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The Circle, November 19, 1998.xml

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 52 No. 8 - November 19, 1998

content

·
_

-
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.·.
,'•
t's prod~ction of
ide_'Story
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.
.
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·
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.
.
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·
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slappeq
around
tra
lastweek,
but
it .
·
.
.
.
•·
not
·
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>
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·
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____
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- - - - - - ~
tlie
sttldent
newspaper
•·
of
llaristCC>llege
VOLUME#52
.
ISSUE#S
·•·
Happy
·
Thanksgiving
IL
·,
;
NOVEMBER 19, 1998
.
Emergen<;y
.
·
phones ne
.
ed
replaceJBents

bySCOITNEVILLE
-
runctipning exterior security
St.a.ff Writer
phqni~ ·anct ieplace them with
four modern radio transmitting
.
Rwming
from a frenzied drunk,
models. .
.
.
hearing himclqse in with thun~
_
Leary said some of the current
dering · fcJOtsteps w
_
o
_
uld be a
security phcmes
·
are archaic and
·
·
are riot reliabie .
.
.
harassmentvictim's worst night-
mare
.
"A couple phones are a piece
·
.
-.
_
·
..
·
:
9ettfo1_( to
·
one
_
'
of
the
'rive
of ju~," h~
·
said: "Three phon~
Maiisr
·
••Blue
-
Light"
.
secqdty
·
.
haven tworked ng?t for a year.
,

.
phonesjind
·
finding
-
"it:
dead
>
__
The fi~e ph~n~s are c~rrently
.
·
might make things worse:
··
.
:
·
!ocated mthe
_
Be~kPa,rking~ot,
.
-.
_pi
_
re~tor
:
of Safety and Secu-
Ill the Hoop Parkin?~~: behind
rity, Joe Leary, and Telecommu.,.
Gartl~~ Common s E bloc,~,
_
nications Analyst, Bill (::o~k,
.
.
.
. are
workifig_to feniove
·
the mal:-
i
-, :
...
please see
PH.ONES,
'
pg .
.

~
·-
:
···
·
·
·

·
~
~i·
Gruletf
"
diijj1ays\Vi,rk':t>:£
I
.
·
·
.. \
199'1

.
Mati~t;
,
gr:~dµ~f
C,
.
..
.
Photo courtesy of Browning
Kay .
,
;
Kay's
'Garde11Paintingsstio_w
is his second ln the
Marist
galleiy
.
bymEA~O
-
.
an ~xhibit by
'97
-
a~umrius,
StaffVlritef
~
·

BiowningKay
.'
. . . ·.
,;
.
The

show,
·
entitled
Garden
faintings,
.
is scheduled to run
.
until Nov. 25. The oif pai11tings
_
on canvas
are
a series
·
of land-
scape scenes from Kay's back.,
yard.
.
Greystone h~ be~n l?esieged
·
by bright
'
pm:ples
·
a;nd yellows,
·
Wann
oranges atidHvely greens
;
-
The Marist College Art Gal-
lery, located in Greystone's
basement, is currently featuring
'W££KLY
POLL
·
~
Do you smoke
cigarettes?
YFS
31
71in
is
an
,,,._<darlific
$IITWY
talm
from
100
Marist studoUs.
.
Art gallery Director, Donise
·
English, said the paintings have
mid-twentieth century qualities.
.
_
"They're really relat~d to
Americari modernism from the
1940sorl950swecan say/' she
said .
.
"They're very bold."
.
-
Kay was originally
.
a business
major, but he changed his major
to
art
in his ~ophomore year. He
said he decided to follow his
truedream.
"Chasing· after that has just
been a great experience," Kay
said.
... please see
ARTIST,
pg. 4
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Circlcphot~JoeScotto
. ~tudents f!nq _tti7:
:,
a5.phalt pav_ed
'.
9n top
·
9t th~ previous gr~veL rilakes traveling past the
.
library constructroirmuch easier and safer. The pavirig
il:,
a result-of student concerns.
·
·
;i·
-~a¥~Jilent~nj8J~es
·
:
-travel
~~
easi~f
~
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.
, . b)'.
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B~n•oo'fmtheorlgfnal~plart,~BS~~en
~'c:
~fouiid
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the
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gt~i
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,p;;tfu~~;afe
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.
. ~ajf!
:
it
"ii
;
m9fe conv~nient and
·-..
"I
hav~ a depth perception
.
>'
::
'I?ie
roc~y road
'
"is over
-
for
saf~ ~or
'
peopl
~
to·u:avel
_
on
:
_
-
-
~
~robl~m
and
~yen_in
full
day-
.
.
.
)
_
~ose tr~veling on
.
campus.
.
-
Safety
·
·
of the gravel path was
light
.I
had
·
trouble seeing
.
·
1
:
The
··
gravel path
.
iiffront"of
a
big
-
concern for students ac
.,.
where
I
was
.
going," sp.es~id.
. '•
/
;
the library c:onsttjictio'11 nciw
·
cording
Jo
Linda Coopei
;
direc-
:
;
Kalyoussef said she needed
-
.
J
I
has asphal~ over it
_
,
_
making iL tor o
r
special Seryic"s.
_
Many
ll~lp_ t(?
_
ge
_
tac;~oss the path be-
.
::
).
'
sriloother~dmoreaccessible . students in
·
wheelchairs arid
catiseJhere
:
was nothing to
-
foreVeryorie;
_
.
_
_ _ __
_
_
,
those
.
with visual impairments
hold oriw and she felt un-
Before the
·
paving,. the. · had diffic~lty getting ~cro~s
:
stea(ly
~
-waJking on the gravel. .
.•
gravel path had
s
parked con-
campus because
·.
of
,
the gravel
.
-She·
.
often
_
fqund alternate
cerns and complaints
:.
Ac-
P
.
ath.
, :
.
·
-
·
_ ·
routes
to
get to where she had
·
cord,i9g to
_
Maris(
s;
Physical
,
.
_
·
"There \\:'as a problem with the
·
to go.
.
.
·
p1aii~ departm
_
~nt
;
the
·
paving
··
.
.
__
grnv~l
·
path because students
·
_
"I would have to go through
was done be
c
ause of student
·:
couldn
'.
t tell when the
:
ground
-
the
,
Stud~rit
_
Center to
.
get to

complaints about the
·
safety
level ch~nged/' she said. "This
.
.
·
Champagnat or anywhere else
a:nd
_
Hiriited a
6
cess
:
th~ gravel was not s
·
afe for thein
.'
;
:
·
on the SOllth end of campus,"
patlrcause(l:
·
,
·.
.
.
>
CoJ:>per said sp.e hadheard
she said, 'This was definitely
·
.
Tom Bentz~n
;
prnj¢ctman-
·
many ybncemsabout~e prob-
aninconvenie.ncet
ager for Pavarini
.
Construction
lems th~ path
was
causiJ1g. Al-
-
Now that the path has been
Compally, said the asphalt . though the
:
Office of Special
paved; Kalyoussef and other
· paving was donein~house by
Services d~
_
not complain to
_
students sai!i they find
.
it
Marist and not by Pavarini..
Physical Plant, she said Physf.:.
.
much more convenient.
.
''The originaj gravel path
cal Plant "".as aware of the prob-
Junior Sarah Papineau, said
·
was in the plans to get around
lems and complaints .
.... ·
.
she ~ees a noticeable
_
differ-
the site during the colistrilc-
,
Hanneh KalyoQssef, avisu-
eitce with the new path.
<
tion; but the asphalt was not,'
'
ally impaired student, said she
"I
feel the new path is safer
he said.
·
·
·
·
· .
· .
.
_
had problems getting from one

arid easier to walk on," she
··
Although the
_
asphalt was
end of ~amp
·
us to the other and
··
·
said.
Evacuation_ poli
_
cy strands disabled
by
BEN AGOF.S
·
News
Editor
. With the biare of a fire alarm
comes the inevitable sound of
_
students racing to
_
get to the
nearest exit. But for some dis-
abled students, getting our of
the building is a race against the
clock.
Junior Bill Quinn, who is con-
fined to a·wheelchair, was in his
"Human Behavior in the Social
Environment" class last Tues-
day
.
located
·
on the Dyson
Center's second floor. When
the fire alann went off at about
11 :30
a.m.,
.
Quinn, who did riot
know
·
how to evacuate, was
forced to remain in the building.
The alarm was caused
·
by a
burnt bagel in the Dyson coffee
shop and no damage was re-
ported
;
but Quinn said real or
not, this is an important issue.
"If
the alarm had been real, it
would have been a dire situa-
tion,"
·
he said.
Cheryl Whitley, associate pro-
. fessor of psychology, stayed
with Quinn during the alarm.
They went to the elevator, but it
... please see
FIRE
,
pg. 3
INSIDE·
TODAY:
Mosty Cloudy
hi:
54°
lo:28°
Community ................. 2
Features ..................... 5
A&E .....
.
................. 11
Opinion ..............
.
....... 9
Sports ... ~·············
·
··
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.-
·.

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...
malftinctioitl~g_ smok~
-
det
_
~to;,
.
.
..
.
.
.
.
.
·
.
,;·
·
·
·
.
. ·
·
·
:
An unici~~
'.
tirie~
~~;d6riii~e
thankful ~
.
?
What~you
• ··
·
.. · ..
.
1.or.
Student
·
Governrilerit
··
·
was· spohec(:rnrirting
.
aro~nd
In
an· effort
to
proi:note'
alcohol
outstcleDoi;iJJelly H!!Jl
~civ,
:
J3
:
awareness, the Student Government
Ciasses \yere dis~pt~d.
:
Tues.:.
at
:
4:25 a.m
;
·
1Jte figupf d~~~ed
Association have beeri
sponsoring
day; Nov. IO, when a buqi~d ba
~
_
into Dorinel!y wean.rig 9i11y
a series otwoi:kshops this Novem-
·
.
g
·
eJ in
_
Dyson
.
Cafec_inised
a
.

rags and
a
hospital ideritif!.ca-
ber. The worl<shops have
cl~~
·
with
.
.
. .
.
.
a variety of alcohol related issues:
·
smoke alarm to blare
.
and the
-
.
tion band.
.
:
.
.
.
·
·.
;
The last wor~hop will be held
·
evacuation of the building
·
at
·
.
·
·
A
.
security
,
guard wh~
.
ap-
onTuesday; Nov.
·
24
·
at:7 p.iri
)
iil.
:
h:35a.m.
.
:
.
.
.
.
.
proached the man said he
was
the P.A.R
.
.
: ..
.
·
.
..
:
/
:
. _:-
.

·
i
:
No d~age was reported and
''incpherent and wild." Town
--
.
Judge Roil.aid McGaw;
from the
· .
students were promptly allowed
.
and City of Poughkeepsie po.-
Poughkeep.sie
.
c;ity Couri;wiil by
to return to class
;

lice were notified as the man
ran
.
speaki~g abo
_
ut theJegalaspects of.
.
toward
_
s
.
the
·
wob~ed ai:ea near
alcoholfylat~ crime.
'
. . :
:
.
i
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
A
blue· Dodge ~eon\~as leaf
the Gi:otto.
'
.
.
Literary'Arts Society
·
0
.~-
.
.
ing gasoline
'
onto
·•
the Upper
·
.
When officers
.
arrived, the
.
.
.
TiieI.iterary
Arts
Society i~ now.
-
· ..
Hoop Parking Lot Wedriesd,ay,
.
man was SQbdu
'
ed and cuffed.
acc
.
e
.
pting~ub
.
mission
.
s for their lit-
.
N
v
·
11 a·t4·40p
·
m
Th
·
e
.
police
.
said th
.
e character
0 .
.
. .
erary magazine,
The Mosaic
,
If you
The fire
..
department was noti-
had been wanted
·
in connection
have any prose, po~try, short sto-
.
fled and promptly hosed c,town
·
to a previous; undisclosed inci-
· •
"F amity,
.
goo
_
d
friends;
.
g<Jod times;
·
:
and
my
health "
.
"My health,
f
amity,
·
·
education,
·
friends
·
and
ries, artw<;>rk,
.
or photographs
..
~~~t
·
thelot:Nle~kingfuel hose
was.
·
dent off-caQipus
.
.
·
·
you
.
wish to
submit,
please put
Pat McDonald
girlfriend.
,
"
·
KevinLundy
them in the
LAS.
club mailbox in
.
found .to be
.
the
Pf
0
blern
_.
·
SC
369
·
.
:
·
·,:
..
.
A
.
fem~l~ student plac6d
.
he
_
.
r
'
Another fire
ctlaim
souhded in
Donnelly Hall SaturdayNov.
i
4,
.
at12:32p'.m.
:
..
·
.
.'
'.
.
·
.
·
·
senior
·
,
. .
senior
.
..,
:
-.·
Submissions will. also be accepted
by any dub member.
·
..
· ..
,
identific
.
ation card
OQ
,
a table in
.
Ifyouhaveanyquestforis,
:
p1ease
the
,
dining
.
halLWedrie~day,
.
cal.I
Scott Neville atx405:ioi- Heather
Nov,
if,
at
6:50 p.m: When she
-
~Iarke

arx/io~
·
.
·
:
·
·
·
·
;
.
'
.
'.

.
.
.
:.
:
returned, three
.
unidentified
All
submissio
·
ns
·
wmoe returned
males were seated at the table.
with request.
·
They claimed there \\'as no
Class 2000 and 2001
card on the table when they
ar-
.
Photogr~p~{ equipmE#, had
been set too close to the
.
alarm .
Fairview
Fire
Department re-
sponded
and
made the students
relocate
.
the materials.
The class
'of
2000
.
and
200
I;
pre-
:
rived.
·
Tbe student canceled her
sents
ttie
'
ultimate talent show
·
on
card
in
'
ih~
Secu
.
rity Office within
.
earth. Thursday,
Dec.
3 in the caba-
10
minutes, but it was too late
iet, from
T to
'
IO
p.m.
:
1
• .
·
·
·
for $26 that had been cleaned
Admiss~on
!s
free.
All
M_ariststu-
.
out of her
account.
The three
dents are mv1ted. There
will
belots
:
.
. ,- ·
,
·
.
,
_.
.
.
·
·
. ·
.
.
of
free
food,. pri~es, and
_
entei:tain-
:
s_tudents h~".Cf
~?\
Y.~tbe~~
id~~-
ment. Please
sign
uppy
calling Ben
·
·;
tified.
·

; ' ..
.
..
..
.
.
.
.
.
Security confiscated 58 cans
..
of
Busch
.
.
beer,
six
·
bottles of
_:
;
Honey B
:
rown be~~ and
.
60
.
empty can~ ~atiJrday, Nov.-14,

at 10:30
p.m
.
in Townho'use's
~T'
·
·.Block.
·.
:
-
_. ..
:.
,_
·
.:'.
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·,
.
·
·
.
Twenty-three peopl!'!
.
w~re
.
clocumented
.
.
at the scene, 22
razn
,
hi: 50"
,
·
Io:
'
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)
,
partly
cloudy
.
.
hi:
'
45<>'
.
lo:
:
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·
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.
..
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44°
.
·-
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26°
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.
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Amarone
at X5779 or Maureen
-
.
.
.
.
.
.
. ,
.
:
..
.
.
:- ..
.
Sacchetti at X4452:
.
Gartland Co'rrunon's
"P'
blc:ick
was ~vacuated Friday
,
Nov.
13,
.
being Marisfresidents.
·
Sourc~
:-
http~·llwww.i~eather.com
(The We
_
~tlter
Clwnnel)
.
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rerund aftei'
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9:ooam until
9:00am,Wed
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c~riq~l
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,
ny
.
:
cqurse
.
.

-;
"
because
'
of
.
.
~~~~~:Ei ~T~~it~~t
.
Jan~ary
·
s.
Fn~ay
'.
~tr~:Ylt!~1e::~~1~2agf
t:;t~f



·
··•·
..
·
·
.
:
insuffici
,
entlnrt>Urnent
.
'
High sctioolStudents.is
$300'
January 8~ Friday
.
-Last
d~y
to drop courses wit~oµt
·
academic
for a 3-credit class.
.
.
.
January 20, Wed.
r;,~
~ s
for
d~y
.
ahd
evening ~ia~ses.
January
21,' Thurs. -Spring Semester begins;
Day
&
Evening classes.
January
22; Friday
-Final
Grades for Winter lnt~on
.
due
by noon.
For
inol·e
information
·
call
.
The
School
of Graduate and
·
.
·
contini1ing Edµcation
at 914/575-3800, Marist Fishkill
~t
·
914/897-96,48,
or
Marist
Gosl~en at:914/294~5785
.
February 5, Friday
-
Deadline for grade changes
&
resolving
..
incompletes forWiriter 1999.
..













































































.
...
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PAGE3
t,,
Sfug@fs.,tri18y
.
be
Off
to
·
Rome
-
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:
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.

