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Part of The Circle: Vol. 52 No. 15 - April 1, 1999

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~FEATURES~
Cherry Popp in' Daddies
will ~wing
over to Marist
.'
Tickets on sale now, pg~ 5
~SPORTS~
Marist baseballis off to
·
.a
7~11
start, pg.16
the student newspaper of -~lflrist College
httn://www.academic.marist.edu/circle
APRIL
1,
1999
Graduation·
·
01ay
·
tie resclleduled
Sinking
..
_

library
·
worries
officials
.
by
APRILFOXX
Asst. NewsEdiior
.
.
-
.
·.
prompting Marist officials to
at this pace, inspectors estimate
cancel graduation for the. Class
that the
.
structure has
·
the pos-
of1999.
sibilityofsiiding down the cam-·
Apparently not enough geoc
pus gree~ and into the Hudson
logical inspection was
·
done in
:
in le_ss than
a
year.
·
the area that the library is being
Many students were happy to
built upon. According to New
hear that the new library might
The new library is sinking into
York State inspector Brad
slide down to the campus green.
the ground and there is the pos-
Nuefeld, there is a hidden fault
·
One student was pleased that
sibility that the upconiing gradu-
line running underneath the
the library might he
·
attached to
ation could be cancelled.
middle of this campus. His con-
the Rotunda in the future. Ac-
In a required state inspection
cern is that like the fault lines iri
cording to him, he is happy be-
conducted last week, New York
California, a minor tremor could
cause it will eliminate the need
State inspectors have found
·
open up the earth and swallow
to walk outside if he needs to
that O\,:er the past two months
up the $19.6 million building,
visit the library.
·
the foundation of
the
building
·
Construction
·
workers are still
Marist officials did not return
·
has sunkenjust
·
over
2
inches;
.
hard at work on the
.
building,
phonecalls, primaniy
_
because
,
,.
.
_
:According
:
to anonymous
even though it seems
:
that soon
....
·
this
article
is being published
on
_::7,;
Maristfocultf
souices;tiiefi'
1s
;:
,
,
allof.this w9rkdone\Vill
b.e
either
--Apr.in~
-
Irifact; none of this story
·
J
::oncem that the library will
b,e
underground oninderwater.
.
.
is true at all. Happy ApriIFools
·
,
ori the campus green
'
by Ma):',
.
Evenwith_out an earthqllake,
Day everyone!
0

'.
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:
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·.·
.
·
·
.
.
.
.
.

.
.
,
.
.
.
Circle photo/Joe
Scotto
Elie Wiesel,
-
fenovvn
.
author,
_spo
,
k~Jo
.
.Mariststudentl3:at a
lecture
.
sponsored tiytt1e
·
Student Programming C(?uncil.
Wiese
.
l
·
.shares
.
.
.
co
.
nc
.
erns· on
.
.
l
!r
w~fllld
'
~flea~~
1
b y ~
GROGAN
·
,
Wiesel said the fightjng occur'.'
.>
)Jews
Editor

..
ring in Kosovo is because of

.
hatred be~een two groups. and
Min/people iri this
.
country
·,
compared it to a passage in the
are·uninformed as
fo
the effects
Bibi¢.
.
..
.
..
.
.

.
·•
.
of the
:
fighting in
.
Kosovo;
:
ac-
''Whoever kills, kills
·
his
cording tq Nobel
_
Peace
:
Pri
_
~e
brother," he said:"1t's the
.
sin of
whmer
;
Eli~ Wie~eL
.· . '
' .
.
killing you neigh,bor."
.
.
<
Wi~s~l, a suryivoroftheNazi..
·
The conflict in Kosovo has
concentration camps:
'
during
been inten
'
se since Serbian
Wodd'Wai:-U, spoke
.
to Miirist
PresidentSlobodan Milosevic
College students
on
his

views
·
stripped Kosovo
of
its au-
regarding the conflict in
tonomyin 1989.RecentlyNATO
Kosqvo.
·
...
please see
WIESEL,
pg.4 ·
Diversity Day turnout lower thait expected
WfZKLYPOLL
.
..
·-
~
-
·-
-
~
-
·
.
.
·
I?O-.YO~
"
t.4i~
.
.
.

·
.
Marisfshould
.
·?
restticdtiJf
drwar&~
.
ing of emails?
·
YES
NO
-
--
68
·
32
SEE RELATED STORY, PG. 4
This
is
an urudmrijic suney taken from
100
Marist srudnil<.
Cin:le
pholo/Joc Scono
Jon Murray perfonns at D-Day.
by
JAIMETOMEO
Staff Writer
.
.
,
The second an
_
nual Diversity
Day attracted fewer students
tharilast year.
.
·
..
·:
P,iversity :bay was an effort
:
.
thatbegan last year to increase
students'
-
knowledge of the di-
versity that exists on our cam-
pus and to
·
celebrate diversity
that this campus contains. It
was held last Saturday in the
Cabaret and Performing Arts
Room.
The Student Government As-
sociation
-
organized the event
this year, according to Student
Body President Colleen
McCulloch.
-
.
.
"It
was run by a presidential
committ~, which was chaired
by Caroline Davis and Edward
Antoine," she said. ''They were
in charge of planning every-
thing and finding the perform-
ers and getting the clubs
aligned. They did the majority
of the footwork on
it."
The day was filled with guest
... please see
D-DAY,
pg. 3
INSIDE
10DAY:
Partly Cloudy
hi:
64°
lo:
39"
Community .................
2
Features .....................
5
A&E ...................
.
.... 11
Opinion
....
:
.................
9
Sports ........................ 16










































































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APRIL
1,1999 ·
Co1liiiiia• .. ·
\it
·
·•
·
··
SPC
.
· Marist College Student Pro-
gramming Council is proud to
announce MOJO recording art-
ist Cherry Poppin' Daddies in
concert with special guest. Con-
cert
will
take place on Sunday,
April 17, 1999intheMaristCol-
·lege James J. McCann Recre-
1\vo students kicking a berich
were caught by a security ·of-··
fleer while on patrol from the
Donnelly Parking . Lot to the
Sheahan Parking Lot.
What's the funniest
April Fool's jok~ that has
been played on you?
.
ation Center.
Doors open at 7 p.m. and the
concert begins at 8 p.rn. Will call
opens at
5
p:m. Ticket prices for
M~rist students,.faculty, .and.
staff with valid.ID is $8. Orie
tick<!t/ID. Other college students
with valid ID is $
12:
Orie ticket/
ID.
General public is $20.
All
tick-
ets are general admission.
Tickets are on sale daily from
noon to 9 p.m. at the Office of
College Activities in Student
. Centef 373. For information, call
575-3279.
Dress to impress, swing style,
· .. so we can start our own 'Zoot
Suit Riot!
. Chess Club.
On Thursday, Match 25th, 16
·' ''·members of the Marist College•
Chess Club participated in a.
club, chess tournament. Robin
Toll came in first place, followed
. by Brian Wills in second place;
Ethan Georgi, club, president,
· took the third place trophy.
The Chess
·
Club will also be
doing a candy grarn fund-raiser
during the ·week of April 11th.
They encourage everyone to
buy them and support the Chess
Club.
WMCR
Want the "Odds On Favoii.teT'
Tune into 88. l WMCR at 6
p.m.
for Wednesday Night Sports
Beat. Tune in for up~to-the-
.
minute stats, scores, and analy-
sis· of
all
NCAA teams and
games, as well. as Marist and
professional sports.
"You gotta hear it baby," Dick
Vitale.
The two vandals were identi-
fied as Leo Hall residents and
.
admitted to the crime. They then:
·changed their minds and denied
any involvement. One of the
residents said· nothing can be
done
to
them because they were
not caught on. film.
. A
Madst faculty m~mbecre-
cei'ved harassing rnail and
phone calls. The faculty mem~
ber reported them to Marist Se-
curity and the Town · of
Pougkeepsie Police Department.
A member of the housekeep-
ing staff walked into one of
Champagnat's 1st. floor men's
bathrooms at 6:00 a.m., on
March 26th, to find water spray-
ing from a sinkwhere a faucet
had been tom off, and a number · •
of pipes were bent:· ·
.

