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The Circle, October 8, 1998.xml

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 52 No. 4 - October 8, 1998

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·
_
~FEAiiJREs~. ·
Brother Paul Afubrose has
... ctecii~at¢q·,68Jears _t9
t1ie
:·_ M~stBrotheis;
pg.5
<\
v
-

r
-~S\. ·: .
. .
,,·--
;
"';.,·•-
~SPORTS~
Football team takes
an:..
qther ..step in\
hunt
for
, M.:AA.C
t1tl.e,
pg .
.16.
:
; ·
·
: .
the· student newspaper
Of
COllege
VOLUME #52 ·ISSUE# 4
Goodluck on'.midtermstHave a·qreat break!
OCTOBER 8, 1998
ResNet'S ..
211.d
year
.
aSlJC;!~
.
.
.
byn;M~O~SON.
.
. · StaffW.rJt.er,
.
Marist; . It 1eg~Sept~ml;>~r of
.:. · Iast · year
\viili
the
·
°frrsf
tour.· of
the:\'SWA'f?'.
team.·:
·
, .. ,-:•::
·:·
· .
Besdrnowriforitsrctnningfox-
·
..... ~.This,groupof stildenis and..
_>
logo, ResNet finished 'tlie year computer .tecfiniciags· went
to
~head:
. . . .
· .....••. • . each doflll
and
living ?iea·on
<
Residential ;Networking; or campus to installed internet and
Res~~(is'
th~
program
on
cam-
·
mainframe access to ··students
pµs
that not
·
only. hooks. up
who requested'itfor"their per:.
c~mputers to the college's main,:
sonal coinpU:ters. . .
frameforresfrient 'stridents;.but . ·.·
While the program may .be
itl~o''.dqe~
tji~ili
:inoii{
.
. . . ..
.
new, theidea is not.JtaH began
..
:
Rob;Guillll1;manager,~f Per-
about .•
7
years .. ago·:\vhen'the
~onhl
Computer Jec9no,9gie~ _ Int~met 'Y.aS nofab~g
de~, J,ut

•.·
. . .•
..
. ..
.
. . . . .
.
. . .
.
. Gr~~J:\
.
sajd
fl()
gne k_new ~ltaL mo~e. a.nd
~Off
schools ,wert? . ..

Jarie,t K~ne swipes, ,heii-.student
JD
for
securitf guard, Ja.mes Deyo, at the entrance. of
!o;expect when Manst
.
started gett~R<?A*
·
·
·
. : .
,
·
Leo Hal[S'ecurty·hired new teinRguards fortlie dormitoriei:do expand the force .
... "--··--~!~~~=~~~;::~
largeJhis ..
.
.
·
ac~fi~~~c~i!;d~:~:~~n~:~~= ..
,si~~-»it&ltpg'file&;~fa~ttGQls~.:.~.-:--
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RCiNet ;, aituall/neW at
:,.pleas~see RE!;NET,pg.
4
.
hires
tel111
t
,P-1~~
gµaEtls .
. . . . b .JILLGIOC<>NDO
... .
~atds{iJ1~·5pllege
~,<lli
1111oved .. fo:of
i:>~v-01,_-
~S~6:rti_ng ~tu-,
·· Y
· .
. . .
· ·
• ilie full-:timers:onto foot-and car 4e11ts;JlJld}nWci9g sllre _the
. . $!~1!}(2.
1
rs
> ·
.. .- .·.. . .
"
p~tr~t :Tue s~ho"ol'W\tiH}~¥1s-': •?"(:i-3l(~¥;ety ~[the_cainp.llS .
. Resi~enf}ttide~~s 111~y
:
.,hin.:1
.
?ff~_uarc;I~
through_n~\ys~ · is Illat~ta,in~d:<_-.-
-
:
< . -- .• ...
. have noticf!d·some l!!lfamtl-
. paper.ads'.
.
. -··
:
-.
'
:
·
•.
.
.·.··.-.,
.
:µarysatclJh,atthis wa~ a
· iarfaces at their dorm's· secu- . ·.
:
'.
Entry
officers are :still being .. step
up
(or the permanent of,.
rity desk. .
:::>:•
:
. :: /:, ..
r~tate,a':betwe·en don.n{orLa
.
ficefa;c: .• . . . .· ·.· .
·
.. :
.. The new :fa~~s· b~}cmg to ·:. claily'.b.1:tsis:si~c;e·w~ pe,ginni°-g
· .. ·
''lt
is :~-h.l8-~~r1:midposi- .
temporaiygtfards_hired to
·
oftheyear: . .,,.,
:
,· :'.:
:
tton buppsno moreor.110
·
expand.!he.sec,urity force'.·.
· .. " ..
_
Starting>thfa Il!()hth; the . less imp_ortant thap. the en:-
'Joe
Leary, diredorofSafety- ::guards willbe'ori aweeklytot_a" .·
try
officers;" he sat~,' · ....
and'S~c.udfy;~said ,the ·new ··
·
•·!i()I{sih~~l~.
'
~::-·\ :. ;
L. ·,
:
s.ecurify~n:theoth~r~ide
. gllards; ..
~
ar§ jHtrt of the - .
·
A~c6rclirigt9"·~ecf!1% r9Jat:- •. of}loµte
9
was one
o[
the
_ c9lleg~.'sg1:o\vth. ·. .
>
-
ing"guards:giyes,tlierrl.exper,- _reason~for th
.
e ex~an_s10n:
.
. .

.«E~J)filc}Sillll. of
.ti!~
coll~ge . . ence. in all. th~donnsllllcl itpre-' . - ·.·.· ':'est Cedar n?w has a se-
: ' ...
•····
/
"·· .. •
·
,:o-
.
.... : .··.
.
.
:. : : \
•·l
:
<.
.''-"lePooto/J~~o
.
.
.was
the
c1:1fJtlyst fof_hiring
vents'.fraterriizing \\'.iththestti-:. cunty guard assigned to that
S.hanncm McGinr:iis and her par~nts enjoy
.
Parents' \i\fe~k~nd
.
more ~afd(to· cover the ad-. clen~which was an issue·in the.
area. ·
.
..
.
.
'•.
~- >· .. ·
.
· ..
< . .
,:_
.
:16·
··o·o
·
·
.
-o·. .
ditional territo_ry,''. he said;
·
' p'ast.' . ·..
. _, . ·,. ,
>- .
. ..
The library aiso has a. se'"
Ma
... ·• .. ·
......
r . · .
·
·
··
·
·.1.·.·
...
s.·.··.·· .. '
..
···t ..
'ho. s
.. ·
t
... ·.·
s.··· .
.
.
· ···• .... ·
.
:
.•.···•··.·.· .. ;,· ... ·· .
.

..
... · .
·
.. · ..
''The.new, temp,:>rary guards
·
.The.second change was pro-· curif)'
·
guard inside.who is
hayedone a·goodjob in the. motingguatdsthathaveperma-
contracted through.atiout-
·.~o·
..

.

..
.
.
-....
- . n .
· ..
··.·a·.
···.-r.
..
.
.. en
·
ts··.'····.·
.
·.'··.·. ·•·
.. · ..
T.
.
.
.

.<e'.·
·_ ..
·k··e·n·
.a··...
time that they have been
nentpositionstootitsidepatroL . sideagency.I.;earysaidthat
lJ
F
.I.
I

l' l'ol
here:" . .
. .
These guards are·no,.vin charge . the highervisibifity security
...... <
.
:
;
-

..
.
.
ovet;:inthe:nifrige;ai~i- a~d
·
Besides hiring temporary
5>fthebuildings, vehicle patrol,
has the better.
byTHEACIMMINO.
clean rooms can
·
only mean it is ··
L-.:..,_.:...;;,_;_ _ _ _ _
,..;... _ _ _ _ _
;,;,..;.....;.......;_;..__;__,----..:...;.-,--..:...;.-...,-...,...,---------,----'
. S!affWriter
parents' weekend.
.
class president.
Strange faces on campus, lax
Marist hosted one of the most.
dorm security, r:estaurant. left-
successful parents; weekends in .·
·
-
·.
the history
c:if
the college last
W££1{Ly
POLL
Friday, .Saturday. and· Sunday.
k
~·..
Approximately 800'stridents and
%)
.
over
15,000 parents aridfamily .
members participated in the
Are
you
registeredto
vote? ·
YES
29
NO
21
If so, do you plan to vote in
November's elections?
YES
18
NO
11
This
is
an unscimlific
SIIJVey
taken from
SO
Maristsru,!mu.
weekend's activities.
Assistant Dean for Student
Services,
Deborah
DiCaprio said
the weekend was a great suc-
cess.
"It seemed to go very, very
well," she said. "The numbers
have been growing over the past
several years. The weather was
beautiful and this was our big
... please see
PARENTS,
pg. 3
Hogan .. wins
prez title
by
CHRIS GROGAN
Staff Writer
Recently elected Freshman
Class President Kevin Hogan
said he feels he has the skills to
lead the class of 2002 into the
next millennium.
Having a good work ethic and
being easily approachable are
his best qualities as a student
leader, according to Hogan.
"I'm easy to talk to, so hope-
fully students
will
come up to
me and suggest ideas," he said .
Although he has not set any
spe.cific
·. goals yet,
Ho
g:a)1
saicl
·coµ-
centrating
.
.
on·: •class
unity will
.
· - - - - - -
behismain
.
priority. He plans to do this
by
. starting
a
freshman class_ ne-..vs-
lettei and giving important in-
formation to ResidentStudent
Council (RSC) presidents to be
relayed
to
students.
Hogan already has many
years of experience in politics.
He began by serving in the
student council of his middle
school, and in high school he
was elected junior and senior
Hogan is from Kenilworth, NJ,
and·•attended David Brearley
High School.
·
l[NSIQE
TODAY:
T-storms
bi:
65°
lo:47°
Community ................. 2
Features ..................... 5··
A&E ....................... 11
Op
. .
.
9
lDlOO ••••••••••••••••••••••
Sports ........................ 16







































Security Briefs-.. - - -
Vandals kicked a Px
811
hole in. a ··. 24 and intimidated into. handing .
wall of :the eighth floor ·
.
over an estimated $2,000 in
ChampagnatloungelastSunday . money'afld jewelrj:.Jhe.inci-
night. The damage w11s discov".
dent
w~as
tiport~d at 11_ a:m. on
ered the following day and re-_ -Septem~~f 28 to' Security '.who
ported.

·.
.
contacted the Poughkeepsie
,
. . PoHfe Department:.
'
A Marian Hall resident lost her
Maristidentification card Safur-
day, Sept. 26 arid reported it to
Security. Three _d<;tYS later, th~
·new owner ofthe card ran up a
$70 bill in vending machine and
laundry bills, emptying the_ac-
count.
A white Diamond~atk bicy~Ie
was found thrown over the wall
near the Hoop Lot parking area
over the weekend. The owner
later claimed the missing bicycle
at the Security office.
An"tinlicensed Culin:ify;.in~ti-
tute - of Amerfca student
. slamQ1ed a car into the slate sign
·embankme~t at the North End
entrance last Thursday at 4:56
p.m, The police and fire.depart-
ment rushed to the scene, but
there were'
no.
se'nous injuries.
The car w~s ~oderately dam-
aged, crumpling the'front and
driver's-side corner panel. The
driver of the vehicle was
charged with·operatingwithout
a license; driving with a sus-
pended registra~ori arid failing
Two freshmen
.
were approached
to reduce speed. The CIA ·was
in a parking}otat:the Galleria
infonne.dandisexpectedtohelp
Mall at 8 p.m: Thursday; ,Sept. · - a for the dam.a ed slate.
Weekend Weather
FRIDAY:
showers
hi:
&\,O
. SATURDAY:·
• partly cloudy
hi: ..
M~
SUNDAY:
sun_ny
- hi:.
7.1°
J
io:
45,1':,
Source: http://www.weather.com (The Weather Channel)
SCHOOL
Sale
ction
SUNY
gallery
explores Asia
College
Art
Gallery; SUNY New.
Paltz:
-
Chandler Qallery, "Sacred
An-
cient Asia: · Photographs by
Kenro Izo"; iinages which docu- ·
ment ancient religious sites
throughout Asia whic.h are in
danger of oeing lost by' _neglect
and war.
·
· ,
North Gallery, ''Opium Works";
sculpture by Barbara Brnughel
which.explore tlie opium tr~de
in the' 18th and' 19th centuries.
Gallery Hours:
Tues~Friday:
W
a.m. -
4
p.m_.;'Tues~·ev.e~gs:'7-
9
p.m.; Sattm,Iays
aml
Sun~ys:
1-4
p.m.;
¢1osed
Mond~ys arid
all
school.holidays_. . -' . .
For infon11~tiori, cail 257-
3.844. ·. .
i!
·

.
Defensive Driving offered
; •. ;:, +;.i :~:,.':: •-
.._:
,
' .•.
~
~
-
Unison Arts_ and' Learning
Center is offenng·Defensive
Driving
cm Sunday
Oct.
.18,
9a'.m.·
to3:30p.m/·\' .•
/:··••···n\(-,
This
NYS
Point arid Iristmmce
Reduction.Pt<lgr@t_.i{'.~·si~_hour
course given for safety:.,and· .
. ,
,';.
'
.
Photo courtesy Poughkeepsie Day School .
.
savings appr(jved by'the NYS
This handbill from the Velvet Underground's·
Boston Tea_
Departme\'ltof Motor Yehi~les. ·
Patty
concert is one of many unique items for bid on Oct: ..
17 .)
The courseis adrivfog'Imowi-
P~ughkee~e-llay Schoof h~
anilpru
·au~~µ;
edgerefresher,tlla~~.:ansav.~ .
.Yo'u. ·· . ' · '- -
·
··
·
, . :
··
·
- , -
, ' On Saturday, Oct. 17, the
, Novel and celebrity memora-:
10% offcollisiori·and liability
-
11
bT" , · 1 -d. ··
h
'd'
insui:ance,fofthree'-ye.
ats,
and .Poughkeepsie Day School w1
. 1 ta~mc u mg autograp e
'.
re. du. ce foui-po.1nts.
'·hff.:.
yourdriv-
hold an annual-Barn. sa]e and
E]eanor-RooseveJt book;·Rob-:
·
·
· ;
•;Auction. which is "th~ largest : ert Tonner doll and EltonJohn
i~gf~~
0
J~~fis
$
35 f6r ~ni'~cin ,event of its kind in the.Hudson' ·autographed"'Candle in .the
m. em. be. rs. who··.:P. re
.. ~r.
e.·
g.is. te
.. \. ;$37 ·Valley. .·

.
· Wind"· CD auctio1tbegins at 1
· · · · ,
·
· ·
·
·
.. - · . .
An ecle. ctic ,ass. ortment of, p.ril. Absen.tee ... bids. accepted ..
_ rion-.mem. bers. whopre-i:egister,
·
·
·
d · ·
· $1
·
$42 atthe; door,
arid
$28for
se:-
large and smaILtreasures from ..
~A.
ril1ss1on
IS •
i
per persoll.;
niorcitiieris."Bring·luncii"fo tiie _ antiques, to., vintage: c;Jothing, , P.foceei;ls benefit.PDS.-;
: : :
class.
· - · · · · · · ·
~
books to housewares; electron- .
Foririformation, call 462-7600
Forinfonrtation,cail255~f559.
ics to sporting.goods, :offered
or visit the PDS website at
,.
···
·
forsalefrom8a.m.~4p.m;
www.pds.pvt.kl2.ny.us.
Looking for Marist students to model for the 13th
Annual
Silver
Needle
Fashion
Show and Awards on Thursday, Apnl 29, .1999
Requirements: Height
5'9;
_
.Weight proportioned to height .
Size_ 6-8
Only
TYROUTS ARE WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1411
a.m.
INTHE NELLIE GOLLETTI THEATER
INFORMATION -EXTENSION 2124

























































































































