..
the
little
people of the
He Jives in Santa Monica where
Guidos and a.Pizza Parlor" are
earth and mount
a
counteroffon-
he is both an alcoholic and a
somehow tossed into the prime
sive
-when
.:
necessary. When
womanizer.
time lineup, only to eventually
asked about the influence the
Although Kirk Cameron
be recognized as third rate, low
militia has had 00 his
life,
starred in several despicable
budget entertainment. Sure Ital-
Coleman responded, "It's taught
movies, he will
·
always hold a
ians can be quite amusing, but
me to coine to grips with the fact
place in my heart as Michael
baseashowon it? It's not likely
although I am a freak of nature,
Seaver. His career evolved
that
a
couple boys from the
I don't have to take it sitting
nicely in comparison to the
hood with rio astronaut training
down." If you are interested in
aforementioned
·
actors and ac
-
would end up in space, but is
jojning the militia, contact Mr.
tresses. He spent a little time
that quality humor?
·
Drummand.
modeling but after Pennigloss
The 80's were a great decade
Do you remember the show
jerry curl spray went out ofbusi-
for sitcom television.
·
I
fell in
Small Wonder? Well you were
ness, they no longer needed a
love
.
with those actors
-
and ac-
prqbably under the assumption
poster
·
boy. He then went to
tresses and my .Jifohas been in-
that' the
'
little
·
girlon the sh9w
Broadway \1/here he got the lead
complete without them. To fill
was an actress pretending to be
in
a bfographical play titled,
the void left by their dep¥£ure
.
an android
:
fo
acfuality
,"
the girl
"Mtchael
Jackson:
.
the
froni the spotlight,
I
did a bit of
(let's dulher
Kate}
,
i~\i
·
cyborg
Ped.ibpbil
_
ip,
'
Combustible
research to find out.what some
prot~type
·
man\ifactured
?Y
Eni~a/'
.
.
.
.
.
of those act?rS
::
~~d ac~re_sses
•
Pana~onic in coop.eration
.
w1th
.
InaU.facet!i
_
ofhfe~ har~~uo-
,
have
·
been dp1f!gw1yith7.11}iv.e~-
:
X
Mi~t6s6fi
;
,
:-.,,·:
.
.
-.
~
-
,
•:
·
>
-, ·
.
pi~~
~
¥.~
,
bestciwed
'
upon all
-
~f
you
:
read;i lotof;jlogw~~h
w
.
©f
; .·
-
A.fttfr
/
SmaH Wonder bi(tlie
- ·
us
.
·
:._
Tl_lis
is
no better
'
exemp11-
tabloids '.·~b
.
oHreeie~ryry
'.~
~CaQ-
-
_
.
dust,
.
littl~
;
•
kate stru'ggled to
.
fied than in the case of Ricky
dals
,
_~utJ'.
-
m
'
~ere. t?
_
_
giy~
J~
.
~•
'"
;
kefirii'er"acting caree_r afloat b_y
.
Schro~der.
Rip~Y, ~ho _Pl~y~d
Maris
t
<I~!
.
!~~e,
th
~
:
'.
?Qn~
st
,
tc
\
:
auditiori,ifig for parts
m
"Terrm-:
, ,
the son of a nuJhonrure
m.
Sd-
god
;
tr,µ~
/
:
·
:.
_.
::.
,o-tJ
t:'..°:
>
·
~:
-~.
<
natoe;
·
and
.
"Robocop." After
ver Spoons" became addicted
'
~~
{
1U
f
.
J~IY,-~~
-
~
-
~
_r:
g
.
a~}'.
-
-
_;
f-bei
'
ng denied for the role eyen-
,
to heroinfollowing the s~ow's
Colelp.an~dh
.
!f antlcs on
Dtf.:
·
tu ally s!Yagged
·
by Arnold
·
.
'cance1latio'?. His li~e spiraled
ferent Strokes. And we were
Schwartzenegger, Kate told re:-
·
.·.
out of control and he ts rumored
all heartbro~en when we found
porters that "mortals stick
_
to-
to be living on
;
the streets of
out about his legal_ pro~le~s.
gether because their parochial
.
Pittsburgh selling sculptures
Two years a~o, while flippmg
·
cognitive processes inhibittheir
molded out of ~ompost.
through an issue of Weekly
ability to assess artistic effi-
The ~ast o
_
f "Ch~rles
In
Vf
orld Report, I came across a
.
ciency." It has' been rumored
Charge'' is an mter~sung tale.
picture of a fat, bald guy stroll-
that Kate is working for the De-
Nicole Eggert starred ma steamy
ingJ~to a gun s~op .
.
·
~ 'Yas
•
partm.entofDefenseandisused
film with-accomplished actor
crushed when I ~eahzed thts was
p_eriodically for assassin~tions
Corey Haim bef~re she had_ h~r
Coleman and satd to ~~self, ~at aild miscellaneous black ops.
breasts enlarged m order to JOm
there•~ a lost soul ?nftmg atm-
. How chaotic would your life
th~ cast of "Baywat
7
h." Psy-
lessly ma sea of disarray. -
be if you were ignorant about
chiatrists aqd zoologists ex~-
.
About a decade ago wh~n
the "Facts of Life?" That show
ined buddy after the show s
"Different Strokes" was on
Its
gave me an ethical blueprint by
death
.
He can presently be
way out, Gary wentt?
3:
psy-
.
which I would str:ucture my en-
viewed at the Bronx Zoo mon-
chic and he \\las told tha~
m
ttn
'
tir~Jife~ In case you were won-
key pit where he displays the
y~. he would be fat, bald, tng-
dering what
the
girls are up to
sign language he was taught by
·
ger happy and ,memplo~,ed. ~e
allow me to share my wisdom.
scientists.
.
.
.
chuckle~ and sneere_d, wha;~
After gaining 90 pounds and
.
Scott Baio experimented with
you talkin about clatrVoyant ·
having her face badly mutilated
.
a career as a stockbroker but all
S~rely ~nough, fate cau~ht up
during a chemistry experiment
of the anxiety resulted inaner-
w1th
.
,
him. The expenence withsulfuricacid,Blairwashos-
vous breakdown. He was seen
opened his eyes. though and he
pitalized for severe depression.
streaking through the New Y?rk
becamearegularmemberofthe
_
She is unmarried, she lives a
StockExchangenaked,exclaun-
Psychic Friends Network, even-
miserable existence in which she
ing that his loins were on fire.
tually making a guest appe~,.
ingests 120 milligrams of Prozac
The stars of yesteryear will be
~nee
~n
one of . their
a day.
·
.
.
cherished always a~d
~
hope
mfomerci~s. The ps~chics then
After
.
spending four million
you all share the admiration for
info
_
rmed him about his new pur-
dollars on cosmetic surgery,
them that I possess. It's a shame
pose i~ lif~. He ~as to start an
Nattily became a porn star. Her
that the quality of entertainment
orgamzatton with Emanual
alias is Nat Bung Hole and you
has deteriorated to its present
Lewis.
.
can see her in films like
state, but we can survive this
You may rem~mber
~WI~
as
"Battlestar Orgasmica" and
catastrophe by dwelling in the
the puppy huggmg, smckenng
"Nevermind the 7th Command-
past. We must remember patri-
~ebster, but once he t~me~ up
ment, Take Your Clothes Off."
ots like Lewis, Coleman and
wtth Coleman, the g1gghng
Joe eventually made public
Cameron. They had a lot to of-
stopped and the payback
that she is in fact a man
.
When
fer society and I am much richer
started. Lewi~ and Coleman
asked why he stayed in the
for having watched ~em.
were the foundmg fathers
or
a
·
closet for so long, he replied, "I
*
If
you actually beheve any of
militiacalledP.I.P.?.A-~ .• which
thought that if I tried hard
what you have just read, you
stands for Pygmies Pissed Off enough my body would trans-
are a nincompoop.
At the World. Although both
'
·
Lo
·
cal acts IDake
the
scene in Hudson Valley
by
CHRIS KNUDSTEN
Staff Writer
Perfect Thyroid
headlined a
show at The Chance last Friday
with
Half-way Gone
and
Three.
One of the highlights of the
show
.
however was a perfor-
mance by
The Schematics,
a
very lively swing-ska band.
They played a relatively brief set
but still got the crowd moving
which is one of the most impor-
tant parts for Chris Lafave.
"I love playing for the crowds,
it's the best part of the job and
it's great to see when they actu-
ally appreciate it," Lafave said.
The Schematics
have been
together for only about a year.
Some the members of the band
went ( or are going) to school in
New Paltz
,
where they originally
got together. Chris had gotten
the band together by handing
out flyers arid asking around for
other musicians, ultimately lead-
ing to
tl1e gathering
of theif cur-
rent line-up of.
.
eight players.
Aft<;r. startj~g
~
og.s y;itll s~veral
other icicaloands
The Schemat-
ics
played
.
at
a
battle
·
of the
bands with
f'
erfect Thyro(d
and
later opened for
The Toasters.
"I
think we'll be around for
awhile. I want to do this for a
career you know, just as
I
orig as
it's still fun." said Lafave:
Dan Flanagan, the lead vocal-
ist, agreed with Chris.
·
"This is so much fun and if
we can make
a:
career out of it,
why not?" Flanagan said.
The band's recent success
would appear to be a good sign
as they are hoping to growmore
and more popular
as
time passes
by. When asked what kind of
music they would consider
themselves, Chris replied sar-
castically.
,
"Universally spectacular mu-
sic
,
that will
·
change your
Iife
.
.. just kidding," he said.
"I
guess swing-ska but we're a
little different though."
The wide range of style exist-
ing in the band would be a di-
rect result of the diversity be-
tween each member's musical
backgrounds. Each member
comes from a different upbring-
ing that has prevented the band
from becoming stale as they are
constantly trying new things
'.
Unlike many other bands these
days
The Schematics
try to
avoid stereotypical labels as
much as possible.
"Labels are kind of silly," said
Lafave.
·
The Schematics
·
might be
corQing here to Marist College
later inthe month of October de-
pending on whether
the
show
is approved or not.
~
Also_possi-
bly appearing with them wiHbe
Marist's own
MidHudson Pork,
an up and Coming local band_
Fizzlewink, The Embarrassing
Rex
from Long Island, and more
to be announced: The show is
·
not
·a
definite yet but keep your·
ears open for more news on this
show that is currently planned
for October 23.
If you want to get in touch
with The Schematics you check
out their web page at http://
www.
Geocities.Com/
SunsetStrip/Underground/
1367.
atrick's words of wisdom:
-
"If you want to become
a
friend of civilization, then
becoIIle an enemy of the
h "
trut ...
--Kurt Vonnegut
_,:=-==--=---
- .
~
// EXTRA
INCOME
FOR '98 ·
I
Eorn $500 -
S
1000 weekly
stuffing
'
· envelopes. For details • RUSH $1.00
with SASE
to:
GROUP FLYE
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N. Aoademy
Blvd.,
Dept.
N
l
Cok>rado Spring,,
CO
80918
..I '
~;:::======---==========·-=-=======::::-:,/
-
.
.
October 1
7
1998
Mell'Stemill;,t~fun
Und~ft~t~dfu
MAAC .With:' Qlle:
.
match
to go .
.
·
-
~
:
: .
'I~
~
....
..
by
PETER MOYLAN
and
This is evident in the fact that
KARRE
NU.MME · ·.
· - • ·
riext year siveii
of
the top eight
Staff Writers-
players
will.
be returning, and
hopefully improving.
Simply put, the Marist tetmi!;!
.
Five out of the top six players
team is on fire.
·
are new, including Mayer and
Just this past weekend, the
Ralph Van-de-plas~e. Both are
Red Foxes not only beat both · junior college transfers who
Rider arid Canisius, but they did
have· yet to lose. Three fresh-
so without even losing a set.
man have also stepped in.
Add onto that accomplishment, . Bielawski and Juan Carlos
the undefeated tandem, of . Deigado are undefeated, while
Roberto Mayer and Darrel
Dahnert has only one loss.
Bielawski; first and third singl~s ·
· RacaneUi is the lone returnee
respectively, and you have
a
of the top six, and he says he
nucleus of a team tliat is off to
can. see a difference between
the best start in Marist history,
last year and this year.
boasting a 8-0record in confer..:•.
· "The drive lhjs ·team has
ence play. They are one wfa
makes us competitive,t' he said.
away from going undefeated in
"I am confident we will do well."
the conference for the first time
The success of this· years' team
in their history.
is not only terrific, but timely as
Junior Michael Racanelli says
well. Just this past July, the
he believes Mari st has what it
NCAA passed legislation allow-
takes to beat Fairfield.
ing each conference champion
"We are a highly motiVated
.
to receive a:n automatic bid into
group, extremely serious. Ev-
the NCAA tennis champion-
eryone not only wants to play · ships. This means if the Marist
well, but· wants to ·win/'
tennis team continues tctplay
Racanelli said.
as well as they have, they have
The success of this :team
a great chance of representing
should be credited
to
conibina--· · MaristintheNCAAchampion-
tion of youth, talent, and expe-
ships.
.
rience that coach Tim Smith has
Smith said he would like to win
been able to put together.
the conference so Marist can
"Our team is green and grow-
play against some of the better
ing with a lot of young players,"
teams iri the United States.
said Smith.
"It's extremely exciting and
.
·
:
~.
provides a great opportunity for
the team becaus·e·just like
1:fas:.
ketball, if we win the conference
we would receive a bid as one
of the twenty-eight di~isio~ one
programs in the country," Smith•·.
_ said:
, ·
. :
.· . . .
This honor would give Marist
the chance to play against suc.h .
national tennis po-wers as
Stanford and Georgia, while. also
allowing the country to see just
how talented Marist is.
·
Before they can evenbegi~ to
think about the NCAA champi-:.
onships however, Marist
knows they still have a long and
tough road ahead .. On Tuesday,
the Red Foxes will play the pe-
rennial power of the MA.CC
conference,
th~
Fairfield Stags,
A win against Fajrfield will defi-
nitely give.
Marisi
a tremenclous.
boost in confidence and recog-
nition.
· ·
·
· .
·
Smith said his team realizes
what their goal~ ar~ .. , . · .
· .
"The heaviest burden
any
.of
us have is
a
great opportunity;":
Smith said .. "Our te.am has the
opportunity to represent Marist
in the NCAA's." · ··
·
In
other words, the Red Foxes ·
greatest enemy right now could
be themselves; but -if that can
all be put aside, the sky is the
limit
for
this group of.talented .
and poised individuals: .
.
-.-··-
-
.
PAGE14
ootball .
box-
.
.
s.
St.
Peters,
"Marist26·
StPeters 3
•
•. i
,
.
..
1st
Marist ·
7
·
St.~ Pet'ers•O
. 2pd_
3.rd
'
IO
0
J
4th
,Tot-
,:o'' .
·26 ..
3 · .. _, - ' 3
Marist-.
·
'· .
_.
•• ·•
. . ·..
<
<
Korba 26 pass
from
Trainaglini
(De{Ho
kick}'
Marist,. · .
~ •
.
•
..
.
. . .
· : .. ·· · FG
Adamoyurka 29
Mans't:.;,, '· -;,_
· FG
Adafuoyurh 27
Marist ... - .• .
" - .
'., -F.G Adamoyurkif30
. Marist.:. :
...
.
,. ~G Adamoyurk~ 39
~,,
•. Manst,., ...
,
... ""·· , . ··•·. ..
..
_;
f -; .... _
..
·
t
< ,· .
Galabpa 58 pass fiomTi:ainaglini' (DeV!tc>'kick)
,". S{Petedf- ".:- "-~· -.-/'.-:-
. ·.
·
. -•.·· •
·
. ..-
FGHulse29
.Marist
Firstdowns .
25
. s:.J':'sh~d-yards-.·.. 56-300
. ~assi13:g y_ards.,
.
. ·2~5 ·
~acked:-y?fds lost _, 0-0
Return yards
-· 46
Passes
10:29_1
: . Puij~ . -,
-~-36.2
Fumbles.,.lost
,
. 2-1
,- . P~n~lties-y~ds . .' 12-109
. _ T{I_lle
c;,f
possession _3f 59
StPeters.
, 10· .
26,~62
106
2,,_1g
3~· .. :,,
1-2s.:.2
:9-36.7
-1-L ·
10-i°o9
. 21:.Ql
-·,:
..
WIVIPUAL STATISTICS
. . 'RusHiNµ.· · . _' :'. .
: . ,
. _, .
. . -.. Ma.£!~~:A.Ilen 19,-12;4,~pinato 14-61, µavitt5-34,
. . · . Rey~ 7-:~, Calal;>ria 1-:18, Reilly 5-1_2, :fraII)aglini
l-11,
;r~di 3-9, Jones l-3 .. StPeters-Miller9~39,,Silva5-18,
_;Bu,rns_
fl-
IO;
C~lon 2-9, Makle
1-4,
Lyver 2-minus 7,
Crockett 3~minus
1
I.
.
·
PASSING
.
Man~t-Trarn~glini .8~27-1-194, Lug~ 2-270~ 21.
St Peters-Crockett 3-17 ~2-34, Lyver 4-11 ~0-72.
RECEIVING .. :
.
,
Marist-Puabria 4-138, Traynor 2-33, Korba 1-26,
Brewer 1-17, Reid 1-1, Stack 1-0. St Peters-Polite
5-54, Snyder 2-52.
Att: 725
f
.
.
THJ
~
t.IRC.~l
.
,
.. -;
·
s-
'
s,·
·'
;
-
o:rt
;
S
-
·
.
·
·
·
.
-
,.
•
··
.
.
•
·
•.
·· -
•
r
-
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•
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'
PAGE
15
i
••
:
'
··•
..
·
.
1,i:'~e
:
i99s
-
~as~~aji
·
seas~ij,
:
_
:: .
:
A1t,e~
~eli6 surgeli1i'O·ie'se~
·
~
'
'
.
P~dro
:
~artinef,
'
iast year's
one
'
of the mosfexciting 1n
'
re'-
·
.·· ,.
ond lialfcof ihe
:
seasoii, hitting'
'
. N:C Cy'
Yptihg
wiri_ner, led_ the
cent memory; we
'
wet~ capti.:
.387 with 31.homeis arid
86
RBI
'. '
R~d: Sox
:
to'·
the
'
piayoffs
·
and
vatef by the exploits of. Mark
.
after the all star break;
.
Hidin
~
pitched l?ig game
•
after big game
.
McGwire
and.
Sanimy Sosa, vte
ished hitting
j26
with49 hpm~ . over the
:'
course
of
the
.'
season.
saw theYankeeswirtmore
.
ersarid
.
152runsbattedin;ilum'-
.,
llis
·
numbers, while not nearly
games
thiui
anyb~µy since
·
the
bersthiteasilf riyal Gonzalez's
~'
a°s'impre~sive as last'year's, are
1906Cubs and we\vitnessed the
·
but the fact that
·
the White:sox . still impressive, finishing with a
end ofRipken's
:
streak .
.
Ina
\Vere
.
out of playoffcontenffon
.
2.89
ERA
and a 19~7 record.
sport that had seeµ1frigly lost its
.
fairly early· in the:
season
hain-
Ma,ftinez gave the Soi the domi-
hister, it
all
seemed t<>come back
perBelle
.
's chancesi
:
.
·
,
nating pitcher tha:t they lost in,
at once.
.
<
.
:·
_ . .
.
.
.
__
. .
<
Manny Ramirez is anotlier
.
iroruc;ally; Roger Clemens.
.·
.
I have
-
been faced
:
.with the
.
playerthatw
·
orkedhi~ way into
.
'
Davi_d WeHs
:
~oes not have
near jmpossibie
'
task
~f
trying -the MVP ra~e wi~
:
a fate expl_O-'
nearly the sa'ine
·.
nu~bers as the
;
to decide who deserves
·
the
.
sion
:
In
the criticaLfinal
two
.
·
first two candidates, but he
post-season awarcls._
·With:
all
months of the season,'Ramirez
does he does have one of the
the great perf ormarites this year
hit
21 homers and knocked
in
57
·
moments that made this season
the races \I/ere tight; bull have
runs
.
over
a'
sprui
'.
of 52 gani~s.
'
so
·
·
special; his
:
perfect game
made my decisio
_
n and
will
IlOW
To ptit those
'
numbers i!].tO per- ' against Minnes<>ta.
'
He did end
hand out thejrophiesfor the
spective,over a full season that
.
up with an 18-4reccirdanda3.49
.
American League winners, Na-
equat~s to 65 ho,nie run~ 178
·
ERA,_ bur with ~le mens and
tional League
•
winners' will
_
be
·
nins batted in'. Ramirez finished
,
Martinez in the running, he just
crowned in our next issue
:
_
.
hitting .294 and with career
·'
does not stack up.
:
·
t
c
~
/;
_.
~_
}V
:
~~t~s:·01.1
:
l~pr
·_.
_
·
,
,
.
FootbaUl0/3
vs. St. John'§ 1
p.m.
:
. ·
r
Volley1>itn
io12.:1013
@Haliford.Invitational
6
'
p.m.
10/7
vs. Siena
7
p.m.
Men's
~~cce~ 10/3
vs.
Sacred Heart
1
p.m.
10/7
@.
Iona 3
p.m.
Wome~'s'~~~cer
,
10/5
@
Columbia.? p.m .
.
·
10/7
vs. Fairfield 3:30 p.m.
'
'
Men's
tenri.i~d0/1
@i:°Fordham 3
:3h
p.m .
.
.
10/3-10/5.@ ECAC Championships,
·
·
Vassar TBA
Cross country
·
10/3
@
Colgate Invitational,
-
Hamilton; NY
·Tough
Trivia
How many World Series have the New York Yan-
ees won since the Boston Red Sox last won a
orld Series?
.
'
.
Answei; to last week's question - Babe Ruth brqke his own
ecorci of 59 home n.1ns in a s
·
eason when he ,hit 60 in 1927.
The first award to be an.;.
highs in both ho_me runs and
Ip.a
race that really isn't a race,
nou~ced will be theAmerican
RBI, finishing with 45 and 145
.
Roger· Clem~ns
_
wins the Cy
.
high expectations, Gdeve fin-
team with a pitcher that could
..