.
-
0
byGINAMASULLA
.
.
-
-
-
Staff Writer -
--
-
·
-
The Marist Singers are plan-
.
Iling to perform_in.front of their
biggest audience yet._
· ·
_
-
~-
The MarisfSingersliope
·
to
travel to Rome next semester
and attend

canoniz~tiori"cer-
.
embny
-
for Father
'
Marcellin
Champagriat. Charnpagnat, who
founded the Marist Brother-s'iil
1817;
.
willbe sainted at
tp~
-
Vatican-sometime this spring .
. Hi~
legacy includes service in
-
education and assistailc~tothe
·
pool:.
-·'.
_
_
__
_
. · Lyndie Boggs, U
;$
;
apibass,~-
dbr to ·the Vatican, in,~ited the
· Singers to a reception following
Champagnat's canonization.
While there,
the
Singers hope
to sing for an audience with
0
the
Pope, perform in a church in
Rome and sing at the
ambassador's reception
.
Keri Dixon, Marist Singers'
president, said the gr:oup is look-
ing forward to representing the
college
'
overseas.
.
''I
think it's a once in a lifetime
,
opportunity, not only for Sing
_
-
ers but for Marist," she said.
-
.
.
However, th; trip and its
-
~vents are dependent upon the
.
Photo courtesy of Mari st Singers
MaristSingers may attend a canonizati
_
on ceremony next semester at the Vatican for Father
Marcemn
·
Champagnat. They may also sing at the amba~sador's reception. Champagnat
will be sainted. His legacy includes service in
_
education and assistance to the poor.
Pope's schedule and health, the
date of Champagnat's canoni-
zation and finances.
Tim Massie, chief college re-
lations officer and the group's
advisor, said he is looking for-
ward to accompanying them to
·
Rome.
"I'm encouraging the Singers
to start saving money,'' he said.
"How many singing groups in
the world have the opportunity
to do this?"
' Music director Laura Russell
said the Singers are already in-
volved in fund
.:
raising. As co-
sponsors of M~CTA's produc-
tion of West Side Story, they will
receive a portion of the show's
profits.
A year-round fund-raiser al-
lows parents to order a birthday
cake to be delivered to their son·
or daughter by members of the
group. They also hope for do
-
nations
.
Marlst Dlu
-
st
_
-
pay
$·11,SOQ
_
in Lavin
-
suit
FIRE: Policy needs revision
:

:
... contint,!~dfrom pg. 1
students, but said there is a defi-
nite policy.
was not working
~
so they stayed
He said the policy may pre-
on

the
'
second
:
floor untii- a
_
date when Cooper startedwork-
Marist security
·
guardcame
ano;
--iiigat
'
Mans
:
nthd
·
ttiat>is'why
said the alarm ~as cau
_
sed
by
she is unaware of
it
In fact,
smoke in the coffee shop.
-
Leary said
,
the policy may pre-
byBENAGOES
News Editor
/
Marist ha~ been ordered by a
White Plains federal court to
-
"
iricrea
s
t
B~rbara
·
Lhvin-
McEleney's salary by $5,800-the
amount a panel found Mari st
had beeri underpaying her.
The six-man, two-woman
panel ruled there was statistical
evidence that Lavin~McEleney,
associate professor of criminal
justice, was being paid less than
her male counterparts
.
Besides
the salary increase, Mari st must
.
also provide-about $11,500 in
additional pay for the past two
years, according to the Nov.
11
Poughkeepsie Journal
.
·
Lavin-McEleney told
thelour-
nal
she was gratified by the de-
cision.
"I like Marist, but I felt this was
an issue I couldn't allow to con-
tinue and keep niy dignity;" she
said. "lfelt ifl didn't stand up,
I didn't have much to teach my
students."
-
In a separate interview
-
with
The Circle,
Lavin-McEleney
said she believes winning the
case has set a precedent, but
she
.
is unclear how far reaching
it will be. ·
.
.
·
:
_
·
·
~
·"It's up to
'
(other female
·
pro-
fessors
po
:
pursue any injus-
tices that they feel happen to
·
them," she said.
·
During the t
_
wo
-
week trial,
which began Oct. 26, Columbia
University professor Michael
Parides testified that Marist's
salary policies had
_
discrimi-
nated against women, accord-
ing to the
Journal
article
.
Lavin-McEleney's attorney
,
·
RobertDiNardo, said the verdict
was a victory for all women in
academia.
_
_
\'What it does for all
_
of us is
raise our sensitivity to unin-
tended discrepancies between
men and women and causes us
to question !UOre car~fully some
of the assumptions we operate
under," he told the
Journal.
The jury found Marist did not
willfully discriminate against
Lavin-McEleney, and the col-
lege remains committed to its
policies, saying they are similar
to those at all other American
colleges and universities.
Marist has not said whether it
will a eal the decision or not.
-
"It's not a s
a
fe situatio11
,
"
date construction of
the
Dyson
Quinn said.
"
It's dangerous for
Center.
people who are disableg ~d for
_
'
~
Evacuation procedures for
·
the people that are assisting
(disabled people) is to have
them and risking their lives."
them go to the area near the stair-
Whitley could not be inter-
case and stand by there until th~
viewed before press time.
fire department gets there," he
-Linda Cooper, director of Spe-
said. "We advised Special Ser-
cial Services, said the evacua-
vices verbally to pass it on to
tion procedures as outlined in
their students that this is where
the Student Handbook are
they head."
·
flawed.
In the Lowell Thomas build-
"
They make the assumption
ing, Leary said, the collection
everyone can go down the
point on th~ second floor is at
stairs," she said.
"
This has
the southeast stairwell, closest
been brought to the college's at-
to the main entrance.
ten ti on over the years and
He also said the elevator in LT
thef ve failed to respond."
is operational during a fire alarm,
She said the answer is that the
but it is not a good idea to use
college needs to have "collec-
it.
tion points." U1ese are desig-
"If
we are tra~ped and
-
the
nated areas in
a
building where
only way to get this person out
handicapped people know to go
is to use the elevator, then we
in case of an emergency. Typi-
will," he said.
cally this is at the top of a spe-
Leary s
a
id Quinn and Whit-
cific stairwell. Emergency per-
ley were not'" evacuated off
sonnet are notified in advance
Dyson's second flciorlast Tues-
that they should check these
day because it had been deter-
collection points when they ar-
mined by the responding officer
rive on a scene.
it was not necessary.
"People know that if they can't
"It was immediately estab-
get out of the building on their
lished we didn't have a situa-
own, this is where they're sup-
tion and that we wouldn
'
t move
posed to go," Cooper said.
them
,
" Leary said.
She said she has tried educate
Fairview fire and Marist Secu-
the college on the problem, but
rity officers were aware Quinn
has been unsuccessful.
and Whitley were still in the
"They simply won't listen to
building the entire time, he said,
me," she said.
and would have been moved if
Cooper said her role is not to
they were in any danger.
make the procedures- that role
Cooper said she is afraid of
belongs to the Office of Safety
what could happen in the future
and Security.
if evacuation procedures are not
Joe Leary, director of Security,
made fonnal and put in writing.
said he agrees there is nothing
'This is a life and death issue,"
in writing concerning the evacu-
she said. "I really fear some-
ation of buildings by disable
thing will happen."
,
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6


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:
THE
-
CIRCLE
NOVEMBER 19
7
1998
PHONES:-
;,'-Sfhre
:
e ·_
out
of
5
ph~iie s
bt6ke]1:for
a
year.
... continued from pg. 1
.
100 or20() y;:rrds away."
on a wall of the McCann center
The n~w phones cost $3,000
annex and near the West Cedar
each, but run on a radio trati.s-
Townhouses.

..
·
·
.
.
.
injssion;notundergrouM
,
wires._
Leary said two of ilie older tel~'-
The_ ph6
:
iies
·
wHl
be_

equipped
phoneswiU remain in sefviceon
with blue Jightstliat
strobe
a temporary b~sis, bringing the
when th~ button is pushed to
total
fo
~i,c_
securicy ph.,oile~
cam-
contact the Donnelly Security
.
pus
~w
ide qnce the new oiies are
.
Desk.
installed
. .
.
.
.
. .
·
·
The old phones cost $1,000
,
·

·
·
·
·
'
.
~
.;
.
··
·
·
.
not
·
1"ncluding
"
the
·
.
labor need
.
ed
-
·
.
The rrialfunc:tioniiig
·'.
upper
1-JoopParkiligLottelephon~\Vill
to dig ditc~es for
'
the telephone
be removed; and a new one
·
in-
wire. .
.
stalled in the middle ofiliefot.
Sophomore Heather Rose, a
Another new
.
phon~
:
will be
.
Marianl:Iall residentassistant,
placed at the°foot
.
of the stairs

said the lighting on campus is
to the Sheahan Parkirigt'.ot.
.
.
not sufficient, but if she was
The telephone in Beck Park-
being chased, she
.
\Vould not
ing Lot will
·
alsobe replaced.
bother with the phone.
.
Leary
said the new phones
will
"If
I walk~d across
Ca.!_llPUS (
at
be satisfactory for the moment.
night), l wouldn't
.
feel
safe -
"They're adequate for now,
qiere's not enough light. if I was
but I
,
don't want to stop at that,"
bei
_
ng followed, I'd_ run,''
_
she
he said. "I'd like
-
t0-be at a blue
·
said.
light phone and see the next one
: •
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·
Circle photo/Jeremy Smith
Garden Paintings
show scheduled to
·
run until
l\lov.
25 in the relocat
_
ed Art Gallery in the
basement of Greystone: Kay has been displayedinnumerous shows. This is his first
.
solo.
ARTIST:
Talent
dis{)fayeclifigaUery
··· continuedfr~m pg.
J
:
ture
.
.
K;ay'said he
_
w~nts to sell
~oi.ild tell.;'
_
.
.

·
..
.
.
·
·
..
.
·
·
.
.
Kay's work
.
_
ha~
.
been dis-
his woi;k, but has dtfficulty'part-
·
xay ~aid
,
he\vill be applyi_rig
played inac~uple
of
senior art
ing with each piece.
.
.
.

to
·
gr~du
:
at
(
schqol_c1t
·
Y~~)p.d
shows at Marist and in some . "Letting go 9f artwork is let-
CUNY Queens Soon. He''s"aid
.
other exhibits.
·. ·.
This i~ his first
ting go of a pi~ce of ~our self/'
he is lookingfor
his
next move.
CARD:
Dean's
.list
discounts
iElaillled
sin!~/i~tworked
,
on s~veral
he
d~~~n
_
Paintings is the sec-
pro~·~:: ~~n!ii:~;!,?,gK~~t:~~~~
... continued from pg.
_
3
~~~:tt~~~~!~p~~~~e
.
"Aca-
self-portraits, sculptures
.
and
ond show in the art gallery since
w!~~~
_
f~ttcltbtiwtrw~r
.
.
dr~wings .
.
He said
.
his passion
it was relqcated from the Stu-
. .
.
g
.
.
.
·
.
,
,-
-~
..
;•
,,-
,,
" Right now everything is still
Guldner
said
businesses were
lies in landscapes.
·
dent Center this summer.
tended Yale
·
arid taughftlie~¢.for
conceptual,'
'
Guldner said.
still being contacted in hopes
·
"I
want to inspire people to
.
..
English said she knew Kay's
.
several yeltrs. Kay's mothl?r is
John Svare, SGA executive
of being able to
·
provide-stu-
look outside because it's so
work and asked him todo a soio
·
a1so a paint~r.
.
.
.
vice president, said tt~ere
·
was a
dents with as many discounts
beautiful out there," he said.·
show.
The Marist
Art
Gi_tllery is open
possibility the prograrrimay not
as °fJO~sibl~,
,
·
::
-~
"
:.
_.
>
.
.
Selling his rtrtwork i~
_
no mys-
"He is very talented,'' -she
Tuesd~y through Friday from
12
be able
to
start this yeifr.
"
·
Svare .said
:-
tltar as
;
of now,
tery toKay
.
He
said Fath:erLtike
said.
·
·
.
"When
'
he
·
was. in
un
_
tiL5
p:lll.
and· on W{;_ekends
"Unfortunately, this plan may
pl~ns have been made to meet
·
McCann once bought a sculp- ·. ·ever
_
yon~'s
.
class, ev~ry!Jo,,dy
from 12 ti1_1til 4 p.m:
.
. _
_
not ~e
.
iinp~~Jllented
t~is
:
year
with
Foxnet,
S<Jdexho
f;
alld the
;;
,
-
~~~t;!;:¼~~Jf
SiS!t
:!;t!f
~~~:t!~I~~
Ha6itii
?1lt1ps
•~cal, Reedy family
just started the committee we
be recept1ve to a 10% discount
byTIIEACIMMINO
The
.
house1s
.
expected
,
to.be -n'!~tch and to
~~fherilp
ileck-
·
are looking to have preliminary
for Dean
1
s list students.

Staff Writer
completed sometime
·
.in
·
·
the .laces nexfseiriest~r.
. ..
, •
. :· .
_
.
.
meetings this seme
·
ster and
.
then
.
.
.
Membersqf SGA, including
·
·
·
spring. It will be
·
one level with
,
·
·
.
· ·
Habitat
'
memoers arid

alocal
working hard to have
a
real plan
Guldner, said they feel this is
_
a
A group oCMarist students
.
four bedrooms and will contain
.
'
btiilder, Mark'sch~ibel;cleai~d
next semesterto be implemented
way to i:ecogniz~
students
\Vho
broke out the hammer and nails
only
necessities. Fod~xample,
:
the
O
Sun~e
f
ioi
'
~~~f"
th~
•iasf
_
next year."
.
.
... ,: ....
·
are doing exceptionally
.
well
last week.
.
.
there
·
wili-be ncnvasher, dryer,
.
.
ni6rith.
·
Sthwebei said he
-~i-i-
The first meeti.ng was hel~ last
academic.ally.
.
.
.
.
The Student (]oyer,nment air conditioner or dishwasher:
joys working iith.the stllderits.
weekandtheSdAunariimously
'.'It's away to re
.
ward students· Association's(SGA) latest com-
The Duchess County chapter
..
"These
:
guy~. a:re ·here, and
·
passed tlie committee mission
tfuoughbenefits/'Guldriersaid.
munity
.
service
:
projet't is a
of Habitat for Humanities has
·
they~~~IIY,
,
~~t i
_
o,
·
-
~~t/~_9qp~:"
Last

lecture
·
in
.
·
series

Det
·
2
.
~tt:tli:~~~;~~!t:~a:!;' t~totit:~t~~l iie t~: :~;~
·
·
!h~i;~i!~;t;:~cleared
·
~s
Faculty members now hav.ethe
separate from thejr concentra-
currentiy
a
clubori campus.
:
house; it