'"·
;.-:-:
"My friend stole my
clothes while I was .
skinny dipping. "
Stephe~
Kirk
,,.fr~hman.
A
motor.vehicle accident be- . •: • . : . • ,
,
,
f :
.i ·
_1(·'
tween two off-campus Marist
students -occurred near the en-
trance .to the West Cedar apart.c·
ments at 7:55 a.m. March 26th.
4:10
a.m.
'on March 27 by the
Security officers overheard the
two·residents'upon their returri
call from the scanner that an am.:
to their room:··
bulance was.reporting to ,the
The unknown vandals kicked
scene and serit a patrol to help.
in thelowerhaifofaroom'door,
Both· students •. were heading
and punched threehplesin the
West towards campus, . one by
top half: The residents of the
bicycle and the other by car.·
i:ciom had left atl0 p.m. with the
Joe
Leary,
drrectorof safety and . door stillintact. The r~sidents
security, said the bicycling
stu- : .
said they•• did not know who
dent
ran
into theCar,injuring his . would.do s1:1ch'a thing ..
left shoulder. He was transported ·
to St. Francis. Hospital by a·
Fairview ·ambulance,. while his
bike
was
taken. to his apartment
by. Maristsecurity officers:
Prug paraphernalia, · including a
bong, filter paper, and a pipe were
confiscated from five students in a · '
room on Champagnat's first floor
an
:25 p.m.March 26th.
Vandalism on Champagnat
Hall's
8th
floor was reported at
Thirteen bottles of beer, one
bong, and one packet of mate-
rial resembling marijuana were
confiscated from Benoit House
on Saturday, Marc~ 27th at 8:45
p.m.
A
single, qne~pint bottle of Co-
rona beer
.
was>confiscated from
a Leo Hall ro<>in on Saturday,
Mar~h 27th a~ 9:30 p.m,
Weekend Weather
Security officers are on the
lookout for forged parking per-
mits, after discovering three on
cars parked in •the West Cedar
Parking Lot. ~e offenders will
be restricted from parking per-
mits for an unspecified amount
of
time ..
FRIDAY:
partly cloudy
hi:
63°
lo:
40>
SATURDAY:
partly cloudy
hi:
61°
Io: 39"
SUNDAY:
mostly cloudy
hi:
57°
lo:
39"
Source: http://www.weather.com (The Weather Channel)
A'
resident in the "new" ·
townhouses reported several
hundred dollars in Small bills
.
being stolen on Saturday,
March 28th
at
3:45 p.m. The
money had been in a bag in the
apartment and was last seen
March 24th. Security officers
are continuing their investiga-
tion into the larceny.
" I don't do things like
that."
Karen Orifice
freshman
"My girlfriend lied
lo
me
and told me she was
pregnant. " ..
-emier Unisex Sdlon
Is Steps
Away
fromMarist!
HE
WEIJ
··-
wmfSPIGI
DIKOUNTS!
HAIRCUTS: GUYS: $15
&
GALS: $18
. INDIVIDUAL TA.NNING SESSIONS: $7
NINE TANNING SESSIONS:
$45
SEVEN
( d ] f < , r ~
~~CJJ/t'r
l.lmlletJ
264 NoRTH
Ram,
POUGHKEEPSIE 454-9239
Jui;t
p a s t ~ ~ ~
fl'onds
~
Near KEDDdi;
Free
1lriing
~~9-4~m,s,i,.BJ(),5
•Ma>isl~
aredigJblef<,r
~
d b ~
I.D.!Proo/











.
.
TH£ CIRCLE
·NeWs
PAGE3
Sewerbreakforces students to
,eya~µate upper. townhouses·
by
KRISTINA BRITO
Staff Writer
Residents of the H-block
townhouses. experienced an
unwanted lesson . in a sewage
clean~up last month.
On March 6, a sewage pipe
broke inside the wall of
townhouse H-4, according to
April Quigley, resident director
on duty that night. The break-.
age caused flooding and evacu-
ation of the residents of the
block, according to students.
Townhouses HI and H4 were
those most affected by the
break.
·
Brenda Bertolini, resident of
H-4, said that suds around the
grate in the shower started to
forin and water started pumping
out around 7:30 p.m. Bertolini
said she called maintenance im~
mediately, but waited 45 minutes
for someone to arrive.
"One man from maintenance
came and tried plunging the
drain, but more water kept com-
ing up," she said. "He said he
was going to come back with
some more tools, but took al-
most an hour to return."
By the time maintenance re-
turned, piec~s of waste were
coming up with the water and
had· spread into the downstairs
bedroom and kitchen.according
to Bertolini. She started to mop
up the mess and wentto other
townhouses.to see if they were
experiencing the same prob-
lems.
Sarah Papineau, resident of
H,
J,
said she was in.the upstairs
shower
and
heard
her
houseinates yelling downstairs.
When she came downstairs,
there was a huge mess alL ov~r
the downstairs floor, she said.
''My housemates and I had six
mops and started to clean up,"
she said.
.
Most residents including
· Meredith•Dobson, resident of
H-1, ·said they was disgusted by
Photo courtesy of Katherine Wright
Sewer breaks in the townhouses left many students' personal items damaged.
the whole ordeal.
"It
was pretty wretched that
something like that was floating
around in our house, especially
since it came into the kitchen,"
she said.
Papineau and Dobson said
they called maintenance, but it
took them two hours to show
up. When maintenance arrived
at the house, there was a strong
stench in the house. Then they •
were told by maintenance they
might have to leave their houses
because of the contamination,
but may be put in a hotel .
Sarah English, director of
housing and residential life,
said that the students safety
was the main concern.
Quigley said she, other mem-
bers of the Housing staff and
maintenance decided it was un-
sanitary for-students to stay
at their houses because there
would be no water and no way
to have the mess cleaned up that
night.
Residents of both
townhouses said that resident
directors and resident assis-
tants came by to assess the situ-
ation. It wasn't until
U
:30 p.m.
that they were definitely told
they would have to evacuate for
the evening and possibly the
following day. If residents could
noffind a place to stay, the
Housing office would find them
a
vacancy on·campus.
Dobson said there should
have been swifter action in the
matter.
"They could have let us know
that we had to evacuate before
11 :30 on
a
Saturday night," she
said.
Bertolini said that she was of-
fered a vacancy on campus, but
chose to go to a hotel. Other
residents stayed with friends
off campus.
When residents were allowed
back into their houses late Mon-
day afternoon, some were not
satisfied with the clean-up per-
formed by Marist, including
Papineau.
"Although it wasn't Marist's
fault and they did the best they
could, it would have been bet-
ter to get rid of the mess sooner,
she said.
Bertolini said she did not feel
safe with the cleaning done be-
cause the contaminated water
was poured back down her sink.
"I don't think that the crew
was prepared to handle a situa-
tion like this," she said.
After students were allowed
back into their townhouses,
they had to deal with the dam-
ages done as a result.
Papineau said there was dam-
age done to personal belong-
ings, as well as many household
items.
·
Bertolini said she had damage
to personal items as well as to
the closets and floor in the
downstairs bedroom. Accord-
ing to her, she is still waiting to
hear about compensation from
the Housing office.
D-DAY:
Location considered inadequate for event
... continuedfroinpg. I
.
spe_akers and faculty lecturers,
as · well as cultural. dances and
ethnic clubs. Diversity Day's
theme and messages were well
received by its audience.
.. Christine Flesch, sppJlomore,
· said there were many ideas _that
came together during l:Qis event.
"I
think
Diversity Day is when
everybody comes together to
show the diversity. between all
types of people, not only mi-
norities and non-minorities,"
she said.
The day seemed to run
smoothly even without the turn-
out that was expected;>
Antoine sai4 he believes lo-
cation was part of the l~w turn-
out.
"I think there was a shortage
of people because it wasn't out-
side," he said. "But it was a
oood turn out I believe."
0
Some participants of Diversity
Day enjoyed doing community
"I think Diversity
Day is when every-
body comes together
to show the diversity
between all types of
people, not only mi-
norities and non-
minorities."
Christine Flesch
sophomore
service, but had a different ex-
pectation of what the day would
be like.
.
Marissa Thornton, sopho-
more, said she was disappointed
in the low turnout.
"I went for my sorority, Sigma
Sigma Sigma, and we sat at a
booth and made beaded brace-
lets that are going to be donated
to children of battered women,"
she said. "But I thought it was
going to be much bigger and
that there would be lot inore
people involved."
Many students feel the low
turnout was due to the event
being held in the Cabaret this
year. They said it was con-
stantly crowded and uncornfort-
ably wann.
Flesh said the location's small
size did not suit the purposes
of such a big event as Diversity
Day.
"When I walked into the Caba-
ret it was so overcrowded and
hot," she said. "It was too
cramped. I think it should have
been outside· because it would
be·more spacious."
According to the presidential
committee, the idea of holding
Diversity Day outside was
looked into carefully and then
decided against.
Antoine said there were many
factors in the location decision.
"It was warm maybe for people
to be outside, but as far as the
dancers being outside, they
weren't wearing appropriate
clothing and we wouldn't want
to see them wearing sweatpants
and sweatshirts," he said. ''The
groundkeepers also wanted to
make sure that the grounds were
well kept for graduation. All
those concerns made us put it
inside."
Among many issues raised on
Saturday was one of gender
equality. JoAnnf: Myers, assis-
tant professor of political sci-
ence, attended Diversity. Day
and gave a lecture. According
to her, people can not absorb all
these concepts in just one day.
"I think the turn out was lower
than last year. I think that we
need more than one day for Di-
versity Day," she said. I did a
lecture on gender equality. I
think there are issues that
young women and men need to
confront that we haven't
reached an equality."





































































































































