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Part of The Circle: Vol. 52 No. 10 - February 4, 1999

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. 'fhe
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the studenfnew&pal)erof
VOLUME#52ISSUE#10-
WelcoineBack!!
Key prayer
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r-·:e
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out of game
by
JEFFDAHNCKE
John Ritschdorff and others re- .
· S~affJVriter
v i -e
w
e
d
. Eligibiµtyquestiqns,surround- - Cielebak' s
·
ing one of their best players • s t a t_,u_ s ,
have brouglit:_the Marist mens
Cielebak was
basketball season to a screech- . ruled.,._ offi~
. inghhlL
:
. . .
'•. '
ciallyjneli-,
On)ru;i:15,Maristleained that
_
gible fo'play, ·.
the:NCi\.A: was :investigating . theii. report
T, · •- -
c··
1
b·-:1, - .. -·
-ti -
was
sen[.to
·
. omasz
}!!
e
M,_ a
JUP:lOf
or..
.
the
.
NCAA
waid fromsPoland; for,.hisiri~ .- : ·;:(· -.
,,.li. _
.
,~
, ~,, .. ;;., ... ,.:~!:::;:~Et,~~l-"~1~:,:.: ...
~~~~~~2r-'~:·r,{2~:
. Ina statement released by the : .
. ..
_
...
. _, ., ,
_
. _
sc_bool aftet}iarning ofthe
in~
.
"I
!~ti
t~Feerlffi:icJ~:-
'Vestigati,on,athleticoo:ecfor1'im
~
-
-
1 •.
f{J
t
o
,,.
l"i/,': \ ·
>y,
.:Murtay
,
btjefly __ cl_escribed the
are<-op~rating ·--with.
situation,
_·-
-
_
. --
·
·• -. . .
·o,ie
han·d
·
:·behind
. "The~e hav:e been some ques~ · .
:-·
. ,; • .: · · ·
·
·ttonsnusedaboutTornasz'spar-,'
our l:Jack. .· ,
ticipation ·in the European dub
system,"_he said._.·"It has been
de<:id.edthatitisJn.the best inc:
terests ofTomasz and the men's
·.-·basketball· program -to -tempo-.
rarily
wjthhold him from
cornpe"
_
. .•
._. . . . . . .-
_ ,. _
titionuntifthese issues have
.-.. S~anMomson,?ss1st~tct~':
been resolved."_ ... .- .· •• ,
Je(i£direct(}rfcire}(:tem:tl~airs; ·
. . ··.Now,:·
six_gam~s si11~e;ffe{in,\,;'),a,i~Af:~-.,§aq ~J_(pe~tedAP:i~.i~~on_ ,
. - vestigation begap;''.Gi~le]?ak'if/:by,;f!i~~~p.9[Ia~~:\J(e~~tP~ttl·a '
. ,· stiHon-the sideline>Maristcon;: ·.·· .. ~ec~si<:Iit~:in,a4e,1ly.the~CAA; ·
tinues to··a\\'~it•word from thi ···11e•s~id/Marist\yi1Jl:,)e\Vithout ;,,
NCAA Sfuderit-Atlilete Rein~
on~o_ftheir biggestst3:1:s: •. ·:- . --· .
. statemenfCommittee.
,
·
-
-
"It
is
in
ouibest interests· to.
' As-of Tuesday: Cielepakwa!i .. ·withliold liim'from'c<>rnpetition
. officiAfly listed as inactive ..
On .
u11t1l
llll)'
qu~stions w~thNCM
Jail:~24;
after .sitting out.three -·regulations 'are resolyed;" he
ganie,s',
fyfar_ist athletis e>fficials . saict _ .. . .
...
.
_
- .·
ruleo.the forward ineligible,· ·· '
•It
is difficult to ascert,rinw~at
_;rhls'.~ari:J.e after an inte~al
,
1n-
'the exact violation was/how-
q11iryJnto the,rnatter,-·,A_c.f:>iri- _ever,
.
. When asked why-'the
niittee/consi~tjng of Murray,
NCAA was concerned. about
assistant. athletic director for
c;ielebak's eligibility, Morrison
c~mpiicuwe Chandra Bie~irth,
·NCAA:faculty representative
...
pleaseseeCIELEBAK,pg.4 _
:. ~-: ·"
< ,, ,··
-:--SPORTS~-
B~'farragan
and
tlieR~-
Foxes·had a rough-time
controllilig}i>yola'sJason .
Rowe,
'pg."1~ .. _· _:. _.
wa:KLYPOLL
J.,.,~ . -~_: __
Libraryfund
gets·
$500,000
:lf!~11ii
p~~~g
reguiations?.
YES
94.
NO
6
SEE RELATED STORY PG. 3
This
is
an
~
svn-ey
talcen
/Tt1111
125
Marirtsttu!orls.
· C"m:lc
rt,oconoc Scotto
Men work on library's roof.
byLIZ
C,ARRUBBA ·
Manag'in~ Editor
·. Marist has been offered a
. prestigious $500,000 challenge
grant to finish fund raising for
· the n~w library by Sept. L
According to an article in the
Poughkeepsie Journal,
_the
Kresge Foundation will give
Marist the grant if$
I. I
million is -
reached by Sepl 1, and if the
goal of reaching a total of $ I 0
million
is
successful. Dutches~
County Induspial Development
Agency bonds
:will
pay for the
leftovercostofthe$19.6million
library ..
· The
Journal
article stated that-
. the Kresge· Foundation. is one
of the country's most presti-
gious philanthropic organiza-
tions and funding is competi-
tive.
.
. ·"It offers.grants to institutions
operating in the areas of higher
... please see
GRANT,
pg. 4
• FEBRUARY 4,1999 ---
INSIDE
'IODAY:
Showers
hi:45°
lo:33°
Community ................. 2
Features ..................... 5
A
&E ............. , ........... 11
Opinion ...................... 9
Sports ........................ 16



















































































































.
Februar 4 1999
UnisonArtsandLeamingCenter
An off-campus
'student
.
··
Unison Art~ and Leaming
.
awoke in her second-floor
Cent~r
·
is offering
·
Advanced
,
..
Poughkeepsie apartment
at
BeginnerSwingDanceClasses
1:45 a.m. Monday, Feb. 1, to
with Eric Hollman. Lessons will
find a threatening male in her
_
take place Thursday evenings room.
.
from Feb. 18th through March
The student dialed 911, hut
.
llth,from7:15p.m.to8:45p.m.
911
service has not been es-
The cost is $40 for non-mem-
tablished
in
Poughkeepsie
·
bers. CaUUnisori at255-1559 to
yet. An operator traced the
pre-register and for
,
more irifor-
call and contacted the
mation. Unison is a non:.:profit,
Poughkeepsie Police as a pre-
multi-arts center located at 68
caution.
.
.
.
. .
.
.
\
.
.
What was your
·
.
New
·
Year's
Resolution?
PAGE2
.
Mountain Rest Road in New
Joseph L~ary, director
·
of ·
.
Paltz.
fytarist security, said the fig-
.
Defensive Driving is being
'.
ure, a
6;2''
black male \Yeigh-
.
offered with Patrick Paul on
ing approximately 200 poimds,
Sunday Feb. 14th, Sunday April
·
made his intentions of physi-
25th, and Saturday June 5th .
.
.
cal violence obvious as he
Lessons will take place from
approached her.
9:00 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. The.cost
is
The student bribed.the male
$37 fornon-members who pre-
·
with money, giving him a
register and $42 at the door.
purse, but· he continued to
This NYS Point arid Insurance
approach her. To dissuade his
Reduction Program is a course
advance, the student said she
given for safety arid savings
had AIDS, causing him to
approved by the NYS Dep~-
back away momentarily. This
inent ofMotor Vehicles. The
gave her ehQugh room to run
course is a driving
.
_
knowledge
from her apartment to the
refresher
that
can save drivers
street.
10% off CoIHson and.Liability
.
.. The attacker cha
-
sed her
~'Try
to
get more
.
· ..
:
press
for
:
the ~wim
·
.
:
team teani. ,,
"Exercise more. "
" Fpr all of the
-
children of the world
to
join hands and
·
sing. "
insurance for three years. and
down and struggled tosubdue
.
_
·
fn1~f
6
£°cJ~!PPj11
.
ts
9ifY.
.
~~I~Y:.
.
"
~:;;:ri::r:,~htt:ef
;!:;9!};~
::
·· -
7,:
,,.
·
.
..
....
.
~,.
·
...
·
.
.
.:" -· :
E~yS~~w~b
·
·
-
-
rreslimaii
·
_,
·
.
.
Kevin :O~uglas
-
soph.omore
.
·
·
Drew1unitton
··
-
sophomore
.
An on-going Yoga class for
unknown offender. fled and
beginners
·
is
.being
offered jumped afence, where the p'o-
Tuesday evenings from Jan. 5th
lice officerfanded wrong, in-
to June 29th, from 4:
.
30 to 6:00
.
jured
·
his ankle, fod was
fled the scene and was not
p.m. The class.is being taught
forced to give up pursuit.
·
fo~nd.
-
the
fripto
St
..
Francis and to
Arlington bo~tl:iouse at
,.
3:QO
,visit Health Se'rvices
.at
a . p.m. Similar graffiti was found
by Deborah Medenbach, acer~
·
Leary said
.
there was no sign
tifieci teacher through
The
Yoga
·
·
of forced entry, and the
Institute in Houston. The cost investigation continued after
is $12 fornon-members in indi-
·
.the
suspect's escape, includ.,.
vidual classes and $45 for each
.
irig the use of police dogs and
_
monthiy series.

dusting for
.
fingerprints. The
DutchessCountyHappenin~s
.
student sustained minor
"The Big Funk" and ''The

bruises ori her legs·.
Conduct of Life"
.
will
·
be
·
pre-
sented in the Nelly Goletti The-
atre. The dramas will take place
from Feb. 4ththrough the
7th.
For more information, call 575-
3133.
Hyde Park Winterfest will take
place on Sunday,
·
February 7th
and starts at 12:00 p.m. There
will
be
games, refreshments, and
ice skating. For more informa-
tion call 229-8086.
"Lost in Yonkers" wiUbe on
stage at the County
·
Players in
Wappingers Falls. Feb. 5-6, 12-
13, and 19-20. More information,
cal1298-149l.
.
Three Marisi students, all
livingiti off-campus housing,
were verbally abusive to the
Palace
·
Diner staff and the
Poughkeepsie police officers
that responded to the incident
Jan. 27th at 4:30 a.m.
A student's 1999 Toyota was ,
scraped as· a result of a "fender
bender" in the West Cedar
Parking Lot.
The incident was reported to
security officers Wednesday,
Jan. 27th at 5:30 pm
'when
the
owner found the car damaged.
The other driver and vehicle
Weekend Weather
FRIDAY:
partly cloudy
hi:
43°
lo:
2'1:'
SATURDAY:
snow
to
rain
hi:
42"
lo: 22"
SUNDAY:
snow to rain
hi:
41°
lo: 30>
Source: hrrp:llwww.weather.com (The Weather Channel)
later date.
·
.
bY security
9: 10 a;m., Jan.
Fire alarms ~e~e functim1al
25th;
'
painted on the west en'"
in Gartland's
;'E''
·
Block
,
·
securityfound'.'WE'REEV-
trance of the Riverfront tun.:.
again, bladng at
1
:00 p;m.

ERYWHERE
rn"
a:nd an anar-
nel.
after another cooking mis-
chy
·
symbol sprayed
on
the
·
hap. West Cedar also re.,
·
ported a_fire al11rm last .
week, caused bybumt food:
·
An ambulance.transported
·
:
.
. ·.
a Chainpagnat student to St.
'
>
.
_-
Francis Sunday, Ja11. 31st, al
·
9:40 p.m; because she was
.
·
having difficulty breathing.
Harassing ~alls have onci
,
,
,
.
again been reported around
-
campus ...
·
A Mid-Rise _visitor, com-
plete with pass, became un-
ruly at 1 :50 a.m. Saturday,
Jan. 30th .
..
The guest admitted to cre-
ating two holes iri a wall -
one punched, one
'.
head-
butted. He calmed down
_
shortly after, and security
allowed him to remain on
·campus.
·
Two hours later
·
security
asked the visitor to
-
leave
when he became agitated
an
·
d obnoxious again;
A female s.tudent from
Champagnat's sixth floor in-
jured her ankle at 2:40 p.m:
Saturday, Jan. 30th, when
she slipped on a re.cently
mopped
floor
in
Champagnat's breezeway.
·
The student opted to skip
(JJJJp~'lllli-lm~OfferlJ,#
264
N0RrH
R{W),
POUGHKEEPSIE 4S4-9239
J,arpa,t
AllSpr.,t;
~
.!I'.
Prands
~
,,_
U:,DIJdi;
Em
.
llrii7w
q,e,.~9411Ms.~Sat&J(}-5
.
.
.
•Manst~and1g/JikjJrtibo,iprts
ll!flhSlat/ttlll.D)Prtx/






















































































,

_.
~
·
FEBRUARY4 1999
··
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.,
•.·
.:
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TH1l:t1RJCLE
.
.
.
N
·
ews·
PAGE3
Patkillg causes he~daches for students
·
by
JESSICA SMITH
Staff Writer
·
. ·
S~cu
'
rity "and studerit opi~ions
·
·
differ drastically on
.
the legiti-
macy of parking tick~ts.
·
.
Of the roughly 7,500 tickets
given out each year, Tom
McC_lean, assistant director of
security, conteQded that
they
are given out _fairly.
·
.
"We do get a lot of complaints,
but most tickets are justifiable,"
he said.
McCleah said that it must be
emphasized that Marist is a walk_.
ing campus, and most tickets
are
given out because people are
·
too lazy to· walk from one place
fo
an9ther. ·
.
.
_ ·
.
·
·
Sophomore Christine Bradley,
-
who lives in Mid-Rise, strongly
disagreed with McC
_
lean.
.
.
Circle file photo
.
"I
don't think it's fair atall,"
.
Donnelly parking lot, pictured above, provides six parking spots for campus visitors to use.
sh~ said. "Security isn't well
Security tickets students who park around campus because of the parking crunch.
run in this area."
