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The Circle, November 12, 1998.xml

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Part of The Circle: Vol. 52 No. 7 - November 12, 1998

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·. :;.,,'.FEA.1:i.JRESL ; .
Sleeploss.isji.istanother .
part
of.~olleg¢ Jife for
rohny:stude~1S;
pg:"s .. ·. ··
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-
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·-. ~~'.;::.-:· ' ;-·
• the student newspaper
of
VOLlJME#52ISSUE#7
Student~
·,.
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.·.,
·concerns
coneges
byCHIµSGROGAN&
BENAGOFS
· enforce the law, but it is unsuc-
cessfui as far as I'm concerned. ,
Asst &News Editor . ·
Freshmencomebacktothecam-
pus and tell
µs
that they have
Although students may enjoy
been drinking at McCoys."
having McCoys across the
GerardCox, vice presidenfand
street, it is a recurring headache
dean of student affairs agreed
for Marist security.
with Leary.
Joe Leary, director of Safety
"Theconcern is whether or
and Security, said he feels hav-
not they are making it possible
ing a:bar that close to campus is
for students who are underage
· an accident waiting to happen.
to drink,'' he.said.
"It's only a matter of time be-
While Cox and Leary agree the
fore· someone gets hurt cross~
major problem lay in the fact it . ·
.· ... •·'
:
;:;spoliis~>·
. . Bil1
'IJ~maglini'sfintl,l92~
me·:tumed :out
tcr:
be ·_
.. '~ .
. ;
. tw¥}fyer.\
-
~
· ·
. . ·
l,arist
College
NOVEMBER 12, 1998
ing · Route 9 after a night of is illegal for a majority of Stu-
.
Circle photo/Joe Scotto
. drinking," he said.
dents in college to drink,. that
Since Opening last year, McCois
lia.s
prompted adm.i11istrativE{c6ric¢rn. towards.the.
Another concern.is that.un:..
was not the case 12yearsago.
underage drinking becau~eof its g~~~tpop~l~rity mn.ong Maris, st~den_tf , . ·
de rag~ students are ·al}o~ed
to .
Unti(
f986/f
h~n.]e~isla~on :
Befotether~ w~re any coffee
~nd lafe
.
~ ~~named to ''Tl'ieRiver
hang out, a~cordingto Cox.
enter.
the
bar, according
io
Leafy ... , . was passed<;hangmg
-
the
~npk-
.
-,·-shops".pr:th~
·
Cab~t,~•stu.~en ts·
'""
·
Room,~!
-
.:.ct,
~
•-
·
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2
,..i-J.c.'::-'''
'
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"'''':"WhiI&somc:.fucidty"wouid--··-''-
·
-· ,~-~
-
---~-
. ~It bothers ine. that
;
stud!,!nts
ing age.from'.2tto'.,1~; there w.as ·. · c6uld'
go
and
'
grab something to
·. The River Room, whicl{ was
'conie'eit.10/a
dru1k
'ormeai there,
are goh1g over there wlio are riot. .actually ait; es,tablis~menf.~n · eat during the day and then plir-
located where the basenierit of it was ·primarily populated by
eligibleto·drink;'; lie said:"The
campus that se~ed
_
alcohohc
chase alc:oho_l i_n the evening.
the.Student Center.is now, was
students," he said. "Students
owner~ tell us they· strongly
beverages; ·
·
This pla¢e was called ''The Pub," . a ''.~ice place'.' for students to . . ..
please see
BAR, pg: 3
Cyl)ei:abbilectures
oil.··
Marist. losfls: suit,
.
sh~dow
.
of
spirituality
.
apf.Je~l
u.nC8tt3.ih
by.JA.iMETQMEO
-. Staff.Wryer
Rabbi Niles,Goldste10is not
your typical religious leader.
Dressed
in
a
fashionable
browff plaid.suit and•. lool<lng
morelike aJ:Crew model, this
rabbi,: writer, :edjtor '.and poet
. spoke fast Tuesday in the Nelly
Goletti
0
Theate:r.
:
HisJecture,
"Confronting
the
Shado.\.\(Side
of Spirituality;"
.
captivated the·
audience's ~ttentjon:
.
.
_ .
.
. Goldstein began his speech
explaining that he enjoys learn-
ing from his audience:
"I think lhave a different style
of speaking; one_ that can lead
to spiritual growth. I. also wish
to learn as well as speak," he
W£1!KLYPOLL
· ~ - ·
~
Do you feel you
get enough sleep
at night?
YES
NO
29
71
-
SEE RELATED STORY, PG.
5
77,is
is an
IUISCinuifu:
survey
ta1or
from 100
MaristS1»dfflls.
·
·
said> "I wish tif have an· ex~
byBEN A GOES
.. ch. an
.. ge of icfoas between me ·
.
News Editor
·
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.• .
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·Mafist
remains
arid my audience:''
·
Manst lost a lawsmt m White
· • · · :

,
· .
Theceritralidea of his speech
Plcins federal co~rtlast Thurs- .
co.mmitted
to the .
was an analogy between per,-..
- da/ tli~t'cf~iine~. the·college -
poli'cf
that.
all
its
~
sonal experiences and their con-
. paid BarbaraLaymless than her •. · · · •
.. · · · •··
· .
• . · · .
. nection to spiritualityiNotuntil
male couterparis becauseofh~r
faculty_ are paid _eq-
being faced~to.:.face witli
'
\Vhat
'.
sex.
..
'
uitably.

. appeared to tie
a:
warm and fiizzy
·. The
ju:ry
foµhd there. was sta~
ball, but· what. was in actuality
tis ti cal· evidence meri are . paid
an
:
Alaskan
.
.. griizly
.
bear, .did
.
"ItfsiwHen we confr9nt the
niqrethlj.IlfemalesatMarist, but·.
'
Golclstein gain a sense of spiri'- . shitclowside ofo~r petsonality
c~e short of. blaming the col~
tuality. :
.
.
that '.inables us tOcome in con-
"leg~
fo6villful discrimination: ·
Whereas he_ was· fearful
tact with spirituality, rather
than·
Lavin, associate" professor of
· throughourhis encounter wjth · our warm and
fuzzy
side,"• he • criminal justic~, filed the suit in
the fierce animal, Goldstein said
said. '. .
.
.
-
. .
late 1996, but the case just went
he felt exhilaration after he man- .
While Goldstein. plays many
to court Oct. 26. ·"
.
.
aged to escape.
roles, the most unusual is being·
Lavin was unavailable for
He. th.en connected the two
the. rabbi ofa cyber synagogue.
comment befo~ press time.
ideas.
That is'~ synagogue on the
, Bruce Wagner, assistant vice
"In.order· to reach· ultimat~
Internet. By making use of tech-
president forHuman Resources,
· spirituality;weinustbeengulfed
nology, he is ableto communi-
said now that thejury has ren-
by God," b'e said. "We ne~ to · catewith individuals who want
dered its decision in favor of
both'Iove arid fear. God to re-
to leammore about Judaism or
Lavin, ifis up to thejridge to
·· ceive both sides of spirituality."
have personal issues they wish
decide the damages she is owed.
Goldstein later explained the
to sort out. It serves as a daily
That will be done using acer-
. main purpose of his speech.
24-hour synagogue.
tain formula, but he said there
«I am trying to give you a dif-
Aithough Goldstein has an
has been. "no specific amount
ferent vision of spirituality," he
alternative look and method of discussed."
said. "One where God is with us
thinking, his blended theories of
Wagner said a damages award
everywhere, even in the shad-
Judaism and Christianity
is expected sometime within the
ows of the most difficulttimes."
seemed well accepted and ap-
next
30
days.
While Goldstein pleaded for
preciated by his audience.
He said the College was
his audience to remain hopeful,
Goldstein is· the voice behind
suprised by the ruling and said
he also offered reasoning for
"Ask the Rabbi" on the
Lavin was treated like any other
when people go through bad or
faculty member.
·
chaotic times. He referred back
1
RABBI
3
According to the official me-
... p ease see
, pg.
to his grizzly bear analogy.
dia statement from Marist, the
coUege operates along the sam~
lines as most in the nation.
"Marist's compensation poli-
cies are similar to those at all
other colleges .:; in America,"
according to the statement.
"The College is considering all
of its options, including
arf
ap-
peal of the jury~s verdict. Marist
remains committed to the policy
that all its faculty are paid equi-
tably."
INSIDE
TODAY:
Partly Cloudy
hi: 50"
lo: 34°
Community ................. 2
Features ....
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5
·A&E .......................
11
Opinion ...................... 9
Sports ........................ 16
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.
.
In an effort to promote alcq
hol awareness, the Studen
Government Association will b
sponsoring a series,·bf work
shops in November. The work
shops wiU deal with a variety o
alcohol related issues.
The workshops will be held:.
*Tuesday, Nov. 17 at 7 :30p.m
in SC 348
& 348A
*Tuesday, Nov. 24 at 7 p.m; ·
thePAR
. .
On ·Nov.
17
Dr. Mario
Malv~ross.a, .addictioll<;>logist,
will spe~k about __ the medical
consequences ot'alcohoi abuse.
· On Nov~· 24 Judge Ronald
Mcqaw, from the Poughkeepsie
City Court,
will
be speaking
about the legal aspects of alco~
h9I related crime.
Literary Arts Society
The Literary
Arts
Society is
now accepting submissions for
their literary magazine,
The
Mosaic.
If you have any prose,
poetry, short stories, artwork, or
photographs that you wish to
submit please put them in the
LAS club mailbox in SC 369.
Submissions will also be ac-
cepted.by any club member.
ff
you have any questions,
please call
Scott
Neville
at
*4052
Chess.Chill'
.
.. Vassar:l:ollege_ squeaked by
tl1e
M¥i_st College' Cµess Clhb
in a very exciting chess match
on Nov. 8;· 1998. Atotal of 16
games 'Yere plaYed
by
&:meiii:C
ber teams: The final score was
Vassar's' 9 ·
wfrls
to Manst's' 7
wh1s·.
Orie
more· win by Maust
would have tied the match,
·· ·
.. On,Deceinb"ertC19.9~
ps'ci
·chess Master, Allan.Kantor,
will visit the Marist campus and
play an comers
in
a simultaneous
cbes~. exl,tibition. 1:00.PM; SC
349, Mr. Kantor 'is:
a
national
tournament director and an·as-•
sistant director
of
the United.
States·••·-· Chess Federati~n
(USCF)~
H~
is also rankedin the
top 2% of chess piayers in"the
United States.
1998 membership is at an an
ti~e high as they have a~eraged
over20ri1embers at their weekly
meetings. On Thursday, Nov.
5th; they had-28 members. The
club meets every Thursday at
9:00 PM in DN 236. X2621
Kappa Lambda Psi .
The Kappa Lambda Psi soror-
ity
will
be
sponsoring
a
blood
drive on Thursday, Nov. 12. It
will take place in the Student
Center, in the PAR room from
11 :30 am. until 5 p:m.
Sign-ups will be taking place
over the next three weeks in
Dyson, the Breezeway and in
front of the cafeteria. Walk-in' s
on ~e day of the event.are more
than welcome.
Donating blood can save lives
and we would appreciate your
support with this cause.
.............
-
-~
:,
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.'·f:.. ,~•,:·:· ·.
What.are
ytiUr
ic:teas,abolll',

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,

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'c
·•
_>
Officers obseryecf a'group
near the Lowell Thonia:f build-
ing; attel_llpting to kidnap a stu-
dent, lastFriday at 3: 15
p.m.,
ac-
cord~l)g to Joe Leary director of
Safety and Security. The offic-
ers told the group to break itup,
but were ignored when they left
the scene.
·
1mprovu1g s~~•a.Hif
e
oltca:rnp:us?
Securitywas later notified by
a
witness wallcing in Beck Park-
ing Lot that a student tied up
another and threw him into a
vehicle. The witness also re-
. ported the vehicle's license plate
number. Security officers ar-
rived at Beck and questioned ·
four students about the vehicle
that had just driven away.
The students said the "kidnap-
ping" was an initiation prank
designed by members of the
TKE fraternity.
The driver of the car was
pulled
over
by
five
Poughkeepsie police officers
and the students were appre-
hended with police frisking them
under gunpoint, according to
Leary. The seven freshmen of-
fenders weretaken to the police
dep~rtmen
t ·
and: ·questioned
aboutthe "hazing"
of
the vie:
tim, a ~arist junior.
\;. ;hbkstude~f
(~f
!JieUe~
"Provide: more
interesting things for
students to do, such
as bigger /Janqs ·and
better shows. "
Ian
Philbric
sophomore.
Afire alarm blared IastTues-
day at 8:55 p.m in the Town
House "A" block. A resident
left a lit candle on top of a book,
unattended, causinga small fire.
:rhe' residenr:·extirigilished the
fire minutes
after the fire alarm
:wentpff; caifsiifgid1uhage
o~ly
·to.-the book. •.
., ·-/ "','.'[ '·
at 12:45p.l;Il. IastThursd11,y, ouk
si<ie the J'qwn Houses asking
Gartland Coriimon;s"E" hlbck
, students directions to.the fresh-
.residents _burned b
_
agels at
men halls. Sec11rity
.was
notified
11 :50 a.m. last.Thursday, sltting
and escorted two malesand one
offthe fire alarms with·a cloud
female off campus. The three
of smoke. The entire block.\1/as
hacl supposedly.,been,prpmot-
e~acu~ied::burno qainage.wa~
ingatelevisionprograrriknown
reported.
-'~.
-.
·
ll!"<;:'.omicStripLive.''.
:;, , , ..... ,_,.,
•, "; ,
.
,
_ . , . ;
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,
.A nois~Os.Jmpiajnt;~~~·:_r:e,
-• ,A
West .Qeciar,resident wit-
ported outside , Oartland
· nessed an unidentified student · Cominon;s ·-·ch6IockihisSim-
rip __ a young
.
tree ouJ
qJ.
the .. d~y atl:50 a.m .. One_crowdwa~
ground last Friday at 2:35a.m~
~ nois1edhan usual and. another
Ho_wevey,
,
the offend~rle~t the
group objected, resulting in a
s~ene pnor to s~curity's arrival, . heated·arguirieriLSecup.fyoffic~ .
A 'I'o~n House
.'T'
block resi-
dent saved hislaundry
frbm
a
smoking was.hing IUachine this
. Sunday at-!
:SOp.m.
The student
pulled the
fire
alarm and the
ma-
chine was shut down. No other
damage was reported (including
the clothes}. -·
Class 2000 and 2001
Thedass of2000 arid 2001 pre-
sents the ultimate talent. show
on earth. Sunday,Dec. ,,; 1998
in the cabaret, from 9:00p.m. to
12:00 a.m. Admission is free. All
Marist students are invited.
There will be lots of free food,
prizes, and ·entertainment.
Please sign up by calling Ben
Amarone at X5779 or Maureen
Sacchetti atX4452.
S.P ..
J.
Communications majors; come,
one, come all.
Learn
more about
life after Marist.
The Society of Professional
Journalists is sponsoring a
ers arrived shortly after ·and
broke up the incident . .. .
.
A student fell on a pile ofgiass ·
·
~ear West p:_~ar, _
lacerating his
nght hand this-Sunday .at 9:15
p.m. The stµdent •was: trans-
ported to St Francis by the se-
curity patrol.
round table discussion on ·
Wednesday,Nov.18, 1998,fr~m
11:30p.m.to l:OOp.m.inDY227.
There will be an· informal talk
consisting of people from the
professional field - pr:ofes~ors,
Poughkeepsie Jou'rnal
staff,
and
RNN staff. Refreshments
are included.
If
you
would
like
a club bul-
letin put into The Circle. write
up the infonnation and drop it
off in the envelope on the door
of LT 2JJA or in mailbox
SC
369.
Bulletins are due the Monday
the week the issue comes out.
Attention: Liz
"Get
a
bar on
campus."
Frank Thorpe
sophomore
'.'Cut
down
on,:
. secu,rityaitd'_have
frats on campus/'.
Denis ·McManus
sophomore
Weekend Weather
. :_. · Pr6'cessirtg Ihailfor, ija#ovaf~ompariy! •.••. ;
Free supp lie~, _pos,tage !
:N,"

selling! _Bonuses!
· .Stwt Innriedia{ely, Ge.m1ip.~J)pportµnity! .
· Plea_~_e'-rush long: self-addressed stamp.ed
· · ·
:eriyelope
!mil
·
~c,
Suite 391
2045 Mt
Zion.Ref
·Morrow, GA· 30260
nonu. ·
Canan
Jamaica
!!
Ballamas
_
Barbados
frill
... 599
---·
1~0M2&~mo
ITING UNDER CONSTRUCTION
me to the
MARIST WRmNG CENTE
ocated Just
Past
The Post Offke In ·
ampagnat Lower
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ir:.;;:;=pg.J
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.
M.::~i!~d:~:s;o::::i;h~
I I
1,J.
1
bar on
_
campus; including
by JENFEMMINELLA
Staff Writer
sophomore Bryan Delaney.
,
"People are going to drink
anyway; so why not offer
it
on
Ci~Jcpholo/JoeScotto
campus," he said.
Marist's on campus bar, called The River Room, was closed
.
Attitude gets you every-
According to Cox/that would
in 1986 due to the change of the legal drinking age.
where
.
.
not be possible today, not only
- - , • • • • • • • - - -
Parker said about six students
Marist students foamed this
because of the
9
nnking age law,
per semester ¥e caught trying
~nd more at:.an alumni panel
but also because it would be
to use false IDs.
Tuesday .
.
The panel was spon-
hard to get students to stay on
Whether you have it
Matthew's Mug is operated
sored by
·
theCommunication
campus.
.
on campus, students
completely by students, and
·
Arts Society wi~h some help
''
Whether you have iton cam-
Parker said fraternizing ha
s
no
t
.
fromAlumniAffairs
,.
,
.
. ,. ~\
:-
.
"
p1.1s
,
stude
"
nts \V()Uld continue
.
would confi.nue to
been a problem .
.
:
AU four pan:elist
_
s IIi
a
fotain
to go offcaijipus tqdrink," he
-
go off
,
campus to
"
Typically there is
_
no faculty
high prC>file positions
,
:wi~hin
·
said'.
:
''And
.
<>f
:
course, there
drin
_
k.
staff member in the Mug when
.
theircmedia
·
fields .
.
The speak.:.
·
would'alw
·
aysbethosestudents
it is operating," he said. "Stu-
ers
\
vete Berilad~tte Grey
('83),
'
who
'
when the bar closed at
2
dents have proven themselves
~itor
~
!".;c~ef
;
Wor~n¢
·
woman
.
~
:
~.
:
~ould go
oh
to
another
.
responsible over the time.,,
~!1g~e
;
BillPalI_n_en( 8
3
)
,
Vice
placeuntil4a
.
m."
·
Gerard Cox
The best part·about having a
Pres1dentandGeneralMana&er
,
Vassar
.
CoUegehashad
'
abar
vicepresidentanddeanof
bar on campus is that it does
of
W~RVIWALL;;
.
The
,
resa
·
oncampiissince1975.
studentaffairsatMarist
no_t give students the chance to
O'N~1II C~Z)
,y
r.ese~r.cher- for
Ray Parker
,
Vassar's associate
------"'-"-"-_.;..-.;.._ mak
e
a bad decision.
NBC
s L<,lte l-l1gJit with Con
_
an
dean said having a bar on cam
-
"It allows students to walk
9'Brien
·
an~
:
.Bar?ara
;
San
c
h~~
pu{h
~
s al"'.a1s beena?eb~te.
receivealarg~Xonbothhands
,
home afterdrinking wh
i
ch we
(94),assoc1a
_
teed1tor,
/
TheL1t
·
'
_
'The dec1S1on to retam a bar
and over
21
students have
like,
"
Parker said
.
"No one
erary Gtiild":
;
Doubleday Pub-
on campus
·
has been reiterated
bracelets.
wants to talk about students
lishing: ·
~.
.
·
.
.
..
.
.
.
over the y~ars
,
" he said.
One of the largest problems,
drinking and driving."
JeffSchanz
,
drrectorof Alumm
.
When the drinking law was
according to Parker is students
Cox, vice president and dean
_
Affairs, s~id _this was a great
changed ih the '80s
,
Parker
s
aid
trying to get into the bar
,
which
of
s
tud
e
nt affairs at Marist
,
said
opportu?1ty ff?
_
r
~tu
dents
·
to
the college had to come up with
is named "Matthew
'
s Mug,
"
r
e
establishing a bar on campus
speak wtth alumm who have
a system of identifying under-
with fake IDs..
is far fetched,
bee~
.
~uc::cessful.
.
"
.