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'
THE
.
CCIR.<CLH
.
N
·
ews
/
Waterfront
Pllrk
.
lo
become
·
reality
.
by)ESSICASMITH
Staff Writer
·
Poughkeepsie.
·
'
.
Construction of the park is
antidpate
·
d to
·
begin in late win-
ter or early spring. It
will
start
The library is Ii~t the o'nly part
·
with the expensive infrastruc-
of campus where impro~eriients
·
tufe, or
·
underground
·
work that
are being made. Plahs io im-
·
needs
to
be taken care of first,
proveMarist's waterfront are in
such as the bulkhead and
sep-
their final stages.
.
··
·.
.
tic tanks.
.
.
The a
_
rea
_
will tie
:
.
called
'
The college has raised
.
C
irc
le
photo/Bric Casazza
Laura Barnes spent the weekend with her father and brother
PARENTS: Comedians,
musicians all part of the fun
l.ongview Park and will extend
·
$913,944, including grants from
°from
the
tumiei
:
by
.
tlie\vater
five' state agendes
;
the Dutchess

treatment
-
plan{ to
;-:
an
.
~rea County Industrial Development
o\\'ned by
·
vassar
,
beyon
_
d the
Agency and the Hudson River
.
.
crew docks. !twill niakeneeded Improvement Fund, according
.
·
impro
.
veinenis to the

clocks,
to Tim
.
Massie, chief college re-
which will be a greai asset to
lations
·
officer: The approxi-
.
·
the crew teams, acco
_
fding to
mately $1 miliionMaristreceives
···
continued from pg. 1
ing the men's baseball, football
..
Executive Assistant:to
·
the
.
from the state and government
gest crowd
_
ever."
and soccer games.
President, Susan RoellerBrown.
sources will be matched by the
Steve Sansola, assistant dean
Sophomore Thomas Byrne's
.
"First and foremost it willim-
,college.
·
.
:.
of Activities,
.
said parents'
parents won a drawing Saturday
·
.
prov1fthe crew tearh's
i
situa-
.
Once construction is started,
weekend is a wonderful oppor-
to take a ride in a hot
air
balloon
tion;" Brown said.
·
,
.
·
-
·,
it will hardly be noticeable, said
tunity for parents and students
over the campus.
.
A
crumbling bulkhe1~ has
Br;own. Since the site is sepa-
to enjoy the campus and its sur-
That evening, the Student
·
becom.edangerousf<;irthe~hore
ratefromthemaincampus,most roundings.
·
.
,
.
·
Programming
-
Council spon-
.
and possibl~ eroston'lmd w.ill be
·.
~~
_
dents will not even be aware
"The Division of Student
Af-
sored a performance by
Pappa
the first thing worked
·
on
;
when
of the construction.
fairs was pleased
to
have so
.
Doo Run Run.
This group has
the infrastructure· repairs are
Also, the construction teams
many of our parents and stu-
won two Gold Record awards,
.
started.
·
..
-.
·
will work around the crew
dents participating iri the week-
received Grammy nominations,
.
,
:
The park will
'
add
.
improve-
schedule. The maj<;>r construe-
end, visiting the college, meet-
performed at five Superbowls,
,
ments to the waterfront.
,
.
The tion will go on before and after
ing the staff and faculty and
two inaugurations, two World
.
road wili be moved away from
crew season.
enjoying the beauty of the
Fairs and the Olympics. They
the
·
shore
;
grass
·
will line the
Overall, Longview Park will be
Hudson Valley," he said.
played classic rock of the 1960s

riverbank
:
_
and
a
sidewalk for an asset to Marist's already at-
Tlie weekend began Friday
and '70s and Beach Boy-style
walking, biking or rollerblading
tractive campus.
with the open
recreation
family
.
California rock and roll.
·
will be added .
.
This will make
·
·
·
Sophomore Courtney
night at the McCann Center.
Heather Suydam, president of
.
fora safer
;
rriore serene looking
Mattiace sees benefits to the
Students and family members
Student Programming, said the
area.
.
construction.
had the opportunity to
.
use the
·
concert turned into a dance
,
,
Adding to the beauty of the
.. I(s a great_iclea, it'll attract a
center's workout facilities, pool,
party.
::
park-\vill be picnic areas; a
·
see.:.
l<?t
.
mo_re PSopl1Vo the s~hool," weight room
and
the racquetball
"There was a lot of
dancing,"
·;
nic overlook.with
·
a
pavilio1fand
.
,::
she
.
·
s
_
arck
:
--::
·:~
:o·
.•
'1
"
.
N,
. -'"·':
-
~
·
-
~
-
-
:-"•
·"
~
and
.,
hasketbal)
,
cowts.
""°'""'
'
•"--

~
---
..
,
~
she.said
.
.
,
;.
'P,aren~,,rmd
,s,
tud®~
·
,,_
.•
.
.. ;
,
;
.
.
·
....... ,•
. .
. ..
.
:
/
int.erptetive
:
dispiays
~
a
fishing
O .
.
Sophomore Anne
_
Morales
.
Later McCann
was
turned
into
danced
with
·
each other.
There
·"
doc:k
-
and restrooms which
:
are
said she likes the idea of an im-
a comedy hall featuring come-
was even a train
going
through
.
:
}urrentl.Y missing fro~ the
w~
~
··
..
proved waterfront
.
dian Mark Nizer. Nizer has ap-
the audience at different parts
··
1~rfyonf
'
Tlie
-
eritiie
:
park
~iU
be
·
._
"It
soimds
·
like it
'
ll be really
·
peared on Arsenio Hall, Comic
.
of the evening."
.
six
acres, four of which
:
will
be
nice," she said. "Improvements
·
Strip Live and
MTY.
He cracked
Mari st held its weekly Sunday
:
owned by Marist and
:
the
-
re-
are definitely needed in the jokes: juggled flarnin?
.
torc~es,
Mass
and
invited all the parents
.:
maining two
·
by the City of area."
. "
.
··
.
.
.
bowl~ngballs
,
electnc_ km~es
to attend. Th~t afternoon a
con-
'
TT .:~
·
a
·
.
.
.
.
··
b

·
...
,
_
·
d
:
d
andcl1dsomersaultswhilespm-
.
·
·
certwasheldmMcCann
,
where
:
ftlllg
..
.
raws
.
un re
.
s
niiigbal~spn
'
?isfingers.
.
severalofMarist'smusicalen-
..
.
.
, :'·
.
.
. · ·
· .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
Followmg N1zer was the mus,-
sembles performed.
by
JEFFPATI'ERSON
cal
.
group; the
Red Elvises
who
Every year Marist coordinates
StaffWriter
_
were recently
featured
on
.
parents' weekend with the
._
C
_
or
_
etta
_
Scott King began the
MTV's Buzzkill. They per-
Duchess County Tourism Of-
formed music froin their three
fice. This way
if
parents wish-
evening
without saying
a
word.
albums
"Grooving to the Mos-
ing to participate
in
the week-
.
Hundreds who packed intQ the
cow Beat
,"
"Surfing in Siberia"
end send their request form in
McCann Center Monday st00d
·
and
"I
Wtint To See You Belly
early enough, the tourism office
hi
applause as this woman of
Dance."
can
send
them a brochure about
world renown made her way to
Saturday's activities began
things to do in Dutchess
.
the podiu"'.
with a continental breakfast with
County.
·
.,
Nota word was spoken, bµt
faculty members and
·
academic
All proceeds from parents'
.
th
.
·
_
e room ~as alive as people of
deans in the dining hall. Fol-
weekend are used to cover the
"
all ages and races gathyred .to
lowing breakfast in the Student
cost of the ~eekend's activities.
·
hearfrom King.
·
Center there were workshop
It is recommended by the Of-
.
Poverty, racism and violence
sessions on studying abroad,
fice of College Activities to plan
.
are not what America needs, she
King
·
internships and career services.
ahead for next year's events
·
said.
·
.
Multi~racial and ethnfo
She said discrimination cannot
Over 900 people signed up for
because accommodations are
groups should assemble tci
_
de-
b~ tolerated in building an ef-
Huds<Jn River cruises.
usually limited
.
ter theseJeelings;
·
·
, .
.
'
fective coalition of social justice
.
There were also several sport-
The dates fornext year's par-
"Htstory is calling yollr gen-
"Injustice anywhere is a threat
ing events Saturday for parents
ents' weekend are Oct. 1
,
2 and
eration to put nght theirjustices
to justice anywhere," King said,
and students to
'
en· 0 includ-
and to put an end to poverty,
quoting lier husband.
racism, bigotry and violence,"
King asked for support of af-
King said
.
.
.
firmative action because she
.
The message seemed to con-
said it allows people to relate to
tinue Dr. Martin Luther King's
different races because America
dreamofAmerica.. Shesaidem-
is not a melting pot
,
but a vi-
ployment and educational op-
brant and beautiful mosaic.
portunity will help unite the
King took the position that
people of America, while enrich-
more young people should vote,
ing society, expanding the
saying it is the youth of
economy and allowing for more
America who do not vote and
businesses to interact in the
then complain about the prob-
world marketplace.
terns in the system.
Building a stronger commu-
People have sacrificed, bled
nity and focusing on what and died so Americans could
America needs for unity will
vote and it is everyone's respon-
give a definite direction toward
sibility to make the most out of
Dr. King's "I Have A Dream"
it because every vote count_§_,
speech, 35 years ago, she said.
she said.

s - -
·
· -























OCTOBER 8
7
1998
RESNET:
Progr~ll! ai:ro~-to
sati.sfy
web
surfi11g
-
-s:tri9-fn'ts_
... continued fr~m
pg.
1
-- type _
of networ~ing card Jnto
· _ their computer:· From here the
first network at Marist was de-
veloped.
In the first few years of net-
working, students wo_uld bring -
their computers to the computer
store located in Donnelly Hall·
and haveMarist computer tech-
nicians install the Token Ring
card into their computer. How.:.
ever, as more students were
bringing computers to school,
the operation had to be moved
Marist College--•
h
for:.
thefox
- l
to a lab in Marian Hall.
ers are often not compatible with
Joan Syler, office manager of.· the mainframe and the Token
Information Services, said the
Ring card and can cause night-
growth of students bringing
mares.
their own computers to college
"You could have a group of
was phenomenal.
CompaqPresario'sforexample,"
"Things just got too hectic
McConaghy said, "and half will
and we had needed more space,"
hookup fi
,
ne and the other half
she said:
_
._
. _
_
_ .
won't for some reason or an-
But even in Marian, the project
other."
of hooking up students took too
For this reason, ResNet's
much time and space.
, member urge students looking
In 1997, Gumm and others
to buy;a.computertolook on
went to. a ResNet conference
the ResNet Web page to check
where ·people from other col-
all the recommendations in find-
leges and universities _dis-
ing a compu-ter that is best
cussed the ever-'growing prpb- · suited for the system ...
lern of campus networking.
.
Even .though· the SV{ATtour
From this conference, Marist's
is over for this year, ResNet is
own ResNet and the SWAT
not finished .
.
Maintaining the
team was created.
network and handling different
ResNet's SWAT team con-
-computerproblenis becomes the
sisted this year of 20 student_ nexttask.
.
,
technicians and 3 professional
When d~velopirig,th~ Marist
staff members according to . ResNetprograrµ;staffrnembers
. Martha Mcconaghy, i¥ariag~r :also had to, find a new, way to
: df
Systems; 'Networking·
arid '
'rn~ntaiifthe labs/.~ven with
',
'
· Opetatioik\:"''•.f:·::~:t~·•:•,"-'·-
:'gfdwtIFiii
s,tgcieiff~}O:~ihging .
,
Tllis year's: S\VA'.f.team com-
-computers/the
_µs~
6fJabs has
pleted 343 req~es;s:tcrhook up_ also jnc;reased:
:
.<·
_
: .,. __ _
personal computers on its 10- -
As of this year, all of the com-
day. tour, _ This was a serious
puters in Donnelly have been
· jurnpfforn 240 in its Sept. 1997
upgraded to Windows 95. This
campaign.
quicker ·operating system has
Unfortunately, the 343 re-
helped. ResN~t maint~n. some
quests that were completed computers.that originaHy had·
were only part of the 436 re-
Wmdows3,l, which is older and
quests placed to ResNet this __ hardertofix. ·
-
September.
However, . Even thougl:i 932 stu_cl~nts are
Mcconaghy said 95 students -··
-
active 6Qthe network;)abs in
were able to hook up their com-
Donnelly;Lowell Thoµias
and
puters by themselves, nearly _<Dyson rriainly ~upporfthe rest
double from last year's number.
of the student boay. This makes
Gumm said ResNet's goal is to
computer availability and lab
make students more capable in
maintenance even more of a ne-
handling their own computing
cessity.
needs. It's not all about spoon : ResNet has also had to ~:leal
feeding student software.
withthi complainr oforily one
"One of the aims here at
·
• TokenRingjapkperroom; This __
ResNet is not only to get people:. problem has peen addressed in
.PAGE4
Strt{ggiing•;.!}1tith
·.
studeJlf~Iook
·ii6fiirtb.et;~ath
lab
offetShelp
byTONICONST~O
Business Manager ·
teer, said she ·sees the· lab as
a
useful resource
to'
the Marisf -
community, and hopes to pro.:.
mote its services.
Students who have been _
_ ':'We encourage students to
struggling in mathematics need . use it Whether it is in session or
to look
no
farther. The Marist
.
not,'' she said. -.
_
College inath lab is here to help.
The services offered include
LocatedinLowellThomas013,
student-to-faculty help ses-
with extensions near the eleva-
sions. The math Jab includes
tor,' the math lab is
a
place where
the larger area surrounding LT
students can go to get the help· 013. Students can participate in
they need.
_
.
group help sessions. The ex-
The LT is staffed by the mem-
tension comes equipped with
bers of Marist;s math depart-
pknty of tables, chairs, a _sta-
ment. Each -in-structor volun-
_ pier, pencil sharpener and a large
teers one hour and fifteen min-
dry erase board so students and
utes per week toward· helping · instructors can better illustrate
math lab students. No referrals
important concepts.
or recommendations are needed
Though the math lab staff is
to partake in the lab's services. __ committed to_ helping stuclents,
Any student who is having dif- -- 'it is strongly recommended stu-
ficulty is encouraged to go.
dents bring their text, notes,
Christina \rertullo, mathemat-
supplies and ·specific questions
ics lecturer and math lab volun-
so the instructor ca~ get a bet-
ter sense of how the material is
being presented by a certain
teacher.
.
_
Though -there are -set hours,
the laO is still open to students
who wish to work together in
a
group outside.the lab's normal
hours of operation.
·
Conference
to
lookatFDR,
Vatican and Catholics
The world's leading scholars·
on President Franklin .Delano -
Roosevelt and the Roman
Catholic Church will convene in
Hyde Park next month to exam-
ine the relationship between our
32nd president and _ the
country's largest religious de-
nomination.
.
.
_
"FDR, the Vatican and the
Roman Catholic Church in ·
America: 1933-1945'' is the
theme of the three-day convo-
cation to be held Oct. 7-9 at the
FDR Presidential Library in
Hyde
Park.
Marist College. and the
Franklin and EleanorRoosevelt
.- Institute
are
joining the FDR
Li-
brary as co-sponsors of. the
event.
_
-"This is one of the last great
unexplored aspects of FDR's
presidency,'' said Marist Presi-
dent D·ennis J. Murray. "Events
that occurred more than half a
century ago are stm · making
news today, and it will be fasci-
nating to hear the results of the
latest research on this most im-
portant era C>r'history."
on-line, but to get them to be-.' the
new · West
Cedar .
come competent and comfort- - Townhouses
-
wti~r:e there are
able with their computers;" he
_
: two'corinection·s per room.
said. ·
·." However, multiple jacks in
He also said many people call
other residentiaJ areas knot ex-
about problems that they could
istent
arid
is not in the immedi-
probably fix on their own but are
ate future.
too afraid to touch any of the
"Its being talked about, but
cords.
probably won't happen in the
The SWAT team also runs into
near future," Mcconaghy said.
problems when hooking up stu-
ResNet can be found on the
dents. Certain types of comput-
Web at www.marisi.edu/resnet.
Spring Break 99'
....
_
Largest selection of Spring Break Desti11atio11s,
including Cruises!
Foam Parties, Drink Specials and Club
Admissions.
Group Discounts and Free Trips Available.
Epicurian Tours 1-800-231-4-FUN











































I
-----,-
-,-.---.--.,,..------------------------------
OCTOBER
8~
1998
PAGES
A
lifetime of service, Brother Paul
·
Amb~ withMaristfrom
beginning
by
ELIZABETH CARRUBBA
dressed as a religious," he said
,
tally called him and asked when
Staf!Writer
"I chose.to remain that way and
he was going to receive his de-
not to change/'
grees.
Ambrose completed his scho-
"He told me to be on the next
lastic studies
·
and became a
train to Poughkeepsie," he said
.
·
.
·
Marisfs roots are within closer
teacher. He received his Bach-
In three hours, he was on the
reach than many may realize.
elor of
Arts
degree in Education
train and on his way here. He
The hard work and detennina-
and English Literature from
did not know what his respon-
tion that changed Marist into a
Fordham University, and also
sibilities would be when he ar-
four..:year college in 1946 was
earned a Bachelor of Arts de-
rived.
the work of Brother Paul
.
gree in Library Science from
"I
went to see him the next
Ambrose. His extensive educa-
Villanova University. From
morning and he told me to go to
tion and 68 years ofdedication
1941-1943, he was the Director
the Marist Normal Training
to his order, the Marist Broth-
of the Community in Catholic
School, which was Greystone,"
ers, have made for a very ful-
:University's hotise of studies.
he said. "He told me to stay
filled
life
.
Ambrose taught at grammar
there with the young brothers
Ambrose came to Marist as a
schools in Manchester, N.H. and
and keep my eyes and ears
student in 1927. After high
·
Lowell, Mass. He said while
open."
school, he went through the
teachinginManchester,N.H,he
The Provincia told Ambrose
regular rate of training for the
was assigned to teach the fifth
that he would come to the
brotherhood. He had two years
grade;
·
school in one week and an-
of Novicia,
·
which is the study
'There was also a group that
nounce that he would take over.
of the vows and religious life.
nobody was taking care of," he
His primary job was to change
He took his vows in I 930 and
said, "so besides teaching my
Marist into a four-year college.
has been a Marist Brother ever class, I was taking care of the
Accomplishing his goal would
since.
1 A kindergarten class."
take a lot of money, support, and
''.When
I
received my vows
His next assignment was at
St
·
teachers with Doctorate de-
and kneeled before theProvin-
Ann's Academy in New York
grees.
cial, he changed my name from
City.
Ambrose also needed to im-
Leonard Edward Fontaine to
~•1
was a high school teacher
prove the library and have good
B~9ther Paul Ambrose,"J1e sai<r
.
.
teac.hing Latin and English," he
science laboratories.
;
However, iri 1962, the Vatican
.
..
'
$aid.
"T
wafals<f iii
·
cnarge
"'
qf
-~.
,;rb
_
roughi'.-broihers
'
here
from
;_
'"
said the brothers
·
~mild
go back
the library.''