is
.
the first
to
be stu-
.
.
The VassarCqll~geHa~itatfor
.
opportunity to spe~ktlieir
'
mind
tion'.
:
.
.
.
.
.
-
.
Marist Habitat Secretary, J11lie
dent sponsqred:
-
.
~ .-.
-
-.- .
·
Hutnanhies
·
chapter is alsi)
.
vol-
with thy Faculty Lecture ~eries.
.
Joseph KiIJland; ~ssistant
·
Gadarowskifounded th~ group
·
··
..
MaristHa:t>itat president, Khn
unteering
-
with the project.
Richard'Wolcott, assisfant di~
professor ~f !llath~Il_la.ncsi gave
ovei-the1996/97 school year.
Proulx
,
siiid this is the largest
Dutchess Cpimty -BOCES st11:.
rector of Student Activities,
the first lectµre this )iear;
-
.. The
She said she asked SGA how
proj~c:t the chapter has taken on
dents
wiU
install the ·plumbing
'
said the goal of th¢ series i
·
s to
Earth, the U:nh•irse
_,
anq i:he
to establish a club on campus.
thus far.
·
.
.
.
and electrical systems'. Other
reach out to faculty and let them
.
Fourth Dimension"m1: Sept. 22.
There was no room· for another·
"Everyone
.
is very excited
services have been 'donated by
speak on any fop~c they wish.
.
_ 15irtl_and said he enjoyfd P~..,
club so Habitat was
.
established . about bµilding the
.
house. be.:
Day, Oswald and Gillespie En-"
"It
also gives students a
ttc1patmg and would do it agam
as a committee under the Social
cause it's the first project we've
gineers and Surveyor.$ of
chance to_meet with faculty 611t-
in the future.
"l"
.
.
.
.
.
WorkAssociation.
.
been able to do since we started
Hopewell Junction.
·
·
side of class,''
Wolcott said.
..It
gives me a chance
_
to ex
- .
"We grew
·
too big my ju~ior the chapter
cm
campus,'' Proulx
.
_
·
Other houses built by the
·
'
-
'It's called
·
a
'lecture
series;' but
plore things outside my disci-
year, the 97
/98
schoofyear, and
said.
·
Habitat for Humanities
-
have
it
has a more informal setting.
pline that I'
ni
interested in,''. he
studeQt government took us on
The chapter must raise $3~,000
·
been erected in as ltttle
-
as five
It's more of a discussion than a
said.
·
as their community service to build the home. The inoney. days
;
President of Habitat for
lecture."
·
The final lecture
,
"Construe-
project,';Gadarowskisaid. "I'm willcomefromvariousfund-rais-
Humanities of Dutchess
The lecture series is sponsored
tion of Self
·
in Composition
really glad with how the chap-
ers the chapter sponsors.
·
County, Rich Taylor, said btlild-
by theOfficeofCollegeActivi-
Theory", will by given
·
by Jo-
ter has grown and progressed."
Habitat held a spare
'
change
ing the Sunset
.
house over a
ties and was held last spring for
seph Zeppetelo
;
visiting assis-
Over 20 people attended a
collection a:n~ will be selling
period of months is a lesson for
the first time. Professors and
tant professor of English. It will
ground breaking ceremony held
flowers at the Mari st College
the students.
other faculty members speak on
beheld Dec. 2at7:30p.m.
in Stu-
Nov.
·
12 on the Sunset Ave. lot
Council on Theater Arts pro-
"It's for the students, to give
any topic they like, within or dent Center room 346.
in Poughkeepsie where the duction of "West Side Story"
them a chance to learn all the
--------------------~J,_e_ss_i_ca_
·
_S_m_it_,h
chapter is building a house for
·
this weekend; The chapter also
different phases,'' Taylor said
.
spring Break
_
, 99
_
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a
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I
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NOVEMBER19,i99s
·
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atures
PAGES
Thanksgiving,notjusta day off
byKATRINA
FUCHSENBERGER
Asst. FeaturesEditor
'.fo a lot of people Thanksgiv-
ing is all aboµt eating tons of
·
food, watching footbllll, and
getting a day off from work and
school.
.
Thanksgiving actually means
the expression of gratitude and
the giving of thanks.
for Nedssa Drew, junior math
major, Thanksgiving is actually
a day of thanks and gratitude.
"In my family Thanksgiving is •
a really important holiday,"
.
she
said.
_
"It's so important, that
family members travel from En-
gland,
_
Louisiana, and the West
,J11die~
)o
.
cele~rate and gi_ve
thanks.
yte Ao
.
this every
'
year
because we realize that all we
have is each other.''
The first Thanksgiving was
-
.
celebrated in America by the
;
Pilgrjms whq fled from religious
persectitibri :rrom England.
but in March whe~ the weather
got warmer the health of the re-
maining pilgrims improved.
An important event for the pil-
grims was when a Native Ameri-
can named Samoset came to the
settlement and spoke English to
the pilgrims. He later brought a
man named Squanto who knew
better Engiish
.
The pilgrims received a lot of
help
_
from Squanto. It is said the
-
pilgrims could not
_
have sur-
vived wi
_
thout him. He taught
them how to tap maple trees for
syrup, which plants where poi-
sonous and which were medici-
nal, and how to plant Indian
com
arid other crops.
In October the Pilgrims had a
-
really successful harvest and
·
had enough food to survive
through the winter. They had
inuch
to
celebrate because they
had good homes, an abundance
of crops, and they· were getting
along with their Native Ameri-
.
can neighbors.
Governor William Bradford
proclaimed a day of thanksgiv-
ing to be shared by all the colo-
in order to celebrate. This day
is believed to be the real begin-
-
ning of the present day Thanks-
giving Day.
·
This custom of an annual
Thanksgiving day continued
through the years and during
the American Revolution (late
1770s) the Continental Con-
gress suggested a day of na-
tional Thanksgiving.
In 1863, Abraham
_
Lincoln ~p-
poiiited
·
a· national day of
Thanksgiving and since thJ;!n
each president has issued a
Thanksgiving Day proclama-
·
··
tion.
Jessica Macias, junior busi-
ness major, said Thanksgiving
is more important to her now that
she is away at school.
."Thanksgiving
is a day when
.
your family comes together and
enjoys good food while remem-
bering good times," she said. "I
miss my mom and my two broth-
ers a lot and this holiday means
even more because I get to
spend time with them."
.
The pilgrims came to America
·
in 1620 after a long, hard trip that
lasted
65
days. Many people
got sick during the
trip
and food
baa
to
be eaten
.
cold because
the ship was
.WC>Oden
andthere
nists and the neighboring Na-
M .
C
II
d b
ti~~i~t~ames,rarirace;,
.
·.
ar1st
_
0
ege
,
-
e
_
_
ate
marched and played drums. The
was
the
danger off"rre.

. ·-
·
.
_
.
The pilgrims
:
lande:ci' in Ply-
mouth
_
and settled there. Their
.
biggest concern there was at-
tack by the local NativeAmeri-
·
cans, but th
_
e Patuxets were a
_peaceful
group and di<:f not
Indians sh6wed · the Pilgrims

.
·
.
:

_··
.
_.
·
fr
-
.
-

.

~6:
~~::ei:~~;h:!efili:
••·
team
ma
·
n.·es·
·
•··1
·
ts
·"
·
_·--
p
·
·
.
·
.
u1nt

·
.
prove to be
a
~eat.
·
thi{
firshv10ter was fealiy hard
fbr the
.
Pilgrims. The siio~ and
sleet were very heavy and idn-
terfefed with the construction of
:
the settlements.

Many
-
of the
pilgrims
·
died during this time,
.
- ·
·.
.
'
.
.
••
..
.
Indians their musket skills .
They also had a grand feast to
celebrate.
.
-
.
_
In the third year, the spring
and summer were hot and dry
and the Illany of the crops died
.
Bradford ordered _a day of fast-
_
-
ing
.
and
_
prayer, and soon after
that the nun came.
.
'
.
:
No_v
.
29
_
of that year was pro-
.
claimed a day of thanksgiving
by
EMil,YKUCHARCZ\'K
Features Editor
Junior Mark Smith said he
likes to argue.
Most students probably
would not want to get into an
argument with him.
·
·
··
·
·
·
·
·
·
"I love to argue
with
people,"
.
Students
·
p]an
_
ning
·

.
-_
h~;!~
~·~:e
1
~t::
0
1~i~:m-
bers of the Marist Coilege de-
.
f
_
or_spring
·
_
break
__
s
-
ba;o~ai:daboutl2yearsago,
the team travels all over the
-
by
RICHSJIUTKJN
·
Staff Writer
country proving its point and
lar time for_colleg~ students to
·
'
trying to destroy other's.
make reservations for their
_
Smith and fellow teammate,
spring vacation.
junior Andrew Gorray, recently
'~Many college students have
·
won a debate competition at
·
Warm, tropical breezes and
made reservations with us,
Shepherd
College
in
sandy beaches are what some
through travel agencies,
.
to go
.
Shepherdstown, West Virginia.
studeQts are looking forward to
to many resorts," she said.
This was Smith's second com-
in the spring.
"These
resorts
include
Hawaii,
petition
. _
.
Even with spring vacation so
Florida, Mexico and the Carib-
Smith said this contest was
far down the road, students are
bean."
much better than his first de-
still planning on how to spend
McCormick also said the
bate.
it
_
-
_
younger generation contributes
·
"I got clobbered in the first
There are many resorts being
to the profit of many airlines and
competition, but I persevered
put on reserve by students,
travel agencies.
and learned and was very sue- ·
keeping travel agencies very
She also said students seem
cessful in this one," he said.
busy.
to make the most of their vaca-
In
order to have a debate;
James Rusch,junior, said he
tions.
there must be a debate topic.
plans on spending his spring
·
''Kids
seem to enjoy their lives
This year's topic is "that the
break. in Florida:
the most," she said.
United States Federal Govern-
"!
want spring to come quickly
Brian Delaney, sophomore,
inent should amend Title VII of
so I can go to Florida," he said.
said he plans on enjoying his
the Civil Rights Act of 1964,
"It's the most beautiful state in
trip to the Bahamas.
through legislation, to create
the U.S. It has nice weather,
"The Bahainas will be great,
additional protections against
great beaches and beautiful
and there is no better time to go
racial and/or genderdiscrimina-
women."
there th
·
an the spring," he said.
tion."
Marla McCormick; travefex.;.
·
"After living through a cold
Scott Thomson, debate team
-
ecutive at Northwest Airlines,
winter, I will be very
_
excited
coach;#,;aid a lot of thought
said this time of
year
is a popu-
.
about going to the Bahamas."
goes into choosing a topic.
..
"All the debate coaches in the
country talk about whaf topics
they

want to use and come
_
up
with four to put on a ballot and
then they vote on it," he said.
"They have to do serious re-
search on it so it is not a bad
topic, because a bad topic
·
makes for a terrible year of de-
bate."
Once
a
topic is chosen teams
choose an affirmative side or
sides to advocate. During a
competition a two-person team
goes through several rounds
against an opposi
_
ng team. A
debate usually lasts one-and-a-
half hours.
Thomson said it is a very in-
tense experience.
"You have to anticipate what
the responses will be before-
hand and prepare for them," he
said. "You can't think of the
answer to everything in a de-
bate because there's very little
time to do that"
While a debate 1s going, on a
judge from the non-debating
team takes notes on each argu-
ment and counter-argument and
determines who had the better
argument.
In order to be in good shape
for a competition, the team
spends a lot of time on research.
Thomson said researching is
a group effort
.
"It's not like each individual
has to prepare completely for
themselves," he said. "All the
work that everybody.does gets
shared with everybody."
Matthew Dombrowski, assis-
tant coach of the debate team,
said the intense research helps
when it is time to write a paper
for class.
"It
helps you learn how to do
research;" he
·said.
"It dramati-
cally cuts down the amount of
time you have to put into re-
searching."
To be a good debater,
Thomson said
·
a person must
have drive.
"You
have to have a curiosity
and be able to speak clearly,"
he said. ''But you also have to
have a competitive spirit, you
have to sound like you want to
win."
Thomson said he encourages
students even slightly thinking
·
about being on the team to try it
out.
He said a student will never
know if he or she does not try.
"We'll meet with a student
and help him prepare just
enough to compete hnd see
what it's like," he said.
Smith said he has gained a
great deal from his experiences
so far.
"It's very stimulating and use-
ful," he said. "It teaches you
skills you're going to need as
f~r as presenting things in front
of people. It makes you think
quick."
Thomson said winning is very
rewarding for the mind.
"You get a lot of satisfaction
after putting in a lot of work and
seeing some sort of tangihle
award for it," he said. "You put
in some work and you're suc-
cessful, and that's an important
lesson."
~
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.
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byBENWINTERS
o
;.

corpcalled the Hell Cats; the
.
,in the stands where the cadets
Special to
·
the
di/ti~
_
_
:
'.
MaristB
'
aiid was
·
aufomatically
,
.-
gatlier
to speculate
:
_
.
.
_
selected without any of the nee-
To show their enthusiasm dur-
essary auditionhig.
.
' ing the ga.ri}~ tliey all stand up,
_.
_
_
_ .
_
·
'
:
•.
_
_
__
Orice
,
selected;
·
the
_
barids
in-
·
manyofihemjumptipanadown
~
It is halftime during an Anny
dividually practice the same
s,iout
,
wildly; and when their
football
·
game versus Tulane
musk that wiH be performed
-
team scores a
·
touchdown, some
University.
·
·
during halftime on "Band Day."
.
ofthe cad~ts
,
run onto
·
the field
lmagine
·
standing on afootba11
AH
pru,ticipating bands arrive
and
i_
do push
,:.
ups to the total
field
with
_
nearly50,000 people
at the stadium early morning. In
--
-
-
-
points the team has acquired up
watching.
_
..
the past, the MaristBand had
-
-
to that point.
-
-
_
_
-
- _
TheMarist band and 12 other departedfromMaristat5:30a.m.
When thesecond qu~er of
selected high school bands from
·
in order to arrive at the sta<Jium
;r,
the game arrives, the bands get
the tri~state area participated in
.
·
intimefora2-hourrehearsal for
_
_

ready'forthe halftiµie show be
-
the annual "Band Day" at the show.
_
.
_
cause there are
'
sO manyin-
Michie Stadium at the West
-
Theroutine was differentSat--•
-_
.
volved. The bands form a long
-
Point Military Academy,
.
New
urday as the band
,
d~pa:rted
.:
.
·
line
'
stretching outside the sta-
York
_
this pas
't
Saturday
:
·
·
nearly 2 hours later because the
·
dilim prior to halftime.
.
.
·
Notjtist any band can partici-
-
kickoff.had been pushed
to
3:30
-
- .
Nearly the entire field was
pate in band day: Severalmem-
-
p
.
m
:
This tirile
:
shift occurred· fille&
·
with people and the
bers of the West Point Band
becausetheganiewastelevised
,.;
so·unds of
'
<'Also Sprach
visit various high schools from
on FOX.
·
Zarathustra
;"
from tlie movie
._
New
_
-
York, New
·
Jersey,
_
and
_
_ After the rehearsal the bands
_
"
2001: A
Spac'e·
Oddessey,"
Connecticut
;
Each paridjs
.
"
are
,
as.sJgrie
_
d io
·
one c:>r two ca-
'~ ;
_i:ushed through
J
h<
f
~tadium
.
•judged on its so~rid
)
iQd ~tten
/
\
dets
fo
take tllemo11
_
a to~; of
)
~'lien
/
sel1\c,ti0Q
f
frort1;
,
t11e film
tivenes~
towards
the
conductor
:
th~ academy.
\
-
:
· :; ,
;
,
"Jurassic Park"
-.
were-pfayed .
.
Lara Daghlian; senior p~r~us:-

The Mari st B
.
arid
was
giyen a
·
The bands rot
a
ted to form the
sionistin the Marist band
/
said
walking tour and was allowed
letters USMA on the field and
,
it is important tobe disciplined.
to see some of the barracks in-
played the song, "Don't
Cry
for
"There are nearly 1,500 band
eluding the dining hall that
Me Argentina" arid
·
then per-
members on the field that must
seats close to 4,000 cadets
-
-
in
-
formed
thdiriale
,?'
fc~aikovsky's
-
aJl play at the same time," she
-
-
one sitting.
"1812 Overture
'
," as
.
caimons
said.
· .
Members of the band had the
erupted.
_
.
-
.
.
The Mari st Band, although
opportunity to ta1k one-on~one
_
_
Daghlian said
the
experience
not a high sc~oolband, had the
with a cadet and ask
.
questions.
.
was very exciting.
__
_
oppoi:tunity to be a
Pcart
ofthe
_
Aceremonial parade was then
:
"
If
was an amazing_feeling
event
·
due
-
to
the band's con-
·
_
given by
.
tl).e ~adets as thou~
standing with
lQO or so other
-
ductor
i
Arthur Himmelberger.
sands of spectators watched
:
percussionists; all ofus
playing
:
B~caust; ofHinimelberger's as
~
-
-•
Every
c
adetmus
.U
~Jtend the toge tiler,
-
_
feeling the ground
i
sociation with the A,cadellly, as

-
game in foll uniform so
'
there is
shaking from a11 the
-
drums as

a Sergeant and leader
ofa
<l!"um
~
large se~tfo
_
n of brown visible
well as the cannons," she said.
.
. ·.
,
~
·;·
.
~
:<)~
·?
f
:
;
;(
.
,
,
,..,J
;,'
School
of Graduate
&
Continuing Education
IVI.l-\RI
ST
Poughk~rs•~ fis!MI Gosh~n
....
,
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·
NOVEMBER19
2
1998
.
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·:.-; )THE:.-CIR.CLE
-
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:
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tu·res
- PAGE7
http://www.aristotle.net/thanksgiving/
With Thanksgiving on its way, why not sharein the ceJebration by reading other's
·
reflections on the holiday.
Check out http://www.aristotle.net/thanksgivingl The page is sponsored by Aristotle,
a graphics design company.
The site offers a variety of information on the holiday. Viewers can read different people's
stories on what their most memorable Thanksgiving experience
was,
good or bad. Viewers
can also subinit their own reflections.
·
Send
a free
Thanksgiving card to a friend or family member. Or learn a few new recipes to
add to your Thanksgiving holiday flavor.
Get information on the turkey, and learn more information than you po
_
ssibly ever needed
toknow.
·
The site also has section of photos on.fall foliage of areas throughout the country.
Links to other Thanksgivingrelated sites are also available.
_
So, for Thanksgiving information check out http://www.aristotle.,iet/thanksgivingl.
If you have any suggestions for this column, or would like to write
·
a column, contact
·
Emily at exf ens ion 2429 or email HZAL. Features Editor Emily Kucharczyk wrote this
Searching
·
the sites column.
Horoscopes
·
·
~
-
·
·
·
ARIES·
Sagittarius is
your intuition is con-
.
'-
·
·
.
. ,
·
.
·
·
.
·
·
jn y
.
ou; Solar Ninth
.
cerned,
·
and that's a
~
House of travel, and
bighelpifyou'remak-
that's what you
ing big decisions,
should be planning.
which is exactly what
It's going to be com-
_ you ought to be do-
plicate
.
d this week-
,
ing right now.
·
.
.
.
,
end, but if you m
_
ake
·
.
~
-
.
.
LEO:
There will be a
:,,
yourplansorcaneven
·
. ·
-
, _ .
,
strong
.
compulsion for
·
.
.
.
start, your trip now,
~
people to talk <!bout
you'll be
.
well out of
·
.
things. For you this
there. Don'tbeembar-
rassed
·
if you can't
quite keep up yet. Be
patient with yourself.
SCORPIO:
If
you've
been thinking about
,
~sking for a raise, th!s
.
.
.
.
1s a
_
greatday to do
1t.
.
i
You're
going
to
·
be
·
more outspoken than
difficulty
'.
s way by
will be most likely to
-.
..
·
usual, and
it
should be
relatively easy to find
the right words.
It
looks like there are
the time conditions -
show up in your rela-
.
change.
tionships with the
;
.
~
-
.
TAURUS: Something
people you love best.
:
p(
-
~~::t~~
-_-
~
_
lui
.
~t~t
·
·
~~l:!::'r::t,::~
could take
'
an uiiex-
much time as you can
pected turn.
'
Your
.
·
to listening to what is
problem, or perh
_
~ps
going on with the
the sohit~on to
.yoiir
.
people y°-u
..
love.
problem
;
_isinco_nuiiffi
:
·<
You'Illead even bet-
.
nications
/
TI_iere's g(t-
:
. ·,
Jer'
:
i'r- yo~ blow what
.
ing to
be
'
all
kirid's of
:
_ thesep~ople wan(and
inforrn~tion .coming.
·
.
need
'. ·
.
.
·
.•
· · .
.
out. Sqme
·
you sus'"
.
[ ! ] ·
.
.
·
__
.
·
·
.
.
·
VIRGO:
It looks like
pected, bufsorrie you ·
·
,:
:i
_.
f
.
·.·
y. ou


.
r
.
e
·
.
in
.
·
·th
.
.
e mood to
don't have. a clue
~
clean
things
up
,
about, and that's what
.
.
arourtd your place.
_
i,yilica~~e !~eqlla~ge
.
·
·
·
~haqg~s
'
,
ar
:
~ J!ldi-
·
-
in procedure.
·•
·
.
cated;- and
,
you
·
might
,
·
i]
,-
~EMINI:TheSunis
·
.•
_
,
havetoripafe\VtJiings
·
in' Scorpio arid the
-,
apart iri order to get
·
~a~~~t!~i!~int~j:i

·
-r:;y~~~gl!!t
t
t~:
.