.
,
,;
age people because the bar is
These students are given a
"It would not be possible to
_
"
1.t~s_all a,?ou~ "Yh_o
.
you know
,
open to anyone, regardless of "minimum sanction" which in-
h
a
ve an establishment like that
,
,
_
he
:
said
, •
•-
T?•~
:
gives studen~
·
age
,
.
eludes havjng
,
to
.
att
e
nd and al-
unless the law we
r
e changed
·
an opportumty to
.
have
..
a fac~
··
Parker said a Vassar security
cohol awarel}~ss ~e~
i
nar, man-
back
,''
he said, referring to the
·
\
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..
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rs
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conti~uedfrom pg
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tion of
Jewish
institutions and
Soul: The Role
'
of
Command~
media business
aftyf
graduation,
Microsoft
Network
.
at . the revitalization of Jewish life
ments in Liberal Judaism."
including how to enhance their
-
1-
0
·
North Amen·ca.
He is tli.e editor
of
"
Contact,''.
·d
www.forumsJnsn.com/religion.
.
resumes. Bernade
_
tte Grey sai
.
..
·
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A &o
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abbi
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a quarterly
·

oumal of Jewish
·
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·
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, GP.'A
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He is
·
the
·
Spielberg Teac mg
JI
(ll
she looks atan applicants
.
.
,
Fellow at the National Jewish
.
in New Rochelle, Goldstein is
thought and opinion
,
and his
extracurric~Iaractivities and pre
::.
Center
for
Learning arid Lead-
also
:
a

published poet and 'au
~
,
essa
·
ys
'
and
poetry have ap-
.
vious experien~es.
·
·
·
·
th
·
or
'
·'
or
.
edi·tor of three
,
books,
.
peared
_
in
.. various publications
·· ·
.
·
·
··
f
t
ershipinN
_
ewY01:k_ City.
·
"There are a lot o
·
smar
,
.

ffi
·
d
"Forests of th·e Ni·ght·.
·
The Fear
around
.
the c
_
oun
_
try, most
__
re-
.
·
·
·
·
·
He is tile program o
.
1cer an
·
'
people' out
:
there that you
·
are
educator for the Jewish Life
of God in
.
Early Hasidic
cently in "Newsw~ek'' maga-
. ~ompe~rijfwith
,'
'
:
c::iray said
:
·
.
,
N
·
tw
k
·
a&ou
'
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'
da
.
a·o
·
n and think Thought";
"
Judaism and
_
Spiri-
.
zine.
,.-1
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:
She

said
i
gaini
ii
g experience
e or
,
JI
_
·
now
.
iStmportant.
.
"I interviewed a Harvard
gqiduate this morning with ari
·• .
OK;
GPA; and no Glips from het
.
college rie\\'.spap
~
rt
:
she
s
aid
;
·
•i
twon'thire
·
her."
-
.
·
,
Bill Palmeri said he agrees us
~
..
ing th~. college media cJuos as a
.
.
\earning tool is important.
'.
·
"Bob Lynch just showed me
.
the new
WMCR
closet
,
and no
one w~ on the air," he said. "~

was
·
so disappointed."
Palmeri said he remembers
doing
a
radio show on Sunday
nights
,
for
,
an audience of two.
He said even though no one was
listening, he gained knowleage
from that experjence .
.
.
"By the time igraduat~d~I ha?,
.
:
about 5,000 hours of
an:
tune,
he said
.
Barbara
·
Sanchez said
_
that her
internship doing public r~la-
tions for a local
·
radio stanon
was valuable because she hated
it
"I realized that radio was not
what I wanted
,
and that I had a
lot to learn about public rela-
tions," she said.
Palmeri said he agrees bad ex-
periences and rejection are
.
.. please see
PANEL, pg. 4
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Manst s d1v1~19
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tion by submitting a proposal help improve the pedagogical
at Arhn~t?n !_:!igh School, also
1mposs1ble
_
for classrooms
·
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been collaborating with numer-
to the National Science Foun-
skills in theseschools
t
he said.
had pos1t1ve comments about
perform up-to-date experi
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·
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·
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t~:.rro?r~'.
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-
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schoolsmanattempttounpr9ve
:
posal
·
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s
forJ\1arist tore~eive
teaching skiHs of"theJaculti~s
Science on•the ~~ve has
_
ments bec~e
.
m9re up-,to-date
the status of their curriculums
:
.
.'
permission to foini "Sciente on
at these high schools as
well
as
really helped
_
our science
'
cur-
whe11 tlie n~W
-:
equipp-tent was
.
Accor-ding to a ~arist Coll~~e Jhe Nlovet
·
a prograpi
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the enthusiasm of th
·
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Web page,
~ m~~tmg at Mapst towarcls
.
transfonT1.irig
'j
lle
·
de-
dents
;
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. •
·
she

sa~d
.
·
:
Students are more
Teacher~
_
can now teach more
College;wh1ch mchided 40 high
·
funct.high school'science cur~
There has been positive feed-
enthus~ast1c,
_
parents are
·
yery
effectiyely
:
1:>i:;cau~~
'
they
_
have
'
school teachers
,
was. held in
riculums into decent ones.
.
back from the teachers
·
and
stu~
,
impressed, and the teachers are
;
imerove:<:l ~hei
(
~<lmpi.iter
,
and
1?94. Two major concerns were
To achieve its goal, the ''Sci-
dents of these Mid-Htldsori:Yal-
·
m?l't capable arid confident" ,t~~chiµg
'
sk;ill~
?
:B
'
pµ(teach~
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;
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expressed.
_
.
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ence on the Move" program bas
ley high s~hools
,
accord1ng to
.
~an they_~e~e before
:
"
.
_.
:
and st~den~ aji~e gfve
·
p~
,
sftfve
.
One concern was thatscience
performed various tasks includ
-
_
Molloy
.
.
·
-
Lc):ptop computers, per~~:mal
<
reviews toth~ program; accord
~
..
·
.
was
··
taught
-
·
w
_
ith
;
iriadeguate
.
ing ~
"
rovidirig pr~p~r ~aboratory
. . ..
·
'
.
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.
sc)lool teachers
'
computer~ and
·
testing
·
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laboratory e~mpment and out-
.
eqmpment
;
prov~d
.
mg comput-
.
are
'
very satisfiiid
t
he
.
said.
me~t
_
are JU
.
st
_
_
S~1!1e of t~e new
.
.
.
.
;
~llllY
;
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r
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.
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_
enc;e
_
~eit~»~
date~ learning methods and
ers and educatrng teachers
"_Some of these :tiic~ers
:
1fave
'
eqmpment that
_
1s
.
u
.
se.~-
'
. .
e:s and ~tucl~i;its
.
.were_
.,
~mer
~
.
'
matenals.
_
..
.
_
_ .
_
·
.
about the use
·
of these comput-
told _us tl~at e1el) th~
,
most un-
_Lesser
_
ela?01
:
~te1 on the_pos1-
.
:
~?e.~ed
-
~<l,all,o{tll
_
eirc_omrrients
·
Therewas also a need for sci
~
.

ers.
.
.
.
.
.
motivated high school kids
ti
~e.
effe~ts this
:
n_e~ s?1:~~ce
,
\\'.
~
re pos1t1ye,
"
~h~
~a,1d .
.
Maristl<lSeSJolm ".Jack''Doµgltefty
eqmpmenthash"41
~
Arhngton
.
John
j_
"Jack;:
::
o
·
ough~r
t
y,
.
'
.
.,
.
·
raising
;
·
and
whos~

:
name-
:
ad~
-
~
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~d
'
the
.
-
form~r director of deyeloplllent
public i;ela-
college'sfootbaHfie\d
:
,;,
.--
.
_
.
_
.

·
at}'\1arist,
:.
died at his)1ome
iri
'
tions.
_
He
In 1~67, heJi~lped i
~
P.I.arinJng
Staatsburg on Oct.-1
L-
He was
.
was
later the 150th anniversary
cefobra'-
88.
-
.
.
-
.
"
employed tion of theAounding
;'
of.the

_
.
He had b~en iuffering fro~
.
by Westem Mari st Brotheni'heid
:
at the
'
Ho-
:
the effects of stroke in.1997,
:
ac
-,
.
Publishing
tel Commbdore. The same year
cording to his wife.
as director he inaugura~ed Jhe
-
annual
.
,
Dougherty had received his
Dougherty
of public re-
President's Commun1ty
B
·
n;ak-
B.S
.
and M.A
.-
in education from
_.
.
,
_
,l
a
tions and
fast at Marist.
New York University and went
e
_
ducation from i'954 to 1964.
.
Dougherty later serv~d
-
as de-
on to become a secondary
·
Heth.~njoined¥a6.sti~ 1964
velopment consultant
o:
iri
:
school teacher in the New
.
York
as directornf de~elopment
·
Marist's Office of Gollege Ad-
City school system from 1935 to
Dougherty he!d the
.
position
vancement from 1976 until his
1937
.
He then joined the Ameri-
f~r 12 yeai;s
.
[!~ri
.
ng
,
thattime,
death
.
,. ·:.

. ;
..
.
,
,
:
,
.
.
can Red Cross as director.of
i9J9.65,heo
_
rga.n:i~~df9rfyla,rist
..
·
.
A memoriaLMass
.
was
·
held
safety
:
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-
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,
.
tne,P~f!l;~
c?~tt:WPP!"WY
:
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at
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qollege
.
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canDmnerml'i~Y'!.!Y.or\5:~!ty
.-
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~f
Sai~t FrancisJ-fospital in New
h~
,
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York City and Poughkeepsie as
final!cial giftof$_2
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~,QOP
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~
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He is survived by
-
his \Vife' of
consultant and director of fund-
cal doctor, Aleski Leoni doff over 50 ears, Pe Dou he
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,~"B?s
s~>
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NOVEMBER
12,""t998
·
PAGES
.
Tbe

camp11s
that
·
never sleeps
_
_
_
by
KATRINA
.
-
.
FUCHSENBERGER·
-- Asst. Features Editor
the professor is talking about,"
she said.
_
.
O'Brieri said there are other
·
problems which result from lack
of sleep.
.
_
·
.
_
'-
From noisy housemates to
"Some stu~ents may drink too
early iri.ornjng

practices
to
-
all
much caffeine, take pills; or even
night cram sessions, many stu-
smoke cigarettes to ~tay
dents
-
suffer from lack of sleep.
awake," she said. "Some stu-
.
Jane O'Brien, director of dents may even drink aicopol to
Health Services, said for many
·
go to sleep but this winds
·
up
students getting eriough sleep
interfering with the sleep pat-
can be hard.
tern .
.
-
All of these things
_
have
"Students have
-
~
lot of de-
~egative side effects."
.
mands on their time including
-
According to
.
the Fall 1998 is-
academic; social, and athletic
sue of "Student Advantage
demands.
_
_
Soine
students may
-
l.'vlaga~ine", caffeiµe's effects
-
even have a job that takes up a
vary from person to person,
-
lot'of their time,"she said; "To
however," if one ingestir
;
_
too
fit that aH into a°busy schedule
.
much (each little Vivarin or
can be very difficult:
_
If some-
NoDoz is equivalent to two cups
thing has to suffedt wili be
ofcoffee)onewilllosetheben''-
sleep."
·
-
.
efits
-
of caffeine such as in-
.
Jessica Macias, junior busi-
creased alertness; reduced
fa:.
_-
ness major, said
'
she used to
tigue
_
, and qu,ickly acq~aint one-
suffer from la& of sl~ep.
self with its drawbacks such as
_
_
_
_
_
Cin:le photo/Jeremy Smith
Sophomore Bill West rests under the warmth of his covers, trying to catch up on some sleep.
"Every nigh( I stayedilp until
irritabil_ity, anxiety, and head-
almost 2 a.m. in the
·.
m~rning
~ches .
. ;
_.
__
-
-
studyi
_
ng
·
and
_
then I had to get
O
'.
Brien said th~re are things
up at 5:30 a.m. for swim prac-
students can clo to get more
,
~ice," she
·
sa
_
id: "Having to
sleep.
_
study, beti1g
on
a team, and be-
'.
'Students
.
should cuLdown
-
longing to clubs takes
a
=
toU
_
· on
-
on caffeine, alcoiiol;Jmd ciga'-
_
yo~r ~
.
o~ri(i:_>f:,~l;eJ>:'.
t ,
.
;
,
!
/.
:
-
· reue
_
s~ They. shoulciiaiso avoid
i
.
.
O'Brien s'aid thete

are
mariy
,eating· a
'.
bijfrneal
anc(d~nl<lng
i
_
se
..
.
_
Yn
·
,
:
_
oipu'pg.
~
_
ih
_-
~
_
:
ms
·
~
_
l:-
_
e~_
-
e:
~
p
~~
-
-
-
-
?
_
·.:
_
:r
_
}~
#_cil
.
_
:
_
·
_
/
_
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.
:.
~
_
_'.e
_
_
_
-
_ft
_
_
.
_
i:
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~
.
?
__
~
-
--
,

-
iiquidii""hffore
:
going
,
to
/
bed;'(
-
- she sajd;
,.·
,
..
,,,,
-
-
~
<
,
,,
·(
.
_
,:
..
-
:
·
''Some students
may hav~ .
-
·
O~Brien
,
"s1d students should
problemsw1th
'
staying
-
awake
irt
'
also
·
avoid procrastinat111g:
·
.
'.
class and riot remembering what
'.'Students
,
sh mild also
try
to
'
A
·.
coye
·
·
dedicated to
1
memories
of
the past
_
byKATRINA
FUCHSENBERGER
Asst. Features Editor
, __
,
.
:i
BrQther JQ§~ph
-
J3e!~i:iger,
Frencli
\
prof~ss§r, saip
:
he_
-
b~:
lieves the
·
vandalism resulted
. from the turmoil of the 1960's.
manage their time better so that
they
.
are not overwhelmed with
what they have to do."
According to the Sleep Disor-
der Center at Columbia-Presby-
terian Medical Center,
-
there are
.
other sleep disorders that have
c~n
:
have
.
serious: effects
·
on:
-
a
·
person
·
"·r:·
.
:
~
-,-
..-
:
_•;
.
.
;_.:\
Recent
.
:researcJi
';
lfas
:
deter-
mined snoring
·
.may:,have
'
ad-
verse medical
,
consequences
and 1s also
a
prominent symp-
tom of several dangerous dis-
orders 'of breathing including
sleep apnea that occur in sleep.
Insomnia is the ability to fall
asleep or to stay asleep.
Poor sleep during the night can
be serious problem in itself and
can
result in decreased wakeful-
ness; c:oricentration;
.
and
p~tfor-
'manteduiiif
'tlteda _
,
.,,
:,
' ,.
·
·
,
;,
-
wJildng
/
~ng;
:
lcreliriiiiig,
and
the
·
v~rf'.orinarice of
·
otlier
- be~~yiors in $le~p are important
symptoms which are too often
- ignored.
_.
·
"The late 1960's w
.
ere very
Many people may wander
tough years i:>ecause
,
all thekids
,
along the path from Sheahan to
were being
,
sent to Vietnam. by
,
_
Donnelly and
·
wonder what the
the draft," he said
.
"They were
big white altar and the cave-like
very
_
upset and became rebel-
,
structure are along
:
the
_
way.
__
_
lious/'
The cave-like memorial is
Brother Paul Ambrose said the
called 'The Grotto of Our Lady,"
problem of vandalism depended
·
and was built by the French
on the students that were here
brothers in the early 1900's.
at the time.
It was the first station built out
"There was never a problem
of 14 stations
'
the brothers
of vandalism when the school
would go to when they would
was made up of only brothers,"
make the stations of the cross.
he said. ''There were only prob-
.
·
At first it was used as a place
!ems when other students be:.
of meditation and as the last
gan to attend Marist."
stop of the 14 stations.
According to Ambrose, there
Itwaslaterusedasamemorial
have not been any problems
for all the students that passed
with vandalism in a long time.
away before gradQation.
_
_
. Another tradition for.the
A stone with all the names of brothers was to hold a prayer at
the deceased on it is placed in-
the cemetery, which was built
side the grotto.
where the McCann Center is
·
The white altar is called the
now.
"Outside Cavalry," and was do-
Forty-eight brothers were b~r:
nated by the Class of 1942.
ied there and the prayers made
Three statues of Jesus, Mary
were dedicated to them
:
·
and St. John, were originally
Ambrose said these customs
placed ori the altar. These were
chan~ed V,1ith ~e tim~-
_
vandalized by some
'
of the-stu- -- ''The customs were d1scontm-
dents during the l 960's and
ued, but the spirit remai
_
ns the
eventually were removed.
·-
-
same," he said.
Built in the early 1900's, "The Grotto of Our Lady," serves as
a memorial for Marist students who died before graduating.
A~cording to Belanger, prayer
the 14 stations. The rest of the
services have not been held at
stations were taken down when
the Grotto for a few years. -
Leo Hall and Sheahan Hall were
''The most meaningful service
built.
I attended atthe Grotto was four
In the I 960's the grotto was
years ago when a student from
also going to be taken down, but
a sorority died," he said. 'The
the students protested this.
sorority organized a candle light
Accorcling to Belanger, when
ceremony which processed from
the library is finished a
"Heri-
the chapel·tp the Grotto."
·
tage Garth" will
.
be placed be-
·
This Nov:, a month long me-
tween the chapel and the library.
morial service is being held for
It will be a relaxed, shaded area
the deceased.
with a bronze statue of Father
Booklets will be made with the
Champagnat talking to stu-
names of all the people that died
dent~
.
-
.
,
who were once a part of the
Belanger said it will be a nice·
Maristcommunity.
piaceforreflection .
.
. ·
Each day a different group will
"This will be a nice focal point
be
meqtioned. A mass will also
where students can go to and
be
held.
meditate," he said
:
"Itwitralso
.
The grotto arid the altar are the
be
a ~_f~r place
.
tc:, go to than
only two monuments left out of
-
.
. the Grotto."
Sleepwalking presents a dan-
-
ger of accidental injury and, fur-
thermore, can b~ a sign of medi-
cal illness or psychological
stress
;
.
_
_
-
: Althou'gh
·
these
·
are serious
di!;orders,

lack of sleep can also
. have
.
.
very serious
effects
on a
..
p~t~QJ!-
.. -.::
.
:
_
:
__
.
:
.
~
-
_
-
_
.
.
...
:'.
-
·
,,
Madas·said
:
sJeep is
-
very
fm
~
porta~t
to
her.
·
"Ithink the amount of sleep
a
persc
:
m gets affects their whole
~ay,"
she
said.
Students
reach out
to youth
-
byELIZABETIICARRUBBA
Managing Editor
Marist students have the op-
portunity to be positive role
models for children who are at
risk of dropping out of school.
The Marist Coliege Liberty
Partnership Program has been
working for eight years to pro-
vide intervention services that
influence children, from grades
five through 12, to graduate
from high school and enter col-
lege or the work-force.
There are currently 27 Marist
students who are assisting the
partnership by working or vol-
unteering in after school pro-
grams. More students plan to
help on-campus events for the
children and the program is look-
ing for tutors for the spring 98
semester.
Susan Repko, director of the
Marist College Liberty Partner-
.
ship Program,
·
said school per-
sonnel identified the children
based on their low attendance,
poor grades,
tow
self-esteem, or
'
-
.. . please
see
MARIST, pg.
6
[lj
."
/
J

















































