·
.
.
.
·· .
. .
·.
all over theiountzyand Europe,
to their birth names and wear
The morning that
·
Ambrose
who had Doctorates," he said.
civilian guard.
received his degrees,
.
the
Circle file photo
"I had been known as Brother
Provincia, which is the head of
Paul Ambrose for 32 years ~d I
the Marist Brothers, coinciden-
... please see
AMBROSE,
pg. 6
Brother Ambrose's life at Marist began in 1927 as a student.
Donnelly
Hall, once
center
·
of
.
can1pUSlife
-
.
byKATRINA
FUCHSENBERGER
Staff Writer
To science majors Donnelly
Hall is a second home, to others
it is a piece of history.
.
Donnelly
.
Hall was built be-
tween 1958 and 1961. It was
named after Brother Nilus
Donnelly who was a physics
professor at the time. He also
designed
·
and engineered the
building;
Crews of student brothers and
teaching brothers contributed
to the construction of the hall.
The building was originally
built to hold dorm rooms, a caf-
eteria, a bookstore, lecture halls,
classrooms, and a library.
Dr. Andrew Molloy, chemistry
professor, was
:i
brother at
Marist at the time Donnelly was
built. He said everywhere a stu-
dent needed to go was located
in Donnelly Hall at that time.
"Donnelly was the central
building of Marist College," he
said.
Circle file photo
Built between 1958 and 1961, Donnelly Hall has seen many changes throughout its history.
The building was named after Brother Nilus Donnelly, a physics professor at Marist.
Dr. Richard LaPietra, chemis-
try professor, was also a brother
at the time Donnelly was built.
He said he remembers a certain
closeness
resulted
from
Donnelly being the center of the
college.
"I think what was extraordi-
nary in those days was that ev-
eryone lived in this village and
it was the core of the college.
There was more of a closeness
between faculty and students
than there is now," he said. "It
was almost like a main street or
a mall. Everyone you wanted to
find was at Donnelly."
Molloy said one of the best
memories he has of Donnelly
was the Christmas parties.
"The faculty was all in one
building so we all knew each
other," Molloy said. "We had
marvelous Christmas parties
with good food and singing. It
was a great time."
Molloy said he also has some
funny memories of Donnelly.
According to Molloy, when
the students (who were all male
at the time) arrived at Marist in
the fall of I 960, the outside walls
of the dorms were not finished.
Only the first dorm room was
finished and the rest of the
rooms had no outside walls but
there were platforms outside the
rooms with railings.
"This
happened in September,
so luckily the weather was not
too bad," he said.
The only construction Molloy
helped out with was laying tiles
in the floors of Donnelly so the
chemistry labs could
be
moved
from the bottom of Greystone
to Donnelly.
According to Molloy, there
have been a lot of changes since
Donnelly was first built.
The media center was once lo-
cated on the lower level of
Donnelly at the base of the
stairs where the offices are now
located.·
The business department
once took up the strip of offices
that now include the financial
aid office and the student ac-
counts office
.
In 1981 the Fashion Design
Program held a fashion show in
what is now the computer lab.
There was a runway set up with
music to accompany the mod-
els.
·
Donnelly Hall was renovated
between 1989 and 1991. It now
holds classrooms and natural
science laboratories, a fine arts
and fashion design center, the
Computer Center, the Leaming
Center and other academic sup-
port services.
There is a coffee shop on the
upper level along with the Cam
-
pus Security Office and the col-
lege switchboard.
It
also houses offices such as
the Registrar, Financial Aid, and
Business.
LaPietra said the renovations
made a difference.
"When a place gets run down,
its age is shown and it gets an
old face," he said. "Renova-
tions put a new face on
[Donnelly]."
/























1.
OCTOBER 8
7
1998
· THE .CIRCLE
F-eatur:es
PAGE6
Riot changes. ~arist's history
On-ca.mp
us
amusement
park close.d
after brawl
. so, .students ·and brothers were
around.".• ' : .
On the amusement park scale,
Woodcliff.Park would probably
rate low compared to the amuse-'-
ment parks of today, B~ckthen
· though; it was the place to be.
Woodcliff. Park's facilities in-
cluded
an
Olympic~sized swim-
ming pool, a roller rink, arcade,'
tunnel of love, an inn where beer
by
JENNIFER MATARAZZO
Staff Writer
. was served;and the Blue Streak,
the tallest roller coaster in the
country.
Picture for a moment, an
amusement park on the North
end of campus.
Wermuth said the park also
featured a Ferris wheel.
"The Ferris wheel was prob-
ably one of the largest in the
country at the time," he said.
"Part of it went out over the
river. That was the main attrac..:
tion."
Today, Woodcliff Park is noth-
ing but a memory in the local
history of Poughkeepsie. Marist
College has expanded and built
the Townhouses, Gartland Com-
A roller coaster taking the
placeofGartlandCommons.
An
Olympic-sized swimming· pool
located down by the river and a
roller
rink
where
the
Townhouses are. On the site of
the Marist College campus in
the early 1900's, Woodcliff
Amusement Park attracted thou-
sands of people every weekend
of the summer.
. mons, the athletic fields, as well
as planned future expansions.
Thomas Wermuth, professor
of history at Marist, said the
amusement park was well
known and very popular in the
1930's.
"The park was in operation
around the same time Marist was
in its early years," he said. "At
the time, Marist was a seminary
Wermuth said although most
of the park is nonexistent, there
is one thing that remains.
"Ruins of the pool's founda-
tion are located down· by the
river," he said.
Wermuth said generally
people from Poughkeepsie at-
tended the park.
·
AMBROSE·:·
Marist be-
.
, . ' · . :
.
. .
::.·
..
comes-afour-year School
... continued from
pg.
5
Inspectors from Albany and ·
Washington came to see the
progress that the Marist Broth-
ers had made and agreed to sign
the contracts.
"On Sept: 20, 1946, we got a
charter from Albany making
Marist a four-year school," he
said.
Ambrose stayed at Marist from
1946until 1958. During that time,
he became the Vice Provincial
for Marist Brothers in the United
· States and went on a trip to make
his second mission.
·
Marist Brothers were establish- ·
ing high schools nationwide
and his job was to evaluate the
schools.
In
1958, there were 846 schools ·
in 72 countries that were estab-
lished by Marist Brothers.
'There was a meeting in Rome
and I was voted as a represen-
tative of America, 10 countries
of Asia, and 15 countries of
Af-
rica," he said. "They voted to
keep me there.'.' ,

. Ambrose lived
in
Rome and
wcirked for-the Va~can for 18
. yea_rs. ,He said his greatest de-
sire was to b.ecome a mission-
ary.
'cc
. ·..
. . . •.• •
.
.
.
After he left Rome, he was
able t~ fulfilljtls dream by be-
coming.~ tj}issionary in Liberia
and setting up schools there.
Brother Ambrose returned
from Liberia 10 years ago.
He is a life member of the
Board of Trustees and has been
here for atotal of 25 year's.
He said 'watching Marist's
growth has been fantastic .
.
..
"My greatest joy is to be back
here and enjoy the growth," he
said. " We had four brothers
graduate the firsfyearand now
we have about 950 graduates. I .
let God rule my life ~d it
turned
out better for me than anything
else I could have done."
Attention ommun1cat1on aJors
•Announcing New Prerequisite and credit change
in the Communication Internship Program beginning FALL 1999
a Students must take
the
prerequisite I-credit course· CRDV JOON
Employment Practicum before they
do
an internship
o The total nmnbcr of internship credits will change to 14
THIS CHANGE APPLIES TO ALL STUDENTS WHO ENROLL IN A
COMMUNICATION INTERNSHIP FOR FALL 1999 OR AFTER.
For more
information.
~sit
Communication Internship
Director
Geny
McNulty at LT226, Call
the
office
at
x36SS or ematl:
menu
. u
"Dayliners-also came up. to
der, 15
Slate
troopers
were called . to'be about $500.: In that time
Poughkeepsie from New York
in to help. •
'pfiiiod,' that'was a lot o{dam-
City," he said.
According to
The Circle,
fifty-
age.
. . •
.
.
. OnAug.10, 1941, the life of twoofficersbattledwithrioters
·· Shortlyafter,aninvestigation
the park wasJorever altered.
f <>r nearly two hours of chaos,
went under way to close the park
. A riot erupted at the park late . strugglfog to"control the crowd
permanently. .
.
that afternoon in what
The ·asrocks,bottlesandbrickswere
OnAug.15,ThePoughkeepsie
Poughkeepsie· Eagle-News re-
thrown in every _dh"ection. Po-
New-Eagle reported the inves-
ported as "the worst outbreak
lice, armed with. nightsticks,
ligation was un_de:r way as Dr.
of trouble in Dutchess County
were assaulted with.knives as
GilbertCMackenzie,healthin-,
in many years."
some of the rioters smashed car
spector
-for
the to'Wn of
AccordingtotheDec.12, 1991
windows and attempted to tum
Poughkeepsie, examfoedthe
edition of
The Circle, the park
over squad cai-s'.
··. · ·· ·
park's facilities .. Hegaid the pool
was reserved by .two groups . Deputy Sheriff Quinlin, one of was safe for public use, but the
that day, a. Polish organization
the• first officers at _the scene,
rest of .the park was
tn.
"pretty
of about 1,0,Q0 people; and·a
was cut in the leg by a knife.
poor,rundown condition~"·
group of approximat~Iy·~,000
In a telephone interview tran-
OnAug.18, three women were
blacks associated with a lodge
scribed in the earlier
The Circle, ·
killed
and 42 people were
injured
fromNewYorkCity.
Quinlin, who was 25~years-old . attheNewYorkCitypierwhere ·
The Polish Society reserved
at th_e time, described what he
the "State of Delaware" was
the inn fqr that day and the.riot
saw that day.
.
about to depart for Woodcliff.
broke out around3 p'.fu., shortly
•~There was bedlam,'? he said.
After this incident,· excursion
after several black men entered
"They .were ripping.
the
place . ships were no longer permitted
and were denied a glass of beer.
apart. ·You can'.t <::oritroLtherri.. to dock at the park.
The men accused the bartender
They scream and yell and de-
Woodcliff Park's days were
of discrimination, which began · stroy property. It was· like an
numbered, as political and pub-
a brawl whose outcome no one
angry flow of water. There was · ·lie pressure increased, forcing
could predict.
no hold~ng it back. It was a
the amusemeritpark to close
All havoc began as rocks and
wave of human beings."
down.
bottles were being thrown at
The police managed to gather
However; some people will al-
park visitors, which soon be-
up all the black excursionists on
ways remember what happened
came a violent clash with the
board the "State of Delaware,"
onAug.10, 1941.
police. Law enforcement agents
the ship that·brought them,
According to
The Circle,
were sent. to· the' .park as the
which finally ended the riot.
Quinlin said the day left an in-
sheriff's office continued to re-
AlthOugh there were no
delible impression on him.
ceive calls for help. The city
deaths or arrests;thepark esti-
"I had never seen human be-
sent22citypoliceofficers to the
mated the damage to the prop- · ings act like that," he said. ''It's
park. . Still unable tci restore or-
er'ty, police and private vehicles
something I never forgot."
Attention
.
.
.
-.
.
St11dtr11.ts
· all your · textliooks ,.now
eca~se._: starting · -~t midterms,
w
ill
be
.retu~ing textbooks
to.
th
ublishers. And
then
how
wiJI
you
ram?-
Marist Colle e Bookstore






































J
-
·_'-THEXCIR.CLE
octoBER s, 1998
_:~c'ie.e
at u res
Sear¢hil!g,tl!e'
~lt~~
.
http://WWW.rlllllle~sw~rld.co~.
A


Attention all runners out
there. Get information about
runni~g free and fast at
http://
www.runnersworld.com.
The
site; which is a takeoff on
Runner's World magazine, offers
lots of information on running.
The site is divided into sev-
eral sections. One section pro-
vides training information. Dif-
ferent levels of training pro-
grams can be -accessed for 5k,
10k, half~marathon, and mara-
thon races.
There are also sections on
shoes, nutrition, injuries,
women's running, statistics,
and race dates. Runners can try
to calculate a predicted time
'they'll fun ala certain distance
in the "Goodies'' section . .
And if you're ju_st getting into
runnirig there is a special sec-
tion for beginners which pro-
vides inspirational anecdotes, a
glossary of runni'ng terins, and
·running schedules.
So click
on
to
http://. .
www.runnersw6rld.com
and
learn how to improve your run-
• ning.
If
you havir 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
· Searchiiig the sites column.
Horoscopes

· R~S: Y;ou should
ways spend money
s if you didn't have
nough. That way you .
ill
have enough when
. something you lladn't
planned
on
.
comes
along. It ~lso helps to
think of something
µeat you want to.buy
for yourself that's not
already on your list.
With this procedure,
• ·
·
·· ···
you may be~abte·ro
stick to a budget.
·
~'.AURUS: This is a
~
ood day for discuss-
~
ng financial matters.
ou're a very good per-
son at figuring out how
to get the very:best
deals for youf re-
sources at hand .. The
others could very well
make a mess of things
if you don't speak up.
GEMINI:
You're going
to be feeling better_ as
the day goes on.
That's also because im-
portant things keep
getting cl:i.ecked off
gument. You like to stir
your lists. Keep busy.
things up every once in
Do Jhe stuff you've
a while. That's quite
_
been putting off.
possibly going to hap-
CANCER:
Some CJf the
pen today. If you get
most
, interesting
intoafight,takerespon-
thi11gs you'll discover
sibility for it. Then,
.
today will be through
make sure it has a posi-
the grapevine. It's fun
tive outcome.
to know the inside
·
~ -
LIBRA: You want to
scoop .on .all your
'ifi+i(_
break . through old
friends and associates,
~ ~
boundaries in the com-
but you'd better make
ing year, and nothing's
slire.
·your
·
secrets . . ..
-·· ...
'going
to
sfopyou.
That
don't get spread all
doesn't mean you have
over town.
to be crazy about it,
LEO: You've got a big
though. Make up a plan
job in mind, and it
now. The unworkable
looks like you' re under
parts will become obvi-
.
pressure to
.
makeit
ous, as will stresses you
happen. You·'know
never imagined. Con-
you _should start by
tinue to make changes
organizin'g several oth-
as necessary until work
ers into a team, and
seems more like play.
then motivating them
~SCORPIO: Quick
to take action.
thinking is required, as
' · VIRGO:
The moonis
well as quick action.
·
~t:!e~n::'-t~:~~~~
!~;·~:::::
~P~;~~;
pens, you're quite
good deal, but you'll
likely to run into an ar-
have to be firm and de-
Emily's Recipe __ of
the
Week
Cheese arid Bean Enchiladas .
1 1/2 cups cottage cheese.
1
1/2 cups grated sharp cheddar cheese.
l
cup black beans, rinsed and drained.
. 1/2 tsp. dried oregano.
8
6-inch tortillas
1 cup salsa.
Preheat oven to 375. Coat a 12x8" baking dish with nonstick
cooking spray. Blend cottage cheese in food processor until
smooth. Transfer to large mixing bowl. Stir in
I
cup cheddar
cheese, oregano, and beans. Place about 1/3 cup cheese mixture
in the center of each tortilla, and roll up. Place each tortilla in
baking dish, seam side down. Top with salsa, then with remain-
ing cheese. Bake for 20 to 25 minutes, or until thoroughly
heated. Serves 4.
• •
cisive. You get to de-
cide what's the best
price, and
talk
the other
guy into going along
with your idea.
SAGITTARIUS:
People are in the mood
to tell stories today.
That's one of your fa-
vorite occupations.
Better be careful not to
do it during working
hours. It looks like
spair. It's a phase that
will pass.
AQUARIUS: Your luck
.
is starting to improve,
and it holds good for
the next several days.
The frustration you felt
recently is starting to
fade. It's your attitude
that's shifting. You're
starting to feel like you
can handle anything,
and you're probably
-~-,-rl ..
.
,thei:e;s.stjJJ q"uite a bit -;-. :_,.;; •~
.
~right;-,:;>c;:,·-~.-.-zi,__,~..;.,~ . ..,.._,-
that needs
to'get
done
e1·.
PISCES:
Don't
pro-
be.~. ore tom_orrow. In
=
crastinate any longer.
fact, if you do get it
A
job that is relatively
done before tomorrow,
easy now could be-
you can goof off then.
come practically im-
CAPRICORN: You
possible soon. That's
were getting a bit. of a
because the ever-in-
free ride yesterday, but
creasing distractions
that's drawing to a
will keep you from fo-
close. Your luck still
cusing your attention.
holds in the morning,
It's hard enough for
but by afternoon more
you to concentrate
work is required to
anyway.Doasmuchof
achieve your goals.
it as you can now,
You may get held up
while conditions are
by the silliest little
right.
things, but don't de-
Hepatitus B, n9:t a well~known virus
'
; YVorCc{
byEMILYKUCHARCZVK
Features Editor
Senior, Nadine Simon has only
heard the name mentioned. ·
"I've heard about it, butI don't
really know too much about it,"
she said.
.
Jane M. O'Brien, Director of
Health Services, said she is not
surprised.
"Because college students are
not required to get a vaccina-
tion they may have not heard of
it," she said.
Hepatitis B is an inflammation
of the liver caused by the hepa-
titis B virus. It can cause mild
flu-like symptoms, fatigue, nau-
sea, vomiting, anorexia, abdomi-
nal pain or jaundice.
In some cases the disease
might result in chronic active
hepatitis, cirrhosis and liver can-
cer.
About 240,000 Americans are
infected annually, with up to
40
percent of new cases occurring
in young adults, according to
the American College Health
Association. ·
.
·Most people do get over the
virus. However, according to
O'Brien, about lO percent of the
population have chronic"hepa.:.
ti tis B where they are carriers for
the rest of their lives. O'Brien
said she is unaware of any cases
of the virus among Marist stu-
dents.
Because the virus is trans-
ferred through blood and body
fluids, O'Brien said college stu-
dents are at risk.
"College students may engage
in some behaviors such as hav-
ing sexual intercourse with more
than one partner or maybe hav-
ing sexual intercourse and not
taking any precautiqns," she
said. ''Students might get tat-
toos or body piercings and most
places are reliable, but you al-
.. ways run the risk of how do you
really know .if you're getting
sterilized equipment."
O'Brien said the symptoms do
not usually appear for three to
six months.
"Someone may be infected
with the virus, be capable of in-
fecting other people, but not
know they're infecting others,"
she said.
There is a vaccine available for
hepatitis. The vaccine, which
O'Brien said is about 95 percent
effective, is taken in cycles.
After the first dosage is taken
the second is taken one month
later and the third dosage is
taken six months after the first.
Although Health Services
does not supply the vaccine,
staff members can administer it.
"If
a student has a prescrip-
tion for the vaccine from their
health care provider or
if
the
health care provider mails the
vaccine to the college we can
then immunize the student,"
O'Brien said.
O'Brien said it is important for
students to complete the cycle
in order for the vaccine to be
effective.
Vaccine or not, O'Brien warns
students to be careful.
"The best prevention is to not
be sexually active," she said.
"However, if you are, make sure
you have only one partner and
that you know that partner re-
ally well and use protection."
O'Brien said students should
be concerned about the pos-
sible effects of the virus.
"A liver infection is something
that can potentially be serious,
especially if you end up with a
chronic Jiverdisease," she said.
"Complications involved with
Hepatitis B can be fatal."
.
: Jamous
Psycliic
. Famous Psychic
i
To the Stars
·
: over
30
years
experience!
can help you obtain
~
·. rove
:;
L,
{
J-feaftfi
1
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i
and'Lucfr.
1
I
Telephone
l}IIY)d-Guardlno
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(~23)~09f:()~49
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(423 . . . . .
{423)?~8:1197
Tenoess·ee
Fax: (423)~9-0921
tittp:T/User.tcx.net,'-psychlc
,.

