League MVP. There ai:-cfmany
respectively.
·· .
. ·
·.
.
.
. .
·
.
.
Young for the second consecu-
ished his first full major league
.
be depended on from start to
.
solid candidates· this year,
:
in-
·::_
Each of these players put
·
up
·
.. tiye year. He put
·
up the best season hitting .288 with 18 horn-
.
start, and de~pite a weak sec-
eluding Mo Vaughn; Nomar
similar numbers; but the MVP
.
numbers
·
and for that reason
ers and 89 nins batted
fo,
defi~
ond balf, still had a good year.
Garciaparra,Ken
'
GriffeyJr.and
·
should go
'
·
to the
·
playe~ that
·
Clemens ~rings home number
nitely enough to gamer Rookie
The 19~8 A.L. Rookie of the
Alex Rodriguez,
_
but it really
proves n:iostvaluable(hence the
five.
:
of the Year consideration.
.
.
Year
,
goes to-Ben Grieve. His
boils down to three names: Ju
_
an
':·
name)· a·nd out
of.
this group
Orlando Hernandez, the Yari~
solid, an<i occasionally spec-
Gonzalez o,f the Texas Rangers, .
.
ortly Juan Gonzalez proves to be
kees 29 year:old Cuban pitcher;
tacu:lar play, gives. the Athletics
Whi
Alb_ertSBelledof_ththe
1
Chicago
truh
.
ly indis~e~sabGle. Th
1
at beihng
.
It
·
·.
,
:
1,s
__
.
(Juan)
also came to
.
the
:
~ajorf with
hope for thein
:
ebuildindg efforts
.
·
te
ox, an w1
a
at~ surg~.
·
:t
e case,
1t
-
1s
.
onza ez
t
at
·
high expectll.tions and met them
and gets him this a war .
·
Manny Ramirez.
.
.
.
.
·
_,
·
walk~ away with ihe prize, the
Gonzalez'
that walks
with ease.
·
1n a season where
Also in the world of sports this
It.is hard to compete· with the
.
1998 A.L;MVP.
.
away
with
_
the
·
prize,
A.L. pitche,:s could not seem to
week:
.•
nuritberi;that
·
Gonzalez
,
piltllp
·
:· ,
>-
Thereisnotnearlyas much
:,-7-e.J9n8A~L.MVP.
'
keep
.
runs from scoring,
LMcGwirehits70,anumberf~r
this year, hitting
'
;3}8 with 45
·
.
·
coi.ripetrtion
·
for th
-
e AL Cy
"'"
7 '
Hernandez djd,fin
_
ishing
~ith
a
.
th~ ages.
_
homers and knocking_ in'l57
_
~ns
Yo
_
ung
-~
as
:
for
the:
.
MVP.
-I.f
·
~II
.,
..
· -·
3. 13 ER.A. H~
a.1~·0 fiflished With
'
·.
·2. Saints
OP.en
to
3-0
..
:
Can you
while leading the Rangers to the
.
comes down
.t()
the two reign::-
: _,
a 12~4 record;whiie onlyaHow-. say D~tka Super Bowl Bound?
playoffs. donzalezwasalsopart
ing ey :Young winners and
On to th~ AmeriGID1League's
'
ing batters to
,
hit .222 against
Notwith
'
this team.·
.
of: the record chase for a brief
·
David Wells.
:
last major award
;
~eRookie of
.
him.
-
It was ah
,
excel)erit
:
~eason
·
·
3: Growing Pains;
.J>t
2
.
Man-
period,
,:
when it looked as
.
•
.
RcigerClemenscameupbigfor
the Year.
·
.
forEII>uqu~;
_-
a
·
s¢as~mthat
_
the
nirigandLeafthf()wacombined
though he migµtha,ve a ~hot at ·the
.
second consecutive year,
Ben Grieve, the 22 year~old
Yankees hope can be duplicated
.
total of6 interceptions; both San
competing for Hack -Wilson.'s
leading the A.L. (ti¢ with David
outfielder for the Oakland Ath-
in the future.
:
:.
·
'
Diego and Indianapolis lose.
·
.
68-year.:old RBI record of 190.
.
Cone and Rick Helling) in wins
letics, arrived in the majors with
Rounding
,
oµtthe list
of
cari-
.
-4
.'
New York Yankees win 114
Wltlle befell short of that total,
with 20, and leadtng the league
·
.
much hype
·
:a!J~
.
iji~h
_
~~pecta-
.
_
qidate~/is Tampa
~~y
pi
_
tchec
:
gam~~-
·
Now can they finish?
hii.-157 RBI led the
·
American
in ERA.with
a
2.64. Clemens
'
Hons and niet
._
themin grand
.
Rolan~o:Arr~Jo::Ari-ojo,
:
alsoa
-
·
5:
-
i
Priesi:.who?
·
Baltimore run-
L~ague· and boosted his repu-
-
struck out 271
·
b~ttersi9 234 2/3 · fashion. D.e~pjte alt the
·
pres-
Cuban
·
ref'.ugee, finished \yitli a- . ning· back friest Holmes busts
t~tfon as one of the best run
~nnings,-aitd punished hitters to
·
sures associated with J:,eing a
record of 14-12 and a 3:56
,
ERA>
.
.
onto scene with 2 TD's and 178
pr<>ducers in baseball.
the tune ofa .197 average.
·_
young playerin the
,
njitjbis with
Ai:rojo
:
pwvided the e
_
x,pai\sipn
. )
t'?tal yards in win over Bengals.
••
Melfi
···
enJOYs
·
.fast.
•
tilll.~s at
·
M~r:i$(
i
G.Ollege
'
.
·
.
-
..
·
-
,
<,fl:
.
· ·
-
~
·
.
:
trained har4.ov~~ thJ
:
s~mmer
;
.
i
has lelMelfi
to
·
hi~
earl/~e~.:_:
'
.~ti~l'imiversities around the na-
byJENNIFIIltGLOVER
.
,
prestigiousIC4Ameet.
.
; Through tlje m~i~~~
\
ofJuly,
.
/
son ~~¢t:es~e~.·_:·
f6.
.
~
'
,
~.rst.
:
~..yo
_
;. tfon.
_
.
_
.
.
StaffWr
_
,
_
·t~r.
_
,
:
·
r
_
-
_
·
...
.
.
,
_
_.
_
:
l\1e.lfi's accorilplishplents have
;
August, and Sept':!
.
!liller
;
Melfi
: .
meets
.
of_th.e
-.
sea
_
sc;m
,
coa~~
--' .
_
-
'[he goals
·
nowh~ave
1
nsend
>
a1so given him anoth~r Marist
:
ran
870miles, ay~r_asi!1g60miles
.Colaizzo·h~cj
-
s~p1igh
-
goals
.
for
even .higher' for t 1ua ente
.
"Break~ut". adequately· <!e-
•
first. Last spriilg;'Melfi was the
,
per
_
week
.
.
I'vfetfi
.
alsifkepf in
;
Melfi, ·e.:J.C.pe¢.ting
:
hiin to win. . run~~~-- Melfi hopes that he can
scribes this
SaturdayNighf
Fe-
·
fustMarist
nfonerto
qualify for
·
'
·
cfose cont!ct:. wjth
.
head coach·
.
The big ch~_llenge
.
that came for
,
·.'
win theMetro Atlantic Athletic
·
verfanatic;
_
.
'
1
'
_
the
National
P~nn
~elay ineet, ·
·
PeteColaizzo;wheilierthrough
Melfi was at the.University of
:
Conference championship at
.
'
This year, senior capt_ain
where he rait the five-lcilometer
:
e-mails or telep4one co
_
nversa-
Notre Qame.
.
Van<:o~land P~k Nov. 1. With
Michael Melfi has eruptecl
_
on
ra,ce.
_
.
,
'.
tions.
.
,
>
·
,
·
. .
_·
Melfi admits that at first he
-
·
top-_ten
·
na:tionally ranked Iona
the cross country scene;
In
this
.
This season's accomplish-
Melfi ~ttnbutes
"
some of his
.
was unsilre
of
the expectations·
.
College'in_the confer~nce, Melfi
year's first three meets·, Melfi
'
ments
are
even more impressive
;early
seasonsuccess to his re-
,
CoachCol~
_
zzo had set for him·.
:
will
have to ·co~tinue to. i:un
has been consistently Marist's
.
sim;e at this tini.e'lastyear Melfi
•
'lationship
with
Colaizzo over the
"He 3lways
,
sets high goals that. strong: ButMelfi's compet1t1ve
number one runner. ·
·
·
·
_was wa~ching fro.m
th~
sidelines.
summer.
·
seem almost unreachable," Melfi
·
spirit and dedication
_
will more
Atinvitationals held at Lehigh
LastJall, Melfi
·red-shirted
to
"The one-on"o.n~_relationship
added:
·
.
. ·
_
,
·
..
.
.
_ .
than likely propel him
to
the top
and Hartford, Melfi easily cap-
save his last year of eligibility
.
-
really helped.
·
I received good
However, he surprised
.
eye!) . as he enters the
_
second half of
tured first placefinishes.
·
Two
.
fo~
this year. '.The season away
·
advice and ·coaching all sum,
himself when he
·
s~rpassed
·
his season.
weeks ago, at the highly com-
from the
sport
did crea~ doubts
mer."
.
.
these high goals
1
.
peati!)g All-
·
petitive National Catholic Cross
.
in the mind of Melfi.
And it is Q:iis
·
dedication that
.
:
Amen.cans from ofu.er colleges·
Country
_
chanipioh~hips he
Becauseofthetacticsrequired
completed the
·
five mile course
·
for cross country racing, Melfi
24: 17, good for
third
place.
'
admits tha( he worried about
This has not just occurred
whathe
·
wouldbeabletoaccom-
over night, however. This se-
plish this
'year.
.
.
nior psychology/special educa-
"When I stepped on the line
tion major has
·
been at the top
Sept. 5, it
·was
the firsttime I
of his sport for a while now.
raced (cross country) in two
Melfi holds five indoor track
years," Melfi said, "I thought it
records, including
an
8:27 in the
·
·
would
be
tough to get back into
three-kilometer race and as a
it."
member of the distance medley
Melfi did not leave this sea~
relay, which competed at the
.
son to chance, however, as he
s
ancun
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-
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·
*
·
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*
·
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•
·eahamas
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-
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and
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·
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411
..
~
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·~
five
·
Marisf indoor
•
track
'
·
.
recoicts;
:'
/:,,\; , .·/~:
.
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:·.
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opei
t
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;
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Gar~folaJ11l:the
_
•
·
by
JEFFl)AHNCK.E:
•
.
.
.
. ·
•
s~affWriter
..
.
·
.
post arid then minutes late[
•
he
· ·
.
,
.•. ..
.
.·.·
.
·
.
,
,
..
.
~a~
:
·
stopp~d
.-
1:>y goalkeeper
.
Recording
'
corisecutive shut.:
Matt'falarico.
,
.
·.·
·
.
·
.
.
"
··
..
·
·
·
•
outs is
a,n
impressiveJeatforiµiy
· ·
J
The<lo!lefrrst half goaj prov
.
ed
·
teatn, but for
·
a team 'with
:
14
.••
tobe enough;:'though~
·
as
'.
fresh-
:.
·
·
·
·
.
·
.
...
....
.
.
·
: _
_
-·
.
.
>
Quote
·
or~~e
-
W~lc
>
·.
•
·
: ~'.
We
:
couldnotaskforany
::
.
· tN~ii
Ill<>~ft?~
~
iP
.
8-~Year,
bld
'.
kid/'.
:
\
Meii
's
;
so_cce.r
'i;odcii
:
!Jqbb/Iiefodes
;
Oft
Carlos
DeBriio
':
.
.
· .
· ..
::
:·-'.
:
:.(,:-:.:
>:
PAGE
,
16:'
o
freshmen itis remarkable
:
.
.
··
. .
·
··
men DeBrito earned his first ca~
-
That is
-
~xactly what the Marist
.
reer shutout :· .
.
·
.
.
. .
>
•
.
rrien
;
s
:
soccer squacl
·
accom-
.·
·..
,
'
'
l
'.
111
d6ing
'
just
-
fine
;
'~ s
'
~fd
plislied this ..yeekencl; however
,
•
.
·.
OeBrito
.-
of ~if perfbllllaii<:e qf
.
stringing togethefapairofl
~
O
·
late. !Tmjusfexcited
;
to
·
play
··
·
. ·
·
·..
·
· ·
·
· ·
·
·
.
·
·
··
:
·
·
·
,-
·.
· ·
·
·
·
·
• . ··
·
·
··
'
'
:
·
·
.
victories
'.
Over
·
Niag11ni
'
aqd
.
every timelstep
·
QO,
ihe
field,."
'
The'M,aris
\
rnerl'°s
:
so
:
ccer
.
~ea~
'.
nasviorrthre~ g~mes
i~
a
row
~~erstarti
.
ng
:
·
o
:
s.
i
-
Cajiisius. The RedFoxes
:
have
.
.
•·
..
'
Mari.st out-:shofthe
f>Qrp~e
·
.
.
.
,:
;
.
.
.
now won three in ato\V
.'
.
. ;
.
Eagles 266.
'
·.
·
.
.
.
.
.
.
;:
<'
.
thing
.
that eriraged the
:
canisitis
. •
Canisius
•
ritldfi6}de~
rilade
a
ra-
.
tipp¢r right
.
CC>tner of the goal,
"We're finally starting t9 come
-
·
-Sunday
,
saw
·
Ganfsius
.
visit head coach.
,
.
•
.
·•·
.·
.
·
·
·
. ~ial s~tir:
..
.
.
.-·
.·.•.·
·
.
.
• .
.
,
.
enough
_:
to give Maiista 1~0
win.
together," said goalkeeper Po·ughkeepsie. TheFoxeswere
''Youareanightimire,"sai
.
dthe
.
"Iw.as v~ryupsetthat
:
he
-
had
. Heracles colnplemented
C1Ji-J9s DeBrito. "We're feeling
·
-
forced
.
to . play
.
wit~o.ut
·
coach Jrom the s°ideline
/
"You
.
to resort to
'
tliat/'
.
Bradley said 'DeBrito after
.
the
,
game,
giving
.
.
confident and just taking-it one )riidfielderTh~miasM_ullowney;
have no business tfofog out
·
ofthe.incid
.
ent.
.
'"
fwanted to do
him a lotofcr~ditforthe wins.
game
:
atatime.".
.
.
:-
.·
whoaccurrrula,ted:J1is
;
fiftfryel~
there."
.
·
::··: ·:.:
.·
.
.
·
somanythirigsatthesametime
;"Hekeptusinthegame,»said
.·
NiagaravisitedtheNorthField
..
low
card
'
iti
the
Niagara
game
MaristcoaciiBobby
,
Hex:odes
.
andlcolildri'
.
t For the next five
.
the coach
.
of his
.
Young goal-
.
Saturday afternoon
;
coining in
'.
and had to sit'oµt.
.
;
.
.
agreed Morda
•
inade s·Qme
~ad,
.
mjnutes
·
it
was h~d
'
to
.
get
/
my
.
}5:eeper
.
.
·
''We
:
could hot ask for
with
a reco_rcl ofli6.
·
The
FC?xes
·
: .
TheBrst
half
saw
_
both
:
teartls
calls butalso said the
'.
Canisfos
·
mind
·
l>ack on
.
th~ game.'
\ .
.
anything niore
.
froriran 18-yeai-
.
struck first
·
when Brian K3:i'cz
.
gq
~corefoss; as 'neithe
(
club
.
players were
·
outofcontrol.
•
·
·
,
·
·
.·
}leJ,'odes
.
pnuseti Bi:adleyfor old kid:''
.
.
took iiil
.
assist fro
in
::13,rian
.
\\'as able to cqnver
f
whe~)ie
_
~
·
•• ·
· _
"Some
·
~e~isions
·
wej~
.
prem,
-
t!ie.-:way ~e
:
cond~c
.
ted hims~lf.
·
·
.
·
The Red Foxes are now sec:.
.
Garafolaatthel5,:45mark
>
The
·
:
seilted
·
witffopportutjitles
;:
.
'.fhe
.
suspect,'~
.
said the Red
'
Fq_x
''Hehandleditr;eally
.
\\:'elltsaid
ond.in
:
tJie
:
MAAC with
.
a3-1
:
.
.
-
----- __
•
re~i of-the half was all
Mari~t;
'
second
haif:saw
:
ili
(
reafW~ry
,
coach
:.
:
"But
'.:
they
.
(C~~isit1s)
)ie~~4es'.
.
~'.~e
:
got
,
~p~~!
,
·kept it
.
·
.
record.
·..
.
·
··
as
.·
they controlled the
.
tenipo
•
<
develQp
:
as:
severar
f2ani$i
~
s
··.·
cr()ssed
'
ithe
·
line
'.
:
You
;:7'
don'.t
.
under· control
;.
arid maintained
·
·
·Aithouglithey ahead of where
·
:
t~l
~t
tat~~
.
•.
µif·:
f!o~
_·
()
r:
:
m
,
e.
:
··.{
~½a~,:,;~t:!~,~I
/
l
~t
hl
.·.;.
·
··:
s(ri%j~tf
r!r~~-
·
~~di
_
;
;!;i
:o
._.
hl!K~~~th:
.
con~st
··
J!~dley
.·
ap~
ftt~~i:iti1i~1~~~o;::i:a~· .
•
.
. .
.
.
. ·
•
..
Thef<>xes \Yent to th~ pr~~
.:
--.
••. :,
Mor~
,
con_i.i~J~11tly
_:
,
~arp.~d
. :
spiUe~
'
over
;
!nt~ a,
.
disp~t~
,
~Jt_li
proached Bradl~Y
1:
alld
/
apolo,
..
tureJ~
_
consider
'
the
_
m in the up-
•
.
with
·
a
:
.
·
t ..
o
cllsh
_
ion
•
bufit ye
.
fy
. ·
/
Q.anjsius a\fout,
·
:m~
i/
:
fo~l
~
laif
·.
;,
th.e.
t
plllyer
f
wh
.
en
J
q,_tjijqri~-
;
·
~d;
' .
_;,,, '
)!;
i
:
:
:>
..• :.
'.
,:
,
\:
:
'
.
.
p~r e
.
c~elQil
·
o
f
the conference
;
·
easily
'
could have):,eeil
'
larger
:
-:.
·
,
guage
~
at
;
orie
\
poitj
f
,
st55i>Pi_ng
.
•
tion
)irose
J,etween M@.st'
~
;
Ri
/
-
'.
There
·
was still a gatt_1e
:
going
·
.
· '!
)Ve'.re just too
·
young,"
To
·
start the second
·
Marist
_;
play
to
speak"1itQ captain N
a
t~
·
·
chard
-
BradJt_!Y
·
ancfC
.
~_nisius'
.
on
through alltbis.
,
The
'
SCO(
..
Herodes said
;
.
•
.
·.
cameoutaHttle
.
flli4
attim~Jo6k
.:.:
:
,
;
Fillmor¢
.'
·:
:
M_idfieJd
~
r
:
'.
Ry
.
a.n
;
.
·
·
.
R.yariHandle
y;-
::
B
r
adley,
an
Af,;
·
.
'fog
·
b~g:in
:
~nc
f
en
de
.
cf
;
at:th.e
·
.·
Marist\yill
be
in
actionSatui:-
.
·
ing
;
tfre<l .
.
Once agairi they
•
had
·/_
P.untlri
\
va'.s
-
ejec(e<f afte
i
:
r~e1v
i
:
t
ican
·:/-
Arrie
·
rkan,
.
}
got
J
n
.
·
71:55
,
markwhen
Brian
Garafola
·
.·.
day
·
at
·
I
;
p.m
>
,
when they host
·
..
.
·
indiffl~'Yiir°~ftley's
'
~C~
~
ts
·
1
.
;.;nto
•
ili~icijioci.M01
.
rf}~~~4~
L
!1
.;.;
fl,
.
~~
.
~!-l~!g
.
2
,
~t
·
1
~!•
~~~~~~
by
.
THOMAS
RYAN
\.
.·,
., .
.
yard
f
in
'
,
hf~
)
h:re'¢
)
Ye~
i'.s::'
'
~
t
•·
~y~n
,
:
played be~ter
.:;:/
l1ie
:
•
{)~a-
:
foxes
.
caught a
.
big break
in
_
t11~ir
.
..
..
·:·
a
.
road defeat they suff~r~d
.
last-
.
.
.
}
.
ma~hng of t11~
.
~t
_
:.P
.
e~~sf~
.
i
t
:
;
·
.,
.
~1~
,
p~es,
,
as
.
,
~e
.
· ~e'."-'.
J
o~
,
:
1?4
·
<
11C>~~7
;
~)~Q,
c
~
.
~9Jc~,
;:,
N!e
.
o
_
~~t
-t
~~~1{!h~~f~
o
f;9
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.
5~W.~
.
!D:11
/\.
tent1,o,n
i
W~~gllo
,
u
~
f#~<:s,~on;
..
cgck~
r
~
:
:.
·
i/
:,·:;_;;:::,::>:
\/
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:•
;z>/
:
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.
ff
.
qio~e
s
·
~~gh~
·:
c
.
ompt
.
e
c:
.·.
·•·
•
,
~l~~pg
t~f}i§
~,
9
5~~f
.
~~ e
_
n
:
~
·
•t
l,!~\~tll,a:~~g~
~
~
¥an~t
;
~IW~:ve
·
·
•
·
··•
•
..
Bµt,
:
with
:
!9-f
-'
Hoy as
:
loss
:
.
to
•
.
• .
. ·
.
.
· · ,
The
'
Red Foi·offense rushed
.
·,
tions; an average of24
:
.
25 yards
·
.
tire
game
;
·
,
·
: :.:
.
'';;-
:-,/
''i
f
:
:p
~
.
;_,:,
-<:
':
.
the ti~-bi'eak~r on ~eit side by
·
·
Faid:'ield the seasori has become
:
·
.
for3
·
QO yar~s
,
ang'tbre\v
fQ
r
i1
f
::
per
com,ple
.
tiq~
;
.:
·
:
\i:
:
.'.•//
'
';,>°)
·
'
:
'.,
¥~s
f
i
quid.