APRIL 1
7
1999
.
.
.
,
.
Circle photo/Joe Scotto
Wiesel shared his thoughts with
a
crowded Mccann Center.
Circle photo/Joe Scotto
Wiesel meets with reporters during
a
press conference.
·
TIIE
)
CIRti.£
NeV\ts
PAGE4
.
. •
~IftSE.IS:
·
·
·
S-Urvivor
pushes
i:
f@r
intervention
:
in
Ko$9yo
.
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)
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powedeft in this world today .
But Wiesel
_
questions what
makes a country a great power.
He said he feels that how rich a
has
:
been

putting
.
pressure
·
on
country is should not determine
Milosevic to sign
a
peace agree-
its power, but rather only if that
nient, including authorizing
country has a commitment to
airstrikes in the region.
humanity.
·
;
.
·
Wiesel, whos¢ parents and
·
• According to Wiesel, part of
younger sister were
·
killed in the
the blame for the indifference in
Holocaust, said
h~
believes that
this country can be found in the
·
·
intervention was the only way
teaching procedures of colleges
to stop the fighting in between
and universities.
the Ethnic
.
Albanians and Serbs
.
"How
many professors would
."I
do believe we should inter-
stop in
.
the middle of
vene, as much as I'm against
Shakespeare and say, "'Let's
war," he said.
"If
we had inter-
stop and talk about Kosovo','.'
vened in the first week, we prob-
he said.
ably could have stopped
Wiesel saicfin the 1960s and
Milosevic then.'
.
'
·.
1970s students
·
showed more
.
.
.
While Wiesel said h
_
e
:
agrees
·
initiative in trying to make adif-
.
:
that Milosevic is
)'.
guilty of ference in the world.
·
.
atrocities,"
.
he said the fighting
·
While many people are indif-
sh~uld ~ot
·
be referred to as
ferent to the fighting in ;Kosovo,
genocide.
·
.
Weisel said
that
it was honor-
"It's not genocide, it's some-
able tofightforpeace,especially
.
thing else," he said.
with
a
country as powerful as
Wiesel said his greatest fear
the United s
·
tates.
is that much of the population
"To die for democracy, it is the
in this country
shows
indiffer-
honor of our country to come
encetowards international con-
to the aid of the victims," he said.
flicts. ·
"It
is even our duty to try to give
·
.
"Neutrality does not help the
them autonomy."
victims," he said. "It only helps
According to. Wiesel,
·
he is
the.victimizers." -

'
-
happy that
·
some progress has
"I do believe we
should intervene, as
much as I'm against
war."
"Neutrality does not
.
help the victims. It
only helps the
vic-
timizers."
such as the one in

Kosovo with
the formation of human rights
organizations. While in the
.
1930s there were only five, there
·
are now over 2,000 organiza-
tions that fight for human rights
throughput the ~arid.
Wiesel said he feels we must
not igriore the conflicts going
on throughout the world,
.
but
also look towards a bright
fu~
ture.
·
-
·

The
·.
U.S;
·
is the only great
·
been made to suppress conflicts .
"We ~ust go on and hope that
peace will prevail," he said.
·
;t~l!cYf;prohibits
i
.
emailfflt~a~~!llg
.
,
..
._.

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->.
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·-·
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·
by
KEVINKNEUER
.
McC~naghy said she
.ha~
not check my mailI have
·
somethirig
StajfWriter
heard of
a
student's account fromsomecompanytryingto·get
being locked for se~eral months
.
rriefo joi~ their n.iaiHrig list," he
Many stu_dents wonder why
so this does not seem to be a
'
said
:
"
'
-:
·,
·
· ·
"
·
..
Maristrestricts· the forwarding
major problem on campcts.
:
.
McConaghysaid that; like the
of email from the MUSICB ac-
.
What has ,becom~ an increas~
.
·
filters used to detect chain
.
count.
ing annoyance
.
to students ac
:.
.
emails, Marist has software fil-
'
Mass forwarding
of
email is
cessing their emailcaccounts is · ters to
try
and prevent these let-
.
restricted from the mainframe.
something called "spamming.''
iers from reaching students as
Those stud~nts who
·
are caught
This refers to the act of compa:.
much as possibie.
.

.
.
.
.
usually end up getting their ac-
nies or people sending out un-
"Unfoi:turiately, network
countssuspend,eq. The main
·
solidted email,non:nally pro-
·
trouble makers come
·up
wi~
fact6t'that results
in
a student's
rooting a pr<>dlict or service.
'
.
new ways to get
'
past these fil-
acc9unt beipg shut off is chain
Junior Mi~hael Be?dneltsaid
teiiall thc.ttiine, so ~~
:
have Jo
l~gers.
,, '
·.
··
.
'
'
.
he is constantly r.~ceiving Jllail
~ -
try
iuid
keep
'
up with them;t,she
'
Martha McConaghy, manager from different companies.
'
~

.
,
·
said.
.
:
.
·
ofcomputer systems, networks
·
"It
seems like every time
I -

.
and operations, said Marist has
never allowed students
.
to use

ehiail to send chain letters
;
.
"Chainletters have been pro-
hibited at Marist since we
·
first
started using email in the early


·
:,
i980s," she said:
·
Other than the
·
annoyance
chain emails
·
can cause,
Mcconaghy
.
added they are
also prohibited because
.-
of the
amount of space and bandwidth
these letters take up.
,
Marist uses software filters in
·
order to combat the sending of
chain emails: These filters look
·

for
-
specific
'
pattems that are
common to-most chain emails
and then 'signal MUSI CB to lock

,
the sender's
i~K"
accounL This
lock does
..
not let the student
·
·
access his

or her
·
account. In
·
order to
,
get their account un-
locked, students must go to the
help desk in Donnelly Hall and
request their account be un-
locked.
According to McConaghy,
this is the only reprimand that
students will encounter when
they send chain emails.
Teach for.
Ka
.
plan.
·
If
you scored
:
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sm
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;
·.
MCAT
or
DAT
·
and would
like
to
.
help_o~~r~
PP~~
..
s~rile
\each
for
Kaplan.
Kaplan· offers paid training!
,'.
.
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'
Call today
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£0£M/F


































I .
.___
THE
<CIR.CLE
APRIL 1,
1999
-
Featur
,
es
PAGES
The Easter bunny will Soo be here
by
CHRISTYBARR
_
Staff Writer
The history and symbols of
Easter date
-
back to ancient
times, but the traditions have
evolved over many years.
Easter began as the feast of
Passover in Jerusalem when
Jesus, a Jew, was crucified and
then rose from the dead.
_
While there is no indication of
the observance of Easter in the
New Testament or in the Writ-
ings of the Apostolic Father,
chllrches throughout the East
and West celebrate it as a major
feast.
Since the Council of Nicaea
in AD 325, Easter has been cel-
ebrated on the
-
Sunday follow-
ing the first full moon after the
Spring equinox.
-
The tradition of Easter pa-
rades began during the Middle
Ages in Europe _when people
would take a long walk in their
· new clothes after Easter mass.
Rabbits, eggs,
·
and of course
the Easter bunny are all Easter
symbols that have· evolved at
different times.
Rabbits evolved as a pre-
Christian fertility symbol and
were used as images of Christ's
post-resurrection appearance.
The rabbits were noted for
their capacity of abundant pro-
duction of the young, especially
in the springtime.
Ancient Egypt and Persia are
responsible for the egg symbol
evolving. Friends would ex-
change decorated eggs as a
symbol of creation, fertility, and
new life because the coming
forth of a live creation from an
egg surprised people of ancient
times.
The Easter bunny first
evolved
in
Germany in the 1500s.
The Germans believed that the
Easter bunny laid red eggs on
Holy Thursday and multicolored
eggs the night before Easter
Sunday.
Over the years many Easter
traditions have continued.
The tradition of dyeing Easter
eggs is one which children ev-
erywhere take part iri. ·
These dyed eggs are then hid-
den for children to find in the
Easter egg hunts. All over the
world children hunt for hidden
eggs.
However, the biggest tradition
has to be the Easter baskets that
are left for the Easter bunny to
fill with candy. It is a tradition
much like that of Santa Claus at
Christmastime, only instead of
gifts, children receive candy.
And of course, there is the
Easter Day Parade on New York
City's 5th Avenue. This parade
is the biggest in
·
the United
States and carries on the tradi-
tion set forth back in the Middle
Ages of Europe.
·
cu:etry;
'
l~o.ppin~