·•·PAGES.
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ace
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~Z~0~1~~~1~;~~~~E:~J;1~i;;:7;;;~s
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library, housmg, admm1stration, the bookstore, secunty and now the library
Editors
..... ·.questionprof ess. Or. 'S Comments..
sit.~atio .. n.Forfour year
.. s I hav. e·c. omp·l· ained. ~om. y mo
•. m. m.-. at
.. e
.. ~.a. ~?~t the~. e com-.. - ··, ·
·• ..
. .
·
.
.
, -·
. ·, .
.
.
plamers. I'mnotsaymgl'venevercomplamedabo°ctap.yt~m~_,at.~~~t:9~t_for:_.~
After:readmg Assistant accountmg professor.RobertWalsh s op-ed
P
1:ce m the the most part Ilove•this college:·That's whylwas'yery,h<1ppyto read the article ·•·• .
. Sept.
JO edition of the
Poughkeepsie Journal,
<'PGA ca~e coul~ tak~ the wmd out of by Carter Hayes. I agree with him
l 00%·and lalso .. wish I weregoingt<:)behe~eto,
exclusionary practices;: one m?stquestion the_:f~ason!ng b
7
hmd ~t. .
. . . ·.
utilize this\vonderful new library'. ·
· .
·
.. ·
. :,,.,c-;_
.
·
Marist President Dennis Murr~y see.ms to ha,ve figured tt out m his Oct.
4 re-
When
I arrived here at Marist in 1994, the rotunda and mid~rise looked s,0111~:..
sponse, "Marist committed}? the dis11bled,'' but most o~ ifis sp~nt publicizin~ the · thing like the library does now. Afterliving in. a corner suite with a riv~r v1e\\i the
Office of Special Services and nor~xplaining the reas.~nu~g behmd Walsh:~ piece. . . nextyear I was grateful for all of the construction. ,Marist has a beautiful campus
The ·issue·should have been addressed rather.than dismissed ~erely as hte~ary · with so much to offer.
•I
feellikel have gotten
an
excellent education_here:yes,
sarcasin." Is it literary sarcasm whe~ the comments blatantly ridicule segments of the library hacross the street but asmy roommate pointed out, you don:·t.hear
the Mwist community? . . .
.
. .
.
.
_.
- .
.
.· .
students complaining about crnssfog over to McCoy's in the darlc The parking
Walsh not only ''.missed the mark," as Murray ~uts it, he_ success~unr ~~tenated
fil1
isn't always great but al least_ we !lfe issued free parking permits when tnany '
·
entire population of stud~nts, parents and alu~t who may have d1sabthtte_s; ~e has
schools charge µp to $100.00 for them. _There are many complaints about secu-
taken an issue Jhat_ tlle college h_~s
.fought
to}esolve r~~en_tly ~y appomtmg an · rity-lock your townhouse doors and you will not have to expect security to be ·
ADA
compliance officertomeet with_ federal Jaws, and tnv1ahzed it. .. .
sure no one breaks in~ To those who complain about the food-would you like to
. · Perhaps no one should care wheri disabled Marist stude~ts are ~rawlmg up the •· cook for 1000 students?, Would it always taste great? At least they 'always have
stairwells
to
Walsh's third~floor class because he "lo(?k[ed] mto gettmg_ the elevator
sandwiches. And
as
for the water; my housemates and I
dra:nk
it
straight for four
disconnected in ... [the] building" and succeeded.
. .
.
. . ·,
years and all.lived to graduate! And then there's Iaundi)'.,w~U:.dealwith it! It's
The pith of Walsh's pi~e is that if the Pro Golf_Assocta~on wms the appeal m ~e part pf campus life and be~er than finding
a
locallaundraniat, ,· '
'
· '· . ·• .
-L ,
·
Casey Martin case, he
\VIII
have the freedom to exclude disabled studentsfrom his : JwouldJike to pose this question.to the studentbody.Jfyou hate so rµany
dass. Walsh writes h_e wants to "start excluding people now so we won 'tJiave to
things·about Maris~' why· are you here?
I
know
I
would riot
want
Jo spend
$80:ooo
. clraw Iiµes
qr
address the issue o~ a ·case~b):'~case ~asis !at~r on." .
on'
a
pface
0
that triade'me mi_serabie .. Consider why ypu ch~seMiuist and focus on
No one would be expected to beheve there ~s any smcen~ m these h ~ l
words.-
its good points. 'You wm. b,e much happier than if you focus on its "slfortco~.:
·
In line with' this, how is one to believe Mun-aywhen,llewntes,
"A:ll
m~mbers of ~e . ings." If you are truly unhappy here, do a favor to yourself and those ofus \VhO
· Marist College community, including Professor Walsh, ~e pnde m. the special
like Marist-transfor ·to a·place where 'you will be happy,. Tothe'entire~t.lff.of this
programs and S«;!rvices we offer to students wifu. disabilities ... "? Walsh has m_ad~ a
college
I
say "thank you." Do not judge all ofus by the complainers:
I
know that
mockery of the special services program at !."1anst, and s~rely does not take pnde
m
there are many student._s who
are
grateful and more than satisfi~d;
. it
. .
.
.
.
. .
,,.
Walsh should respond to the Marist'community and clear up any mis_u~de:Stalld-
Traci Davis,
Graduate student .
. ings. His remarks_ have caused distress throughout the campus and 1t 1s time he
address these concerns.
The Circle
Editorial Staff
Professor supports columnist's ideas
Editor:
I enjoyed Kris Hart's column, "Being •well' is not a hole in the ground,'' in last
week's
The Circle.
The advice she gave on becoming a well-developed individual
would benefit any student interested in holistic education -
one of the "mis-
sions" of Marist College.
Students wishing to follow her advice should consider taking the self-
managment courses offered by the Leaming Center and the Psychology Depart-
ment. And believe it or not, even Core courses -
if properly understood -
can
provide a similar benefit. Why not check them out?
Ed O'Keefe,
Professor of Psychology
Amanda
Bradley
Editor-in-chief
Emily
Kucharczyk
Features Editor
THEJCIRCLE
BenAgoes
News Editor
ThomasRyan
Sports Editor
Patrick Whittle
Arts & Entertainment
Thra'Quinn
Opinion Editor
Joe Scotto
Toni Constantino
G. Modele Clarke
Photography E~itor
Business Manager
Faculty Advisor
The Circle
is the student newspaper of Marist College, Poughkeepsie, NY.
Issues are published every Thursday.
We welcome letters to the editor, club announcements and story ideas. We can-
not publish unsigned letters to the editor.
The Circle staff can
be
reached at
575-3000 x2429
or by email at
HZAL




























PAGE9
Ho1110gel1.iz8tion
.
is good ...
f or milk
..
The
Jerse.y--side
Tara Quinn
O?!tliON EDttO!!

I w~iched the demolition of the ·
. Mid-Hudson Business Park
across the street.·
. The building was
an
obsolete .
remnant of a long passed era.
Its pale yellow stucco 'fa1rade,
with huge glasi; brick windows,
looked as thou_gh it belonged in
the Miami Art Deco District, but
. I
hate aluminum siding.
Granted, it is an odd thing to be
Its pale yellow· stucco
passionately adverse to,
·butfiarade,
W_
ith_ huge
behind the very physical fayade
l"
of alumimimsidinglies some-
glass brick windows,
thing deeper, Yes, there is usu-
looked as th_ough it
ally a hou~e, or maybe even an
b
l
d · ·
apartment building, but was not
e
O
n
g ·
e ·.
l
n
whatlwas driving !ll One might
theM iami Art Deco
say that I can not drive at any- ..
District, but instead
thing, because! STILL do not,
have a driver's license, but that·
it cast its streamlined
would.be a_b!,id pun. Since this'
s/;,adow over Marist's
paragraph is now saturated with
stretch of the old Al-
bad puns; I
will
indent.
.
ba'ny »ost Road.
: Anyway, I just do not like the
r'
'.way that siding glosses\o:ver
t11e_quirks of old housef.apd, instead it cast its streamlined
brings a neighborhood closer to
shadow over Marist's stretch of
homogeny. When sidinfo.vercc- the,_old Albany Post Road, more
·comes
an
old Victorian
:ii
stiJds - commonly known as Route 9.
its gables. Itoften cori2¢iµsthe ::· I ·admit there _appears to be
intricate woodwork of.aTudor •. Jittle connection between siding
I was reminded
of
this hatred as /. and an old industrial park that
built Fiats in the 1910's and pub-
lished books for much of the
century. However, just as sid-
fog homogenizes· neighbor-
hoods, the destruction of the
Mid Hudson Business Park
brings the homogenous com-
mercial strip of highway that
spans from
Fishkill to
Poughkeepsie deeper into
Marist Country.
As most st_udents are aware, a
new Super Stop and Shop and
Home Depot are to be built in
its piace. This is convenient and
probably worth a fortune more
in tax revenue than the old in-
dustrial park. This is progress-
or is it?
Americans are not satisfied
with a hardware store or a gro-
cery mart when they can get
everything bigger, cheaper, and
faster. However, there are un-
derlying costs to this gratifica-
tion. Who wants to work at a
Home Depot or Wal-Mart? Do
we really need to consume as
much as we do, or are we buy-
ing in excess just because we
can? Sure, employment is up all
over the country, but non-fran-
chised individual ownership of
stores is down. Sam Walton
Circle file photo
In 1995 a Wal-Mart was proposed for the site of the.now-
demolished Mid Hudson. Business park.
became one of the richest men
big stores have replaced Main
on earth by "selling for less,"
Street, U.S.A.
but it was clearly at the people's
.My disdain for aluminum sid-
expense.
ing is a reflection of my disdain
The whole idea of everything
for homogeny. As the 20th cen-
ultimately becoming the same
tury conies to a close, we live
scares me.
It
is as though
world in which no matter where
George Orwell was not wrong
you go, everything is the same.
when he described the year 1984.
One can see this clearly if one
He was just twenty years off.
travels
to
Times Square, the
As these new big stores are
"Crossroads of the World." It
built, the city of Poughkeepsie
is now lined by stores such as
fades deeper into urban decay.
Foot Locker, Athlete's Foot,
Many of the storefronts along
McDonald's, Sbarro's, a Disney
the Main Mall are empty, others
and Warner Brother's Store. Or
bear hand painted signs of fly-
better yet, save yourself the trip
. C
olti:ntnlst
aspects, of'
se.es the
Clinton
,
.
, · ·. : ,
·
· b - _
. ,
. .
by-night shops. Maybe:,the_se _and<~:. _check_
opt
.
_ the
;, pea

·,y ,.,,.
big
'iie%
stores wiJH>ffe,fnew· "Pougfikeepsie
Galletfa..
It
is'all
.

·
jobs to the community, how
the same.
.
in
qu1•ry
many people really want to be
The destruction of the Mid
.
cashiers and shopping cart
Hudson Business Park reminds
•.••POUflCAL
.. COUJMtl!St
;_ Gingrich understand the dan-
of
an ugly personal attack
gerous political gamble;

then
against the President, and Re-
.perhaps there is a legitimate rea-
. pubiicans would be left seem-
.
_· sonfor Republicans to pursue · ingHke buliies who lost a fight.
<the possibility ofimpeachment.
The important factor here is
Regardless-of your' opinion on
the. ele_ment of drive. What
the matter, imagine for a moment
makes our leaders do what they
there was a scandaLworthy_ of do? Even if the Republicans act
impeachment at -the White
onthemostselfishofmotives,I
House., It is good to thinksuch
think impeachment is. a poten- .
What is· irt the near political
an affair would be addressed,
tial political nightmare for every-
future for the United States? . and not ignored.
·
one involved. It will make any
Anyone who reads
The New .
But if Republicans are push-
strong candidates that emerge
York
Times,
or has
a
pulse for
ing impeachment for political
in 2000 unelectable, and only the
that matter, understands that . gain, then two possibilities may
docile will be considered (see
their lea<iers are mulling over the
cause an embarrassing backfire.
Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter).
choice.· to begin impeachment
Also, the Republicans will
proceedings against
th~
Presi-
I ·
·1r
t
b
t
force themselves to overcome
dent Thoseinfavo.rofinlpeach- .. · .
am
Wl
zng
O ·
e
another .obstacle in the year
ment nliglit decfare a r~sponsi-
there will- be greater
2000.,
_
Al Gore will have gained
bilitytpdowI:iati~righrforthe,
VO.fer . awareness
valuable political experience.
country.'Tiieysayli~impeacli:.
d.
'I!,''
r
i
n
g t
h i
s
Any positive, random event
mentinq~iryif~yeessary:-it .·.
"
. '-,·
' '
.. ·,. ·thatoccursinthenexttwoyears
wouldbeirrespo11sible~~ignore
Nove,mber
S
Congres-_ .
could be claimed by the Gore
the possipility that the,~eri-
sionalrace, and,that
campaign as a direct result of
~::Si~:~~i~
Ii~i~~i~~j[ · · •
ther,f will
be
a
greater
~:i:e!:~~f~~
i~
::::~i~~~
and Congress canfind enough
voter.
turµ
OUt.
face - healing the country after
grounds, the President wiU b.e
·
an impeachment. Tue Republi-
impeached or forced to
resign..
When -the N&;~mber elections . cans do not want to face poten-
It is popular to assume this is
are here, people will perceive a
tially damaging experience, and
a power play by .th~ p_olitical
vote for a Republican as a vo!e . as a matter of history, incum-
elite~ Republicans are stamping
for impeachment. Since no
bents have an upper hand.
their feet and having a temper
American wants to make that
The subject of national moti-
tantrum because they feel good
decision, the Republicans might
vation is intriguing. Perhaps it
leadership at the executive
find themselves at the bottom
is easily explainable: the most
branch is compromised, and
of a land slide defeat.
immediate, and most satisfying
they disguise their distaste for
.The other political disaster
conclusion governs our politi-
Clinton by believing in earnest
might occur in two years. This
cal endeavors. -· This would
that the Republican outlook bet-
scandal might blow over, and be
mean any long term national
terseives the country. For Con-
a non-issue in 2000 (much like
goals are non-factors, unless
gressional Republicans to use
George Bush's brilliant foreign
the genuine push for such long
a scandalous affair as a means
affairs program in 1991 was ig-
terrn goals are perceived as an
to achieve power is foolish.
If
nored election day in late 1992).
le
CLINTON
JO
we assume Trent
Lott
and Newt
What may remain is the memory
... p
asesee
,pg.
shepherds? ;These same people
me of a conversation! had with
may have once had the oppor-
--
'
tunity to own a store, but these
... please see
SIDING,pg.
10














































































































































I
I.
I
!
October 8, 1998
SIDING: The big
cover-up
..
.
continuedfron:ipg,
_
9
\.
a woman who! worked with over
the summer. She
.
w
_
as a re-
.
nowned andwell-educated,art_.,.
ist
,
who, between art
,
sho\Vs;
wa!red on
tables
in orde
_
r to
sup-
port herself.
After a long, slow shift, I said
to her
:
.
'.
'This d~y will'go
'
down
in history as the mos~ boring
_
day
ever."
.
She
·
1aughed
_.
and
-
~aid,
/ '
It's
fo_rmy yoi.t
_
say
'
that.
_.
,
~othing
'goes ~ownin his,t~~y' any-
more.'.'.
.
__
.
.
:
.. ·-,
: ,.,
.,
_
l tnoughtaboi.tt ~q~r
,_
a
~p
:-,.
riienf
·
and
said,
·
"$urt{it~does-
_
they J~st bi.tHd
·
a

n1ce"
'
happy
shopping mall ove_r it, sci you
Your current job search
is
a critical fact-gathering missicn.And
the~~lit~e li~e forthf
mountains
oi
information
you11
r«eive. Daunling amounts-from
011ical
to
lriVJa)-lh~t
must
be
considend. "iou \\·ant the plain, unvami5hed truth-ind Arthur Andetsen
JS
where you11 find il
We are seeking qualified candidates
to
work in one of the fastest
gro~ing areas
of ?ur
Assuruce
and
BuaiDc9 Adrisory
Practice.
Our Businells Pl'oc:eM
Rlak
Ccmailling
group
is
the recognized leader in providing
internal audit set\'ices. Contact your
placement office
for
more infonnation.
.
.
ARTiiUR
ANDERSEN
WE ,,.,Ill BE RECRU!TJNG 0~ CAMPUS
TttUP.SCAY, NOVEMBER 19
----~------
·
·
- - - -
.
woµld never
~ow:•~
.
_
,
_
In the case ofthe Mid Hudson
Business Piuk, (~a~\vrong ..
Th,ey_ llfe building
a
J!oine De-
pot
aM
a
Super
,
Stpp
,
and S,h<>p
.
Tara
Quinn
is Th'eC,ir.i:le's
Opin-
ion Editor.
She
is
a
Communi-
c;q_tf
qrl~
-m
-
~Jqi
:
:tmir.-l/P~
,
et~,
;
New Jersey.
·
S!ie also does
,
not
like vinyl siding,
bz,i
wilf
spare
you
further details. .
.
..
..
" .
ence. How can we dominate our
future
if.
we cannot dominate
ourselves?
.
If
we cannot realize that we are
i
important to our nation, then we
.
must not value our importance
·
'6fbeing:
·
Voting is the deter-
•:
inin1ng factor
fn
the outcome
of
· ou
'
i- future, As Ms
:
King stated,
:,
,;We
have a l~ng road ahead of
us,though we have come a long
:
. way."
-
'eo~Jua
s
ScottKing reminded
us
'
ttilit
••JiJ