)
_i
~
y
e.:
ii
~
~
:
.
~
t
fr
\ /
way
i
<>f th~ir
/
29
;.
17
~
~ii
f
over
·
revitalizcil
,:'.
,
.-'.: ~·
-
.
•··
·
• ·.
·
:
'
.
·
...
··
..
.
_
·
.
more
;
while Aclanioyurl<alocked
•··.'
:
:
:
.
r
Traiilaglini~~
::
tw
·
9
;.J_
>
.
igges
f
.
Trrs(s,hUt(?'uy'>f
J
~98
;
i
(
J.l°'~for
,
~
.:
'
Faiifieldl~t~attjr&,ty
,
.
'
-·
:
.
·. :,
.
.
• .
'
Confereiic~
·
leade
r
Duquesne
.
.
·
~ s
;
chpo!
.:
recordJ~~r fi~id
·
g~~¢
•.
'
'.
~
g
nipletio_iis
_
Vf
e,~e
;
~
an1~~~1i
f
d
.
:
.·
·;
51
:.
y~fl
pun.
(
t
e~tj
\
~
t
~o~ho
i ..
....
Me~~Nl~
~
Jh
~
.
P~~co~}(~
r
eH
.
·.
st~l must play
_
fairfi~~d.
:
tllis
. .
.
~;sen.i9~
.
c<>11xertec1 fi~lcl,
g~~~
.
·
~round
·.
A,d~~o~11;r.l<l:l
f
!ie.lcl
Ill{)~
~~s_tc;rSyl~~~
(
¥.We.r
.
.
:
to
0
::
2
:
1(1
tit~
c<>n
_
ferenc~ •
.
.
with
.
wf!ek,,m.ct _Ge.orge~<>\VD, i
_
n
~~
·
~9
,'
·
~7:
/
~d30
rar~i11~e
~ee:
:-
.:.
S?als
,
]~~~~Miirstp'.'
·
.·
•
thatgayf ;St-J?et~~
.
l~c~JI~nt
·
::
G~orge,t9w
.
n~
c
.J?
,
1:1
:
9U~~ne,
·
.
aQd · weeks .
•..
1-'J
_
tho~~both
~~
·
~t .
.
onc:t quarter cllld then dn~lecl
_:
_
~
,/
'
!
~·
.
2-.1
Metro A!}!lflbc A,~~Hc fieldpos1ti<>n
lll
.
t!ie.f o ~
~uar-_ Fairfield
~J
l~ft,~~J9~1r_sched-:
hpme,}1e~the~ 1s a sure w~ ~or
39-y~der in ~~.third,
_
qmµter.
·
· ·
~()µt:erence) ppened
.
~~s~A11ng
.
.
tef•
.
fres~111an
,
P:!~9~~1f ker . 11le,
.
.
. ,
:
,- _- ,
ii
.
,-
:
·
·
.
·,
.
·..
.
.
the Dukes.
, .
.
,·
.
,
·
.
.
He missed~ #yard
_
~tteinpt
.·
.
··
in
,
t!te
·
first qu~er 'Yhe1
f:
ll~
.
.
..
·
M1ckeyHulse
.
l>Qo~~
.
af9,
:-
yard
·
·
..
Ne,xt
.
up
.
fo~the.l\:fari~t Red
..
.
.·
.
.
~
be~een
_
those twog~es,
·
1
.
ater
.
in
·
the ~ird quarte~
,
~at
.·.
f<J~nd wid~ receiv~r
-
'fii.µ
K:<l~~~
.
fiJld go~,.thefi~t opps col
,
le-
.
.
.
F<>x:es ateJJ:te
:}
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.
lohn
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rR~d
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·
sh
.
ould t
.
h~ Dukesj>lay? ·
would have ~n~e longes~ir1
:
.
.
on a
:
2~
.
-,yard to~cM0~11 p~s
· ·
g1ate~I• to ge
.
t
t!ie.
~~a<!9C~
.
·
;
Sto~. _The Red St?wi
~ill
~
· .
1b.eM:¥is~ Red i:'<>xes .
.
A
.
per-
·
·
~choo! historx, but}till beca,me
·
:
!o giv~ the
R~
:
f
oxe~ -~ Cl,lrly
·
on
_
:
the
,
~0.3!°d,'
:
.-
The folle other
.
:
CQ~~
g ~tg Poughk~p~1e af~r
.
.
feet oppo~ni
.
tyJo
.
r r-.,:anst to·
thefirst,ReclFoxevertokickfout
·
7:-0 l~(l .
.
yttemjhe thit:d quar-
·
bng}lt SJ)(?t
~~
tJl~
day :{or
~r
·
.
g~ttmg
.
a severe bea1:t
.
ng at the
catch Duquesn~ n~ping after
in on
.
e garrit_!. He also score,d tlte
·
te.r wit~
.
Marist
,
µp
y>-0,
P~ters
~~~
~e pi~y O~)~mor h
.
ands of the I)uqu~11e Qu.kes
·
.
coming off o(what should
be
a
mo$r points ever in on~ game
·
'fl]Ullaglirri,!t8(>~ed up with-Joe
.
~1de rece1ve1)el
.
an1P9.bte. Po-
.
last week .
.
_
St: John's lost th~t tough game agairl
_
st the Stags
forMaristkickerwith 12, \)eat-
_
Calabna o
.
n a 5~
-,
yard tq11c~~
·
ltte caught five pas~es f°.r 5
.
4
contest 31-3 m fr~nt
.
of their while looking forward to play-
·
·
ing the old markofl I.
dow11 play to stake the
_
Re!}
yards. .
home crowd, and will no doubt
ing Georgetown a week later .
.
Leading ~sher J.J. ~He11ran
_
J:o~es to a 26-0
1~4
:
_Calabri~
. With ~e win, 1!1e Red Foxes
be
Jooking ~orward
t~
turni~g
However, not every \'ery good
for 124yards on 19 ca¢es and
finished tQ.e d~y_ with four
.
·
SIXlQ.,stnuwitaga._1~st~L P.eters,
~eir seas~n around with a wm
team goes to J>ennsylvania'and
Dave Spinato .chipped in with
catches for a whoppmg total 138
:
.
Man st st~yeq
.:
~v1tJt
m
a
·
half over
Manst:
·
.
,;
beats
the Dukes on their home
6l yards on the ground
:
Allen
yards and a touc;:hdown.
.
_
·
game of ~~quesne and Canisi~s
.
Mari~t, in~ch lil~e th~ydid with
field, and it is still a question as
went
.
over the 1,600
.
yard m~k
As well as the Red
.
Fox offt:n~
-
.
.
.
,
·
both of
·
Whom ~tand at 2".'0 m !11eFairfield Stags
,
will
be
look-
to whether Marist is even a good
for his career and now h~ 1,626
playe4, the defe.nse may have
the MAAC standings. The
R~~
mg to take rev~nge at home for
team
yet
·
·
•
•
;
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••
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:'Ii
.
52.3.1
52.3.2
52.3.3
52.3.4
52.3.5
52.3.6
52.3.7
52.3.8
52.3.9
52.3.10
52.3.11
52.3.12
52.3.13
52.3.14
52.3.15
52.3.16
,.~.mu.C'.i ,.,._
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Coret_t~/ Scott.
)<i~g
:i~ ,
· · · speak of husband's
ieg~cy -·· ·
·
: ;;9n
0qt:
?,,)g{~: .: •
·
Has Maristmet your•
expectations as a
Freshman
thusfar?
YES:
90%
NO
7%
DON'TKNOW:
3%
men.
,>t
:
frSPORts·, ..
· -~~;1
~~J~;rt~~:
;· d
in a row after:
ason start,
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·•
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OCTOBERl;-1998
Disabled firid
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10DAY:
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hi:65°
lo:55°
Community ................. 2
Features ..... ; ...............
s·
A &E ....................... 11
Opinion ...................... 9
Sports ......................... 16
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fjfty)'~s hl'te
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tli~
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war
.
~rim~
.
.
·
·
tnals
)
it Nuremherg soughho
brinf
(
the perpetrators of the
.
Holo~aust to justice, the
·
inter-
.
natioiial
.
community continues.
to seek methods
·
.
.
·
to
,·
enforce
iritemation law andactdress war
:
Club Bulletins
'
.
.
crimes.
.
.• ·.·.. . .·
.
.
>
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·
-
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.
.
·
•
·
·
On Oct. 5 and
6,
Bard College
t
t
&fohat
·
oiitreach
·
·
.
will hold
'
a
.
confereri2e
/
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.
.
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·
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.
.
.
.
. .
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9
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l1io~itie
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Needs
.·
enthu
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s1ast1c and ded1-
.
ecutingWar Crimes Fifty Years
~
·
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catedstudents
_
to
,
~
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part-ofthe
_
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Global Outr~ch t~~
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· .
Statesmen, historians
;
inilitary
.
•
·
·
.
;
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Thos
.
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,
w,~.?
-
,
\Vish
,
t?}~r.ye:
. .
experts,
'
andjc,urn~Iists wiil ex-
.
Where:Mexic«>'Cify&'Jluerto
·
amine· the legacy of
·
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.
Rico /·
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·
..
,
I·
[
;zt .
.
Nuretrtber~
trialsi~
the context
·
When:
Spring
Bi-eak
,5 ;:
of current mtemation
.
a1 efforts
.
Sponsored by Camp
.
us Minis~
.
to comqat and
:
prosecute war
tryandPublicPrruds
.
.
.·
crimesahd crimes against
ht1-
·
contact: Lina
Riv~
~Si36
·
··
.
·
·
manity in Rwanda
;
Cambodia
,
· .
.
Meeting:
·
S~day,
OctU,
at
Sori~h Afri~a, the forpier Yugo
~
8
;m.
in
the Cha
,
el
·
slavia and else
,
whe
_
r~
.
.
:
p
p
·
The conference
wdl reassess
Student
Programming
Council
·
Nuremberg's legalistic ap-
proach
~o
conflict resolution in
the post-Cold War World.
(914}
575-
7404.
.
.
,.
,
i'
__
.
•.
Coretta Scott
King,
.
the w.idpw
..
of Martin Luthei:: IGng k
/
is
coming to Marist College
bri
Monday,Oct. 5,
at7:30 p.m;in
·
the
James
J.
McCann Recre-
ation Center.
King's nie~sage
is one
of
s_ocia
_
ljustice .
.
Tickets
,,
l)Yeeken~
Weatller
Se~uti(yBrie~s
-
·_
:
·
·
·
_
,
.
·
:
.
.
,
:
:·
,
.•.<
'
'.
·
Security recovered
a
~hairin
..
.
Ch~paghat biker~ck.None
.
of
Chanipagnat Hall Mcmda.y
~ .
the stolen.property ~aslobked.
;
morning afterit wasfound to be
•
.
.
:
-
are avaUable
at th,e
Office of
College
Activities
_
.
AU
,
tickets
arfgeneral acln,ussiop;J:qrti<::~et
·
sales and event information, call
College
Actirliies :at:(914) 575"-
3279.
-
·
.
·
partly cloudy.
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.
5fj°
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..
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ptJr.!lYrj<il<JTJdy
hi:
-
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·
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.
missing.
The
blue kcliner'rock
-
Secllrity
:
was
-
~Otified
:
or
t~o
;
ing c~afr valued
at
$309 \vas threatening
'
phone
'
calls
·
fr9m
:
stolen during the weekend from
off
.:.
carop11s this p;tstweek.
·
_ ·
·
alounge intheStudentCenier.
Security confiscated six cans of
Three reports of bike theft 6JetandabottleofSambucaii:
· were,reported last
week.
A bike
'.
quor
Wednesday;Sept·23:
·
•
rt
1:
:
appraised
'
at
$JOO
\.V'as
.
taken
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4
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=
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:
·
•
.
,·
.
. . ·•
.
·
Sponsored by di~ Student Pro-
gramming Council.
.
lo:
43
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41°
lo:
48°
.
S~urc
e:
http:Jliv1
11
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weather.com
.
<f'
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e
Wea
i;rth
a~
ti;}) .
,
fron
\
aDoµnellyHJH bike ra.ck,
·
.
A
fire
ajartn
blared atll :30
p.m.
.
,
a;wheel apptai~ec1
.
·
a
f
$75
,
and
·
a
.
Friday,
.
Sept25, in
'
Gregory. No
·
bike °frame
~
apprais~d ar $3
,
50
/_
,
cause
_
was found.
·
,
_ ·
,:
~;{
.
·
Community
·
Not~s
·.
Sept. 25:.
No~-1."
'
i<evi1
f
.
·
•
McCurdy's Haunted
:
Marisiori
.
Oct. 314:
.
CivifWarEn~p-
.
•
~
Fright
'l:'raiL
.
Bowci<>.~n
\J,~
aj:k
~
.
·. •
inent.;·
Sat11uel F.lkMorse
His-
Shaef
e -
Road;
·
wappingers
.
·
fu.ric
·
site,R
t
9,~
Po11gllkeepsie.
Fa)1s:J\npourof thrills
as
guest
s
-
''Dutc:hess
G
_
ou~ty
~QJdiers,C:,o
.
exped~nc:e
-
special
-'.
eff ec~
.
'
and
' ..
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·
w.es~
!_
'.fhe
)
59thYo
r,
k Regimerit
live
::
~
~tOf!i:
:-
,
A Hudson
.
·
Valley
,
.·
:
in 'fullallQma, Tenness;y'
~
,,
Ex
~
tradition
/'
·
<
,
.
,
_
:
•
· :
·
..
.
periericefir.st~hand the Iife
_
of
_
a
Fri. &Sat. 6-ti
p~m.
.·.
_
..
.
.
.
CivjlW,ar soldier andfamity
>
Suil.l-5
p.m~ aml
~9
p
~
in .
.
·
.
•
$3:
:
JQa.m.-4p
;
m;
· .
·
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$12/:idults;$6/imder
.
12
;
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297-2288
.
.
.
....
:/ ·
·
.
.
•
·Jf•ypu
··::
qre.
·,
:x
n
.
t~r2
· ested
·
in
-
submit"'
·
During th
.
e 1998-99
academic
year
Whether you Jive off campus or not
consideration for the good peopte of the area,
In their
homes
and in their neighborhood,
Is important.
The Marist tradition includes consideration
for
and
mitment to the well bein of our local
communitie
•
nabbed
.
from
~·;
a
'.
.
:
- '
.\
'.
--Compiled by S
t
oit
.
N_
e
ville
-:
-:
-_.-:
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-
~
-
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7
•
·
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_
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~-
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Looking
·
for Mart~t
-
students
:
fo
.
model
fqr
the 13th
Annual
Siiver
N
·
eedle Fashion
·
:
. ·
-
Show and
Awards 011
Thursday,
April 28, 1999
·
.
'
'
.
'
.
Requirements:
He~ht 5'9'
..
.
.
Weight
proportioned to height
·
Size
6-8
Onfy
TYROUTS ARE
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1411
a.m.
IN THE NELLIEGOLLETTI THEATER
INFORMATION-EXTENSION 2124
I
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PAGE3
Jl8irte~119,t~m~
:
n(!Wneighbor
.
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.
by
KRISfINABRITO
·
StaffWriter
Ma,rist will soon be getting a
new neighbor.
.
·
.
·
.:
·
According to City
·
of
·
·
Poughkeepsie Town Planner,
WilsonShook,
a
Home Depot
and Super Stop
'
&
,
Shop wiII
movejnto
.
the
'
Mid..:Hudson
Business Park.
.
.
The site, rumored to· firs'i°be a
.
WaJ:-Mart,
is being demolished
and brought up to
:
code
:
.
.
"The buildings use has been
.
.
drastically reduced and
.
needs
'
to be,_brought
_
up t,o
.
new build~
.
ing standards," he said .
. ·
.:·
'
According to Shook,
.
wts
'
tern
Publishing owned the building
and abandoned ii:10 years ago.
Since the abandoned building
will now be,in use, there are
.
con-
cerns about how
.
these new
businesses would affect the
Marist community.
Chasin Engineering Company bought the Mid-Hudson Business Park.
scheduled to be complete in 1999.
"We inet with Marist and the
Department of Transportation
(DOT) to discuss important is-
sues," Shook said.
Roy Merolli, executive vice
president of Marist College,
said there was concern about
how the new businesses would
affect the campus and Route 9.
"We spelled out our concerns
at themeeting and I thirikthat
.all
parties were cooperative," he
said.
There was also aconcem with
preserving t~: aesthetics of
-
'
.
.
'
,
DISABLED: Seem""
Route 9 and the campus, ac-
cording to Mero
Iii.
"We asked that the environ-
ment development of Route
9
be
reflective in signage and land-
scaping of the new businesses,"
he said.
·
·
· ·
There is'also a difference in
appearancl to southern por-
tions of Route
9,
as opposed to
the northern portions, he said.
,
It
is this difference that they are
·
trying to preserve.
Besides ·the aesthetics of the
area;
-
traffic was also a big con-
cern.
Jeff Kane; director at Chasin
JEngineering,
said traffic w:as
.
a
.·
:<o,
..
_
:.
rify
escorts increased
·
.,
.
.
.
.
.
toaidstudents' needs
·
'we have1i't
.
made
·
.•.
continued from
pg.
1
.
C'
• •
any specific provi-
:
acce.ss to the library was always
.
acknowledged, but
:
a plan
.
was
never put into place until three
weeks ago.
JohQGildard, coordi
.
nator of
Human Re
-
sources and ADA
coordinator, said his job is to
look into access situations like
.
this.
Gildard said that as a tempo-
rary solutfori,
·
the curretfr es~ort
servid~·provided by security
,.
will be broadened:
·
·
.
..
~1f
sjust expanded its ~ssion
.
to include people with
_
disabili..:
ties," said Gildard.
However, Director of Safety
and Security, Joseph
Leary,
said
assisting students
.
with djsabili-
·
ties across the street is
·
not done
as a habit.
.
Leary
said Security has been
instructed to assist one visually
impaired student, but that the
student had been receiving as-
sistance from Security for a few
years,
.
''We haven't made any spe-
cific
provisiC>ns for other handi-
capped
·
students, and we are
not responsible for their assis-
tance,"
Leary
said.
He said the administration
feels when these students leave
college and are out on their own
they will not have this help.
Leary
said the administration is
mainstreaming them.
This is a temporary solution,
sions for other
handicapped stu-
dents, and we are
not responsible for
their assistance'
Joseph Leary
director
safety and security
he said, and security has not
received much infonriation con-
cerning the issue.
"Security will do what we are
instructed," Leary said. 'Those
instructions have not been
forthcoming
.
"
The new West Cedar housing,
and possibility of more expan-
sion across Route 9 could also
potentially be a problem for stu-
dents with certain disabilities.
Kalyoussef said that West Ce-
dar was not a housing option
for her this year because of her
problems crossing the street.
"I would be isolated ove~
there," she said.
Cooper said
.
as long as hous-
ing and the academic buildings
·
are accessible, the college is
within the ADA regulations.
Gildard said this is a safety is-
sue that the students must ad-
dress themselves.
concern arid was considered in
the modeling.
"We are concerned about traf-
fic, but there is adequate room
on Route
9,"
Kane said.
There has al~o been a complete
traffic study of the area. In or-
der to improve the q:affic situa-
tion, th
·
e traffic signals will be
modified and some new turn ar-
rows may be added, he said.
Although traffic is a concern,
Shook said, the site is in a good
location.
"It is accessible to a large
population of the City of
Poughkeepsie that will support
it," he said.
Although many more city resi-
dents are expected to come to
the area, there is rio threat to the
safety of the students, accord-
ing to Merolli.
"The people that come will be
there to shop," he said.
There will be trees and bushes
that will act as a barrier near the
businesses as well as serve aes-
thetic purposes, according to
Mcrolli.
The Home Depot is scheduled
to be complete the first quarter
of 1999, while the supermarket
is scheduled for the second
quarter of 1999, according to the
Chasin µngineering Company.
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OCTOBER 1
2
1998
-PAGE4
Stained
gl~,
new.pewS
pad
Of Cllllpelfac~Iift
by
THEA CIMMINO
Staff Writer
Marist's beautiful and serene
place of worship is about to be-
come exquisite. ·
.
·
Marist plans to renovate the
Our Lady Seat of Wisdom
Chapel sometime within the next
year. The renovations should ·
be completed by Fall 1999. The
enhancements that will be made
are part of the new library con-
struction project.
The preliminary cost for the
· project is $500,000 and will eri~·
tail refinisgimt'the pews,'replac- .
ing the carpets, revamping the
heatirig andiventilati<>n system
and renovating the ro·of.
·
. services or masses, but there
. -. are: alternatives if the. problem
arises.
' ."We can do services at the
field- house, the theater or resi-
,.
dent facilities," he said.
.
Marist has also taken .som~
steps to avoid certain problems.
"We haven't booked any wed-
dings until· renovations are
· complete," Cox said.
.. According
to
Cox there should
. be a tentative schedule for the
re~ovations· within· the next
mo~th.·
'
··
·
The Marist Brothers builtour
Lady Seat of Wisdom Chapel in
1952 .. Accordingilo"lfim Massie,
the chapel is
a 'very
unique
building.
Roy Merolli, executive vice . Renovations to the Our Lady Seat of Wisdom Chapel are priced at $500,000 and are scheduled to be
president, said the exterior of the completed by Fall 1999. the Chapel was built in 1952 by the Marist Brothers.
·
"The chapel is a historic build-
ing in its own right," he said,
"It's one of the first chapels in
the round in the country. The
Marist Brothers were about ten
years ahead of their time."
chapel will have the same ap-
pearance as the new library.
"Probably some walkways wiil
change in the front," Merolli
said. ''The building's exterior
. lighting may change. There is
even a possibility · the steeple
may · be lowered to keep · the
chapel in perspective with the
height of the new library!'
Tom Daly, director of Physical
Plant, said the colored plastic
windows currently in the chapel
·.will be replaced with real stained
glass windows.
Daly also said the bells will be
moved.
.
"We're looking to stained
glass windows," he said.
:''The
bells are being relocated to the
roof, soy'ouwon;t see them."