NOVEMBER 12
7
1998
Procra~tin8tion
kef
fij
StIC~~ssfOr
.
SoJBe
by JENNIFERMATARAZW
procrastination- derived from a
.
.
C~ale s
_
~id tlii
-
~ore
people
'
.!;~~
·Ba~
11l°g~
from}p~yz-
/
J~~~~s."f
i
;
ip~f
..
th~
i
e,nd.
'.
,
'
'
',

.
Staf!Writer
Latiilwotdthatmeans'oftonior.:.
put 1t off, the more worse off.· mg symptom ~f'depress1_on
:
9r
,
Irithe.careeqlfatlhav~cho-
row'-isriotjustarilatteroflazi--'
they are.
-
. :
-.
,
anxietydisord~rtoap.
_
~vecyday
.
·
sen;
I
bave}o work with
.
tight
Picture a student,who on the
ness or of poor management,''
.
"Some people tend to deriy
aversion to
'
anything"from
d9:
·de
_
adHnes, soit is
·
better that
I
night
before
a
final exam, begins
.
she satd .
.
"We
put things off for
the importance of getting their
ing the dishes to
.
balancing the
lqlow how to deal with it now,"
studying at midnig~t, or, who
_
a range ofreasons{'
.
. _
_
_
work done," h~ said. ''The prob-
checkbook.
.
_

.
_ .
. ,
. .
she said .
.
_
.
·

.
_
starts a 20-page te'nn paper two
.
- _A
procrastinator's vocabulary
lem with
·
that
-
is
,
it could
:
Pctlnt
,,
Canale.said-Albert Ellis,
'
ii
fa-
:
J
(}anale
·
saig procrastin_ation rs
.
·
days before it is due.
·
· ·
·
·
·
can consist of
HI'll
do it tomor.:

them
into
a comer,\vhere they
·
moµs psychologist; believes
_
·a
trait that:conies ab9ut from
'
Many people find themselyes
.
.
.
row;, "Just after this" and the
do not have
time
to complete a,. procrastinators have a false:be.,.
·
·
1eaniing; conditioriingiand1he
·in
this rut of putting off workpr
..
·
exe;
.
p9pular; "I've g~t it under
parti£u
.
lartaslc~?
: _-
_
, ,
;
:
.
-
lief that it
;
is
·
easier

to
·
avoid
erivifonment;
_bi.it
also
·
the'.kind
chores until the fast po,ssi,6.Ie
,
·.
c_onfrol,'J_
;;
·
.
-
.
·
.
Eileen Forrester, junior com-
things that are hard to do,
.
then
·
,
.of'.
temperarilenf and
·
cons ti tu~
moment. This
-
so-called ruUs
. .,
.
Often the causes can be linked
inunicatio~s major, said she is a
-
-
,
to actually get to them.:and ac:-
tion
you are born
with:
·,
- '
-
'
.
.
known as procrastination.·
,
.
.
with
our sense,ofself-esteem,
procrastinator.
,
.
r
..
,
_,
:
_
,.
complishthem;
,
:
,,
.
.
.
.
.
.:i:'.'Some
.
people are m.ore se~~
\
Procrastination is putting off
.
.
or
.
,
tied to
.
a need
to
avoid pres-
"I
do better when there is pres-
".
?Ellis
says:· that although
it
,
ous about
,
t~ings than'.•otliers
doing
something until later,
µ
.
,
sure.
But,
it also can be linked
sure, because
I
know it abso-
.,
.
may s
_
eeni
·
easier
in
thcf
'
short-
and
,
they worrymore;"·he said._
delay. Many procrastinat9,rs
,
.
to
~ form of-thrill seeking, for lutely hasto be done," she said
.
.
run, in the ~ong-run, you're still
"Those kinds of peopl~ are less
find themselves working under
example, the
.
adrenaline rush of
"If
I
try
to do
.
work ahead of
,
going
·
:to have to do them,
oi:
li)cely
,
to be procrastinators.
extr~me pressure. of deµdHnes .
. _.
a
deadline;.
,
,
.,
,
.
time, nothing c9mes}onie." -
you
'11
regret not doing them,"
Whereas; •people
-
who tend
\to
,
Although p_rocias
'
tinit'io.n
. _
Jo~
_
eplj,'(;inale, a~sociate pro-
.
'Whereas,
Andrea Newsom,
he said.
.
.
_ .
ininimi~thingsorplacerespon-
tends ,to
.
relatejo students and
.
,
fessor
-
in the psychology de-
junior psychology and special
.
C::anale_ said people think they
sibility more outside themselves
school, it can al_so include; quit-
partment at Marist, said
.
he be-
education
·
major, said she can-
can tal.ce the. easy way out by
than on themselves,
.
~ill beill.Qre
ting smoking.joining a fitn¢ss
:'
lieves. p~opl~
.
p.1;9c,rastinate
riot leave her work until the last putti~g t
_
he
.
assig
_
nm.
_
erits <?
.
r
JikelY-.!O. pr()~rastinafe;'.'
.
i
it
prograin or doing the dishes .
.
som~tim~s around.tbjngs
>
they
-
minute.
.
..
-
:
-
:
,
.
~
~
\
-
<:
·
',<;
·
tasksoffuntillater.
/
l

\
_
-
::
{
'
·
}
,,-_
·
Cariale
'~
sai_d
:
ariyoile
,
cmild
We all do it, whether we realize
.
do not have a lot of confidence
"If
I
do leave
my work
until
:
:
;iEHis';says iri'the:ioniEfim,
-
~--over'comeprocf,istin~tiori;
?
½'
it or not.
.
·
-
.
,
111.
.
.
.
.
.
.
theend,l'Hseen_cimy
;.
t!~!ire
"
~<?.
whil!_Seemsi~~e
:
thi{el!Sy way;
:
,''All
you
·
haYe
.
to
'
;
dciis.orga"'.
Dolores Kong of the Boston
"People avoid attempting
stressing over'it
;
" she said.
"I
:;.
out, may cause more problems,
nize your time into blocks or
Globe,
·
said psychologists are
things or getting things done on
like getting things done ahead
-
·
then actually facing the difficult
periods of time that are all?
_
ttt!d
_
·
beginning to understand why
time because they are afraid of of time; so
I
-
have a
·
chance to
task," he said.
.
-
. _
_
.
.
foreach task,"
he
said,
.
"Like
'.
people procrastimite.
not doing weli and failing," he
check it over.,,
.
.
Forrester said she always gets
.
any habit you can work
'
adt; and
;
"What they've learned is that
said.
'
Researchers say procrasti~a-
her workdone evenlhough she
:
change it.1
1
·
<
.
1
MARIST:
Students
help outcomrimnity
... continu~dfrof!lpg. 5
during after school programs or
.
terestecf in
·
school.
'
The chil
~
in a classroom.
dren usually sp~nd
:
time with
'.
Repko said the'program's fo~
·
their tutor and h
'
ave
a
·four
of
·
cusforthis
·
yearisonusingcol.:.
the campus.·
_
·
, )
·
Iege students>~arist students
_
·
:Thirty
middle school students
.
.
"
are ab
_
le to enhanc~ the fr pro-
-
from
.
tl)e pr_ogtani
\(t.tended
_
an
negative attitudetowru:d schpo
_
l.
.
:fe!isionaLdevelopment through
.
-· pn~cainpus
:
Hall6wee
_
n
·
par:ty,
·
~fost
'
of-:
th~
:
~hi}dren
\
aie
~
µom,
,
workingwithi <livers~ gr6up of
., ,·
which

was
'
·
sponsore°d
·
by
:
the
'

Single' parent
'
homes
;
arid
'
hen-'
:
.
chilcfrfri'fu'ldtlrrough'interaction
pfuxil
Pibj~ct:
:
·
Fdur
.'.
'
iirt
.work-
,.
efk from
·
.,
foteraction
-
with a
.
·
with
'
scho
'
ol
'
persoiiliel
;'
The
tti~ .
shops\u-e
'
iilso

fu.k.ing
'
pla'ce
:
ev:,-
young adult:
'
.
.
.
tors also meet as ·a
·
group
_
dur:-'
·
eiy
Friday
ort
campus for migdle
.
"I came on
.
board in August
ing
the
semester
.
to
·
share their
scliool students.
·
.
.
-
'
andl'm am!1Zed at·whatis of'-
experiences .
.
·
.
.
.
.
'
JeffTome, a"recenf transfer
fered through MaristCollege,''
'
.
-
"The tutors
,
are
'
an impqrum,t
sttideritfroiri the Schoolof\TJ.~
she said. "The students are so ·
:
part cifa team and thei are fropt
'.
suaf Arts
i~
Manhattan, is or-
.
.
interested
:
and ifs a
.
wonderful
line workers,'.'. shesajd.
:•were-
,
ganizing
i
the' work'shop and
i:esqurce
.
that b~ne'(iJ
.
s
tli'e
kicls;••
ally
:
respectthem
and:
their
in:
'.
·
teaching the chi]dren.
:
The first
·
- •·
0
:
The
.
prqgr
_
anJ is
·
fu
,
nded
put is important."
·
workshop took place last Friday
_
through
a
New.,York Stat¢ Edu.,.
-
. ,
·
Shy said:th.e c@clten benefit
and
tlley
·
we
_
re ~ught atyi_:,e,
,
of
cation giant
anq
serves 22$
chiJ-
.
through
th~
:
interaction with a
Pointillism; which i's
.
finger;;
·
dren; betweefr six
/
schq9ls, in positive role rnodel and expo~
·
painting witll
'
ink arid leaves.
·
Kingston and Poughkeepsie:
·
·
sute
to
the college. She also said
·
"The experience was enter-
Th~ t\itorsrepresent~
:
variety
this is awiil, win-situation.
.
taining and
it
was
furiworking

.
of majors
/
A
·
stiideni•
niay.
oeC:
'
"\Vith the middle
·
school stu~
with the kids;'' he
.
said.
:
"!spoke
,
-
come a ~t1:>i- with
the
i>r~reqµi-
dents, iCgets them
on
campus
with some of
the
·
kids aftet the
··
site of taking the tutoring
tiai
.
~"
and helps
·
them to s~e that col-
class
w~
'over and some said
·
ing
'
that is
.
offered through the
lege can be iri their ftfture,,,she
that they had
·
never done any-
Learning Center.
:
,.
.
.
.
_ .
said
.:'
-
.
_
. ·
·
· -
thing l~ke that before.
They
had
.
The tµtors help children with
.
Trips to
·
Marist are
'
tiseci as
a
art talent and
ha~
never explored
-
homework and computer skilis
motivator and to
keep
them in-
it"
-
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Kll§HART

-wid.t(#t1~ay and
die?
Well,
I can
J
,
,:.
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.
·
.
.. ·
._
sr~fi\Yrit
_
er '
.
.
_
·.·
.,
,
.
-~
.
.
.
only hope°'S() .
.
How peaceful and
1
·
,
.::
,
contentwo~
_
d our global soci.:.
-~Sonietfrnes peopl~ wil\(go
I~
.s
e~
:
.J?;,!f
er
fry
one ~ad an equal
.

V
any
.
lengths to avoid changei
·
opportun1ty~to exist unham-
r/
v'
'Uheyperceive it as dangethiis
pe~~~1theptejudicesof~g19:"-
:
"
-;-
·
.
~
r--"
,
:\
·
v
ahd detrimental to
·
society'.
.
bal
_:
s~ci
,
ety t~a! seeks
_
t()
_
_
2P
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:
-
.
. .
.
-
~ .
,
,
.
.
·
:
_
-
~
·
·
.
.
.
.
·
Change is dangerous and detri~
·
.
press
,
~nyone
:
or
-
~~ythmg that
-
-
·:
.
.
,t'_I
don't
kno_w.J<athy. It
seems
like!
have been 'ostrich-
'
~ental?
Hmnim ...
Was endjng
~~
dot1tnormfrrodts pi;~scribed
·-~
~
~~iz_ed' sif"lqe
',
daY.
on
,
e.'
_
'
slavery
a
bad thingr I-·donot
·
µonii'.
--'$~::r
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tlµnkm~y people\vould argue
.
'
h~~i~a-~;llf_ ;ti~iety. by deaHng
The ingividual fighting for
that,
:
but some cons'e"rvatives
--.'::
r'
-
-
··
·
withitsturrentirijtistices we can change is
'
weak, but the masses
st~it
·
i~si~t
,
th~t
~~ari~e ~atises
w_as
:
ending
'
slavery
.
moveforward
_
to a more
progres-
demanding change is powerful.
iri'egar~~~e
''
~~ge
-
!~
,
Q!-it
~od
~;'
;
,
d
bad
thing
·
?
_.
_
_
l
.
do
·
~,
siye, egalitari~n
_
state.
Do not let the status quo tell you
ety How can we progress as a
··
·
S
II
l'b
l
that everythingis good and that
. S<>~iety
"
withoht"chairge?
,
;
-.
:
.
·
·n
.
o_t 'think
/
many
··
caii1:/: r:;i~a:
=~~·;n;~?'i
this is the besttQat it is every
O',
Conservativefosuallyconsist
::
people would
,
argue
proudlyadmitthatbotharetrue. going io be. You know that is
of members oftl,Je
:
cu~en
.
t sta,-
ihat
'
but
some
con.;,
'
lfirmly believe that advocating
not true. Be courageous, stand
·
tus quo. They have their power
·
·
'
'

·
.



.
·
for social change is the only way
up for your rights and demand
and they do not want t
_
o giveit
servatives still insist
.
we can save ourselves from the
a better society from yourself
up. Infact, they
_
wo_uld prob-
.
that change ~auses
mess we are in now. We have a
and your peers. Do not hide be-
ably
_
do almost anythm~'. spout

irreparable dam-
consumer driven market that is
hind what has always been.
any
·
untmth
_
or
.
defame any
.
· ·
.
-
-

.

·
being taken over by monopo-
Nothing has always been. Will
cause t(! protect their own sia-
age to
OUT
Society.
lies that tell us what to buy and
you be a part of the change, or
tus.
·
for how much
.
You delude your-
will you be one of the ones who
Conservatives
·
who resist
.
Think about it. Would pc:iv-
self if you believe that our eco-
will waste your lives fighting it.
change
are
simply afraid ofloos-
erty and war exist
as
we know
no~c system runs simply on the
It
.
is such
.
a privilege to be
· ing the power that they posses.
.
it?
·
Or
,
\\lould our global society
theory of supply and demand.
·
where I am. I do not think the
The)'
are
the
"
privileged insoci-
·-
_
finalfrhave figured out that
we
·
.
HS)W can there be true competi-
majority of college
_
students
ety, either by their gender; ~ef
f;
·
mtJst
'
f~
_
d
O
our
:
people,
·
nof k,i
_
U
tion if there is simply a system
understand how lucky they are
race
;
their age, theirsexuaLori-
<
,
thenr
.i
over differences that:\vill
.
of conglomerates that regulate
to be attending a college. If no
· entatio~,-o~:11:it}co~~clic
·
~~:
~L
~e
·
r.tt~ttgii
il!!t§sf~!..~~
:
,
c?'
}1ri~~J
:~st~~~l
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&.frfJ1ft~ti,i~h;t~
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.
.
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fui0t
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.
_w~ll
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;, ~~:;girii!:i~
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:o;f
s~kiie~
:
ti~~;
ii#g
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/
and
the'f aritaftaidto
iet
'.
:·:(
sul~
?
ids
}
6irtpitssion
:
~d
em-
·
·
<F
it is imperative that every
.
in-
What is your gender?
1t
is
time
gc
f
i
Letting go
-'
of powei'cafr be
'
"'
path§;
n'c:it'
war
aiid
:
destruction
:
divi°dual
sits
cf
own
'
and rethink
.
that we figlit for more inclusive-
.
h'ard,
.
bullook
·
~it
''
tiie' S'&ial'
-
0

_
th~t
will save
'
()!!r s~ciety in
the

their yalues.

Is it good that we ness.
:
I
·
was glad someone
progres
_
s oursociety can make
end
,.
_

"
,.
_:
-
,
·
~
never'change? Or, have the in-
fought for me. How
_
ca~ I do
if power is
:_
redistnbU:ted
:
rµore
.
,.
'
If \\'.e'biiose not to
-
move past

justi~es of oilr society finally
any less for others?
'
evenly.
,
:
~::
:
c,
,-,-.- : :
:
:'.
:
.
.
,
.
.
/~
;
.
_
this period fo·tiur history
/
and
.
.
to"tich~d)"mdn a way that will
:r
1four
·
society
'
was more
·
yes, change;Hien we will stag-
call you to adyocate for a better
~
equally
_
_
b
_
ased wo~)d
"'
sociarin~
'
riate
'.
anci
die'as
a
so9ietY:
·
We
.
social system. ·we do not have
justice!fcease
fo
occur? Would
' .
will
never progress if wf
do
riot
.
to live withsex~sm and racism if
racis"in
;
sexfam
;'
and cla~sisfu

heal our
people.
_
dii~e w~ have
we will not ~tand forit.
• .
: !
'
-:
.
.·.
' '
:::
. .
·_.
·
'•
·_:
'
·
f
;
.
.
Kris Hart is a political science
major with a minor in womens'
studies. She is from St.
Johnsvillf!;
·
New York .