injustice anywhere
"'
is.
i
ait
.-
injustice everywhere.''
is•
i11afis something we all need
'
..
tc
i__
adh~re to and grasp_ the true
,
-
meaning
·
of ... She
.
IDade a poin!
to remind us that w.e are all one
,j)•
:
·
·,
·.
'
!
,
.
'
nati01_1, with nq
_
regards to race,
col
.
or, or creed.
,
. .
.
.
,
,
,
We are all granted freedom;
·
''.Liberty
and justice
·ror
all;''
.
which is also a part of our alle~
'
giance.
, ·
But part from having
"allegiance;' to the flag,
we
need
.
to hav~ allegiance to each other
.
w~
rieecfioreaiiie
'
that
.
"color''
is
on"iy sltjn\leel
.
Hatred cari~
-
~8t
.
~f
1
.J.gl·t
~~~~;Y?~[~?
;
PYll°-
Y
~
,
can
·get
,
you
:
everywher~.
,
No
.
one is superior to
Y(!U,
unless
·
you make yourself inferior to
.
PAGEl0
CLINTON:.
In-
quiry
ipay have
unseen: benefits
... corrtinuedfrom
pg
'.
9
immediate benefit. It is the re-
sponsibility 'of voters to create
"the incentive for our politicians
- that is our place in govern-
ment. We must protect our chil-
drefi'and our future; it is the crux
of democracy
:
.
Perhaps whatrecent political
events and scandals should re-
vitalize in us
'
is
·
notan embar-
rassing impeachment'. process,
but a healthy understanding of
our role in-government.
·
tam
willing to bet there
'
will
be
greater
voter awareness during this
Novemberis Congressional race,
and
-
that there
.
will be
a
greater
_
voter
;
tum out; More
·
then the
result of a sensational scandal,
:
this (hopefully) is
a
natiotrwide
mandateto regain control of our
politicians;
·
·
·.:'
'.
--, :
,
Bill
,
Mekr~t
is
The
_
Circle's
f!o_-
liti<:ai'Colu~znist.
·
He
,
is
.
·
a
Po:
liti~iii
Scienc
~
:
~nd
English
doubleritajor from Linco_ln,
RI.
Tenth Annual
Care~rand.
Em.pJo¥e•
·




'
!"


; .
'
;
Thursday, October 29, 1998
4:oo-)7::oo
p.m.
·
_
··

·
Marist C:9llege~ McCanh Center
'
·
·
,
·'

·
.
.
'
'
'
;
.
-
'
~.
.
.
.

·
Friday,
·
October: 3Q,
_
1998
SlJN'(New
·
Paitz, StudentUnion Blcf
1_0:00
a.m.
_
__:
:
2:00
p.rn.
Check the complete
fut
of participating
cmploycn; at w~-w.marisLcdu/c:arec:rscrvicc:s
Sponsored
by
.the
·
Mid-Hudson Career Consortium
for students and alumni from member colleges
Bard
Calir\uy!ns,;tu..
D u l d , n , ~ i y
!,loris1
;
MO'llnl
St.Mary
·
0ning,<
C"""'7
<:ocnaninity
Sallivan
Counly
eca.n...ity
SllNY
No..
Paltz
tJllle
O>unty
C--.niiy
v...,
.
.
111!1!!'
































































































l
.

OCTOBER 8
2
1998
PAGEll
.
.
'
.
.
.
JoyinsObrie
isit ossible?
_byCARLITO
Staff Lush
When th~ slln sets; the life of
a first stage alcoholic is a simple
·
.
Orie. Locate
'
alcohe>l and devour
it
Seek and destroy.
.
There are no cloak and dag~
get
:Strategies involved; there is
only the bottle and the mouth.
·
For those that do not find com-
.
fort
at the bottom of a wineglass,
there lies the question
...
what to
.
do?
.
Monopoly and Parcheesi
su~ceeded in passing the time
·
in elementary school, put for the
average college student; it
.
takes
a little more to stimulate the re-
lease of dopamine. That is
.
a
.
neurotransmitter,
not
a
Dramamine, heroine hybrid.
·
Sure billiards and video games
·
There are other sources of happiness out
'
there, but
·
he can not seem to beat tpheorqcouott""l'eY
c a i _
ito
may work for half an hour or so,
rn
D
II
but people thatspend too much
·
of Poughkeepsie strongly dis~
of their gourds, but that is not a
my hideous face. Until that day
time in the arcade
are
laughed
courages this and does so by
prerequisite in any way.
I
will continue to wallow in
at by the ~ocially
.
active
.
Al-
positing signs on the bridge re-
It
is a great place to meditate
asexuality, renting soft porn on
though
I
am an
·
alcoholic,
I
am
.
minding people that life is worth
and if your hamster is feeling
Pay Per View. God,
I
should be
aware of alternative
'
means of living and you should not jump
.
cooped up and he's fed up with
shot in the face.
entertainment.
.
As a journalist,
Personally,
I
think
.
that. Jife is
his exercise wheel, take him for
While
I
am on the subject, a
I
fe
_
el-:obligated to inform the
.
P?.in
,
sobyallmeansjump ... arid
a walk. Theexperiencewillbring
second partner is not required
public about the myriad of plea-
leave the bungee at home.
the two of you closer and can
to fulfill your erotic
.
fantasies.
sure that can be found
1
in the
In
case you do not like Moun-
even serve as inconspicuous
North Hamilton Adult Shop has
absence of alcohol
'.
·
...
..
tafn Deiv, theX Games or any-
foreplay. Perhaps you have got
every sexual medium imagin-
Iri
Po~town, options are limited
thing that might even remotely
a sweetheart and if you are look-
able: magazines, videos, CD
.
with
,
the
·
exception
:
of
its fine
accelerate your pulse, you might
ing for a place thatyou and your
RO Ms and accessories that will
sefectioii'ofcrack.tiouses
arid
.
fancy somethirig'a little more
·
lovemtiffin'
,
barigetyourswerve
,
b]owi,our
,
mfod .
.
Well/that
is
·
bro'thels.
:
ButifyouJook be-
·
.
relaxing. As our college s
'
o
on, there isnotamoreroniantic
what I have heard anyway.
I do
neath the filthy surface;a sinor~
.
proudly boasts, the campus
setting anywhere in the north-
not know from personal experi-
gasbord of delight awaits
,
,
blankets the Hudson River and
east.
ence or anything. O.K. I went
ffexcitement is what you seek,
my
oh iny what an
·
incredible
Maybe
.
some day a girl will in there
·
once but
I
thought it
look no further than
.
the
view ids.
I
highly recommend
accompany me on my walks to
was filaundromat
I
definitely
MidHtidson Bridge. Although
·
taking a stroll down to the river
the river. Maybe they will go
did not spend four hours in one
renegade bungee jumping is
to experience nature' in all its
voluntarily or maybe
I
will need
of the private viewing booths
punishable by law, it is stilfan
.
:
majesty. Many of the students
six rufies and a pint of Jim Beam
though.
·
exceptional
·
source
·
·
'
of i:hatfrequent the riverfeel that
likelasttime. Maybe someday,
In case you have not noticed,
adrenalized pleasure. The city
:
·
it's mandatory to ge{stoned out
girls won't shriek at the sight of
I
have failed to recommend ex
·
-
ercise as a means of occupying
spare time. God forbid I lift a
muscle or break a sweat or do
anything even remotely healthy.
If
you do enjoy strenuous ac-
tivities for leisure, go to the gym
.
I will
sit on my couch with a
Marlboro and a Busch rooting
you on.
It is obvious that I never have
anything worthwhile to say but
it is even more obvious when
I'm trying to preach about some-
thing I do not believe in. You
are in college so there is noth-
ing wrong with becoming a tem-
porary alcoholic. Hopefully
,
your drinking will not progress
after you graduate, but cross
that bridge when you get to it
.
I
am not encouraging irresponsi-
bility and academic neglect in
anyway because the primary
motive for attending college is
to learn. But for the love of God,
you are here to have fun also.
So go to a bar and drink
amounts of alcohol that
could
easily kill a small horse
.
Take
your shirt off and do the River
Dance on a table. Take strange
men or women home with you
and wake up in shame and dis-
gust. Who cares? In four years,
you will never see these people
again.
.
.
A,nyway, the point to my ram-
bling babble is that if you want
to have fun without alcohol,
good luck.
If
you are looking
for my advice, sorry,
I
do not
have any
.
My apologies for fail-
ing to present you with any op-
tions bu
f
my life revolves
.
around the bottle and it obvi-
ously permeates into my writ-
ing. Now if you will excuse me,
I
need a drink.
Joy
in
sobriety: yes, it is possible!
.
.
.
.
.
byPATRICKWHITILE
·
A
&E editor
.
.
and have somefun doing it.
.
This weekend
I
attended a rep-
tile
show with a few friends. The
.
.
admission fee was five dollars,
My
esteemed
"
~olleague chose
: ,
'
the
.
same
as
the cover charge at
t
·
·
s:
th
·
M ·
t
·
c
11
·
the average bar.
If
you have a
.
n
o m1orm
.
e
ans . o ege

.
·.
·
.
.
·
·
,
.
· ·
th
"
··
k
·
th
th
··
.
.
aversion to chameleons, igua-
campus
ts wee
at ere is
·
..

· .
·
-
..
·
.
· ·
·
.
·
·
·
• bl
·
t
.
.
·
.
nas and alligators then this
no conceiva e
·
way o enJoy
.
, ·
·
·
.
·
.
·
II
·
1·c.
"th t · d
1
. •
probably 1s not your idea of a
co ege 11ew1 ou m u gmgm
.
.
. ·
··
..
·
.
• ":l h
.
·
·
al h
Ii
·

.
.
good
.
time, Personally
!_was
....
-c
,
asi~g ~o o c iversion
,
enthrall d
••
Afri
d

h
•.
:
.
11
.
Ibe
to
differ.
··.,..
.
.
.
·

.
-
"·
·
·
.
.
e.
<

en
.
w
1:>
wi
·
g •.·

,
>·
·
,
·
·
· •
remamnamelessplunkeddown
My twenty years have taught
.
·
·
·•
·
,
.. ··.

.
·· ·
··
·

·
·
· . .
·
.
· .
a rather large srim of money on
me tflat mµch
_
enJoyme~ can be
·
-
-
·
·
·
·
.
·
·
·
·
ti
......
d ·.
·
.· ..
Ii
.
ti. i·
.
·
..
.
··
:.J
··
.
·
..
•th
·
·
.
.
.
·
i
·
.
·
·
acag~forhispetchame.le_on,but
oun ma e 1vcuw1 ac
ear ·
·
.
·
d b 1
th
..
.
· d
·
bod·'
· · '
..
d
·
·:
1

I
·
·
·
·
ak
.
·
·
1t was no ou t ess an some
mm '
yan
sou.
amm -
.
d" "d al Ik
.
.
d

··
1

·
·

tt
·.
·
·_.,
,
·
t
'
·
·
.
.

.
.
·:
·
·
1
f
.
....
h
..
·
10
iv1 u s
now spen on a -
mgnoa emp ap...,,~rse -ng -
.
·
,
.
··
.
·
·.
·
·
,
.>
·
•.
y - , - :

..
.
.
.
..
coho
I
ma smgle rught. Besides,
teous or
.
enforce a set ofvalues
·
.
yo
h
Id h
·
th
·
·1
.
.
..
·
·
·. ·
··
·
· ·
·
u s ou
ave seen e srru e
on my fellow Red Foxes. Rather,
.
·
·_
·
.
·.
,
·
·.
· .
·.
·
I feel that this forum
can
be
used
.
.
o11 the httle gu~ s f~ce. Money
.
.
.
·
.
.

.·.
·
·
.
.
·
·
.
·
spent to make a hzard happy
for
subJects other than reviews
rath
·
th
·
an t · b · t th b ·
.
.
.
·
er
o
me na
e e ram
of the latest movies and CD's
:
.
.
·
Th bod
. th
I
f th
1s money well spent m my book.
e
y
1s
e vesse o
e
.
.
l
d h
Id
b
·
ted
Followmg the reptile show we
sou
·
an_ s
ou
.
e respec

ventured up to Red Hook, a
someted
thmg manyklof(us takeh for pleasant little town
·
north of
gran
on a wee y or per aps
h'
fi
· htl ) b •
If
R mebeck. A ter repeatedly
~tg
Y
~is
.
~ou care to
being accused of being a Com-
hsten,.
I
will use
_this
space to
munist by another friend who
suffic1ently_explam the level of
will
remain nameless,
I
con-
u~derstan~mg that I have at-
vinced everyone
I
was with to
tat~ed through my temperance.
check out a restaurant called
I wt~l. also offer you
.
a few ~on-
Luna 64 .
.
They serve amazing
trad1bonal ways to pass the b.me
vegetarian
'and
organic food.
We drove around, stopped by
some quaint stores and tag
sales, and generally had a good
·
time. So maybe I'm not actually
Communist
Reptiles
.
and vegetarian food
do not exactly cut
it for the av-
erage Marist-ite, so perhaps I
should suggest something a
little more
·
dynamic. Mountain
hiking is always a challenge.
I
have not been hiking since Mt.
Washington some time ago, but
I plan to take on Mt. Marcy (that
is not too far from here) this com-
ing weekend. Or
God
forbid you
could make up for lost time with
your brain and read a book. May
·
I
suggest
.
Three-Legged Race
by
Dan
O'Mahoi:iey? I have not
finished
it, but what I have read
I would recommend to anyone.
If you have not read
Slaughter-
house Five
by Kurt Vonnegut
orAnimal Farm
by George
Orwell you are seriously miss-
ing out. You are reading this
article. That means you
are
lit-
etate. Give it a try.
Again I am making no attempt
~o sound heavy-handed and
.•
.
-
preaching in this article, but re-
cent days have lead me to disil-
lusionment w:ith
the
apathy that
.
spreads like cancer throughout
this campus. Last year
I
went
to Washington, D.C. with the
Society of Professional Journal-
ists. The first night there
I
went
to an animal rights benefit. Ev-
eryone else I know went to a bar.
I grew up watching my best
friend's mother scrape by a mea-
ger existence working
as
a
bar-
tender and the one thing
I
learned from that is that a bar is
a bar. The alcohol tastes the
same in Poughkeepsie as it does
in D.C., Cuba, Guam, or wher-
ever you plan to go. Not every-
one needs a political agenda,
and I don't claim to have one
myself, but the more you open
your mind to different world
views the more you can accom-
plish as an individual.
I
remember
I
once saw an anti-
alcohol activist on a news pro-
gram saying that we need more
young people who abstain from
alcohol because together we can
use our clear minds to make the
world a more just and peaceful
place. This may seem like a
blindly idealistic statement. but
nonetheless there is a certain
value in it. Friends and acquain-:
tances have told me since high
school that drinking alcohol is
a right of passage into adult-
hood, and that if I fail to con-
form
to this
I
am
being childish.
If adulthood means giving up
on the ideals we all have as
youths, I will gladly stay young
'till
I
die.
1.,

,.























































































































)
OCTOBER 8, 1998
Goo- G
·
O O
JUJ?,J!i.i.p. ~~nd~
0
not so
legendacy
.
·
byNricB
·
ti~&;AJiTis
·
alcii1rt rain,
'
thunde/~nd light-
.
missiorie~~n thoughlt'Y~g~n~
Dolls
get
·
.
Staff Writer
ening. The maillcharacters are
·
:
:o
eral~y predi~tabl~- Am<J~g _th
.
~~
·
:
,
·
·
· ,
:
acast
.
ofsix
,
small enough to let
are scene~ m
,
which N?tahem-
.
· · ·
·
'
·

.
.
·
·•
·
the audience become familiar
teracts
-
w1th her Gothic room-
..
:
The~
t
seems
,i
~
o be
:
a
~iinpl~
with them; large enough to
.
draw
mate, who eX~_IJlplifies
}lU
the
formula cornmo~ to all
_
oftoday's
out the length of the
film
as they
.
Mans?n-~s'!ue crap that 1s seen
-
teen h~rror flic,ks:
·
get a bunch
getslaughtered one by one. The
on daily mstallments of Jenny
dizzy with
it
,
.
of scantily
:_
clad
·,
babes
main cparacter,J-~·atalie (Alicia
Jones
/
~'her¢ are al_so some solid
bleached:.:'haired
·
frat boy . Witt)
/
is introduced . in a . and behev_ab
_
le acµon scene that
wannabes, acid
an
:
odd
•·
twist, _ . ~'Friends" -style cafe, "chilling"
help to bmld the sto1?' along the
and, picture
'
tile killer on the
with her friends while sipping
way. The ~urroundmg woods
movfoposter
>
<
:
:
.
,
.
. •

Cafe Lattes. Damon (Joshua
.
and dark highways of the cam-
·
like Jon Bon Jovi. .Like the
by
JOHN SULLIVAN
Staff Writer
Backstreet BQys
for
:
some
people,
the Goo Goo Dolls
are
my guilty pleasure, Reniember
Iris? That weepy little song from
.
I am not usually prone to sam-
the god-awful "City Of Angels"
piing a lot of the corporate, "al-
movie? Oh
man,
I love that sorig.
ternative" cookie-cutter crap
And every girl loved the fact
that is played on the radio.
that
I loved that song. AB th~
Jhatis it Armies of teenagers
Jackson of"Dawson's Creek"),
pus where
_
the film_ was