Tim Massie, Marist's chief re-
lations officer, said the new en-
. .
.
... .
Photo courtesy
of
Katy
Silbcrger
This picture is of the former Fontaine
bbildirig
a~ it Was b~ing
destroyed this sumer to make
room for
the 11ew library. ·
FACULTY:
Stud'ent cdnta.ct
easier,. work productivity ba.rcler
... continued from
pg.
I
Th<>mas Wermuth, assistant
professor of history, said the
location may be ideal being at
the heart ofthe busiest part of
campus, but the surroundings
are not satisfactory.
''This move will have implica~
tions. It will be hard to get work
done," he said. "We are always
out in the open, making contact
for the students easier, but it will
also impact our productivity."
Sue Gronewold, assistant pro-
fessor of history and Asian
Studies, has returned to Marist
from a year
in
Asia on sabbati-
cal. She said she is optimistic
about the situation.
She said there is a new unity ..
between the staff working
in
the
Student Center.
"We
are more together here,
more adhesive," shesaid.
Groriewold :also said the
Marist coordinators did a good
job converting the old fitness
center into office space.
"With
the space provided,
they did well and it is all for a
good cause," Gronewald said.
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hancements will complement the
chapel and thecampus.
"We' re looking for a more clas-
sic look in a contemporary
building," he said .
It
is necessary to redesign the
entire back of the chapel since
it was previously c,pnnected to
the library. The designing ar-
chitects for the project is Perry
Dean Rogers and Partners from
•;
Boston. Pavarini, the construc-
tion company building the li-
brary, will do the chapel reno-
vations as well.
There is not yet a set sched-
ule for the project, but construc-
tion is expectedto begin in late
spring and into the summer.
Gerald Cox, vice president and
dean for student affairs, said the
project should not interfere with
. Gerald Cox said the building
is an important part of Marist's
history .
"The chapel is one of the most
significant buildings on. our
campus," he said, "We're look-
ing forward to enhancing the
interior and the exterior."
· - A L :
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I
. OCTOBER l,1998
Coretta Scott
King to speak of
husband's legacy
' :· '. "" ·~ J. ,- '
byiµ.TRINA
Sudan said she· thought the
King founded The Martin
FUCHSENBERGER
Staff Writer
students would benefit from the
Luther King, Jr. Center for Non-
program.
violent Social Change, Inc. in
"It
will be a living piece of his-
Atlanta, Georgia and is also the
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. is
tory because people will be able
Chief Executive Officer. The
coming to Marist- through the
to listen to the widow of Dr.
Center was established as a
words of his wife:
Martin Luther King, Jr. speak,"
memorial to Dr. King, and pre-
Coretta Scott King will hold a
she said. "Listening to her first-
serves the legacy of what the
program called "The Dream of hand experience will be benefi-
human rights movement accom-
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr." at the
cial for students."
plished under his leadership.
McCann Center on Oct 5 at 7 :30
Cassandra Giarusso, a board
After receiving her Bachelor
p.m. In her program she will dis-
member of the student program-
of
Arts
degree in music and edu-
cuss the ongoing civil rights · ming council, thinks King'.s pro-
cation at Antioch College, King
struggle and some of the roles
gram will make an impact on
went on to study as a concert
she has played since her
Marist College students:
singerat the New England con-
husband's death.
"It wilrmake [Marist College]
servatory of Music in. Boston.
Heather Sudan, president of more worldly and it
will
decrease
There she met Dr; King who was
the student programming coun-
ignorance," she said.
studying for his doctorate in
cil and vice president of student
Giarusso said she thinks it is
theology at Boston University.
programming for the student. important for students to go to
They then got married and had
government association, said
King's program..
four children.
King was chosen t<> come
:to
"I
think th~ progr.am, will in-
King occasionally substituted
Marist because she sends out a
crease awareness and not only
for her. husband during his ca-
good ~essage,to"students.
, _is the. progrlµlljnt~resting,'but ·. r,eer,,aFa speaker and also ap-
' "We\vanted to have
'£i1ei:'bii-~ii
ii,tziJ!!~ticatJ.oriaj:l}fy.,~il:fi,~lp:!!Je:: iP~&/g0a1>,,a: _speaker• l?efore
with a message of social justice?·
·
Marist commuriity gfow,''.'.she · '-' chtitch/civic; college, fraternal
she said. "We felt her message
said. · ''It's something'that you · and peace groups throughout
would be pertinent to the com-
c~m tak.e away from college
the United States and beyond.
munity as well as Marist stu-
that's not pai:t of the curricu~
She performed a series of Free-
dents.:• .
lum."
dom Concerts, which were
fa-
History
w
i-t-.h·-
·
height
byRICHSHUTiqN
Staff Writer
Dormifones .are a necessary
element at Marist College.
One of those important ele-
ments is Champagn_~t Hall.
Champagnat Hall was built in
·
1964 and named after Marcellin
Champagnat, a· Frenc~ priest
who was the founder of the
Marist Brothers in 1817.
With nine floors inhabited by
students, Champagnat exists as , -
the tallest building at Marist
College. Its height enables it to
occupy students of all four
years, freshmen to seniors. The
dormitory houses ov~r
400
stu-
dents.
PAGES
Photo courtesy of Tim Massie
Coretta Scott King will hold a program, "The Dream of Dr.
Martin Luther King, Jr." Oct. 5 in the McCann Center at 7:30p.m.
vorably reviewed. These con-
tin boards and videos will be
certs com.b_ined pr()se and po-
displayed. Sudan said there are
etry .. narrationy.iith musical se-
many people who do not know
de4fipn~:~t9.,w~~P~t,~e.,history
0
•
..
aJota!JoJ,Jt Coretta Scott King.
of the movenient'lier husband
.· "There's.a
fot
of
people
that
led, aswell as raise funds for
don'tknow who
[King] is
and
the cause.
they shouldn't be afraid to ask
In· order to educate students
about her," Sudan said.
about King, "informative bulle-
Cin:lc
pho!o/Bric
Casazza
be a very social atmosphere;"
he said. "In fact, many sopho-
mores request Champagnat so
that they will be socially con~
. tent. It's size and large variety
of students contributes to
this."
Junior James Rusch said the
dorm is his favorite.
"I love it," Rusch, who has
lived in Champagnat for three
years, said. "Champagnat has
greatRA'sandgreatRD's. The
large amount of students there.
makes it a very sociable dorm."
Brian Lacher, a second-year
resident of Champagnat, said
he likes the convenience of the
dormitory.
"One terrific thing about
Champagnat Hall is the fact
that it is connected to so many
different places on campus,"
he said.
"If
you live in
Champagnat, you are able to
check your mail or even go to
the cafeteria without having to
go outside."
Lacher said he likes the view
he gets from his room.
There are also other, nonstu-
dent residents of Champagnat
including three Marist Brothers,
Brother Richard Rancourt,
Brother Joe Belanger_ and
Brother Frank Kelly. · ·
Built _in 1964, Champagnat Hall is the tallest building on campus. Champagnat was named
after Marc"ellin Champagnat, a French priest who was the founder of the Marist Brothers .
"I also enjoy living on the
seventh floorof Champagnat,"
he said. "I have the most beau-
tiful view of the Hudson River
from my window."
With its grandiose height,
sociability and convenience,
Champagnat Hall is not merely
The building is also the loca-
tion of Special Services, the of-
fice
geared towards aiding stu-
dents with disabilities. In addi-
tion, Champagnat is physically
linked to the campus' post of-
fice and student center, making
it one of the most convenient
residence halls at Marist Col-
lege.
Brother Frank Kelly said he
likes the sociability he sees
among
students
within
Champagnat.
"Champagnat Hall is set up to
-another campus dorm, but also.
a reason why so many stu-
dents are enjoying their stay
at Marist College.
/
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OCTOBER 1
7
1998
THE CIRCLE
Features
--
-
Students ID.ake
·
friends
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
·
.
-·.
.
on Intentet chat
groups
by
ELIZABEl'H CARRUBBA
Staff Writer
Meeting new people is as easy
as a click of a button.
Internet chat rooms seem as
though they are becoming a
more popular way for college
students to communicate.
They offer the opportunity to
talk with new people from all
over the world and also keep in
touch with distant friends with-
out having to pay phone bills.
From age
·
and location, to life-
style and hobbies, there are chat
rooms designated for every
topic and type of person imag-
inable.
The Internet is also a place
where some people are meeting
·
their significant others.
Chat rooms are accessible for
college students because they
are not limited to America On-
Line users. Many of the search
engines found on
.
the World
Wide Web have chat rooms that
anyone can talk on, even with-
out downloading the software.
Lisa Douglas, junior biology
major, and her roommate, Dawn
Catino, junior chemistry major,
·
said they frequently chat on
Excite, which is the same as the
·
search engine, Webcrawler.
They said they
_
usually chat
about once a week in the room
titled, "20ish,'' and meet many
·
people who are also in college.
"Every now and then, I'll talk
to one ofmy friends from home.
We'Hpick a time to meet on a
chat line," Douglas said. "It's a
nice way fo talk to friends that
you
.
don't get to call on the
phone."
Douglas said she started chat-
ting last year and did not know
anything about it at first. She
said now she
·
could see chat
rooms being a large part of how
we will communicate in the fu-
ture.
.
.
.
"It
seems like everyone I know
chats now,'' she said.
Catino, Douglas' roommate,
said when they first started chat-
ting, the
-
maximum amount of
people on-line was about 5,000.
"Now, there are about 15,000
people on at any time of the
Time Check regroups
by
TARA SULLIVAN
-
·.
StaffWriter
The fall semester means re-
growth for Madst's male
accapella group; Time Check.
Due to the departure of six
members because of graduation
and internships, the remaining
·
members
·
of the group, sopho-
mores Graig Corveleyn, Chris
Yapchanyk, and Ryan Kessler,
have spentthe past few months
searching for new music
-
and
new members.
·
1ime Check
was formed in 1995
by former Music
.
Department
chair Mark Lawlor as
a
group
featured in his Choral Singing
Ill
class. The group performed
at
-
the dedication of t
_
he Nelly
Goletti Theatre, and received
rave reviews
.
from those in at-
tendance. Beca~seoftbis, they
•
decided to audition for members
and branch off on their own.
The group tooko11 the name
:
.·
Full Throttle
Pop,
and spent the
.
·
next year establishing them-
selves as a fan favorite perform-
ing at Marist Singers concerts,
as well as 'functions on their
own. Last year, the group, made
up of mostly seniors, changed
its name to Time Check, took on
three new members, and
achieved its greatest success to
date, the recording of their own
CD.
"Fifteen Minutes Late", Time
Check's
first CD, had promising
sales, and gave the group the
popularity and exposure it
needed. Members of Time
Check started doing concerts all
over campus, and every time
drew a larger and larger crowd,
perfonning covers of popular
songs such as The Longest
Time
and Brown Eyed Girl.
·
.
,
·
Atthe end of the spring
·
se-
.
niester, five_
Qf
di¢
original mem-
.
bers graduated; arid
:
one
,
went
•.
off to
.
intein;iII
'
W~shington,
D.C.; leaving the three remain-
ing members, all freshmen at the
time, to rebuild the group.
1ime
.
Checkriow
consists of
eight membeis, all of whom are
underclassmen.
··
Along with
Corveleyri, Yapchanyk, and
Kessler,
-
the
.•
new members are
·
:
Joel· Cordenner,
'
Burt. Vllale,
MiclmelSeaman, Chris Nelson
and MattMcCiellan.
-
.
·
.
.
Fre
.
shina.n
·
inembeLChri~
Nelson said he is really glad to
·
be
involvedwith the group.
.
-
.
"I
saw
·
~
videotape of
t!iem
at
.
orientation and thoughFthey
sounded really good so I wanted
to join,'' he said.
"Everyone
in
the group is really great and we
all get along very welL"
Corveleynsaid he h
_
as seen a
lot of progress among group
members.
"I was apprehensive at first,
but now we're really where we
·
want and
need
to
be/'
he said .
.
''I'in really very pleased with
where the group is."
He said the fact that the group
consists completely
of
under-
classmen-is also a plus, giving
them more time to work together,
·
·
-
and achieve
'
greater success.
According to (::orveleyn, it
may be a while before anyone
sees the new Time Check in con-
cert. The group is working on
new music and there is talk
about recording another CD in
Dec.1999. TimeCheckmayap-
pear
at a coffeehouse in Octo-
ber.
Corveleyn said whenever the
group does get to play he
guar-
antees it will be a good show.
''We're growing and have a
great sound," he said.
_
"Come
spring, we'll ~nock
.
people
over."
day," she said.
She said there
·
are a lot of
people who knock chatting, but
once they try it, it can be a lot
of fun and, addicting.
Catino_ said what she likes
about chatting is that it is easy
for her to be herself, it is easier
thari spending
_,
money on
·
· ·
phone bills, and shecis able to
get
.
reactions to what she has
said much faster than through
email.
·
Another positive point is she
can talkto people nationwide
and experieµce different cul-
tures.
·
·
·
·
Catino said she found it
funny
how people
~ill
write
fn
the way that they speak, so
someone from the South will
use differentexpressions than
someone from our area.
"I've been talking to one per-
·
son from Georgia for probably
over a year now," she said.
Douglas said most of the
people who she and her room-
mate have chatted with are nice
and similar to them
.
.
.
"They are down to earth
people and you do actually meet
tionships developirtf_over the
a lot ofnormal people," she said.
·
Internet because
'
people who
"Ies just a good way to ineet
chat getto know a lot about
people who
·
yo
_
u normally
·
eachotherovertiine.
'
wouldn't."
Many people have been told,.
•
·
Chat rooms can also bring
_
us
however, to be cautious of some
closer to home; Catino said she
of the people Who we chat with
recently met a person in a chat
over the Internet.
-
Both students
room who livesjn Hyde Park,
agreed it can be difficult to tell
and Douglas met a student from
what kind of person you
are
talk-
the Culinary Institute of ing to.
.
.
..
America who knows her friend
.·
'.'Limit giving
011t
last names
that also attends there.
arid personalinformation
_
:
to a
Catino said she thinks the
few people who you have
:
been
Internet and chat rooms are_tak-
chatting with for a long time and
ing over the elating services and
have exchanged pictures with,"
newspaper personal ads. They
Catino said.
both said they could
·
see rela-
.
.
NATIONAL
DfflRFSSION
GDAY.
Depres1ion ~
-
an
illness
an~
~ffeeti
_
ve
,
tr~tments
are available.
Look for our Information Table
in Donnelly
Sponsored
by
Marist College
Office of Counseling Services
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lx
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TH£r.CIR€L£
OCTOBER 1,1998
"
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PAGE7
Searching
the site$
·
http:/
/ww'Y-Ieland~s~nford.edu/g~oup/kl~g/
-
·
With the
'
am
val
o{
Coretta tion ~ontainifig documents writ-
.
:
~Cott King to Marist oh
Oct
:
5,
.
ten by'Kini
.
Some of the inore
.
you mightwant to
.
learn more :"familiar papers
"
ava1lable are
·
about hethiispand,
Dr:
Martin
"Lette{from
:
the B·irrninghani .
-Lu~erKing
'1i.
'
"
}ittp://
WWW•
.
Jail," the Address atMarch on .
·
Ielari.d.stanf~rd.edu/group/
Washington
,
(the "I Have
:
a
•
ki,nglis
a p
_
age
~
dedic;ited to the
Dream" speech;) and "I've Been
civil
rights activist's life
;
The
to the Mountaintop,''
,
King's
.
:
site
is '
_
The M~iri Luther King,
last sermon.
·
Jr. Papers ·Project at Stanford
Pictures chronicling his life
are
·
University,''
:.
sreatecl
by
also available for viewing.
·
Stanford University.
_
.
So click on to
http://www-
-
The site contains documents
leland.stanford.edu/group/
written by and about King dur-
king/
and learn about one of the
ing and aft~fJJis)ife,
,
most famous civil rights a
_
ctiv-
.
High!igh
,
ts of the page include
ists ofour time.
a biography section which con-
tains a general biography of Dr
.
King from his birth to his death
.
There is also a chronology of
his life, articles written about
him, and suggestions pf places
to go
·
for further information.
·
One can also click on a sec-
if
you havf! any suggestions
for_
this column
,
_
or would like
to write
.
a column, contact
.
Emily at extension 2429 .or
email HZAL .
.
Features Editor
Emily Kucharczyk wrote this
Searchitig the sites column
.
IIoroscopes
•
•
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You needto
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could get kind of un~
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c
·
ussion. Make it
·
easy
_
sibility.
~very
·
move.
,
This
'-•
·
·
for theother person to
:
.
...:
.
.-
..
·
-
.
byEMILYKUCHARCZVK
Features Editor ·
Kevin McCurdy cannot seem
-
to get away from horror.
·
McCurdy, creator of Bowdoin
Park's Haunted Mansion and
Fright Trail is opening
.
up his
imaginative world of horror from
now through Nov.
L
Admis-
sion is $12.
·
McCurdy, who also co-owns
Adventures Cafe in Hyde Park,
said his unusual avocation/oc-
cupation began during child-
hood.
·
"I
started making haunted
houses in the basement for my
friends when
I
.
was a kid, and
when
I
was
I 5, I
started doing it
at Bowdoin Park. It's just
be
-
come pretty much my
life,"
he
said. "So many people come
back year after year and now
they bring their kids, so it's sort
of a tradition lwant to keep go-
ing."
·
·
What people will be coming'
to see
-
this year is "Kevin
McCurdy's Haunted Mansion
and Horrorwood: The Backlot."
'the theme
ka.
continuation
.
of last year's 20th anniversary
celebration of Ravenscroft
Manor, his haunted Halloween
mansion in the park.
The story begins when a sci-
entist builds a machine to con-
tact the spirit world. A few of
the spirits are let out by mistake
in the mansion. New inhabit-
.
ants of the mansion discover the
poltergeists and bring in ESP,
Electronic Surveillance of the
Paranormal
,
to get rid of them.
Guests will
be
taken on a scary
tour through the house with
a
parapsychologist to capture a
ghost.
There is a surprise ending, but
it is top secret.
''Let's Just say a ghost may fol-
low you home," Mccurdy said.
_participants are also encour-
aged to act out scenes from
movies such as "Tremors,"
''Halloween," and "Alien" while
iaking a walk down the fright
trail.
One parody, "Screech Three,"
continues from where the movie
"Scream 2" left off.
"I try to make it as funny as I
do scary," he said.
After 21 years of holding the
event, Mccurdy said it is some-
times difficult to think of new
ideas .
"We always try to come up
with something nobody has
ever done before," he said.
He said he likes the techno-
logical edge the show has this
year.
'The interaction of video and
animation effects and the actors
and the people is just a really
Entily's Recipe of the
-
Week
Spanish Omelet
_
1 large onion
Uarge red pepper
2 medium cooked potatoes
2
tbsp. sunflower oil
4
eggs
·
Salt and pepper
2
tbsp
.
butter
Peel the onion and chop it finely
.
Slice the potatqes .
.
Dice
the pepper
.
Heat oil in frying pan. Cook onion and
pepper until soft. Add potato and cook for two more
minutes. Beat eggs in bowl. Stir in onions, peppers, and
potatoes, and season
.
Melt butter in frying pan.
_
Pour
.
mixture into pan. Cook over low heat for about 10
minutes, and then cook the top under the broiler. Serves
two to three.
•
•
talk to you about it; ev-
~CAPRICORN:
It's not
erything will go more
n
.
ecessarily going to be
smoothly
.
easy to get, but the
~0c~:
.
1~~;=:~~!
:~=~/;;u;t;~a~!
~
1s m Aquarius. This
to pass a test, but that's
placement
.
of the Moon
·
OK. Show .you know
c
_
an \;le a
little difficult
your stuff.
:
'·
•-":"
forcyoii
'.
sometimes.<Jt
·
.
.
AQUARIUS:
You're
can
:
mean
!hat you may
1..,. ,
~u,mng
6ut the
month
have to slow down just
ICJ'I,,
m
a good mood. You
a
little; That's OK
.
·
,
·
JdveachaHenge,andto-
You'II do better in the
day you're liable to find
long run if you do the
one: Don't worry. Even
homework instead of
·
a tough job is not
going
taking action right now.
to be impossible for
SAGITTARIUS:
Your
you.
.
brain should be work-
§
PISCES:
There's
a
lot
ing well. Use it to figure
of tal~ going on today.
out how you're going
If you put your ear to
·
to make your life tum
the keyhole, you'll learn
out just the way you
more than you even
want it.
-
Don't spend
wanted to know. Some
time wishing you'd
ofitcouldhelpyouplan
done something other
your next move, so it's
than what you're doing.
best to stay informed.
go~d experien~e," he said.
McCurdy promises to offer
participants a safe way to cel-
ebrate Halloween.
"Halloween has had a bad
connotation the past
10
years
with trick or treating," he said,
"so places like this have taken
the place
6f
trick or treating and
made it safe to go and have fun
on Halloween."
The Details:
Kevin McCurdy's Haunted
Mansion and Horrorwood: The
Backlot ·
The entrance is on Sheafe Road,
about one mile past Bowdoin
Park, Town of Poughkeepsie,
The park is open now through
Nov. I; Fri. and Sat 6 to 11 p.m.,
Sun.
6
to 9 p.m
.
; Thurs., Oct 29,
-
6
to
10
p.n1.
Admission is
$12.
Call 297-BATI or on the Web at
www.frightek.com for more in-
formation.
:
vVor{c[
!
Jamous
Psycliic
Famous
;
Psychic
To the Stars
over
30
years
experience
;
can help you obtain
£<JVe
9-[eaCtn .
W.ealtn
antfLucfr.
Telephone
DBYJd:Guardfno
anyt;lina•at-
·
(423)§0~f()~p
·""
-
•··t\609'Jl9'Hl
~l~~:11s1
TQ,messee
.
.
Fax: (423)609-0921
tittp://User.tcx.netf-psychlc
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Ms
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Giocondo Stilted;
.
'The
schoo
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and
·
the
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and career
·
.
.
.
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-
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seryices created
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<
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·
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·
auspkes oftheSchoolofl:ommunicatlons
.