.
.
agreed w~th Bradley.
while unpacking her car after
"On
-
campus parking is so
·
Earlierthisy~ar,Bradleylost
"YoucanparkintheMid-Rise
winter break: The student is
tight, we just don't have the
the key to he(car arid _called se-
lot on the weekends, but it's
currently looking to repeal the
space available," he said.
ctirity to notify them that
·
she
easy to forget to move your car
charges.
Ticket prices range from
$
l 0
wouldn't be able to move it.
back to Hoop lot before Mon-
McClean said that the lots are
forneglecting to display a park-
Still: Bradley received three
day," she said.
overbooked for space and the
ing permit, to
$75
for unautho-
. parking tickets and a boot on
Novick has received two tick-
amount of tickets given depend
rized parking in a handicapped
her car:
.
·
ets this year. She also said that
on the lots.
space, according to the Student
Although Bradley didn't have · the tickets are given out ex-
· There is no visitor's lot avail-
Handbook.
to pay her tickets because
-
of the
tremely early, so that a student
able here due to lack of space,"
McClean said he did not know
miscommunication, she said that
wouldn't even have the oppor-
according to McClean. Visitors
where the money from the tick-
she thought communication on
tunity to move their car before
can park in the six or seven
ets went. According to him, the
security's part was not satisfac-
their
8:00
a
.
m. classes.
·
available spots in the Donnelly
security department has noth-
·.
tory.
.
.
.
Novick also relayed the story
parking lot, and the rest of the
ing to do with it, but it probably
Melissa Novick, also a sopho-
of another Mid-Rise resident
·
visitors have to park in Beck
goes to a contingency fund.
morelivinginMid-Rise,saidshe
that received a parking ticket
Place, located across Route
9.
·
Transfer, student
.
.
rate
.
,
highest
,
in
.,
y:e.a
.
r~
..
.
C
-
~;
f/~
'
.
Spring semester
'
.
.
.
begins with
-
110
transfer students
.
"My
brother goes
here
and
he
has
by
JAIMETOMEO
Staff
Writer
Startingfre~hman year of col-
lege was nerve-racking enough,
but when you are a transfer stu-
dent who is in it all alone, it is a
-
.
never had
.
anything
bad to say about it.
And I -meet new
people everyday so
it
.
.
different kind of nervousness.
·
To ease the fears of transfer
.
students, Mari st College admis-
sions,
.
which

includes
.
transfer
~dmissions, works very hard at
making them feel at home. Sean
Kaylor, ".ice president of admis-
sions,
·
saicl admissions works
hard to recruit transfer students
and make them feel at home.
.. Kent Reinhart [ coordinator of
·
·
·
spring enro1lment] coordinates
a campus wide effort. Everyone
did a superb job to enroll 110
·
transfers in the spring," he said.
The 110 transfer students this
spring semester more than
doubled the number from last
year
.
It
is also the most trans-
fers ever enrolled in one semes-
ter here at Marist.
Kaylor gave a few reasons as
to why the number was so high.
"More students opted
·
to
study abroad, which frees up
some housing and more resi-
dential space," he said. "Also,
since we came in right on the
exact number of freshman for the
fall we did not over enroll the
class, which means we didn't
have the mammoth number of
build-up rooms."
Marist welcomes and encour-
ages applications from transfer
students
.
They accept students
gets better and bet-
ter."
. Jessica Sullivan
transfer student from
Endicott College
from two and four-year colleges
throughout the country, Just
like they do with freshmen, each
applicant's
·
grades, leadership
skills and personal qualities are
taken into consideration.
According to Patty Houmiel,
from the housing and residen-
tial life department, transfers are
also given a survey similar to
the one freshmen are given.
This provides helpful informa-
tion for housing when they are
deciding with whom to place the
student with.
Students such as Emily
·
Schwab, a freshman transfer
from the University of Connecti-
cut, were interested in Marist
because of its reputation in aca-
demics.
"I heard it guarantees good
jobs after college and that it has
a really good communications
program," she said.
·
J.R. Cappe11o, a freshman
transfer from Bryant College,
said he agreed with Schwab on
whyhe
chose Marist.
"I
chose Marist because it's
known for communications
which is going to be iny major,"
he said
.
But it was not just the work of
admissions that persuaded
some students to consider
Marist.
Jessica Sullivan,
a
transfer stu-
dent from Endicott College, said
she heard good things about
Marist through word of mouth
. of those that have had experi-
ences here .
·
"My brother goes here and he
has never had anything bad to
say about it. And I meet new
people everyday, so it gets bet-
ter and better;'' she said.
Black Delanney, also a trans-
fer from Endicott College, said
he also heard positive com-
ments from students here.
·
"I chose Marist College be-
cause it is about 25 minutes
away from my house and
my
best friend goes here," he said.
Most students, such as the
aforementioned students, are
transfers from two-year or four-
year institutions.
Kaylor said the reason for this
was
.
"that
·
most transfer stu-
dents came from schools that
didn't have their major or were
just unhappy."
Some students are just glad to
be away from home. For Carol
Pernice, a transfer from Nassau
Community College, that was
just the case.
"l
absolutely love it here.
l
like to be able to do things with-
out my parents constantly find-
ing out. It's great," she said.


























































































































































FEBRUARY 4
7
1999
PAGE4
··.
GRANT
,
:
Kres·ge
:
gives
r===
Marist prestigiQri~
aWard
..
.
continued from pg. I
"The
library
will
education, health and long term .
care, arts and humanities, human
represent a nice
bal-
services, science and
.
the envi,.
..
a,ice
·
between
·
.
what
ronment arid public affairs/' the
·
we
'
kn
"
o
·
w
as
'
a
ho
.
·ndi~
article stated.
·
·
·
·
,,,
u
The grant will help Marist to
tio nal
lib
rdry
.
and
.
complete the construction by its
h
, /.'
t
··
..
·
h l
promised deadline and also en-
t
-
e use
OJ
ec no ·
courage other donations.
ogy
to
support
teach-
Dennis
J.
Murray, president <>f
.
'
ing
·
·_
:''
Marist,
·
said in the article that
·
Marist has already
·
raised sev-
eral hundred thousand dollars
.
.
toward its final
.
goal of$1
.
1 mil
~
lion
.
During the final phase of
the campaign,
·
officials will
Roy
Merolll
.
Marist's executive vice
·
president
reach out to alumni, businesses
all of our things done," she said
_
:
and friends of
the
college.
"I could do research with books
.
"This distinc~i~e ne"': li_b
.
rary
. ·.
and the Internet, type the paper
Des~ite
·
recent weather conditions, the library construction remains on schedule.
willadvanceM~st'~
_
nuss1onof
·
.
andgetacupofcoffeeallmone

.
·

:
._
,
:.
·
..
..
.
.
·

h d 1
·
d
acad~mice~celle~~ean4coni-
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llace
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construction
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-
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-
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She also said she's
.
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.
oking
-
·___
U
_
.
·
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· .·
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t o
.
rrie
'
ef-Septelllb
·
er. '99
·
deadline
times larger than the old one;
unsafe crossing Route 9 late at
.
·.
_
-
. .
. . .
.
.
·
going from a 27,000 square foot
night to go to the temporary li-
b
TARA
QUINN
.
relations; said he was impressed
weather
.
"
librarytoan83,000squar~foot
brary.
_
·
. .
Y
S
rff'u .
·
.. :
·
withtheex
_
pedi
_
encyofthecon-
Merolli
·
also added that.
·
.
.
·
.
-
,
.
ta rrrzter

·
h
one.
·
Roy H. Merolh, Manst's ex
~
·
·
·
struction.
progress made this week m1g
t
The third floor is going to use
·
ecutive vice president, sai~ the
Despite recent
·
_
inclement
''It's amazing to see the library
impact the swiftness of the
technology to support collabo-
library would improve student/
weather, the construction of the
.
take shape," he said. "Each day
library's completion.
rative teaching and learning.
It
faculty interaction, create more
ne\v library remains on sched-
another section of wall goes
"We
have the
,
first two floors
will contain academic comput-
·
study space, use more technol-
ule to open in September 1999.
up."
closed
,
Hopefully in another
ing, a language lab, two elec-
c;>gy and skills, support learning,
According to Roy Merolli, ex-
Despite the progress, Merom
·
week the
.
third floor will
·
be

tronic classrooms that
·
seat 35
and offer public on-l_ine cata-
ecutive vice president of Mari.st,
said that prqblems may arise in
closed so that if the weather
people; one electronic class-
logs.
.
there are no major problems yet
.
coming
.
weeks.
gets bad, they can focus on the
room that seats 19 people and
"The library will represent a
''The library construction is
"It depends a lot on what kind
·
interior of the building," he said.
the center (or applie~ technol-
nice balance between what we
progressing
.
at a smo(?thpace,"
.
ofwinterwehave,"hesaid. «We
"Right
now it
.
is on
·
schedule,
ogy.
know as a traditional library and
he said. "The
.
site changes ev-
are losing
·
some tirrie this
_week,
but if we get snow and ice for
Careerplanningandservices,
.
the use of technology to sup-
.
eryday.''.
.
.
,
. .
.
withalloftherain. Therewillbe
anextendedperiodoftime,itis
~cadel_Ilic supp~rt
·
s:rvi~e~ ~d
:
pprqe~c.hing,''
h.e
said
.
. :
.
.
. ··
,.
...
Tim Massie, director of public
,
a

hold
.
up
:
iL}Ve
i
get
·
se:ve:r.e
.
·
gQiQg
_
(o
:
affecttb.e ti.Q1eljne/'.
>,
;
.
·
·
internationaleducauona,realso
,
...
Theuse
.
oftheM.E.RI
.
T.sys-
·
c
"
·
.
·
.
..
··
.
. _
..
,
..
:
.
. ',-
.-
.
,
·.
":
·
.
·
.
.
·.
,
,
.
"
k
gt~,;~
0
t::;~~1tt;~t)t
0
i
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.
. ·
ortgtes
·
sm
·
a
:
n
:,
spe?
·
s
tionSystemsmajorandanem-
'
isalsogrowingand
_
willbenefit
on h1
·
·
·
s
'.
·
·
e
·
d
-
u
·
c
·
···
at
'
1!Jo
'
n

.
a
"·
·
1

v
·
·
·
•·e
··
w
·
,
·,
s
ployee in Academic Technol-
the new electronic classrooms.
·
.
.
·
.
·
·
,
,
·
-
·

.
·

.
ogy, said the department is
·
go.,.
·•
Merolli said all of the
.
changes
ing to move to the third floor of being made on campus are
the new library and that she
'
is
needed.
.
_
.
.
.
looking forward to working
--
"I think that the library will
there.
,
make a significant difference;"
''The library is going to be-
he said. "It
will
be the heart of
come the one stop place to get
·
the campus."
.
CIELEBAK:
Star
.
basketball
player remains off the cqurts
... continued from pg.1
said that
it
would take two hours
to explain because of the com-
plexity of the issue.
.
Murray could not be reached.
It was qo secret that Cielebak
played liasketball while living in
Poland. He was a member of the
Polish national team from 1995-
97, and also played in the club
system as a kid
.
But despite that, Morrison
said that the athletic department
had no reason to question his
eligibility. Cielebak arrived at
Marist last year, but was classi-
fied as a sophomore b~catise he
lost a year of eligibility after
studying for two years at the
Academy of Physical Education
in Poland.
·
''When we went through the
certification process, nothing
was brought to our
-
attention
that this would be a problem,"
Morrison said. 'We had no rea-
son to question his amateur sta-
tus."
Not surprisingly, the absence
of Cielebak has hurt the Red
Foxes. 'The 6-foot-9 forward is
·
the team's fourth leading scorer
and second leading rebounder
.
Head coach Dave Magarity
said it has effe~ted everyone on
the team not just physically, but
mentally as well.
"I just feel like we are operat-
ing with one hand behind our
back," he said. "You don't
know if he's coming back or if
he's not coming back."
Cielebak was initially reported
to be very upset about the alle-
gations, but now is handling
it
fine. He said he could not com-
ment on anything about the in-
vestigation until it concludes.
In terms of possible penalties,
.
the reinstatement committee can
either restore his eligibility with
no sanctions, restore his eligi-
bility with sanctions
_
or not re-
store his eligibility at all.
In a worse case scenario, as
the Poughkeepsie Journal re-
ported, Marist could be stripped
of all 11 wins
in
which Cielebak
was a part of. However, it does
not seem likely that such a se-
vere measure will be taken in this
case.
• Loyola University head coach
Dino Gaudio said he thinks
Cielebak will be back on the
court before the season ends.
by
CHRIS GROGAN
News Editor
kids get the best educ~iion
'
they
can
·
get.''
,
,
.
Hinchey praised the current
Congressman Maurice
presidential adminisl:ration for
:.
·
Hinchey
.
spoke
to
Mari st stu
..:
balancing the
.
budget
;
_
Accord-
·_ ·
.
dents and
.
faculty in what was
·
·
ing to him;
·
tlte surp!us moner
probably one of the most com-
that
the
government expects this
·
.
fortable speaking situations for
·
.
year should go
,
towards educa-
him, especially considering his
tiorialprograms
,
·
. ·
.
.
.
.
views on education.
·
He
.
was notso pleased
~
with
,
Hinchey, a democrat repre-
.··
the
'
gqv~i-nor'~
'.
b~dget
plan
)?
.
sen ting the 26th congressionaj.
· .
.
.
Wheri
asked
about New ):qrk
district of New York which en-
·.
-
Govemor
:
Patakfs bridgefpro-
conipasses much
-
of thii
i'
area,
.
'.
posal
/
Hirichey referred to it as
spoke to students and faculty
''.a blatant bait-and~switch tac-
Monday night exp1ainirig his
tic."
.·.
·..
. .
views on everything from the
·
Hinchey saidit would l:>e a
·
local economy to the Clinton
serious mistake to cut the edu-
scandal.
cation prograrrL He
.
made
.
an
.
But it was education
.
that
·
analogy that.there are not only
Hinchey was the most vocal
ghettos in the city, but also
"ru-
about. He said niore money
ral ghettos." He point~d oµt
,
needs to be spent on public
how he represented some ofthe
schools in this area
..