.
s~ot
wiJ.Huni out
.
in laj"ge
.
gro
.
ups to
frat boy extrao
.
rdinaire and
made the difference m creatmg
see the
filin
;
and while the act-'-
friend to Natalie, recounts the
the mood that was necessaryfor
fog
·
may b1
(
contrived
and
the
events of an urban legend that
this type of movie. Even the ac-
.
surprises predic't~ble, girls will
involves incidents similar to
tors that played the professors
get to screah:nmd guys wiH get
those that were rumored to oc-
and the dean of students had
.topulLcheesy
'

moves where· cur on
,
campus by a.recent se.:.
aneerieairtothem.Meanwhile,
_
they pretendto ''.c
'
omfort" their
rialkiller. Little does he (or the
a security guard who bran-
dates by
:
hanging
·
·
onto them.
restofthe
·
cast) know that the
_
dished a pistol while reciting
"l!,rban Legemr does little
tq
late
·
victim was a high school
Pam Grier lines from ?O's flicks
dispel the bad reputation ofthis
friend of Natalie. This gets the
~
added comic relief to the other-
genre
qf
films; yeti ts ~lmost wh~el
_
spinning;
·
and soo11. the
wise bland setting. This did not
guaranteed
thaf
people
_
will
turn
·
rumor c;>f a killer
on
campus be-
.
always work wen, however
,
as it
out for
,
the
_
aforementioned rea-
.
comes reality. The catch is that
appear~d to
_
add humor in
sons, riot~o
·
01:e~tion to
·
.
s~e
-
_
the
·
.
_
the
.
ki!J~r uses only
_
urban leg-
scenes w~ere it seei:ned unnec-
Actually I hate most every-
tracks off of their sixth album,
thingthatisplayedonMTVand
1995's "A Boy Nafoe'd Ooo''
Z-100
and every other forum for
were nice, well written sensitive
what is popular today. I do not
songs. Name was their break,
like being told what I should lis-
through hit,
.
a song that made
ten too and most of the time for
one wistful for the clenched
good reason. Seriously, does
teeth vocals of Richard Marx
anybody
REALLY
like
Match-
and
Poison's
.
Bret Michaels.
box 20? Can
anyone seriously
The Goos latest:
"
Dizzy Up 1be
say "Oh my favorite band is
Girl" is even better. Everytune
Days of the New!"?
I know what
that Rzenick sirigs ori is
a:
great,
kind of mind numbing top 40
broken relationship easy-' listen-
tripe people are "into." Its
ing tune. Some of the faster
played in the gym, it was played
songs are downright silly and
in pretty much every place
I
sung by a less talented second
worked in over the course of my
vocalist (Bassist Robby Takac).
life.
I
don't like
Creed.
I don
'
t
I
can not believe ~at they still
like
Marcy Playground
and
I
think they are a punk band but
hate ANYTHING done with a

hey, they sold out and they're a
computer or a keyboard. Rap
.
better band for it. s
·
ongs lik
.
e
has become a
·
parody of itself Broadway, Black Balloonarid
and with the exception of ''Ten
'.
'.,
·
Acoustic
.
#
3
should definitely
NoxemagrrL
. .
··
.
· ·..
...
. •
.
·

· ends
tb
off his victims includ-
essary or mappropnate.
The
film
takes place ~n a typi'-
. irig the famous baby.:.si;ter story
All thi~~s considered, "~rbati
cal coHege campus, with those
in which the murderer calls her
Legend 1s
a
must-see if you
old, Gothic-style
·
buildings for
from inside the
.
house.
enjoyed fi
.
lms like "Scream", "I
classrooms and dorms that look
There are
.
severa! incredibly
Know What You Did Las
_
t Sum-
incredibly menacing at night,
entertaining scenes in the movie
mer", and "Scream
2." Just do
especially when

the director
that are worth the price of ad-
n~t _exp
_
ect much in terms of
·
ongmahty and content..
99 Cents
Sets
Stage
at
The Chance
Pearl Jam
ju
·
st bore~
.
me. _ have-no,troubledizzyingupthe
by
:
CHRISKNUDSTEN
Wish list
has to be the most dull,
·
girls and Iris is included on there .
StaffYfriter
forgettable,annoyingsongever
for
:
go9d measure. The new
. .
'
.
.
.
.
·
putoutbyaone-timearenarock
..
single is
,
called Slide
-
an'd "t's
f!ardco~emus1
$
co?.tmues to
band.
·.,
·
-- ·
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,
'
,

·
::-
·
1 ·
"
hold

'
·
·
Its
,
.

·
g:round
in
more on the Jme of Long Way
.
·
.
·
.
·
,
·.,
·
..
.
Anyway, I digress. I Jike
the
-
Down than say, Name .
.
It
'
s
.
a
Poughkeepsie .
.
.
:
_
T~is
.
was ev~
.
-
.
·
Goo Goo Dolls
though
.
I don't
goo~ song though and
.
should
dent ~t the
Indec1S1on
showFn-
know why. Something about the
.
have no trouble catching on to
d
,
ayomg~t atthThe
.
hChance.
'
E
.
Goo'
.
s sappy ballads and power
rad·
Wh
t
1
· ,; It'
·
h
.
-
penmg e s ow
·
was
xu
10•
·
·
a am saymg.
_
st
e
·
·
Woundfollowedb
s1·
,1;
h
punkriffsjustintriguesme.Hell,
Goo Goo Dolls,
every song
.
.
.
Y
_
ippS!w
0
the songs are CATCHY. Ok?
sounds like a single! hecom-
put on a powerful setthat lasted
The Goos should probably be
mend every guy.to go oiitand
about a half- hou.r.
_
Self.Decay
included with the aforemen-
buy this album for two reasons:
was up next showm~ that age
tioned bands that would not
One, it is a well done CD. The does_n t matter w~en 1t comes to
·
have a career if it were not for
songs .are fun and catchy and
gettmg star,te<l,
m
the scene.
the curse of the Top 40 food
the six string and 12
_
string gui-
~fter the younger crew of
Self
chain, but I think they rise above
tars frame each song perfectly.
Dec_ay
c~e Orange County
fa-
that
I list~n to a Jot of
.
heavy
Two
,
itis a good ''.sensitiy~ guy"
vontes
Ninety 9 ~~nts,
fol-
metaL Late 80's heavy metal,
.
CD
to
own. This will make up lo\V~
.
~
-
by the ?ea~l!m!}g ~ct
In-
mainly because I like the fact
for all those
Pantera
and
Wuc
d~clSlon,
play1ng with their new
that I can not hear it anywhere
Tang Clan
records iri
·
your col-
sm~er, former]~ pf
Milho_use.
else.
·
Rightnowitislikemyown
l

.
I ·
·
-
Unhke more glamorous(<rock
ec 10n. t is a
.
conversation
tar''
b
.
d
.
1
d
. ·
.
-
.
.
,
·.
personal music .
.
The Goos 11
,
e-
·
·
.
.
S
an s,
n eCISIOn
tnes to
piece.
.
.:
.
.
.
mind me of that era of light
. I am going to wrap this up by
leave the audience
.
with.a last-
acoustic ballads and raise your
saying I get real happy when 1 ing impression
,
w,h6th~r° it b~ ·a
fist rockers. Vocalist
.
Johnny· . hearmyboys
the Goo Goo Dolls
question, an idea, or a
·
new out-
Rz
. k h
·
d
look on life.
·
;
.
-
.
eruc
as a

greaLvo1ce an ,
on the radio. They.'re an oasis
.
thank god, does
·
not sound like
in
.
a sea of one hit wonders
I Il)anaged to catch up with
Eddie Vedder.
·
He sounds more
whose one hit sucks.
Ninety 9
Cen(s
after the
-
~
-
~ow
.LEX,
lllAKf
Uf,
:C
NEtl>
APVJCE".
t
tn£T.
It
..
#(EAi.LY
COIL
Gl~l-
10NluHT, BU-r
t
FORGoT H!R
NA"1E'.
WHA1
,
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l
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I
SEE: HE"P.
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-
81,'1(£",
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AWKWA~l1
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.
ALL.
to
·
ask
.
them a
.
few questions.
looking .for their big break, the
Max, the riewest member of the
·
band is more concerned with
band VJhq
_
has only been with
just enjoying thems~lves. .
.
themfor
the
last two years was
..
.
·
'
'.
W~'
rf'. not really making any
the most vocaL Unfoithnateiy
riimi
.
~f
we
'
re jfrehy
"
moch in
Mark, the lead vocalist, was kind
debt right now,"
Max
said with.
of ind
_
isposed bu

tthe rest
of
the
I
.
"d d
·
·.
'
.
'
.
a ops1
.
e gnn .
.

,
:
·
.
.
barid was
·
more than wining to
·
.
In
.
the middle of their Set a
.
share their opinions atiout the °figh
t'
erupted tharthb se~urity
current scene
;
staff qui~kly
hi:o
,
ke
up. The
.
"W,e're real happy\vit_h the whql~
'.
't~n1gl;l guy" syild~qme
lpcalscene here, there's always
is som~thing thatapp_earsfai~iy
. a tot of ki:ds
,
coming ~mt,". Max
often
;
.
.•
.
.
.
.
.
saicJ.
:
.
:
,.
;
,
.
> ,
,
,
.
.
..
.
·
.
_''Eyet}'Rhe;s gotta dea{ybu
.
Th~ffiOS
_
t important'piece of know
/
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Max
·
.
'
said. . ''Still
.
lvinety
'
9
'
rents is 'just having
every
'
one'slookifigOtit fo~
·
e
·
ach
.
fun
:
.
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other
.
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theii qiv~rsJty
p~ay asJi:>Qg ~s
wedui'.'
"
Be,
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witi?
·
arange~fsornesk'a/regga~-
sides'_playing
J
pr th
'
elilselv
'
es:
lik~
s
_
oiigs to heavy
_
punk;· the
shows
li~e
!Qis ~~Ip out up and
.
band atte~ptsJo
·
rip down soine
coming bands such as
Self
D.e-
·
.
of the commoii label!tthat only
cay.
((There are
:
always new
serve to further
.
divide the
bandfCQmil)g up! this~ kids
are:
s
,
r;i?f}e

Niiieiy
_
9_
Cgnts will
be
justtrying
'
to
get tlieif.foot in
·
,
around
.
the Poughkeepsie area
rbe do?r•"
:
~~ s
_
.tiq.
.. ·
.. : ·•·· . .
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T~~
ip.~mbers
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Ninety 9
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www
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ninetJ9c.ents.coin.
py
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..
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TH~:
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Thea·tre
byRACHAEL VOLLARO
Staff Writer
•·
"What is lo_v~? 'Tis not here~
after; Present mirth hath present
laughter;"
-William
Shakespeare, Twelfth Night
This weekend theMarisfGol-
lege Council. ,on Tpeatre Arts .
will presentits first prndm::tion
of.the season, Noel Coward's
Present Laughter. .
Present Laughter .centers
around the character of Garry
Essendine. Essendine, ap-
proaching age 40, struggles to
maintain control of his both his
artistic life
and
his sexual life.
He also is dealing' w~th the de-
mands of those who know him
and ·those who want to know
him: Freshman Ben Hecht stars
as Essendine, and is one of four
freshinert in the cast. ' . --
.
. Director, Donald 'Anderson,
said 'that he didn't anticipate
>
,. .. _._,'
; : , · , c .
, . . .
' , " '
. )•, '.'.'
casting ·so many freshmen,
"It's one'of the really nice as-
pects of the show. There is a
nice mixture of veterans and new
.
.
..
,,
comers," he said.
being a mentor to the freshman
. in ·the cast. This is also very
exciting for me, because it's my
first fall Mainstage in my four
years at Marist," hesaid.
Rounding out the cast are.
sophomores Sara Zizzi and
Keisha Mason, Zizzi plays the
femme
fatal
Joanna Lyppaitt.
"Joanna is the bitch, the vixen.
She's one of the most fun char-
acters I've played," she said.
· Mason plays Liz Essendine,
Garry's ex-wife and lover of his
two best friends.
"Liz is a class act, kind pf like
the woman I aspire to be," she
said.
Anderson, who is an assistant
professor of English at Marist,
said it should be interesting to
see how the audience reacts to
Coward's humor.
"There will beshows with
more laughter than others. It will
depend on the audience for the
particular show," he said.
Senior Robert Amodeo said
the humor might challenge the
audience . .
"It might bediffi~ult because
Ul~!Yll-
~ry
th~~~9.al
h~mo,r,:·
Regru:dles~, Anderso~ is con-
fident in C<>ward's gift for daz-
zling dialogue arid exasperating
situation.
.
.
.
'
· Megan Williams, also a fres~- •
tnari; plays 'the _Swedi~h Miss
Erickson: -She said is very
plea~ed with her ,Marist debut -
"The m01:e I got into the play
the
more'!
realized
it
was more
than
a drumor of comedy: There
are some dark strings attached
to it and some tender moments
too. TillI started working with
the cast I didn't realize
it,"
he
said,
"It
makes me appreciated
Coward more as a playwright."
Dischord Records legacy continues
· '-'This is the firsttime I've done
a
Swedis~ acc~nt'on stage," she
Said. "It's been a thrillirig and
fulfilling experi~nce."
· ·
--
For veterans like senior Chris-·
topher Betz, Present. La~ghter
has been an overall experience.
"It;s be~n
a
great experience
Betz ~ummed it up best._
"Itjs really bea11tiful, like na-
ture. It's dt:ep," he.said'.
/?EXTRA
INCOME
FOil '9~)\
Earn
$500.- Sl
000.,we?klfstuffirg ·;
envelopes._
For-details~ RUSH $1.00
witt\SASE;to: __ "-- ____ .
GROUP FLYE
6547 N.
Aw:=aclemy
Blvd., _Dept. N
Co&orado Springs,
CO
80918
.
:; . . · · - : , - • . • - . · • -
_._
J
- - · , , ., • . ·-
'11
-
by
PATRICKWIIlITLE
A
&
EEditor
Dischord Records continues
to amaze indie rock fans world-
wide with their wide variety of
innovative bands.
' Dischord was founded in 1980
iil Washington, D.C. by mem-
bers of a band called
the Teen
Idles.
Ian MacKaye of art-rock
geniuses
Fugazi
remains the
principle mind behind Dischord
today.
It
is· a little early for me to
begin celebrating their twenti-
eth aniversary, so I will give you
a little taste of what Dischord
has offered ttie music world
over the past eighteen years.
A total of thirty-five artists
have worn the Dischord name
on the backs of their records.
Among these thirty-five, a few
stand out as my favorites. The
best place to start is with
MacKaye's second band,
Mi-
nor Threat.
Though their mu-
sic would be outdated and rudi-
mentary today, fifteen years ago
they were one of a kind. The
''.Out of Step" LP is my favorite,
since it has some of the stron-
gest choruses and rriost sincere
songwriting I have ever heard.
Another great early Di~chord
band is
Dag Nasty.
If
you lis-
tened to
Nin
1
ana
and
Green
Day
a~ a kid and never got
around to buying DN's "Can I
Say" LP,
you
are seriously
If
your friends
coo't hove o
good
time
without
drinking, maybe
you
need
some
friends who can.
missing out. Dischord bands
like
Embrace
and
Ignition
rede-
fined positive emotional rock in
the mid and late 1980's. Plus the
latter even had a sax player, how
is that for class? Dischord's
most successful and longest
ru_nning band is
Fugazi.
"l 3
Songs" and "Repeater" were
amazing records in the 80's, and
this year's "End Hits" proves
they have still got
it.
If you have
never'heard them, imagine ex-
perimental, sometimes melodic
and sometime discordant (no
pun intended) music. Dischord
signs a lot of younger bands to-
day like
Bluetip,
Check.
Dischord Records out on-line at
http://www.southern. com/
southern/label/DIS/index.html.




































.
. , October 1
2
1998
.
...
,.
...
Me·it·'s
·so~cce·f
lOsi~s
to
AdelPhi
;/11.as
game
cancell~d,
by
JetTDahncke
Staff Writer_
well for the rest of the game,
something Herodes said he was
pleased to see.
·
_-
_
After three consecutive victo-
"We made an early error and .
_
ries catapulted the Maristmen's
they capitalized on it," he said.
soccer team into second place
"We pretty much_d,omin~ied the
in the Metro Atlantic Athletic . entire game after that. The sec-
Conference, the
Red
Foxes saw
ond half they (Adelphi) weren't
their winning streak snapped