Gemini
_
s.ymboHzes
.
Som~q1ing drastic .
. .
'
conversations. about
.
..
The overall result
will
trivial matters, and
.
\ie
·
~
.
gQO
_
<(~ne
·
,
but
·
Sagittariuslikestotalk
_rigtif_
n.<>w,
things
about
·
philosophical
·
_
might lo6Js worse than ·
subjects. Both of you
..
·
they
~
did before.
several things in your
favor. One is a tough
.
job you've recently
done. You made it look
easy, and others have
noticed.
·
SAGITTARIUS: The
Moon
~s.
in your sig~
now, g1vmg you a bit
.
of an extra advant~ge.
·
Venus is there in your
sign, too, and so are
Pluto
·
and Mercury .
.
These are absohitely
·Ejnily's
.
Recipeofthe
Week
Applesauce Raisin Muffins
3/4 cup all-purpose flour
1/2 cup whole wheat flour
1/2 cup sugar
Tbsp. baking powder
1/2 tsp. baking soda
1/4 tsp. salt
Tsp. cinnamon
2
cups bran cereal
11/2 cups unsweetened apple sauce
1/4 cup skim
milk
3
egg whites
.
1/2 raisins
Stir together flours, sugar, baking powder, soda, and salt and
cinnamon. S
_
et aside.
In
large mixing bowl, combine cereal,
applesauce and milk. Let stand about
5
minutes or until cereal
softens. Add egg whites. Beat well. Stir in raisins until
combined. Add flour mixture, stirring only until combined.
Portion evenly into 12, 21/2 inch muffin-pan cups coated with
cooking spray. Bake at 400for about 20 minutes or until
lightly browned.
marvelous condi-
~
AQUARIUS:Itlooks
tions, as far as you' re
iike there could be a
concerned. The com-
couple of surprises
bination gives you a
_
today
.
Those are
sharp wit, quick tim-
more in the area of
ing, passion and
friendships. Your
compassion. You're
work is going to be
.
ff1St
~:m
your feet and
going along the same
·
,
.
,.-.:
·
:
'-•_
vyith
,

your
'.
mind,
·
so
.
.
.
. ,
,
..
. "
..,,
,,,. ·-
~
"
Jails
.
it:i,yas
.
qn
yester-
.
.
you
.
can :outmaneu-
day. You have ac-
.
--
v~r
just about any
complishedthemajor
adversary.
.
.
part of what you
C APR I C
O
RN :
were trying to do, or
You're into some sort
at least you should
of dilemma today
.
It
have by now
.
looks
like
you don't
el
PISCFS:
It looks like
really. feel like you
a person in authority
can talk about this
has some sort of
freely yet, and it's not
-
_
scheme for you. He
.
a good idea to do that
or she has not got
anyway. You need to
this thing figured out,
get all
.
the facts and
and that's where you
figures sorted out be
-
come in. You need to
fore you think about
do the creative part
.
going public. But for
Help this person fig-
you, right
.
now, dis-
ure out how to ac-
cretion is
the
better
·.
complish what he or
part of valor:
she has in mind.
tend to stir each other
-
~
-
·
LIBRA:The
Sun will
up. But, you're riot
n
be
·
going into Sagi
.
t-
Then stop in and see us at,
going to have time to
tarius at the end <:>f this
discuss things quite
·
week, and you'll no-
as much as you'd like
tice the big shift al-
because there's sim-
ready underway. Sag-
ply too much work to
ittarius, for
·
you,
do. Take care you
means education. It's
·
don't get in trouble.
thesign of scholar-
CANCER:
This is a
ship and philosophy.
good
tim~
for
,
you to
It's also a sign you
.
make
,
de'c_isi_ons c~n-
find fascin~ting, and
ceming- proJects
-
you
today you II get a
and y~ur l
_
oved ones
taste of what is to
:
want:to work:on
·
to-
come. There should
ge
.
tiier. You're still
besomeverystimulat-
-
very strong as far as
ing discussions out
MILLIIAN'S T-SBIBT
FACTORY
·
12 Fowler ave., Poughkeepsie
(Take Route 9 South to 44-55 East
12 traffic lights 18/ock down on left.)
454-2255 FIX 454.5 771
l&ia\311
.
the Marist Communi since 1978
,.
1


























































NOVEMBER 19~1998
PAGE8-
·
CONGRESSSHALLMAKENOLAW~ABRIDGINGTHEFREEDCJMOF;SPEECH,OROFTHEP~-
School of Communications
J£DITOR_IALSI
responds to recent editorial
C
& E
I
&litor:
areer
. .
mp
"
.
oyer
:
I was gratified to read about the high value news editor Ben Agoes on his
journaliSI?experienceatMaristCollegeandtoseehim,inarecenteditorial,
E
"
·
x
·
·
po a
SU
_
c
·

.
·
.
_
c
·
ess
·
ful
.
ev
.
en
·
t_
.
crusade for those he fears maybe less fortunate with their own experiences.
However, in the interest of
accurate
reporting, as chair of the Communications
Editor:
Department I feel compelled to correct the record and reassure him on several
_._
The
ioth
annualCareer
&
Employer
,
Expo.was very successf\ll. More" than· 1,100
pomts.
.
.
.
.
. ,
.
.
,
...
..
.
·
_.

.
11
.
.
·
Marist students and 850 students fronf the
:either
colleges irt
µ,
·
e
rhi1~I:Iu
_
cison
.
. I
a~r_ee
that
pr~fessors
·
should
be
evaluat~d annually. In
fact, they are evaluat~d
·
,

Valle§
attended the two-dl).y event held on Oct. 29 at.Marist and Oct. 30 at SUNY
.
m ~ntmg by thetr students; themselves an;cl the De~
.
,Q~.the
_
.
sc.~o?! of Co~mum-
.
·
New Paltz; Afotai ofl64 employ~r.s were in attendance
.
__
,
··
c~t~ons and the ~ - I also _concur that s~ngen~ ~~idehnes ~e utibze~ dunng the
··
As usual, Marist students
.
were standouts! We
'
received numerous comments
hmng ~rocess. Agam,
~ beheve
.
we d~ this by utthzmg a detailed ~and1date
-

.
·
·
·
·
from
employers ~n now
weUpiepared
ourstudents\vere and how professional
·
evaluation
form,
checking three _candidate references and observmg the cand1-
·
·
.
they were in their manner and their' dress.
.
_
.
date _teach
_
a dass and present hts/her resear~h.
.
.
.
.

.
Students who missed the event
may
obtain a copy of the Expo pro gr~. w,hicp
.
~•s seme~ter, students
-
could s~lect from_s1x upper-levelJourna~1sm class~s.
·
contains contact names, "addresses arid telephone numbers.fofthe
employers,
in
·
With those
~lX
courses, only one time confhct eXJsted._ For the ~pnng of_ 1999
DN226. Employersare very willing to hear froinstudents aft~i-i.tie'everit!
;
.
· .·.
·
schedule, six upper-level courses are on the books, with_
t\VC?
t~me con~1cts:
.
Thanks again, Mari.st students
,
for making such a good impn;!ssion on our
Students should not, however, that the three upper-level ylectiverequtred m
.their
·
visiting
.
guests
·
·
·
·
·

·
·
·
.
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
· ·
·
major do not have to be fulfilled with courses from the same conc
.
entration. As a
·
·
·
·
matter of fact, I argue that taking "classes from other concentration areas like
Deid
_
re
,
Sepp
.
.
.
public relations, advertising, radio/television/film and multimedia broaden
-
·
students' intellectual horizons and develop their skills
.
.
[)irector, Center for Caree.r Services
.
Finally, when the Communication Department and The Circle paid for satellite
transmission of the Associated Press wire
·
, that service was used extensively in
Radio News and News Editing courses from the
.
Fall of 1995 through the 1996
Presidential elections
.
In
1997; The Circle editors began subscribing to a
.
differ-
ent, internet-based AP news service designed for weekly newspapers. If this
year's Circle staff has been imfarniliar with the service, it'may be due to the
unfortunate, but predictable, loss of expertise that occurs
.
each year when senior
Circle staff members graduate'.
.
·
·
I appreciate the opportunity to respond and correct the record on the same
editorial. pages in
The
Circle that Ben's article appeared
.
I
alsojnvite
any otµer
thoughts that Journalism oi' other communication students may have for strength-
ening our pro
grain.
My office is located in LT 212C.
Nick Neupauer
:
Chair
·
of the
·
Communication Department
Marist is
not
our
-
parents
Editor:
This is in response to the drinking article in The Circle .
.
·
I
tllink it is not fair that
Marist as a college will not let anyone truly experience college. There is no
·
denying that the true college experience involves a little bitof alcohol. Marist is
trying to act like a parent to the adultstudents at this college.
I remember in orientation that the staff themselves called us adults. Why are we
not treated like adults?
_
I know many people in many coUeges and they all say that
Marist is ridiculous in its strict policies.
Crossing Route 9 is also not a problem because at 2 in the morning there ate
__
_
hardly any vehicles passing. It is in my own view and my fellow students view
-
that Marist should act like an establishment we fund and stop acting like it wants
to
be
our parents.
If
we needed parents around all the time in this phase of our
lives we would have stayed home
,
Joseph DeMatteis
Freshman
Fraternity clarifies security brief
.
• Editor:
.
·
'
·
. :·
·

.
.
· ·
·
·
·
·
.
We are writing this Jette; i~ ;espouse
to
a report made inth~ Security
,
Briefs.
.
section of your paper on Thursaay, Nov. 12, 1998. There are several inaccuracies
that we would like to clarify.
_ .
. _·.
_ _
.
. ·
. . _
_
.
.
.
.
First, the event that took place
wai
not
·
a "kidnapping," iris a unity event
involving the associate members
'
of
the fraternity and
~
actJve brother who is a
·
willful participant. This was riot
an
initiation prank, as reported, and is in
·
no way a
··
requirement for member~pip.
_ ·
.· ,
· ,
·
:
_
·
.
·
.
.
.
.
-
.•

Second, no car was puliecfovi(Th~ stud~rits invo.lved wefe
·
not f.ri~~ed
,
at
_.
guneoint. None of the officers
.
_
had drawn
_
their firearms. The students were
.
.
reprimanded by the <?fficers' for creatjng ;,in undo disturbance
·
and se!}t on their
way. No student was brcmght to
·
th~ police station; arid there were no questions
of "hazing" on the part of the Towri'o
,
f Poughkeepsie Police Department.
The Men of Tau Kappa
·epsilon
Amanda
Bradley
·
Editor-in-chief
Emily Kucbarczyk
Features Editor
·
Elizabeth
Carrubba
.
Managing Edito
·
r
ThomasRyan
Sports Editor
BenAgoes
News Editor
TaraQuinn
Opi11io~i Editor
Patrick Whittle
Joe Scotto
Toni Constantino
Ans
&
Enrenainment
Photography Editor
/Jusiness
Manager
G. Modele Clarke,
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.









