According
poorest areas in New
-
York and
to him, his goals
-
are to reduce ·to the fact that some of those
class size and upgrade existing
school buildings are in serious
schools.
disrepair.
"Students need more indi-
"Most of those building were
vidual attention," he said. "It's
built in the 1960s, and some
an important obligation
for
our
were even built in the 1930s,"
society to make sQre that those
he said.
·
Hinchey said he also consid-
ers economic issuesof p~icu-
.
l;u- importance, especially those
that affect this area. He referred
·
to the loss of over 7,000 IBM
jobs in the area
:
a few years ago
arid how this area is struggling
to become economically healthy
·
once again.
.
,
According to him, the region
is on
·
an economic rebound.
Hinchey referred to a revitaliza-
tion of the local real estate mar-
.
ket, and pointed out an in-
.
creased number of small busi~
nesses popping up .
''That's been the focus of my
plan; to bring in federal funds
and priva~e companies to this
area," he said.
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!
.
I
--
~
·
·.
·····
;-.
,.
....
TH£
:
<CIR.CCL£
FEBRUARY 4.1999
.
Features-
PAGES
Spring
may
-
soon
·
.
be here
byKATRINA
FUCHSENBERGER
Features Editor
by the Romans who
.
then car-
ried
·
the myth to the Germans
during Roman invasions many
centuries ago .
.
Itis
celebrated
every year on Feb. 2.
·
The ancient tale of the ground-
If
Candlemas Day is bright and
hog became
.
a reality in the
clear,there'll be two winters in
1880's.
A
group of residents
the year.
from Punxsutawney
,
Penn. de-
.
This old Scottish couplet is
cided t9 celebrate Candlemas
·
the basis for the
·
legend of Day by going into the woods in
Groundhog Day.
_
·
..
.
~earch of
.
a groundhog.
··
On this day,
if the groundhog
.
Accoroing to
·
Feldman, the
sees his shad.ow it is supposed
·
groundhog is also known as a
to mean six more weeks of win-
·
woodchuck. It hibernates from
ter. If he does not, it means
October to around February.
spring is coming.
·
The groundhog'.s habitat is
Hog
'
boy
This year he did not see his
usually in a grassy area or in the
shadow which means spring is
woods where they build exten-
just around the corner.
sive boroughs underground.
Richard Feldmari, environmen
-
They are also herbivores.
·
tal science professor, said when
.
In 1886, the editor of the local
the groundhog' comes out of newspaper named the group in
hibernation he is in search of search of the groundhog the
food.
Punxsutawney Groundhog
Cirtlc g
ra
ph
i
c/Groundhog
by
Tara Quinn
was made
_
and Punxsutawney
Club journeyed to Washington.
·
correct only
1 out of every 3
Phi} gave his first official fore-
D.C
.
to -yisit President Ronald
times.
"The groundhog
·
needs the
Club:
fresh food of Spring,"
lie
said,
The club named a certain hill-
"If
there is no food the grounci
.,.
top near the·town !'Gobbler's
.
hog
will go back-and hibernate
Knob:'' This spotwas intended
.
"
for six
·
more week
_
s
:

~s:fs
a
to
.
_be
.
th~
.;'
place
.
.
where
.
better way
to
tell ifwintei: is
go-
"..
PunxsutawrieyPhil cquld accil~
cast. From this"day, the ground-
Reagan at the White House
.
Feldman said there is a better
hog rose to fame throughout
In 1990, the movie
.
"Ground-
way to predict the weather than
the world. His forecasts are re-
hog Day," starring Bill Murray,
using the groundhog.
corded in the Congressional
became a smash hit at theaters.
"Long term weather forecast-
Records held in the National ar-
According to an online
ers look at high altitude air
chives and the Library of Con-
source,

r
.
esidents
·of movementsandalsotrackocean
giess in oui- nation's capitaL'
.
_
P.1,111~~
-
1,1~~'YJl:~Y
.
<:<;>
,
1_1J~nd that the
currents," he said. "Another
ing to continue or if spring is
ratelyfoiecast the weather .
.
.
coming.
"
·
·
On Feb. 2, 1887,
the
first offi:.
InJulyoq996qobbler's.Knob . gro_1.mdhog has
rieveFbeeO
·
wayis
·
fo
ti:ack
'
migratingbirds
·
was officiailf
:
operied year~
wrong.
.
·
.
·
to see if there is an increase in
round to the pubiic.
.
·
·
.
But, the National Geographic
the number of them
·
overhead.
In 1986, Punxsutawney Phil
Society
.
once studied the
If more birds start flying north
·
.
Groundhog .Qay was founded
.
cial trek
·
to "Gobblef
s
Knob"
and members of the Groundhog
groundhog and found him to be
spring is coming."
·
Students travel
by
RICKS~
Staff
Writer
·
Winter break remains one o
_
f
·
the most exciting times for col-
lege students because it allows
them to recover from the stress
of their schoolwork and exams.
It also provides vacation time,
enabling them to go to various,
fun
.
places.
Many Marist College stu-
dents spent a l9t of quality time
with family and friends in differ-
ent regions of the world.
Junior James Bowers said he
has pleasurable memories of his
time spent in Honolulu
,
Hawaii.
"I had the most amazing time
.
of my
.
life", Bowers said. "It had
beautiful beaches, beautiful
.
women and sonie
·
very good
·
.
drinks."
Bowers, who is also a surf er,
said he received the most plea-
.
sure out of riding the waves at
the Hawaiian beaches.
"It ruled," Bowers said. "You
haven't surfed until you've
done it on a Hawaiian beach."
Sophomore Jennifer Wilcott_
Who spent their winter break basking in the warmth of a
tropical paradise like this?
.
said she had an exciting time in
family, friends, and a chance to
France.
.
.
_
.
escape to warm regions.
"I
considered moving
thefe
·
Junior Evan Lopez visited
by the time
I
left," Wilcott said. .
·
Pasadena, California.
Wilcott also said
.
she liked the
"Cali's got everything from
special monuments in France.
nice weath~r to palm tre~s to
"The Eiffel Tower and Notre
nice beaches
,
" Lopez said.
Dame were pretty cool, but my
Lopez said he also enjoyed
favorite place was The Louvre,
seeing his family in California.
the most beautiful museum in
"I saw my grandparents and
the world," Wilcott said.
even saw one of my uncles for
Winter break provides stu-
the first time in 10 years," Lopez
dents with time to spend with
said.
iii
r;
gh
t'
ct
..:
·_
'
ke
_
·••·
ay_
:~;:1
:-;,;_
:
}
f
i
Broa:dwa
:;
.
~e
caUcol
·,
'
ee
Rent.
·
The
l
aj~~
p~king
.
.
i:beeri
'
.
























































































































FEBRUARY 4
7
1999
Photo courtesy of Nadia Ennis
Hunter wants to be a
·
public
defender after law school
Getting to
know
·
_
junior
Ryan Hunter
byKATRINA
FUCHSENBERGER
'
Features Editor
.
·
Ryan Hunte,; junior political
science major
'
from Roosevelt
,
New York
·
··.
·
.
<
.


mE
-:
CCIR.GL£
.
·
__
_
1::e
·
a
,
_
t
-
11,.te
'
s
--
-
_
_
:
·
_
by
_
CHRISfY
BARR
Staff Writer
·
As another semester begins,
··
so does the stress for Mari st
students.
College students
.
:,vho work
and participate in other activi-
ties along with their stud~es be~
come stressed when they real-
ize there is not enough time for
them to do everything
.
Jane O'Brien
,
director of
·
·
Health Sei:vic~s. said the pres-
sure for students to succeed
academically and fit in socially
often becomes too much for
them to handle.
"College is a time of major
stress for most college
_
students
.
who are trying to achieve aca-
.
demic, social, a
_
nd personal
goals," s
.
he said.
"Often;
,
y.rhen
trying to
·
achieve th
.
ese
·
goals~
students
ruri
.
into
·
stumbling
blocks that create
stress."
ber of.credits, a
full
or
part
time
.
eno~
-
gh time
,
.
.
·
·
...
job, being involved in activities,
·
..
Frechette
is
involved with
and trying
io
do personal and
Manst College Tel~v1sion, the
social things with their friends,
.
de.bate team,
:
Marist Singers,
..
students create
an
overload and
and
.
recently pledged a frater:-
··
something has to give," she
.
nity in addition to his doubie
said.
.
.
.
major of journalism and politi:..
.
Sophomore Donald
J.
Tardiff
cal science.
.
said he knows all too well that
''I
tried to fill up
my
free time
ari
abundance
of
activities
withalotofadivities,andfotind
means an
abundance
of stress.
myself stressing qut a lqt," he
.

·
As a
:
freshman,
.
Tardiff took
.
said
:
~
•Now I try to find time to
.
.
part in the ski team, resident stu-
work out or t~e a nap so thatl
dent council, and student pro-
can bring my
·
stress level
graniming, as well as the busi-
down."
·
·
.
ness, computer,
and
sailing
·
Sophomore Kimberly Davis
clubs .
.
In
addition, Tardiff said she also finds that setting
pledged a.fraternity
arid
t_pok a
time aside to work
.
out helps her
full course
load
as an infonna-
·
to relieve stress.
.
tiontechnology major and busi-
'.'
After
I
work out
I
have a
ness minor,
· .
.
..
.
.
.
more positive-attitude and am
"My freshman year
I joined a
able to handle stressful situa-
lot of activities be¢ause
I
had
a
tions much
·
better," she said .
·
lot of free tii:ne, but then the ac-
O'Brien s
·
aid
that exercising;
ti vi ties
.
led me
.
·
tb
.
become
resting, and eating right are all
stressed," he s
_
aid.
HThis
year
I
essentialto coritroiiing stress.
.
How would you describe your-
self?
Down to earth, kindhearted,
in-
telligent, and open-minded.
I'm
more about community than in-
dividualism.
.
·O'Brien
said thatwhen stu-
.
dents join activities they some-
times go overboard and try to
do too much, causing them-
.
selves more stress.
decided tojust focµs
.
on those
-
She also said that talking
activities that are
-
nio
'
stimpor~
·
seems to relieve stress as well.
tant to me and
I
am a'Jofless
"Students
·
need to find some-
one they feel comfortable with,
and, if they are having a diffi-
cult time, talk to them because
talking helps a lot," she said.
stressed
."
Freshman Aaron Frechette
·.
said he also
found
himself with
.
too many activities and not
What makes you happy?
A couple of things make me
happy. Such as, seeing my par-
ents bappy when they get my
report card and taking out my
nieces and seeing them
·
have
fun. When
I see pe!)ple do the
.
right thing, that is what makes
mehappy
.
..
·
·
What do you fear?
I fear that we're turning into
people that worry more about
economfos than morality.
Money can't buy you happi-
ness, love, virtue, all the impor
-
.
.
·
tant nonmonetary things in life.
What would beyourpenectday?
A day where
I,
can go outside
and not be judged by the way
I
dress, the way
I
act, and most
importantly by
.
the color of my
.
skin. Also, a day where I
~
able
_
to give back
to
my parents
what they have given to me
throughout my tii:ne on this
.
··
planet
What
would beyourdreamjob?
My
dream
job js to become an-
activist,
or
.
refonner for
.
social
change like Martin Luther King
Jr., advocating theories
_
of jus:.
.
tice and equality.
What things are the
most
im-
.
portant to you
in
life?.
My values and my character. I
,
would never sacrifice those for
money or any position whether
it
be
here at Marist or out in the
real world. Treating people the
same way you would want to
be
treated is also important
What
are
your
~oals?
.
My goals are to finish law
school and become a public de-
fender. Another would
be
to do
a good job in any endeavor or
in any project I take up whether
it
~
in
Marist student govern-
ment, any of my classes (espe-
cially
capping),
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PAGES·
I
!·ED1,1RIALll···.~~~:~Fr;~~iht:&f~~~a~~!.~ .. ···
.
:.
Residential "of the -month" life staff
F.ditor:
.·.·
.
· -
...
.
...
.
.
. . Last spring, as part of the Aniericari University Washington Semester Program,
recognized
fi_
or their
.. _··. a
.. · chieveme
.. n~:
.
Ihadtheopportl.lnity·tointemandstudyforasem~sterinWashingtonD.C>My
experience was extremely positive arid I encourage all Marist stildents·to learn
. ·
·
more about the Washington Semester fiogram. ;
. .
.
. . . .
The members of the Marist College Red Fox Chapter of National Residence H;.µl ..
· .. My experienceinclµded.an ·internship
in
the office of ~ongressman JameirP. :
Honorary
®IBM)
would like to congratulate and recognize the "Of the Month''. ·
: McGovern. In addition, I wrote a major res_earch paper arid took a serninarclass ·
(OTM) award winners for the month of November. The recipients were each
at American University .. My class .and I heard from several notable speakers -
nominated by their peers for outstanding contributions to the Mari~t CoUeg~
· throughout the s~mester inch1ding ~en_ator C:h~ck Robb; Congressman Scott,
community during the month ofNoyember. Thewinners' nominations have been
.Congressman Moran, andfonnef~enatornmnpers'. .
<' . .. . . .
;'o
forwarded to NRHH for award consideration at th.e regional level. Pleasee?(t~nd
. ·• .. ··•.Students may choose from. ~leyenJielc,ls ofstudy inclu~ng:Joumali,~m, . . . .
congratulations to your pee_rs for a job wel(~ope
! '.:
. , .. · . .
·: ·.: :
.\
< :
.
<
International Business andTtacle,-fublic ll~w;por~ig1f
P.pliey;Art
an,d.;:Arc:Jiitec-::
. Student of the month: Travis Mason, PresiMarianHall; Executive Board.
.·· :, fureJiisiory° and Cuitunil Pplicy;'Ebbnbnuc'Pdlitits,,lnform.a,tj(?n technology, and
Member of the Month: Maureeii Sacchetti, Pres. Class: 2000; Advisor of_the,
,
communication an..djusti~e.tEach 9fthese pro8f!1IDs d~yel.op~
tl).e
series t~ r~fl~t .
. Month: I{ellyAnn Esposito, NEACURH; NCC.of theMontb: <:;arolyn G.ollP.ll~z; · , . · the.interests-of the students: For example; .during my semester
iti V/ashington,
.