,
_
Jyiaristclai111s to ~c,co.rn,modate s~udepts t9 the b,~st9ptp abilities. This is h
,
ard t~
.
and tile
Arts:
She
_
furt.h~r stated U1itE;mpl6ynjept
,
Pr~cticuII1
«
::'.
is
a
combinatioii of
·
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b<!Jie".~
.
co11~i<i~d11g
.
the
'
sfud_e11t
.
conce_rns
,
a,bout
.
the location
.
of the temporary
II~
:
two
existing
cRtjv
class~/
\
There is no combination course.';Emplciyment Practicum
.
brary:
:
Th~ n~\V library will defini
.
tely
.
~"'pand Marist' s acade
_
mic rescmrces, lmt for
·
(CRD V l 00)
is one:of.the two existing ccnir,se:s
'
: C~eer Planning and Decision Mak-
• .
the ti111e beiflg
~
the
,
temporary arrange111en~ are una~corn?dating.
.
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· .
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.
wa~ first dec1
_
ded the transitiq~ l_I!,rary
,
·
.
•
.::
Othehvise, Ms. Giocondo provided
a
concise, accurate
article
oithis e
x
citing
<
~~uld be i11
tll;~
~11s~men~ of the· Stude11tO,entt!r
:
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the e>ld Fitnes~ Center us,~cl
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ch~tige;
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People were skepttcalabo!Jt this arrangementbecause
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On
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MY 11l~l_lJC?n
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an alley in Po
,
ughkeepsie
w1th
poorlighting a~ross from a popular evening hangou(
·
-
·
.
'
'
•
,
~
.
·
·
·
.
.
-'-
M.H.Alderson
·
for
Poughkeepsie's finest Pedestrians
·
are
,
alsoless visible to cars,atnight whilt
.
-
~::::::::::::;:::;;;::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::=:
.
crossing Route
9.
Many
:
students have resorted .to driving,
.
especially if they are
-
•
"
h
alone and want i1pface to study or do researc.ti and do not have time during the day
·
·
· ·
·
.
·
·
.
· ·
·
·
.
to get <>Ver there.
'
Bi.It no sooner do you drive over and park your car in Beck Place
.
.
.·
TH£
-'
CIRCLE
·
and step outof
.
yotirvehicle, Securityis right behind
:
you
to
ticket your carfor
·
.
Aman
..
···•·
~Briffii~Y
.
·
l\fatth~~~
par
.
.
king in a I~
.
t to which yo
.
u
are
not as
.
sign
.
ed.,
.
.
.
.
.
.
M,
·
·
·
·
E'd"
·
·
·
·
·
&Jiio
.
r-in_~ch'ieif
·
anagmg
itor
.
Security has always discouraged students
.
from driving their cars across campus
.
during class times; but Marlst should make
an
exception f~r temporary library ar-
.
·
rangements
'.
~eek was expanded this
year
and there)s always more than enough
parking at any given time. Faculty have been told they can park in Beck to use the
library regardless of their parking sticker and I can not
see
how the students are
denied this same privilege.
.
.
.
An
argument from Manst's side is the fa~t that students would abuse this allow-
.
ance. This can be avoided if during the day and after the library closes Security can
patrol Beck and ticket cars that do not belong there. It is unfair, and unsafe for that
matter, to deny students the same right to use their car for such a purpose if it
provides them access to campus resources
.
· During evening hours, students are deterred from using the library because of the
parking situation. Security can not relax the parking enforcement when it comes
down to the safety of the students?
Amanda Bradley,
Editor-in-chief
BenAgoes
NewsEdiior
Patrick Whittle
A11s
& Enieriainment
TaraQuinn
Opinion Editor
•
EmilyKucharayk
Features Editor
.
.
Tho~Ryan
.
Sports
,
Editor
~
·
Toni
Constantino
Business Manager
Joe Scotto
G.
Modele Clarke
Photography Editor
Faculty Advisor
The Circle
is the student newspaper
_
ofMarist College, Poughkeepsie, NY.
Issues are published every Thursday.
·
.
.
.
·
We welcome leuers to the editor, club announcements and storyideas.
The Circle staff can be reached at
575-3000 x2429
or by email
.
at
HZAL.
mass of people will.. ~o.
~
'fhe
g<>vemment is a direct exten-'
sion of what we do as citizens,
. whether we vote cirdon't vote,_
make a national scene about
an
issue or decide to forget an is'-
. sue quickly. The science, or
mathematics, of it all comes into
• play when political scientists
·
and ad agents (might this be
· In
a very delibbrate atteriipt to
developing into the same dis-
steer away from Congress's ir-
cipline?) predict what issues
responsi~le
·
quest for impeach-
they can win a political battle
ment, I thoughtitmight be re-. with.'Itisanacademicwar;and
-
fi-eshing to aJso avoid any
wearlsimplypieceson·acom-
pressin_g P.oliti¢al
.()f
intema-
plicated game board.
:the original:ide;: I-proposed,
(which; inca~e:anyone under-
standably forgoi,-as· to break
avyay from everyday politics).
'It is·as
if
weturn our
noses up ti/''the idea
of comi!Jg down off
our pedes(al to plq,y
a dirty
little_
game
,with the UJJ,fortunate
rabble iha{_f orms
_around our feet. __ _
tional developments;,c'.(he nice
. · Clinton and Carvell won be-
thing aboutour goverrurient is :_ cause*ey·correctlyused their
that academicTeview is:hardly . "bitch{about the economy
I want to discuss_ soccer. My
necessary,';though e~tirely im:..
card." Of course, this was just
friends will tell you this is odd
portanf.if~e wish to unde~tartd
a trick of a};killfully played
because even tinder the most
our world,:~".
.
.. __
.
.,,
. . game~. becauseJliany academ-
strange of circumstances, I
_ ~7,er •<?r. notClniton
re-:
_ks
will
argue that protecting
would rarely decide to d~scuss
m~~
m 91'.fl~ts COlJlpletely our·<· our for~ign concerns first will
soccer.
Everyone has his-or
:d~!~ton ~-ci~tze°:s.,,~very Con-_
?
gu~antee a healthier domestic
her favorite sport, and it just
. gresslll~n wil,l a~?(J~usly ~b-
economy in the
future.'
Neglect
so happens that mine is Ameri-
serv~ _,p~U~.: tr:~tyfedict !which
of world concerns has created
can football.· Bu~ while
I
spent
_ ~~tc<>~~ i~-most favorable to its
. great world animosity towards
myjunior year in England, I be-_
:constituen~s;_ - ..
.
·.
theU.S.A.
·
came aware ofan unfortunate
It is impos~ible to predict what
__ .:Which,_ in. an admittedly .. prejudice. Americans are tragi-
one pe'rsonwilldo,-but entjfely :· ·round 'about way gets me to
cally
isolated, ~d_ the 11pswing
.
..
possiblet<>pn:dictwhataJ~f!!at;,_ -,-" . --~. _ _
' . ·.
> >
-
.•<1§t9~ti~c~JJii~$
1
·P~cJ.¢~cn:9tjl1;~j;lJ.c1jce.•.
--·to Ward\_-~
Marls·t:
_constriictfon·
site
-'.
.
-: ... ·
__ .: . - :; ;- . ::·- .. · . , .--· .' .. ,: _,: _., ·r :: ::_ ~·---. ,._-_. :.:
- . . .. ;. . -• ·;. _,. .. ,
by CARTER
RANDOLPH
' . s · · · ~
- . '/- StaffW,:tJ/r.,:c,:,'•
. _ -.. Everycme is e11titled to;Jiis
orJer ow11 opiriioii: Isuppo~e I
. _
.
.. ¥ii
require_d to state that righta.t
·etiie, ~eginnihg._ Far is it from: µie
· to
try.to
stop the free thinking_·
pi:oce~s' th~t g6e(9_n
.on
these
pagei However,
r
feel obligated
as
ai1
ol~er (ancJ possiblfwiser)
·Red Fox to.address some.of the
issues brought forth in last
week's opinion article "Fresh-
man Comes to Terms with Col"
· lege Life and.Laundry''. .:
- 11iis_year's sloganis
_
''Bu_il_d~ ·
irig With.Vision".It is:thatyi-
sion that makes this institution-•'
. among. the
.
finest · aroun_d·. · So•··•·
many schools are willing to sit
back and say that they have
done their _be~t already to make
the youth of. this ,_country pre-
pared for the next level in their ·
lives. Marist College is not sat-
. isfied. Thatis why I chose this -.
college verse the five others that
were in the running.
Ari
institti-
'
tion that is Willing tO put forth
Circle pholoffata Quinn
the effort to make their campus
Sophomore Joe Scelia walks
by
the
library
construction
site:
and
learning environment more
·
-
advanced and better' able io have a token card
_than
wait.for
~
meet the changing needs of. dial up tirp,e and sit thought
today's society is where I want· ··busy signals as many of my mo-
to be. I imagine this thought dem toting friends from other
also crossed the mind of our au-
schools do.
thor: even as he wrote the ar-
The pathway in front of the
ticl~. As far as the other li?rary site has been ma?~ inti-
quibbles the student had some : rutely better by the add1t1on of
were probably better addressed
overhead lights._ This was a
byaResidentDirectororamem-
concern that went up through
ber of the student government
the regular ranks and v:as
association than on the pages
solv~. The thoug?t of pavmg
of
The
Circle.
or laymg concrete m an area of
In response to the internet
ob~ious cons~ction is not in-
qualms, I would much rather
telhgent or feasible.
In general, I would suggest
that the author simply spend
more time at the college. Possi-
bly two months or a whole se-
mester instead· of the three
weeks that it took him to dis-
cover and label everything that
might be wrong with Marist
College. Maybe somewhere
along the line there will be an
article praising the school for
all its accomplishments and for
... pleaseseePRIDE,pg.10
:PAGE9
to living in a comparatively
country was not even remotely
small country like England is the
be):iind them in this truly inter-
. level of importance placed: on
national test of athleticism.
world
affairs.
The politics of tile
The U.S.A. did not even look
globe seem that much closer to
like they were worth rooting for.
them, and they are that much · I saw the game· we}ost to Iraq
more aware of their surround-
frqrn beginning to end. They
ings'. In tum, it seems they are
looked like the Giants under Ray
that much more acceptedas_an
Han9ley. Theywanted no.thing
acti\'ememberoftheworldcom-
to.~o.with this gajhe, while the
muruty/
Iraqi's, who wereplaying for
•.When the U.S.A\vas embar-
worldpride-foreverylraqi-left
rassed ·in the worlcl cup,
l
was
their hearts on the field, and had
sitting vyith some English, Scot~
broad, unassuming grins ofvic-
tish, Pakis-tani, and German · tory.
friends;' who each feverishly.
It made me sick. We are the
supported their· cotiritry. · I_ world's dominant nation? It is
couldn't help but yearn-to be as ifwe turn ournoses up to the
on an equal level of apprecia-
ic:lea of coming down off our
tion 'with them .. The American pedestal to. play a dirty little
team looked sluggish, as if they
game with the unfortunate
were certain that the whole of
I -- . - '.
SOCCER
JO
. -
_.
.
.
.
... -p
easesee
,pg.
their entfre,,large; prosperous
..
.
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~~
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October 1 1998
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lo?.t~p;;~t11::~!am~?;;
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Quinn
J
b
.
egan
to h
.
ear
.
a
.
v
.
oice, but
OPlll!ON
(O!IOF.
I sat alone on
a
swing in Cen-
tral Park. A boy
:
about iny age
wandered out from
•
.
under
•
an
overpass
-
in the distance
.
and
.
tookthe swing next to
'
me
'.
Suddenly
;
it felt as though the
park behind
·
.ine was cardboard
and there.was an orchestra
-
hid-
den in a pitahead of nie; It was
s?mf:thing out of a cheesy mu-
sical.
.
. .
.
•
·
.
.
·
,
.
I silently laughed at' the sce-
nario, and how much I hate mu~
sicals.
·
I usually' spend the first
half calculating the time until in-
termission, and the second half
figuring out when it will let out.
In the meantime, I flash the
Indiglo on my watch at such
a
frequency that it resembles
a:
miniature strobe light.
.
·
Anyway, this particular scene
was probably too·quietto be a
·
musical. Granted I could not say
for sure, because I was wearing
a Walkman. Had it really been a
musical, l would not have been
·
wearing aWalkman,
'
,
..
.
. ·
The mu~ic
b.l~i:ing
.
~n
IUY
eaI"s
madethe
scenario seem sun:eal.
·
·
I
0
flippeci:thf6Jgh
·
thefadi6
stri-
.
tions.
·
Tara
,
you arrogant [expJeti;eJ !
my Walkman
·
smothered· the
sound.
:
I
.
thought
th~t. maybe
.
the boy would trY:to
talk
to me.
.
Maybe he would throw soine
ci°lieesy. line
.
Then that sober-
!ng inner voice began
·
to mock
.
.
~e all <?Ver again.
,
. ·
.
•
.
.
.
.
):'gu royal winner. Sure he is
goJri_gfo ~k to
.
YC?
,
U
:
Something
stupid. ~e, 'Do I know you from
somewhere?' Or-
.
.
"DOYOUHAVETHETIME?''
,
!glanced aqhe boy and real-
-
i~d that
·
be
h
~
~
al
.
ready asked
.
several times
,
slightly amplify-
.
ing el}ch inqui
_
ry
:
I furn.bled with
·
the dial on my Walkman.
.
·.
·
·
·
Just tli~n.
·
the wonian with the
·
tiara shouted from
a
distant
swing
;
'
.
'If
we c~ed about time,
·
w~ y.,~uld not be on the swings! _
Who needs time?"
The
_
not pa_rµc~larly p~tij~hal
older man grumbled that it was
quarter after three.
. ,
. .
He
walked back
under
the
-
011erp~ss
an~
into
,
th~ city. I ran
.
the scene th,roug~ ¢y
.
min~. as
.
·
Pink Floyd
playe
·
d
·
on
.
.
theradio
.
·
and l pondered the pros and
cons ofrny,Wall(kmat1).
:
·
.
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.
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.
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J'llra
,
Q
_
uinri is
.
*e
,
Qpi~ion
.
Edi-
.
t
.
or
'
of
.
The
.~
Circle
~
•·:
Size
·
isfrpm
Teaneck,
N
~
w?erse
f
.
·.
. .,
..
I thought to Inyself.
·
That guy
prob~bJyjust
:
sat next
.
to
you
because there
,
was bird crap
on
-
.
s
0
.
·
c
·
.:
c
·
·
.
·
.
..,.
.
.
the other six swings
.
_
You really
·.
.
.
.
.·
'
.
·.
E R :
think that you are the center of
'
.
.
·
.
italL Heck,thi~swingsetwas
-
·
U.S
.
.
/
shoul
.
d
built specifically for you
and
the
.
~~~!t~:~::f;;u;e;!~~y~ci
.
gef
,
i9volved
Painted
-
Black
is ~n
.
the radio.
.
Sure that guy is sitting
.-
right
'
-
there on the riext swi
_
ng because
you are her
~
;
It is all you. You
are a royal champ
,
.
·
·
,
·
"Do you have the time?
n
. Asnet my th<:mghtsmn by, I
-
continued to
.
stare out forward,
ignoring
.
the boy,
• ·
A
young woman wearing a ti.,.
_
ara ran to the swings followed
-
by all older manviith shopping
'
bags
:
from women
~
s
.'
dothing
stores· in tote
,
:-
He djd
·
not
ap~
.
:
pear
particularly patriarchal
;
out
onewould politeli( or more cor-
rectly, wrongiy) assume
·
that he
was her father.
·
. ·
.
"Do youhave
:
the time?
~
'
-
·
,
My mind drifted back from the
couple to the boy.
.
.
,
'
~:
.
.
'
.
.
.
rabble iha
C
fornis around ou{
-
feet. This is a :matter
of
true
na-
tional pride. lthink
~
thatif the
U
.
s:k
took
its
run
'
at
the
World
,
Cup
_
inore
·
seri<>iI~lj; i(~ould
genera
_
te gre
}
1t respect
·
from our
very irµportant neighbors
iri
the
'Yorld coinmunity
J
·
: ·
·
_
.
..
Iti~
part
qfworld diplomacy,
every bit
as
much
.
as the deci-
sion to placc0 s
'
anctions; or
:
to
send monetary
.
ai9.
Weneedto
.
be
:
less
·
full
,
of ourselves,
.
and
play a game with the kids on the
· -
·
block.
_.
..
.
-
B,ll
Mekrut
i~
·
a
senio:,,
P~Uti-
cal
Sde.nce
and English
doubl~ 111aJ<?r from Lincoln, RI.
you,re
dovitiif
. :
~
·.
friends.:Jl~rtk
'.
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on~
'
iifdt~"idr
.
the
road .
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regret
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hange
<~hat'
lti~ri
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and
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t
I
OCTOBER 1, 1998
PAGEll
An
evening with Lisa McCormick
bySTEPHENMERCIER
Staff Writer
·
singer/songwriter
·
Lisa
McConnick performed an hon-
est and heartfelt show, which
displayed both her powerful
vocals and distinct guitar style.
McCormic!(, a stylistic folk
artist who
_
has been touring in
support of her late 1996 release,
-
0
Right
Now'
_
' (Rising Records)
played in the I>erforming
Arts
Room
at
Marist College on
Wednesday, September23, 1998
.
In front of the small crowd, all
she needed was her voice and
her acoustic guitar to win over
the hearts of the audience dur-
ing ~e 70-minµte
.
performance.
_
She first started the concert
with ".All
I
See Is You", a cut
from her new album. It was an
excellent choice
.
to begin the
show with. "All I See Is You", a
very poppy love song, dis-
played flowing chord progres-
sions and Jewel-like mid ranged
harmonies.
photo c:ourtesy Bob Lynch
"Holy Water" is a song that
-
Rising Records recording artist Lisa McCormick treated
was inspired by
-
Canadian
Marist to a concert in the Performing Arts Room this past
singer, Jane Siberry; an artist
Wednesday
featured on "The Crow
ited vocals. McCormick's pleas-
Soundtrack" a couple of years
ing voice was a perfect supple-
ago
>
-
This ~xtremely catchy
rrient to the majestic sound that
song,just like all of h~r
.
better
·
·.
came from her instrument. Lyri-
;
.
fu~es
;
.
had
:
'
i
r
b.il
,
anc:~,.b,~tweer
j:
{i::ajJy,
_
th~
SOilg
was lllso
_
inter-
.. powe
_
rful guitar ~ound
-
~nd
spir
f
,)
e
·
s~ng.
-
The song
-
was· written
before the Clinton Scandal, but
she now thinks that the song
has relevance. The words "cau-
tion where you place your faith"
·
_
-
can
.remind
one of all of the ma-
jor
hlict' nifoo~
pfayers of the big
mess.
.
Another highlight was the
song, "Gotta Go". The Dino-
saur Jr. sounding ballad featured
some of the rriore simplistic play-
ing of the evening, but it fit the
songwriter's mellow, yet grace-
ful crooning. "I Would Tell You
How I Feel, But
I
Forgot"
,
came
from the opposite side of the
spectrum compared to "Gotta
Go". Leaving away her folk in-
fluences for a couple of minutes,
McCormick showe
·
d the crowd
that she could also rock.
·
The playful
,
carefree lyrics and
the strong, hard playing created
a well-balanced rock tune.
The performer also played a
few other strong tunes that
showed us that she can defi-
nitely play some
'
good folk, but
also has funk, rock, and even
some waltz in her repertoire.
She also was able to include
some mellow guitar work and
even a little guitar slapping and
banging.
She played a fantastic set, but
it did contain a couple of flaws.
These mistakes did not occur
because of a lack of talent or
ability.
Some of the songs really
seemed like they might have
been
·
good ideas, but when per-
formed;
'
they just
didn't work.
"Purgatory
Cafe;; just reminded
me of another version of The
Squirrel Nut Zippers' song,
"Hell", but just didn't have the
catchy-ness and distinctive-
ness that the latter had.
"Do Something Stupid To Get
You Off Of My Mind" and a
song that made the board game,
"Monopoly" a metaphor for life,
just didn't work. The silly lyr-
ics just didn't fit the sincere and
focused music that was being
played during these two songs.
-
Despite these
few
songs,
overall, McCormick performed
an excellent show. She basically
plays folk music, but no one
should feel that means that the
music can only be enjoyed by
folk fans
.
Her guitar playing could be
compared to popular artists
such as Ani Difranco and Dave
Matthews and her vocals can
easily remind one of Jewel.
She also easily fit pop, rock,
and funk into her style of music
to create a good balance. The
only negative aspect about the
night is that hardly anyone came
to the show.
Hopefully, next time when
Marist brings a free concert to
the campus with a skillful per-
former or a good band, more
people will take a chance and
maybe
see
something thatthey
really like.
•
Theatre columnist gets
intothe swing of things
Two new cd's on
their
--
w3Y
.
tO
yourstereo
..
•.
·
.
by
RACHAEL VOLLARO
Staff Writer
A
moment away from the
stage
...
"It
don't mean a thing,
if it ain't got that swing."
by
BOB ROTH
'
·
Staff Writer
Although there are things go-
Swiching gears al!}lost com-
ing
in
the theatre,
I
wantto share
,
pletely is ne:wEarth Crisis CD,
.
.
something I experienced. Some-
.
-
/'Breed
the Killers." Earth Cri-
..
thing that has become the lat-
••
-·
NoLimitRecords is one of the
<sis
have become the
_
_
driving
.
est fad.
premier rap labels of the .late
force of the straightedge and
This past weekend I went
·
199o•s. First there was
.
Death
anirrial
liberation movements in
swing dancing for the first time,
Row, then Bad Boy, and it know
hardcore music in the 90's.
Us-
andno it was not like the Gap
looks like No Limit his number
ing music and
_
lyrics astheir
..
commercial. ·
one.
· .
.
_
_
_
weapons, they
are
not a band
·
Hudson Valley Country Dane-
there?). I don't know how to
describe it except as your old
elementary school gym. It had
'the
huge wooden floor except
with a stage in front and a bar
outside the dance area.
The eight of us in arrived at
7:30 PM for our hour beginner's
lesson.