Marist image is not re~lity
ByMIKALAMINLEE
Staff Writer
As
l
leave to graduate ifr May,
I am very afraid of what I see on
this campus.· Marist College was
at a crossroads when lcame in
as a freshman in the fall of
1995.
Issues of diversity, gender, and
· academics were at the forefront
of issues that needed to be dealt
with. I got involved as a mem-
ber of the Student Programming
Council to handle. issues of di-
versity and programming. I was
theeditoroftheNIA(BlackStu-
dents Union Newspaper) in the
hopes of using it as a tool to
er~se the neg~tive stereotype
placed on Black students on this
campus as "separatists". Fi-
nally, l ran to be the student rep-
resentative to the administration
as Student Body_ President to
finally get our voices heard, and
our concerns acknowledged.
. Four years later, all the issues
I fought for still have not been
dealt with in a satisfactory man-
ner. Marist College has done
an excellent job of beautifying
the campus, but have a done
poor job in supplying a diverse
and academically enriching en-
vironment for all students.
_Fm: example, the new library
.
will have threi
floors
willi
c&iri-
puter laoi and n~W offices:
wm
the library have more books and
other periodical resourc~s · for
students to use?
I
do not think
so. We have a population of
studentsJhat are more con~
cemed with.·a bar,being placed
on campus (when the majority
of Mar.isl is not of legal age to
drink) than actually participat- -
i_ng in events on campus. We
have an administration that de-
.
nies everything from not· pay-
ing its-professors fairly, to the
fact that there is a drinking prob-
lem on this campus.
Marist will tell you its diverse,
yet an 9verwhelmirig majority of
its ·students come from the same
geographical location, and eth-
IJ.ic origin. The programs of di-
versity it does institute are few
and far l;>etween, poorly funded,
and poorly supported. When I ..
open up The Circle, I do not see
articles from juniors and seniors.
I see repo~ from freshman and
sophomores who the adminis-
tration has catered to for years.
Their viewpoint is important,
but so are the views of the up-
perclassmen.
The Rotunda may be percieved as a monument to
academia, but what does Marist really stand for?
Abortion
is a right
byMICHELLECORINNE
WHilE
Staff Writer
Abortion is perhaps the most
volatile subject in our country
today. Even though women
have had methods of ending
unwanted pregnancies for cen-
turies, it has been only within
this century that it has become
a question of government. The
issue at hand is that of au-
tonomy. Autonomy is defined
. as independence and the abil-
ity to self-rule.
If
a woman is
forced to have a child against
her will, her autonomy as an in-
dividual is being coqipromised;
her life subordinated for the life
of the fetus. If abortion were
chy on who is important. This
others unlike you? Is it about
illegal, a woman's autonomy
From what
I
have
campus survives on perception
becoming a mature and respon-
would be stripped because
it
seen, Marist
Col-
real or imagined.
It
does a dis-
sible adult, while having fun?
would be the dictation of a
l
.
b ·
t
service to all students when the
From what I have seen, Marist
Catholic morality on a govern-
e
g
e
_
lS
a
OU
image Mari st wants does not
College is about money, indif-
mental level.
money, indiff er-
live up to that.
ference, deception, and intoler-
Our bodies are very personal
ence~ .. deception,
I urge studen_ts to open your ance. Thisisnottheworstplace
but they are also political. We
d
. -
z ·
eyes, and realize.what is hap-
in the world, but, it is not the
pride ourselves in America be-
a11:
lll/0
erance.
pen1ng_to. this campus. There
t:iappy, diverse, clean-cut, all-
cause we have the freedom to
.,. . ..
was'
·a.tlnie'
when'stitderits· did 'inchisive prestigious university . 'decidewhat.,is, b~st.for us, we .
-_
---_----.......:.---. ...;.
__ ......;. __
:.......
·fight for so~ething; did stand
Dennis Murray would want you;. . have the innate right to personal
What does this ·mean? -
It
behind issues of academic, and
your parents, and their bank
autonomy. Male citizens have
means that the image Marist at~ - not bars or attacking those who
accounts to believe.
this right which has been pro-
tempts to promote does not ex-
wish to bring about some equal-
tected in federal court in McFall
ist.
It
means, urilike what some · ity. Ask yourself; what is col-
Mikal Amin Lee is a senior En-
v. Shrimp. Shrimp could have
would believe, that Marist is an
lege for you? Is it experiencing
glish major. ·
saved the life of his cousin had
institution that places a hierar-
new things, and learning about
he undergone a medical proce-
Americans show
pour
judgement
dure. The court supported his ·
refusal to do so, saying to com-
pel him to submit unwillingly
would be a gross invasion of the
privileged territory of the sub-
jects own body (Borda, p.77
·unbearable Weight). Is the male
body considered to be privi-
leged territory while the rights
of the female to self-govern her
body are superceded?
The· Jersey side
Tara
Quinn
OP1NION lOOOR
_ Although !have been re-
moved from my summerjob as a
. waitress for a full three qiJ)nths,
I still wait tables in'my dreams.
Actually,
1
have .restaurant'
nightmaref that aite.mate with
my "showing up for class na-
ked" dreams lately, but we:will
not go there. I am wondering
why I have come this far already-·
I hardly know you. However,
while I am here, I confess that I
have a tremendous insecurity:
I feel that if I do not occasion-
ally write something slightly
raunchy, no one will ever read
this column. But hey, let us all
be
glad my current medium of
choice is print. Besides, The
Jerry Springer Show is booked
until next May.
We could sit here a while and
strike up a det?ate about exactly
what co~stitutes "raunch," but
you would not have much of an
opportunity to say much, since
I am the one doing all of the writ-
ing here. Actually, you would
,
probably have a ''mute" point.
Anyway, MY point was that I
still have a tendency to suin up
anything with a waitressing
analogy._ I will call this one The
Boomerang Effect
of Coffee-
pots .. This
IS
simply because
people generally do not like to
eat that. which they name.
Hence, people are hesitant to eat
horses, dogs, and hopefully, the
remainder of this column.
At breakfast in a high volume
restaurant, members of western
civilization, particiil~iyAmeri~-
cans; are Qbli.;,ioils to every-
thing ·aside.from when I, the,
server, am and when I am com-
ing back \Vith more coffee.
It is
as if they think the Medusa is
lurking at the bottom of.their
cups. Unfortunately, they do
not turn to rock at the comple-
tion of their coffee. They either
frantically wave at me, or give
me a stone cold stare.
Initially, I pretend not to no-
tice. Just before a customer
stands up, whistles, or does a
weird mime show, that if we were
playing charades I would either
guess ''Tortured POW on verge
of death by dehydration," or
"Customer finishing coffee and
waiting for sloth-like waitress to
refill cup," I casually saunter
over to the table.
"Oh? Would you like more
. coffee?" I ask with a slightly
mocking grin.
··
The customer grunts.
. However, when people from
the Middle or Far East come in,
it usually a different· scenario.
A couple will sit down and wait
patiently. This silence causes
me to become alert and con-
cerned.
In
case they
felt ne-
glected, I grab the coffeepot and
run to the table. As I rush to
their aid, tables of Americans see
me. They simultaneously wave
and chug the remnants of their
coffee.
"How is everything here?" I
ask in a voice so cheery that I
figure it to be worth either a
three-dollar tip or a stint on
Barney and Friends.
"Everything is fine," the
. .. please see
COFFEE,
pg. I 0
Drawing conclusions
A
recent survey shows that nine
out
of ten lab rats prefer
Equivalent
brand
sweetner to other leading national brands.
The author of last week's col-
umn, "Abortion destroys lives,"
quoted a doctor as saying; "to
accept the fact that after fertili-
• zation has taken place a new
human has come into being is
no longer
a
matter of taste or
opinion .. .it is plain experimental
evidence." This sentence infers
that this doctor had an agenda.
I agree with Nik Bonopartis that
opinion and fact should not be
confused. One doctor's opin-
ion influenced. by his personal
morality is not fact. Do not be
mistaken into believing that all
science is absolute and objec-
tive. In the Victorian era if a
woman was the slightest bit sick
or disagreeable her ovaries were
be removed. This was not
sound biology, but the severe
misunderstanding of the female
body. In the early l 980's it was
believed that AIDS was a gay
male disease. People added their
own meaning to that. Medicine
is not alway~ fact..
The question of when life be-
gins is one that has many dif-
··· please see
RIGHT, pg. I 0
...
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·
... continued from pg. 9
gentleman replies.
"More coffee?" I ask.
"No thank you, we are no~ fin-
. ished," they smile, though they
seem slightly perplexed by my
sudden concern. ·
i
walk away, surprised that the
closest thing I got to a
third-
degree
was when I grabbed that
coffeepot in haste.
So, this I believe my generali-
zation'to hold more ground ~an
RIGHT:·
Student
defends
aborfion
... i:ontinuedfrompg. 9
ferent answers. depending on
one's belief system.
It
is, how-
ever, fact that a fetus is not vi-
able outside of the womb until
the third trimester. This is not
up for de.bate: . The morality of
one group -should, not ·negate
the voices of all women.
.
- ORDERFORM
.
-
.PAGE10
the usual suspicion that. all
. people from_ that regio_1,1 of the
.world work owri "Seven~Elev-
: ens."
At
least it seems
more
di-
rectly related to my pqin,t. .
·
... Maybe-~is phenomenonis
partially due
·
toAmericans'_ ad-
diction
to
caffeine. I think itjS
something slightly deeper.
Why be concerned with having
more if one cannot enjoy what
one has? Itis no wonder other
countries show contempt, for
us. Sometimes, we are so hung
up on getting more that we do
not even stop to notice what we
have ..
Tara Quinn is a junior commu-
nications.major with a minor in
English. She is from Teaneck,
New Jersey.
·
Abortion is probably never an
easy choice. Neither is adop-
tion, or raising a child in pov-
erty.- Neither is bearing a child
with HIV/AIDS. But women
· have made all of these choices
by the standards
of
their own
morality. People who want to
· ·keep abortion legal do not walk
~round with signs that say
'eradicaJe your children,' th~y
simply say that each woman.is
different, every pregnancy
comes under a different:set of
circumstances: If abortion is not ·
the choice for you, do not have
one.
Michelle Corinne White is a
junior American studies major
. with a minor in women~ stud-
GUARANTEED APPROVAL
·•.··.·.•··1:•~
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t~ards·
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16662, ATLANTA:~
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PAGEll
Jtlatures
with
0
MutationS
: bysrEPHEN"ivnmciER
.
Staff Writer·
, · ,·
song implies, is a blues tune, but
it also has a little folk and p6p in
it too. It has a really melodic
blues guitar riff that is solidly
accompanied by the upbeat pop
Beck's
riew:·album~
Mutii-
of the band.
lions,
.brings the·same· eclectic
Just lik,e Neil Young, H~nsen
musical style that we
are
all used
can make a country' song that
to him performing, but also adds
many non-country fans can ac-
Beatles-like
psychedelic pop to
tually enjoy. In
Sing
It Again,
his repertoire. . , :
the sweet sounding guitars and
-Beck Hansen, who first came
soft drumming combine riicely
info the popular music scene
with
Beck's
ragged, folk singer's
withthehitloser,isbestknown
voice. The song kone of the
fortakirig.inariykindsofmuiic
strong points of
Mutations.
It
and· be able to. gep.uinely · per-
ls e~tremely strange and melan-
form and combine each type.
choly because .it sounds both
Since his debut,
Mellow Gold,
happy and sad at the same time.
he has played blues, folk,-roc::).c,
Out of the 12 songs (there's
· pop, rap, soul, _c::ountry, ,and
a ~ecret ~onus song), almost all
punk.- In
Odelay;,afl
incredible
of them are really good. One
andmusicallyinnovativealbum,
tune that did not totally work
he fused all thesedifferentkinds
was
O Maria.
Unlike the other
of~styles, but from.the help of
songs on
Mutations,
it lacks the
.• the producers, The Dust Broth-
spirit and muskianship that the
· ers, he-proved that he can make
rest display, but it is still okay.
spme of the best funk/hip hop
Overall, it is a very good
music of today._
record.
Beck's
guitar playing
In
Mutations,
Beck brings
and singing is really maturing
, some country, blues, andfolk,
and it seems that his musical
· but leaves behind
·
hip,hop and
style is broadening even more.
punk. While replacing the lat-
My only warning is that it is
ter, he brings in Bossa Nova, but
very noncommercial and is laid
for the majority of tge LP, 60s
back as compared to his last al-
British rock·seems to be his ma-
bum.
jorinfluence. Nigel Godrich, the
From what I have heard, this
producer of
Radiohead's
last
was an experimental album for
·.tw<> ali;,llms s~e.m_s,to
_
b_ethekey _ . ,
Hansen. Supposedly, this al-
;,~r~~s
.
on,f;'l:>~)iiii"d
~11eck/siiiiis ·.'
0
,w.- ·;;,,
bum,
wa~ ac~ally goi_ng ~o be
phase; -:
Ori .. Riididlzecid:i'-oK

',C,
O<·. :/ ,
,
; .·
·. . . .··
.,.,_,, ··· .. '
.
<· .
.
'< . •·. . . . .
PhotofromcoyerofMutarionsCD' '
:
released
q1lietly
by-theindepen-
,_J;,qi,ipuier
\Vhi~h \Vas
I)l."()clUced:
.
''B?q,ktias
!J~pkei;l 11ew
ground once again in
the world
of
experimenta_l
rock/His'nevJ· , . , .
d_ent label, Bong Load and then
by Godrich, the band took
Pink
CD
Mutations
is in stores now.
·
·
· · ·
·
an
Odelay-like
LP would be re-
Floyd
acid rock and--i&ied a
leased by Geffen in the near
fu-
very clean ·and '.technical ap,-
fluences prevents him fro~just
melodies and harmonies that are
ture. :aeffen,
Beck's
major label,
'.
proachtowardsit Just like on
sticking to one kind of style.
blended together perfectly.
Mutations.
The crisp guitars
really wantedto capitalize on his
p;~f!§.;:Cbinputer,
Godrich brings
The song
Tropicalia
is defi-
Tropicalia also displays the
and 60s like keyboards domi-
popularity with'
Odelay,
so they
; ·'liissHckproductionabiHtiesand : nitely the.;best son,g;on the
musicaltalentsofBeck'sband.
nate the trance like song.
It
arenowreleasingtheCD'sand
, overwhdriuJg.appe~ for
atmo- .
record. Even though the Bossa . The· flute, drums, guitar, and
~~~:t~:~~~:!!1;:;:;!!~;:: .
i:ape;fof tbisl_kalbum.
spheric rockto
Mutations.
The
Nova spng is performed in a
synthesizers are a great match
you
1
e Beck, you will
only dif!erencf~s
t11a(Beck_is.
Icmnge,music fashion, the hu- . forBec,k'.s smooth cr:9oning.
~qste~rly i~s, bult tansen probably really enjoy this one.
very.unhk~R?~
1
f~~ad.Wln!~
bnor,that:lleckbririgsmakesthe,
Dead.Melodies
is a good ex-
g~;~~
l~~t~Jn;;eiom:
0
5t ~:
Ifyouarenotfamiliarwi
th
Beck
Ol~,f;:':.',"P,lf..['j{~Bw..~sk_}~:~.S.~1YP~O-·,C•.·songev.enmor~app\~aling. The . ample of the
Beatles
influence
own personal presence to it.
an~ y~u are curious, try
f:!felay
,gress~y
__ ,e
____ /_<>c
__
,_!>
_
,_J __
._S_,./i.~.·m_ a,ny
m- ·
infect_iou_ s s_ong fea_tures
__ great
that i_s he_a. rd many times on
an
t
en you. can see
1
you
.
.
. _ : .· . ·c:;c
Bottle of Blues,
as name of the
want to listen
.
to
Mutations.
Totally Theatre
byRAqIAEL VOLLARO
Staff Writer
West Side Story,
in the Nelly
Golletti Theatre.
B~ed on a conception by
Jerome Robbins,
West Side
It's been called a timeless
Story
is the story of two gangs
classic. It's been, called the
and the· two lovers who get
Rome~ and Juliet of _our cen,, . caught between. them. They
tury. It s called
West Side Story.
play is set on< the West Side of
OnNov.19,20,&21 at8p.m.
NewYorkCityinthelate 1950s.
and Nov. 21
&
22, at 2p.m.; the, Robbins who collaborated with
Marist College Council on The-
Arthur . Lauren ts Leonard
atre~inconju~ctionwiththe Bernstein· and, Stephen
Manst College Smgers presents
Sondheim, first produced the
. shbw ~n Broad.Jay in 1957.
.
Since then; it has been revived
on Broadway, been on national
. tours and th~usands of"stages
.around the worlc.I: . .
·
. One thing about
West Side
' . Story
that is undeniable is the
challenge and work involved in
producing a show of this mag-
nitude;
Producer Keith
Sunderland, said
West Side
Story
is challenging all around.
"West Side Story
in compari-
son to past plays we've done
here, is the most challenging in
terms of singing~ dancing, and
production," he said.
Assistant producer, Brian
Delaney said the audience
should expect a different kind
of show from last years'
Joseph
and the Amazing Technicolor
• Dreamcoat.
"There's more drama and
heartache in
West Side Story.
It's intense," he said. "There's
great musical and dance num-
bers."
... please_seeTHEATRE,pg.
J
3
Currentmusic

.. trends
that have got to go!
by
PATRICKWIIlTILE
. A&E Editor
Being the Arts and Entertain-
ment editor of a fine publication
such as
The Circle
gives me an
opportunity to comment on
anything and everything going
on the A & E world each week.
It also gives the entire campus
justifiable grounds to accu·se me
of being an obnoxious (exple-
tive), something that is becom-
ing more than customary re-
cently. This week I figure what
better way to toss gasoline on
the flames than to write a piece
on current music trends that are
embraced by the masses, which
yours truly just so happens to
abhor?
Keep in mind that I have little
or no background in most of the
subjects on which I am about to
display my unabashed opinion.
Rather, I am taking it upon my-
self to denounce styles of mu-
sic that I have a thoroughly un-
educated inipress1.on of. And I
wonder why people think I am
an obnoxious (expletive).
Let us start with the most
ungodly of flavors-of-the-
month: Swing Music. Most in-
dividuals I know who are drawn
into this drivel know next to
nothing about the origins or his-
tory of swing as a musical move-
ment. How~ver; they sure· do
love zoot-suits. The demo-
graphics of this new obsession
are mind-boggling: this may be
the first big commercial success
to appea_l primarily to people
under the age of 14 and over the
age of 35 exclusively. The mu-
sic itself I supposed has merit,
after all it did gamer a huge fol-
lowing (several decades ago).
This ties in beautifully with
my second unfortunate victim:
Ska. Or should I
say
third-wave
... pleaseseeTRENDS,pg.12




























































































































































































































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- - - - -
-
----------,--~--,-,--:-,-:-:-:-:-:-,-~..,...,....,...,......,..--
-
- - - - -
-
. -NOVEMBER 19
7
1998
Mak
.
·
..
_
.. ; ·_ .. ·.,
_
·
.
.
:
.

·
.
-
·
· , . .
.
·
werehe1i~J~J6rting.bands~ike
:
e ~oom··.
.
MXPXJnsteadJ>fWuTa~g:
,
be:.
.
.
,
. . .
.
1
_
·


.

cause t4ey
.
hav<:i
·
got
_-
to start
· ·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
.
·
somewhere and why" not start
·
·

· · ·
·
·
with something like this
.
,
·
.,_

·.
111vp
V
·
ThOre;,Isuq>risecameafler
1.0r
LUA.j
.
·.
A
.
·
~~;::i~.1.i-;.:.~~1:~
byCHRISKNUDTSEN
Staff Writer
tween Face to Face and other
Fat WreckChord bands. After
playing with other Orange
County bands
_
such
as
Lounge,
Beefcake, Ninety
9
Cents,
MXPX packed The Chance
Joey's Throwing Elqows, and
on Nov. 10. When I say packed,
others. they have ~anaged to
I mean packed, there was no
move up on the ]adder to get
room to move at
a11.
Waddup
the
_
chance to open for abigger
fire hazard;
nam<'! band like
MXPX.
(Get it?
The police actually showed
The Chance to open for them?
up at the end of the show to see
Nevermind: .. -ed.)
I
met up with
exactly how bad the situation
Rob, the new bassist who joined
was and probably see how big
Cooteraboutthi:-eemonthsago,
a fine they
_
could slap on. Be-
and he explained that the best
sides the over-crowding the
part of playing shows
_
like this
only problem
I
had with the oth-
was the facqhat people who
erwise great show was the ri-
never would have heard of them
.diculous amount of teeny-
get to seithem
.
if
ycfo
want to
boppers, but
I
guess that came
-
drop Cooter a line you can email
as a result of the fact that they
them at' 'Cooierrock@aol.com
did not h~ve school the next
or visit their page at
·
day (why
·
did we?). Forget
www.angelfire.com'/nyl
about dancing at this show too, -COOTER.
.
.
·
·
·
·
·
·
you would have
-
been lucky to
AfterCootercame the band
jump up and down next to the
that basically
:
everyorie was
12-year-old with the Less Than . waitingfor;MXPx They played
Jake"T~shirt
I
did.not let this
with justas much intensity as
ruin the show though, it actu-
·
they did at
The
Warped Tour
aUy was pretty good.
when
I
last saw them so
I
was
The first band was The Get
glad to see that they
_
were
·
still
Up Kids who played an emoish
having fun. Highlights of their
set to open the night up. When
set were Chick Magnet
arid
a
they first started it was not that
Ramones cover with
a
bit of an
crowded but by
_
the
·
time they
.
extra twist:
·
Ag
'
ain, the_ only ag:.
were done .... Folio.wing them
grayating
.
thin'g
;
abo~t their set
.
was Cooter, who
I
had
-
only . was thafin oi:cj.er to get:on the .
heard a\)oilt'at
.
thi~
pqint
but
floor you
.
wouJd
ha
_
ve
t6.
deal
.
never
·
actually· had the chance
with a couple dozen
,
_lJquncing
to listen to
.
them. Cooteris
·
14-year-old~; but what can you
·
Green
'
Day~esque pop
·
punk
.
really
expect.
I
guess in a way
it
band that is kind of a mix
.
be-
is betterthat the teeny boppers
·
\t'
_
;~
: .. ,
:
_:.
;
·;~o:.-
'bus and off to their hotel but
they stuck around until the last
fan left, This was a perfect way
to end the
.
night because it
shows that eve11 with popular-
ity some bands can stay away
from becoming rock stars (i.e.
Less Than Jake).
All
in all the
show was
·
a:
su.rprise and any-
one who missed it missed a good
show.
:
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.
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.
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.
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.
)
(C)t998C<>ll~~~fFeai,uressyiidicateiOni
i
n6ittiinp-.11www.cpw1re.com
39
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1siii
:
eent
English
Artlst
·
-
.
.
,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.

·
.
·
-
.
-
.
·
-
.
-.
40.Arjierici11
(
CoUegiateMedia{lnitials)
,
.
LasfWeek's answers
-
::~=~
•··/
·
·
7,
-
RomanP~et
~;
43.CountryAlonglheCoast
8.Partofa~ioveFirebox
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l:l(?Wal'd

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9.
Effects
,;
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·
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Sniali
Bird .
-
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·
:
48.
Amateurs
·
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·
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·
St
:
tiigher_
·
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13.Positiv11Congress
.
Votes
,
: .
.
57;Fight
-
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·
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·
21
:
Preposition
. ·:"·
·
'

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58.
Surf
the_
·
_
25.
touch
' ·
'

.
··
·
. .
59
.
A
Type
.
26.
One
Hording
Up
The
World
60;
Entertafl
21:
Express
With
Sound
61
;'
Marna Sheep
28.
SWelling
62.
one
WllO
completes
.
29.
NegatiVe
_
Conjunction
63.
RaspySounds
30.Antek:ipe
'.
64.
Hait
Color
.
31.
End
of Life
65.
Stayed
In
One
Place
32.
Tum
Aside
33.Ulas
N O N E S
IA'os
A'v'A I [ .
ET U OE
'ii°'tM
NANNY
.....
-~
ATTIC
EMU
TRODE
POSTOLANT
WINOS
,
L I D I T H E A -
GA
SITRT
I E R CIE L s
LUNAR
CHEAP-LET
A R AIB
F O
lmEIA
V E
D A R• B L U N T
A LIT E R
S E E D L I N G
E I !LIE E N
- H I P ~ I G E M
AT
MAN
EMOLLIENT
SH
AR
0
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i-u
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.
35;
Made
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·38.Gab
39.
Hold
Fast!
1 . ~ ~
:
CPU1298 / Nov.12. 1998
2.Egg~
.
3.
Mining
~
·
.
41. R\.ll"4)!es
.
.
.
42.Powei-Fallures
.
48.Typeofsldlift
.
4.
AdJess
Lena
.
5. Pemlcious
;
.
a
Caltsldri
CvarY
·

.
44.
LookThroUgh
.
.
49.
My
Friend_
·
_
..
45 . .:.....:..:...:
Haec,
1:1oo
(Lalin)
,
50.
Phiiip
(Spanish)
47. Tutor's
Pupil

:
,
.

. -
·
52.
Moist
·
.
TRENDS:
Editor
shoots his mouth off
ing your guitars down, scream-
•.. i:ontinuedfroin pg'. 11
.
.
ing like a c~strated farm animal
ska, or
.
fourth-wave ska,
I
seem
and
·
sporting the biggest Jnco
to have lost track. First of all,
a
jeans you can find may be a
quick lesson. No Doubt is not
-
great wa{to
·
win the hearts of
ska .
.
And alas, The Mighty
high-schoolers across America,
Mighty Bosstones are not in fact
but somehow
I
am left wanting
pure ska either, If you are
·
still
something more
."
Add thano
.
urider the impression that they
the facf that these ba
.
nds are re-
·
<!re; please by
all
means pur-:
fe
'
rred to
.
as
'
''hardcore music"
chasesomeDesmondDeckeror
and the topic'
:
becomes e
_
ven
Laurel Atkin
CD's. Now that we
more repugnant.' If you
_
want
hav~ cleared the air on that, let
hardcore music, go back to
_
~e
me be so
:
bold a_s to say that
80s and listen·: to.· Youth of To~_
there is
,
a special place in hell
day
.'
··
·
·_
· ' · · ' ·
·
·
''
:_
, ·
':
:
•·

,
_
·
'
·
for you
if
own a plaid suit and
lam
not sure if my riext sub-
checkered
-
braces
;
As our jeci is
·
even music, but
I
must
former A &·E Editor once
saythatlhaveneverbeen
'
abig
pointed out, ska revival bridges
fan of Rave.
I
have)ll.so never
the gap between happy-go-
done Ecstasy (<=<>incidence?).
lucky and happy-go-stupid.
Just how
·
m:ariy
'
drugs
'
does
·
one
·
But if you actually do like this
have to
'
consume before
'
:y'ou
.
music, at least have the common
·
begin to see that square you are
decen~ytoputdownyourReel
trying
·
to create with your
Big Fish coll~ctiQn and pick up
hands? Rave does have sonie
a.
:
Toasters
-
or
Mephiskapheles
socially"
redeeming qualities
CD
."
·.
.
.
however.
For
exaniple,if you
·
·
·
Next
and
by
far
th'e most ab-
hemfned
down
'
each'
·ilia
every
hortentofthebunch is this new
.
raver's pants to ariasonable
group
.
of Adidas g~ar".wearing
.
slie,
you could use the excess
a1ternameta1 bands like Korn
,
fabrido
'
c1othe the homeless in
So
_
uifly,

the
'
Deftones,
Limp
NewYorkCity.
Biz/cit (are these band names or
.
This article is in no way
.
a
newly
-
discovered diseases?)
personal affrontto p
·
r9p6hetlts
_
an~ so
_
on and
.
so
foaji.
_
.
,
Ho~d
.
:
:
t?f
tlt.'r5e
.
stylt;s
:
of-ipllsif
·
;::
IfJt
;
the php11~
_
S;
.
we
,
have a wim
,
1er;
:,._.
·
~e.r~
-199,5;
l
.w?uld ~ost
_
~~_r-
this
'
is the
'
,
worst thing
to
:
ha.p
·
-
·
·
.
tairily'
.
bt: ~rjting. this
·
.
ar\itJe
peri to niusic in the·•~os. Tun-
.
·
aboutho-w whi,Ii)'. Billy
_
_c:oigan
'
.
.
.
-
·
and theSmash'ing Punipkiris_ are
.
;.
.
gi".ing
,
_
J!l~
:
~
.
,
~~~ry
.
~
,
m
i/
1
.Y}ril
{
·
:
:
bacl¢to '8Wand
:
you woul
_
d
.
pe
.
·
.
__ ·
iitrteisir:ig a,sli~eI~s
J
1ss~i:d~
:
.
Oil
New Ki<#On '[he
Bloc
_
k
(par-
·
-
.
ti~ulatly
Jordart)
/
l
began
"
this
.
.