Daddies
are swingin'
over
·
to Marist,
by
JILL
·
G~OCONOO
·
>
-
:
-
'
StaffWriter
-
_-
-
-
Dust off your dancing shoes
and brush up on your swing
dancing, the Cherry Poppin'
.
Daddies are coming _to Marist.
sales and the first days of sales
_
,
were limiJed
_
to
_
1ylatjst
~
stude_11ts
only. Tickets are $8
-_
for ~arist
·
students,
$12
for other college
students, and
$2t>'
for general
public
·
and all ticke_ts are gen-
~ral
a<imission.
Heather Suydam, vice presi-
dent of the Student Program- .
·
mingCouncil(SPC),saidtheSPC
:
thought the Cherry Poppin'
Suydam said the concert has
been in
-
the planning stages
since the beginning of Febru-
ary
and SPC found out two to
-_
Da9dies wen~
a
good band to
;
bring to Marist
_
becaµse they
are
r
different from other bands
-
that
·
-
have played here.
"It was a name people recog-
nized and a band that people
who aren't interested in the
type
of music can still come and have
fun," she said.
The concert is being held April
17 in the McCann Center. Last
week was the first week of ticket
three weeks later that the con-
cert was going to happen as
soon as they had a signed con-
tract.
The members of Cherry
Poppin' Daddies include Steve
Perry on vocals and guitar, Ja-
son Moss on guitar, Daniel
Schmid on bass, Tim Donahue
on drums, Dana Heitman on
trUmpet, Sean Flannery on tenor
saxophone, Ian Early on bari-
tone and alto saxophones and
Johnny Goetchuis, on key-
boards.
The Cherry
_
Poppin' Daddies
have produced four albums but
gained most of their fan base
from their
.
most recent album
Zoot Suit Riot.
The album is a
-
compilation of the swing tunes
from
their first
.
three albums
·
(Fe-
rociously Stoned, Rapid City_
Muscle
Car,
and Kids on
the
-
Street)
plus four new big band
songs. The album
-
combines
classic swing with punk rock
intensity and since its release
inMarch 1997, ithasgoneplati-
num.
The album gained in popular-
ity as the swing music craze be-
gan to take over the country.
After the album began climb-
ing onto the Billboard Top 20
the "Daddies" appeared on the
Tonight Show and David
Letterman which increased the
resurgence of the swing move-
ment
Many students at Marist have
been swept up in the swing craze
and have taken lessons offered
by the college. Many have also
purchased the "Daddies" album
along with other swing albums.
Suydam said that she has
heard nothing but positive feed-
back about the concert.
"Many people were jumping
up and down when they found
out the concert was being held
and even people who weren't
sure of who the band was were
interested," she said.
Information for this article was
taken from the band's official
website: www.daddies.com



















- -
-
-
-------------------------
TH£?·<GIRCL£ .
APRIL 1
7
1999
Feat·ures
.PAGE6·
April
Fool's
l)ay
is
.no
joke
by
COURTNEY CONNOLLY
Staff Writer
What do Jenny Craig, Chris-
tianity, Dick Clark; and a paper
fish all have in co_mmon?
They all believe in new begin-
nings?
Actually, they are aUcommon
denominators in the celebration
of an "obligation-free" holiday
that can tum a person into an
uneasy idiot or an impish
jokester. It can be called the day
where anything goes or as Mark
Twain coined it, "the day we re-
member what we are the other
364 days of the year." Better yet,
it can be called April fool's
Day.·
Most people don't kno»' the
origins' of this' day 'of pranks,
they ju~t know that if there is
someone in their lives they want
to make look like a moron, that
this is the day to do it.·
Doug Wilderotter,junior, said
he remembers his last April
Fool's dlly prank.
"Sophomore year, we got the
keys to my· friend's room and
took all her furniture and stacked
it in· front of her door so she
couldn'tgetin,"hesaid. "When
she finally got the door open,
she had to climb over a dresser,
bed and a pile of books. It was
great;"
· Such "jokes" actually served
apurpose ( other than self-grati-
fication) during this holiday's
conception.
.
· In. the sixteenth century, the
start
of the ~ew y~ar.'was
~b~
served on the first of April,
much as it is today in January
(Dick and Jenny probably would
have preferred this time slot).
But, in 1562, Pope Gregory cre-
ated a new calendar for the
Christian world placing the New
Year on the first of January.
Many people didn't believe
that this cha~ge had honestly
occurred, so they continued to
celebrate the holiday on April
1.
Those who acknowledged the
switch began to play tricks on
the gullible ones sticking with
the pre-tradition and labeled
them "April fools," often send-
ing them on little false trips or
"fools' errands."
In order to successfully trick .
· s6meone;
the
victitri musffall
get'~':glasf)g{~t;r, it)ust
completely. prey-to the joke so
shoots out all over your face."
that they can officially be an
Other fun gags include sew-
"April fool,, and possibly even. ing the fly of someone's pants
get
a
paper fish taped to their
together, putting Vaseline on a
back· as is custom in France,
doorknob,
setting
your
where the person is called "un
roommate's clock ahead an hour,
Poisson d' Avril."
and even rigging your chosen
To be triumphant in making
prey's computer.
someone a true fool is often a
You can download a "fart ma-
. difficult task. One has to be
chine'.' that makes up to '.'20 rude
cunning and ~iiling to saqdfice
noises," or a "puke m11chine"
a friendship or even a family
_with the sounds of "vomit
member.
.
splash," "heave," and "yuck"
Steve Lappolla,junior, said he
and install them into any sys-
thinks the family can be a great
tern.
source for pranks,
For more ideas, check out
"Every year, my mom tries to
AprilFool.com,
the Ultimate
pull one off," he said. "Her best
April Fool's Day Homepage, the
one is when she takes electrical
April Fool's Day Scrapbook,
tape and puts it around the head
your friends and even family
of the faucet. When you go to
members.
Then stop in
and
see us. at,
.
MILLMAN'S .T-SHIRT
FACTORY'
12 Fowler ave., Poughkeepsie_
!
Take Route
9
South to 44~55 East
2 traffic lights 18/ock down on left.)
454-2255 FAX 454-5771
· JWUiiiiU
Serving the Marist Community since 1978


























































































-----------·--·----
--
··
··-•
···
- -
·
- - -
http://www~happy-easter.com
-
Is Easter one of your favorite holidays? If so
try
visiting
www
.
happy-easter.com.
Thi
_
s site is called "The Easter Pages"
_
and has i_!lformation on everything that has to do with Easter.
There are facts about the origin of the Easter bunny and Easter eggs as well as information on Easter
bonnets from Scotland.
.
If
you can paint an Easter egg better than anyone else, you can send your picture of it and win
money in a egg painting contest.
If you ~ant to send Easter greetings to your family there are electronic postcards and message
boards to use. You can even pick out an Easter gift for someone special.
·
There is' even a game where you can roll a virtual Easter egg on this site.
So, if this sounds interesting to you go to
www.happy-easter.com.
If
you have any suggestions for this column, or would like to write a column, contact Katrina at
extension 2429 or email HZAL. Features Editor Katrina Fuchsenberger wrote this Searching the
sites column. -
Horoscopes
ARIES:
You should
.
b
_
e
-_
foelin
.
g abso-
_
lutely marvelous
today, and you're
:
looking fabulous.
You 're going to
,
.
·
.
attract all sorts off
i
·
.
'i/,
0
·,,
ait~ntiort
:
Sonie of
it.
-
chm.d;lrohi
-
youi.
--
--
-
competition:
-
They're starting to
.
· reaHze you' re a
force to be reck-
oned with, and
they're right On a
scale of
O
(most
challenging) to
10
(easiest)
,
here are
your levels for
today: Love:
6

Work:
7
-
Comnuifii-
..
cations: 6
[~J<g~}Ef!
'
.
.
case, itlooks like
theydo.:You'll be
nmkirig
"
a
lot more
'
money if you're in a
job you love, for
example. You may
think the job you
love doesn't pay
well, but that won't
always
_
.
be true. Do
what
you
love
-
and
the money follows,
remember? On a
scale of
O
(most
challenging) to 10
(easiest), here are
your levels for
today:
Love:
4
Work:
5
Communi-
cations: 6
GEMINI:
This is a
marvelous day for
-
romance. It may not
go quite like you
planned. It looks
like there's a
separation, and that
doesn't seem like
fun. It could make
things more
intense, and
intensity can
be
neat. All will erid
well, so don't fret.
On a scale of
0
There are also
plenty of opportu-
nities to lose more
-
(most challenging)
money even more
to 10 (easiest); here
.
quickly. It's a
are your levels for
jungle mit there.
today: Love: 6
But it's exciting,
Wo_r~~
1
~ommu,
.::
aryd)his
is
_
a gari)e
-
,
:
·:
nications:
6
-
-
at
which
'
you have
·