A
short man, in black
pants,
a
1980's silk shirt, and
black dancing shoes, was our
instructor. He told us to get into
a circle, and taught us the:'ba-
sic". It was easier than I
thought it would be.
While we were in the circle I
looked around to try to get a
feel for who was there. It had to
be one of the most diverse
groups of people I've ever been
a part of. There were college
kids, our group from Marist, and
a group froQl Vassar. I have to
say that it was easy to tell the
difference between the two
groups. There were locals vary-
ing in age and style. People in
their twenties to people in their
sixties. A look that seemed
popular was
a
vintage forties
dress or skirt with Converse
sneakers. Very interesting.
After everyone had gotten the
basic, we learned some twists
and turns. This is where the real
fun began.
I
have to give my
dance partner credit. He already
knew what he was doing and
that made it a lot easier for me .
A couple more practice moves
and then we were dancing.
_
The live band started at 8:30
PM. They were a trio consist-
ing of a guitar, a string bass and
a drum set. They played mostly
a fifties-style swing. They
didn't have the instrumentation
for a forties Big Band style. The
dance floor was packed but ev-
eryone, including me, had a
great time.
I have to admit that it took
some convincing to get me to
go, but I can't wait to go again.
-
Now they give rap another
to be ignored. Being on shows
ers sponsored the event. They
great record in Big Ed: "The
like"MfV:Smashed"andCNN,
sponsor a variety of dancing
Assassin." This record features
they have used mass markets to
events throughout the Mid-
the No Limit family on almost
promote their message.
Hudson valley. The dance it-
every song. ComprisedofMas-
Since then they have jumped
self was held at Germania.
ter
P,
Mystikal, Silk the Shocker,
labels from Victory to Roadrun-
Wllere and what is Germania?
Mia X,
·
and Snoop
·
Dogg this
ner and are back with 12 songs
It
is located on the Artiaral in
group helps make this record
of fury and metal with, "Breed
between Cactus Club and
stand out Big
Ed
actually uses
the Killers." Comprised of a 5-
Confetti's (remember going
his vocals to make this record
piece, Earth Crisis combine _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
...,......, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
,,
great. From song to song, Big
hardcoreandmetaltomakethis
ATTENTION ALL PLAYWRIGHTS:
Ed
uses the No Limit family to
record a masterpiece. The gui-
help. out but takes his own parts
tar
work of
Scott
Crouse and Erik
MCCTA is looking
for
original one-act plays
for an
"Evening of One-Acts".
If you're
to make each song different and
Edwards combined with the
interested, plays must
be
submitted by
midnight
Friday
Oct
9, 1998. For infonnation
better than the previous. Pro-
moving bass and drums of Ian
contact
Sara Zizzi x4773.
duction by Beats By the Pound
EdwardsandDennisMerricklay
l - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
helps keep the songs fresh so
the fo.und~tion for Karl
RESERVE YOUR TICKETS NOW.
Big Ed can use his lyrics and
Beuchner's lyrics and music.
·
MCCTA presents Noel Coward's Present Laughter, Oct. 8-11, 1998. Perfonnances
message.
With a switch to a bigger Ia-
are in the Nelly Goletti Theater. Tickets cost: $3 Students, $5 Faculty/Seniors, and
Big Ed:
"'The As~assin" is the
bel, EC can get their musi
.
c and
$7 General Ad.mis.gon. For ticket reservations call the MCCTA Box Office at x3133.
record No Limit needs to
·
stay
message to the masses.
strong in the coming years.
_
j
,
.
OCTOBER 1
2
1998
phoro
courtesy
Nik Bonopartis
Blink 182 played at the Chance on Sunday night, but
thankfully everyone could still breathe.
Blink 182 and friends
rip it up at
,
TbeCmmce
by NIK
BONOPARTIS
Staff Writer
Blink 182,
coming
off
the ra-
dio success of their hit singles
"Dammit" and "Apple Sham-
poo", brought their tour to
Poughkeepsie Sunclay night for
an all-ages show at the Cpance;.
The punk rock trio were virtual
unknowns a· year
_
ago before
they were
"discovered"
by ra-
.
dio and MTV, but nowadays
they're selling out nearly every
venue they play.
.
.
· ·
.
Being a longtime fari of Blink
182
since high school,
i
,Vas
.
at
first
.
iiisappointed
.
to
SI!~
·
\vhat
seeme'cf
to
·
be a predonumuitly
MTV
·
crowd.
·
·
Trendy
alternateens lined the club with
Nirvana apparel
and
large
JNCOs, but that didn't stop ev-:-
eryorie from having a good time.
drowning in
a
sea of people ancl
sweat and getting
.
tossed
around for a few hours,
.
but
Blink 182
definitely is. Just
when
.
the crqwd was getting
antsy after the long delay, Blink
182
appeared.
When the cheers died
.
down,
guitaris.t Tom Delonge ex-
plained the band's tardiness and
apologized to the
.
crowd.
"Sorry
we►re
late,.,he said,
"I.
had to.take a poop."
.
·
When
·
·
Blink
·
'l
82
jin(liiy
;
:
io6k
ihe
stage
the
·
Chance
·
was so packed
there was barely
breathing room.
Later on in the show, Blink
They launched into their set,
would address the MTV issue
playing seve
.
ral cuts from ''Dude
by singing, "And if y_ou only
Ranch", and continued their
know us for this one song, then
slapstick h~m~r between
@#$%
you!"
.
songs. A really strong indica-
The first two bands, River tion that a band
·
has reached
Fenix a.op.Assorted Jellybeans,
"rock star" status is when the
played a hyped up mix of punk
women are
·an
-
over the
•
band
rock'and ska to warm things up .
. •
members .
.
Blink I
82
certainly
One
·
would
-
expect a band
ei:ijoy~cl their
'.
~ewfound star-
named after River.Phoenix to
dom
.
when all
•
the
.
ladies in the
have~ ol
,
d-time, n,os~gic pu~ crowd bombarded them with
rock
·sound,
0
bur the
,
Houston,
th~irbras, which they hung from
'(exas four~piece was loud, fast,
their mic stands. Bassist/ vocal-
.
ap.d vulgar. Among the notable
ist Mark Hoppus pursued the
.
tunes were· a cover of
Duran
matter even further, calling for a
Dur(ln;s "Ordinary World;' arid
·
contestfqr th~ bigge~t bra in the
the closer/ which will
'
remain
-
Chance
'
to be
"'
thrown at him.
~~l~s,s
.
in ~is newspaper col-
Sure
.
'
enough he was
.
hit in the
umn
for
the sake of keeping
face
with one
a
minute later, to
things
clean.
Assorted appl;ms~fyQmJhecrowd. While
Jellybea.11~,
,
WhO'had tfie lookof . the band aclaiowedged the ra-
a bunch of high-schoolers and
dio crowd, they also honored
the musical talent of
Hanson,
their longtime fans by playing
took the stage next. Each song
fan favorites
"M&Ms"
and
blended too well into the next,
"Carousel" from their first al-
making it sound Hke one bigjam
bum. They also played brand
session. They were too random
new, unreleased material, ex-
for my tastes but the crowcl
plaining that they were, "sick of
warmed up to· them midway
the old stuff." Blink 182 also
through the set.
sponed a new drummer,
to
the
Unwritten Law
was the big-
dismay of some fans who
nameopener. 'IJleS~uthem<::ali-
hoped to hear fayorit~s like
fomia five-piece played a brarid
"Touchdown Boy" and
"Wast-
of powerful punk rock al9ng the
ing Time", a previous single.
lines of
Pennywise
·
and No Use
·
Nevertheless the rest of the
For A
Nq.me. Thipg~ really got
songs
·
sound~d great, ~ven
rolling in the mosh pit at this
when getting my head srepped
point. When
.
Blinl(
.
182 finally
on by crowd surfers.
Blink 182
tQok
·
stage the Chance was so
left the stage to chants from ra-
packed there was barely breath-
bid fans, promising another tour
ing room. I decided to venture
stop in Po.!gkeepsie. Maybe
into the sweaty
.
mosh pit at this
_
next time they' II have to take it
point Not many bands are worth
to the Civic Center.
..,.
.
,
.
.
-
~
-
.
PAGE12
Tfi,t~e
R~Jtnyt>{J~ra
,
Alfia7:~s
.
,
-
.
.
,
..
·
,
.,.
_..
.
-
_.#4
.
.
.
.
·
·t
·-
.-
_;..;,.
.
.
by
PATRICKWlil'ITLE
·
;
·
,
Mudge
.
Tucker),
.
daughter:of
vorable conclusion; MacHeath
Ai,.
E
Editor
· · ·
·
.
unscrupulous businessm~ Mr.
isn'tportrayed as a blo~dthirsfy
·
·
·
·.
·
·
·
•
·.
-
·
·
<
,
.
·
Peachum (Brian McEleriey).
villain in Trinity's "Three-Penny
The T~nity Rep~rtoryCom~
MacHeath entrusts his own
Opera" but instead as some-
pany in Proyiderice, Rhoqe
·
"business" to Polly when he"is
thing of an anti-hero. The
Island's r¢prisatof Bert9lt brought up on charges and tries
viewer develops such
.
an affin-
Brecht's
·classic
musical
•
''The
·
· ·
·
·
·
·
.
·
·
·
to escape
·
the
·
law. His connec-
ity for him
.
by the denouement
Three Peni;ly
0
.. P· e
·
~a", su.ccess
..
.:.
·
·
tion·
.
•
to
·
Scotland Yard/ Tiger
that killing him would be
ill
ad-
fully modet'nizes a seventy-year
·
Brown
(Barry
Press) betrays
him
·
d
·
old masterpiece:
'.
,
_'
.
· .·
·
·
·
along the way~and brings him in
vi:n~ther
.
thing that
.
m
..
akes the
While the
.
fact that TririitY
.
·
is
·
· ·
after receiving atip from Jenny
musical succeed are the perfor-
,
located two states easi'of New
.
York may prevent many
.
o
..
fyou
(a wiry Ellen McLaughlin), one
mances by the lesser characters.
of MacHeath's former mis-
MacHeath's gang; particularly
·
from witnessing the prodµction,
I feel that th
'
e Comp
'
any's adap-
tresses.
Matt (Eric Tucker) almost steal
tation is outstanding erio:ugh to
Music is the axis of the play,
the show. The one major char-
deserve our attention.
I
enc·our-
anditis delivered perfectly. The
acter whose perfonnance lfelt
·
ageail.y theatre~
.
ori~nted Mari.st
standout
·
is McLaughlin's im.:
was
.
a bit
:
1a:cking
,
was Jenn
studentsfrom'the eastern
New
peccable solo performance of Schulte's take'onLucy Brown,
England iirea to:considei ta!4i:ig
"The F:}ick Knife Song."
;
The
Tiger's daughter. Her wrangling
the trip ho~e
·
to check'
out
thi
...
·
s
music will be familiar to anyone
with Polly" over MacHeath's af-
.
who
favors oldies
.
stations,
'
as
fection serves as little more than
pe1~~;cbistoricall;
.
dabbles
.
th~
,thenie
wa~
·
adapted iI).tO a
good subject matter fora good
with the traditiori~I sqripts of popu_lar song ir1 the 1950's. The
song or two.
their performances to make them
musicians
·
do
not miss
'
a
note
Trinity's reprisal of "The
.
·
appear more up to date,
qotl]
in
thfc;,ughout. the
.
·
entire perfor-
Three-'Penny Opera" succeeds
dress and in dialogue. Their
.
m,ance,and are perhaps the real
because of the changes in the
rendition of''The 'I)lre~_PennY,
stars
.
of the show.
•
.
.Chcireogra-
adaptation, but it also suffers a
Opera" is no excep~ipn, a~ ~er-
.
pQe~
Kelli Wicke Davis also rises
little from therri. Anyone expect-
tain lines Jrorri the new script
to
'
the occasion, particul
,
arly
ing to see a traditional off~
would make any self-respecting
during «The Squaddies' Song."
Broadway musical shmild either
resident of l 920's
·
Londmi
The writers took a lot ofliber::
look
.
elsewhere or wait
'
for
-
a
blush.
If
the original was rau-
ties with the plot of the musical,
Broadway rendition of the origi~
cous, Trinity's version is down~
'
right d~\Vn to adding a
·
happy
nal. However, this
-
production
·
right ribald.
·
.
.
.
,
,
ending. ''TheThree-~enny Op-
is definitely an
,autonomous
The plot centers around the
·
era" is a decidedly light-hearted
success by any theatre major's
fall of notorious London gang-· affair to
.
begin' \Vhh,
.arid
,
this
standards.
I think•~'The
•
Three.:.
;
ster MacHeath (a Tommy Lee. gr_oup tikes that
'
a step further.
Penny Opera"-.would make·a
J ones-esque
.
'
·
William Tiie story "traditional ends \vith
great project forMCCTA
in
the
~
Damkoehl~r)~ bett~r
Irnown
·
as
MacHeath a~aitiilg execiitio11,
future.
,
To
learn
more aboutTrin-
Mack thc(Knife. Be.sec:r~tly
butDainkoehle~•s
'
chap11ing
'
per'.'
ity Rep; check out http://
marriesPollyPeachum{iennuer formance demancis'a morefa-' www.trinityrep'.com·
IJonl
trvrgel lo
.
'
'
•
.
.
.
~
.
'
.
vo1e111
.
.
tudent
Elections
will
be
held
on:
·
.
.
-Monday,
Sept:28
·
-Tuesday,
Sept~9
,
·
~
-Wedn4!s~ai, Sept.
'
~o
.
.
.
,
,
.
Ballots
can be
;
cast
in both Dyson and
Donnelly
'
.
.
President:
.
"'
·
Michael
.
Caponegro
.
,
Kevin
C.
}Jogan
·
'
Nicholas Adclfrinola
·
Justin Haight
'
·,
.
.
;.
.. : .
~
•:
•
I
Vice President:·
Melissa Santanello
.
:J¢f
Patterson
,
Eric
M.
Deabill
.
.-
:"!
·
·
•·
.•
StudenfGovernme11t
Public
Relations Com,;ni,.eejs' loo,Cing
-
•
.
..
:
'
- .
: .
for
Studentsii ,:-
. .
J
.
.
~Build Your Portfolio
·
*SLipp_lement Youi Resume
.
_-
·
*Earn Priority Pointsf, . ,
..
~
(-
:.
,
.
.
All Co_inmunications
,
fields
,
neededl
··
·
·
Adv.ertising;
Event
Qrganization~
.
Joumalism,
_
.
,
Publi~ R~latioris~·and Radio, TV, Film!
:
'
··
._
:1
·
•
i
interes~ed, please call Sara Bergeron, SGA
Director of Public Relations at
x.
2699.
tudent Speaks ..
X.
2206
Let Student Government know what
you
think!
Sifcoin
.
St?,rS
Pf
.
Yester-
yC?t:
where
·
arethey
now?
·
.
byCARLITO
StaffLiar
.
standing
.
Jnder five feet in
form itself." Someone told Joe
height, Lewis now 68 years of that spontaneous gender polar-
age, and Coleman who is now
ization is physically and ana-
89, were
.
both the subject of ridi-
tomically impossible without
cule throughout their
lives. In
a
the aid of medical science.
·
.
Back in the day, comedy was
press conference, Lewis com-
Trudy dropped out of society
as pure and wholesome as ho-
mented on
.
how George
afterpeoplekepttellingherthat
mogenized milk. Punch lines
Poppodopelis constantly ha-
she was annoying and hated by
revolved around family
:
values,
rassed and degraded him about
all of western society. She's
unlikely situations and lovable
his height. ''He'd grab my face
presently unmarried, 56 years
characters. To my dismay, I've
and push me to the floor while
old and she still has braces.
watched this
.
type of comedy
calling me names like rabbit turd
Remember
ALF,
the fuzzy little
slowly evaporate before my
and poopstain. He once told me
alien that stole our hearts and
very eyes.
that my mot~er mated with a
our cats? Two years ago he was
Prime time
.TY
is presently
ground
_
hog ancl I was the re-
ho
'
spitalized after getting a kit-
dominated by pitiful shows that
suit." ·
·
·
.
,
ten lodged in his large intestine.
are orchestrated
,
by horrendous
George
·
PoppodC>polis died
in
Apparently Melm2cian diges-
actors making sad attempts at
1989 in
a
myste_rious car bomb-
tive systems deteriorate at
a
humor. Shows like "Homeboys
ing. P.I.P.9.A.W. was
·
formed to
quicker pace than humans' do
.
in Outer Space"
·
and "Two
defend
..
the
little
people of the
He Jives in Santa Monica where
Guidos and a.Pizza Parlor" are
earth and mount
a
counteroffon-
he is both an alcoholic and a
somehow tossed into the prime
sive
-when
.:
necessary. When
womanizer.
time lineup, only to eventually
asked about the influence the
Although Kirk Cameron
be recognized as third rate, low
militia has had 00 his
life,
starred in several despicable
budget entertainment. Sure Ital-
Coleman responded, "It's taught
movies, he will
·
always hold a
ians can be quite amusing, but
me to coine to grips with the fact
place in my heart as Michael
baseashowon it? It's not likely
although I am a freak of nature,
Seaver. His career evolved
that
a
couple boys from the
I don't have to take it sitting
nicely in comparison to the
hood with rio astronaut training
down." If you are interested in
aforementioned
·
actors and ac
-
would end up in space, but is
jojning the militia, contact Mr.
tresses. He spent a little time
that quality humor?
·
Drummand.
modeling but after Pennigloss
The 80's were a great decade
Do you remember the show
jerry curl spray went out ofbusi-
for sitcom television.
·
I
fell in
Small Wonder? Well you were
ness, they no longer needed a
love
.
with those actors
-
and ac-
prqbably under the assumption
poster
·
boy. He then went to
tresses and my .Jifohas been in-
that' the
'
little
·
girlon the sh9w
Broadway \1/here he got the lead
complete without them. To fill
was an actress pretending to be
in
a bfographical play titled,
the void left by their dep¥£ure
.
an android
:
fo
acfuality
,"
the girl
"Mtchael
Jackson:
.
the
froni the spotlight,
I
did a bit of
(let's dulher
Kate}
,
i~\i
·
cyborg
Ped.ibpbil
_
ip,
'
Combustible
research to find out.what some
prot~type
·
man\ifactured
?Y
Eni~a/'
.
.
.
.
.
of those act?rS
::
~~d ac~re_sses
•
Pana~onic in coop.eration
.
w1th
.
InaU.facet!i
_
ofhfe~ har~~uo-
,
have
·
been dp1f!gw1yith7.11}iv.e~-
:
X
Mi~t6s6fi
;
,
:-.,,·:
.
.
-.
~
-
,
•:
·
>
-, ·
.
pi~~
~
¥.~
,
bestciwed
'
upon all
-
~f
you
:
read;i lotof;jlogw~~h
w
.
©f
; .·
-
A.fttfr
/
SmaH Wonder bi(tlie
- ·
us
.
·
:._
Tl_lis
is
no better
'
exemp11-
tabloids '.·~b
.
oHreeie~ryry
'.~
~CaQ-
-
_
.
dust,
.
littl~
;
•
kate stru'ggled to
.
fied than in the case of Ricky
dals
,
_~utJ'.
-
m
'
~ere. t?
_
_
giy~
J~
.
~•
'"
;
kefirii'er"acting caree_r afloat b_y
.
Schro~der.
Rip~Y, ~ho _Pl~y~d
Maris
t
<I~!
.
!~~e,
th
~
:
'.
?Qn~
st
,
tc
\
:
auditiori,ifig for parts
m
"Terrm-:
, ,
the son of a nuJhonrure
m.
Sd-
god
;
tr,µ~
/
:
·
:.
_.
::.
,o-tJ
t:'..°:
>
·
~:
-~.
<
natoe;
·
and
.
"Robocop." After
ver Spoons" became addicted
'
~~
{
1U
f
.
J~IY,-~~
-
~
-
~
_r:
g
.
a~}'.
-
-
_;
f-bei
'
ng denied for the role eyen-
,
to heroinfollowing the s~ow's
Colelp.an~dh
.
!f antlcs on
Dtf.:
·
tu ally s!Yagged
·
by Arnold
·
.
'cance1latio'?. His li~e spiraled
ferent Strokes. And we were
Schwartzenegger, Kate told re:-
·
.·.
out of control and he ts rumored
all heartbro~en when we found
porters that "mortals stick
_
to-
to be living on
;
the streets of
out about his legal_ pro~le~s.
gether because their parochial
.
Pittsburgh selling sculptures
Two years a~o, while flippmg
·
cognitive processes inhibittheir
molded out of ~ompost.
through an issue of Weekly
ability to assess artistic effi-
The ~ast o
_
f "Ch~rles
In
Vf
orld Report, I came across a
.
ciency." It has' been rumored
Charge'' is an mter~sung tale.
picture of a fat, bald guy stroll-
that Kate is working for the De-
Nicole Eggert starred ma steamy
ingJ~to a gun s~op .
.
·
~ 'Yas
•
partm.entofDefenseandisused
film with-accomplished actor
crushed when I ~eahzed thts was
p_eriodically for assassin~tions
Corey Haim bef~re she had_ h~r
Coleman and satd to ~~self, ~at aild miscellaneous black ops.
breasts enlarged m order to JOm
there•~ a lost soul ?nftmg atm-
. How chaotic would your life
th~ cast of "Baywat
7
h." Psy-
lessly ma sea of disarray. -
be if you were ignorant about
chiatrists aqd zoologists ex~-
.
About a decade ago wh~n
the "Facts of Life?" That show
ined buddy after the show s
"Different Strokes" was on
Its
gave me an ethical blueprint by
death
.
He can presently be
way out, Gary wentt?
3:
psy-
.
which I would str:ucture my en-
viewed at the Bronx Zoo mon-
chic and he \\las told tha~
m
ttn
'
tir~Jife~ In case you were won-
key pit where he displays the
y~. he would be fat, bald, tng-
dering what
the
girls are up to
sign language he was taught by
·
ger happy and ,memplo~,ed. ~e
allow me to share my wisdom.
scientists.
.
.
.
chuckle~ and sneere_d, wha;~
After gaining 90 pounds and
.