··

.
~cle
.
basically
.
by ~xplaihing
•-
-
·
·
·
'
that
I
have no idea
\1/hafl
'
am
·
' .
..
talking
about right now.
:
(Well,
I
a!Jl.
pretty sure .tpout th~Jc,fd
_
at1
:
·
i
ttjltjg
;
buf
tha~ is,~~sig
_
~
;
:
tli~
.
.
·
p9.ipt)
:_
}f
you~njo.y swing
/
sk.a
,
.
· ,
4d~i:l.as-:cfap-;
;
gr: ~aVe
/.
by
_
~ll
llleans"
go o~fifrici have a
.
good
·
,

wu~
with
it.
Pe!:S
'
ona11r,
:
bvill
.
be
.
:
-
l\'aiti!}gfQ(the
·
next''big'!hing
''.
to
.
tome
.
along sci
I
canJ1ave
·
.
C

something
":
new ,to complain
about.
.
·
.
• ··
,
..
_
,
.
.
-
·
·
:
GOOD WEEKLY
-
~
INCOME
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Morrow, GA 30260
--
:
.











































































r
l
.
, · THli,:tIR<CEE .
NOVEMBER19,1998
...,](''.&.
E· """" . _ _ . -·
• --
PAGE13
N
·t
·th ·-·
has'ii:•fewissues;in•tbismovie:
Th
t
TIJ:
t
s·d
Story
.
-. ew
-
a - --
e
-~=~~'.:1~-o~t;;o~i:: -•'.
~!
re: .
vve~
l
e . :
.
_
:~--- ;•.;. i_/_;_.·:
:
::.,:·>.;
0
• • • •
__ · . ' · : . · _
• •
'<'.' ·-·..
onhistushy.
COilllilgthis weekto
Manst
•: Tiie football-'team is abso- ·
. m ovles
f
''The
~d:~::1r~~~;~~[~:~n.~~ -...
continued from
pg.
11
has been musical director for,
directed, and appeared in many
productions regionally and lo-
cally.
Daniels and the assistant coach
Co-Producer Keri Dixon con-
w_---.
· ..
·
_
·aler
_

_
~bo
_
_
_
.. -
·.y·-·
... '
.
'
~i~t:t;;:=i::~~
:~~!~·:~~i~;b~~h::~:

Actually,thatisnotentirelytrue.
"Without the dedicati_on of
Juniors Michael Seaman and
Jennifer Schneiderman star
Tony and Maria. Seaman is
making his debut on the Marist
stage. ~chneiderman has been
previously seen in MCCTA's
productions of Marvin's Room
and Macbeth.
byCARLITO
Staff Writer
presses her ooly son and man-
ages to regulate his maturation:
process, keepjng it at a level
equal to that of a six-year-old.
As a devout fan of Adam :,Even though Bobby is 31.years
Sandler's comtidic genius,_I
·
old~ he has never had a·friend,
walked into the movie theater
read Swank or hitchhiked to
Sunday night with the_ ~ighe~t
Paraguay. I think that if you
of expectations,, Aside. from
have not hitchhiked to Paraguay
earning the most money open-
by_yourmid~twenties, you have
ing weekend in ,the history of completely wastedyourlife.
comedic:Jilm, "Waterboy" has
. Bobby is an unpaid, self-em-
evoked rave reviews from crit-
ployed waterboy for the foot-
ics, friends and my mother ... I
ball team. He is an aquatic ge-.
' love my'mother v,ery much and
nius who is wise in the arts_ of
I trust h·er as a niovie critic, sol water sterilization and purifica-
decided to treat myself to $7.75
tion. He even invented a water-
worth of entertainment.
.
powered moped.that emits Li-
. fylany reyiews have praised lac-scented fumes. Wait ... nope,
''\\'aterbC>t ,as,b~ing S~~le~'s
that is a complete lie. Bobby
finest film yet. By finest, I am
lands a job as the waterboy for
sure critics are not referring to · WTRNU-:-White Trash Red Neck
Sandler's talents as
a
dramatic . University. Here he is once
mastermind. Sandler plays
again degraded repeatedly for
Bobby Boch er;· a . t);iirty-_orie
his intellectual prowess, but he
year- o
,
l<;l.iv1omma's~J:>~y .. He
is nevertheless determined to
lives
·1n·
the.· shodcii.est shack-· prevent his teammates from dy-
frn~gi~able-that l.iei in the heart
ing a slow death by dehydra-
cif aLouisiana swamp. Al-
tion,
.
though I was never notified,
All of us have our breaking
then~ are apparently-areas .in
points. though;: and so did
Louisiana other. than· New Or-
Bobby .... After an unbearable
leans. Bobby iives in the alltga~
onslaught of insults, Bobby
tor. :infested swan.ip wi_th his
unleashes-his wrath on the
quar-
overprotective m.qther .. (p1ayed
terback The coach, played-by
by Kathy Bates) where the two
Foniy (does he,,h·ave a real
feast ·on· gators, snak~s. and name?), is amazed by his feroc-
squirrels.
· . ··
.
·
·
ity and immediately asks him to
Although he loves_ his join the team. (Yes he does,
it
is
M,<'>Il}Illa yery 1imch, she. op-
Henry Winkler -ed.) The Fonz
Photo from
Peopl~
Adam Sandler continues his post-Farley success with his
new movie "The'Waterboy."
Themascot:eventually dies from
everyone involved with the
cirrhosis oft~e liver. The team
show, this wouldn't have been
does start winning games
possible," she said. "We are
though and Bobby is suddenly
very _lucky to work with such
hurled into academia. Bobby
great people.
_
seemingly enjoys college life
Marist_'s production of West
because it does possess a little
Side Story
i~ under the direc-
more excitement than swamp
1ife
tion of Kristen Coury. This is
· with Momrria.
Coury's second productiqn with
He finds himself being hit on
MCCTA, having directed last
by beautiful women and he even
years' musical Joseph and the
begins to cultivate a relation-
Amazing .
Technicolor
ship with a charming ex-con.
Dreamcoat.
Herotherpastpro-
His relationship gets· off to a
fessional credits include direct-
rocky start though because of ing her o_wn independent film,
his Momma. Iv1oirima says that
directing television commer-
: women are the devil and in re-
cials, and directing various other
cent weeks, I have formulated
theatrical productions.
an opinion.of total-agreement.
West Side Story
marks cho-
After a while, Bobby succeeds
reographer Cindi Parise's fourth
in getting
to
first base and he
production at Marist. She has
even sees his first set of choreographed the last three
bazopgas.~ Qnce again, I had to
MCCTA musicals: Fiddler on
experience the blatant degrada-
the Roof,• Guys and Dolls,
and
tion of· women and boy did it . Joseph · and the Amazing
make my stomach chum.
Technicolor Dreamcoat.
_Parise
Throughout the film, Bobby
is a member.of the Actor's Eq-
establishes himself as a star ath-
uity Union. ·
lete while hiding his college ca-
In charge of the music d_irec-
reer from his mother. Eventu-
tion is George Croom: Cr()om
. ally though, his hormones and
· athletic devotfon· lead him·
fo
reQelagainsthis mother. ~n a .
, _
scene that I
felt
was inappropri:. .
' ate for this film, Bobby thrc?ws
-· his mother into a tub of sulfuric
, acid anp giggle~ sheepishly as
her body°cilsiritegrates. Afthat
· moment~ Bobby was freed 6fhis
oppressor
and
had finally be-
come autClnomous.
Senior Daniel Allen stars as
Jet leader Riff. Playing Riff's
lieutenant, Action, is sopho-
more Christopher Yapchanyk.
Senior Kevin Boyer stars in
his fourth musical as Maria's
older brother and Shark leader,
Bernardo. Playing opposite him
is sophomore Katie McQuade
as the sexual, witty Anita.
Sunderland said the talent of
the cast is evident in their per-
formance.
· "West Side Story
is the type
of play that requires a lot of
emotion and character building
from the actors. The talent
within the club brings the audi-
ence on the emotional roller
coaster ride set within the plot,"
. he said.
After all the rehearsing and
hours put in, Boyer said the cast
and crew are sure of one thing.
!'It's going to be a great
show," he said.
With
his mother gone,
Bobby was now·ableto lead his
team into the championship
game. After falli£Jg behind in the
first half, his coach and team-
mates start visualizing their op-
presscjff
io_
tatalyze rage, a-tech-
nique mastered by Bobby. In
one,scerie, the African-Ameri-
can field goal kicker visualizes
the head of a I<u Klux Klan
I
memberbefore kicking a fifty-
yard field goal. This was the
scene in which tqe primarily
black audience erupted the loud-
est. I was astounded at how the
film's writer managed to take
something so tragic and trans-
form it into comedy. Although
there is nothing funny about the
KKK's actions in themselves,
i;_EXTRA
INCOME
FOR
'98~
!
farn
$500 - S 1000
weekly
stuffing
·
its context successfully enter-
tained. Interesting concept is it
not?
Anyway, the team battles
back in the waning moments of
the game, eventually tying it
with only seconds left. In the
last play of the game, the ball is
put in Bobby's hands and the
outcome of the game is placed
squarely on his shoulders. Un-
fortunately though, Bobby is
suddenly mauled by a Yetti and
although the beast is penalizeq
fifteen yards for disorderly con-
duct, the decapitated Bobby
cannot continue and his team
loses the game. Yes that was
obviously a lie and if you would
like to know how the film actu-
ally does end ... then go see it.
. envelopes. For
details
~
RUSH $1 .00
with
SASE.to:
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l.~~.I
r~··l·:.;'
f.
',~
;
1
fl
NOVEMBER 19
2
1998
byKAARENUMl\1Em
·
· ·
·
·
(4th and 5th) giving Marist the
Staff Writer
8-1 victory.
·
This
-
leaves Marist. second in
The Marist Red Foxes hockey
.
the s
·
uper East Conference with
·.
team got·back on track.last Fri-
-a
·
2-0 record
·and
four
-
points.
day night w1th an
iH
.
victory
.
They trail only the Wagn.er
over the Flying Dutchmen
.
of Seahawks whci has six points.
Hofstra.
Marist hosts Wagner at the Mid
The speed of the Marist play-
Hudson Civic Center this Friday.
ers took its tolJ
()0
Friday the
This wi11 be
a
battle,.accord-
.
.