,
by
NIKBONOPARTIS
§taffWriter
Our co~ntry is mad~ up of in-
dividuals
·
who are aJfpursuing
goals. They are all out to do
better fqr themselves and are
encouraged to think in order to
develop their own opinions
.
Yes,
everyone has a right to his or
h
_
er own opi{!ion
,
and opinion it
is.
,
But opinion most certainly is
not fact, and that is one of the
most forgotten truths in• our
country today.
If everyone
'
s
personal opinions were reality,
we could justify everything and
anything, from the assassina-
tions of JFK and Martin Luther
King Jr
.
, to the slaughtering of
millions of Jews and Christians
in World War
II.
Why is it that people assume
that their personal opinion in
regards to abortion is fact?
Whether they like it or not, opin-
ion does not change reality, and
scientific evidence has continu
-
ally proven that human.life ex-
'
ists
·
·
inside'
the
'.
woilib
af'a.H
stages.
Dr
.
-
Jerome Lejeune, "Father of
Modern Genetics'
.
' and discov-
erer of the cause of Down's Syn-
drome said, "To accept
.
the fact
that after fertilizatiori has taken
place a new human has
'
come
into being
-
is no longer a matter
of taste or opinion ... it is plain

experimental evidence." Also,
,Dr.
-
Hymie Gordon, Chairman,
"
bepartment of Genetics at Mayo
Clinic said that, "By all the
.
cri-
teria of modem molecular biol-
ogy, life is present from the mo-
ment of conception
.
"
This argument, based in
sound scientific fact, from the
mouth of the most qualified and
capable scientists in the world,
serves to disprove the argu-
ment that Pro-Life beliefs are
based on religious doctrine.
This is not opinion
,
this is not
religion, this is not
·
skeptical
belief
.
This is plain, hard scien-
tific truth. I do not know how it
can
be made any clearer, yet still
people rave on about their rights
and their opinions.
·
Does the right to choose over-
ride the basic human right to
life? Does this right to choose
justify the mass slaughtering of
millions of helpless babies?
Sorry, but I cannot empathize
with a woman's right to choose
when it involves the killing of
an innocent human being. In
fact, in "Questioning Au-
tonomy," by Kris Hart
(The
Circle,
Nov.
5,
1998) it was
stated that when abortionist Dr.
Bernett Slepian, "was assassi-
nated in his home in Amherst,
New York, not only was his
life
... please see LIFE,pg.10






































Sticker re~oval silen~~ message, . ·
[£.DITCOR]lAlliSI
,~~~-Jifebumperstj~ke~W~s··re~~y~dfrommy~c~;t9~~ti~.,~~shripi~
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'),:_J,::11, ,,.,
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e ::rn-
could not be tolerated by ~e}ri.dividrial who rerii.6v~~
ft..·,.·.. ; . ,' .
.
. ,:
-
. . . .
As I reflect upon my most 'recent experienc·es to write
an
editorial, I reach .
First,the voices
9p7
million babie,s are si~enc~d)';l~\y,'tl1e,.voices of those who , writer'_s block,_There is nothing. apout Manst, or. the community,
or
even the world
care
~~OU~
~rm are being_silen~ed too. Asa~ ~sHmonytoAmerica's internal
' tha~ I_ c~ think ofto w*e
a~out:~~re
is.§.tjr_n~~ing
~
l~itle clo~e~'to_ho,ne, .
co11<:htipn.,
.
, . .
. .. _
. , .
.
:
.
·
· .. _
.• · , _· •

.
though, that Ifeel compelled to share.
· '
. . : .. ,, . . . . . .
. _
_
Pa~an'Ro111ans
tll~~
we we ·:· dowe really beli~ve V(e s_hall be spared
a
similar
. : As·~ juni?r in c?lleg~,
~
hay~ learned m~y_tltlngs atio~ip"feP.~i-fr1g_I1,1-YSc;lfJor Illy
,

destmy? .
.
.
_
life
after graduation, Liymg on cruµpus for,thre~_years, I.have also learned the
art,.,,
Christine, ,A •. Hapeman
of livi11g ~ith a numl>~r ofo~er pe9ple:
9~-
)'.O:ur)>~11,,_you al~g 1¢_af!1 ~p,wJ<>,coqk;
junior
.
_
do l~llt1~ry. ll11d othe_r sue~ .ili,-~':':S~ ~ai,g11dg;e
y<:>~
mto,.!3-d~l_9lp9d.;-_. . _
..•
:)!,./.:
,r( _·, , ... -.
0ne.thmg
l
have *o learp~d duqng these_years is ho_..v.to really live mylife:L ·
Stu
dent
rebuts
columnist's comm en ts,
)m,_no't s_ar}n¥ one _d~y_i_h~d son.ie'v,~t~t}~~-~?:me or,a:r,~!ig~oii~i~ve1~!i
0
i
~u,i .
·
·
,
_. ___ ___ .
_ ...... tn~Y.fu.,1_ng~_1n_my hfe have l>r<~µgQt_m~JoJn,en up~ach.day~, lfoundout
lasL ·
Editor: . •.
,, . ,
" _·
:, -~,, .. · . ,,_
>;,·
> _
_
.
s~mester_that
µiy
grandfathenyas diag11'osed with lung cancer. lvfyother graQdfa-
In. the last issu_e of The. Circle _an article titled ''.Coltirririist condones co.ritro-
· · ,ther ha~ }?e~i;i diagnos~d
~;f
~w-years;.el:ltli_~r
5
with·pf9.Sl!lte ciJ.nc~r'.-R.ec~ivm.g'~ews.
versy," by <::art~r Randolph Hayes gr9_).lgh(up §ev~ntl pointf that
I
.woulti lik_e to
. Jik~
this
at first hits hard'. O!<>3/ipg
iip,
you aiy;ays beH~yiyou aj-ejnyinsible and";
rebut. The writerbelieves it is his duty to defend the columnist Carlita for
everyone _arounc,lyou is immortal: Manyof my friends had lpstgrandparerits and
"pushing the envelope.''.. P,ushing the envelope at a conservative school would
other relative~~ but it h.adnever seeinedreal until it happenef to ine. My grandfa-
require doing something progressive, such 'as actually getting· birth cont(ol on
thers both receive treatment and carry about as though nothing is·wrcing: Stayirig
campus. Offending people 1s the kind of action that progressive people fight
- strong though I feel their pain.
·
·
· · ·
·
·
·
against.
·
_
_
I am now;only 20 years old, but tin1e goes by fast wh~n you are npt paying ;.
Another argument that has been used to defend offensive comments in The
..
attention. My' grandparents have lived a full Hfe and I hope I have co,ntributedfo
Circle·
is that if one does not like what they read, do not read it This is devoid of
some of their happiness and fulfillment. They have to_uched my lifein many ways.
all logic _arid therefore a mootpoint: Seriously, how would one know they did not
They have !aught me mai;iy lessons throughout my life arid even through this l
like
it
untHafter they had read it? This is also a poor attitude to hold, particularly
~
still learning from them. . .·.
.
' .
·
. . .
. _
·
~ · ~:·
·
· ,
,
·
for a jounialist, whose job entaiis trying to reach people through the written word.
~
I haveJearned from theµ- experiences to be strong even whenlfeelWeak. Also,
Wµy bo-ther pursJ.Iing_ the c ~ r of a journalist if you hold no hope of ever ·
-to live life.to the fullestalld not give in or' sacrifice myself for: anything, I have
reaching people that come.from a different frame of reference than you?
also learned.to '.'seiz~ the day_.,,, I know that saying may be oyerused, but recently
It must be_ mentioned tliat the author defending "Joy in sobriety" clearly missed
I have learned the
true
111eaning to:it. I have a _lot to do and see what is offered in
the point of Michelle Corinne White's article, which is the fact that a comment
this
world and I hope to take.aµvantage of as much as possible.
about rape has been defended
as
humorous. Hayes states that ucomedians ;..
Amanda Bradley' Editor-in~chi~f
draw ~mhuman experience to make people laugh at themselves;' and finishes off
the thought by saying th'at the _author Carlito should not be portrayed
as
a rapist
THE'
~}Dlf"'I
:Er ..
for doing so. Ct1rlito might better address that as he put himself in the role of a
• · - - . - ·
~
.
X\,
'V
Ln._·
-
rapist when he said ''Iike·last time." The real issue is that by making a statement
AmandaBradley
Elizabeth
Carrubba
about rape in a "humor" column, one makes such an act seem acceptable.
Editor-in-chief
Managing Editor
.
BenAgoes.
Perhaps we should focus our attention on pushing envelopes worth pushing,
like the fact that men are allowed to joke about rape. Isn't it a worthy subject of
debate? Who is really being censored here? The person writing offensive
comments or the person with the courage to say that it is not acceptable.
Finally, I come to the issue of responsible speech. I have been wondering who
this person is that defended the article so valiantly. Yet, there is no record of a
person by the name "Carter Randolph Hayes.'' Are the people that so love
controversy the same people unwilling to come forth to back up their strongly
worded opinions? At the same time defending the right to free speech, why
should you feel the need to hide from the effect of your words? What happened
to journalistic integrity?
·
·
Debra Alfano
Junior
Emily Kucharczyk
Features Editor
Patrick Whittle
Arts
.&
Entertainment
ThomasRyan
Sports Editor
News Editor
TaraQuinn
Opinion Editor
Joe Scotto
Toni Constantino
Photography Editor
Business 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 anno~ncements 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.






































































































































































·
TH£
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PAGE9

Abo.t.
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tion
,cfest;toys
·
Jives
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_
st~ff Writer
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.,,.


.
.
only hope°'s<>.
'
How peaceful and
I
.
_:
.-:.
contentwoi'.tld our global soci;.
-~Sonieti111es peop)~ wilA(go
I~ .
,e~ ..
J.?;-!f
er?rYone ~ad an equal
.


"
by NIK BONOPARTIS
any
.
lengths to avoid change,
·
opportun1ty~to exist unham-
r/
v
§taffWriter
'Uheyperceive itas dangethiis
pe~~~1thepfejudicesof~g19:"'
_
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1~~-"
/_
·
.
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ahd detdmental to
·
society'.
bal
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s~ci
,
ety t~a! seeks_ t<>.
-
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.
t
:
-
.
.
.
·
-~
.,,
.
.
.
.
.
.
Our co~:ntry is mad~ up of in~
.
Change is dangerous and detri~

.
press
~
~_nyone
.'
or
-
~~ythmg that
-
.
·.
.
'
.
'I don't kno_w.~kathy. It seems
like!
have been ·ostrich-
dividuals who are atr:pursuing
'
mental?
Hmnim.
_
..
Was er:idJng
~~:
doe~~'cnofmfrrorits pi;~scribed

-~
~~'iiz_ed'
~i11qe
:
daY.
on
,
e.'
.
'
goals. They are all out to do
slav~ry
~ bad thing?
:
!'·do not
µonn ... ,.,~::r
,,
~
,;.;·,
1
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i,
r~ _,.
·
· ~-·
'

·
·
·
':. · ·
·
better
for
themselves and are
tlµnkni~y people\vould argue
~-7·····-:"-'~".""
'
heai~d.:~ui ;ti::iety. by deaHng
The im;iividual fighting for
encouraged to think in order to
that,
~
but some cons'ervatives
\:tr
·' ,
·
·
. ·
-
~ith itsil1rrent trijtistices we can change is
'weak,
but the masses
develop their own opinions. Yes,
st~ir