-
-
_
, M.f
=CER:
Youinay
natural
uilefldo
·
.
feelpulled every
-
.
get out.there and
which way, but
play, but be wary
.
_
_
dori'tfallintoa
-
Onascaleof0
~
-
dither. Good friends

-
(~9st challenging)

'LA
an
_
d
-
loved ones can
to
IO
(easiest), here
-
_
~
keep you on track
.'
are your levels for
Take time to set
today: Love:
5
yoµr priorities so
Work: 5 Commu-
you know what to
nications:
6
atucmcepdtoanwnd.·w
,·:
_
ha
_
no
I
~·t
I
LIBRA,
Youi
best
.
route to fame and
•'
'
On a scale ofO
.
.
fon.une t()day is .
,
.
-
(m~st challenging)

,
·-
through
a
partner-
:.,t
i :'
:
to
10
(
easiest); here
/:
ship
:
You ancl (~is
t
i
. ,
.,
·
are,-youi lev~ls for
~::
other
.
persoil
-
can
.
.
-
.
£
,

today: Love:
5
-
· ·
make
all
sqrt:sof
Work: 4
_
Commu-
._
things' happen.
fiications: 6
You're good when
-
-
LEO:
Should you
"
you'.re working by
~
-

-
stay or should you
yourself, but you
go? Should you
"
_
really flourish
accept an invitation
when somebody
that's close to
else encourages
home,or one that's
you
"'
and stimulates
far away? It's
your imagination;
pretty hard to
_
.
-
Today, you could
choose. But if you
find somebody
-
wait a little while,
who exactly fits
the answer-should
that description
.
become obvious.
On a scale of
0
On a scale of
O
(most challenging)
(most challenging)
to
10
(easiest), here
to 10 (easiest), here
are your levels for
are your levels for
today:
Love:
6
today: Love: 6
Work: 6 Commu-
Work:
7
Commu-
nications: 7
nkations,
7
.
I
9!1E:I
SCORPIO:
You
VIRGO:
A fool and
-
often get your way
his money are soon
through a round-
parted. Don't let
about route, and
that happen to you.
today that could
If
money seems to
be
the case again.
be
a recurrent
You should lean on
theme this week,
a person who owes
you're right. There
you a favor. He or
are plenty of
she will then call a
opportunities to
friend, another
make more money.
friend and another
friend. FinaUy you
will get what you
want. Today is a
good day for
starting that
process.
On a scale
of
O
(most challeng-
ing)
to
:
10
.
(
easiest),
.
here are your levels
for today: Love:
3
Work:
5
Communi-
cations:
6
SAGITD\RIUS:
You put on
a
good
show this week,
and you deserve a
little break. Sched-
ule a break for
yourself and
a
couple of very
good friends. You
should call
_
it
a
meeting, because
you'll be discuss-
ing important ideas
and establishing
valuable relation-
ships. You'll also be
having a great time.
On a scale of
0
(most challenging)
to
'l
O (
easiest), here
are your levels for
today: Love: 6
Work: 7 Communi-
cations: 6
CAPRICORN:
You
could get an
excellent chance to
advance your
career today. This
opportunity is
based on work you
have done in the
past. It's also based
on relationships
you have devel-
oped. You have
built a good
reputation, and
that's why you're
getting this chance.
The opportunity
could bring you
some more money,
so give it a try. On a
scale ofO (most
challenging) to I 0
(easiest), here are
your levels for
today: Love: 4
Work: 4 Commu-
nications:
6
AQUARRJS:A
.
;
~
person you fins\
_
.
·
f C A . .
_
1
.
-very attractive
-:'
;
feels the same way.
It may be difficult
for the two of you
to get together,
because of the
distance between
you. Luckily you
can correspond,
and that's the
basis of your
relationship.
Continue to build
thatfriendship and
see what happens
naturally. On a
scale ofO (most
challenging) to 10
(easiest), here ;ire
your levels for
today: Love:
5
Work:
7
Commu-
nications:
7
PISCES:
Your
dilemma today has
to do with money.
How should you
spend it? How
should you budget
it? Will there be
enough to go
around? It's one
thing right after
another. There
will
be plenty of money
for a while so don't
worry about it. You
should be able to
do just about
whatever you
want, within
reason. That's the
hard part, but you
can do it. On a
scale of 0 (most
challenging) to l 0
(easiest), here are
your levels for
today: Love:
5
Work: 5 Commu-
nications:
5












































I
I
r
I
l
I
I
t
'
I

l
I
I
PAGES
\T
1
~
\\\OT
GO\NG
,o
WORK
~
~O\J ...
l
<2.J,.__. _________ ___
Marist shows no
respect for solution·
Editor:
I am writing this opinion to express my concerns about the continuing problem
.
with crossing Route
9
during all hours of the day.
In
my two semesters as a
graduate student here,
I
have s
.
een
3
incidences where students
i
have either been
hit or have
·
been closeiy missed by cars while crossing Route
9.
No hneori
.
·
campus denies the problem with dodging cars on
a
fu
a
jor tifghway fri

order to
·
reach the libr!11)7 or other facilities across the highway; what bothers me is the
campus communities actions' when corrective measures have been taken and
implemented
,
'
·
·
Last month
,
Marist officials and the D.O
.
T. have proposed a solution (whether
it
be temporary or permanent) to the problem. At the Fulton.Road/Route 9 main gate
entrance to the campus,
_
the D.Q.T. has changed the timing cycle on the traffic
.
light to a11ow a cyc1e where pedestrians have the complete right-of-way
.
That is to
say,
·
that all four sides of the intersection have a red light, while all four cross-
walks have a walk signal. In order for this to work, however, it was necessary to
implement a "No Tum on Red" law to all four street comers to prevent vehicles
from making legal right turns while pedestrians could be in the crosswalk.
Despite how "well" the solution works, the entire Marist community should be
enthused at the advancement. Instead,

however, I see people at all hours of the
day fotally disregarding the sign and making right turns on red anyway. Is that
not what the students fought for in the first place? Now that a corrective action
has been implemented the campus community still chooses to disregard it, even
though they will be the first to complain when another accident happens.
·
_
I realize this solution may not have been the best
_
one, but you've got to accept
the decision that the college has made. I am writing to express my outrage that
this law isn't being enforced by Poughkeepsie or Marist security officials and to
express my outrage at the members
.
of the campus community who choose to
·
disobey the law, no matter how
light
the f19w of traffic may_ be on Route 9
.
,
.
I, for one, am happy at the progress that the coHege
·
has made addressing this
matter, although I realize better soJutions
.
would
be
more procluctive. Nonetheless,
don't even consider honking your horn at me when I'm stopped with my right
blinker on waiting for the green light to make my right tum onto Route 9
.
Louis
·
Lokuta
Graduate Student
I
Athlete q1-.1estions
.
swim
_
_
teain coverage in
The Circle
Editor:
I don't know understand why
The Circle
cannot mention more about the sp~!l5
teams here at MaristCollege thatactually succeed?
·
·
.
·
.
Just because sw
i
mming is not a priority sport is
110
reason at
.
all not to cover it!
Also
,
other sports
;
crew
for
example
,
I have never heard niuch ab6ut it at all in the
paper
.
.
·.
.
.
.
·
.
.
.
.
.
Back to swimming.
I
receive more credit in the
Poughkeepsie Journal
than
l
or
the team itself does in
-
the college paper.
I would like to see this changed in the f\lture.
Dave Dobbins
*Submission Deadlines are Fridays
.
at 5 p.m.
*
AmandaBradley
Editor-in
-
chief
Elii.abeth
Carrubba
·
Managing Editor
Katrina Fuchsenberger
·
Thomas
Ryan
Features Editor
.
Sports Editor
Chris Grogan
News Editor
TaniQuiim
·
Opinion Editor
Patrick Whittle
Joe Scotto
Toni Constantino
Arts
&
Entertainment
Photography Editor
Business Manager
G. Modele Clarke,
Faculty Advisor
The Circle
is the student newspaper of Marist College, Poughkeepsie, NY.
Issues are published every Thursday.
We welcome letters to the editor, club 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
~L.