. Program or'the Month: '~It Coulci Happen toy9u: ~~ryiyors •of.Sexual A.ssa~lt ·
·

, .• the Public
LawUritt
heard from Supreme CourtJusticeScali~ during one of the
Share Their Stories/' Facilitated.byKristi Greenhall, RA Leo Hall.
. .
. :,
.
seminars. ,
.
-- .. ,
. . If
you :would like to recognize someonefoI' an ()TM awar~, please
fill o~t a :. ·,
_
-[The Washington Semest~r Program is a unique. experience thafha,s exis~eclfor
nomination form. Forms are availableJhrough
~
members, _RSC presidents,, · . more than fifty years:
.
The program includes several famous
ajy#ifli
at1d
has ·•· '
RDs, Mentors, and the Housing Office. You,rform must be submitted by the l~t ,
respect thJ:ougho.ut the country. lstrongly encourage
all
stuqe~tftoJeatii ni9re
day
of the month in order to be eligible for consideration., In addition to those. - . · abouf this terrific program.
If
you would like to leariI more about the pro grain_ :
listed above, categories for nomination include: Spotlight of the Month, RA of
pl~ase contact i;ne. I will be happy to answer any of your quesµori~; · ·
··
the Month, and NRHH .chapter of the Month. Thank you for your assistance in
recognizing the dedication and outstanding· contributions of.these members.of
· our Marist College community.
·
Cathy
~ne
Advisor NRHH
-John D. Svare
X5079.
JohiJ.iJ.Svare@Maristedu
,_,.

Amarn:hlBradley
Editor-in-chief
Eli7.abeth
Carrubba
. Managing Editor
Katrina Fuchsenberger Thoma.5
Ryan
Features Editor :
. Sports .Editor·.
Chris
Grogan
News Editor
TaraQuinn
Opinion Editor
Patrick Whittle·
Joe Scotto
· Toni Constantino
Ans & Entertpinment
Photography Editor
Business Ma11flger
_
G.
Modele Clarke,
Faculty Advisor
The Circle is the student newspaper of Marist College, Poughkeepsie, NY.
Issues are published every Thursday.
·
We welcome letters to the editor, club announcements and story ideas. We can-
not publish unsigned letters to the editor.
The Circle staff can
be
reached at 575-3000 x2429 or
by
email at
H'ZAL.









































































PAGE9
Tlte
.
.,·
-
.
.
'
et1itor strikes back
byTARAQUINN
•·
Opinion
Editor
.
much to lose by printing the
truth ... They'd go
off. the
stands in a day if they
·
printed
the
_
truth. There's no ideas in
lri,theDecember 10, 1998is-
Time
Magazine_;,
·
·
.
.
sue
.
9(
-
The (!ircle, sophomore
•.
To further jllustrate the bias of
·
Chd~topher Cavallari wrqte a
·
the
.
press, I will note that the
·
letter to the editor in which he
publishers
of1ime tried to have
'.
said he said: "Since when did a
this scene edited fromthe pie-
·•
newspaper allow reporters to
ture,
.
but Pennebaker declined
.
vofce their own opinions
·
in a .
.
to do so.
.
·
supposedly unbiased public:a-
The Opinion Section offers a
tiori?"
·
balance to the hard
Time/

tb~lieve that reporters have
Newsweek-style
news that
.
the
<
saine rights
.
_
as
'
other stu-
·
CavaUariapparently covets.
dents to express opinions in the
Cavallari also stated that the
section designated expressly for
editors "owe otir readers an
opinions.
.
apology."
As
an_ editor, I do not
_
Cavallari also said that: "I was
taught iri~thl? fourth grade that
newspapers were in publication
·
"If I
want to find out
as a means of dispensing unbi-
.
"the truth,
I
am not go-
'
a~ed information to the general
.

d T •
public."
ing to rea
..
ime
casual conversation with my
.
Bias is_ a
.
n.inevitable factor in
-
.
Magazine. I
.
mean,
boss.
all
bl
b
I
HecitedMelBrook's 1974film
.
:
pu icatwn_s ecau~e
p~op
~
because they oot 1·ust
wnte them. I did not thmk it was
· .
.
.
.
o
"Blazing Saddles" as one of the
'
necessary to remind the reader-
too
much to
·
zose
_
by
.
funniest movies of all time. I
sJ1ip that
newspeopl~
i:tre not
printing the truth. ...
noted that Brooks' 1968 film
exempted from the biases that
Th
.
.
,
.
.
.
·
.
·dea
·
. n
"The Produce
.
rs" was a classic
plague society.
.
.
. .
.
ere
S
no_
.
,
l
.
S l
as well. He said that the movie
.
_
..
. .
The Opirtion Secti<ln is a fo
~
-
Time :Magazine.,,
has a sick premise
,
and wal~ed
.
·.
rum for studen~ t() que~tion the
·
-away visi~ly dis~rbed.
biases that
are_
inhereti{iri
soti-'
·
·
:
.
:
. '
.
-,"Blazing Saddles,'
'.
is about a
- ,
ety;
which includ~s
;
the
.,
press,
'
·:
·-
'
,,.,.
-
i
~
.
9
.
Q
·
.
·
QyJa:fi
:
governor
'
in ~e
,
Jpid
'.
J~th
C.C?P.-
.

It is a forum
to,
express/~eas
:
:
·:
·
. •
·
·
.
-
·
·
·
·
turj
,
who
:i
wants
'.
J
o dem
_
olish
;
a
..
.In Donn
·
Penneoak:er\ 1967
oweanything
:
to readers'other_

~own th
.
ads situateclin
.
the
path
.
documentary; "Don't Look than
'
spa~e ori these
:
·
pages for
of
the Transcontinental Raif-
..
Back,'' Bob Dylan told a jour-
their opinions .
.
After all,
is
that
road. The townspeople
_
reftise
,
rialist from
Time
Magazine, "Ifl
·
nbtwhat
'
thii section
js
for?
.
to pack up and leave, so he
want to find out the
trutli,lam
·
_
fwould alsolike.toacidress the
serids in a black man to be sher-
not going to read
~
Time
_
.A,faga-
issue of humor; which
was a
iff. He anticipated that the stier-
zine.
I am not going
fo
read
controversial subjec:t through~
iffwould be killed by thetowns-
'
Ne",,vsweek.
-lam
n9t goh1gto
'
out the last
.
semester. I c
·
ame
people and the town would col-
.
read any of those magazines; I
across an_-example of the ccm-
lapse in a riot. My boss thought
·
mean; becausithey got just too
troversy over the
.
summerin a
this was a classic, but what if
\
my boss was black?
laugh at these films?
However, "The Producers" is
It seems that humor is just a
about couple of guys who de-
natural defense to des~nsitize us
cide to over-finance a Broadway
to damaging pain and oppres-
show, have it flop the first night
.
sion. Is desensitizing ourselves
and keep the money that would
ethical? Is being human ethi
-
have financed subsequent cal? Should we pass on that
shows. To ensure that there
question and offer it to Presi-
would be no subsequent dentClinton?
shows, put on an absurdly
It seems harsh to demystify
tasteless play called "Spring-
laughter to a simple defense
_,tj~~
,,
fo
_
r,J:!i~ler
t
_
,
:t-.1:y boss
.
w~s
..
mechanism .
..
It is like r~ducing
. Jewish ancl toolUiffensetcitliis:"
'"
'
'
tfie
a
'tfra
tf
fo1{
'
betwe
·
eh two
.
I would also like
.
to
note
that
·
people as being just "chemical."
~e;.e we:e several "r~pe j~kes"
Maybe adding mystique is just
m Blazmg Saddles
.
This re-
another defense to alleviate the
lates
.
di~~ctly to the "rape _as
.
.
monotony of just
being. I find
comedy issue th~t was heavily
this notion to be so austere that
debated on these pages last se-
makes it me just want to skip
mester.
.
,
.
. .
.
.
being excessively analytical and
I do not
think
the oppression
get back to writing
a
humor col-
ofBlacks, Jews, women, or any~
umn.
·
one else is "funny
,
" Why did I
!
. I






















FEBRUARY 4
2
1999
·Tu£•-c1R.<CLE
·
Fe·atures
http://www.cdnow.com
Are you too busy to get to your favorite music store? Try going to
http://cdnow.com.
to btiy
compact discs and videos at reasonable prices ..
This sit~ offers compact discs and tapes of every kind of music including rock/pop, jazz/blues,
urban/electronic/, classical, country/folk, world/new age, and even children's music. It also offers
sales on musit made by "Gramniy winners and greatest hits albums.
Having trouple getting a gift for your girlfriend or boyfriend for Valentine's Day? Have a custom
made compact disc made with the romantic music of your chbice.
- There is also a special register where you can have a list of all your personal favorite music. This
makes it easy for friends who don't know what kind of gift to get you.
·
So,.for an easy way to get the music you 'want check out
http://cdnow.com
Jfyou have any suggestions for this column, or would like to write a column, contact Katrina at
extension 2429·or emai(HZAL. Features Editor Katrina Fuchsenberger wrote this Searching the
sites column.
ARIES:
Everyone
se-ems to want. to tell
you _what to do
today, and you ought
to listen.It looks like
quite a bit of money,
if only you knew
how. Well, guess
· what? You can learn,
· and soon_.-Today, get
a good book on the
. subject. Odds are .
-good that~_w,hatever: -.: ·
yo1i'/e
thinking
aboi.if - '
dding'-'is not· going to
·
be easy, bu
tit'
is _·.
.
going to be-possible.
-
CANCER:
You're ··
· ·
hitting a bit of a_
tailwind concerning
_ your career.
A
dear
even worse than
usual. That's because
somebody is pressur-
ing you to get this
job done by last
Friday. You're
· generally betier tl}an
in_ost at .keeping to
you:r
schedule,_ and
11l()re
likely
than
not
'.yoii ·get things done
ahead of time.But
complications '
beyond· your control ·
most likely prevented
what to do. A little of
that goes quite a
long way with you
under the best of
circumstances, but
today you'll be in a
rather testy mood.
· That's just because
Mars
is in.your sign,
and
that
makes you
impatient. Youwant
to get on with what
you had in mind, but
instead, everybody
else wants your time
and attention.
a friend, along with

· partner of y9urs; ·
J1a\re allsorts··of< :, _-
tf"kcellenl'icJg'as:
They"
can also be there to
support you with a
plan you've already
got going. The
situation that was
happening· yesterday,
for example, may ..
simply have been too.
tough for One person
to handle alone. You
.
-
.
-
always at least giveit
friend could give you
a push in the right
direction. You'd -
never ask for
it;
of
· that from happening,
and every little
situation where the
work didn't get out
last Friday is going to
. ~ - SAGTITARIUS:
LJ..
There could be a
..!\...
'if
slight difference of
opinion- today
between two people
you respect and
admire. They're both
very intelligent, but
sometimes they can't
seem to see their
own way out of a
paper bag. Today,
you're the referee.
You get to help them
come to a compro-
mise, and also see
the obvious. For you
it's obvious, but for
them it's practically
inconceivable. Well,
they might be smart,
but today you're
going to be the
professor. Once they
figure that out,
everybody's going
to get along a lot
better. It's the little
_details that will help
a
try,
but there's no
point in wearing
yourselfout. ·
TAURUS:
An
initial
-
r_ es1-·s
__ iant:eJ~o-ulcl
fade as the week
-
continues, so don't
take no for an
answer, especially if
it's the first answer
you get:You're well
known for your
persistence, and
today that's going to_
be your winning
virtue. A partner will
also come in handy.
_ It looks like this other
·person willget
through ·where your
path is blocked. The
problem is, can you
trust this guy? If you
give him the valu-
ables to carry, will he
come back and pull
you out o.f the well
later?
·i
·
, · .
GEMINI:
You should
be in a relatively.
scholarly frame of
mind. You're up
against a rather
interesting predica-
ment. There's
something at home
you could
·~o- ,
yourself and save
course, but you
might as 'well accept
it if it's there. If ·
..._ .
y9u' re not careful,
this one could cost
you money, though.
, You'll have to make
an
investment in your
own future, possibly
_ to ge.t the education- ·
you need.
LEO:
You'restrong
most oftoday, and -
that's good, because
you're facing some
tough competition.
The competition is so _
· tough, in fact. that
you may want to
compromise. Perhaps
you can talk this
· other person into
helping you instead
of hindering your
every movement.
Sheer flattery could
work wonders. The
-othe~ person is pretty
apf to faU for
just ·
about· anything you
say,
as
long
as
it's in
favor of his or her
ideas.
VIRGO:Your
workload is intense
the whole time the
Sun is in Aquarius,
and today could be
be noticeable today.
LIBRA:
There will be
.
a lo_ t of c-ompetitfon
for your time today.
· _
Somebody yoµ care
· very much about
would love to
dominate your time,
and you wouldn't.
But there's work to be
done, and some other
sort of meeting
you're supposed to
attend. Yourteam
needs your input,
too, so don't ignore
them in favor of
. somebody else. You
want to be able to
please everyone, and
sometimes you can.
Today, however,
it
might feel like the
only way you're
going to be able to do
it is by cloning
yourself. Just in case
you haven't learned
how
to do
that
yet,
how about delegating
someofyour
responsibilities
instead?
SCORPIO:
Monday
could
be
frustrating.
It looks like just
about everybody
wants to tell you
_ you advance in your
careers on Tuesday.
r.====icAPRICORN:
You
_,:;,. should
be
watching
~
your money today.
..__ _ ___.Jfs a good bet
somebody else is,
too, and if you're not
careful, that person
could get more of
it
than you have.
That's OK
if
you're
buying something
you really want, but
don't let somebody
talk you out of it
without getting the
very best possible
deal. The better fight
you put up, the more
likely that is to
. . h,appeJ? .-;:-
yo,_u
_
.
getting . the -good
deal, of course,
AQUARIUS:
Confer
with your partner
today about a
purchasing decision
you're contemplat-
ing. You can'treally
afford to do this all
by yourself, and
neither can the other
person, but today
it's a definite
possibility. Today,
you need to get your
various consider-
ations worked out.
Figure out what
you'd like, what you
need and what you
can do without, and
ask your friend to do
the same:
§
PISCES:
Your work
may seem over-
whelming today, but
don't despair.
Actually, you're
learning lots of
important things that
you'll be able to use
later, and it also
looks like something
you're learning is
going to lead to a lot
more income. It's
tough in the begin-
ning, but the more
practice you do, the
better you'll get at it,
and the more money
will be coming in.