i~si~t
;
th
_
~t
¢b.ariJ?;e ~auses
w_as
:
en_ding
·
s~}!ery
.
move
forward
_
to a more
progres-
demanding change is powerful.
everyone has a right to his or
irregar,We'
'
~~ge
!~Qtii:
~o
,
ti;:
.,
a
btid thing?-,: L
,
do
-
~
-
siye, egalitari~n
.
state.
Do not let the status quo tell you
h
_
er own opiJ:!ion, a11.d opinion it
-
:{tei
0
:iih~h(~l:-:~r;s as_~
,:
"
·n
.
o_t
·.·think·.
_
.,.
many
·
c:irr:/:nr:;i~;;b:~~·
;;~it
:~:1:1~
th
~~!i~~~~f
~n~v~~
-
~~~::c~:~~~~:~~!
c;:~i{~!
·.
,·_
conservativefosually consist
:;
people would
,
argue
proudly admit that both
are true.
going io be. You know that is
most forgotten truths in• our
of members of ~e
_
cu~en
,
t st~-
ihat
-
but some con.;.
'
lfinnly believe that advocating
not true. Be courageous, stand
country today. If everyone's
-
tus quo. They have their power

'
'

·
·
.



.
·
for social change is the only way
up for your rights and demand
personal opinions were reality,
and they do not want t
_
o giveit
servatives still insist
.
we cansave ourselves from the
a better society from yourself
we could justify everything and
up. In fact, they
_
wo_uld prob~
.
that change ~auses
mess we are in now. We have a
and your peers. Do not hide be-' anything, from the assassina-
ably
_
do almost anythmg'. spout

irreparable dam-
consumer driven market that is
hind what has always been.
tions of JFK and Martin Luther
any
·
untmth or. defame any
-
·
·
.
·
-

.

·
·
being taken over by monopo-
Nothing has always been.
Will
King Jr
.,
to the slaughtering of
cause to prqtect their own sta-
age
fO OUT
Society.
lies that tell us what to buy and
you be a part of the change, or
millions of Jews and Christians
tus.
·

.
·
· ·
for how much. You delude your-
will you be one of the ones who
in World War
II.
Conservatives
.
who resist
.
Think about it. Would pov-
self if you believe that our eco-
will waste your lives fighting it.
Why is it that people assume
change
are
simply afraid ofloos-
erty and
war
exist
as
we know
no~c system runs simply on the
It
.
is such_ a privilege to be
that their personal opinion in
·
ing the power that they posses.
.
it?
·
Or;would our global society
theory of supply and demand.
-
where I am. I do not think the
regards to abortion is fact?
The)'
are
the
"
privileged
in
soci-
.
·
.
finally have figured out that'
we
·
.
Hs>w can there be true competi-
majority of co
II
ege students
Whether they like it or not, opin-
ety, either by their gender; thefr
/
mllst
,
feed
'
our
:
people,
·
n'of ki.11
ticm if there is simply a system
understand howlucky they are
ion does not change reality, and
race; their age, tb~irse.xu,aLori-
<
,
~eni/over differences that
:
wm
.
of conglomerates that regulate
to be attending a college. If no
scientific evidence has continu-
.
entatio~,-o~:ll:i(eco_!i~m_ic
·
~~:
~L
'
~e~~!i.~itgn~1~~-:§sf~!:.~~
:
.
....
fri~~J
;
.
~fl
:
~~~l~s through ~~ir.,7,
?~f
-
~~~
-
!01;1~h-~./~
-
~
.
~?ci_~l -
a\ly proven that human.life ex-
tus1:11iey:liave1\Vllat.;tli'.eywart~'e
-
.
~
15fc>
·
one·can ev~.r-rechlLwliat the
.
4
mect1~'subs1ilianes what we will_ change, wtiuid
-
you be.• !J.ere
'
ists
··
inside'
the

v.iom'b
af'a.H
-
~{~t'.fe.~t}l~<(~~:#$e.:6r.;~i~
.
~r
'
fati~~tf(~;
~eJ'J§s(the/e~
·
~
)_uyJ
(_'.:
.
'
.
.
_
_
_
·
_
.

.
'
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how? . What~s your s
_
ki~_~6!6r?
stages.
tt~P
1~
'
ru.1?
f.!1erar~ ap:~~t?1et
:.
j
~u
_
lts
;~
I~;t,~5
,
o~~.~s~o~
~d
~~-
_
. _
'
A.1s
.
uilpfr'ahve ~at every _m~
What 1s yo~r gender?_ It 1s t~me
.
Dr
:
Jerome Lejeune, "Father of
go
!
T.ettmg go
'
of power can be
·
·
pathy, not war and destruct10n
dIVIdual sits down and rethmk that we fight for more mclus1ve-
Modem Genetics'
.
'
and discov-
h:ard; bu(look
·
~i:
''
the' s'd~ial'

.
th~t
wiilsave
'
o11,r s~ciety iri
the
:
'
their :values. Is it good that we ness.
:
I
·was
glad someone
erer of the cause of Down's Syn-
progres_s oursociety
can
make
.
end,
.
.
" ,.
_'
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.
.
, .
· ·
.
~
never'change? Or, have the in-
fought for me. How _ca!!
I do
drome said, "To accept
.the
fact
if
power is;_redistnbuted
:
rµore
.
''If
\\'.e'biiose not to,move past
"jtisti~es
of our society finally
any less for others?
I
that after fertilizatiori has taken
evenly.
,
:
.:::
0
'
'°,' ·
-
:
<,: ,

.• .
.
"
1

-::
this period fo·tiur history/and
·
·
to·uch~d)ou
hi
a way that will
place a new human has
'
come
-
:/
Ifour
·
society
·
was more
·
yes, change;Hien we willsfag-
call you
.
to adyocate for a better
Kris Hart is a political science
into being
-
is no longer a matter
-
equally
_
_
based wo~lcrsociann~
,
'.
riate'.anci die·
.
as
a
SOfietY:
..
We
.
social system. ·we do not have
major wi(h a minor in womens'
of taste or opinion
...
it is plain:
justices cease fo'occui? Would
'
.
will
rieverprogress ifwf do riot
to live with sex~sm and racism if st
udies. She is from S t·
experimental evidence." Also,
racism: sexfam/arid
.
cla~sism
heal our
people .
.
dn~e w~ have
we
will
ncit stand forit.
Johnsville;
·
New York.•
Dr.
·
Hymie Gordon, Chairman,
.
·
'
'
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.
.
.
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'
·
oepartmentofGeneticsatMayo
Clinic said that, "By all the cri-
teria of modem molecular biol-
ogy, life is present from the mo-
ment of conception."
This argument, based in
sound scientific fact, from the
mouth of the most qualified and
capable scientists in the world,
serves to disprove the argu-
ment that Pro-Life beliefs are
based on religious doctrine.
This is not opinion, this is not
religion, this is not
·
skeptical
belief. This is plain, hard scien-
tific truth.
I
do not know how it
can be made any clearer, yet still
people rave on about their rights
and their opinions.
·
Does the right to choose over-
ride the basic human right to
life? Does this right to choose
justify the mass slaughtering of
millions of helpless babies?
Sorry, but
I
cannot empathize
with a woman's right to choose
when it involves the killing of
an innocent human being. In
fact, in "Questioning Au-
tonomy," by Kris Hart
(The
Circle,
Nov.
5,
1998) it was
stated that when abortionist Dr.
Bernett Slepian, "was assassi-
nated in his home in Amherst,
New York, not only was his
life
...
please see LIFE,pg.10
















































































































































































































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:'.: ~o_n_1inuidjrJ11tpg. 9\
_
.
.
·
prem~tu_rely
.
:
~µded,
..
·
but
women's autonomy was
.
threat~
enitt''Ye~
·;
his life wa~ pr~01a-
.
tureiy·ended
:.
D
_
o.notJor a
minute think that
this
is
.
right in
~any way. Th~ trµe
.
natu_re of the
Pro-Life niovementis to respect
·
alHife.
:
aiid
thafincludes Mr.
Slepi~ .
.
It
bQthers
.
me to,think
that not. one
.
word ,.was spared
. for
.
the miliions of babies
.
"'.ho
-
·
ha.ye ha4!heir)ives premature~y
ended bYmep such as him .
.
.
Additionally, the article states
that women's autonomy is at
.
stake be~ause
of
this sort
of
.
.
'
murder.Autoii~my
.
is riot some:-
\
tbing that
(s
purc;hasel!.~i~ ~e
life ofanother. Women do riot
.,
gajn
autonoiny
,
~yjlc1ugQt~ring
.--·:
their children.Ifautonomy·were
i~
!i~ly

th~\ssµri;{ihoufrlthi~
·:
. :
tharJre~ing oneselffrq?,1-
tpe
·
shackles of.P,eer, econom1c
..
and
.
soc"iaj pre~su're
,
to ha~e.anabqr-
...
tJ_op.
~
\\'.(?U_ldJ,ethe prionty.ffau-
.
wnol!lyis
.
9ci~sid~red first, tb'1n
·
·
listen
.
to _the \es
_
timony
_
of
.
women who have had abortions
and
let
,them0tell
you ,how:tl).e
aftereffects of
,
abortion
,
:
have
ruiriect tlieit
,
aµt9npmy~
.
.
·:
.
:.'
In
the e11d; it comes
.
down
,
to
re~p,qnstbiiity.
w~
c_an
'
h~4e be-
.
,
hind
.
half
truths and
.
beliefs;
,
or
'we
cari;face
.
the
'.
mu~ic
.
and ow,n
:
\
\ip.
,
~()
f
~ct/.A~C>rti~n d~stroys
·
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ORDER FORM
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ilrtifr~cit~~&!~
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·
A· PO
Box
16662
ATLANTA
,:
GA
30321
.
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GUARANTEED
APPROVAL
:
;
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.
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.
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PAGEll
(
T11£\c1R!ttE
~o~i~i~:.199:
_<


...
_
,,,_
A
'
&

E. ,,,_
fl'f)tley
CIUe
i'ESUITectS80's at
Civic
~enter
.
·
_
-
"'
· ...
.
.. -
.
ous y .
.
~yc4J.U,gq_
°,
' ·
·
·.,
Although a majority of the
_
Siaff SociafChamel~q_n
.,
_
cro\,1/d had been constructe~ on
-
·
·
·
·
,
a white trash assembly hne,
-
.
,
.
tli~re w
'
as a little diversity. Me
- ;•
Jn
:
a:
short di~s~rtation regard~
-'
and my hard rock associate
1ng the 80'.s; Virice'Neil summed
were not the only ones that were
:

themupinsixsyllab]es;
.
.
·
.
.
;
ciressed u
·
p for the occasion.
-

.-
1
''Whara
·
f'l'@indeca.de:"
,
:,
TW;o young men:were_dressed
. :
I
I could
·
not·agrEi(m<>re>
~s
I
as rabbis and I can not for the
strolled around'the MidHudson
-
life
of me
,
fig~r~ou{why.; When
· -
Ci vi'c
'
C~ri'tet

prior
tQ
·
Motley
-
_
I )nquired abou~ their
_
Hebrew
·
:
Crue
's
:
Buriday
,'
ni°gh( perfor-
.
garb,
·tlieir
,
re_spons~-was simply;
martce,
·
I
·
t~alized eiactly how
·, "iehovah
lo,v~s you.''
_
One was
-
much! missed the 80's/·
-'
.-
,
,
'
kind enough to bless mewith
,,
-
,
-
j
wa~ reminded 6fhow much
his sacramental.wine (actually
.(every
time l'cross'ed pat~sviith
it:was Busch on tap) and hon-
one,
of:
the: several thcfosand
es'tlyj have never felt closer to
· specimens thath?d
!
apparently
-
God.
_
_ _
__
been stuck
in
cryog
·
enic slum-
__
_
Regardles
_
s
_
qf
the ideological
'.berfotthe
'
pastdeca_d~>_Hindit
.
.
;
'
'
.
.
.
'
:
.
p otocourtcsy
ayMillcr
.diversity
amongst the people,
,_
to be quite befuddling how

so-
tieialiy Met~I hole-over~
fr~m
·t~~
BO's
M,oiiey Crue
proved
that
decade
wil
never die.
the crowd was united in a com-
:
dal evolution can pass by
1
$4~_!1
-
~nd'her
boyfriend
-
{~h9
1
,.y'as
The second act,LardLawwas
thing she got and more;
_
mongoaL And that goal \Vas to
,
_
·
a
,
large
·
portion
'
,
of
:
oifr popula:-
your diction~y "defi~itiQri of
,
a slightly more tolerable but
_
Being a ~trong advocator of rock .. For about two hours, I
-
tiori. Approximately eigh~ per- ' "du:tbag'.'.) that.we join
_
for9es in
_
-
packed with cruel irony. I recall
gender equality, I was appalled
forgot that I was a semi-intelli-
cent
of our·
·cult'ure:
has
r
'tio
a r~volt \iga1ns
·
t our oppress,ors
:
.
thinking
-
what a shame it was
by these remarks. Domestic
·
vio-
gent college student
_
and
I.
was

qualms with dinging to an era
.
arid this
-
proposal was greeted
.
that no one ever laid down a law
lence robs women of their au-
transformed into a hypnotized
plagued \Vith• fashionable•igllp-
with
·
a frightening am.ount of forbidding bands like the afore-
tonomy and ihould ·not be con-
slave ofrock and roll. Infected
ran·ce.
'''
AO: era
-
where leather,
enthusiasm. I think he might
·
mentioned
from
playing their
doned by entertainers that are
with
Motley Crue fever, I was
-
tight deniin and do~rags
-
were
have agreed
'
a· ltttle too whole-
music in public. l"only remem-
worshipped by the public. Nev-
like an uncaged animal. I am
eh
vied
-
·
like
·
Joseph's
heartedly with
-
my
·
sugge$tion
-
ber the name of one of their ertheless, he can still hammer beginning to think that I should
TechtiicolotDreamcoat and an-
because tw~nty minute~ later; 1
_
songs and it was appropriately
·
those drums. Nikki Sixx, the
be kept on a leash when attend-
archy wa§ perc~ived
is
a
legiti-
saw hlinbefog"draggecl frpm the
.
titled
Its
a Shame. It's a shame
bassist ( whose guitar I was
1ng concerts because I was once
:
mate political party.

:
_
.
.
_
atena by
security
aftedightirig
th
·
e band was ever formed. It's
privileged
enough
tb grope) and
again ousted from the arena.
·
When
attending
·
such
a
fiasco,
with another overexcited fan.
a shame they have a cult follow-
Mick Mars the guitarist, both
My four seconds ofcrowd surf-
it is imperative that one blend
·when
talking with another
ingofleathercladN~anderthals.
looked like they had recently
ing was not applauded by the
into its
:
slirroundings like a clia-
·specimen,
I
:
ran into a little
-
It's a shame l had to witness
beeri resurrected from the dead.
security guards. Flashbacks
·
-
nieleo
_
n. T<,:r§gress ro
.
.
such
_
a
trouble. After the assortment
:
such an
·
atrocity/
.:
, -
.
_
_
_-
The aging
·
prbcess has
riot
been
_
_
from
-
the
Pearl Jam incident
_
X:_ar
f
j~e;
'
ip~is.(~~
_b~
i()
,
~1}~l?c~i2r~~J.™f}JJJ¥t~~~;l
-
~,k~?;
,•
.;
~:
~¥.g~~Y.
+
81¥e,oµ
_
,_e~o*fr;_}J~d'.;_;; .kind
-
~?;tli~m~;yet,thef hav~
.
the
_,
"
·
prod.dedII1e
.
to
swallow
mr
pride
""'.realins
·
of:tlje extem
,
a1;,w.artmil5et::::.?b€en:'clep1etei:l
'
·
we stood
-
th
.
ere
:
'
'.\
was phenomenal.
,
l could
_
not
->
courage
.
to
.
not only
_
continue
and thank them for escortmg me
)
jji,f~a;iagi;
t
9.ppJdjeatj{
~
artp
:<f}
¥e~Ne~-~
~
Jµ~t,
W.h~~°rQtptigh(
:
~
b~
,
more P,leasedwith their per-
::
living,
but
to continue rocking.
from the premises oh so gin-
:·,
f~fof.f
{
f'.s_
.
~~r~Y!.ri~~d
:
~cl 1
_;.
;
~
9~t
i,
c.:o~.vets!l~i9n,
was
.
·
enaef
_
..
forinance as well~, their appear-
The band _flawlessly pl~wed
gerly:
·
-
sported-were oitly
,
v1sua1 q~~oys
_
pr~matu,relyby an awkward st--:
;
ance.
_
Vince Neil s chest \Vas
through the1r greatest hits ~s
All mall though, the show was
that y.iere n_ecess
.,.
~r)'.tJo
'.
pen-
<Jenee;
he erupteq withapassioµ-
,
:
freshly waxed and saturated
well as a few tracks from the1r
one of the best I have ever been
.
etrate ttje deferis.e:i of ~O•s
·
n:~_fk-
<
ate
'.'F*@
!in A". This terinis a
with hot oil;
·
which was a very
mosfrecent album Generation
to, but in a cultural sense. !felt
-
.
ers: After
·
nuqieious conversa-
versatile one and
·can
:
mean a
.
effective decoy. It°helped con-
Swine, which sold 218 copies
like I was atan animate wax mu-
.
tions ~!th
the
natives, I becallle
·
number of things: It
can
be used
ceal the twenty or so pounds of worldwide. They opened with
seum, not a rock concert. It is
_
·rt.iore
'
copfident with my sti~-
_
whe
_
11 you
·
an~
_
either
_
in total
_
marshmallow that he has accu-
.
Dr:_ Fee/good and followed up
bewildering that one can attend
cessfullyapp}ied
:
s~ial
(
c
'
~ou-
agreement of
.
utter disagree-
m1.ilated throughout his brief with
G_irls, Girls, Girls, a track!
such an event and actually be
.
flage. On the bee
_
r line, Trea:l-
ment. It is the southern Baptist retirement. Tommy Lee has the
have always been revolted by
able
to interact with the past.
·
ized that
J
had completely
equivalent of ~•Amen my
_
_
samechiseled physique that he
du~ to its derogatory ponrayal
The decade that brought us
:
blert~ed
·
jn
wh,en l
,,
c9nyersed
_
·
_
brothd!
:
an~
·
s
,
imil
_
ar to

the
.
:
:
possessed in his amateur home
of women as mere sex t~ys.
Velcro and the microwave oven
·
with two strippe~fand
:
~!~ough
.
,
Jtideo~Christiari
;
Iruneritation of
·
vide with Pamela and I can hon-
Motley
Crue 's stereotypical can be observed in its entirety
1iooked like an
~
idi9t;they

did
"Hallelujah:" When you do not
estly say that I have never seen
rock and roll
life
sty!e was b?l-
like
a
brontosaurus fossil if you
riot gsti'aciz.;e ~e
·
if any
W~Y-
know what.to say in an 80's
_
skimpiedeather~hoits. Tommy,
liantly lamented m a bnef look in the right places. It is a
A1t1io~gh
'
st.rti>Pe,rs
are
;
gawked
_
.•
gathering;
:
1.1ttering
,
that phrase
-
\,\'.hose
·
dread Jocks
·
resembled
speech mad~ by Nikki Sixx .. He
shame that such a magnificent
at i3Tid clrt:ainnibojlt by
,themaJe
is more thari eifough.
-
Busta Rhyme's during an elElc-
highlighted the band's musical
decade had to be replaced by
gen4er, tliey·~m,no_\Vay,mem-. -
;;
Havelmentioned that! went
_
trocution,.ex,pressed his appre-
career by boasting about the
an era that has produced
bers

~f:a
,
~oc;ia]:cla~s that is re-
,
ts(a concert yet? Sorry but
C
ciation for all the Jove that t~e
amounts of heroin~ they had
cyberporn and
Hansim. For
ferredfo
as
the elit~.
"
_
·
tendto get swept away with the
fans
sent him ~h.i)e he was m
injected, all the c
_
ocame they had
those of you that cherish the
I
hag tlte pleasur~ of mingling
_
spirirof l 98~ and itinvades my
·
·
prison. He comillented on how
snorted and the many hookers
past as I do, catch
the Crue
s
with a fine, you11gfady
e~
.
m~d
.
writing, The first of the t~o
_
·
he was
a
victim of circumstance
they had impregnated
.
T~e
tour before it is too late. It may
J~fdy
_
ano'Ye~~~<;:il~segourmu-
"
opening act~
_
was
World
on
andthatthejudgefailedt
_
oreal-
boyscoutsandPTAmem~rsm
be your last opportunity to
tual irreverence to\Varcis the ~e'-
Fii-e
>·
T
believe I have said
ize that Pam deserved every-
the crowd applauded bo1ster-
dress like a complete moron and
curity
·
staff. I suggested to h~r
enoJJgh regarding that band.
be commended for it.
Raves for Flaystation!s Metal Gear Solid
_
_-
.
_
·
target from anywlier~- in_ the
unless their demands are met.
If
strange surprises around every
b
CIIRI~iNAPIERSK;I
wqrld.•When NATO foun
_
d out
that was not_ ba~ enough, the
comer. I would Jove to say more
y
StaffWriier
·
·
.
:
. ,
!}iey
call~ p~
~~~
called Fox
-
group of soldiers 1s lead by cur-
abou~ the plot. but I do not want
;
-
'
·
-
,
·
· ·
Hound. ·
·
snake,
one
of the new-
rent members of Fox Hound. _ to rum the sto!)',
.
.
est members of the team, was
Snake had retir~d from Fox
The most 1mp~e~s1ve thmg
sent
.
in
-
alone after their best Hound after the second game
about the game
IS
Its spoken
Snake is back in his newest
'
game, Metal Gear Solid. For
those of you who are unfamiliar
with Snake, he is a rough
·
die-
hard soldier. He firstappeare<l a
long time ago on the Nintendo
Entertainment System in
·
the _
smash hit game Metal
Gear.
In
Metal
Gear, a small but
pow-
erful nation called "Outer
Heaven", was building a secret
weapon.
-
This secret weapon was call¢
Metal
Gear.
Metal Gear
:was
a
walking battle ta,Qk that was
equipped
.~
with nuclear weap-
ons, which it could fire on
any
·
agent, Grey Fox, was captured.
and is now forced to return_ to
dialogue. The game does have
Snake. managed to single a_ction. Once again he must m-
excel!ent state- of- the-art
handedly infiltrate the base,
filtrate a top security base, ~one g~aph1~s ~nd sound accompa-
save Grey Fox; and stop Metal
·
and unarm<?d to accomphsh a
med with smooth and easy to
Gear.
seemingly impossible task.
learn play control~ but I "'.as
·
,
Metal
Gear
Solid is the third
Metal Gear Solid has an in-
more impressed with the dia-
game of the series and is made
tense. and_ well t~ought_ out logue; This may
be
because t!te
for the Sony Playstation.
In
this
story Jme ~th mu~t:Jple en~1~gs.
last game I_ played was Para~1te
game, a group of soldiers cause The game _s story 1s ~ery s1mrl~
Eve. Parasite ~ve had magmfi-
a
·
revofr in Alaska and take over
to something one might find m
cent . graphics, _a d~cent
a U.S. facility that was
_
being
an X-'Files e_pisod~, where the
storyhne, and ~utiful cmema
used to store disarmed nuclear
government 1s
trymg
to cover scenes, but their were no words.
warheads. These soldiers soon
up one of its secret projects that
become terrorists by threaten-
went bad. It is full of plot twists,
···
please see
GEAR,
pg.
J2
ing
·
to launch a nuclear
:
attack
advanced technology and







































































,.
.Tff£.~€IR.CL£'.
--.- . A·.& -:E --.-
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ays_
·
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·metbberoftheband._:,H.ew~s,
-
·
.
.
. .. -
not
intimidated by.any qu.estion
--.·. . · . ' . · .. .. . . · " · ·. •' '.. _ • · · ·
r
asked him.
J
ani
gl~cp i11!~r-
hdStJQ
.Ht~;~1~i~~1-~vity '._ -.

~;:$~~~~1~$~1;
... _

,
,.
·
, · : ..
. "H20,
.Lo~iigfwill~e~tjWhg~9
.
irig abouth;tJfe>f ~t!.~_ei .. ,,'. . _,_,
to $e press.
_
. _ .
by
CHRIS
KNUDTSEN
.
The
Chance.Oil .Noveriilier,28
.
· "It's' all give and .t!ike; you .
My first set9f questions were ·
·Staff}Vriter.
:· ·:.
whfn they,Plaf.~ith\Eerfect· know." Todd said. "Abouthalf
about origins of the band;and
· Thyroid
,
,
:·:,>,: ·, -,· . ·
•.> · .
of this is.for us but the-·other ·. . .
: , ..... ;
'-•ii: .. ·.
how lorig
Fear Factory
has
ilio
headiin~d ·~:show at
th~ . _.
,.''lt's:a.lot
bf
:(mtpjayi_pfwith
halfis forth~Nds ~r?:~omf>~t .
- I ·
·n·t.
· e ·
·rv
.
..
•l·.
·ew_.
.·. . .
been aroun.d.
'"
. . . '
NewbtirghPl~etariu.mlas!Fri-
·bandslikeH20;theyhelpuso_ut hereandsupportu~: .. 1f1tw.asn t
,
. . ,
,
,.
"We have.been around eight
day with opening bands
Rrach..
aqd:·they'xe·
,f
9.·unch},f, ~o(?d
for them we wouldn't be here·,
·
·
years, we actually started IIal-
the Sky, Lounge,
and
Ninety 9 .
guy's, toot lead-)iocalistand· so wliy nofshow
·
tltem.
a
gc,od
with Fear
loween 1990,"hesaid."How's
Cents.
Doors. opened abput_ an
gt1itarist Joµn said;· .-. '.'
., ,
time?'\.
.
. ..
1
.
··
, :
. . . . . . .
·

that for a coinddenc~."
.
. h'
houriater than ex.pe<;.tep ~_uqhe • ·
Ninety 9 C'e~ts
was: the
·
next
My thoughts ex.act y.
D
·
·
I went on asking
him
about 1s
w~ith. o_u~idthejnhth.e cold_. was
?~dhto~ak~'tJ.ie
1
·stage,a
.
cFt?clleow
0
-f.
,1_-r
actor_U
.,_ , ·
.
.
·
f:tuavalolny_·tpe
1
_bcakneddsu,panad
_
·bhaosws .ghue
1
_atarc~.
wort lt
10T
lS S
9Vf• ;' ·
mg·
t
etr regu ar,pr -.. 1
. •

J_.
"Probably" the best thfngs
sprayi~g down: the fron!. of the
He told me that he was into all
about shows like these are that crowd. with their _beer, the b~~µ
styfos of music. . From Elvis
there are
no
barricades, no inju-
obvi011sl/ ~njoyed • thepiseJves.
by
BOB
ROTH
Pressley .to
.Suicidal Tenden-
ri es, and. no fights'." Todd
It was ·the.ifoxt- ban_d hoWeyer
Staff-Writer
cies,
all music shaped him into
Morse of
H20
said. "It's pro_of
that almo~t e~eryone;hai:i gone
the bass played he·is today.
that it can be done."
.
, to see · ; , ··
·
: .'.· ,'.- · •:
.
· ·
.
. ,
"I loved the bass lines, or
Reach the
Sky,
who has !ban-
H2a°'E~m~
Jp"~eii,aniplayed
R;adrunner Records pliblidty
rockabilly, that's one ofthe·rea-
aged to.gather a good follow-
an amazi~g ~e(mainly playing
department called on me on a
sons I play stand up bass," he
ing a~ oflate, opened the show:
a lot of their old material but in- ·
recent.Thursday night asking if sai.d. "I was the normal kid, un-
They I1fade
.
~ goodfir,st.inipres-, corporatinf~'ol?Ji. µ~wer.:S9Il,¥S
I could do _an interview with
til
l
,got my first punk rock
sion on' me since this· was the
as well; .. The firsrtirrie·J ever
.
Fear Factory. ,
1
thought, what
record, and the world around me
firsttimUhave seen'them even . heard I:l20.~as:9n ~tapewhere
. an honor it Would be tc:i inter-
changed." ~.
·_
.
though ~ey plaJtipst~te/airly ·.
'
theJasispng·~as·T~by playing.
view.oneofmyfavorite bands.
I.got curious on what records
often .. Also making a very PQ~i- . ·· .. with
Sick Of li'A'll,
and now.~e
So I jumped a:nhe chance, and
Christial! Played stand tip bass
tive first impression was
Lounge
band has gone from being the
called Roadruimer back/ lwas
on. . .
.
.
.
who play a -lighter punk· style . one taking the hand.:.up to the
to 'meet Christian/ the bassist,
"Well, with the
Souifly
record,
including a cover of the old pop
one giving it.
.
at
5
PM atthe MidHudson Civic
Max
(Souifly
singer Cavelera)
song-
Land Dm\:n JJ_nder.
"Wewere'anopeningbandfor
Center. Later ihat night
Fear
came down to my house and
Lounge has a new record,
Punk
a long time but I think it was the
Factory
was. scheduled to per-
asked
if!
played thatthiiig," he
RockSuperheroes,offofTriple
second record that really got
formwithRobZombieandMon-
explained; ''It~ldhim:-
·
'
Crown Records. The record has
enough people listening to us
ster Magneb
seven songs. on ,it, .i1:.1c!u"ding · that
we
could: do our own
At my fast imI?ression, Chris"'
Danbury, Secr,et,
and others
shows." Todd said.
... please see
FEAR,
pg.
13
such as .the aforementio~ed
Definitely'one of my perso11al
cover. The band has •been:to-
highlights for the show was
getherforaboutthreeyearsnc:iw
when they playeq ,a
D~ad
and i~ beginning to attract.;~;
_Kennedy's
cover'
that/pack~d.
heavy.fan following .. , ;::::;:::/:/ the''stag·e,\vith' dieha'fd
'faiis
Lounge
·
started playing
_
with
singing
along:-
Ui:JJ~ke. at'The'
bands like
Cooter,-Joshua,
and
Chance where fans are discour.,.
Fair~hild
and.are
D_OVf
play)11g
aged from going onstag~,-the
with biggern,ame bands
SllC;li
a~. · stage was literally packed aur-.
'
.
..
.
'
,..
.
.
•··
.:•
ACROSS
·'

·
.
.
..
1.
Re\igious hours,.
. ,,
a.
TV
money-makers
9. Take advantage of
14.. Musical Study •.. ·
15. Bad Actor
16. Fran Drescher
17.
Storage Area
18. FlighUess Bird
19;Walf5ed on (variant)
20. f!eligious
jn
training .
22.Sots . · :: ' ',·
23.
"Put
a_··_
·
~
itl"
· 24.
Greek
name , ·.
28.
Where
to
fuel
up
30; Male hawks •
34:Typeotecripse
35. Penny pincher
36 •. TenQis fault : :·.
. :.rt
~High stepping steed
as:
Pass
off · · : . . . ·
63
· 39; Roof
overfi?ng ·•· •. ; '. • .• ·.
:c
40. Revolutionary group
· · : • (C)
l998CollegiatePresswireFeaturesSyndicate•Onlineatbttp"J/www.cpwire.com
4
f.
Forthright -
·
42.Change
·
·_
Last week's answers
4,3~
~l:>y
ptant •
~- My
~steJ-.--
46. Rose
fruits · ,
_47.Jey.,el .. :.. - .
,· ..
48.
Cockney
haberdasher
51.
Something
soothing
57.
Pottery
piece
58.
Skif)tomy_._· , . ;
59.
Final
ballad
stanza
80. Grade of beef
61.
We
own
it
62.
Stage
setting
.
8. X-Rated
movie
(adj.)
9. Netherlands city • •
10. Heat control
. 11.Soon .
-12. Prefix forChineSE! .-
, 13.
Caustics .
21.Sass
25. Miami
team
· , · 26. Funeral flowers
27 •
.Ms ....
28.
Type
of
drum
29. '60s
criet
oola
ao.1950shorrorl110l(ie • •
~
..
.....
,
..
63. Type
of
eclipse ' · '- .
64.Austied
65.Tearlntopieces. .·,.
31:0mrjoy .