PAGE 9
The
_
vi~ws expressed on these
pages
are not necfssarily those of
The Circle
. Sfride:rit- questiOns Marist 's level
Of
tolerance toward gays
ance to its lifestyle. That is, im-
by
DEBRA ALFANO
posing the Catholic family struc-
ture upon its students.
The origins of Marist College
Christine Hapeman's editorial
are as a Catholic seminary and
(The Circle, 3/4/99) implied that
later as a Catholic college. It
intolerancetowardhomosexuals
evolved into the private institu-
is not really an issue on this
tion we know it as today. How-
campus. On the contrary, there
ever, Marist maintains its Catho-
is much hostility endured by the
lie roots. Evidence of this ex-
homosexual members of this
ists in many aspects of the col-
campus. The heterosexism at
lege: the celebration of Christian
Marist forces many homosexu-
liolidays;. the chapel; the mis-
als into suffocating and oppres-
sion statement which, as stated
sive ''.closets." Antagonism to-
in the handbook, is derived from
wards homosexuals is mani-
the Judeo-Christian tradition;
fested in both obvious and
and the many clergymen that
are
subtle ways. Homosexual stu-
part of our community. Based
dents at Marist have been vie-
on that alone, how can anyone
timized by threats of physical
doubt that at Marist, Catholi-
assault just because of their
cism is not only tolerated, but is
sexuality.
actually the norm?
The more subtle forms of this
Marist continues to impose its
oppression occur each day in
Catholic morality upon its stu-
the discourse of a large number
dents, despite· our status as a
of people at Marist. "This is so
private institution receiving fed-
gay" is the common Mari st
eral funding. . One issue that
phrase for something that is dis-
. seems to agitate most students
liked. "He's such a faggot" is a
is the unavailability of condoms
Marist-ese insult for a male who
: at M_ari~t.
/fh{!re
is alsoan ~f-
is not "manly" en9ugh. How
i
fe_ns1 ve::1!,l~,lc:.;,.9f.,;;reprClguct1Y;e,i2--: abouuhe,rampant~~hispers
and
health services for women on
laughs present in a classroom
this campu~. This situation is a
when the students discover that
: con_~eq_uence of the Catholic
their professor is (gasp!) homo-
tradition at Marist. And the last
sexual. There is an endless list
time
I
checked, "Marriage and
of scenarios that preserve'het-
Family" was/a pretty
0
popular
erosexuality as the norm. The
comse designed to teach the
next time that you are about to
Catholic mission and compli-
use a synonym of homosexual-

..
~NatiolllllE.fl#litiotz of Anti-Violence
Programs (NCAVP) Report 1996-97
ity to equate it with something
that you find unpleasant, re-
member that you are perpetuat-
ing the oppressive treatment of
·homosexuals that is so perva-
sive on this campus.
There is a stark difference be-
tween the way that Catholics
and homosexuals are.treated. Js
there a Catholic on this campus
that has been forced to hide her/
his crucifix for fear of humilia-
tion or harassmem?,Reflecting
on Ash Wednesday with the
numerous people on. campus
wearing dark crosses on their
forehead,
I
do not believe that
there was any threat of Catholic
bashing. On the other hand,
there are not many Marist stu-
dents that display their gay pride
flags on campus. This does not
mean that homosexuals are not
present at Marist. In fact, they
are very much a part of our cam-
pus, but fear prevents them from
being visible. Does the name
Matthew Shepard ring a bell?
It is true that many groups on
campus are in fact persecuted
minorities. However, Catholics
are not one of these groups. As
college students, we are sup-
posed to open our minds and
explore issues from different
perspectives. Do not mistake
the inclusion of minority groups
in your academic discussions as
intolerance towards the norm.
Oh,and it is very symbolic that
the new library towers over the
chapel crucifix.
It
should serve
. as a reminder that Marist Col-
lege is no longer a Catholic train-
ing school, but rather is an aca-
demic institution.
Debra Alfano is a Political Sci-
ence Major with a minor in
Womens' Studies. She is a jun-
ior from
Yonkers N.
Y.
Columnist
through
takes
blind
a look
faith
"I think the big mistake in schools is
try-
ing to teach anything, and by using fear
as the basic motivation. Fear of failing
grades, fear of not staying with your class,
etc. Interest can produce learning on a
scale compared to fear as a nuclear explo-
sion to a fire cracker." St l
K b . k
The Jersey side
Tara Quinn
C?!WON €Dl1Cl!
We lined up· at the gate and
waited for what seemed like an
eternity. My friends and
I
stood
amongst scores of other people
who spoke many different lan-
guages. A group of Gennans
conversed with laughter so in-
tense that I laughed too, al-
though
I
could not understand
what they were saying. I·
stopped la~ghing when
I
thought that maybe they were
just laughing at me.
When
I
f1nally reached the
gate, a woman behind a window
asked that I emptied the con-
tents of my wallet. I was worth
forty-four dollars less when I
passed through the gates.
My
friends and I regrouped and
headed for another line, not sure
what to expect at the end.
We stood for
a
while and
I
began to notice that the line was
a lot longer than it appeared to
be.
There were obstructions and
distractions built in and around
. the waiting area. to shade us
from the snaking queue. Cam-
eras fixed on us from above and
monitors displayed us as we
waited. We waved at the cam
When I am .really
bored I often envi-
sion myself having
some sort of break-
down reminiscent of
Jack Nicholson in
one of those movies
from the early seven-
ties when he dances
around and reduces
everything to what it
is.
eras enthralled by our appear-
ance on monitor. We almost for-
got that we were in a line until
we reached a door.
An attendant urged us to pack
in to a dark room, and we were
instructed not to sit down, as
we needed to fit as many people
in as possible. We complied and
the door shut behind us. Sev-
eral large monitors clicked on
and a couple of popular movie
stars came on the screen to brief
is on what was behind the large
double doors at the opposite
end of the room. We watched
in silence.
We were about to be part of
an interactive movie trailer for
''Twister," an attraction at Uni-
versal Studios Theme Park,
Florida.
I
saw through the thin
plot and pushed my way to the
front of the room.
I
shouted
over the recognizable voice of
Helen Hunt.
''THIS IS A CONSUMERIST
HOLOCAUST!!
THISISNOT
ENIBRTAINMENT!! THEY
JUSTWANTOURMONEY!!!
THEY ARE TRYING TO STRIP
US OF EVERYTHING WE
HAVE!! DON'TYOUUNDER-
Please see
PARK,
pg.
JO ...
an ey
u ric
1928-1999
'~if!~~:~~!fegt'!l~/QC~ttst
]l¢JP~mJ>rance
_
Prograni·•·
·
·
.··•
·

'
;
·
Few.eyents·
·
this ... pastcentuty have
.
as
much
-
to'.teacb
·
• us as· the:Holocaust. • Les-
sons of this tragedy·· must be applied
,
to
()Ur
lives daily. ..·· . . . . . .
'
, . .
. .
..

'
··.
·
The program features Holocaust survi-
vors Frank and
.
Emily Ullman, who were .
.
hidden in Amsterdam by a resistance
movement
·
establis
_
hed by
.
the Dutch Re-
for~e~
,~hu_rch.
, .
In addition, Rabbi Dan Polish of Vassar
Temple· in Poughkeepsie will present a
message of indifference to human suffer-
ing. ;\lso included are musical selections
created during the Holocaust by victims.
We hope that you
will
attend A,pril 13
at 7:30 PM in Student Center 348. A re-
ception will follow.
:.,



























































APRIL 1, 1999
\
·
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1 ;:-
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-
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\?r
:
,
,
;,y_ :-,,':·:;: .•. ,.·.·•
: ·
.
·
·
• :' : There comes a .
.
,
everybody,hasA<tg~L . .
·
-;
:
the UnitedStates:'Everybo
. :
·
•.
,
f:;:t~t:!~{[i
::
~!~tl~
0
.
, ·
. the
same
old buildii;igs.
Eve
-
· .
.
.
so ?~eif
it's:fi~ef
<>f~ch~g~,:: )Writer.
·
·. Thins why so many
.
ofusgo,:

:
···
•', ··
· :~t1~J;t\t~;tt ...
,rul~l;\1"1,l
pus went somewhere for
·' ·
··
·
-
• • .•
·
. P~(\Ve~k(lls~,~~Y;,~¢J
~::~;,g:~r?:~
·, lar places
for
the ma,ss
.
e~o .·
.
s
_ -'
spected\vriter):<A.
~-:-,■■■■•--s
7