Scott Baio experimented with
you talkin about clatrVoyant ·
having her face badly mutilated
.
a career as a stockbroker but all
S~rely ~nough, fate cau~ht up
during a chemistry experiment
of the anxiety resulted inaner-
w1th
.
,
him. The expenence withsulfuricacid,Blairwashos-
vous breakdown. He was seen
opened his eyes. though and he
pitalized for severe depression.
streaking through the New Y?rk
becamearegularmemberofthe
_
She is unmarried, she lives a
StockExchangenaked,exclaun-
Psychic Friends Network, even-
miserable existence in which she
ing that his loins were on fire.
tually making a guest appe~,.
ingests 120 milligrams of Prozac
The stars of yesteryear will be
~nee
~n
one of . their
a day.
·
.
.
cherished always a~d
~
hope
mfomerci~s. The ps~chics then
After
.
spending four million
you all share the admiration for
info
_
rmed him about his new pur-
dollars on cosmetic surgery,
them that I possess. It's a shame
pose i~ lif~. He ~as to start an
Nattily became a porn star. Her
that the quality of entertainment
orgamzatton with Emanual
alias is Nat Bung Hole and you
has deteriorated to its present
Lewis.
.
can see her in films like
state, but we can survive this
You may rem~mber
~WI~
as
"Battlestar Orgasmica" and
catastrophe by dwelling in the
the puppy huggmg, smckenng
"Nevermind the 7th Command-
past. We must remember patri-
~ebster, but once he t~me~ up
ment, Take Your Clothes Off."
ots like Lewis, Coleman and
wtth Coleman, the g1gghng
Joe eventually made public
Cameron. They had a lot to of-
stopped and the payback
that she is in fact a man
.
When
fer society and I am much richer
started. Lewi~ and Coleman
asked why he stayed in the
for having watched ~em.
were the foundmg fathers
or
a
·
closet for so long, he replied, "I
*
If
you actually beheve any of
militiacalledP.I.P.?.A-~ .• which
thought that if I tried hard
what you have just read, you
stands for Pygmies Pissed Off enough my body would trans-
are a nincompoop.
At the World. Although both
'
·
Lo
·
cal acts IDake
the
scene in Hudson Valley
by
CHRIS KNUDSTEN
Staff Writer
Perfect Thyroid
headlined a
show at The Chance last Friday
with
Half-way Gone
and
Three.
One of the highlights of the
show
.
however was a perfor-
mance by
The Schematics,
a
very lively swing-ska band.
They played a relatively brief set
but still got the crowd moving
which is one of the most impor-
tant parts for Chris Lafave.
"I love playing for the crowds,
it's the best part of the job and
it's great to see when they actu-
ally appreciate it," Lafave said.
The Schematics
have been
together for only about a year.
Some the members of the band
went ( or are going) to school in
New Paltz
,
where they originally
got together. Chris had gotten
the band together by handing
out flyers arid asking around for
other musicians, ultimately lead-
ing to
tl1e gathering
of theif cur-
rent line-up of.
.
eight players.
Aft<;r. startj~g
~
og.s y;itll s~veral
other icicaloands
The Schemat-
ics
played
.
at
a
battle
·
of the
bands with
f'
erfect Thyro(d
and
later opened for
The Toasters.
"I
think we'll be around for
awhile. I want to do this for a
career you know, just as
I
orig as
it's still fun." said Lafave:
Dan Flanagan, the lead vocal-
ist, agreed with Chris.
·
"This is so much fun and if
we can make
a:
career out of it,
why not?" Flanagan said.
The band's recent success
would appear to be a good sign
as they are hoping to growmore
and more popular
as
time passes
by. When asked what kind of
music they would consider
themselves, Chris replied sar-
castically.
,
"Universally spectacular mu-
sic
,
that will
·
change your
Iife
.
.. just kidding," he said.
"I
guess swing-ska but we're a
little different though."
The wide range of style exist-
ing in the band would be a di-
rect result of the diversity be-
tween each member's musical
backgrounds. Each member
comes from a different upbring-
ing that has prevented the band
from becoming stale as they are
constantly trying new things
'.
Unlike many other bands these
days
The Schematics
try to
avoid stereotypical labels as
much as possible.
"Labels are kind of silly," said
Lafave.
·
The Schematics
·
might be
corQing here to Marist College
later inthe month of October de-
pending on whether
the
show
is approved or not.
~
Also_possi-
bly appearing with them wiHbe
Marist's own
MidHudson Pork,
an up and Coming local band_
Fizzlewink, The Embarrassing
Rex
from Long Island, and more
to be announced: The show is
·
not
·a
definite yet but keep your·
ears open for more news on this
show that is currently planned
for October 23.
If you want to get in touch
with The Schematics you check
out their web page at http://
www.
Geocities.Com/
SunsetStrip/Underground/
1367.
atrick's words of wisdom:
-
"If you want to become
a
friend of civilization, then
becoIIle an enemy of the
h "
trut ...
--Kurt Vonnegut
_,:=-==--=---
- .
~
// EXTRA
INCOME
FOR '98 ·
I
Eorn $500 -
S
1000 weekly
stuffing
'
· envelopes. For details • RUSH $1.00
with SASE
to:
GROUP FLYE
6547
N. Aoademy
Blvd.,
Dept.
N
l
Cok>rado Spring,,
CO
80918
..I '
~;:::======---==========·-=-=======::::-:,/
-
.
.
October 1
7
1998
Mell'Stemill;,t~fun
Und~ft~t~dfu
MAAC .With:' Qlle:
.
match
to go .
.
·
-
~
:
: .
'I~
~
....
..
by
PETER MOYLAN
and
This is evident in the fact that
KARRE
NU.MME · ·.
· - • ·
riext year siveii
of
the top eight
Staff Writers-
players
will.
be returning, and
hopefully improving.
Simply put, the Marist tetmi!;!
.
Five out of the top six players
team is on fire.
·
are new, including Mayer and
Just this past weekend, the
Ralph Van-de-plas~e. Both are
Red Foxes not only beat both · junior college transfers who
Rider arid Canisius, but they did
have· yet to lose. Three fresh-
so without even losing a set.
man have also stepped in.
Add onto that accomplishment, . Bielawski and Juan Carlos
the undefeated tandem, of . Deigado are undefeated, while
Roberto Mayer and Darrel
Dahnert has only one loss.
Bielawski; first and third singl~s ·
· RacaneUi is the lone returnee
respectively, and you have
a
of the top six, and he says he
nucleus of a team tliat is off to
can. see a difference between
the best start in Marist history,
last year and this year.
boasting a 8-0record in confer..:•.
· "The drive lhjs ·team has
ence play. They are one wfa
makes us competitive,t' he said.
away from going undefeated in
"I am confident we will do well."
the conference for the first time
The success of this· years' team
in their history.
is not only terrific, but timely as
Junior Michael Racanelli says
well. Just this past July, the
he believes Mari st has what it
NCAA passed legislation allow-
takes to beat Fairfield.
ing each conference champion
"We are a highly motiVated
.
to receive a:n automatic bid into
group, extremely serious. Ev-
the NCAA tennis champion-
eryone not only wants to play · ships. This means if the Marist
well, but· wants to ·win/'
tennis team continues tctplay
Racanelli said.
as well as they have, they have
The success of this :team
a great chance of representing
should be credited
to
conibina--· · MaristintheNCAAchampion-
tion of youth, talent, and expe-
ships.
.
rience that coach Tim Smith has
Smith said he would like to win
been able to put together.
the conference so Marist can
"Our team is green and grow-
play against some of the better
ing with a lot of young players,"
teams iri the United States.
said Smith.
"It's extremely exciting and
.
·
:
~.
provides a great opportunity for
the team becaus·e·just like
1:fas:.
ketball, if we win the conference
we would receive a bid as one
of the twenty-eight di~isio~ one
programs in the country," Smith•·.
_ said:
, ·
. :
.· . . .
This honor would give Marist
the chance to play against suc.h .
national tennis po-wers as
Stanford and Georgia, while. also
allowing the country to see just
how talented Marist is.
·
Before they can evenbegi~ to
think about the NCAA champi-:.
onships however, Marist
knows they still have a long and
tough road ahead .. On Tuesday,
the Red Foxes will play the pe-
rennial power of the MA.CC
conference,
th~
Fairfield Stags,
A win against Fajrfield will defi-
nitely give.
Marisi
a tremenclous.
boost in confidence and recog-
nition.
· ·
·
· .
·
Smith said his team realizes
what their goal~ ar~ .. , . · .
· .
"The heaviest burden
any
.of
us have is
a
great opportunity;":
Smith said .. "Our te.am has the
opportunity to represent Marist
in the NCAA's." · ··
·
In
other words, the Red Foxes ·
greatest enemy right now could
be themselves; but -if that can
all be put aside, the sky is the
limit
for
this group of.talented .
and poised individuals: .
.
-.-··-
-
.
PAGE14
ootball .
box-
.
.
s.
St.
Peters,
"Marist26·
StPeters 3
•
•. i
,
.
..
1st
Marist ·
7
·
St.~ Pet'ers•O
. 2pd_
3.rd
'
IO
0
J
4th
,Tot-
,:o'' .
·26 ..
3 · .. _, - ' 3
Marist-.
·
'· .
_.
•• ·•
. . ·..
<
<
Korba 26 pass
from
Trainaglini
(De{Ho
kick}'
Marist,. · .
~ •
.
•
..
.
. . .
· : .. ·· · FG
Adamoyurka 29
Mans't:.;,, '· -;,_
· FG
Adafuoyurh 27
Marist ... - .• .
" - .
'., -F.G Adamoyurkif30
. Marist.:. :
...
.
,. ~G Adamoyurk~ 39
~,,
•. Manst,., ...
,
... ""·· , . ··•·. ..
..
_;
f -; .... _
..
·
t
< ,· .
Galabpa 58 pass fiomTi:ainaglini' (DeV!tc>'kick)
,". S{Petedf- ".:- "-~· -.-/'.-:-
. ·.
·
. -•.·· •
·
. ..-
FGHulse29
.Marist
Firstdowns .
25
. s:.J':'sh~d-yards-.·.. 56-300
. ~assi13:g y_ards.,
.
. ·2~5 ·
~acked:-y?fds lost _, 0-0
Return yards
-· 46
Passes
10:29_1
: . Puij~ . -,
-~-36.2
Fumbles.,.lost
,
. 2-1
,- . P~n~lties-y~ds . .' 12-109
. _ T{I_lle
c;,f
possession _3f 59
StPeters.
, 10· .
26,~62
106
2,,_1g
3~· .. :,,
1-2s.:.2
:9-36.7
-1-L ·
10-i°o9
. 21:.Ql
-·,:
..
WIVIPUAL STATISTICS
. . 'RusHiNµ.· · . _' :'. .
: . ,
. _, .
. . -.. Ma.£!~~:A.Ilen 19,-12;4,~pinato 14-61, µavitt5-34,
. . · . Rey~ 7-:~, Calal;>ria 1-:18, Reilly 5-1_2, :fraII)aglini
l-11,
;r~di 3-9, Jones l-3 .. StPeters-Miller9~39,,Silva5-18,
_;Bu,rns_
fl-
IO;
C~lon 2-9, Makle
1-4,
Lyver 2-minus 7,
Crockett 3~minus
1
I.
.
·
PASSING
.
Man~t-Trarn~glini .8~27-1-194, Lug~ 2-270~ 21.
St Peters-Crockett 3-17 ~2-34, Lyver 4-11 ~0-72.
RECEIVING .. :
.
,
Marist-Puabria 4-138, Traynor 2-33, Korba 1-26,
Brewer 1-17, Reid 1-1, Stack 1-0. St Peters-Polite
5-54, Snyder 2-52.
Att: 725
f
.
.
THJ
~
t.IRC.~l
.
,
.. -;
·
s-
'
s,·
·'
;
-
o:rt
;
S
-
·
.
·
·
·
.
-
,.
•
··
.
.
•
·
•.
·· -
•
r
-
·
•
.
.
-
-
·
· ·
'
'
PAGE
15
i
••
:
'
··•
..
·
.
1,i:'~e
:
i99s
-
~as~~aji
·
seas~ij,
:
_
:: .
:
A1t,e~
~eli6 surgeli1i'O·ie'se~
·
~
'
'
.
P~dro
:
~artinef,
'
iast year's
one
'
of the mosfexciting 1n
'
re'-
·
.·· ,.
ond lialfcof ihe
:
seasoii, hitting'
'
. N:C Cy'
Yptihg
wiri_ner, led_ the
cent memory; we
'
wet~ capti.:
.387 with 31.homeis arid
86
RBI
'. '
R~d: Sox
:
to'·
the
'
piayoffs
·
and
vatef by the exploits of. Mark
.
after the all star break;
.
Hidin
~
pitched l?ig game
•
after big game
.
McGwire
and.
Sanimy Sosa, vte
ished hitting
j26
with49 hpm~ . over the
:'
course
of
the
.'
season.
saw theYankeeswirtmore
.
ersarid
.
152runsbattedin;ilum'-
.,
llis
·
numbers, while not nearly
games
thiui
anyb~µy since
·
the
bersthiteasilf riyal Gonzalez's
~'
a°s'impre~sive as last'year's, are
1906Cubs and we\vitnessed the
·
but the fact that
·
the White:sox . still impressive, finishing with a
end ofRipken's
:
streak .
.
Ina
\Vere
.
out of playoffcontenffon
.
2.89
ERA
and a 19~7 record.
sport that had seeµ1frigly lost its
.
fairly early· in the:
season
hain-
Ma,ftinez gave the Soi the domi-
hister, it
all
seemed t<>come back
perBelle
.
's chancesi
:
.
·
,
nating pitcher tha:t they lost in,
at once.
.
<
.
:·
_ . .
.
.
.
__
. .
<
Manny Ramirez is anotlier
.
iroruc;ally; Roger Clemens.
.·
.
I have
-
been faced
:
.with the
.
playerthatw
·
orkedhi~ way into
.
'
Davi_d WeHs
:
~oes not have
near jmpossibie
'
task
~f
trying -the MVP ra~e wi~
:
a fate expl_O-'
nearly the sa'ine
·.
nu~bers as the
;
to decide who deserves
·
the
.
sion
:
In
the criticaLfinal
two
.
·
first two candidates, but he
post-season awarcls._
·With:
all
months of the season,'Ramirez
does he does have one of the
the great perf ormarites this year
hit
21 homers and knocked
in
57
·
moments that made this season
the races \I/ere tight; bull have
runs
.
over
a'
sprui
'.
of 52 gani~s.
'
so
·
·
special; his
:
perfect game
made my decisio
_
n and
will
IlOW
To ptit those
'
numbers i!].tO per- ' against Minnes<>ta.
'
He did end
hand out thejrophiesfor the
spective,over a full season that
.
up with an 18-4reccirdanda3.49
.
American League winners, Na-
equat~s to 65 ho,nie run~ 178
·
ERA,_ bur with ~le mens and
tional League
•
winners' will
_
be
·
nins batted in'. Ramirez finished
,
Martinez in the running, he just
crowned in our next issue
:
_
.
hitting .294 and with career
·'
does not stack up.
:
·
t
c
~
/;
_.
~_
}V
:
~~t~s:·01.1
:
l~pr
·_.
_
·
,
,
.
FootbaUl0/3
vs. St. John'§ 1
p.m.
:
. ·
r
Volley1>itn
io12.:1013
@Haliford.Invitational
6
'
p.m.
10/7
vs. Siena
7
p.m.
Men's
~~cce~ 10/3
vs.
Sacred Heart
1
p.m.
10/7
@.
Iona 3
p.m.
Wome~'s'~~~cer
,
10/5
@
Columbia.? p.m .
.
·
10/7
vs. Fairfield 3:30 p.m.
'
'
Men's
tenri.i~d0/1
@i:°Fordham 3
:3h
p.m .
.
.
10/3-10/5.@ ECAC Championships,
·
·
Vassar TBA
Cross country
·
10/3
@
Colgate Invitational,
-
Hamilton; NY
·Tough
Trivia
How many World Series have the New York Yan-
ees won since the Boston Red Sox last won a
orld Series?
.
'
.
Answei; to last week's question - Babe Ruth brqke his own
ecorci of 59 home n.1ns in a s
·
eason when he ,hit 60 in 1927.
The first award to be an.;.
highs in both ho_me runs and
Ip.a
race that really isn't a race,
nou~ced will be theAmerican
RBI, finishing with 45 and 145
.
Roger· Clem~ns
_
wins the Cy
.
high expectations, Gdeve fin-
team with a pitcher that could
..
League MVP. There ai:-cfmany
respectively.
·· .
. ·
·.
.
.
. .
·
.
.
Young for the second consecu-
ished his first full major league
.
be depended on from start to
.
solid candidates· this year,
:
in-
·::_
Each of these players put
·
up
·
.. tiye year. He put
·
up the best season hitting .288 with 18 horn-
.
start, and de~pite a weak sec-
eluding Mo Vaughn; Nomar
similar numbers; but the MVP
.
numbers
·
and for that reason
ers and 89 nins batted
fo,
defi~
ond balf, still had a good year.
Garciaparra,Ken
'
GriffeyJr.and
·
should go
'
·
to the
·
playe~ that
·
Clemens ~rings home number
nitely enough to gamer Rookie
The 19~8 A.L. Rookie of the
Alex Rodriguez,
_
but it really
proves n:iostvaluable(hence the
five.
:
of the Year consideration.
.
.
Year
,
goes to-Ben Grieve. His
boils down to three names: Ju
_
an
':·
name)· a·nd out
of.
this group
Orlando Hernandez, the Yari~
solid, an<i occasionally spec-
Gonzalez o,f the Texas Rangers, .
.
ortly Juan Gonzalez proves to be
kees 29 year:old Cuban pitcher;
tacu:lar play, gives. the Athletics
Whi
Alb_ertSBelledof_ththe
1
Chicago
truh
.
ly indis~e~sabGle. Th
1
at beihng
.
It
·
·.
,
:
1,s
__
.
(Juan)
also came to
.
the
:
~ajorf with
hope for thein
:
ebuildindg efforts
.
·
te
ox, an w1
a
at~ surg~.
·
:t
e case,
1t
-
1s
.
onza ez
t
at
·
high expectll.tions and met them
and gets him this a war .
·
Manny Ramirez.
.
.
.
.
·
_,
·
walk~ away with ihe prize, the
Gonzalez'
that walks
with ease.
·
1n a season where
Also in the world of sports this
It.is hard to compete· with the
.
1998 A.L;MVP.
.
away
with
_
the
·
prize,
A.L. pitche,:s could not seem to
week:
.•
nuritberi;that
·
Gonzalez
,
piltllp
·
:· ,
>-
Thereisnotnearlyas much
:,-7-e.J9n8A~L.MVP.
'
keep
.
runs from scoring,
LMcGwirehits70,anumberf~r
this year, hitting
'
;3}8 with 45
·
.
·
coi.ripetrtion
·
for th
-
e AL Cy
"'"
7 '
Hernandez djd,fin
_
ishing
~ith
a
.
th~ ages.
_
homers and knocking_ in'l57
_
~ns
Yo
_
ung
-~
as
:
for
the:
.
MVP.
-I.f
·
~II
.,
..
· -·
3. 13 ER.A. H~
a.1~·0 fiflished With
'
·.
·2. Saints
OP.en
to
3-0
..
:
Can you
while leading the Rangers to the
.
comes down
.t()
the two reign::-
: _,
a 12~4 record;whiie onlyaHow-. say D~tka Super Bowl Bound?
playoffs. donzalezwasalsopart
ing ey :Young winners and
On to th~ AmeriGID1League's
'
ing batters to
,
hit .222 against
Notwith
'
this team.·
.
of: the record chase for a brief
·
David Wells.
:
last major award
;
~eRookie of
.
him.
-
It was ah
,
excel)erit
:
~eason
·
·
3: Growing Pains;
.J>t
2
.
Man-
period,
,:
when it looked as
.
•
.
RcigerClemenscameupbigfor
the Year.
·
.
forEII>uqu~;
_-
a
·
s¢as~mthat
_
the
nirigandLeafthf()wacombined
though he migµtha,ve a ~hot at ·the
.
second consecutive year,
Ben Grieve, the 22 year~old
Yankees hope can be duplicated
.
total of6 interceptions; both San
competing for Hack -Wilson.'s
leading the A.L. (ti¢ with David
outfielder for the Oakland Ath-
in the future.
:
:.
·
'
Diego and Indianapolis lose.
·
.
68-year.:old RBI record of 190.
.
Cone and Rick Helling) in wins
letics, arrived in the majors with
Rounding
,
oµtthe list
of
cari-
.
-4
.'
New York Yankees win 114
Wltlle befell short of that total,
with 20, and leadtng the league
·
.
much hype
·
:a!J~
.
iji~h
_
~~pecta-
.
_
qidate~/is Tampa
~~y
pi
_
tchec
:
gam~~-
·
Now can they finish?
hii.-157 RBI led the
·
American
in ERA.with
a
2.64. Clemens
'
Hons and niet
._
themin grand
.
Rolan~o:Arr~Jo::Ari-ojo,
:
alsoa
-
·
5:
-
i
Priesi:.who?
·
Baltimore run-
L~ague· and boosted his repu-
-
struck out 271
·
b~ttersi9 234 2/3 · fashion. D.e~pjte alt the
·
pres-
Cuban
·
ref'.ugee, finished \yitli a- . ning· back friest Holmes busts
t~tfon as one of the best run
~nnings,-aitd punished hitters to
·
sures associated with J:,eing a
record of 14-12 and a 3:56
,
ERA>
.
.
onto scene with 2 TD's and 178
pr<>ducers in baseball.
the tune ofa .197 average.
·_
young playerin the
,
njitjbis with
Ai:rojo
:
pwvided the e
_
x,pai\sipn
. )
t'?tal yards in win over Bengals.
••
Melfi
···
enJOYs
·
.fast.
•
tilll.~s at
·
M~r:i$(
i
G.Ollege
'
.
·
.
-
..
·
-
,
<,fl:
.
· ·
-
~
·
.