' . .
.
32.
Where
to~
for the
Robt. E.
Lee
. 33.
Rear
of
boat- .
.
35.Advisol'
38.
Tum over •
:
,
, , · ,
~
·· 39.:engrlShcloth
measure
1.
Tl<le
.•
41_. ~e,eyeSbk!lds·(Singular)
2.
Snorbers
dog
: ·
42.;
Putposeless . ·
, 3.
Squirrel
food
44. lVwife
'· 4. Rearrange . _ · .
' 45. Wrg;Jy
1hing . _ , ,
·
: 5.NotE~lastic;al .;·:\.,
!
47~Aubnncleeoratlon ·
·
.
50. Postal
box
52.
Pout
, 5;3.
~
or
measurement
· · 54;
Always
and
alway$.
.
CP110S98
(Nov.5.1998
~
6.1.endlng · · · ·
48.
Cleo's snakes
'
7.Swear ·
55.
·Aridthentherewere_· _ .
-•sofiware
1
Engineersr
Go~e
wo~kir,a~_extjtingdast:pa~
industrywilh
b~bfMung·engin·eers:
.
-
'
, .. !: . ._
.. ,; '
~
..
Interviews.
. -,Tuesdayi·Novembei11i1998
.Career
Center
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·. NOVEMBER 12.1998
·11e;w:
,sets:,,greaf
Iie~:10:w ·
t&f
,eiiiertiiijfuellt
v~ille ....
; ;, .. ' .,
·, .. ,; . .
.
Thin~"l.abo~t~iiio? a secorid.
people cons.(der this entertain-
,
·
, , « ;
.
.
,;
l<=:
.• , ·
Take.ab.out2000urbancowboys
,ment.
:u
alsO.~fP~Zes me why!
, by
P1TRICN;~~ri.
and brazen white trash folks,
.was standi~g· ·oµ _my chair the
·!
-AA:E
Edftor;.; ' ' .·
put them,in close proximity.to :wh.ole.time,lo".irigeveryrnimite
•.·
, ., .
sensel~ss~. sodally. unre'deeri.i-
of it'. . The ensu1rig matches in-
.. " , .
"
,~ )
abl~ vibl~nc~, then serve them
cl.uded such' highiights as a
J~xtremeChampio.nship Wres-
alcohol• and· hope ,ev~rything
hug~
fat
guy wi_th a mohawk
tling may not'exactly•be ru:t;istic, 'g9~s.
tiff
withg,u~ a • .. hiJch.
getting hit with
a
few chairs, a
but it sureis ent~rtaining!
Sounds like donning·
a
huge ba-
little swearing in Japanese from
... _The ECW, is
a
"professional"
nana costume and strolling into
Balls Mahoney (now there is a
Qn othenvords, spurious) wres-
the monkey
.
'house for the
tough riame to live with), and
tlingpfomotio!J;runoutof Penn-
evening, l:iutl digress.
even 'inore off color comments
sylvania~ -Their primary audi'-
The wrestling itself was pos-
about inbreeding and such from
ence is in the metropolitan New
sibly the 111ost hilarious display
the crowd. The main event was
. York,area, and they enjoyed·a
.
ofnonatheleticslhave'everwit-
scheduled to· be ECW hero
briefJdev1sedstiritontheMa.di-
nes'sed since the' last time
1
TommyDreainertakingonJus~
son Square Garclen network not
watched those old tapes of me . tin Credible (which
I
think is Jus-
too long ago.
_I
had the plea-
playing· soccer in high. scho9l.
tin Awful pla.y on words); but it
sure of witnessing their card at
The firstmatch featured a team
soon broke down into
a
brawl
the Mic;I.-H1,1dson Civic C:eriter · 9fa
.
guy with an elt!ctric blue
between everyone in the build-
Saturday night. Iain no stranger :mullet and
an
individualdressed · ing who was not scheduled to
tR
the EC:W; ma.ke no.mi~take;
f.rom head to.toe in blue and
wrestle but wanted a piece of
lastyear'sexpositionofpseudo-
white sparidex taking. on·a
the action. In the confusion, a
sport
at
the Civic Center.was
An:19ld Schwarzeneggei-Jook-a- . little mental patient-looking fel-
~l!sHy the highlight
of
my y~ar.
lik~;ind,,anAmishguy. lam not
:
low named· Spike Dudley
Come to.th.ink of it, lmight riot
makjng this up. · I Jound · the
stormed .out of the dressing
want to admifthat publicly.
crowd's repeated chant of ''You · room and administered his fin-
ECW's c;laim to fame is that
(explet1ve) sheep'.?.t_othe Amish . ishing move "The Acid Drop"
they are the."extreme" wrestling
charactecso classless. that
I
al,,. · on everyone but Dreamer, who
v,e.J1U~- They have iittle censors
mo.st did no.t join in. Next·up , scored :the
.
win.
It
was one of
be_ca1,1se-they·are not nationally · was some. sGrawny kid from : tho$e times when deep down
broadcast.on Saturday morning
Buffalo.,.(Mikey. Whipwreck)
inside of you, you really felt a
like more popular promotions
getting obliterated by a behe-
sense of pride forAmerica.
WWF .and WCW., . You know
moth from Brooklyn
(Taz). Af-
· All·things considered, I would
what· thaFineans: blood, c~rs-
ter they scraped poor Mikey off have to say that the ECW lived
ing, crashing headfirst through· of the arena floor, ECW fan
fa-
up to .·all of my. expectations.
wooden.fables; shameless
as:
~-vor:ittSa6u todk on
~orrie
scrub
While I did notplunk down up-
~ii1,1Jt~
.
;vvJth:~V~~yt~iH~
,
fro.~ •:·\Wh{)Se)l~me esc~pes m.etcTllis'. : wards ~f20 b:ucks for.aT,Shirt
y~~~Plil~tus~~10:s_t~~J¢ef:.,;'~~\¥-~j~q_~,~~ely
~fy_Ii
ril&t.G'1\t?:
!
adorning,the.;EGW.dogo; an_d
ladd~(s, unrepentant abuse' of )~jvatch because th¢:ECW's tradt!-' ' some offensive phrase, I would
innocent by1,tanders, ari~ all crnark "set/the scnib up on
tlie· :
definitely recommend doing so
.those·othet:Jhirigs that made .-~-table,then3ump'offtbetoprope . to anyone. Everyone needs to
Steven,Seagal's qrreer what it : and send the scrub through the' · indulge in some u1travio1ent,
is today. Satu'rday.'~ demonstra- •table" n:iove came·into play.
As
completely uneducational form
- tion definit'?l~ live.a upt9 altex-
.,I
refle9t cmwatching Sabu som'-'
of entertainment every now and
pectations, even for someone as
ersaulfthrough the air with the
then, and until the makers of
nonconfrontational as myself.
greatest of ease and probably
Clockwork Orange start up a
My only questi9n is why in
shatter several of the other
traveling circus, make mine
God's riame did they serve beer?
guy's ribs, it amazes me just why
FJ:.W.
·.
New
at the
movies:.
The Siege
by
NIK;B.ONOP.AAUS
SiajfWriter
·
Bruce Willis and Denzel Wash-·
ington are back in
The Siege, a
highly-touted flick in which ter-
rorism puts a stranglehold on
New York City's most Italian•;
borough and goes t,o _town
with
it
Denzel Washington, who gets
considerably·more screen time
than the Demi Moore-less Bruce
Willis, assumes the role of An-
thony Hubbard, heading the
joint FBI-1"1YPD Anti-Terrorism
task force. Naturally, he gets the
first phone call when word of a
bomb hidden on
a
publtc busin
Brooklyn comes in.,.What fol-
. lows is a dynamic scene
in
which we learn that those crafty
Arab tert:orists are at it again, .
and they do not pl~n on stop- .
ping with
the
bus system. Soon
school buildings, fedeqtl offices
and even T°imes Square fall vic-
tim to widespread bombings,
forcing newly inducted Holly-
wood star Bill Clinton to enforce
milltial law on Brooklyn: ~sis -
where Bruce Willis comes
·
in,
sporting a snazzy new hairpiece
as
.
General William Devereaux.
Have no fear, ~ough - the five
o'clock shadow remains intact
in this moyie..
.
Director.Edward Zwick does a
good job of transferring the fear
from the se:reen into the audi-
ence in
Th(! Siege. Zwick, most
famous for his work on
My So
, sr:zlled Life, and his movies
Glory ~nd Legends of the Fall,
was able .. to keep the c~mpli-
cated plot in check for the most
part,but there were stiU soine
scenes which were very confus-
ing.
Tice
Siege also featured a
number of visually stunning
scenes. For viewers who's ap-
petite for the destruction of New
York City was 'not satiafud in
In-
. dependenceDay, more familiar
sites are.blown to pieces in this
. film. If you are considering see-
ing
The Siege, keep in mind the
R
rati~g - _quite a few of the
scenes' pack
a
strong punch and
lend intense gore to the screen.
Some of the language· inay be
offensive
to
certain moviegoers
- anti-Arab sentiment was
strong in the riot scenes, spar-
ing no racial slur towards those
of Middle Eastern descent. Also
among ·the. cast were Annette
Bening as Elise Kraft, a CIA
operative, and Chip Zien, as
Denzel Washington's FBI part-
ner.
• All things considered,
The
Siege was a naiJcbiter, It had the
intensity of
a
good thriller with
enough action
to
keep viewers
interested. Denzel Washington
was partfcularly strong in a role
similar to his character in Fa11en,
Johri Hobbes. Washington has
turned acting the role of an or-
dinary guy in·unordinary circum-
stances into an
art.
He is believ-
able and admirable as the good
guy. On the other end of the
spectrum, Bruce .Wi11is, best
known for his tough-guy, good-
guy roles in other films, seems
at' a loss for motivation in The
Siege. Assuming the role of the
"bad guy" is new ground to
him, and as:General William
Devereaux he fails to lend cred-
ibility to the character. The writ-
ing does not help him much ei-
ther, portraying him first as a
reluctant participant in the siege
of Brooklyn, then as a power-
hungry murderer as the film
draws to a close. Luckily for the
film's
creators,
this
did not ruin
the impact of the plot com-
pletely, and the end result was a
powerful flick.
For great capsule reviews of
new films on the web, check out
http://www.geocities.com/Se-
lect-A-Film..html
Marist Jun.ior Bob Roth pictured in the center with
Fear Fac-
tory
members Christian (left) and Burton (right). Roth inter-
viewed the band before their concert at the Civic Center on
Oct30. ·
.
' .
:
;
FEAR;
)B_a~d-lJrings
new
style·~
to
heavy music
.,
1(
.
~ :,;
yea.h,.anq,l,~ent_down_and.col-
1,~l;,.<.>ra.t.~4,
;99. -~
CQl,IP.le_
Q( tr~"~s.
on the
S9_ulfly .rec:ord."
l
also foµnd out he played
stand up on most of the new
Fear Factory album; Of?solete.
He has collaborated on other al-
bums as well ..
My final questions with Chris-
tian were focused on the new
record and touring plans. l
asked him how this record was
different than their previous al-
bum,
Demanufacture.
·
"This time we were able to
take· our time recording this
record,
not
like
Demanufacture," Christian re-
plied. "We used our own hand
picked producer Rhys Filber,
and everything went a whole lot
smoother."· - · · · · ·
. I asked Christian if he thinks
Obsolete is Fear Factory's best
album. He replied, "Yes, we feel
all of our aspects and skills have
come together in thi~ record."
I asked him what was the big
scheme behind touring with
Rob
Zombie and Monster Magnet.
"We warited to open.
Fear
Factory
up
to
more
people ... MTV has not sup-
ported us, so we feel we must
charge listeners to demand
Fear
Factory on commercial stations
like MTV and radio." .
Enough said. More Fear Fac-
tory
info
at
http://
www.fea,factory.com
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i
.
1
..
,,,,.
,
THE~CIR<G.tEr
NOVEMBER 12. 1998
S
Ro.t;ts
ROOrimt~fes'
_
·
-
:samUe1s.
·
Mil:Y~~
--
proTI4~~
·
strong snpPQrtjng

cast
tor·,ineD'S.hOOpS .. _
.
'
.
,
.
-
.
.
.
·
.
'

.
,,
..
.
·
_
.
..
.
•'
'
byALFREDDEFATIA,JR.
teningtomu~i~.)-Ieenjoysi:nu-
a good rebou
·
n
;
der
.
\\'_bathe
'
Samuels askeq why ne'tu~~d
thing$
,
like diving aft~r
·
lo~se_
Staff Writer
sic so much that he will listen to
·
feels he still has to improve
o;i
·
.
off
.th~
ra<!_i,o and Yale replied he_· balls on the floor.
·
Someone has
music ~efo~ games to getpim
his game is in his jump shot and
·'
did not' want 'it on when being
to do it? said Vale.
"I
enjoy play-
.
When students come out of pumped
·
up. Ho
.
Yf~ver, he
'
did
ball handing. If he gets these

interview. Frien
_
dly
'
words wer,e
ing
.
defense
and
.
I
.
feel
.
that
·.
a
-
high school the first fear is not
not play much in his freshman
two aspects of his garrierefined
·
exchange
.
and no
:
sense of re-
blocked shot is better:than scor-
their college classes, but who
year. .
·
.
he can become
a
real
asset
and
.
morse
was
felt among both rrlen.
ing
t'YP
potnts.;'
.
.
.
their roommate is going to be.
"I
.
really did not play as rimch
give· opposing teams in the
This
is ~hat makes therefr:iend-
Like Samuels he.also .would
In the back of their mind they
as
I
would have liked
.
last year,"
Metro Atlantic Athletic Confer:-
ship
ori
and off the
:
c
.
ourt spe-;
·
pre~er
:
making an ou
.
tstanding
are thinking ofstories that their
said Samuels .
.
"I guess I was
ence trouble.
cial:
·
·
·
.
-
. ·
·
-
·
defense
·
play rather
Ut;m
·
scor-
friend told them about the room-
.
not· strong enough
:
and did not .
Samuels likes to give dominai-:
·
.
''I
never knew Drew until
I
ing ..
Helikes to play tight;ag.:.
:
mate from hell. How there room~
·
·kno,v
the system ·that· we1L
:
·I
ing performances on the:~eferi-
came to Marist," said Vale smil-
gressive d~fensive against the
,
mate was
·loud,
inconsiderate;
.
should be ready'
to go
this1/ear
sive side of the ball as well. He
·
.
ing, tldid no.t
.
knp~t':Yhat to
.
ex:-
.
person he is guarding.
·
and used a11 there ·persopal
,
.
arid
.
contribute to the
.
team:;,
.
.
··
woufd rath~r pi6vent thd>ppo-
.
.
pected but'we both
91icked~·
.
We.
Not only ~o_bo~ )i~e playi_~g
·
things., Well this scenario does
At times- last year he
.
said
:
he
nent he is°gucU"ding froIIi s~or-:
havedifferen'fperspnalities
.
Put' defense, .t~ut they. also enjoy
,
not effec~ soph~inores
'
Dorial
,
d felt he
.
\Yas
nofpart<>f
_
th~
-
terun
fog than
.
dunkitjg thi
.
b.allinto
.
.
weliJ(~t.he
:
samethings
i
For
:
the
·:
do.fog the sawe
:
th}ng{w~en
Vale and Drew Samuels.'
~
>:
·
·
'
because
of
his
.
lad~ ofplaying
the basket.
He
said that
he
also
·
.
most° part our_Hv'ing
-
habits are
·
:
they are·notpfay
_
fog ba~lcetb_all:
.
Not only
do
both live together,
'
.
tune:
·
·Hefolt]ikehe
was
lqoking
gets a bigger. thrill_block!ng an'
.
the same;'!Je. adcl,ed. ·. ,,·

:
.
'
.
.
'They both. enjoy mu~ic and

butthey also both members of at the
·
team from
.
the olltside
opposing player's shot than a
.
.
This wil(be
_
_
Valfsofirst'year
\
playing
NBA
Ltve fo~
.Sony
the Marist Men's Ba
.
sketbaH
.
lookfoif in
:
Ho'?'eyer, he knew
fast break open_du~~--.
·
· ..
·
"'
suitingJ1p
for:
the
.
Re~
.
.
Foxes,:
'
.
.
_
Pla).'.~t~tiol\:
,
~f~~to/~P.
i~
~e
:
.
.
team. So b()th of theni are to~
-:
.
that he
·
was
:
a freshman
.
and
thal
.
.
;
Off the fO
_
~rtw~en ~e has
,
fr~e
, ·
t~_~t yearhe w~ r~1:s.h1~e~;b.~t. m~~,t
.
~r ,;<>f
;
~~.A,J.,.1 te,
,it
,~s
,
.
.
gether f!lOSt ~f
ti).~
time between
>·
he had
to
develop his game more
time, he hkefto ~1sten to
_
music,
.
·
.
gau;iecpots ~f expenen,cesJ~y
Samuels 9ands ~pw,n.
/
yale.
~~d
·
classes and at9letics. However\
,
.
;
and: become
·
a m.ore.<:bmplete
wpte p<>etry,
~dplayNB~
Hv¢· .
bein1(ai?.1e
.
.(g
~ra8~i~e
.:
with_
~e,
·
h~ haf~iy~~
~p
Rlay!
,
rig a~ainst
.
both men enj'oy each
·
other's
player:
:
,
·
·
.
. ·_
.
·
·
. ,
for Sony
.
Playstation. Trymg
:
to
·
· ..
team
a~~
le;rrnu:ig tlie systelll
.
· •··
,
h11:11
,
.
becaus~)Je .t~
_
real~y
.
goo~:
.
~
-,
co
·
mpany-whei:everon campus,
,,
.:
tlt
was
.
a·learning experience
find that free time is sometimes
''I sometimes
-
feel that being . WlienSamuels'pJaysNBALive·
:
.
Samuels was the first to be in-
last year because guys ·on this
imp~ssible between schoolwork
.
red'..s~frt
'
~'.d :fast
'year
Wis
·
a
,
he tak(}S_ i,h<;t
,
l°h~' lm9ws
frciin
:
·
terviewed, but before the inter-·
·
level are stronger and faster
.
I
and athletics.
.
·
blessing bec;ause who s~ys
.
I
.
basketball
a'iid
iilcorp
.
or~tes
'if,
view started he threw in·a tape just wanted an
·
opportunity to
Just as the intervi~\\'. with
would of
,
playe~ 9(not_, played.
<
into the video
'
gaitJe.' .He s~idh
,
e
'
of ,th~ rap group Fl~p
;
~o~~
h~lp th§t~ out,'..'
said
~am,_ti~ls.
Samueis wa~ ending
.
, his ~o~m-
.
It \\'.as
_a'
l~arnfo~
-
~
.
xpeqe9_c~
.of
..
lo~~f to
I?~.
~e_pevela\~~};a':-.
·
Squad.::_
.
-
·
..
,::.
·:,.-
.. \
AsJ()r~
.
h~tS~uelsbtj!'sSo
matecomesmtothero~m. Vale
:
what college basketball is all
alnes .
.
Cleveland
.
plays hai:d
·
The tape was playing through
.
the team; itis first and foremost
quickly goes
·
oyer to the rncli? . ab9u~;;
'
said
V~I~
/: ·
.
.
, .
,'
.
.:' .
.
,
.
noise in y9i1r
faG~
defens
'
e and
_
the interview because outside
a scoring presence down low.
and turns it off, s~op'p\ng t~e
.
VaiecoinesfrorriMari.stviaSt.
that'is'whathe,Iikes .
.
.
.
· ...
..
·
_,
ofbasketbaRSamuel enj?y~ps- _}'fe also considers hi~self to be
tape
.'
form playi~g: A.s
··
a, r~suH
Ray~on
,
d,'s Big~
.
Sc,?0O,l