They've got a
saying in the music
industry about ,
paying your dues,
and that looks like
what you're doing·
now.
I
.
I












































I
I
I
_
;-
r
I
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r
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'
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.
I
.,/•,•
(
<
FEBRUARY 4
2
1999
PAGE IO
.
'
!
l
·
J
-
Apply
to
become
an
,
-
_
-
A
dmiS SiODS Intern
(Only seniors
can
be Admissions
·
1ntems, and the internship is for the
·
'fall semester
of the
senior
year.)
-



















\
by
JOHN SULLIVAN
·
Staff Writer
The newfilm "She's All That"
is very, v~ry hip;
·
It has all the. new teen
catchphrases· and all the lates_t
styles. The people in it are very
attractive and mosfof them look
pretty close to.their alleged
18
years of age .. Infact, ."She's All
· That" wiil probably be the num-
ber one movie in· America and
everybody will recommend itto
. PAGEll
Marist

music
expands
by
PATRICKWHITILE
A&E Editor
. their friends and girls will pin up
The Mari st College Music
·. pictures ofFreddiePririze Jr. in·
Department is offering two new
. their lockers. Just like "Varsity
courses this semester for stu-
Blues," just like "The Faculty,"
dents interested in music and
just like "Can't Hardly Wait,"
performance.
just like ... blah blah bl~.
·
The new classes are Gospel
· ·. The closerwe get to the mil-
Singers and Guitar Ensemble.
lennium the more yotith-ori-
Both classes can either be taken
. ented movies we have been see-
as a one-credit course or joined
ing. Maybe the offspring of the
as
a
club. There are still spaces
baby boomers have finally
available in both classes .
. :i:-eached mpvie-going age.
Photo from
Entertainment Weekly
"We've had a lot of guitar
Whatever.-the cause of this
iShe's
All
That' has whatit takes to win over high school girls, but not much else.
students say, 'H,ey, don't you
irendmay· be, it is starting to
year~old girls, but still; _thefilm
looks life it was shot ~n two
Tinseltow_n was started by wh~t
have anything (for us),"' Mu-
take. over Hollywood. A-list
offered nothing in terms of char-
days. It is
a
forgettable piece of was, I thmk, a. decent movie
sic Department Chairperson
starslikeHarrisonFordandBrad
acter development or original
claptrap thatfal_lsint~}he de-
called "Scr~am." Now every
Laura Russell said. "There's a
Pitt have delivered, in recent
plottwists.
In short/'She's All
pl?rable ~fiteg?ry ,~f . 111-c':m-
studio wants t? make a Teen
real interest in. Gospel singing,
:Years, quit5?,,i
.
f!".~,ggro:p~. ;...~s
T'hat!Hs. the "My·Fafr Lady,,:-.,. ce1ved ch!,:;kJlick..
0
.
If'lwere
a.
,-This-and-that.
,:Teen~horror,
.
,
too. " ·,
audienc~s get'.Younger·so·will -esquf·taleofa popular.kid at
.
chick,'.Jw_§uld be offend_:d ~at teen-comedy, teen~drama, teen-
Gospel Singers meets on
the films. Studios.are not as apt : school who makes
a
project to
this was aimed at me .. I am Just
.
action, .. .it goes on and on. Ad-
Wednesday at 7:45 and is seek-
to greenlight ,Harrison· Fo~d , turn theresident nerd into a
glad
I
am
not dating a fifteen:-
· mittedly, most films that the
ing more men to enroll. The di-
projects anymore .. They ~Ill __ prom queen. Rewinds, up fall-,
year-old girl so I would not have
"Scream" creator, Kevin
rector of this ethnically mixed
however, put anything starrmg
ing in love with her. Surprised?
to be dragged to it. Since
l
al-
Williamson, has been involved
group is Robert· Armond. ·
SarahMicheHe_Gellarand~yan
Iwasnot.Therestofthe.filmis
ready saw it though; that is a
with t\lmed out ok - with the
Guitar Ensemble meets
Phillippe onthe screem;: , Of similarly predictable.) found - moot point
exception of"I Know What You
Thursday nights at 6:30. The
course, Ford.Hanks and Carrey
most of the characters
to
be, for
Also on Hollywood's slate
Yada Yada Yada." The "Scream"
director for this class is Jeff
are stiU star.s but th~y ru;e not
the most part, reprehensible ar-
for you gluttons forpunistment
series has a certain sense_of wit
Armstrong, who is experienced
"hot" anymore ..
A_
new_ crowd
chetypes that ei;nbodies the who like these type of movies...
about it and this year's "Fae-
in Rock, Flamenco and Classi-
of actors has. ent~red ili.e f~ld,
very stereotypes the film \Vas
"Cruel Intentions" (aptly
ulty" proved to be a fairly excit-
cal guitar.
n1ostof~emhom_ngtheµ-skills
tryingto_dispel. Thereisnoone _ named), starring the talking
ingSci-Fithriller.Onthewhole
Junior Edward Antoine is
on TYshows: _Unfortunately as· to root for in this film. _-rn fact,
mannt:!quin Ryan.Philippe.
"Kill-
however, these films are churned
currently taki.ng the Gospel
·. popul~r as. the Jennifer Love one scene
I found so grotesque, · ing Mrs; Tingle" opens in sum-
out. with all the care of a fake
Singers course.
!fe~itt_s andEth~n Embrys ~e ~o disgusting
ari~
hurpiljating . mer. ThisonestarsafewTVkids
plastic vomit manufacturer.
"It's going really well,"
. · mthis new Hollywood pyramid,
thaUt taintedJhe rest. of the
in a K:evin Williamson directed
Hollywood is all about band-
Antoine said. "Only
5
people
the movies: le~ve much to be movie for mFifyousee~'.She's . story. about academic reven?e:
wagons. Maybe next year old
were signed up for the class but
-desired. "She's All That'' is the . AUThat;" you~HfknowwhaJf _ :rhen; prepar~ for other "hip". people will be."big" again. Who
another
7
showed up."
most recent example of young
mean. But I implore you to take
projects like "Scream 3" and · knows?
.
Antoine added that the
faces, fl.as}!y sets and pseudo-
mywordforitancfsteerclearof "A.mericanPie"whichpromises
Fornow, "She's All That" is
class' instructor is excellent.
clever dialogue that add up to a
"That." . The scene involves
to resurrect that other trend of not "All that." It is not even "All
"I remember him from when ·
purely vapid movie-going expe-
such a creepy, taboo act that I
Teen Sex Movies like "Porky's."
This" or even "All A Little Bit,"
he directed 'The Voices of
rienc~. I 1:11ay have been too old
can not even go into itin a fain-
Personally I can notw~it. Was
"All Something," or "All Any-
Unity' in New Paltz," he said. "I
to enJoy_ 1t, as'. the. ~eater was
ily newspaper. · .
·
''Porky's'.' not a classic? .Ju~t thing". It is all bad. All right?
can really see us going places."
filled with hundre~ of fifteen-
· Anyway, "She's All That"
think, the youth movement
tn
.
·
In addition to the Marist
·G·
1·v
.
e· ·no:
.n·VI._

.. o.
le_· ._nee-a.'. chance at The Chance
:::s~:
~~~r~t~;gF~~~~rr::1:::
Each will play in the spring con-
.
- . ..
.
. en; by claiming that he deserved
ing hassled by a group ofolder,
some mon: at her. M~ny had
cert in the Nelly Goletti Theatre,
· by
CHRIS KNUDTSEN ·
this, others sided with him say-
larger, and drunk guys. Rather
~vatched this confrontation dur-
and may play at the Marist cof-
StajJWriter
ing that security "picked on
an
than neutralizing the real threat,
mg the sho~ bu_t none had
feehouse. String is seeking a
· innocent kid who wasn't doing
one security guard assaulted
acted. !here ts a d1ffer~nce be-
bass player to complete their
, Recently The Chance, lo-_ ·. anything wrong" as one of his
the younger boy.
tw~n times ~~en secunty neu-
ensemble.
cated on Crannel Street in friendsstated. Jimmyhadbeen
Seeingthis;hissisterMeli~sa f:ahzes a legitim~te thr~at and
ThisisRussell'sfirstyearas
Poughkeepsie has been on the ejected from The Chance after
screamed at the guard to which
ti!1-'es when secunty_ decides to
the chair of the Music Depart-
receiving end,ofseveral accu-
thescufflewithsecuritfoveran
he turned, screamed back an_d
simply thr_ow theIT muscle
ment. Shesaysthatthedepart-
sations. The security staff has
allega~on that hes~~ fi~t.
lifted her _by the s?irt ~ver his
ar?~nd on mno~ent, and sur-
ment recently received approval
repeatedly been accused of Suffenng from mtld mJunes,
back. Trymg to resist bemg car-
pnsmgly sm~l kids.
.
for an instrumental track within
abusing the falls at the shows Jimmy planned on filing a law-
ried away, Melissa struck the
. "Some da~ some one,!s go-
the Music minor.
for no obvious reason.
suit but has d_ecided not to (to
security guard in the arm.
~ng to ~et senously hurt, Mel-
Russell said the department
. There
are
times when seen-
the best of my knowledge).
"He hit me back and thr~w
1s_sa s~id..
.
.
is offering twenty-six music
· has stepped up to the chal-
There have been several
me to the ground," she said.
S_1tuat1ons
!
1
ke this are ~e-
courses this semester.
rty
when needed but more
other incidents since this, the
"My head was slammed against
stroymg what httle opportumty
"Everything from small piano
e;/;;
than not they merely take
most recent was at the
25
ta Life
thej;round, and I was pulled by
w~ have here to see any shows.
courses to the popular Music
~
opportunity to throw their show on January 9. Although I
the back of my hair, with my legs
It
1s
~
shame that macho slobs
in America course are being of-
e_ ght around. Earlier in the
was not at the show,
I have dangling out of the pit.'~
can smgle-handedly destroy a
fered," she said ..
w:, there was
an
incident where talked to several people who
After being ejected ~rom The
scene ?ut that seems to be the
Experience is not necessary
io
bouncers assaulted Jimmy
were to get an accurate account.
Chance, anoth,er s~unty guard
way thmgs work.
to participate in a music class.
J
Some excuse the bounc-
A fifteen-year-old boy was
be-
confronted her agam to scream
ones.
.





























































































t
.
,
.
.
i.
i
J
·
(
i.
I
I
1-
.
.

·
'
FEBRUARY 4, 1999
.
Zelda
new on
NM
.
.
.
by
CHRIS NAPJERSKI
·
guy
_called
Gannon. Of course
·
Staff Writer
Gannon wants nothing less than
.
·
total world domination. To com'-
The most anticipated game,
plete his quest· for power he
since the release of the Nintendo
needs this thing called the
64
two years ago, has finally
·
·
triforce
.
The triforce is an ob-
been released. This game is The
ject that holds th~ power and
Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of unity of the land together. It is
Tune.
·
broken up into three
·
parts:
For two years, Nintendo, the
power, wisdom, and courage.
If
company that makes the game,
someone good holds the triforce
~
has teased fans with pictures
the world of Hyrule remains
and music from the game. Fans
peacefuL However if someone
of the Zelda series could only
evil, like Gannon, holds the
drool in anticipation of what
triforce the world really goes
they saw. On November 24, this
down the tubes and becomes a
tantalizing game was released
nasty place to live.
PAGE12
.
Finally,thehero,Lirik;:enters
.
.
,......,
_,

..
.
·
_
t
·
·
:
ally
-
.
T_
.
-
.
he
·:
·
·

·t•
·
_
re
· ·
.
.
the picture.
Link
is a young and
. .
I
·
courageous elf-like boy, some-
thing like Peter Pan. He never
by
RACHAEL
VOLLARO
he said. "That's the conflict he
seems to figure out what is go-
.
S,taff Writer
needs to overcome to be a com-
ing on until' after Gannon has
-
plete person again."
·
·
·
gotten his hands on the triforce.
The Marist College Council
Freshman Kate Huebbe
So it becomes
Links
job to scour
on Theatre Arts
·
begins the
plays Fi Fi, Omar's wife.
.
the land for help and items that
spring semester with its Experi-
"She'
_
s real put together, ex-
will let him get into Gannon' s
castle, save
.
poor princess Zelda,
mental Theatre Guild's (ETG) cept that she tells her husl:>and
defeat Gannon, revive the
Mainstage production.
she's pregnant the day before
Triforce, and re.store the land of
.
This year the ETG Mai~stage
she's due,"
,
sh~
__
said.
~ill feature two one~act plays,
The three other characters
Hyrule to
i~
former glory.
John Patrick Shanley's ''The Big
are
Jill, Austin and Gregory. Jill,
The reason
why
Zelda games
Funk," and Maria Irene Fornes'
played by junior Karen Gumaer,
are so popular is because they
"The Conduct of Life." Perfor~
is described by her poru:ayer as
encompass a wide variety of mances are February
4, 5, 6
af8
"a basic good natured slut."
game styles. The Zelda games
,
have a de~ent plot that contains
PM and February 7 at 2 PM All
Sophomore Brian Analante
many subplots; which appeals
performances are
in
the Nelly
·
plays the good-natured Austin
·
Goletti Theatre.
and sophomore T
_
imothy
to
.
th0se that like role-playing
Keeping with tradition,
Sorensen plays the
.
troubled
games. The towns
-
and· dun-
MCCTA presents two shows
Gregory.
·
..
.
geons are filled with puzzles
.
that will get into the mind of the
Overall, Lewis said the
_
audi-
that Link has to cleverly solve
audience.
.
.
.
ence will be entertained.
or a:v_oid, which is great for th0se
Junior Corey Lewis, who
"It's the kind of ~how that will
and Zelda fans' long awaited
The next person in the story
dreams finally came true. The
line is Zelda. She is the fair prin-
Zelda series started out on the
cess of Hyrule. She knows that
Nintendo Entertainment System
Gannon is bad and that slie
with the first game The Legend
needs to save her country from
of Zelda. This game was an
in-
him. However, Gannon acts
Stant classic. Soon more Zelda
quicker than she does and al:
games would follow.
ways manages to steal the land
people who like puzzle games.
stars as Omar in "The
.