.
.
. ,
.
.
. .
.,
.
.
;
...
.
,
. . • .
Cin:lephoto/Jm:my m•
. .
With a wih last Friday against Hofstra.the Marist
_hock~yJeam
moved to 5-5 on ,he sea$on.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.-
·
.
13th spelling doom for'
'
the · ing·toR.ineiiart.
··
·
·
•·
,
,
.· ·
Hofstra goalie Terry Ail wood.
'
.
'These are two.teams that dis-
Thanks to the victory the team
like each other and rub each
;;~rack
lo
.500
on the
year

~:ylh;. ':~~~~•~;:
~h~
MCCORD¥
:·futeinatiortal ¢xperietlce
Assistant coach Kent
beat us
in
the playoffs last year.
.
··
·
·
Rinehart said thihvas a
·
good
and we
are
out for revenge."
.
e•vpec
·
·
4-,.;_.;.:r
.
-
to
.
'
pa

y-off
·
·

m·.
..
u
·
-nr~mm·
.
.
_g
·
·
.
Mans
'
.
~

seas·
'
on
..
start for the team
:
.
.
·
Maiist ha~ looked like
·
the of-
~
lUJ.
r-'-:'.'
·
"We showed how
-
much our
fensively explosive team that
.
.
.
.
'.
.
-
.
.
.
speed can hurt other teams,,, he
they were three years ago. They
...
co~tinued
Jrom
.pg
If
of the bali'. I migh( S9ore 20
'.
\iJm
take.~riiµUii
~xi>idbr-ie}i
.
said. "Especially w~en this i~,
have scored
s:r
·goaJ.s
i11. IO
points qrie
·
game, then. 12 the · playing diffei:enfcountrieds
fo
the part of the year
·
when we
games ieaving them
.
at a'5.3
him in
.
a
.
gani'~. l had
,
like ·18
next night. r'h!'1ve been taking
screen b~tierformy.teammates
have to play the talented teams
goals/game average
.
.
.
points; but' he
.
h
.
ad abou.t'
35
extra shots
to
'impr9ve
.
on my
so.they will b_e able to get easier
in the Super East."
: ,
.
.
:
>
Rinehart said tliat
can
beat-
points."
,
·:
.
.
.
. .
.
.
conststen
:
cy."
.
. .
.
.
shots/'. s~d Mccurdy.
.
.

This game marked the return
tributed to their continued hard
Mc Curdy
.
played
-
hj~ high.
He also learned abou~ being a
.
. Off
tiie
tbµ~
):i~
.
enjoy~ h~g-
of jun_ior defenseman
.
'
Ra,ph
play.
school play for Moun(Ver~on
consistenfplaye{from playing
ing tjut' will tiis teammates·any:-
,
Aiello who was
.
out due to
·
a
"Our forechecking and
.
speed
High School located
fo
New
overs¢a~ this past
.
summe.r.
Jqe
. .
time he caii
:
there
art
::°
ti~es
'
separated
_
shoulder .
.
Expected
is really wearing dO\ynteairis;"
York.
'.
As ~
.
seriior
tie fo~~fthe
Mc¢urdywa_s chosen
to
p_l~y'
.
w~re
·
friendly prank; go
·
oif"in
.
to
~~Ip
Senior pan Sullivan an-
he
.sai~(
'.;'fte
·
.
~ry
·
cra,~Jiing
team
·to
a
Ti'-
·
1 record and
a.
on theMAACSurrimerAJl-Star the lockerroom between teain
~
chorthe defense, it was
.
Aiello's
hardeifor r~bo~
_
n$And
ptjilliig
beitlifo
th~
-
~~2ti8naj_pi~y~ffs.
Tea.in i,r'h~p~
'~his"pak
J~ly,. m
_
~t~s .
..
For exaniple,
fcirward
offense that sparked th~
'
R~d
the pr
.
~s~ur
.
e ~
-
~
/:;.",
;,
'
_
:_
.
.
.
In his pei:vip\is
.
y~ar:he1ed_the
·
This would
be
another expeii,.
DrewSrunuelslike to hides one
.
Foxes.
..

...
.
.
.
,
.
-'.
'
·
.
.
PFess.u~e ~.s a k~fwordfor the
tearri'to
a
Section One,·c1ass_
A
e~t~
.
~n
his
'
iife that ~q@i
~peri
o(MbCut<,ly's
bqots
befort{he
Aiello's offensive effort was
·a
game
~g~~st,'i;J,of~~
;
-
.
Marist
Title)n hj~
·
~eeye¥S playing
uph,i_s eyes like tpe MtJcainps.
.
gets' into
.
the loclcer 'room aftef
nic~ surprisi for the Red Foxes
shofari astronomical riuinber
of varsity
~ineam went
;i)fom-:
','lplay~cl OVt!~in J
.
«w
.
anfqr
tw9
.
pl'at:ti~ls:
. :
.
·
. .
,
'.
: ·
:
·.
Rinehart said.
. .
,
,
.
shots
on
Aii{i,66d
'
and
eventu-
·
biried 50;; 11.
·
:
·
.
.
.<
'
.
weeks/' said )•,1cCin'dy.
7

''Not
'.'f
~I ways hav~ ·to go ~ooking
"Aie11o
is one
of
our top
ally
~of~
hifu
dow
·
~
.
Ail wood
jJesaid
he
'airlift alii~ys
fuc{~
·
only qid I
_
exp
_
erience a.aiffer~nt
arotnid the locker
.
room fcifone
'
defensemen an~ is
.
extremely
made '46
·
saves o~t of
Sf
shots
he would be
coming
fo
Marist
style
·
of'basketbali but
:
f~as
of riiy'~~ols
after
practices:
Fi:·
physical/
'.
he said. "Few guys
·
incluoing
:
18
·
saves
in
the first
"i
lqoked atoth~r sctio?ls i~
.
atiie
to
see
'
~ome
·
unbeiieil~ble
·
·
nally there ~as
.
a daywh~re
l
can take him down
.
when they
perioct'alone. Many ofthe
'
sa~es
the MAAC Conferenc~ coming.
s_ights. It waidnteresting being
got
:
D.re\~
t:,a9k
-_.
fot
liiding
·
,liy
;,
hit him and adding offen
'
se to
.
were o:fhighJightreel quality, but
out
of
high school but ~hoose
o
.
ver th~rewhen they had
·
the boot .
.
I was'the'fir'st
6n~
·
in-_the.
his attack was great fonhis · Marist was too much.
-
.
Maristbecause· of it
·
norbeing
politfoai electio11goingOn;
·
As
Jllc,kerro9mone<iaysolliidone
:
team."
Atthe
.
dther end of the kewas
to far from home and .it's aca:.
for
the food,
t
just eat' a lot of
.
of
hi~ b
_
oots in a sneaker box that
Aiello, who only had
'
three
fre_shman goaltender Peter demics. I'mcurren,tlyperusing
.
[niit
/
>
.
.
.
:
.
. .
.
wafabove his locker. He
·
had
goals in his prior two seasons,
Intervallo who played an out-
a degree
ln
·
co)nmµni~a-~ioµ/';
.
:
··
\1/.litl~ h~
:
·
was over
.
there in
no
idea ..yho did
it.
He go(so
scored only 3:05 into the game
standing game relieving Joh_n
McCurdy $aid.
· ::'
·
-~·
:'
),'
.
·
·
::
.. :
:
Jap~; he was
_
abl~ to experi
_
ence
frustrated looking:for it that he
:
giving Marist the early
·
1-0 lead.
N
.
soimc
.
oeluqcucail.
1
. t
.
Yfo
.
mte
1
. rvn
.
uatellsoopnllayyaeld-
.
·
When
asl_cfd
\
vl:wC
.
hi~
·
'.
_mo~t
~
{
<
ho~
/
a
·
_-:
differenf c:ountry
;
plays
·
•·"
JtI,~cset
,
'.
s
.
~n-
·
.
.
eenakfehro
.
sm
_·.·
0
·
.
e
0
·
;
.·.
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,
ith


.
.
·
·.
·
.
his p
..

·
.
~a
..•.
,
c
..
-
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·
:
·
.

:
.
It was his penalty, however, that
memorable Miiist6afacetbalf . tlie game ofbasketbalL
_
He said
.
_
led Hofstra to the tying power
lowing one goal on
-
the power
moment was
F
li~
:
sai~jt
:.
iqµld
_..'.
jh
'
a(t.4ef.were
the ()~lfAineri~
·.
_
Mccurdy has experienced
;
play goal with only 1 :25 left in
play. ·
-
have to be the dunk on Caliisius
..
can te~
_
competing in these all-
mapy aspect ofbask:etballfrom
the first period .
.
However, the
.
J~.l!le
.,
~a.r:.t
~aJR
.
Int~ry31
_
10 is
guard Mik~
,.
¥fC~hY: ;Wh~t
/
~~
-
8.~f
i
~rY
~ere
~e
IllOS!
-
'
h
_
is days atMmmtVemon mgh
.
Red Foxes never looked back
s~owi~g sQf~
~
tremendous
.
also made 1rrnemorn)Jl~-1s
that
:
·
athk:Ucte,am out gf ~l!.of ~em;
/:
School, AAU CamJ)s; andJapa11 .
.
after that, as they went on a 7-0
progress.
· ·
· th~ picture if used:-to promote
:
':
.
but,it 4ictnot help,
·
.
.-
·
·'·<
.
.._
~
.
\
'fhr<mgh, al~
.
these, different e,.C:·
run.
"Peter is talented kid with a
Marist basketball,
·
"All the teams were furidamen~
periy~ces he has been exposed
Aiello's second goal closed
great ~pr!c,e~ic,".he sajd.
''With
'
.,
Dunkin,g
~d
taking players
·
'
tafS()tlild.
,··
Th~f
did-.nqt h~ye
.
to, h~pan only elevate his gain~
'.
out the first period with Marist
his, siie he ha~
..
done
.
Welland
.
off the
·
dnbbl¥is what he does·
.
t!Jf(athletic. ability:,bur
tliey
to anothe_r level. He has had the
leading 2-1 and
.
he got his hat
his'workinllfa,tcVi
'
ni,ractice is
:
best.
.
How~ver, he still feels
·.
whCfoweHrouridedinother.ar-
exposure and experience,!l.OW
trick with 14:04 left in the sec-
beginning to show off."
there ismore room for improve'-
eas
·
of
;
the game. Also the .its'up to him to translate it into
·
ond period tq give Mari~t the~-
.
_
%th
.
this win. Nlaris_r c~es me11t,
·
in~ludi11g peing a
.more
· crow4~
.
were
,
very
0
~upporiive
. .
that fuµdam,eJit~il~onsi~tent
I lead.
.
.
.
:
'
: ·
.
sdmemomenfu.in into
their
show-
consistent scoring threat for the
ah~
diee.i-ed
for:
us
~
during
·
the
.'
player
.
'
The MAAC and Marist
·
Goals from then on included
down with Wagner this Friday,
Red Foxes.
.
.
.
game
.
.
-
--
~ enjoyed m)'self lly
,
Col\ege ar{infor a treat when
.
Todd Hutton (5th of the sea-
November 20, and at stake is a
''I
need to be a ni.oreconsis-

·learning
:
.aboufanother culture·
.
he becomes.that consistent
son), Bill Persson
(9th);
Jason
share of first
-
place in the Super
tent player ori the offensive side
arid style of bask:etb~ll.
-
Wliat
I
player..
·
·.
.
.
.
.
Caruso (5th) and J;1son Provost
East.
'
.

. .
. .
.
·
.
.
·
.
X-rolJD.try
teams
6nm
~ n
wjtti
3 . • ..
))fto .
20's
.
.
.
.
.
·
·;_;
•,:
·
.
.

. .
-
.
,
;;_;

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~
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by
JENNIFER
GLOVER
VanCortlandt Park once again
Massachusetts
and
the
Harvard University, after setting
ship time oftwo weeksago .
.
Staff Writer
proved to be the course of sue-
Fordham Rams
.
their goal to ~
-
15t!J overall.
;
·
Sophp~oi:e Heather
,
Perrine
cess
for
both teams as
it
had all
Seniors Mi~e Melfi ~nd Ben
.
i
'The wcii:rien
'
fin~s!Je.d
-
just<on~
.
contiriq
_
ed.~tg
ru
_
n'
consi$tent1y
:
season, as the men and women
Hefferon fimshe
_
d then cross
point out
.
Qf 17th, falling. one
With her time
Of
19:34, she
ran'. to
T~th,
and 18th place fin.:
~o~ntry careers
-
~t
-
,M:ari
_
~t,
.
fin-
:

.
place behl,nd
;
Army. Ho_w.ever,
.
.
placeda r\!5pectable 92nd ovir-
ishes,
·respectively,
in an ex-
1shmg first and second for the
·
they were able
to
overshadow
·
all.
.
A good
'
immber of the
fe.,.
tremely competitive northeast
Red Foxes. Melfi's time of theirperfonnance-from)astsea:
malerunnersi.J:nproveduPQnthe
region.
32:35.3 was good for 25th over-
son, when
.
·
they finished 25th;
times
they recorded on the same
This season has provided a
chance for
·
redemption for the
men's and women's cross coun-
try teams.
This weekend was no excep-
tion, as they traveled to
VanCortlandt Park for the NCAA
Northeast Regional meet.
·
Both teams looked to improve
upon their dismal performances
from the previous year
_
when the
meet was held at. Boston's
Franklin Park.
. Despite the added distance
all in a very competitive field of
.
.
Fr~shl'Tlan Liza Grudzinski
VanCortlandt Park course that
(6;2miles, rather than the u·sual
approximate.ly
·
220 runners:
continued. to
·
shatter her ·own
·
they won the MA.AC cnampi-
five miles), the men r~ched the
Hefferon fin!shed the 10,?00
personal,. as we~l as
.
Marist,
.
onspip onju~t two weeks ago.
final of their goals they set for
·
meter course m 33:31.1, fimsh-
records with her
-
ume of'l8:27.
·
'
·
The
'
men and.women now
·
set
the cross country season. The
in_g 56th. The women finished
·
She finished
28th
on the 3.1-mile
their sites ahead on the upcom-
.
15th place finish plac~ them
shghtly undet: the goal they set
course. That time is 20 ~econ~s
ing indoor track season. The
·
ahead of quality running pro-
for the first time
_
this season,
·
faster tha[!. her Metr:o
·
Atlantic
·
men and wonien
·
wm travel to
gram~
such
as
the University of tying for 18th in the region with
Athletic Conference champion-
·
.
West Point November 24th.
'I
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TH£
1
ClR.CLE.
NOVEMBERl9, 199s
s.g'o.r
-,
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.-
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~
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-
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.
:
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•·
••. · .
•.
·:~
·,

.
.
rt·~~diP'.us
.
:.:R.Jp()nf-----:
.
/'---
··
·.
·
.•·
·
--
~y
Jan Beighley, Jr.
.
• .
·
=.
,-·.
-
·
.
·
·
..
·
~
.
:
:
..
.
.
What? TheFalcons~Jfiist
·
to Atlanta.
Duke. Bhie Deviis maintains
place in the NFC·)Vest?
Tijetf
:
··_
.
.
With a bruising running at-,
theirµumt,¢i:onerahkingfollow-
must be a mistake.'
;I
refµsb
_
_
to
tack, an efficient passing game
ing
a
thrashing ofFairfie!d. Try .
believe that th&·Fa!c~r~
are
Olli
;
, _.
~d a very good defense; led
by
to
.
help :me
.
contain myself.
top of a divisioIJ/let ·al9rie
:'
~e
.
·.
Jesse Tuggle, Chuck Smith and
UCONN hdids nuinbertwo with
samedivisicin
that
the San Fran-
Ray·Buchanan, the Falcons are
a b.reatfrtaki0:g
/
oefeat of
cisco 49ers reside within.
-::
·
playing big. Big enough to
.
win
Quirinipia~::
;
wh~t?
.:
Oh, well.
Some_how, some way the ~al-
their first divisionitl title in 18
The Kentucky :Wildcats and
cons
~e
8
:-
2 following
a:
3-1-19
years.
Stanford Cardinal also hold
victorf over the 49ers qn
_
$µn-
.
Ken Caminiti;1996 NL MVP, is
number-one votes in the AP bal-
·
Wh ':·.
' T ,
?
'.
_
_
~ts. on .1.ap .