'
10~
·
LiM ~~
_
vi9fo?aryi~ ~<?thaJs~;
·
·
··:·
..
.
'
·
.-
.
.
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,
: ..
'.
.
.
.
.
.
s
·
...
.
.
.
.
·.,
.
cat~9m
.
~eBronx.
_
Th1ssch,9ql.,. go
,
out1tmpract1Ce$.-ibere
.
~e
.
Hockey
.
beats
·p
U
but
1s
~i:~~~;:t~'.·%i*ri
~:ii\;r~t:titr:;a:
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_
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..
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~
Charl~9r,qart~;P,{esendypJay-
na;fsJ~(; othxr
i
1t1
,
p:i-:_a~t1c~.
·
It's ..
·
-
by'KA:ARENUMMEm·
' '
.
Thanks to
·'
a
-'
todd·
,
Huuon
.
puck in the
n~C
He is
_
o~r
mq~L
ing'for lJM!'15S;
:
ail.~~rc,Jiarri~,
:
aUa~o~th~lRitig·e~~h (jtil.er~%,
·
'
· Staff Writer
·
· · ., ...
power play goal more
th~
hal(-
dangerous
.
player 9ffepsiy~ly
.
·
wh_o pJ,aj,ed at Miit~\~~ota. .
. :.
-
:
:
,:
. to
_
b~f!lti1~
f#~t
compI~te ba~
:-:
.
. -·
,-
,:·
-.
·
·
.. ;
way thro'ligh·the first period,
·
on th
.
e ice at
any
<>ne _time/'
he

''I cifoose
··
J\.1~
,
s,(bec~iI
_
seJ
.,
keib~pfay~
(.
:
,
<
.
'
-0
.
__
.
;:
The Marist Red
·
Fox
-
Hockey
"
Maristfod
1~0:
·
Penn.State re~
said. "Ourteam:needs to ~ork
.
liked.theatmospheteandit'snot. ..
This.s'irpng

bond be
_
tweell
,
team··~na]ly sh?wed
~
tll.eir true
. ·
sponded wi~ thefr ow~. power
.
hard~rto create. Jf(en~i.ve
_
\)I>~.
::
to
,
far
a~~y
fr~m h.t?me
s~
'i_c3!!. :
~r~{y,
'$'#-1~~!~
:
~nd
J)o~ald Yaj~
-

:

potential to
·
be
·
·
dommant last
'•
'
play goal to
be
the game at 1-).
portuciitieswhenheis not play-
_
go)10D1~
.
arid s
.
ee my f~y,
.
·. ·
·
1s wh!3tmakes ~~re fyienq~!'ii.P
Fridaywithan8-'3victoryovei-
.
to end the ffrst.per~6d
·
ing:).gainstPSU\yedida-tre-
.
saidVale
i
o:
·
.
··
.
.
," ·
.
.
:_:
.
:
. ;
..
onaiidoffthecou~~pedru;Jt
_
<
PennState.
·
. .
:
. Huttoii's°secondgoal followe1· mendous'job.'.~
.
·
'
·
-
/
:
,· '
:_
Hesa.iqµefe\tat'.ti.J?es,Iasfy,eat .. isallaboute~Ie
,
n_djiigtlle1,rb~d
'
·
·
Losing to the Nittany Lions
5-
·
by a
·Bofr'Heht)'
goal' gave the
.
The
Marist'coaches
hope
.iliat
·.
he ~
.
i~h~d