:
trained har4.ov~~ thJ
:
s~mmer
;
.
i
has lelMelfi
to
·
hi~
earl/~e~.:_:
'
.~ti~l'imiversities around the na-
byJENNIFIIltGLOVER
.
,
prestigiousIC4Ameet.
.
; Through tlje m~i~~~
\
ofJuly,
.
/
son ~~¢t:es~e~.·_:·
f6.
.
~
'
,
~.rst.
:
~..yo
_
;. tfon.
_
.
_
.
.
StaffWr
_
,
_
·t~r.
_
,
:
·
r
_
-
_
·
...
.
.
,
_
_.
_
:
l\1e.lfi's accorilplishplents have
;
August, and Sept':!
.
!liller
;
Melfi
: .
meets
.
of_th.e
-.
sea
_
sc;m
,
coa~~
--' .
_
-
'[he goals
·
nowh~ave
1
nsend
>
a1so given him anoth~r Marist
:
ran
870miles, ay~r_asi!1g60miles
.Colaizzo·h~cj
-
s~p1igh
-
goals
.
for
even .higher' for t 1ua ente
.
"Break~ut". adequately· <!e-
•
first. Last spriilg;'Melfi was the
,
per
_
week
.
.
I'vfetfi
.
alsifkepf in
;
Melfi, ·e.:J.C.pe¢.ting
:
hiin to win. . run~~~-- Melfi hopes that he can
scribes this
SaturdayNighf
Fe-
·
fustMarist
nfonerto
qualify for
·
'
·
cfose cont!ct:. wjth
.
head coach·
.
The big ch~_llenge
.
that came for
,
·.'
win theMetro Atlantic Athletic
·
verfanatic;
_
.
'
1
'
_
the
National
P~nn
~elay ineet, ·
·
PeteColaizzo;wheilierthrough
Melfi was at the.University of
:
Conference championship at
.
'
This year, senior capt_ain
where he rait the five-lcilometer
:
e-mails or telep4one co
_
nversa-
Notre Qame.
.
Van<:o~land P~k Nov. 1. With
Michael Melfi has eruptecl
_
on
ra,ce.
_
.
,
'.
tions.
.
,
>
·
,
·
. .
_·
Melfi admits that at first he
-
·
top-_ten
·
na:tionally ranked Iona
the cross country scene;
In
this
.
This season's accomplish-
Melfi ~ttnbutes
"
some of his
.
was unsilre
of
the expectations·
.
College'in_the confer~nce, Melfi
year's first three meets·, Melfi
'
ments
are
even more impressive
;early
seasonsuccess to his re-
,
CoachCol~
_
zzo had set for him·.
:
will
have to ·co~tinue to. i:un
has been consistently Marist's
.
sim;e at this tini.e'lastyear Melfi
•
'lationship
with
Colaizzo over the
"He 3lways
,
sets high goals that. strong: ButMelfi's compet1t1ve
number one runner. ·
·
·
·
_was wa~ching fro.m
th~
sidelines.
summer.
·
seem almost unreachable," Melfi
·
spirit and dedication
_
will more
Atinvitationals held at Lehigh
LastJall, Melfi
·red-shirted
to
"The one-on"o.n~_relationship
added:
·
.
. ·
_
,
·
..
.
.
_ .
than likely propel him
to
the top
and Hartford, Melfi easily cap-
save his last year of eligibility
.
-
really helped.
·
I received good
However, he surprised
.
eye!) . as he enters the
_
second half of
tured first placefinishes.
·
Two
.
fo~
this year. '.The season away
·
advice and ·coaching all sum,
himself when he
·
s~rpassed
·
his season.
weeks ago, at the highly com-
from the
sport
did crea~ doubts
mer."
.
.
these high goals
1
.
peati!)g All-
·
petitive National Catholic Cross
.
in the mind of Melfi.
And it is Q:iis
·
dedication that
.
:
Amen.cans from ofu.er colleges·
Country
_
chanipioh~hips he
Becauseofthetacticsrequired
completed the
·
five mile course
·
for cross country racing, Melfi
24: 17, good for
third
place.
'
admits tha( he worried about
This has not just occurred
whathe
·
wouldbeabletoaccom-
over night, however. This se-
plish this
'year.
.
.
nior psychology/special educa-
"When I stepped on the line
tion major has
·
been at the top
Sept. 5, it
·was
the firsttime I
of his sport for a while now.
raced (cross country) in two
Melfi holds five indoor track
years," Melfi said, "I thought it
records, including
an
8:27 in the
·
·
would
be
tough to get back into
three-kilometer race and as a
it."
member of the distance medley
Melfi did not leave this sea~
relay, which competed at the
.
son to chance, however, as he
s
ancun
*
Nassau
*
-
Jamaica
·
*
·
Mazatlan
*
·
Acapulc
•
·eahamas
Cruise* Florida
*·South
-
Padre
Travel Free
and
make lots
of
Cash!
·
Top reps are offered-full-time staff jobs.
Lowest price Guaranteed. Call now for details!
411
..
~
~
'
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.
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.
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.
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.
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·
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five
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Marisf indoor
•
track
'
·
.
recoicts;
:'
/:,,\; , .·/~:
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Gar~folaJ11l:the
_
•
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by
JEFFl)AHNCK.E:
•
.
.
.
. ·
•
s~affWriter
..
.
·
.
post arid then minutes late[
•
he
· ·
.
,
.•. ..
.
.·.·
.
·
.
,
,
..
.
~a~
:
·
stopp~d
.-
1:>y goalkeeper
.
Recording
'
corisecutive shut.:
Matt'falarico.
,
.
·.·
·
.
·
.
.
"
··
..
·
·
·
•
outs is
a,n
impressiveJeatforiµiy
· ·
J
The<lo!lefrrst half goaj prov
.
ed
·
teatn, but for
·
a team 'with
:
14
.••
tobe enough;:'though~
·
as
'.
fresh-
:.
·
·
·
·
.
·
.
...
....
.
.
·
: _
_
-·
.
.
>
Quote
·
or~~e
-
W~lc
>
·.
•
·
: ~'.
We
:
couldnotaskforany
::
.
· tN~ii
Ill<>~ft?~
~
iP
.
8-~Year,
bld
'.
kid/'.
:
\
Meii
's
;
so_cce.r
'i;odcii
:
!Jqbb/Iiefodes
;
Oft
Carlos
DeBriio
':
.
.
· .
· ..
::
:·-'.
:
:.(,:-:.:
>:
PAGE
,
16:'
o
freshmen itis remarkable
:
.
.
··
. .
·
··
men DeBrito earned his first ca~
-
That is
-
~xactly what the Marist
.
reer shutout :· .
.
·
.
.
. .
>
•
.
rrien
;
s
:
soccer squacl
·
accom-
.·
·..
,
'
'
l
'.
111
d6ing
'
just
-
fine
;
'~ s
'
~fd
plislied this ..yeekencl; however
,
•
.
·.
OeBrito
.-
of ~if perfbllllaii<:e qf
.
stringing togethefapairofl
~
O
·
late. !Tmjusfexcited
;
to
·
play
··
·
. ·
·
·..
·
· ·
·
· ·
·
·
.
·
·
··
:
·
·
·
,-
·.
· ·
·
·
·
·
• . ··
·
·
··
'
'
:
·
·
.
victories
'.
Over
·
Niag11ni
'
aqd
.
every timelstep
·
QO,
ihe
field,."
'
The'M,aris
\
rnerl'°s
:
so
:
ccer
.
~ea~
'.
nasviorrthre~ g~mes
i~
a
row
~~erstarti
.
ng
:
·
o
:
s.
i
-
Cajiisius. The RedFoxes
:
have
.
.
•·
..
'
Mari.st out-:shofthe
f>Qrp~e
·
.
.
.
,:
;
.
.
.
now won three in ato\V
.'
.
. ;
.
Eagles 266.
'
·.
·
.
.
.
.
.
.
;:
<'
.
thing
.
that eriraged the
:
canisitis
. •
Canisius
•
ritldfi6}de~
rilade
a
ra-
.
tipp¢r right
.
CC>tner of the goal,
"We're finally starting t9 come
-
·
-Sunday
,
saw
·
Ganfsius
.
visit head coach.
,
.
•
.
·•·
.·
.
·
·
·
. ~ial s~tir:
..
.
.
.-·
.·.•.·
·
.
.
• .
.
,
.
enough
_:
to give Maiista 1~0
win.
together," said goalkeeper Po·ughkeepsie. TheFoxeswere
''Youareanightimire,"sai
.
dthe
.
"Iw.as v~ryupsetthat
:
he
-
had
. Heracles colnplemented
C1Ji-J9s DeBrito. "We're feeling
·
-
forced
.
to . play
.
wit~o.ut
·
coach Jrom the s°ideline
/
"You
.
to resort to
'
tliat/'
.
Bradley said 'DeBrito after
.
the
,
game,
giving
.
.
confident and just taking-it one )riidfielderTh~miasM_ullowney;
have no business tfofog out
·
ofthe.incid
.
ent.
.
'"
fwanted to do
him a lotofcr~ditforthe wins.
game
:
atatime.".
.
.
:-
.·
whoaccurrrula,ted:J1is
;
fiftfryel~
there."
.
·
::··: ·:.:
.·
.
.
·
somanythirigsatthesametime
;"Hekeptusinthegame,»said
.·
NiagaravisitedtheNorthField
..
low
card
'
iti
the
Niagara
game
MaristcoaciiBobby
,
Hex:odes
.
andlcolildri'
.
t For the next five
.
the coach
.
of his
.
Young goal-
.
Saturday afternoon
;
coining in
'.
and had to sit'oµt.
.
;
.
.
agreed Morda
•
inade s·Qme
~ad,
.
mjnutes
·
it
was h~d
'
to
.
get
/
my
.
}5:eeper
.
.
·
''We
:
could hot ask for
with
a reco_rcl ofli6.
·
The
FC?xes
·
: .
TheBrst
half
saw
_
both
:
teartls
calls butalso said the
'.
Canisfos
·
mind
·
l>ack on
.
th~ game.'
\ .
.
anything niore
.
froriran 18-yeai-
.
struck first
·
when Brian K3:i'cz
.
gq
~corefoss; as 'neithe
(
club
.
players were
·
outofcontrol.
•
·
·
,
·
·
.·
}leJ,'odes
.
pnuseti Bi:adleyfor old kid:''
.
.
took iiil
.
assist fro
in
::13,rian
.
\\'as able to cqnver
f
whe~)ie
_
~
·
•• ·
· _
"Some
·
~e~isions
·
wej~
.
prem,
-
t!ie.-:way ~e
:
cond~c
.
ted hims~lf.
·
·
.
·
The Red Foxes are now sec:.
.
Garafolaatthel5,:45mark
>
The
·
:
seilted
·
witffopportutjitles
;:
.
'.fhe
.
suspect,'~
.
said the Red
'
Fq_x
''Hehandleditr;eally
.
\\:'elltsaid
ond.in
:
tJie
:
MAAC with
.
a3-1
:
.
.
-
----- __
•
re~i of-the half was all
Mari~t;
'
second
haif:saw
:
ili
(
reafW~ry
,
coach
:.
:
"But
'.:
they
.
(C~~isit1s)
)ie~~4es'.
.
~'.~e
:
got
,
~p~~!
,
·kept it
.
·
.
record.
·..
.
·
··
as
.·
they controlled the
.
tenipo
•
<
develQp
:
as:
severar
f2ani$i
~
s
··.·
cr()ssed
'
ithe
·
line
'.
:
You
;:7'
don'.t
.
under· control
;.
arid maintained
·
·
·Aithouglithey ahead of where
·
:
t~l
~t
tat~~
.
•.
µif·:
f!o~
_·
()
r:
:
m
,
e.
:
··.{
~½a~,:,;~t:!~,~I
/
l
~t
hl
.·.;.
·
··:
s(ri%j~tf
r!r~~-
·
~~di
_
;
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:o
._.
hl!K~~~th:
.
con~st
··
J!~dley
.·
ap~
ftt~~i:iti1i~1~~~o;::i:a~· .
•
.
. .
.
.
. ·
•
..
Thef<>xes \Yent to th~ pr~~
.:
--.
••. :,
Mor~
,
con_i.i~J~11tly
_:
,
~arp.~d
. :
spiUe~
'
over
;
!nt~ a,
.
disp~t~
,
~Jt_li
proached Bradl~Y
1:
alld
/
apolo,
..
tureJ~
_
consider
'
the
_
m in the up-
•
.
with
·
a
:
.
·
t ..
o
cllsh
_
ion
•
bufit ye
.
fy
. ·
/
Q.anjsius a\fout,
·
:m~
i/
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fo~l
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laif
·.
;,
th.e.
t
plllyer
f
wh
.
en
J
q,_tjijqri~-
;
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.
.
p~r e
.
c~elQil
·
o
f
the conference
;
·
easily
'
could have):,eeil
'
larger
:
-:.
·
,
guage
~
at
;
orie
\
poitj
f
,
st55i>Pi_ng
.
•
tion
)irose
J,etween M@.st'
~
;
Ri
/
-
'.
There
·
was still a gatt_1e
:
going
·
.
· '!
)Ve'.re just too
·
young,"
To
·
start the second
·
Marist
_;
play
to
speak"1itQ captain N
a
t~
·
·
chard
-
BradJt_!Y
·
ancfC
.
~_nisius'
.
on
through alltbis.
,
The
'
SCO(
..
Herodes said
;
.
•
.
·.
cameoutaHttle
.
flli4
attim~Jo6k
.:.:
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,
;
Fillmor¢
.'
·:
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M_idfieJd
~
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:
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Ry
.
a.n
;
.
·
·
.
R.yariHandle
y;-
::
B
r
adley,
an
Af,;
·
.
'fog
·
b~g:in
:
~nc
f
en
de
.
cf
;
at:th.e
·
.·
Marist\yill
be
in
actionSatui:-
.
·
ing
;
tfre<l .
.
Once agairi they
•
had
·/_
P.untlri
\
va'.s
-
ejec(e<f afte
i
:
r~e1v
i
:
t
ican
·:/-
Arrie
·
rkan,
.
}
got
J
n
.
·
71:55
,
markwhen
Brian
Garafola
·
.·.
day
·
at
·
I
;
p.m
>
,
when they host
·
..
.
·
indiffl~'Yiir°~ftley's
'
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~
ts
·
1
.
;.;nto
•
ili~icijioci.M01
.
rf}~~~4~
L
!1
.;.;
fl,
.
~~
.
~!-l~!g
.
2
,
~t
·
1
~!•
~~~~~~
by
.
THOMAS
RYAN
\.
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., .
.
yard
f
in
'
,
hf~
)
h:re'¢
)
Ye~
i'.s::'
'
~
t
•·
~y~n
,
:
played be~ter
.:;:/
l1ie
:
•
{)~a-
:
foxes
.
caught a
.
big break
in
_
t11~ir
.
..
..
·:·
a
.
road defeat they suff~r~d
.
last-
.
.
.
}
.
ma~hng of t11~
.
~t
_
:.P
.
e~~sf~
.
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p~es,
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;
~IW~:ve
·
·
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·
··•
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..
Bµt,
:
with
:
!9-f
-'
Hoy as
:
loss
:
.
to
•
.
• .
. ·
.
.
· · ,
The
'
Red Foi·offense rushed
.
·,
tions; an average of24
:
.
25 yards
·
.
tire
game
;
·
,
·
: :.:
.
'';;-
:-,/
''i
f
:
:p
~
.
;_,:,
-<:
':
.
the ti~-bi'eak~r on ~eit side by
·
·
Faid:'ield the seasori has become
:
·
.
for3
·
QO yar~s
,
ang'tbre\v
fQ
r
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::
per
com,ple
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~
~
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.
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t
fr
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way
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<>f th~ir
/
29
;.
17
~
~ii
f
over
·
revitalizcil
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,
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-
.
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.
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more
;
while Aclanioyurl<alocked
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r
Traiilaglini~~
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igges
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Trrs(s,hUt(?'uy'>f
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~98
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J.l°'~for
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Faiifieldl~t~attjr&,ty
,
.
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-·
:
.
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.
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Confereiic~
·
leade
r
Duquesne
.
.
·
~ s
;
chpo!
.:
recordJ~~r fi~id
·
g~~¢
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nipletio_iis
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51
:.
y~fl
pun.
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Me~~Nl~
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eH
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st~l must play
_
fairfi~~d.
:
tllis
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.
~;sen.i9~
.
c<>11xertec1 fi~lcl,
g~~~
.
·
~round
·.
A,d~~o~11;r.l<l:l
f
!ie.lcl
Ill{)~
~~s_tc;rSyl~~~
(
¥.We.r
.
.
:
to
0
::
2
:
1(1
tit~
c<>n
_
ferenc~ •
.
.
with
.
wf!ek,,m.ct _Ge.orge~<>\VD, i
_
n
~~
·
~9
,'
·
~7:
/
~d30
rar~i11~e
~ee:
:-
.:.
S?als
,
]~~~~Miirstp'.'
·
.·
•
thatgayf ;St-J?et~~
.
l~c~JI~nt
·
::
G~orge,t9w
.
n~
c
.J?
,
1:1
:
9U~~ne,
·
.
aQd · weeks .
•..
1-'J
_
tho~~both
~~
·
~t .
.
onc:t quarter cllld then dn~lecl
_:
_
~
,/
'
!
~·
.
2-.1
Metro A!}!lflbc A,~~Hc fieldpos1ti<>n
lll
.
t!ie.f o ~
~uar-_ Fairfield
~J
l~ft,~~J9~1r_sched-:
hpme,}1e~the~ 1s a sure w~ ~or
39-y~der in ~~.third,
_
qmµter.
·
· ·
~()µt:erence) ppened
.
~~s~A11ng
.
.
tef•
.
fres~111an
,
P:!~9~~1f ker . 11le,
.
.
. ,
:
,- _- ,
ii
.
,-
:
·
·
.
·,
.
·..
.
.
the Dukes.
, .
.
,·
.
,
·
.
.
He missed~ #yard
_
~tteinpt
.·
.
··
in
,
t!te
·
first qu~er 'Yhe1
f:
ll~
.
.
..
·
M1ckeyHulse
.
l>Qo~~
.
af9,
:-
yard
·
·
..
Ne,xt
.
up
.
fo~the.l\:fari~t Red
..
.
.·
.
.
~
be~een
_
those twog~es,
·
1
.
ater
.
in
·
the ~ird quarte~
,
~at
.·.
f<J~nd wid~ receiv~r
-
'fii.µ
K:<l~~~
.
fiJld go~,.thefi~t opps col
,
le-
.
.
.
F<>x:es ateJJ:te
:}
;t
.
lohn
'.
rR~d
:
..
wllo
·
sh
.
ould t
.
h~ Dukesj>lay? ·
would have ~n~e longes~ir1
:
.
.
on a
:
2~
.
-,yard to~cM0~11 p~s
· ·
g1ate~I• to ge
.
t
t!ie.
~~a<!9C~
.
·
;
Sto~. _The Red St?wi
~ill
~
· .
1b.eM:¥is~ Red i:'<>xes .
.
A
.
per-
·
·
~choo! historx, but}till beca,me
·
:
!o giv~ the
R~
:
f
oxe~ -~ Cl,lrly
·
on
_
:
the
,
~0.3!°d,'
:
.-
The folle other
.
:
CQ~~
g ~tg Poughk~p~1e af~r
.
.
feet oppo~ni
.
tyJo
.
r r-.,:anst to·
thefirst,ReclFoxevertokickfout
·
7:-0 l~(l .
.
yttemjhe thit:d quar-
·
bng}lt SJ)(?t
~~
tJl~
day :{or
~r
·
.
g~ttmg
.
a severe bea1:t
.
ng at the
catch Duquesn~ n~ping after
in on
.
e garrit_!. He also score,d tlte
·
te.r wit~
.
Marist
,
µp
y>-0,
P~ters
~~~
~e pi~y O~)~mor h
.
ands of the I)uqu~11e Qu.kes
·
.
coming off o(what should
be
a
mo$r points ever in on~ game
·
'fl]Ullaglirri,!t8(>~ed up with-Joe
.
~1de rece1ve1)el
.
an1P9.bte. Po-
.
last week .
.
_
St: John's lost th~t tough game agairl
_
st the Stags
forMaristkickerwith 12, \)eat-
_
Calabna o
.
n a 5~
-,
yard tq11c~~
·
ltte caught five pas~es f°.r 5
.
4
contest 31-3 m fr~nt
.
of their while looking forward to play-
·
·
ing the old markofl I.
dow11 play to stake the
_
Re!}
yards. .
home crowd, and will no doubt
ing Georgetown a week later .
.
Leading ~sher J.J. ~He11ran
_
J:o~es to a 26-0
1~4
:
_Calabri~
. With ~e win, 1!1e Red Foxes
be
Jooking ~orward
t~
turni~g
However, not every \'ery good
for 124yards on 19 ca¢es and
finished tQ.e d~y_ with four
.
·
SIXlQ.,stnuwitaga._1~st~L P.eters,
~eir seas~n around with a wm
team goes to J>ennsylvania'and
Dave Spinato .chipped in with
catches for a whoppmg total 138
:
.
Man st st~yeq
.:
~v1tJt
m
a
·
half over
Manst:
·
.
,;
beats
the Dukes on their home
6l yards on the ground
:
Allen
yards and a touc;:hdown.
.
_
·
game of ~~quesne and Canisi~s
.
Mari~t, in~ch lil~e th~ydid with
field, and it is still a question as
went
.
over the 1,600
.
yard m~k
As well as the Red
.
Fox offt:n~
-
.
.
.
,
·
both of
·
Whom ~tand at 2".'0 m !11eFairfield Stags
,
will
be
look-
to whether Marist is even a good
for his career and now h~ 1,626
playe4, the defe.nse may have
the MAAC standings. The
R~~
mg to take rev~nge at home for
team
yet
·
·
•
•
;
·
••
'
.,
·
..
:'Ii
.
52.3.1
52.3.2
52.3.3
52.3.4
52.3.5
52.3.6
52.3.7
52.3.8
52.3.9
52.3.10
52.3.11
52.3.12
52.3.13
52.3.14
52.3.15
52.3.16