..
·/.~tjie~ed ~eQui011e
.
1
iravei~J'.JvJr
with
'~1~1~6?ti~ly
what
l6oked
liki d
Onlyinlrel ·
.
.. few
;
miUio11,,i,High
·
Wednesda
School kids
on thezf ·.··
Daf
_
and
we
..
. . .
Galway/Gal
·
_
, way to
•singat-'#ie
St.
,
..
.
towri on
'
the
'
Patrick's
iJay:pa-.
·
·
remiridsmeofa
'
faoviese
.
rade.
. .
.
.
landscape is
·,
bfeaihtaking,
· the town exudes a sense ofo
.,
·
aUfriendliness that made rip
. • • of honnonally ~hallenged car• .• some.of tile sn,1dene~s-~f
SC>
lege students
ar~
C~ncuµ,
Ja- .
·
.
of the Irish shopkeepers:
:
maica,
:
The
'.
:yirgin :I.slai1ds · .. · ..... days we spent iii:Gaf
.
: (ironically named;ehkids?
l~xJ°'gjaii
_
~ts
thr~1t
. decided to do something
.
· little different
this
·
year.I
w
. .
.
. to Ireland
for
fa~rig
b{ .
.
. . The)de
-
.. . ·. ·
-
..
......
_-.,,.
PAGElO
· P,ARK:
Columnist gripes over
erience at-the.me
_pail('.:
,. : ;.'.chntiiz~~JJ;om-ii:
9:
_
·
STAND?!?''
ActuaHy, that is a complete lie.
I quietly stood amongst every-
one else. When
l
am really
bored I -often· envision myself
having some sort of breakdown.
reminiscent of Jack Nicholson
in one of those movies from the
early seventies when he dances
around and reduces everything·
to what it is.
I
refrain from actu-
ally doing s9. It would be rather
silly and I would probably have
to deal with permanent institu-
tiomilization. Two and a half
more semesters at Marist are
more than enough institution
for me, thank you VERY much.
So, rather than put up with
being penned up for the rest of
my life, I stared at the monitor
and went through the motions
of the interactive movie trailer,
which was a simulated tornado.
After the storm, . we were
herded through a gift shop sell-
ing worthless garbage with
movie logos on
it.
It was a fit-
ting end, but that was only the
beginning.
My friends and I waited on a
series of similar lines and were
greeted with a similar set of ex-.
periences as we blindly fol-
a_Grincif'trying to stuff Iilltll~ir ..
fun up
the
chimney.-·. . ,.··
My friends' views weremixed.
"Yeah, I was kind of thinking
that too, you know, with all of
us just following along like
sheep:- You can kind of see the
brainwashing element of this
place."
"You guys are sick. I would
never think of that."
So, yeah, we were kind of var-
ied regarding how we perceived
our day at Universal Studios,
but however way we looked at
it, it showed that the tragedy of
the Nazi Holocaust is some.:.
thing that c~n happen again.
Two ofus refrained from rebel-
ling from waiting in the Hnes,
despite qualms. We did not
know what was ahead, we put
our trust in the hands of the
theme park. The other was so
trusting of authority, that she
passed our slight qualms
as
sick.
We stood in another dark
· room, waiting to see another set
of monitors switch on and an-
other celebrity endorse our
safety. A day at a park can not
compare to the tragedy of the
Holocaust, but it can make us
think. It only takes one person
to exploit our trust.
lowed scores of others through
Tara
Quinn is
the
Opinion Edi-
dark rooms arid gift shops.
tor of The
.Circle.• She de,cided
After a few hours, I mentioned
not 'to befunriy today,· becau~e
my feelings about. the whole
April Fools
Day is a pagancel~
·
deal,·but witlierioug~Jacuo
-~ebratzon mariifested bf
..
Sa(ail "\
'make it sound
HkJ
t
\vai_bdng :,
hims~if.
We1!,'ilih~riha(orshe' '
facetious and insightful; notlike
did
no6·eally
feel'like
i.t, . .
·
-~;.:
Mark
A
Urciolo, K;rj~~LM;: .
Valleau, Joseph A . .Verderame~-·.
re'ceive
'Who's.•
Stephen_Wan~zyk,andJennifer
Who'
_
honors
M. Wheeler.
Sixty~one Marist stude'nts.
NRHH
"Of the
. have recieved the -honor of be-
:
Month" Awar~ Win-
' ingnamed in the 1999 edition of: -
ners '."
J
anµar'y
:1999 -
.. Who'ifWho Amoung.Students _-
The'menibers
.of
the Marist
• · inAmericari Uriiversitfos·.
0
and
.
College.Red Fox· Chaptei:'ofNa-
. Colleges. : : '
< ' "".
tional Re
.
sidence lf~l Hon9rary .
=====
This:years nominees'are as
- · ,
· · -
·· ·
.---'--'------..,.,----..,.,-..,.,-------------------..,.,--,---,----,-----.;..,
(NRI@wouldlike.to congratu-
*ATTENTION.*-
The Office of Financial Aid is currently accepting applications·· for ·several .. Privately: '
Sponsored Scholarships offered through the College. These scholarships may
be
awarded
on the basis of academic performance, financial need, major field of study and location of
permanent residence, or a combination of these items. A list of the scholarships offered
and their eligibility requirements is provided in the Marist·College Undergraduate catalog,
and is·available in the Office of Financial Aid. All students retuming·for the 1999-2000
academic year are eligible to apply.
To be considered for these scholarships· students must submit the following to the Office of
Financial Aid (Donnelly 200} by May 14, 1999.
1. A completed APPLICATION FOR PRIVATELY SPONSORED SCHOLARSHIPS for
each scholarship in which you are interested.
2. A letter from you, addressed to the
COMMITTEE FOR PRIVATELY SPONSORED
SCHOLARSHIPS, outlining why you feel you should be _considered for the particular
scholarship in question. (Note: a separate letter is required for each scholarship you
are interested in).
·
3. A completed SPONSORED SCHOLARSHIP RECOMMENDATION FORM (for
each scholarship) to ensure full consideration from the scholarship committee.
APPLICATIONS AND RECOMMENDATION FORMS ARE AVAILABLE IN THE OFFICE
OF FINANCIAL AID, DONNELLY HALL ROOM 200.
follows>MelissaAdains, Ben- _ . late 'and rec~gnize'the "Of
'the ·
jamin
.
Agoes;i .:Rachel
L: · ...
M~~th." aw.a.· rd· w.:lhrier.s fo.r.
,the:
Ammons,• Lark"'.Marie Anton,
· month 9f J~nuary. :Jhe recipi.:.
Maral Arslanian, Melissa -ents were nominated by byJel-
Backes, Kathleen E. Banks,
lowmembersofthe'Maristcom-
Christine Bartholomay, Brenda
munity f~etheir,~utstandi~g
Bertolini,. Diane Bonsignore,
contributions to
life
at Marist
HermanF. Borromeo, James
K.
-9urin.g the m.· on. ·.th····•··.·_.<>fJ'anuary.·
·... :
Bowers, Kevin Boyer, Emma
The winners' nominations haye
Britton, Simone Brown, Emily B.
·
Carrozzo, and Kathryn Cheski.
been· forwarded"to NRHHfor
.
_
consideration at the collegiate
Linda J .. Cooper, Anne Marie
Cox, James P. Daley, Aimee
regional leveL Please extend
Marie Drayer, Dylan Edgar,
congratulations to your peers
Caroline· J. J<araldo;La Tonya
fora job well done.
Francis, Julie
L.
Gadarowski,
Stud~nt of the Month: Patrick
Heather J. Guldner, Summer
Barrett, Marian Hall resident;
Haverly,
Alfred
w.
Hammell, Jr.,
Program of the Month: ''Death
Simon Hecht, Erinn Hergenhan,
by Chocolate," Leo Hall Staff;
Jamie Howenstein, Charles J.
Resid~nt Assistant of the
Leone, Matthew Loewenthal,
Month: Heather Rose, RA
Kevin M. Lundy, Elizabeth
Marian/Leo Hall; Spotlight of
Mahony, and Erich Mann.
the Month: April Quigley,
RD
Danielle L. Matarazzo, Colin · Marian Hall; and Advisor of the
McCann, Colleen E. McCulloch,
Month: Keith Weber, Asst Prof.
Communications.
Michael J. Melfi, Megan Nedell,
Jane M. O'Brien, Kelly B.
Ifyouwouldliketorecognize
O'Hara, Melissa M. Pascale,
someone for an OTM award,
Kelly M. Quinn, Kenton .pleasefilloutanoniinationfonn.
Rinehart, Rafaelina Rivas, Jef-
Forms are available through
frey Schanz, Thomas E. Schwab,
NRHH members, RSC presi-
John Sellinger, and Stacey
c.
dents, RDs, Mentors, and the
Spina.
Housing Office. Yourfonn must
Jason Sponzilli, Tara Ann
be submitted by the last day of
Sullivan, Erica Sutton, John
o.
the month to be eligible for con-
Svare, Kimberly A. Svoboda,
sideration.