Big
make people laugh and
-
thfnk at
ThelandofHyrule is full of en-
Funk," saidtheETG has done it the same t
_
ime," he said.
.
·
emies after Gannon gets the
friforce and this fills Zelda
again. ·
On the other end of
the
spec-
The story of Zelda is very
away from ~l~a. Then at some
simple. Basically, there is this
point in the game he captures
really evil and all around bad
her. Who will save Zelda?
.
Rap-jam
party
slamming beer
vodka
shots
dh,appear,
you're drivin~
friends jiving
one
more
for
lhe road.
Your mind's a
.
haze
intoxication
then the
rush
accd~ration.
burning rubber
blurring minds
frantic
"Faster!"·
Driving blind.'
Waili_ng
·
screeching
violent blue
spinning lights·
rescue crew.
jaws
of life
battle
death
crumpled car
dying
brea·th.
Guilt.
grief
'
a lif<>'s regret
<:an't chang<> what's dont•
and can't forget.
livt> tht'
pain
kriow it's
rt>al
·
.
a victim~ .
dead.
,
/4
t'
f
be nca\
n
iJ.{
.
!Jf1
Y<>u,-
,.
~~
·•!t.
..
;_:
~-:--h:~
~~~'I(;
-
~ \
I>,
·;1d
· '
.
,
.
j ....
,Jc-.1,I
-
;,:.,,.-__
...
,
....
,11iH I
-----
--
-
----
-
.
"The
ETG
is often unusual,
trurri
is Forties' "The Conduct
·gaines
with
a
_
ction
f i
_
or all th
_
os
_
e
-
this i
_
s year is
·
rio exception,'' he
.
-
ofLife."
action lovers ·out there. Zelda
·
al
.
1

said;
·
·
·
Unflatdescribed the show as
gaines can appe to many p ay-
ers and that is what makes them
~hanley's "The Big Funk,"
a commentary.
focuses on the problems of the
"It's a social commentary on
popular.
five different characters and· the effect of
'
dictatorships have
Zelda game~ are also known
·
·
for their superb graphics,
how they learn to deal with their
ori
the people who inhabit those


problems individually.
.
societies,'' she s~d.
.
sound, and excellent play con:..
·
·
·
·
·
·
troL The Legend ofZelda:
-
Director
Kerry
Unflat said it
Juni
_
or David Brandon piays
is really about the -·everyday
Orlando, a man who has been
Ocarina of Time is no exception
strµggle.
,
,
·
.
consumed by the military.
f~om its predecessors. This
_
·
·
··
"Shanley's theme is how ev-
"Orlando is overwhelmed by
ganie is all that Zel
_
da fans were
·
·
hoping for.
If
that statement in-
eryone handles their everyday
passion and feels very unfilled,''
,
eludes
·
you arid
you
have not
struggle in an amusing
-
and
Brandon said. "He can 'tdiffer-
.
·
,
·
.
absµrdist way," she said.
.
.
entiate between his work life and
played this gaII1e yet,· nish to
.
Lewis said
_
of his character
h_is private
_
life."
.
the local video store or student
~~tiviti~s ~d
:
r,en
,
\,t,h~
g':1111e
9e-
~~:e:~~-~
:
~
;
~e:~~,~~---~~ve
.
it
.
pla
.
ili!df
::i
.
~.J~1!s
,
tt!~rt
fore someone else rents it first.
If you h<J.ve not b
_
ought orrented
.
·
"He has a very rough person-
·
·
.
,
-.
it, you can also check it out
ality, but he feels like
_
he has
online
atwww.zelda64_-i:om..
everything in control until his
.-
...
pleasesee
_
THEATRE,pg.13
wife tells him she's pregnant,"
· Non
Seqitur
by
'3/Uey
·
.
.
I
!
:
I
l
Iii

































































FEBRUARY 4
2
1999
Godsmack'S
The
·
Chance
by
DOUGLASP. (;lJARINO
.
.
, ·
-
_
Staff.Writer_
.
.
-.
His percussion experience was
ever: as they opened a show at
quite evident when; during an
The Chance for
Fuel less thana
.
extended.instrumental section
month ago
:
Tony Park (lead
-
. -
.
.
.
.
·
during O'Stress," he displayed
vocals
,
trumpet) pescribes The
Who ever said that religion
impressive rudimentary skill on
Chance as an
"
average" size
and rock do not mi
_
x?
congas and timbale
~
.
venue in comparison to others
On the cold, icynight of Fri-
·
Backed by Tony Rambola
'
s
that they have played, and is
day, January 22, The
-
Chance
·
grinding guitar
·
riffs, the solid
quite pleased with the erithusi-
_
stage was warmed
·
by the glow
bass workofRobbie Merrill, and
astic fans that frequent it.
of alter-like candles and the uil-
the bone crushing grooves of
·
Other then their incredible
bridled fµry ofB
_
o
s
ton rockers
·
drummer Tommy Stewart
,
the
livesound
,
oneofthemoststrik-
Godsmack .
.
Fronted by vocal-
songs from
Godsmack's self ing things about Pushmonkey's
ist Sully Erna; tlJe
.
four-piece
-
titled album (RepubHc/Univer-
stage show is that drummer Dar-
Godsmack put on an intense,
sal Records) kept the
.
crowd
win Keys perfonns standing up.
hour long set for enthusiastic
·
moving.
According to Park, this is done
fans ina semi-crowded ~hance.
.
_
"[Godsmack fans] want to
to stress the fact that the band
PAGE13
ph
o
to by Dale May. courte
sy
Republic/Universal
Ema, a druinroer in all bands
get their aggressions out," Erna
is an equal musical partnership
previo
_
us
,
to
Godsmack, angrily
said. "They're told what to do
between himself, Keys, Howie
bellowed "I'm doing the best I
at home and in school, but at
·
Bahrehs (Guitar), Will Hoffman
ever did/I'
.
m doing the best that
shows, they don
'
t want to b
e
(Guitar), and Pat Fogarty (Bass).
I can/Now go away," in a voice
told what to do
,
and we respect
When the five-piece unit
Godsmack literally and figuratively lit up the stage at The
Chance on a recent we~kend.
that falls somewhere between
that.
"
·
writes music for a new song, it
limited
to,AC/DC, Prince, Ratt,
that of Scott Weiland
(Stone
.
Touring with
Godsmack are
is essential that each member
Morrissey, Slayer, Van Halen,
Temp/ePilots)andLayneStaley
Arista
recording
ar_tists
has an equal contribution.
and
Sting
.
with sex and relationships, they
are more sophisticated than
"I
love you, you love me."
For more info on
Godsmack,
check out their website at
(Alice
:
in
·
Chains), during a
Pushmonkeyfrom Austin,
TX
.
Bahrens sites musical influ~
As far as lyrics are con-
charged rendition
·
ofthe bancfs
The boys'from
Pushmonkey are
ences from a wide array of cerned, Park states that while
hit radio single ''.~liatever."
not new to Poughkeepsie how-
genres that
i
nclude
,
but
are
not
many of the
s
ongs subtly deal
www.godsmack.com.
-
_
-
-
-
.
.
.
·
·
. ·
·
Theatre:
-
One-acts set to
1998:
The
year
of lackluster
take stage for MCCTA
entertainment comes to an end
-
.
..
contin~edfr~n: P_g
.
12 .
teen-year-old ~ena, w
_
~o be-
_
-
·
:
.
·
-
· ·
.
.
.
- .
-
Seufert said Leticia hves with
comes the twisted obJect of
·
a man who she knows does not
Orlando's affection. Switzer

byCARLITO
Staff
lgtzoriln)US
to mention, but if you are inter-
in this activity
,
but if any of my
love her and who is becoming
plays Olimpia, who also has a
ested in critiques
.
of them, buy
_
civilized
·
readers
·
have not,
progressively more violent.
distorted past with Orlando.
-
·
yourself arespectabie publica-
please accept my recommenda-
"She is-a witness to all of his
Seufert said that overall the
tion. After all; this is The Circle
tiori to do
·
so.
,
actions and directly feels the
show is a lot to handle.
·
··
· ·
.
and
tam
the author so do
·
not
_ In the past year,
I
have not ·
.
. effects ofliving in
a
military so-
"It deals with serious is-
.
,
The pa_st year has seen a
-
_
h
-
-
d
-
.th.
th .
c1·ety," sh
·
e s";d.
.
sues
,
"
.
she said.
1
.
-
-

·
-

· -
expecttoo muc
.
.
.
commente on any mg at 1s
...
,e~~~fr~
.
'
dh
.
ti
.
ti
_
~gl!i~g~~
-
~
.
l
..
~
·
_
I wrote
an
iuti
,
cle
,;
qu~!>ti_pn-
presently
on
television. The ~
-
Also starri~g in The Conduct
Brandon agrees
.
.
television to
film
to music
and
ingwhetheror' not joy in sobri-
_
feas<>n
for
thls is that
if
you
\
vere
?
of Life
a.re
freshman
Megan Wil-
"
The show is powerful and
-
ety was tangible.
,
-
Because al-
- ·
toencapstiJiite
a
week
;
s worth
:
;
li_ams and sophomore Erika
will move you if you let it,
"
he
beyond tberealms of electronic
coh
·
·
ol
·
p_erm
·
eat
·
e
·
s
·
e
·
ve
·_
ry ~acet of
·
fth
·
·
· ·
· ·
·
·
th
·
·

1
·
·
d
·
S
·tz
w
·
ir
·
I
th
fif
said
media
~
UnfoituriatelyJ failed to
1
o
e creativity alls te ev1se
J
w1 er
.
1 tams p ays e 1 -
-
take notice. Instead of cover~
my life,J concluded that it
-
was
in recent programming; 'you
T.
A&E
_,..,l!

irtg the Arts and
_
Entertainment
nporotv
.
peodsstioblbee. 1·Hnaocwceuvrear
.
t,e tbhea-~
might have enough to invent
.1.en
;
.
p1.
UJJ.ctiODS
for
199')
d
.
-
-
,
so~ething as ingenious as Soul
_
omam
.
as a responsible jour-
cause
l discuss
.
ed ~any.iss
:
µes
.
Glow
.'
Since "Seinfeld" left the
nalist should; !chose to de-
and events that exclude the
·
ai
.
r; the only qual
_
ity shows that
-
grade
_
and dehu
_
man
.
ize myself,
·
mandatory presence of alcohol
remain are ''The Simpsons/'
"X-
variom;
_
sub:cuHures, and as
.cor
en,ioymen
·
t.
_
The ~act_-that
.
I
·
·
·
-
1
1
"
1,
Files" and "Tuesday Night
many)ndividuals as possible.
chose to engage in these events
Humpathon" which can be
ln case yoii have not been
-
-
-
reading
'
mycolumn for the past
w~ile completely inebriated is
·
viewed on the Spjce Channel.
.
year
;
allow m~ to
fill
you in
-
on
irrelevant. Yes,I ama lush

.
;
btit
-
.
Actually, that is not an that re-
.
what you have rni
_
ss~d. Regret-:
screw you forjudgi~g me.
mains. 'Growing Pains' reruns
·
·
I attended several concerts
.
can be viewed at 3:00
AM
on
fully
:
lwilll:£filling
you
in
fyol11
in the"past yecU" and they taught
USA network.
-
Kirk Cameron
my_ warped perspective
,
which
-
me a thing or two
;
Pearl
Jain
.
use Soul Glow; right?
is a perspective void of logic
,
taught me that security guards,
.
As far as Art is concerned
,
I
conventi~i;t and truth. If you are
when sufficiently enticed, are
only wrote one article that could
a reader that is searching for a
·
willing and able to whoop my
even remotely
·
c
.
on
_
stitute a dis-
truthful revelation of any sort,
scrawny ass six ways froth Sun-
cussion about art and it was in
please use tbis article for kin-
day. Bouncers and steroids go
reference to the abominable
dling, toiletpaperor the collec-
together like Michael.Jackson
_
fashion fads that plagued 1998
.
tion of parakeet' droppillgs,
and small boys, so if you are
an
All I haye to say is look at your-
The year in cinema has been
out of shape craGkhead like my-
selves, people
.
-
You look atro-
a tumultuous one,wrought with
s
·
e
·
lf an
·
d you are
·
_
be·1ng
·
escorted
··
d
·
h
ld b
both blockbusters and aesthetic
cwu
.
s an
you s ou
e
atrocities. AI,though I adore
out of Madison Square Garden,
ashamed ofyourselvesforleav-
Adam Sandler, ''Waterboy" was
keep your mouth shut.
ing thebouse in such apparel.
an utter disappointment.
_
.
Per-
.
-
At the
Motley Crue show
,
I
All in all, the year has been a
learned that there is a socio-po-
di~appointing one in the realm
haps my stratospheric expecta-
litical equivalent of Jurassic Park
of entertainment. As the year
tions led to my disgruntled
af-
in which creatures that I previ-
2000 bears down upon us, all we
termath to some ~xtellt, but all
ously believed to be extinct. still
.
can do is hope that the quality
in all, the film failed to deliver a
;,
0
am the
..:ft .. "
.
1 am
·
not talking
f
·
·
-
-

=-iu,
o entertainmentimprovesexpo-
:
quality of entertainment equal-
about the Brontosaurus,
·
I am
·
nentially with the birth of a new
ing his pri9r films. Several
talkfog about
·
the leather-clad
millennium .
.
Orifwearelucky,
weeks later, my woes were
rockers from
_
1986
_
. Theyarestill
N trad
·ght
d ·
quelled by an incredible muta-
os
amus was n
an m
tion
.
of the Homo Sapieri race.
a functioning faction of 90s cul-
the year 2000, a colossal meteor
-
-
-
-
-
ture and the approachment of a
willsttjke the
Earth
and we will
·
LookingJjke
a
cross betw~n
·
new millen
·
ni
_
um
·
has

·
not
all die. Keep your fingers
F~anken:~tein and
·
a ~ragga_l,
thwarted the perpetuation of crossed.
Simon Birch took the cme~:c
·
their neandrotholic way of life.
(
Editor's note: The purpose
world by st0rm. llaugh:<1 a
e
Rock on you social dinosaurs,
of Carlita's weekly column is to
gargantuan_ monstros~ty that
. ·
you.