"J•
·
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••
PAGE15
Men's
bJ~ketban
·i
1120
Home vs. Convirse
Ali-
·.
Stars (Exhibition) 7:30
p.m.
\:Vome~'s
:
basketball
11/14
Home
vs:
Columbia
7
·
P:m;
Swimming and diving
(M&
W)
11/21
@
Fairfield
1
p_.II);
.
'
.
.
,'
.
.
.
.
Hockey
11/20
Home vs.
Wagner 9
p.m .
.
Indoor
track (M&W) 11/25
@
Army 3
p.m.
day. .The win over the 49ers
go_ing home again.
l~tirig, but little is known of any
.--------=----------------.
forces all the fans and critics
FollowingSanDiego'slossin
.-
oftheteamsandhm.ytheywill
Tough
Trivia
that have been reluctant to ac-
the World Series, it was made
-
hold up ·over tlie
·
course ofa full
cept the Falcons as a real con-
clear where Caminiti, the Padres
NCAA season.
·
tender to take them seriously
.
.
third
baseman, wanted to go. He
The F~cons a_rea.l cont~nder?
_
.
told the world that he would take
..
Also in the worl
_
d of sports this
Don't look now, but they are
l~ss money to finish his
.
career
week:
.
.
good. Jamal Anderson is one
where it started, in Houston. It
1.
Jake Plummer- He threw for
of the better running backs in
was a class move by one of.the
_
.465
_
yards
,
and
-
~hree touch-
the NFL. He bro!(e
_
l,000
~
yards
:
cla~siest players ln
._
basebali..
·
·
.-
dowp.s
·
in Arizona's 35-28 loss
-
in his tenth
·
ga:nie of the season.
--
Coming off or a season where
to Dallas. Maybe he can be the
He
.
has
·
11 touchdowns. He is
.
he hit only .252, following two
quarterback of the future for the
going to the Pro Bowl.
. · .
' :·
.
.
·
,·'
consecutive seasons iri
.
whfoh
·
Cards:
·
0

.
.
Chris. Chandier is one
·
of the
he
hit
over
:300,
he slgned
a'
two-
2. Roger Clemens - The iilevi-
~?StJffict,~l}t_;ql}~~erb~~
:
~s in_
yearco~tractworth$9.5millipn.
table. happened. By a unani-
th~
·
teague:" He has tlirown
_
for
He accepted the Astros qffer
mous vote, Roger Clemens wins
nearly 2,000 Yard_s. with IS
~
despitea.$21,Snµlliondollarof:
hisfifthCyYoungAward.
touchdown~ coupledwfth 9
_
in-
fer
fr~m the Tig~rs.
_
.
.
.
.
_
.
3. Steffi Graf- She's back. Two
terceptions_
.
Hjs
.
89.5 quarter-
Caminiti is one of the best de-
consecutive tournament wins
back rating is seventh in the
fensi ve third basemen in
·
the
·
following win in Advanta Cham-
lea!iu~Mitng
plilye
_
fs'
ii~
·
niore
rhajo~
.
leagues.
·
'
Over
(he
last
pioriships.
.
than 7oo
·
pas.s
'
atter'ripts
.
For_;1Il
three yeafl!
;
despite
.
his drop off
.
4. Miami Dolphins -
.
After win
ciftqosewhorertlemberNm'fro~
thts season, he prodµc~~ C?f~en~
against Carolina; coupled with
his 9ays with t_h~
.
Colts and
sh;~ly. Froip 1996
to
1998,
Je~s 'loss i_n Indianapolis.the
BllCS,
wake
up;
. . . :
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
'
Caminiti hiis hit
95
homers arid
Dolphins. truce control of AFC
.
Everybody krio'Y(Terraiice
knocked in 302 runs: He pro-
East.behind high powered run.:.
Mathis and Toriy Martin. E~ch
·

vides th~ Astros with a switch
ning attack led by KarimAbdul-
h~~
.
<? ~;re~Hsttc:.~.h.<?.t~~J,q9.q_ h!~~~-'Yitp_soni.~
p~~~!~:S<?.IP~-:-
J_a,}?bru.-.~.
.
.
..
..
:
_
.·..
.
.
yards this seaso!_l ..
Bqtli
calf thirig'µi<!tth'eAstros were
.
s~dly
s:_
.
Frecl<fayior
~
With
'
a
game
pl~y. 'fhe offtmsive)ine isjJl~y-
111issiiig in
·fast
.
~ai-
'.
s
.
playoffs
,
winning 70~yard scamper, Tay-
ing
_
as
w~H
.
.
as anyjn foot~all,
·
against S~n Diego,_
.
lo~ erupted into the inind of ev-
with the possible
·
ex:ceptjon of
After one week o( college bas-
ery prg football
,
fan
.
.
This just
Denver
,
The 9ffense has cotjle
ketball, we
1,rnow
..
:
nothing. You
in,
he has been
·
doing it since
.
togetlle,r, doing their job to bririg
have got to love the start of the
James
.
Stewart
.
went down in
respectabmty, if riot greatness,
college basketball season. The
September.
.
:·.
'.
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:,
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:J
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,
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-
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·>1
· .~~··
r
2
·
·
.
:>
:.1
When was t~e ~ast time the Division I college
basketball national champion was undefeated?
Last week's question - When was the last time the Division I
college football National Champion was not undefeated?
Ans
_
wer - The
1
_
993
Florida St. Seminoles won the National
Championship despite losing to also once beaten Notre Dame ..
FOOTBALL:·Marist
seniots
play
their' final game
.
.
. coniim,ed from
pg I 6
howwewere
·
afami.ly."
.
Along with losing the sixth
leading rusher in
'
I>ivisi~n
1-J\A.
and :quarterback' Tramaglini
from the offensive side.of the·
ban: th~ Red
·
Foxes will fose
several membets
ol
tlie
.
defense
that had
a
hlind
in
the
record
setting defense from a year ago.
That should cause problems
next year, but losing Paul Deckaj
aqd Mario Wilson last year
should have caused problems
also and Marist still finished
second in

total defense in Divi-
sion I-AA.
There will be many holes to
fill next year, but Marist could
still
be
a solid contender in 1999.
Sports News
··
'
Alter
'.rh
·
anksgivfog,
·
The
Circle
will have full coverage of
the undefeated men's
·
and
women's swimming teams and
women's basketball, as well as
a report on the outstanding sea-
·
son of the women's rugby team.
·
.
.
,i
a
1
1i1E
0
ii111
1i
lli■Blirin-
a,
,
,"
·· ·
,
,
i_,,
;
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-11
1
;--~~
:
.; •• ae
i
.
Jlat:l~
.
I:
jt~m
,
s
·:
_
.
ca:n
: ·
Ji>-e
·
ea$i1~
..
,
p-rire]Jased
·
·
at our
Foxnet Student Telephone
·
Sertice
..
,
(:J.ffiee
·
-
iri·
;
nN
·
2~1.
F~r

furthef
.
cJe4tmtand]liij;eba$ing jnform~tion,
give us a call at
(91'-l)
<
SV:5--4400,
-
Monday
-
througbFriday,
8:30-5:00.
·
f l ~

' j ( ~
.
·
~
·
t4e
7~~
S7S StaU,



































Marlst
puts together
third straight
big.win
by
THC>:\\'(AS RYAN
Sports Editor '
It
was the end ofa Mari st foot-
ball era on Saturday.
The greatest statistical era·
ever in Red Foxes football his:.
tory ended with
a
40-14 win over
the Siena Saints in what was the
final game for Marist standouts
J_.J. Allen, Jerry
Gerth, Reid Ellis,
and Darren Valdes.
Allen was once again the big
story. He carried 33 times for
199 yards and for the third con-
secutive game scored four
touchdowns .. Those numbers
allowed him to go over the 3,000
yard mark for his career, as he
now stands at 3,038. His four
touchdowns extended his
school-record to 41 for his ca-
reer.
Still, finishing his career with
a win was Allen really worried
about.
"Wins like this arejust amaz-
ing," Allen said following the
game. "We fell short of expec-
tations this year, but to win here
just feels so great." .
The expectations py .the Red
Foxes were
of
course aconfer-
ence
.
·_ ~hampionship;~ al tho.ugh
.Georgetown and Duque·sne
were clearly the_frontmnners.
Neither of those teams ended up
winning the title, 1s the Fairfield
Stags ·ended up at the head 'of
the MAAC. Still Marist tied the
school record for wins with
seven in
a.
season, the fourth
time they.had accomplished that
sin~e becoming a varsity
pro-
gram
in
1978.
·_ · .
Spe:aking of records, as often
:happens when.talking ofthe
football team the last two sea-
sons, .the Red Foxes wer; com-
ing off their Division I-AA
record~breaking performance
last year when they allowed
only 39.8 yards rnsliing per
game last season. After game·
one when Georgetown's Rob
Belli ran for over 150 yards,.ff
. looked like• the defense ·would
have a hard time coming any-
where near last year's numbers.
But as the season went on, the
Red Foxes adjusted to new de-
. ferisive coordinator Rick Pardy's
system and_ began to play bet-
ter almost every time out. . They
had played so much better that
Marist was actually number one
in the nation in total defense
heading into the game against
Siena.
It was the special teams that
actually gotMarist on the board
first, however._ · Sophomore
Kevin Henry blocked a Siena
· punt early in the first quarter and
fell on it in the end zone to .put
the Red Foxes tip 7-0. The lead
was short-lived however, as.
Siena capfraH}ecl. 9n Bill
Tramaglini's tqmple fosid~ the
Mari st five to·. tie the· score;
Frank Corvino\venfover from
two yarcis' out
9n
the first ~nap
after the recovery and itlociked
like the Red Foxes were in for a
game.
.
Allen put Marist back on fop
on the first play from scrimmage
after the' Saints kicked off.
Allen bustedthrough several
Sierta tackles on
-his°
way to a
70~yard touchdown run. The
. Saints came right back to tie the
game in the second quarter.
Saint's wide receiver Ryari Smith
· got by the Marist secondary and
caught -a -29-yard touchdown
pass from freshman quarterback
Joe Spagnola. ·
Before the half was over;how-
ever, the Red Foxes again got
the ball into the end tone. Allen
capitalized on one of Bassel
Nelson's two interceptions on
the day with a 4-yard touch-
down
hm.
Jeff De Vito missed
the extra point, but Nelson and
Allen combined-to give Marist
a 20-14 lead, and the momentum
heading into the second half.
What a second half it was,
too. The Red Foxes outscored
the Saints 20-0 in the last two
quarters of play. Valdes opened ·
the scoring with llis third inter-
ception return for atouchdown
of the_ year to extend the lead to
27-14. ·
Allen then closed the book on
what was an unbelievable per-
sonal year for him. Touchdown
runs of 13 arid
10
yards in the
final quarter gave him a grand
total of 21 on the season to go
along \Vith_ 1,646 )'.ards. In addi-
tion Allen's father gotto see him
play .for the time in his college
career.
The. tremendous year brings
to
a
close
·
o.rie'
of the' greatest
careers in Jvlarist history, and
Allen· says he's thankful for ev-
ery s~cond of it. · ·
·
·
"Ill
never forget the friends I
made here," Allen said_. ''I'llre-
member all the peopl~ here apd
... please
see
FOOTBALL,
pg.
15
.
Quote·o the Week
"These are· two teams that
dislike. eath other· and• rub
. each
other
0
thewrong ~ay."
.:. Jwckeycoach.KentRinehart
on Marist
and
Wa ner ·
PAGE.16
There
is not
much average
about this Joe
.
.
by
ALFREDDEFATIA,Jr.
Staff Writer
Not many people can say they
learned from the best or were
beaten by the best.
Junior forward Joe Mccurdy
can, He has played against a
NBA player and teams 'from dif-
ferent countries during his bas-
k~tball career.
· McCurdY play~d in Jots of
AAU Tournaments during his
high schoolyears. He would
be invited to these camps prior
to his senior year. :At these dif-
ferent camps he was able to play
against some of the best talent
around the country. These
camps gave McCurdy an oppor-
tun.ity. showcase his talent to
clifferent colleges around the
country.
"There was a lot of talented
people
I
play~d against during
the summertime going into my
senior year of high school,"
Mccurdy said. "I played in a
lot of camps all over the coun-
try."
In those games he played
against players well known in
the basketball world. · He had
the opportunity .to play against
Richard Hamilton, currently
playing for. Connecticut, and
NBA player.Kobe Bryant of the
Los Angeles Lakers.
''There was a buzz _all through-
out the camp that he was not go
to college and head straight to
the NBA/' Mccurdy said- of
Brywt "I actually had to guard
... please see
MCCURDY,
pg.
. 14
Men's.lio()pSitnpr~ssjveinexltibition opener
byJEFFDAHNCKE
. . Staff Writer.
· , Forone nigh_t, anyway, Mari st
College men's basketball ·coach
Dave Magarity -could forget
-about-the absence of ·senior
. point guard Bo Larragan_;
Forward Tomasz Cielebakmini-
mized the loss of Larragan, who .
is out untilmid-December with
a shoulder injury. The sopho-
more scored 21. points on 8 of
12 shooting and
hit
four three-
point field ··goais as Marist de-
feated the One World All-Stars
7 4~(:i7 last Saturday night .at the
James J. McCann Center in an
. exhibition game.
- Junior Joe McCurdyadded 15
points and senior Bobby Joe
Hatton had nine-points, eight
rebounds and 10 assists.
·
.Magarity said he was pleased
with Cielebak's play and wants
to work him more into the of-
fense.
''Tomasz is really going to be
a go-to guy," he said. "We have
to get him more shots."
Marist controlled the first half.
AHattonjumperwith 13:51 re-
m~i11ini started al2-0run,put-
with
.
tivemi~utes'temaining.
ting the foxes up 21-'-9.
.-
..
Cielebak·said he was 'happy to
Hagon and Mccurdy com-
. be playing away from the bas-
bined to score-U of.those J2. ket and does notnlind picking
points. One )Vorld•then-went up the, load for the injured
oria 9-0 run; before Marist went · Larragan.
.
.
to the break with a 34-27Jead.
''I feel much more comfortable
Marist came outflatto start
now that I.can play facing the
the seconcl half, as OneWorlci · basket,'' he said.
"l
don't feel
penetrated the lane and got
,,.
w.AA-~, ·
ow. In
many easy looks. Magarity said
the defense wasa little sketchy
at times, but blamed that on in-
experience.
"It
got a little sloppy at
ments," he saicl. "But any
you have two or three fres
on the floor that's going to h
pen."
One World took the lead
the first time on an Eddie Ri
jumper with just under e1
t
minutes to go. That lead lasted
only·
10
seconds, however, as a
Hatton pass from 30. feet out met
Cielebak's two hands and was
slammed home.
After
an
Orlando Antigua miss.
for One World, Cielebak then
connected on a three-pointer.
That was the beginning of a 16-
0 run as Marist went up 68-55
se
ithout
Larragan. Last year's second
leading scorer will miss at least
- the first four regular season
games.
There is a good chance he
could miss the first two confer-
ence games also, as Magarity
said he will not rush him b_ack
into the lineup.
"He's one of our top three
players," Magarity said.
"If he
is not
1
OOpercent,
i'
m
not play-
ing him/'.
_
The Red Foxes will _depend
heavily on the threesome of
Ci¢Iebak;McCurdy and Hatton
for offense. Magarity compared
this season's squad to that of
1995, a team that was lead by
Alan Tomidy, Kareem Hill and
Danny- Basile,, and also ap-
peared
in.
the -National Invita-
tional· Tournament after g_(?ing
ght now we have three
who are capable of scor-
on any given night," ]Je
''They're all outstanding
payers."
· Once Larragan recovers they
will have four go'."to guys.. In
the meantime, Larragan's spot
will be filled by freshman Rich-
ard
Smith. Smith was in the start-
ing lineup Saturday; the
first time
• Magarity has ever started a
. freshman in his first game.
'.fhe players·seem confidentin
Smith's abilities.
"I was very down when Bo got
hurt," said Cielebak~ "But I
think Rick can fill that spot for
now."
Another freshman, Sean
Kennedy, will also play an im-
portant role in the back· court.
Referred to in the Marist media
guide as "one of the best play-
ers in New York state" last sea-
son,.Kennedy provides tremen-
dous court awareness and bas-
ketball knowledge.
Marist willneed their post
players to step up on both ends
of the court.·
·
6,-10 junior center
Tholllas l(enney seems poised
for a breakout season. Sopho-
more forward Drew Samuels is
expected to develop this year
and provide versatility at the
forward position.
Jason Hastings, a 6-?transfer
from Salt l..akeCommunityCol-
lege, will see significant minutes,
· as will sophomore forward
Donald Vale who red-shirted last
season to concentrate on aca-
demics.
The Foxes will be in action Fri-
day at 7:30 at the McCann Cen-
_terwhen they play an exhibition
game against the Converse All-
Stars. They officially open
Tuesday against Middle -Ten-
nessee St


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