Jj~'
~~~
:
,
p.,ofred-;
..
out
_
to
.
one an
_
<iili~t
~a
h~lp(n·g
,
:·'.
2 only one week before, Marist
_
Red.Foxes-~ 3: 1 le~d
.
~i\Viefir~t
·
the
former Super fa$t
:
Playefof'
'
shirted l?
.
edu:ise
.
the
'
re
.
\'I
ere
..
. each other
.
·
out::· ~cf\vhetlier
.
it
.
dominated PSU:with great fore-"
· ·•
intermission.-
··
·
·
· -
·
the Year
.
.is back after Thanks,.
.
•·
games he -(elt he
.
could have
·
be 9n
'_
the court or. schC>ol th~y.;
0

checking
·
and
:an
explosive Of-'
Five minutes i
.
nto the second
giving;
,
"Ailqther~pfayef,wlio
is
,:-
help,e<;fth¢ iel!rilo,1).t\;.: ..
/
...
:
·
:
.-·
c~
'rel~ti't~

e~_ch prdbl~ms.
;
;,-1 ·
.
fenseto win easily
.
·
> ·:
.
·: .,- .
period
·
PSU
·
scored·
'
to cut
-
.
the
·
a key
to
'
the
'
defens'td{Ralph
/
,:
Vale alslfsaid heis'really ef-
,., '.'
One

probleni Marisfdoes riot
·~
.
Assistant
,
co'ach
·
Kent
.
·:
deffcit
'fo
.
3-2:
:
Marist n
·
ev
:
er
·
·
Aiello
.
who is als6 oi.t(with a
fective
·
when it.conies tore- .. have to wo.ll)'
.
about tpat other
Rinehai:t
sai?
he fee~s that this
.
·
., loo~e~ ~~ck
-
~(ter that. .
P_ou~.
:
separa;e
,
?
5:J;io~l~er.
_lie;is
µop~.:.
·
:
:
b9lln?i~~
~d.
iico1pg J,he~ ~s .t~h~ols ·ha'.fe
!
t?,,~J~
j
tyip~{~
·:.
was a big wm early m:the·se~-
•strrught
.
unwi~weredgo$1}.s gay~
.
fully
c
go!ng
._
t<>_
pla:x,
;
_tht.l>
_wee~J
f
b,1ck 1~
.
tow¥ds)lie basket
: ,.
stop
_
players h
_
ke·Sam,uels and
.
son.
:,
.; .

. ·
·
·
·
Maris
'
t'a
'7'-2
fo'a'd midway
end against Hofstra.
~
.
~,;
.
0
What
I bring to the team is
Yalefromhurtingthereteamon
"Penn State obviously has
'
a· through the third
.
petjoa
. \
·
-
.
The Red Foxes fou~d them;
.
.
agg~~~s
-
~ve~es!l, r~bouri
:
d.i
.
n'g., theoff.ensivean9de,fen
_
siye
..
sjde
name and
'.
has beeri tothe:Na"'
.
Witll
9:45
leftin
the'gai:ne,
a
-s~lvesWitha4-4r.ecoidafterllie
_

·
and)1,us0e: I,I_ikedoingthelittle
oftheball .
.
.
,
..
,.
~- .• -
..
tional Touinament.thefastthree
"'•
·1asonCarusobr~al(away, shoi:t
win over: Penn
.
St:,
.
but)ost
lj:
.
. .
·
,,.
L
, :
L
'
.
·
E
· .
·• .
-
·
..
.
·
·
·
.. ·
.
.
'
·
.
.
years,"hesaid. "ltshow,~d~ow·
·
han~~~
'
:
;o~1 put:~xtra·icih~
_
dii
-
gameatRider3::2tlienei,t"day
.
,
·
.
VO

~
.

·
YBALL:.
,
,
:
Vrr
._
;
will-
-
good
.we
:
can be-when we are
the' cake··~s Ma.rst came away
N'ow at 4,:?,.spphtm1ore
foi:-.,.
·
, .
.
'
.
, -.
, .•·
,
.
-
..
·

,
, . ~:
.
·
,-
:
_,:
~

..
. ~:
i
•.
f:S?ltcu_.~~~
.
~n~
~l~~~?g
with in~en~·.
~i~
th~i~~ third
'.
~tiai
:
~tit
'
li~~i ~ru:d
_,
Se~~
·
·
Ma~y(
S'!d
:
hfb~7
0
,
be tough
~
to·replace
.
for
.
Mari.st
!'
y
.
.
. .
.
victory.
·...
, __
,
.
heves that M~stwdl pl
_
ay
.
up
,
,
.
. .
,
,
.
-
.
;
.
,
.
,
< .
.
.
.
.
lri terms of their eight.g~als,

·
.
It
was
Ht!tto~:s hat
·
1!ic~ thaf
to t!ieirpote.ntfali.,
,
.
·
~
;
;
·
,
..
·
..
;
. ...
co~~;
11
_
qedfrom pg
·
15
.
.
.
(;e~d~ sajd it_~ill ~e._i,nterest-
:
one each was scored on,
-the ·
sparked the Mans~ offense !}lat
''.The key
for:
us
i
.
~
to
p},i:l,y'
w~JI,
.
..
. .-.
. .
.
.
.
.
. .
. .
.
ing to see hoJv they react:to the
power play; shorthanded and
.
isrnissingtl}eirbiggest'?'eapori.
without the rnis!akes,")ie said .
.
yearinNCAAI-Ap_lay, wilI°be
positio~.
. ·.
}
...
.
...
.
also when the teams were play-
Brian Warzecha; who holds
"We
finally d~d
_
that
in
a
game
har
_
q repl~ce
.'
.
,.
, .
.
.
.

.
"Parker and
.
Birk are both.ex-
,:
.
ing four-on-four.
.
,
'
·
·
·
the Marist single season
·
recorq·
·
against J>e11q State, butt)le next
Park~,r
sajd she thin~s t~e :voi~.
:
cellent)1itters," Cerda
:
i
said. I
Both teams came out
~ff
the
.
for scoring; is on the shelf due
day we
feU
off against Rider.''.
will be (el~_next sea~o~.
:
.
thinkthey'Ji.both be cpmpeting .
.
openin~
•~ac~
off hi~ting ha~d
.
to a
-
f~~~tured coll
_
arbone· ~,d
·
Marist'~ ne~t h
_
ome
gam~
-
~s .
·:
"Yir)s just s~<;:h
·
a prt:5
.
eilce in
.
for µte'posidon thro~ghout°thy
-
.:
·
and trymg to find the1r game.
It
separatedshou)der:
:
·'
·
Nov. 13 agamst ihe Flymg .them1d~letParkers!31d.
"Ev-
..
year.':.-
.
, ..
.
.
·
. .
.
, .
was. riot until Penn State made . Rinehart said Warzecha
is
_
i
;
in-
Dutchmen of Hofstra.
.
Hope-
,
ery t ~ respects her and they
For Heather
Vtr,
bigger
and
bet-
,
the first mistake that Marist portant, but Maristcan still win.
fully it will
be
the Mari~t's ex-
.hit
away fro·m her."
.
. .
terthings
are
on the horizon
and
capitalized .
.
:
"Brian has a ~
_
alent to put the
plosive
·
offense and to~gh de-
.
Look for ~itller Birk or Parker
the sun may. set on her
.
college

fense that decides.the game, not
to be the force in
,
the middle
career, but her.impact on Marist
,
.Spring.Brea~t
,99·
--
Larg~st.selection
of
Spring Break
.
.. ·
·Destinations,
·
includi1Jg Cr,uises!

·

Foam p ariiesJ·
Dr.ink
Specials
-.
and
Club
-
-
·
: ·
.
A·dmissidns ..
-
.:
·
·
·
-
.
Group
Admiss.ions
antl
Free·
Trips
· Available
·
·
·
Epifuri~n
Tours
:
l-800~-231
~4-FUN
the date.
·
·
next
.
year.
·
·. voUeyball wiil never.fade ..

,'
'
.
.
'
ancun

Nassau
.
*
J
(lfflaica
*
·
Maza'tlan
*
Acapulc
*
Bahamas
Cruise
*
Florida
*
South

Padre
·

Travel Free
and make
·
lots of Cash ·1
·
top reps are offered
·
full~time
staff jobs.
Lowest price
Guaranteed. Call nowfor
·
details!
.
'
'
.
.
.
411
·
r
'-
















































































































































































































-

N()VEMBER.12;1998
.
' . ,
.
·"'·

·
·
.
:
·
:,
Th~
NFl,
i; in
the fu1ddl~
·
of
;
o~ mY,'p~edicti~rsJi~~
-
come in
.
ver
~rd
both
Randall
·
.
thtfslasdn; basep~i(is
oy~r_ ana
,
..
.
incorrect.. Jn:the tight National,
.
Cunningham and,Bi:ad Johnson
bas~etb~ Zvon't's,~'. H?c¥,ett
·
. D?ague
Ro~ki~
~ftll~
y~ar
,
r~
7
e
1 :
gQi _hurt:
.d~9~~
S~nday's win
.
TheNHI/just sti.tfte~ qack
_
tip
·
-
Kerry Woocfhas enierg~d v1~-
.
agamst t.he sa,nts. Who else
.
and it does ·riot look much
.
bef:.
'
tonous. Congratulaµons
_
\<;>
tfi~
.
.
can compete? Maybe the Pack-
ter tfian
;
Ias't year
so
fill:
a~
_
gb
-
~ls. flani
.
~ tlµ'q\ving ~ighiy
tha'.~
·
cap~
.
ers, Je~~; Dolphins a11d Jaguars,
.
are concerned. Artus Irb'e lead
-
tivated
.
~s
·
in ~
.
way'_that has riqt
.
buq,w.ouldn't hold my breath.
irtg tfilleague in
dAA
with a
.
happened
_
siiict'Doc'
_
Gocrden
.
:
Now to get back to my redun-
1.41.'LCalhtie whe~
·
tlieY wake
·
emei:ged'.
'
onto the scene iri the
:
dant
topic,
but one that is boths
upi:hes6-?~?rs

,
_
_
·
)_:
_
_
.
.
..
:
mid-eighti
_
~s.,
_.
.
...
,--
.
erin~_me_alot. };lave_yous~en
·
Wharis there to talk about m
·
·
·
.
those. new commercials with
thywide'wor]dofsp~~
-
?. We1f
·
.,
.--
..
·
·
.-
.

·
. •
_-
sajnu~iL.iac~9p.andSpik~Lee
first
·
and ftiremost

the
·
Mo
.
·
Artu,s -lrbe leadi
_
ng
.
watching 8th grade girl's bas-.
Vau~
_
hii
drarria,c~;i1tinri~s.
,
A~?~
;
tli'~
/eague .
./,:i,
.GAA
_
~
'
~et~~!rg~~s and .40 year-olds
~:~t~ii~~[i/?vi~;~u!~~~;f
:
with
a
_1:
.
~'(-?:_
.
(!all
-
~~iit:i~ie;i~r~
:t:
t~!~:~
ies~
_
ni'on~y
_
i~th~{gfve
'
~ini
'
h
_
if
·.
m~
when
.
they
·
wake
.
no~erit~eginaMil!er(~he w~ars
'.
.
'years." Quite simply,
1f
J;3os~
.
·
h
,
·
. . .
·
.
31 m the commercial) ts particu-
toii offers Vaughn
5 or 6 years,
·
up
t e St;Orers.
.
·
.
larly good. So
_
if you haven't
a
_
siinilarcornm.itmentth'eym~de
·
·
.
...
.
,
,
-
seentheco~~ercialswatchfor
to ~omar_Garc!?iP~aira arid _Troy
_
:
Movirig on. tothe
NFL:
It
them b~cause they are not only
O'Leary; he
·
'will
be willing to
·
looks'like the Bto~cos·are go..-
funny, Qut sadly true. Start the
coine to iertns with.the organi:-
·'
ing·t,nvalk through ev~rythiilg
_ .
season.:. soon,
..
;
please.
zatiori that seemlrigiy ha
_
d
:
no
.-
this yeiit.
Take
~wayJo~
_
Elway,
.
.
.
-
-
.
chance to ke~phiin,
_ ·
.
.
i ·
they_st~ll do µot lose.
_
In
fac:t,in
.
. _Also in the world of
Volleyb~
11114-.11/17 @MAAC"champio
'
nshjps
'.
.
~.
-
·
.
-
:
:
"
;
.. ;·
·:
:

;
.
.
'
.:·
.
·
.

:, ...
:: .
~
·~
.
f
_.
·~:,-.:•
"'.
Men's basketb~ll llll4Home vs:One World Stars
(Exhibition) 7:30
p.m.
·
..
,

.
·w~riien's basketball I i/14 HoITie vs. NY Gazelles
~xhi~itipn) 5:30.
p:m .
.
Swimming and diving (M&W)
11/14Home vs.
Rider
·
_,_.
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
'
·
.
.
Hockey\i'f_~3
Hom~ vs.Hofstra. 9
p.ni.
-
-
Tough· Trivia
.
.
.
.
'
.
.
.
'
Whe~
·
whs the last time the
Division I college
·
football National Champion was not undefeated?
Last week's question - When was the last time a team from the
stat of New York won the National Championship in Division I
college football?
·
Answer- The Syracuse Orangeman won the National Champi~
onshipin 1959.
There are·compJic:a~ionsllo'Y-:-
a seas<;m where ~tib~y Brist~r
·
sports this week:
ever. Vaµghii:did finish sec
·
ond
.
has played, roughly half the
.
in the Americ~ 4agu~ in bat:.
time,
t4e
Bfonc:os
_
~e·
'
stm 9-0,
L
NCAA Basketball has arrived
Vi
.
Jr
_
-
lea
·
~
.
v
·.
one
·
·.
yball
·
.
ting average, hitting
·
'.
~37
ac;_ld.~
including a 17-point win S~nday
.
and not a moment too soon.
ing40homers and driving in 115
against the Chargers
.
Is there a
.
Coilege ~asketbaH might
.
be
runs.
·
These
'
types
of
·
numbers
better team in football? Straight
·
better than the NBA anyway.
will draw interest ldgue wide,
.
answer, rio.

'
.
.
2. Ohio State loses it's number
t
-
.
• •
·
I
t
and already have,
.
Reportedly,
They have a
·
running game
.
onerankingfollowingashock-
o
.
a
Will Ill
as
_
theAnahe~m Angels have made
.
that can not be competed with
.
ing loss
.
to Michigan State last
,
a 6~year, 7imillion-dollar con:.-
·
in
'the
NFL.
They have one of
·
·
Saturday. Tennessee takes
·
the
'
·
-
~tif'Jlii~~t~J~~~;,
.
.

~:~,
.
~~:;:~;:~~:~;~
.
.
·
.
~;~~~
:
~;;:.~~~;~.
~e,at1\'.'lcCann
Vaughn isthe
fi~e
ageh(!,ha(
'
'
as any'fri'the
'
:AFC.
:"
9~,
;
y
,
eah,

3. Emmitt
·
Smitli
..
broke Tony
by
RYANMARA.2m
.
Shillington
·
to provide the ma-
has beeti
most
'
tlilked apou(iii

·
they'
'
h;~Vtn1
kicket,'
that
-
jhsi
.
Dqrsett's career rushing record
Staff
Writer
.
jority of the scoring.for the'Red
the
;
early sfag'es, but yoti
'
tan
·
•·
..
kick'eciXNFL tecord~tyi11g ~3-
:
for the Cowboys.
. ·
.
.
..
Foxes in the third game, which
sooh
·
expedtb'heat
'
a!>9ups:~,vi9.
_'
.
:
yardfieldg9al! asJyell a~
:
Qne _of
4.
_
Ryan¥
orCr;iigWhelihan?
The\;,,omen
;
s v9l)eybiill
.
t~a~
they won 15-7 to complete the
Brown, BernieWilliartis~
·
A1beri
·
the best punters ·in the
·
NfJ.,.
,
Is ther~
a
cqrrect answer for
enci~d ~~jr d~per seaspn on a · three game sweep. Long Island
Belle'al\d
'
Ra,ndy'J9hnso~ in_ Cari\r6~fihd
a
we*-1iess
'

M(
'"
Cha_rgers_'c9achesf
.
.
high note
,
tn
.
their last home
actually. kept
-
the
-
third game
-
dep~: The
:
ba~-~~.1lfot~e~~<>f eitli.e1\
:
. . .
.
_
.
•..
,:
,-,
,
.
5.
Vi~y;resteverde'.Isthe_reany
ganieofth~ season ...
.

·
·..
.
close; trailing only 7:-4 at one
is heating tip, ~nd
1~s
,only
·
g():
.
.
_
The Vikings are a team t~at
..
stoppin& the former Reisman
The .Red Foxes sw~pt Long
point.J:,efore Marist reeled. off
ing
;
f{)
g~~
h,otf~f,_ ,;
./
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.
,
co1,1,I~
ITT-*f
-~~,nw
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-
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~ro~:
!
wiriiler? He finally looks li\<e the
Isl~d Univer~io/ N.'ovember}rd
four straight points to put the.,
WhileT'fotalkingabo1.1tl'lase~
·
cos~ ·but the qefen_se 1s
_
f t as player _he ~as_ supposed to be.
in t~eirfim;I r,egular se~onco11- .. game away.
., " ..
ba(I;twill_rrientldrithatihffii~i
'••
StrRng'~(~hjlt r~s,ides
'
i_p Oen-:-·. ten 1e.¥S ago.
_·:
,
test win~jitg .the three game§,
:
The_t~am then traveled to the·::
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effortlessly,15-5,15-3,jindl5~
Harvardlnvitational
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.
said_.thire was~ Io(of emot
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Red foxe~ did not fair well, los-
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·
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-
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-
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·
,
.
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·
·_
·
involvedinthewin.
·
ing
-_
tothelv:YLeague'sHarvard
ol;>J~c,~1:ye
~l!•le
_
(!:o mp~ting
·
~'!\~tiY,;:;e.?~:::::tri
d-::~;vt~!/i;;.~;~~;;;
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was for me or_ µot, everybo
d match of the Invitational
b j ~ " G I D ~
: :•
·
'tan't
t9'.
thf
s~~cess ofthis·pr9~ • pr~ved}~ai._,anythfog is pos-
playec;Iexcellent.".
.
..
wept again, this time
StaffWriter
·
·
·
gram.
No
'
fu.atterwhatyourr6l~, · sible. ·.· ·
·
,: .
.
.
(J.l,wiousl_Y,
.
the te
gs,9~15,5-15, 15-
.
;
,
·.
.
.
.
'
"
yqu are an:1ntegral part_
t<;>
tlps
;'
The men's teamis equally 1m-
with her
.
in.
~incl'
.
Being part of a championship
~
program.
.
c '.
,
-
,
·
:
..
:
portant to our success. Even
played Vir;s num
team has be<tn easy. Writing
Too often, cross country and
though we. are two separate
biceps honorin
·
·
about
it
objectively, however;
tract< is
'
an
_
iiiyzed)s
~
~
-
spb
_
rt
·!)f
.
team
_
s,jt
,
ofteh feels as if we are
Leading
·
has not.
.
.
-
.
.
.
.. .
.
:
individuals. There is a certain
one. Every mee'f we can count
Foxes were
Every'weelc:Ifacedthechal-
thrillinthatapproach.
·
Toereare
on .Y.~>Ur
_
su~port to
'
help us
anci"LeighS
,
.
lenge of how to·best:write about
.
always indiyipual goals tp
\\'.OX:k
through the
·
toughest parts of aces; 3
_
6 ass
'
~
t was supposed
the men's and wpmen 's
·
cross
·
towards
and
individual c~ariipi-• courses. And, for some of us,
The domi
lt
promise and po-
country teams. I had
·
to
·
figure
onship~ to be
_won
.
.
And ~in-
.
many of you have become our
Req Fo~es
,
,
...
}lhtct~nti
'
;J£
Red Foxes lurked in
out how to wriie about
my

ning those awards,
l
thought;
closes~ friends, not just confi-
tack, as th
d
_
done to othee'"''tthe
''
6asement
,
of the MAAC
friends· ana teammates__:..,
dieir
·
.
.
was the epitome :Of it
all'..::._ ev-
dants about running, but in life.
teams this season
:
Cara Birk and
with a2-7 conference record (11-
best races; their wbist'races, and
erythfog that you have worked
.
Th~nks fqr aU of your support,
Jen Parker joined Vir in creating
.
17 overall); Despite the Iacklus-
how not to gloat Jhat we were a
towardsjs finally· recognized:
friendship, and cheering week • an insunnountable barricade for
ter record, the team came to lay
champioris'1ip caliber team.'
·
..
Bu(I was wrong:_ Winning
·
a
after
week.
. .
the Blackbirds' hitters, making
hard everyday.
Now that the Metro Atlantic
team championship is eveij bet-
All of this has brought us to
for a quick vic
,
tory.
. .
_
Ramey said that she thought
AthleticConferencecnainpion-
ter
.
Having 17 other people
fo
,
wherewe~today
·
-the 1998
TheRed_Foxesstnickquickly
_
the effort was always there as
ships are over though,
·
I'm
share·that v1cto·ry ,vith topfany
cross· country MAAC champi-
and frequently, jumping out ~o
well
-
throwing aside all objectivity.to
·
·
feeling that you can have by'
ons. Congratulations -
we
a 12-4 lead after only l2~nutes
"Everyb~y came to play hard
fin~lywritethearticlethatlh~~e
:
justwinningbyYourself:-Sirice
.:··
des~t:'e:it. To
.
the seniors of of action in easily winning the
all the time. I was very im-
wanted to about Mari st cross
August21 ,-w·e
·
have all woi-keo
·
both teams, best ofluck in your
first game
15-5.
·
.
·
pressed with the level of inten-
country all.along_·
.
·
-
together, helped each 9.ther get
last rac~ ~nd_ thanks for all the
The second game was almost
sity and effort that the team
Almost every week
11\Y article
.
to t~is poi~t - _
it ha~ been a
hard work over the years.
as quick with Marist leaping
showed," Ramey said.
stressed the.importance of our
·
•'"true team effort.
· :
-
ahead
11-2.
Behind excellent
Looking ahead at next year, the
pack. And that's. th~
.
stren$th
.
That is whaL ~s
!;iO
special
"Severalmontfis of hard work
service from Trisha Ramey l,lnd
Red Foxes will return the same
of our program. From our fi~st
·
·
about this~-
,
This team could
perfonned diligently
will pro-
Julee Cerda, Mari st was able to
starting cast, except for the de-
runner to our last; the coaching
not accomplish what it has
·
if it
vide memories which will last
cruise to a 15-3 second game
parting Vir. Vir, who ranked
staff; those of us ~vho end up
_did
not:work so hard together.
a lifetime.':
. :
·
__
win.
among the top 20 in blocks this
injured and ,vatching
·
from the
One person cannot win a
team
ParkerandCerdahitwellfrom
...
please see
VQLLEYBALL,
sidelines-':-eve1:Yon~ is impor< · champi9riship. Buttogeth~r.
_
we
Than~s for all ~e memories!
the outside on accurate sets
·
by
pg. 14
·
-





















































j,
I
l
.
·Stat ofthe·Week.
The Mar.istfootball foam.
TH
.
. ·
r
-~l·R· .(("L.
"D
- set
·
a school record with
. .
.
.
~
'6 .
~V M
·:6<lpbfutsjn_tht!~,win_OYt!f .. •,

<> ,::
._', ·

·t· . .
·,1he·Ci1·.
'Golden..
·..
/"'"·
·o·:·
·
.
-:,.
'
.,·-·.,,·.·.• ... ··.·•s··..:.
Griffs.':'
· · · · ·• ,,
:
'
, · ·.
·
,
.
· ,
.
· ••·
NOVE
.
-:.
'
.;
. .-
>
> •• .•·· ··
\
,,
;:;.,:,;;:;:;.._,;;:,:;,.;.;;;;;;;;;,;.;,,..;;;,a,,. . . .
...,
....
- - - - - - - - - - . -
.. - - - - - - - -
()Jf
eme~IJP ·
60pointsintiig
'
'
Sehior-ywiµ
·
6y1;HOMASRYAN
·
·schoolrecords alone. The215
· Sports
Editoi
yards givehim.i',447'for
the
sea2 ·
son, ·eclipsing Jova:ri ·Rhodes
. Ifone'thirigcanbe·said·a~out
preyiqusf~ord'of 1,321.,The
the Maris(football
team
on Sat- ·. four' touchd()wns gives•
him.
a
•· utday,. it isi.ihat their perfor--
record 14\>µ ilie_y~ar, a.nd also
mance was a team effort.
ties the single. game record he
uote of the Week
'.'There ~re games when
_
there· are,·may9~.Sqst11-
.; dents.'.
1
~Athletic.'Director
1imiJurfay..oil'life1i's bas-
ketball attendence. ··
.. <PAGE16-
They s~ored through the air,/ tiedlast.week. Notto mention
on the gr9und; ondefense, and
adding on to his career touch-
on special teams,· all the' while
down mark which. now stands
stopping the· Cariisius Golden
at 3 7, Not
a
bad
three
years. ·
·Marist's Dave Spinato.(5}strike's
a
Heisman pose during this,long runagainstCanisius.
.
..
· . ·
.
.
. Griffs from scoripg at
alL
It was
, What_made this· game espe-
complete and total domination· dally sweet for-Allen was that it
as the Red Foxes walked away
came iri front of his father, who
from Seriior Day witha60-0win.
was attending a .game for the
The· win left Ma:rist just one
first time in Allen's career as a
victory short of tying their
RedFox.
school record of wins in as sea-
"I was able to have a big day
son with seven. The Red Foxes
for
my
father which makes it ex-
also won seven games
a
year
ago. Willthefget it this Satur-
day at Siena? Well, lets put it
this way .
.
Canisius actually beat
Siena; 22-7. Unless Siena can
find a. way to · get the ~lready
graduated Reggie Greene in the
backfield on ~aturday,-it'll be a
long .day.for the Saints: .·
.
,
·
Speakfog of great backs,
Ma:rist ha.s one in J.J. Alleri, not
that anyone would notice judg-
irigfrom the articJe below. With
Ma:rist putting up 60 points, it
would be a· good guess to say
Allen had a•big game, and guess
· what? He did: Allen ran 19
times for 215yards and fQr the
sec6nd straight week; four
touchdowns. Not a bad three
. tra· special," Allen said.
.
With 322 yards on the ground,
the Red Foxes moved into ninth
place inDivision I-AA in rush-
ing offense.
· All that is not· to say the
Ma:rist offense was one-dimen-
si onal on. Saturd~Y-, Quarter::
backBillTrai}tagUnj thre\\:'
~\\:'CJ
. touchdowns himself and pr()b-
ably would have had more Iia.d
Allen and the- score not gone
out of control.
· Tramaglini actually got Ma:rist
on the board :first.just ninety
seconds into· the game as . he
connecte~ with Tim Korba ori
40-yard touchdown ·pass. ·· On
the next play
of
Mar_i~t's next
possession; Tramaglini again
quarters. .
.
went long, this time to Je>e
Tiiose numbers give him three
Calabria who took the pass to
. .
.
'
.
.
.
.
the end
i~rie
f9r a 58-yardicore.
Tramaglini finished· the day 4-
of-8 for 120. yards and the
:
two
scores.
· Tramaglini, whose shoulder
had been bothering him much
of the season, said he fehgood·
going into Saturday's game,
"The shoulderwas strong and
I was looking forward to mak-
ing some b_ig plays," the senior
said. "We don't have a chance
to win the MAAC, but we have
a chance to make history and
we're doing that."
Jason Adamoytirka continued
the Marist firsfquarter barrage
with 31-yard field 'goal on their
next possession.,Finally, Allen
scored
TD
number one from
11""
yards out to give Marist a 24-0
firstquarterlead. .
. .
· The second wasn't much bet-
ter for the Griffs. Two more
touchdowns on the ground7one
fromAIJen and one from Dave
Spiµato, bothfroin 7 yards ?ut,
gave Ma:risfa 38~0 cushion at
thehalf.
_
.
Two more Allen touchdowns
highlighted the: third quarter
scoring.• The first one from 20
yards · out and the second· on a
. toss to the left from 33 yards
away. Joe Macchia then re-
turned an interception, his
fourth of the season, 33 -yards
for a touchdown.
Canisius showed. they had at
least some pride left; shutting
out the Marist offense, which
worked exclusively on the
ground in the second half, in the
fourth quarter; They could not
, escape the fourth without some
embarrassment•however, as a
punt attempt ended up with the
ball being snapped out of the
end -zone
for
a safety.
As awesome as the. offense
was,· the. defense was just as
good.
Marist sacked the
Canisius quarterbacks five times
and picked them off four times
in the rout.
.
. • Ma:rist head coach Jim Parady
·said the key was the constant
pressure the Ma:rist defense put
on.
"It
seemed like every, time I
16oked up some one was in.their
backfield harassing their quar-
terback or swarming to their run.:.
ning·backs," Parady said.
The Marist defense ·ended.up
holding the Golden Griffs to just
41 yards of totaloffense, includ-
ing :-19 yards on the ground.
Those numbers enabled Ma:rist
to move into first place in total
defense in Division I-AA, allow-
ing only 213 yards a game. The
Red Foxes were first last year in
that ~ategory as well as rushing
yards allowed per game, where
they are currently second. this
season.
so· witft'alf these :stats back-
ing them up, why• are the Red
Foxes only 6-3? One thingthat
hurt them was the fact they had
to go to· Duquesne and to
Georgetown,. unlike last year
when they played both at home:
Of course playing those two
at home does not. nec'essarily
equal wins. Both.of those teams
currently possess a stigma over
Marist which they will have to
overcome e~entually. ·
M3ri~t a.tlJl~tiC•citPa.rtment concerned
a.lJPqt
d~iJl<J.lill~fsflJ,:)..~nt 3ttendan~e
··by.)EFJ!DABNCKE'
·
_: $ta.ff Writer_:) : :
thin~ theycoulddoRbetterjob ' soiri;p'eo~ie: Attendanceterids
,· Murrayan~lSullivanboth
'
said. tehd because-there is no Con-
' -:ufsuppprting:the teams~•• ·. ·
to fall.off towards the end.~':
they d9 no(know · how
to.
go
nection betwee~ the students
According
fo
figures proviged .
.
'AlthoughSµlliv~ ~dMutrily . about recruiting morestudents
and the. athletes.<
.
.• '
.
' '
· If y~u build it, th~y' are sup-
by
Colin' SuUivan; Assistant
bqth s3cid the foi:itball atten-
to attend sporting eve11ts on
.
"There
JS
really
a
lack of con-
posed to come.
.
Athletic Director for Interrial '· dance.could be higher, that was · campus. Sullivan saidhe.thl.nks. cem among th~ ).tu,dent body
But whUeMaristCoilege has
A.ff
airs; there were on 'average
n·ot· their ·biggest .· concern.
they are doing.all they can:..
towards school. sports;" he said.
built a· successful athletic· pro-
249 students at each of the five
M\lll'ay
said he would iik~
~~
see
"We see:a lot
of
~thletes sup-
"Many of.the ~tudents who do.
granqn_chidtriga fo~tballJeam . horrle football g~es· this. sea- · more. support
for.
oth~r fall
porting athletes but in order to
attend do so bec~use they have
that had thenumberoriManked
son, That-is Jess than 10per-
sports like soccer and volley-
reach ouf to the rest of the stu-
a friend on the·team."
tusliing defense in ·the nation
cent ofthe total student popu-
baIJ: . .. .,
. .
dent body, we don'tknow how
Murray sajd lack that lack of
last season, there
are
:0-otmany
lation. , · .
.
. . . . . . . . ·.
/fhe 'greate.st concern of to goabourdoing that," he said.
interest could be part ofthe
Marisfstudents coming to the
. Last S~turday only 166: stu.:.
Murray's, however, istlie bas-
''We feel we advertise eriough."
problem: . ·
games.

.
. .
. .·.. .
derits witnessed the Red
foxes
ketball attendance. For a sport
However, sophomore Kyle
"Apathy is somewhat of a
There was a slight improve-
destroy Canisius 60-0 on·senior ·that is· so popular with young
Wood said he thinks lack of ad- ··· strong word,'' he said. "I don't
ment in· student attendance at. · day, the final home game 'of the
people, the student support for
vertisirig is one key reason why
think the students are apathetic.
athletic events this fall, but there
season.
It
was also the last
the college basketball teams has
many students do not support
Hopefully they are just in-
is stili a long way to go until
home game for running back
U.
been amazingly low in recent
the teams.
volved in other activities."
Marist college can say they
Allen, who has rushedfornearly
years. . .
"For those students who are
With
the basketball season
have a large cast of student sup-
1500yards and scored 1-7 touch-
"We haven't had great sue-
not associated with the athletic
approaching, Murray said he
porters.
downs this season.
cess,'' he said of basketball at-
department,
it
is difficult for
hopes student attendance will
Athletic Director Tim Murray
Sullivan said this Year's foot-
ten dance. "There are games
them to know when the various
dse. He and his staff want to
said that student involvement
ball attendance was predictable'.
where there
are
maybe 50 stu-
teams are playing,· especially
see more students in the seats.
inotherextracurricularactivities
"From a student standpoint it
dents."
those teams who aren't the
However, as of right now there
might contribute to the low at-
is similar (to past years)," he
Ice hockey is one sport that
money-makers on campus,"
are no new plans to attempt to
tendartce figures.
said. "I think initially the num-
has been strongly supported.
Wood said.
bring them in.
"Students are extremely ac-
bers are high because
it
is a
Murray said he can not
.
figure
In addition to lack ofadvertis-
'The staff is willing todo what-
tive in many activities, and that's
chance for the freshmen to
out why hockey is so much more
ing, sophomore Doug Deiss said
ever it takes," he said. "Maybe
outstanding,"· he said. "But I
check out an event and meet
successful than basketball.
that more studen~ do not at-
the students n~d to
tell
us."


52.7.1
52.7.2
52.7.3
52.7.4
52.7.5
52.7.6
52.7.7
52.7.8
52.7.9
52.7.10
52.7.11
52.7.12
52.7.13
52.7.14
52.7.15
52.7.16