.
entertain,
and
perhaps, offend.
rested _on his shoulders,
b~~
1
Tubing proved
.
to be a pure
Let us keep an open mind this
also cned at the
t~
nd~r nobihty and wholesome source of enter-
semester and remember that
that was nestled m his heart.
tainment. I am sure that my
Carlita
is
more akin to Walter
Su~e,therewasapletho~of white-bread, redneck reading
Matthau
than
Walter
supenor films that I have failed
population has already indulged
Kronkite.)
·
byPATRICKWIIl'ITLE
A&EEditor
Okay folks, 1998 is over, and
for some of us, it could not have
come too quickly. Maybe 1999
will have a little more to offer in
the world of music, movies
,
the-
atre, literature, and midget toss-
ing that we lunip under the cat-
egory of
"
Arts and Entertain-
ment."
·
1
O.
All the "boy bands" will get
together in one place and cause
the biggest communal thirteen-
year
_.
old girl heart attack in his-
tory.
9. Face-paint sporting goons
the world over will suddenly
come to the dramatic realization
that
the Cure suck.
8.
A&E Editor Patrick Whittle
will continue listening to
Dag
Nasty and the Velvet Under-
ground on a daily basis.
7.
Sarah Michelle Gellar willcol-
laborate with the World Wres-
tling Federation for the first ever
"Buffymania."
6. Full contact fishing will rule
TBS
.
.
5
.
Al Gorewill give up his cam
:..
paign and become a porn star.
4. "Zoot suits" will be replaced
with "Goat suits," in honor of
·
fonner
Circle Edito
r.
3.
St,yper will be the next hair
band to make a comeback.
·
2. Someone will watch the Food
Channel. Actually ..
.
nah.
1. "Star Wars," and lots of it!

















































































































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FEBRUARY 4, 1999
U
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·
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. evmg
.
hockey team.
hovers near .500
by
KAARENUMMEill
Staff Writer
.
The Marist College Men's
Hockey team finished off the fall
·
.
part of their season with a 9-0
blowout of
C.W.
Post.
"numerous
violati~ris
·
of their
·
probationary status."
.
·
·
.
.
·
Despite
.the
loss
of
Warzecha;
the Red Foxes have added three
·
new players to their teanifor the
·
spring
that should help them get
.
·
back on track in the final weeks
of the regular season.
..
.
...
.
-
..
.
.
·
·
·

·
··
·
·.
-
--
-
....
-
·-
.,
_
..
,_..
...
.
·
-
--
.
.;.
···
·••
··
.
-
~
·
.
...
.
...
-
.
-
.
.
., .

·#·
·
·
·
·
·
.
THE
:
CIR.CLE
:
With a 9-8 record overall,
things appeared to be headed
somewhat in the right direction
with the new semester on its
way .
.
.
Brandon Maxam
and Scott
Rey are
·
both defensemeri from
Clinton High, expected to step·
in right away.
Marist's
Ray
Kenahan (18)·awaits a face-off in the Red Foxes' offensive zone.
·
However, back to back losses
to Rutgers and Central Con-
necticut put Marist at 3-3 in the
SuperEast Conference and in
need of a win in the worst way
imaginable..
·
Assistant coach
Kent
Rinehart said that the Red Foxes
have been lacking the intensity
that a tern needs if they are go-
ing to be successful for an en-
tire season.
"We
have played all season
without the intensity that you
.
need to win," he said. "We have
.
been playing just well enough
to lose."
Add onto that the fact thatone
of their most explosive players
.
is out for ttie rest of the year
.
and Marist has
to
find answers
from
'
someone else.
.
"Brian
(Warzecha) is out be-
cause of academic reasons,"
Rinehart said
.
"We need our
.
other older players to
.
step up
for us."
Step up they did as Marist got
that win in thefonn of
a
7-4 vic-
tory against Rider University
lastSunday.
·
·
Leading the way for the Red
Foxes was Braegan Plambe~k,
who scored
a
hat trick (10
;
l 1,
12) and also Drew Bowden
-
who
scored two
as
well (3, 4)'.
.
With the score tied at 1-1,
Marist went on to grab a
4c
1 lead.
Then in the third period wl:ten
Rider scored to make it a
5-4
game with ten mfoutes
.
left,
.
Marist iced the game with two
huge goals
.
Peter Intervallo made enough
saves to notch the win, with one
of the
goals
he allowed coming
on a penalty shot.
..
Marist
is
now 4-3
.in
the
SuperEast and 10-8 overall.
They need to play
·
well down
the
stretch
to qualify for the Na-
.
tional tournament, Rinehart
said.
"We are ranked third right now
with only three games left be
0
fore the teams are selected," he
said.
_
"It
all depends on which·
one of our teams shows up. The
one who blasted Maryland 8-0
and Penn State 8.:3, or the team
who lost twice to Rutgers."
·
Something else interesting to
note is the recent suspension
of Wagner College by the Ameri-
can
¢ollegiate Hockey Associa-
tion (ACHA).
The ACHA has not only sus-
pended them for the rest of this
year. but for the 1999-2000 sea-
son as well for what they call
They will also help to replace
Dan Sullivan,' a
.
senior
defenseman who will graduate
this year.
·
The third player is Pat·
Annunziata who comes to
Marist from Iona, but is expected
to work
with
the team to get back
into gear after not playing last
semester.
Some shocking statistics are
plaguing the Red Foxes. The
.
biggest is their
1-6
record
away
from Poughkeepsie.
.
Marist is also
.
5~0 when lead-
·
ingafterlperiod, 1~owhenlead-
ing
after two periods but a dis-
mal 0-8 when trailing after two
periods.
.
Marfat
·
and their potent
of-
fense, which is averaging
_5.4
·
goals per game,
will
play
·
again
at the Mid-Hudson Civic Cen-
·
ter this Friday
against
Western
Connecticut.















·· FEBRUARY4
7
1999-
ff
Campus Report-' - -
,
·.
·
_
.
by
Jan
Beighley,
Jr.
John Elway and ·the Bro·ri~os
historic class of '83 with a Su-
that can shoot the three, arid
defeated the Atlant~ Falcons on
per Bowl ring.
.
before the lockout; acquired
Sunday 34-19, defending their
Well, since thelast timel wrote
Marcus Camby, the NBA's lead-
Super Bowl victory from last
an article the NBA lockout
ing shot blocker last year. It
year, becoming only the sev-
ended. In conjunctfonwith that
looks as though the Knicks
enth team in NFL history to do
much has happened. J9hn
could be dangerous. .
so.
. _
Starks was traded to the War-
Another \\'inner has
i:o
be the
The surprise was not in the
riors with others for- Latrell
Houston Rockets. First, they
outcome, but rather how easily
Sprewell. Scottie Pippen is now
brought
fo
Scottie Pippen, the
Denver seemed to achieve its
aRocket.MichaelJordanretired, · player that had to be regarded
goal.. I really do not think any-
Dennis Rodman retired and then
as the biggest free agent ava~l-
body truly expected the game
decided not to retire. Needless
able
in the entire pool. Second,
· to be over. by the time the
to say there has been a lot of the Rockets retained the ser-
Cracker Jack ad came on in the
action since the lockout ended,
vices of Charles Barkley, giving
second qu.arter (which by the
but the question
is
what teams
them the services
of
one of the
· waywasagreatad,particularly
won when the dust settled?
bestpowerforwardstoeverstep
· that "donkey'\ right Chach?).
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ on the court for at least one
Chris Chandler came in billed ·
more season. In reality what this
as the best quarterback in the
all means is that the Rockets are
game and all he did to live up
Bringing in Sprewell
returning the same team ~s last
thatbillingwasliavewhatmight
was
a
risky move,
year.WithScottiePippenreplac-
havebeenhisworstgameof.the .
h
·u
b .
.
ing Clyde·Drexler. Like the
season. Eiway, on the contrary,
one t
at
Wl ..
rzng
Knicks, theRocketshaveagood
cameoutandthrewfor336yards
success to· New ·York
chance at going places this sea-
on 18-of-29 passing with a
or spell their immi-:-
son.
touchdown arid an interception
d
One
last
big winner from the
. tpat went off of the hands of
nent oom.
NBA off-season is, surprisingly,
Shannon Sharpe.
- - - - - - - - ' - - - - -
the Denver. Bringing Antonio
The game was supposed to be
McDyess back in the fold was a
decided on the ground and
if
it
I think one of. the big winners· big move and one that shows
had Atlanta would have been
that you have to focus on are
the Nuggets are committed to
·in a much better position. The
the New York Knicks. Bringing
winning .. McDyess, Nick Van
Falcons were able to move the
in Sprewell was a risky move,
Exel, RaefLaFrentz and the re-
baU~m the ground, in fact they .. one.that will bring success to
turnofEricWtlliamsmightbring
actually outran the Broncos by
New York or spell theirimmiJlent
the Nuggets to immediate ~edi-
10 yards, but it was the inepti-
doom. Sprewell is an om~nsive
ocrity.
tucle of their passing game that
weapon that the Kriicks have ·
It shouid be an interesting sea:..-
PAGE15
What's on Tap?
Men's basketball 2/5
@
Loyola 7:30 p.m.
2/7
@
Iona
2
p.m.
2/10
@
Rider 7:30 p.m.
Women's basketball 2/6 Home
vs.
Siena
7 p.m.
2/9
@
Loyola
7 p.m.
Swimming and diving (M&W) 2/11-14 MAAC
Championships
@
Mccann Center 10 a.m.
Indoor track (M&W) 2/7@ Colgate, Class of 32
Invitational
9
a.m.
Tough Trivia
. Out of thirty-three Super Bowls, how many
dif-
ferent NFL franchises have won at least one?
Last week's question - When was the last time a MAAC team
won a game in the NCAA basketball tournament?
Answer - The 1994-95 Manhattan Jaspers defeated the Okla-
homa Sooners in the opening round of the tournament.
WOMEN:
·
Lady Foxes
.impressive againstRiderathome
sealed theirfate., , . .
,
. _ ·not·had.thelikesofsinceBer-
son;onethapvillbringusanew _·
----1talfc6in~!rbackio:Elw_ay.·,He•,-~nar,d"King·in~the,mid-eighties.~- :NBAc~~unpion (because the ,. : ; ..
continued from pg 16 .•• .
came through with
a,
game that · He is explosive and can break
Bulls Jtand about as much ·
was fit_ting · of his legend.
out for 30 points on any given - ·chance is-winning the NBA
Maybe, just maybe his second
night, something that with Allan
championship tµis year as say, -
SuperBowl victorywas his last
Houston and Patrick Ewing . Duke or UCONN) and some
Vallery down.
·. game,_ifso,itw~sag.imebefit-:- . gives the
:Knicks
three guys - things that we have not seen in
. ting- of
the
le_gend:
H_
\Vas his
with All-NBA offensive poten:-
a
couple of years. Well, good
· first Super Bowl
MVP
and.a phe-
-tial. In addition . to. Spree, the
luck to all and a good season,
nomenal near perfect game for
Knicks brought in Dennis Scott;
albeit shortened, to all ofus, the
the only. quarterback from _the
a good supplementary player
fans. ·
SMITH:
·
_Freshman guard·
looking to
mak.e a1iame. for himself with the Red Foxes
... continuedf!om_pg .16
staff, arid campus atmosphere."
to deal with college life as a stu-
- When ask if he
felt
there was
dent/athlete.
· All the diffe_rent games that
a differences frcim playing high
No·t to mention trying to learn
he was exposed to coming out school play to. college pl_ay he
how to
fit
into the Marist bas-
of .high school and constant said it had to be the physical . ketball system, knowing when
talks with his dad have been
play.
to· set a screen, move the ball
very helpful. For example,
in
He was well aware of this as-
and execute different defensive
the beginning of the season he · pect of the college game so in
plays.
started the first couple of games · his senior year he worked out
"It was hard the first semes-
because senior guard Bo
hard with weights.
;
ter,'; said_ Smith on adjusting
Larragan was recovering from
·smith said getting sick wiped . from high school to college life
an injury. .
_
·
- out some of the hard word'he
as a freshman.
"Playing against
all
these tal-
had done; -
Smith said he thought it might
ented people in high school has
"I was able to put on like 15 to _ · n_ot be a bad idea for players to
enabled me to play at such a
20 pounds on before I came to
sit out their freshman year.
high level," Smith said.
Marist. _However,
I
lost some of
_"It
has its advantages and dis-
At all these high school and · that when I got sick in January.
advantages. Its advantage to
summer league games he was
I came down with this bad cold
an athlete is that he can con-
able to showcase his talent.to
and my throat ·was really hurt-
centrate a lot more on school-
many coaches around the coun-
ing," Smith said.
'1
took all types
work," Smith said. "However,
try.
of medicines but my throat was
the disadvantage is the athlete
He had a total of ten different
still very sore.
l
found out after . does not acquire game experi-
schools looking at him, . Col-
numerous throa.t cultures and . ence,just practice experience."
leges such as Coastal Carolina,
visits to the doctor that I needed
So far in Richard_$mith 's first
Charleston Southern, Howard
to have my tonsils taken ouL"
_year as a Red Fox he has been a
Untversity and others wanted
This freak sickness would
pleasant surprise. He has gone
him to play ball for them. .
force him to miss
three
games in
through some adversity both on
. "I want to pick a college "that
a row do to recovering from hav-
· and off the court but has man-
was not close to home but not
ing his tonsils tak~n out.
aged to overcome.
to far so I can go home once in
Not only has he had to deal
These experiences will only
a while. I picked Marist be-
with having- his tonsils being
make him both a oetter person
cause of location, coaching
taken out, but he has also had
and player.
Marist played tough defen-
sively, not overcommiting as
they had in the past, allowing
them to better defend perimeter
shots.·
Marist went on a run five min-
utes into the second half,
topped off by a Vallery free
throw.
Vallery, nonei_dstent in the first
half, (2
PTS,
2·REB), stepped up
big for the Red Foxes scoring·
down low and forcing Carey into
foul trouble. ·
·
Vallery said her first half per-
formance was a result of foul
trouble .
"I
got two quick fouls and I
had to sit," Vallery said.
"I
got
discouraged and didn't play
well.
I wanted to make sure we
came out fired up for the sec-
ond half."
Carey's foul trouble during
crucial moments allowed the
Red Foxes to retain the lead
throughout inost of the half
while Carey sat.
Marist Head Coach Kristin
Lamb adjusted the lineup going
with Vallery, Stephens and Torie
. Anderson to dominate the paint.