even able to get the ball out of
after a 1-0 defeat at the hands of their end. We showed.
a
lot of
Adelphi last Wednesday.
poise out there, but just came
Following the non-co~ference
out on- the short ·end of the
loss, Marist is no~ 3-6 overall,
stick.?' ·
_
and
3-1
in
the Metro AtlaQtiC
Herodes went on to compli-
Athletic Conference:
ment Koivu, who made
.
a
few -
.Despite out-shooting the Pan-
dazzling saves,: including one
thers 17-11, Marist was unable
robbingMikeSchillingofagoal.
to solve the toug4 Adelp~ "tje-
: _. .. How_ever, the coached
fense. Senior goalkeeper Mikko . s~ssed that the goalkeeper" was .
Koivu, who ~ks fifth in the
not impei:i,~~able.
. __
· country· in- saves· per game,
"We had a couple·of opportu-'
gained his first shutout of the
nities where-we justm,issed the
year by turning away six shots.
whole ball," Herodes said.
Head coach Bobby Herodes
The club was scheduled to be
emphasized that.it was far frolTl ·- in action three days later against
·
.
· a one-sided game._ _ . . ,·,
•Sacred Heart,. However, the
"We had a ton of chances, we
game was canceled when only
just couldn't get it done," the
11
Pioneers showed up afterone
coach said. "We are getting our
of the team buses was involved
opportunities in every game and
in
an
accident
in
Danbury. No
I can't really ask for anything
makeup date has been set.
more other than putting them in
-- The annual alumni game
will
the
:
back of. the, nett. · ., · _
be
heW this Satµrday at 1
:po
PM
The
lon~ score came tn minute
on North Field. :It is an oppor-
, 11
when Mariusz Kules~a fired . tuajtyforJoqnerp\ayers ~o meet·
ashot from the
left
side of the .. current ones. . .. - .. -
c . . • .
goa,l box
which
s;il6~f
()~er
''.W,~
.ge.t. every_b~dy
.
fr6m the ·
Maiist goalkeeper
.farJos past _to,meet some-of t,he kids
DeB_rito and into the Ijght cor-
thatareherei.n theprograrr.i that
ner.
. .
-. are going to
try and carry on the
-Following the go~I Marist
soccer tradition here at Marist,"
settled down and played .very
Herodes-_said_.
-
"it is
a:
fun- day."
pGri_
e
[ t6the right prpgram for
your
IT
c~r,eer]
·y~.~
r~\ie
t~tci:a
~Is. Now
ifs
&:ne
lo
take
Item 10
a
~gher
fevel.
lre
~e
ki'do
i
is
FOOtball
bOX
-.
scor
;
.
.
.
.
,~
'
-
.
.
.
'".
-.
.
'VS~
:_s1~--JOhn'·s··'· .:
,
.
-
.
.
.
.
"'
··,
. . . . .
.
'
INDIVIDUALSI'ATISTICS
RUSIDNG-
:
>: _., . .
·
StJohns-Free9-2l,.Keena4-10,Mooney 1:4; Gordon 0-minusS,
Neuman 2-minus9, Malone 14-:mi11us. 66.Maii.st-AHen-35-126,
Spinato-3-21iNJqnes·l-1,Tardi2-mi11us3,Tramaglini•ll-minus
32
•/
.
•,
. .
PASSING.
. . ,. _
_
'
~,-- -_•.
St )ohris-Malone 9-24.-2-74; Zanunjt
0-_l~o~o:
M,arist~T.TI!ffiaglini
a-.1~195_:.·,~- •
_i-
~-.
••
.
.·,
-
-
.·,.
_:
~ •
RE<EVIN<i
··•
'
'
-----"·. ·.
-,.
StJohns-Kalb~rer 3~IJ ;Chelloti~
2:,2.7,,
!(eena 2: 1 ~,.Djiep 2
7
Ji.-
Marist~Calabria3'-J62, Allen 2,3; Brewer 1-15, 1:'raynor f-9, Korba
1-6.
.
--
.
·.1: ·

··: ·
>_ ·,
PAGE14 -
Tennis:··Men·•··re~
, ·
.
.
.
~,-,•,
:: tri.ah{urtdefe~ted
Ill
.' MMC'play: ·'. . · .
... continuedfrpm pg. J.6-
-
.
it's more of a.team concept and
- . everyone knows wha,t they have ..
fo
do· to win," the freshman said.
A story book season for the
Marist. teririis team .will ulti--
_matily.be decided on what
tran~
spires.this weekend._ ..
A
win in
the MAAC's would be a shin-
.' ing" momerit in .Marist history,
· ,vhile
·
also·allowirig for
a
new
_··chaptex: to.be,.wriuen in this
· championship' tale.
A.
loss on
-s
the othex: hand, although dev-
-
,
!1S!atirig/~h9_rild
not
at all dimin~
_)sh the ac_complishmerits this
. team has achieved. . , .
This'tearri has quietly and me-
. thodically conquered every ob~
stacle that has°' stood in their
.,::wif.,J/
Now\t'~
titjit?
for the big-
. gest,on~of,~k- :,,, . , _
CROSS-COON-
..
: TRY:-··Trip
to
Alb~y
n~~t'ior·hof6.
.1:iams
'
-- : ... co,ztinuedfrompg_:-16,
0
- the
MAAC
championships:less
than·a inonth
.
away/the·Red
Foxes continue t<f pro\le· that
they wili
be
one ofthe contend-
ing force$ of
the
ctinference;
,: ·This' 'weeketitl, the Mari st
·
. cross 'coiirifry teani .. looks. to
. continue .their winning streak at
' tne
Albany
InvitationnL Irrthe
past, this meet has had a strong
.
-and,competitivefield,b11t.this
,-,year~s: cross country.'tean'r is
looking,-forward to the.chal'-
-lenge, and toincrease.their con-
.. fide11ce_;:is they head-:into'tbe
-
· iastthiee meets:'t:>f therr·season.
·1ntp9J,"tallt•i,g~es,(Jol)!lngp.JffOr
wotnen·~s-·so'cc:er•·.-ill'M.A..A.G:·race
• •
.
-
.-· . . . . .
,
. . . . .
·
. • . .
t .. -
·-·.
.
.
.
,. -,, . . ··
_
·
· · .
:
·
.
:
- . _ . . , . -
· . ;
byKAARENlJMM.Em
Staff
Writer.
-wQe11they host
the
R.ider Br~ncs - rookie teaming upto lead M,arist
_arid theJ,,oyoic1 Gr1/yhom:ids. : thus far. _ Si~ior _ Amanda
Rider is a rival froin the North- - Swiderek and freshman Kasey
.
.
PaileYieboor. Wrth
~
tECtrdlg'ies
am
an
TheMaristwomen•s· soccer
east
-
confoi:ence .and Loyola is -- Sibrinsz.both. have.four goals
team is sitting right nowin the
J)ll~
:of
the-
pii~erh01.1ses -of.the ,:on __ the ~eason;,· Both have also
. middle of the)\.1etro Atlantic
MA.At.'
-
.
.
-.
',
_
_,.been- responsible for a garne-
AthleticConforence. ·
. _ .•.
-
. Marist-hasto feeLextre111ely
winning goal this season.
ClfSlard'~
tr~nfql
orogram,
;ool
fro
tta
~·re as
-
~·a liwitedl~~.,a~ ser,ies
finit -
-~ 011~1e
~
test·<trle
~
~ 5
too.ij.
\'kare
aieci;a
~tt
-~-
, _ ,

:;
;
C
, k >
~

.

... .... ....------&
~
'
~=-:-..
~~-:~-~m-1
·. ;~ J~;-...
:';;:H,
. ~~~;,; Ff:tA~~~ii.Fl~--t
PaineWebber
Launching
your
career
wv.paiNb~r.comlon-campusF.,--------i
Theyhavea2-l-lrecordinthe :_:confidentgoing the rest ofthe
Nic.ole Stangarone, w~o-is-an-
. MAAC tha~pu_ts.themJ!ed for ··wa:Y•:. _ witl.b ·; ~9.pqp~ore~ · otli~r.f:t:~s.lpnan,-ha~ alsbrieued
fQQrth place. Maijst has a hosr
> ~
goaltender laime"BierwiJ1h s~- .- a g'am'~-:\v'.foner for . .the/Red
of gamest1ftii1tfudii(f-g"ani~s .· iniHn net:''.Her'.39 saves in•six
Foxes~· .. ·~ · -·
:~ -
that will be important ·ones· in
garries gives_ her a 0.95 goals per
-
Marist has blended together
order to receive-a good seeding . ,game;average, S,heis.l>ig p~ old~z: ~nd y.o!Jpger ajent to put
in the MAAC Tournament..
·. · of the. Re.cl;F9xes four shqtouts
together:, a ,:espe~table season
On the ,schedule arehyo im- · during the 1998.fallseascin. ,
thus far with many_other oppor-
portant road games at Manhat- .. ' . .Marist's overal_l record is
4-4: :
:
wn.iti~s remaiQirig to, '.SllCCeed
tan and. St. Peters .. · These .are
3, including win!; versu~ Sacred
,
· ?Dd win in .th~
MAAG
confer-
games the Red Foxes are ca-
. Heart and StonybrQok, and a tie _ ence. .. ·
_
-.:. -;:_
...
pable of winning and Manhat-
at the University of. Maine and
',-, The MAAG holds
it
touma-
tan is particularly important
be-
·vs. Holy Cross:,
A
1-1-1 r~ord
ment on the weekend of Octo-
cause they are tied with Marist.
on the road has been positive - .ber 31, w}lere the Mari st
An
important weekend.for :allyear.sofar.
_ ___
.women~s soccer. team should
Marist
will
be_
October. 24-25 .
.
, It has been a veteran ·al)d a · make a foqnidable,showing.
s
ancun
*
Nassau* Jamaica_* Maza'tlan *' ~capulc
*
Bahamas Cruise ._
Florida
*
Sou-th
Padre . -
Travel Free and mak~ lots of
ca·sh
!
Top reps are offered full-time staff
Jobs.
Lowest price Guaranteed. Call now for details!
411
,.



































































































.
·
October~S, 1998
·
.
.
.
1f
:
C8Ill.J)USltepott-i
.
- -
.
'-'
·
t
by)anBeighley,Jr .
.
-

,,_
'
.
This y~ar in the National
on the Asttos through their 102-
Trevor Hoffman finished with
Leaguewasoneofmifoyrun'az-
·
win season .. HehJt.~12'wi~38
·:
a4-2recqrdwitha l.48ERAand
ingperforoiances: ··
·
·.
·
·
_
homersandkrtockedin 124runs.
had 53 saves. Opponents bat-
. .
.
From: the spectacie' that was
The Astros needed
,
his steady
.teda
pale .165 against him. He
Mark
:
rvfcGwire:'and
·
Saminy
.
contribution to achieve the
sue-
·
.
was the dominating closer that
Sosa;
to
Trevor Hoffman and his
'.
cess thadliey did.
_
.
.
.
every team ',1/ants. 'fhe one that
.
near perfect season
'
to Kerry
McGwire had an ou~tinding
you send out with the confi-
Wood
_
'
anf li!s~ bt~atijtaidng
·
season thatnob<>dy will ever be
derice that g~e is oyer. He put
f()()ki~ y ~
;
th~
_
~atio~al Leftgue
:
"
able
.
to forget
.
~OU.Was
an
ex-
·
.
together an am¥ing season that
was ne".'ershoJ:! 9f a hero: N':)w
:
· ·
tremely
:
vital contributor
.
to a
·
helped the
.
Padres reach the
the he
'
roe!i will receive
'
their re-
:
team that achieved a
·
tremen-
.
.
playoffs arid98 win's .
.
wards.
.
.
•:·
·.
'
· ·
.
dous am.01.int of success, and
TomGlavineledtheNLin wins
·
_
·.
Thi{ Nation~I· ~agile ~VP: answered questions ·as to what
with 20 and pitchea'his way to a
r~c~
.
~teate·s one o~ the'm6stfo'."
.
.
·
he was capable~of if:he could
2.47 ERA. Itwas the ever con-
teresting deci~i~ni;that sports-
:
.
•·.
stay healthy.
·
·
In spite of their
sistef!t Glavi_ne's fourth season
wijters
_
have had to
·
'
make in
outstanding seasons, the NL
with 20 or more,wins, and for
years:
-
Do you ·give M~Gwire
;
MVP for the 1998 season is
thefirsttirp.esincel993. Glavine
-
~e
MVP
based upori hi~- u~9e-
Sarrimy Sosa He brought a team
~ made a big pu~h for the award
lievable, 'rec~rd br'eaking
:
year?
(
·:
tq
the playoffs that w~uld never
-
after the. All:-Star break, going
Does'the awar1
·
go·to S~sa, he, have
.
been able to go thaffar
8~3witha2.29ERA.
of th
_
e 66 horn~
·
ruff
s_easo~·and
:
··
·
without him,
he,
'
led ihe major

The competitio~ for this award
who
_
lep theJ::ubRi~s, t9 the play-
.
leag\ies in RBL Sosa did all ili..e
,
,is tight, with these
.
three candi-
offs for the first time sinceJ9.89?
,
thirigs that his team needed him
.
dates, as well as Kevin Brown,
Do MoisesJ Alou
.
a:nd:Greg
·
·
todo, that is whatinakesaMVP.
John Smoitz and Al Leiter, all
Vaughn deserve.mention?
:..
.
justifiable winners.-
The Cy
·
·
.
:MarlciMtGwire 'daptivated: - - - - - - - - - - -
.Young is an award that should
Amedca from March 31st until ·
'.'
·.
-,
,• ,
.
t
:
·
.
..
,
.
.
.
gq
tp
·a
starting
pitcher, unless
hisfinalgameofthe
:
season:hit-
·
·
Sosa
did all
·
the
thereisnota
·
suitablecandidate,
ting homers all along the way.
h .
h
h .
and this year there are several,
.
McG:wire bit.299 with
70
horn-
t
ings
t
at
.
is t(!_altJ,
for this
:
reason
I
eliminate
:
.
.
_
e.rs,)<n9
_
cke
·
,n~)47 n.ms
.
a,nd
needed him
to
-
do,
Ht>ffmanfromthefinalnmning.
:
,
b_r0,ke
-.
the. N at10nal ~eague
·
th
t •
.
h
t
k
Choosing between Gia vine and
record for walks with 162 .
.
He
\
a is
W
a ma es
Maddux is a diffic'tiltdecision,
had aA70p11~b-aie percentage:
a
MVP.
butonthebasisoftheERAtitle,.
..
an<i
;i.
-:7,52 slµggi,ng_perce:ntage.
·
.......,-----.----..,,..,.----
I choose Greg Maddux.
Despite 4is outstan~liI_1g
,
sea-
;
" ·. •.
The
NL
Rookie of the Year
.
~on,: hq~~ver, the.Carclin;tl~ clid

.
"In a race no easier to decide, . award, with all respect to Travis
·
,:
only finish with an 83:-79 ~
.
Qrd.
: ?
tlie
"
NI)Cy"'Yoffr:itcompetition
,,
"Le¢
of
the: Arizona
:
Diamond~
.
.
·
,
Sammy, Sosa_played in
.
the
.
·
has no less than six solid
backs, comes down to two play-
shadows
pf
:{3ig Mac
.
a_lI
-
ye11r.
·
choices. From Greg Maddux to
.
ers. Do you take the dominat-
Playingoutside of the spqtHght,
,
-John
Smoltz
to Al Leiter to
:
in.g pitcher, Kerry Wood, or the
he puqogether one
:
of the most
.
Trevor Hoffman there is not a
young hitting prodigy, Todd
,
;
~mazingseason~ofou~time
.
.
He
bad competitor. In the end, the
Helton?
·
··
·
._
;
._
brm1ght,the C.ubs bactc !O the
·.
rac
·
e can
'be
hrokei:l down to
.
·wood busted on to the na-
.
playoffs, with.a .90~
73
record,
.
Maddux, Hoffman and Tom
.
tional baseball scene
·
with ab-
after a nine-year absence. He
.
.
Glavine.
·
$Otute brilliance. He tied Roger
hit
30~
with
§6
homers and had
.
Greg Maddux_ finished with an
Clemens' single game strike out
.
':i
i
.
major league l_eading ~581,IBI
:
.
;
18;9 rec9rd·o/ith a leagu~l~ad-:'
.
reco
_
r~ of
29
a~1_1inst the Chicago
Without Sosa, the.Cubs return
ing 2.22 ERA. He pitched 251in-
Cubs. He went 13.~6-with a 3.40
Jo succ~s
.
~
_
~voula
_
~ot have
b~e11.
:
~ings
_
;
good enpugjl for third in
ERA, striking
_
out 233 hitters in
po
_
ssib!~
- :;
·
,::-
:
"'
.
•.
.
,
~.
?
:tlie
NL; ih
'Yhich
_
he _orily ga,ve

. 16~
213.
innjngs:
.
Opposing hit-
.
~oisesAlouwasmovedfrom
up20lhits
.
Hesufferedaslight
ters batted only
.196
against
,
the flo
'
rida Marlins during
.
second
-
halfslumpthatkepthim
him, the best opponent batting
Wayne Huizenga's
·
ordered
frorri rimning away with the
average of any major league
·
purge oftlie'l997 World Cham-
·
·
award, but he still put up
·
nui:n-
starter. He personified domina-
pions. Alqu was a key compo:-
bets more than good enough to
·
tion and brilliance.
nentofthatMarlin tearn
·
andhe
·
walkhoiriewithCyYoungrium-
· Helton started his major
·
was the most consistent-player
·
berfive.
league career with a bang. He
son
-
.
Football
I 0/10 ~. Duquesne I :35
p.m.
10/17
rs.
Iona 1
p
.
in .
.
I 0/24
@
Wagner I
p.in
Volleybaltlpll5
vs. F~irfield 7
p.m
~
'
.
.
.
10/20
vs
Iona
·
?
p.m.
Men's soccer
10/10 Alumni Game
1.p.m.
-
10/14
@.
Siena 3
p.m .
.
10/17
_vs.
UMBC 1
p.rrL
·
PAGE15
Women's soccer
10/i4@ Mknhattan 3:30
p.m .
.
.
.
:
·
,
10!17
@.
_
St. Peters
.
2:00
p:m.
Men's t~~s
I
0/9-10/i
I
MAAt
Ch~mpionships
··
Cross country
-'
10~1 0@ ~banyinvitational
·
··
.
10/16 IC4ACha..mpiqnships@.
·
.
Van:Cortlahdt Park, Brorix, NY
•'
;.•~
~

I
t
."
,
;


.
T~u,gh
Trivlij
·
·
What is)µe ~
-
record for
.
passing yards
:
in
single season and who holds it?
·
··:•
Lastwe~k's question - How many World Series have the Ne
York Yankees won since the Boston Red Sox last won a Worl
Series?
Answer-23 .
finished this season hitting .315
1. The New York Yankees sweep
with 25
'
homers and
:
9g RBI. · the Texas Rangers allowing only
Some seasons those would be ·orie run' an
·
d thirteen hits in the
MVP numbers
.
As the season
three
games. Next up, the Cleve-
movea on, he-got stronger, hit-
·
· 1anci
·
Indians and Manny
ting.359withl2homersand53
·
.
Ramirez.
.
_
RBI in the
second
half. Helton
·
2. Donovan McNabb is
dealt
finished among team leaders in
first Reisman challenge with
aB major batting
·
categories.
Syracuse's loss to North Caro-
With his performance he is
Jina State. Can he recover?
clearly the best offensive rookie
3. Charlie Batch has the best
·
thatthe National League has to
·
game of the rookie quarterbacks
offer..
.
.
.
.
thus far with 16/30 passing per-
Wliile) dot/t
:
know if Helton
fomfance
for
268 yards against
ca:n get a
.
fair chiince
·
rrom
the
Bears.
. .
national media due
_
to the tre~
..
4. Larry Legend makes hjs way
mindous hype surrounding
·
to the HaH
:
Now lets
·
get his
Wood, he is my overwhelming
Pacers in action.
choice for the National League
·
5. On a serious note, Darryl
Rookie of the Year
.
His produc-
Strawberry is diagnosed with
tion was simply too much for
colon cancer and, obviously, will
Wood, who spent too much time
not play for the remainder of the
on.the D.L. this year to compete.
playoffs. However, initial sur-
Also in the world of gery is a success, and he ap-
sports this week:
pears to be doing well.
~()8d woes
_
plague volleyball team
by
RYANMARAZITI
Staff Writer
·
·
game at Seton Hall back on Sep-
·
gan on September 23 when
.
tember 15th
·
Josing
·
·
all three
Army avenged
an
early season
games 12~15, 15-17-and 13-15.
loss, sweeping all three games
TheMaristCollege volleyball
The match could have easily
8-15, 12-15.and 9-15. This loss
team has had a iough season to
·
gone to the Red Foxes but Se-
was most disappointing be-
date, compiling a 5-8 record and
ton Hall seemed to have the luck
cause Marist had handled Army
a 2-7
-
record in their last nine
on ·its side.
in the Marist Classic back on
games.
Marist could have used a little
September 11th
After
a
lengthy five game
·
luck this season.
.
Then it was on to Canisus.
stretch of playing mi' the road
Marist played its other two
Marist was again swept in three
in which they
-
wentl-4; (0-2 in
·
.
conference- games at home
games but did not fold as they
the MAAC, the women's vol-
againstRider(9/19) and Loyola
had against Army. They hung
leyball team should be glap ~o
.
(9/20). Marist kept Ride(s de-:.
.
tough and played excellent fun-
come home for awhile.
-

'
,
fense
in
check for the remainder · damental volleyball but it just
Marist would soon like to for-
.
Qf the mat<;h after dropping the
was n~t enough as they lost 5-
get about the road rashing they
first game: Toe scoreline read:
·
15,
i
1.:.15 and 10-15.
received at the hands of Army,
7-15, 15-8; 15~8and 15-7.
· Despite losing this contest,
Canisus, Niagara and fenn
Loyola gave Madst a head-
Marist seemed to show some
State.
·
They pick&i up their only
·
ache
the
nexrday, frustrating the
glimmer of its early season
fonn
win against Harvard this past
·.
team by keeping the Red Foxes
.
of l,rash
.
off the collar style of
w_eekend _in-the
.
1-Jartford Tour-
attac~ off-,balai:!ce
.
winniQg 14-
aJtacking and s~lid
.
4efense.
name'nt -
-
·
6,8~15and7-15.
·
·
·
..
·
Marist had not won a single
Marist:plijyed,a·_non,league
.:
-
1Jl~mid~seasondowns)idebe-
game o
_
n the rgad until they
.
·
.
-
:.
.
.
..
..
":-
..

,

~
.,.
.
.
played Canisus. The glimmer
would soon fade however as
they were only bale to win one
game losing 4-15, 5-15, 15-2 and
11-15. Unfortunately this tumul-
tuous. ride was not over for the
RedFoxes.
·
.
During parents weekend the
team played in the Hartford
Tournament in Connecticut.
After losing to Penn State, the
Red Foxes bounced back and
hammeredJvy League member,
Harvard
·
.
·.:
.
-
--.
.
Tpe d~fense
of
Heather Vir ~nd
Cara Birk was a key element to
the Red Foxes first win in six
games.
So far this season, Marist as a
team is averaging 11. 782 kills per
game, 2.28 service aces and
1.964 blocks per game.
Individually, leading the Red
Foxes
in
kills
is Virwith 123 (2.196
per game). Birk, Jen Parker and
Julee Cerda are not far behind
with
I
22,
I
20, and 117 respec-
tively. Birk and Trisha Ramey
have been steady with service
scoring 27 aces apiece on the
year. Setter Leigh Shillington
has 412 assists as well.
Defensively, Parker leads the
digs department with 127 (2.3 per
game), while Vir has 21 blocks,
an average of 1.2 per game.
With a 0-2 record on the road
versus MAAC opponents,
Marist will look forward to host-
ing Siena on Wednesday, Octo-
ber
7th
at
7:00
PM.
Perhaps home court advan-
.
tage is
_
what the Red Foxes need
Jo
lUIJI
their season around and
shal(e up the standings in the
MAA.C .
_
.









































Stat of the Week
...
· The-Marist football team ·
held St. .Jolln':s. to·".45
·. yac~s rushing. on· Satur.;.·
-: ci~y: , : .·
..
: .. October 8 ·
1:998
.
S.
.
.
'
· ,
.
Quote.of the .we·ek
. · ''We'reJoiiigto~eealot'of
good- competition and
w~
think. we arex~ady.
forit."
:.:DarrelBielawski-on the
tenniSteam
in
tJieMAAC~
,-·-.-pAGE16
Shu.toUt.glves
· fen,sively in ·tlie·'first half they
coinbinedfor only'54 yards to-
· by,THO~RYAN
·
. Sports Editor
A little advice to all'ttie'MA:AC
coaches· who. still· have··'to play
the Marist football teani
"
:this
year: do not stait".·a freshi:na.n
quarterback.
· · .
The Red Foxes sacked
..St .
John's freshman quarterback•.·
· Brendan Malone eight tip:iesimd ·
• intercepted him twice
,in
.1:t
14-0
win that_catapulted-,Marist into
.. 'first place in the MetroAthletic
Atlantic. Conference;:
:
... tal
ciffense:· Ea~h teamonly had
. ·.one r~ai:scoring opportunity in
the first half," and both times
. they ··resulted :in·· missed·· field
·
: g9als. >the :teams· were. dead-
locked 0-0 going to _the half. ·
That all changed in a matter of
. secOrids., On ·Mansfs first drive
:, ,of.the second half,"quarterback
The.Marist _<lefense ~lso•heid
.the Red ,Storm, tci a·
,
scho~l-. .
record low of45yardsrushmg
.
as the Red Foxes continu~d:to
BilfTramaglini con·nected on a
schooh~_coid 89-yard touch-
Jo_Vln
play with
a
streaking Joe
. Calal>ria; · Calabria ran a fly pat-
tern down,'the Marist sideline,
.waited
foriheball to come down,
·shook'a couple of· Red Storm
defenders, then raceo to the end
zone where he made it with
a
full
body:dive.
· lookmoreandmorelil<ethei997
team that led the nation in total
defense .. Jerry Qerth,: Reid Ellis
. and
,,D_wayne Bates dominated
. the St. John's
:
offensive Jirie;.
wrecking havocfor
!ill
sixty
min-
utes,:... and Joe Macchia.and
I)arret{ Valdes each retorded an
intercep_tiori. ·
· Marist head coach '.Jim.Parady
said he thought his defense.was
going to ,step .up, ~i.n,ce Marist
was facing a team thatcame into
the game ranked nuµiber.one in.
the· country in toµtl defense.
.~•we _felt otir defens:e;would
play up to the challenge,, arid
· Calabria acknowledged after
the-game.that he.and therest of
his
.
teammates .did not' let their
'. first half offensive problem~ af-
fect ~eirplayin the s~ondhalf.
.
. • ,
.
.
.
·• ..
.
• .
.
. .


.
Circlephoto/JoeScotto
.
"You have.to use Jmstration
The Red.Fqxes'Jerry:Gerth (37) sacks,StJ.otin's.quarterb
.
ack Brendan Malone, causing.
io ·your advant~ge,"
c.
alabria
himto fumble."'"'The Red•Storm would recovedhe·ball on this play ,:but wound up losing 14-0.
·
·
,
said. ·"You.can'tJet it get you
.day, Pardy-.brought pressure
were .. the
'
key to bringing the
down.''
theydid,"Paj:-ady said. "y./ehad
.guys running clean, ,and when
·YO,U have guys runnfo.g,clean
like. we did, .you ·know·.ifs the
scheme.''
. . . .
· That is the .scheme put to-
gether· by Mzjst::aefeilsive"co::.
·ordinator·.Rick Pardy'. ,On•this
from all sicj.es against the fresh:.
constant barrage ~gainst .the
After Calabria's big catch,
man Malorie,-who to'his credit
RedStonn. ·
·Marist attempted:to establish
.
alwaysgotup. However,be.was
"We_ wantedto be sound and · their run, while.every.once in
not very effective, ,completing · we wer~/'. Pardy said. ·
•~1
was . awhile connecting ona big play.
only 9~of~24 passes for
74
yards
proud of• the ·secon_dary cover-
Allen ran 20 times in .the second
on•f4e,day'" ;
·
·age tll~tallow_ed us tobri11g our ·-halffor 88
yards
to finish with
Pardy said his defensive backs . guys. in.
. .
.
126 on:the,day. He also
-
scored
·
On .the other side of,the ball, . Marist's second -touchdown of
M
.....
>.·•··
.::en.
'S.a
len1_:.ns ...
·.·.g.,ca, •.
r.s
.. _· .
.
t.1·,·.•·:·_p.0.•.·.
·
.··'
Or
~r:;~~:!t!i7.£
f!:$~qi=:~I~~ ..
half Selllor captain
}J.
Allen liad
.
N
ow.:'comes . the·. big one.
MAAC
Championsfiips··~;Ef~1=!£:~
E!":.i::~~~~~~
.
.
.
.
.
byPEIERMOYLAN· .
·
· StaffWriter ·
·
· · ·
.ofthe"iied'Stonn's.nose tackle,
lost.at home last. week to
onships.· -We're•·goirig to see· a· stated :before, this year's . win'."
Elliot Hulse. Along with Gerth,
Fairfield.· If the Reg Foxes want
. I,oi
of
good comp~tition
arif)Ve .
net
will receive an automatic bid Hulse:is the class ·of,MAACin-
the MAAC title, the only way
. thi_nk we are' ready.:Cor it/'
to the :N'CAA tourrminent, so
teriordefensivelineman,
.
ihey'will get it is to duplicate
The
Maristrnen's tenniste~ Bielawski said,
. . . · . .
there-is moJ'C:riding
0
,ri
this.years
Botli sides were so inept of-:
whatthe Stags did.
jusi:haa',a.:we.ek m~st,·tea~~s . ·:Befo~e.lo;king;t9\Vai:µs'.fue
teamtharie:verbefore.With'that ·
n· · · ·•.
.
·
't -
t· · · ·
dream ab.out. . .
·,. ::
;
.MACC._chan,:ipic>,n~hiits
llow_.,
in mind, thestate'.qftlleMarist .
·.~.)r
..
·.o
..
iS ....
s. :
... ·.
cou .. -.. n. :r.·
.y
... .
·· ,.
·e·ams
.. · Not only ... they: J:>~at.p
_
q-'Yer-, · .. ever, tpeJe.uy·toolc.~l!,U,:lr~ige
team,_\Viji~hl~ok~ prom,isingin
house and rival Fairfield,:but -step to :the EC:AG }oumainent; · resp·ect· to/their'·conference •·. ,. . ·.·.·

·
> · ··
t·•.· • · : .
.· ·. : .
-
·
·t ·
.
·
they.also. ~ent i~to:~e
Ea,~te.rµ .-
·w~ei:e they :con~~e~:i§'::~liow.
.
record,is'~owa)ittie,dimiliished: .
CO
.n- :1•n·:U e
.o , r u:n
, Coll~ge Athletic: Co~f eri~c,e'. their-\\'.irilling f9,gii:;_I~i,a. tou~a-
·
Smith
said
he.tliinks the:tour,.
. · ·. · · •'. •.·· •
• ·
.
·
. . . .
.
· .
·
toilmam~nt and blew up;Iike,ap · .. nie.nt',(~~tu,ring ,~1,1~h .TTJ:¥.quee .. 11amenf°
.
sc_on~g"rru.ghthwtthe
·.~s··-.·.·.·.· ...
· t
·
...
.
·
......
· • . · : r · . ·
...
··
.
:.
·
.·.• ...
· .. •.·.·
....

..
.
.. ·•· .. :.· ...
-~·-•.·._,-.·.•--.·.·g·
·• ·.··.·
.
.
· · · w ·
.... ·.··.: · ..
··· . . ·
.
··•··•.
·t.·
]
.
.. .;'.·.·.
·
..
·.:.t··.·
.. ·
..
· w · .
·.·.·.··_··
.
. . .
~ · · , ,
·.
•:w...
..·.·.··•
-n·s
atomfobomb.;
.• . ' ~'. :'.:
.
. .'. . : · .te#risasJJCQ:NN/lIRJ,;Fcrlrfield;
Red Foxes:
>' · ' .\ /
.
·.· ·
_
_
l:t
.
·
.. The-trpiln<;_i~g of:Fair{i(@JY: · · ~uclmell; ¥1d ,D~yi_~i9~JIJ:pow:·
.. If~ewern play1~gthe
t~airis
theJ~ed·Eoxes, at:the;tirrie ~erhouse~ers~th~RedFqxes
he.ad
'
to',-head,:instead·ot
·a:
byJENNIFERGLOVER
Hefferorifinishedsecond,,while
. ·, seem~d.
lik~
a:pinn!!:c.fC:
<>f
iw,
"al,. .
,came ~'Yay-,wi1}1
thiI:9
p}a~_e
.
. tn1t .flighted tourriiuneni,
I
~ould be .
- ·.
.
.
.
S.taffWriter
:sopho~9re.Greg -Salamone was
rea~y:slic;~e~~fulse.~sq~;_;;_F§r 0;·or~~ny~nty~~;::¥.;ui~t~so
cautio'iisly :OP,tiµii5.tic," ~i!i.d . ,
, ,
.
.
. ,
.. not far behina in fourth place.
the··first time in ·scho.9}history; •. ea_ming,Ji
1/z
pojri~ irrthetour-:. ·
f
Q~plf
,Swith:\ "fl;()~~v~r,J.1e-. .. . :.Fr~m 'th~ fl_at,.80:,d~g~ee Notre
.
A middle pack of.Stev_e ·Palmer
•Iviru:_i~i:b~~t)h~ hated
~~ii$:'i
.
ri~erit;
.
,the
·J?lC>~t
&til£e
'
Mari
st cause of :the·pi;u-p~y\pf tlie .. t<>i>
: .
Dam:Cf,OU~e;to the.billy50:de-:
·
:(12)/Brirui-Petrella. (14), Pete
to bring their conference'reoord -~ntei:ed ~e.ECAG's 4J,1Q90. .
four teams; itis qui_tf ¢pnceiy-

• gree brisk central New·Y9rkair, . Startz'(16), and-Jeff.Grady (18)
to.
9.-0-and:th~jr oyentl,l
record
to
- :Two, of ,th~jiighlights of the· . able that Fairfield coulµ re<;eive ·:the· men's.· and women's. cross
seaieci-the. ~arisJ yictory. : ..
: 11--0.
A1$o~gh there.w~~:ajarty
.
;tourna!Ilerit · yjere
:
Rob:erto
a large number pf pqiijts
'at
f(}~r, · :Gouritiy
:
team, proye_dthat notb-
For the women,.freshman Liza
c:losem~tches;:with 3rd singles . -M~yer
.
reaching.·•the .finals
five and sixsitjgles;l;filds~on~
ing·stim~jt{ilieir way to)Jrst · Grudzink_si-contfrn.ied to pace
going· three, sets. an~ 2ncf~n.µ . ~gainst lffl:l's Qu:is~~nder, and
and third d9u~lest\Vith the tpp · placi,yictories..
.
_
{lerte_an;ito.victory with her third
3rd ~oubjes goipg;to tie:breflk-
Bietawsltj reaching the. ~emifi:
three si~gles: !ffid -~fo
_
ul>les _be.:.
Satur~y,:pc~,3 ihe.·rrieri'.s ~d firstplace finish and,by cmsh-
ers,.the.:Maris.t team was able)o · nals again.st BtiaiLDoyle of ing- split up among . other women's;cros.s country· Jeam
ing the -foi:rner five-kilometer
keep 4teii:-.composui:e ~!ipuJl
Colgat~;-
·
. :
. MAACteatns."..
._
.
,
. . .
trayeled)o'.Colgate.University .course record. Grudzinski ran
it.out
. .
'
. . . .
Smitli:said·hewas happy with
In ot~er words,
thf!
old phras~
to participitte.in the
Harry
Long.
the
course in 18:52, eclipsing the
. Coach-Tim :Smith said,h¢ -is · what the ·ECAC's provided for
"there is no
T
in.teap" co11ld
Inyitatio~al.'. Marist:coinpeted
previous record by over 30-sec-
looking forward the next.time
th~RedFmces .. ·. · ·.·
·
. never·hold·so.muc.h~meaning.
agains,thost. tea.m Colgate and
oncls. The women placed their
Marist and Fairfield meet:•··
"We1ike to.thittk this i~
i
good · Withouran· overall 'team effort Metr<> Atlantic Athletic Confer-
top five runners
in
the first
11
"I'm pleased .to.have. ~on the
tune up f<>r.theMAAC cllampi-
from :Marist, the .tournaments'
ence'.rivals 'Ni~gara: Canisius,
places, capping their .17-point
match,·but Ifeel better to have
onship~, because our players
structure would allow for a
and Siena. ·
.··
.
yictory over second place Car-
prepared for Fairfield in the
h.ad the opportunity to face
much weaker team to capture
Marist contiriu~d to ~o what
nel University. Many of the
MMC to\lill~ent coming UP.,"
players from. a· wide ,~ge of points, and then if the cards fall
they seem tg do best, running
women ran to season best times,
Smith said.
colleges -from New Yo,rk, New
right,
take the tournament title.
away with another victory. Se.:
making this· already dominant
· Freshman phenom Darrel
Jersey, Connecticut, and Rhode
Bielawski, however, said he is
nior Mike Melfi led the men's
team even stronger.
Bielawski added he thinks
Island," said Coach Smith.
optimistic. ·
team once again with .his third.
What does this mean for the
Marist is ready for the touma-
Now getting
·10
the coveted
"It's making it a loteasier(win-
consecutive.first place finish of future of the Red Foxes? With
mentthatreallymatt~rs.
MAAC · champ_ionships, an
ning the MAAC)'because now
the year, setting a new record
''We're pretty excited _about
event the Red Foxes have been
on the 7,800-nieter course with
...
please see
.CROSS COUN-
playing in the MAAC champi-
lookingfQrw;rr!i to all year. As
...
please see
TENNIS,
pg. 14
histimeof25:21. Teammate Ben
TRY, pg.14
·


52.4.1
52.4.2
52.4.3
52.4.4
52.4.5
52.4.6
52.4.7
52.4.8
52.4.9
52.4.10
52.4.11
52.4.12
52.4.13
52.4.14
52.4.15
52.4.16