Vallery responded by rattling
off
IO
points from the field dur-
ing the final eight minutes of the
game. Vallery was able to get
open more
as
Rider switched
from a zone defense to a man
defense in the second half of the
game.
The man zone freed up the
paint allowing her to go one on
one With Lady Bronco defend-
ers.
Rider head coach Eldon Price
put Carey back in to the game
around the two minute mark in
an attempt to try and slow
Unfortunately for Rider,
Vallery kept driving and slash-
ing. through the Jane and draw-
ing the fouls.
She canned l
l -of-14 from the
stripe, two of which were criti-
cal towards the erid. Vallery led
all scorers with 23 points, the
eighth time she has led Marist
in that department.
Marist has been unable to
duplicate the win in their l_ast
three games losing to second
place St. Peter's 56-45, Canisus
75-61 and Niagara 65-61, all on
the road.
*
Anyone interested in acquir-
ing a WMCR recording of the
game can contact "The Voice of
the Red Foxes", Ryan Maraziti,
at x4311 and copies can be
made.
Marist next plays Friday, Feb-
ruary 6th against Siena. The
opening tip will be at 7:00 at the
James
J. McCann Center.
BOXSCORE
MARIST(67)
Vallery6-ll ll-1423, Saitta 1-3
1-2 3, Anderson 3-3 1-2 7,
Shackel 3-7 3-3
9,
Fusci 3-
I
2 0-0
7, Stephens 6-10 1-2 13, Knight
1-3 1-2 4, Taylor 0-0 0-0 0-0 0,
Ciaccio0-21-3
I.
Totals23-51 20-31 67.
RIDER(62)
Dilgard 1-4 0-0 3, Carey 7-13 6-6
20, Franus
1-1
0-0 3, Beistline 4-
12 1-2 9, Rodriguez 2-6 1-3 6,
Jackson 2-7 3-4 7, Gavin l-4 3-3
5, Kearon 1-43-3 5, Cross 2-3 2:
3·6, Kearon 1-4 l-23.
-
Totals2I-5417-2362.
Halftime- Rider 30, Marist 29



























































































































































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·
·:
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·
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'20poirits:
J?ieW
Sanme\s con-
·
·
'tiilued
-
his solid play by
,
scoring
.
byJEFFDAHNCKE
StaffWriter
:
:
.
,
·
B
:
while Hatton andMcCurdy
Just over
.
a montll ago,
~
the
:
)1ddecl
i3
aiic1j2 respectiveij
:
.
.
·Marist mens basketbalL te
·
a.m
·
Three days later Marist
tnty-
was enjoying a dream
:
season;
eled to
.
Albany to'Jace Siena, a.
-
As everyone headed home for
.
team they beat 93
~
87
·
eariier in
sernesterbreak, the Red Foxes
the
:
s~ason
>
.
:
.
:
.
·.
.
:
packed their bags, and
.
their 8s0
.
. · ;
Buf 'this was
'
a far
,'
differeilt
record, and headed west to take
environment: as Maristfaced. a
.
on
Arizcma
State.- And although
crowd of over 11,000
at
the
the cross-country trip yielded_ a
Pepsi Arena. Many were
_
upset
85~ 77 loss to the
·
Sun Devils;
about the
.-
conduct. of Hattoi1 in
.
.
people were
:excited
abo1.1t
thfa
.
the previo
·
us rileeting, feeling he
team, so much so that .Ma.rist
sho
_
wboated after th'e game
.
·
received a vote in the national
.
Despite that~ Marist led most
coachespoll.
,
.
of the first half; going to ttie
. ·
Now, as the season enters its
·
1ockerroomwitha40-36advan~
·
final stretch;'the Foxes (12-8;
5~
_
.
tage .. The
.
second have
:
Was
·1) have deraileci, dropping five
close
·
imtil:the
·
Saints,. leading
of their last six ..
_
A season that
,
.
73-71 ;
-
went on
a
tOruri.
-
.
.
was once filled with promise'is
.
.
·
Despite holding Siena
'.
s t~p
now oozing with unc~rtainty .
..
·
player, Marc~s Faison, to ottly
.
.
At the center ofit all is the
two points,Maristl~ft with their
absence of juni<>r- forwa
'
rd
seventh loss.in their last eight
Tomasz Cielebak; the team's
·
,
~
'
-
·
,
·
·
-
·
·
contests. SienawasledbyBran;.
fourth leading
'
scorer,
·
who wa.s
.
Two of the best
:
paint gaurdsin
.
ihe
i
MAAC:

gcf onif
:
on
i
one
.
.
as Mai'is;t's
·
so
Larraga11
.
(5)
don Fields' 18 points;McCurdy
ruled ineligible by Marist ath-
.
defends against Loyola's
'
Jason Ro~e
_
(13)
during
the
Greyhounds' wi
_
n over
.
the Red Foxes.
paced Marist'wid~ 22,
.
while
letic officials last week while the
.
FolloW:in~
the
Loyola g~e. Larragan coiribihed
:
to go orlly
coupl~
-
ofyears.
Hattori added 18.
NCAA investigates Cielebak'i
·
·
head coach Dave Magarity said
6~25 from
.
the
:
field, while the
The Foxes must have taken the
.
On Tuesday, the Red Foxes
eligibility.
.
·
th~t
-
the'absenceofCielebakhas
Foxes as a team
'
coimected
oi1
·•
challengetOheart,asth~ycame rebounded with an impressive
.
.
The investigation into
..
definitely tmrt
the
team's petfor-
only
.
---..,."'.....
int at-
.
ouf aI1'1
·
.9ed _the
game on a Joe
·
showing on their homecourt .
..
C1elebak is based on his involve~
mance.
. .
·.
..
. .
.
.
.··
.
_
te
·
'McCurdy
'
drive seven
'
minutes
..
The Red Foxes defeated the
·
ment in the European club sys-
"We just are not the same team
into the second:.· But Anthony
•·
.
·
Rider Broncos 63-47.
:
tern (For moreinfcmriati
_
on; see
mentally,''
:
Maganty said.
~·rm
,
· .·
;\vho
led aIBcorers with
,
'.
Although the team, is losing,
story on page 1).
.
reallyataloss'fo(explanations.
.
.
'
d~spitecciminginav-
Samuels said he thinks things
.
.
Consequently, Mari st has
We
haven't
.
handled it well
· only
·
t\1/o points per will get better.
been withouthis services since
.
kids
.
are ju~f.searching
.
si
.
ered \.Vith a
thre¢:
,
.
''I know we have a
'
good team,"
.
·
Jan. 16,
a
day qiatsaw the Red
·
swers;
_
They.'re looking
-'.s
bu~ketsparkeda9"0
Samuels saitL
".We're
going to
Foxes fall
fo
'
Cin1sius
:
68-67.
.
·
other
_
andJ'm teilirlg the
.
rLoy9fa
}a
hiri that Marist
·
get our
.
confidence back and
· '
They are
:
1~5
.
in the five garri.es
.
theY:llaveto
.
lookiri the
.
.
,
never
recovered from.
:
.

.
.
we're going to get
()11
the right
·
·
Cielebak has missed so far.
:
.
_
.
Magaricy said thatthe
"
t
.
''
Iri
.
'the
:
l?link
_
of
~ri
eye, it's a
track.!'
.
.
,

'
-
.
-.
Last \Veek, Marjst dropped
.·.
playing the
·
worsrbaske
tie garri¢/'M~ganty said. "And
·•
.
The
Foxes are in action fonior-
two MAACconte~ts, an 81~69
anyte
·
am heh~~ haq
,
>.
iiithebimkofanotherey~,we're
:
row at Loyola. It
_
is still not
. -
loss.at the McCann Center to
:AgaiiistLoyola, Marist never
aganty sa1 w en _e team
down nine again."
kilownifCielebak will be in the
Loyola last Wednesday and an
really
godntd
th~
_
game
;
<:>ffen-
entered ~e lockerrnom: he chal-
Thb
0:
Re
·
d

Foxes never got
_
lirie~_p:
·
.
84-
78 defeatat Siena on Satur-
sively.
/The
'
~tarttrig backcourt , . lenged
them
:
more
.
than he.,has
closer than
.
nine again .. · They
.
day.
of Bobby joe Ifatfon and Bo
.
challenged aJeam in
,
the- last
were lead
by
Tom Kenney with
- :.·
' .
_.·
..
"
'
.
· .
.
..
·
·.
.'
<
.
~
·
-
-
.
.
.
.
.
-
. .
.
by
R Y A N ~
RWif
~\fr
ir;r:irr
i~:•,c
.
.
.
.
·

~
/\ll'll)IDl)WATfA
adV
.
ke 9Ii
how
to.il1lprove
.
my
StaffWriter
..
-
·
to bring Maris(withihone;
17,.
·
...
·
StaffWrjter
game."
.
.
·.
.
.
.
.
If
:
.
~
i
::i(
(·>
>
:
_
..
,:
'
.
:
.
.
,
. .
·
He
had great cn,deritials to be
The Marist C,oll
_
~ge '\Vomen;s
?vfaristregaine? th,eJel;ld 21-
Every
'
since he has pliton

picked forthatM,U team in his
.
Basketbali
teain is oi:Jly3-9 in the
-
·
19 at
the
nine:.ininute mark on a
.
·
·
.
uQiform
.
for
_
the

Ma.rist- Red
_
seilior
,
yeaj: of ltigll l;chool. lie
MJ\.ACJosingtfuee
.
of their last
.
.
Ta# Knight lay-up
·_
fed~icel
~
foxes
.
he has
_
b~en
,
a
·
greatasset
.
finished
his
career at St. Vincent
four conference matches
;
·
_
lently
by
B~th
:
Sha:ckeL
'
.
.
to (!le (ea!!l; iven though he is
.
..
High Sc:hool \\'itl{l,183 points;
.
'fhe lpne victbry
'
during
,
the
M'aii.st allo\'ied:foder
to
stay
·-
only a freshman ap.d comes off Richard Smith was a USATo-
stretch wasa67~62barn-bumer
inthegame;
:
puttingf.h.emto
·
the
·
the bench
_l1e
has
_
been a
_
vital
day All,:State ;electionfor the
.
at home against the basement
·.
lineearlyby°arnassingdghtteam
·
part
to µte
,
te
_
~;-
-,
- ·
.
-
-
:.
state of· Maryland, named
to
resident Rider Broncs on Janu~
fouis in the firstten minutes.
:
..
:
.
.
,
2~,e
phoion~
&otto
Rich
_
arcl. Smith is his nall!e and

::
First., Team All-League, and
AII-
ary
23rd.
.
F6rilie'ri~3'i'fiVe
'
minut~sof
Both
Mari~t teams,may:be
:
passing a~d scoring fo_r t~e
.
MetroD.C.Team..
.
.
.
.
,
.
Marist forward Sabrina Vallery
play the l~acrdianged several
looking to
·
sign thi~ youngster.
M:en 's
-
B_aske_tball team 1s. his
,
On the AAU~ he was ab,e
said. winning the game against
.
times untiFSteveits rebounded ·
·
·
.
game. (}1ve him an uncontested
to be teammates with two cur-
the
,
Broncs was important
a Mari Fusci three~point 3:~tempt
pired.
.
.
·
.
.

.
.
. _.
.
shot and you Can count two or rent N o:rth'Carolina Tar Heels
"We definitely needed to win
and went to the rackfylng the
..
Stephe_ns
·
prnyidecfa
_
mu(?ll-
.
three points being added to his
·
players, Ronala°Currya
11
d Ja-
this one," said Vallery. "Espe-
score ai
.
2~24.
.
,
.
·::ff._
.
.
needed sp~lc for the Red foxes
_
box ~core.
·...
.
.
.
.
.
_.
-
~on ~apel. HisAAUteam also
cially against Rider
.
"
,
Rider
_
then
.
scored
·
six
;
unan
~
_
~coririg I 3 points (6-8 FG) inl 3
·
Two things '1tatm;ike Smith a
played against other big time
Marist opened the game with
sweredto regain the lead, 30-24
·
minutes.
.
.
.
.
special basketball player are his
players around the country.
a 10-9 Jead against the tenacious
with
three
minutes left in the first
Rider began the second half natural
.
s~ills and hi~
.
relati~n::-
.
One team
:
that gave them
double-te;µning and pressing by
half.
.
.
.
;
. .
·.
· .
.
·
. ·
.
. the. sam~ as
,_
tlie first half going
ship wi(!i ~isJather Raymond,
· .
trouble
-
was
·
an AAU team out
Rider. Jen
_
Carey
_
scored th€!
Marist claw
_
ed its way back,
--
toCarey(13PTSfirsthalf)down
As a basketball'player he pos,:
of N~w York !2ity, which had
Broncs first four points looking
eventually coming within one,
low where she
·seemed-unstop-
sesses great bal1-handlin& skilJs
currl'!nt St. John's players Erick
to dominate down l
_
ow. The 30-29 when Shackel fired a bul-
pable.

.
.
and
.
great ~ange on his jump Barkley anci Anthony Glover.
· .
Broncs surged to a seven-point
let to Stephens down low who
Freshman Fusci drilled-a three
-s~ot.
B~t hrs
~eal ~set_has been
"I played against a lot of great
lead, 17-10, behind
_
the play of up faked by the defender and
early in the half to tie the game
.
~is relationship With his father.
competition before I came to
JC superstar Carey and Iris layed in the deuce.
at34-34keeping the momentum
"My dad coaches an AAU _ Maris
.
t College, which has
Beistline.
·
·
Marist had the chance to take
.
from swinging
·
in favor of the
basketball team back home,"
helped me out tremendously,,
·
Marist
countered down low
the lead going into the locker
.
Broncs.
·
Smith said. "So I talk to my dad
said Smith.
·
'
with Alex Stephens coming off room, but Stephens' finger roll
all the time about how I did in
the bench and igniting the Lady
went in and out as the half ex-
...
please see
WOMEN,
pg. 15
each game. He always gives me
: ..
please see
SMITII,
pg. 1.5
1


52.10.1
52.10.2
52.10.3
52.10.4
52.10.5
52.10.6
52.10.7
52.10.8
52.10.9
52.10.10
52.10.11
52.10.12
52.10.13
52.10.14
52.10.15
52.10.16