PAGEll
delivers'Eve
But The Kitchen Sink'
Maristjunior
releases CD
byCARLITO
Staff Promoter
.
.
Whenyoupay$19,000ayear, -
for an education, certain perks
are inclusive in the package and
one of them is an on-campus TV
station. Marist College not only
boasts an awe-inspiring view of
the Hudson, but they are also
the proud sponsors of MCTV.
To _be completely honest, I am
not the biggest fan ofMCTV's
programming but there is one
ray of sunshine in its other wise
cloudy_ lineup, and that -ray is
the student produced 'Every-
thing but the Kitchen Sink.'
Last year, Dylan Edgar and
Jeff Sutphen had a dream. They
dreamt about a variety show
that starred Marist students and
that was also written, produced
and edited by Marist students.
Luckily for MCTV viewers, they
brought this dream to life.
Two weeks ago, 'Everything
But The Kitchen Sink'
(EBTKS)
aired their second . show of the
Photo courtesy C3rlito
_ year'and'by doing so, satisfied
EBTKS kingpins Dylan Edgar and Jeff Sutphen. Their
show will continue to be seen on MCTV.
a student appetite that has· not
_
_
see~ ~~ougp.
C>f.~e.
s'10,.v_. 11),ere, _ , they are d ~ good arid ready,
havebeen\;eveii episooes
'ofilie'
so get
off
their backs:·
'
show andthe Marist population
People do not realize the in-
has been wondering why there
tricacies involved in producing
havenotbeenmore:
I
am friends
a variety show such as EBTKS
with both of the producers and
so allow me to explain. Certain -
in their defense would like
to
tell
shows do not necessitate mas-
the public why there have not
sive amounts of pre-, present-
been more episodes of the show.
and post-production work.' Ex-
Dylan and Jeff are students.
hibitAbeing the MCTV show _
Not only do they both have in-
Pressbox. That show is a ver-
ternships and classes, but they
bal forum that is not pre-
also
have
to take thetime out of scripted, acted or edited. That
their busy schedules to produce
may be the reason it is so ut-
a show: People are constantly
terly boring, but that is irrel.:.
asking them when the next epi-
-evant. - SJ:tows such as EBTKS
sode
will
be airing so allow me
require scripting, acting and
to answer that question. They - editing whereas Piessbox sim-
will put out an episode when
ply requires a few people that
lack a heartbeat.' talking ·about
sports
'in
a'
sedating
'mariner. '
A
show like EBTKS is much
more complex. For example, the
episode that can presently be
viewed on MCTV took quite a
while to put together. One por-
tion of the show that featured
Jon Murray and myself doing a
bathroom critique of diners
across Poughkeepsie was very
- difficult to construct. Although
we were stealth in our attempts
to infiltrate the restrooms, our
presence was not welcome.
Several altercations ensued that
are. fortunately displaced from
the episode.
The segment featuring "Pa-
per Bag Man" was extremely
difficult to put together because
superheroes are generally ego-
tistical and their agents do not
encourage small parts such as a
bySTEPHENMERCIER
feature in EBTKS. Casting big
Staff Writer
name celebrities such as Paper
Bag Man is only one of the
Marist College student
steps the show has taken in im-
Kevin Kwas displays his musi-
proving its over all quality. The · -cal skills with a new band and
special effects featured in the
its self-titled debut album,
show
do
not
parallel
Greedwell Miserly.
Armageddon's but they are
Kwas who is a junior at
.
Marist,
recently
formed
qmte impressive considering
Marist's technology.
Greedwell Miserly
with his
I am thankful that I no longer
brother Brian Kwas and Billy
live on campus so
I
do not have
Babbino. Babbino plays drums,
to deal with the subpar pro-
Brian performs guitar and vocal
dudes, and Kevin is the bass-
--gramming distributed by MCTV.
I wish I could do something to
iSL
improve the quality of television
With the creation of the trio,
provided by the school, but
the band quickly entered the
since I am quite busy and far
studio and taped a 12-track al-
too lazy to rectify the situation,
bum at RAW Recording Studio
I will simply complain about it.
in Mahopac, New York. By digi-
Honestly, EBTKS is the only
tally recording their perfor-
thing on MCTV worth watch-
mance, they were able to place
ing and
I
am not saying that
their music onto CDs, which will
because I am dating
Jeff
soon be available for purchase.
Sutphen. (Although Jeff will
In
Greedwell Miserly,
the
probably deny such allegations)
group creates a raw, extremely
melodic record that features a
For a student-produced pro-
gram, the quality exceeds that blend of punk,
Nirvana-like
al-
, of
many
shows viewed
on
na-
ternative pop, and some slower
tional television.
compositions that display the
The amount ofcreative inge-
darker side of the band. The
nuity exhibited is inspiring to a
different styles of music that is
TV major like myself and it is a
presented on the album shows
shame their schedules do not
the versatility of the group, but
permit them to put out more epi-
also exhibits the strength of the
sodes. Their present episode
musicianship of
Greedwell Mi-
can be viewed on MCTV daily
serly
because of the way they
at5p.m.andifyoucantearyour-
can play_ each style so genu-
selves away from 'Growing
inely.
Pains' reruns on TNT, I highly
With
Christmas Day
and
recommend watching
it.
If you
Blush,
the trio showcases their
are further interested in learn-
greatest talent, which is making
ing about the show, check out
quick paced s~ngs that feature
their
web
page
at
an interesting riff and catchy
www.academic.marist.edu/
melodies. Whatismostimpres-
sutpjd/ebtks.htm.
sive about these two songs is
that they are both somewhat
'200 Ci_g· arette __ s' a mixed bag effort
~:~~~·.b~~~~~w:/~s~~~~;o;l~
lows the selections to possess
by
ADAM KOWALSKI
Staff Writer
'200 Cigarettes' is a movie
-from director Risa Bramon Garcia
aboutNewYearsEve, 1981.
_
It
is a period piece about the·
Lower East Side in New York
City.~Jt has a large cast includ-
ing stars such as Ben arid Casey
Affleck, Courtney Love, Chris-
tina Ricci, Jay Mohr, and
JaneaneGarafalo. All the char-
acters in this film are all trying
to get to a party thrown by
Monica, played by Martha
Plimpton .. The movie is all about
what happens on the way to the
party. At times the movie seems
a little disjointed, but that is
overcome by great -acting -and
spectacular realism. The entire
movie was shot on location in
the East Village. Anyone famil-
iar with the area will recognize
almost every street that they
walk down. One of the clubs
featured in the film, a punk rock
club called "Satan's Pit," is ac-
tually Coney Island High on St.
Mark's Place. Most of the ex-
tras in the set are the regulars
there, and did not need any cos-
tumes or make up.
'The movie is centered on a
group of people all trying to get
to a party in the East Village. All
of the characters try to kill time
before going to the party and
many of them go on odd and
hellish journeys in the Lower
East Side. One of the journeys,
taken by Val and Bridget (Ricci
and Gaby Hoffman), takes two
frightened Long Islanders lost
in the Village trying to find this
party. Another trip centers
around Lucy and Kevin, played
by Love and Paul Rudd, who are
two friends who always should
have become lovers, but just did
not. All of the acting is superb
and help carry a basically lack-
luster script.
David Chappele plays a pot
smoking, disco loving cabbie
who manages to pick up most
of the characters throughout the
course of the night. This serves
to help bind the different char-
acters and show the common
connection between them. His
performance is wonderful and
serves as comic relief between
some very self-evaluating
scenes.
The intertwining stories can
be hard to follow. The stories
themselves are not confusing,
sometimes you just forget who
all the characters are, and by the
time you figure it out you may
have missed something. Some
of these stories lag a little too
· much and distract from some of
the more entertaining aspects of
the film.
Overall this is a very enter-
taining film. It is not one of the
best movies that I have seen
this year. But it was worth niy
$8.50. So if you fi_nd yourself
looking for some movie to see
this weekend go check out '200
Cigarettes.'
depth and musicality.
Throughout the album, the
three members of the group dis-
play their own respected talents,
but
Pull Down The Shade
is a
good example of the sound that
is created when all three shine.
In the song, Babbino brings a
quick consistent drumbeat,
while the Kwas brothers blend
their instruments together to
produce an infectious riff. Brian
Kwas's vocals also mesh well
with the guitar melodies of the
tune.
The band throws different
sounds and styles at the listener,
but the definite strong point of
the CD is the catchy alternative
pop that the trio crafts. A num-
ber of songs on the album hold
this trait and definitely could
easily be placed onto any mod-
em rock station.
If you are interested in get-
ting a copy of the album or you
would like some information on
upcoming shows, you can con-
tact Kevin at 575-5016.



































































Hardcore music,
fflyths
>
and
misc
.
O_ncep
.
tioDS
-
·
bon
_
ded together by poverty
one getting seriously hurt.
byCHRISKNUDTSEN
Staff Writer
and a mutual love for the music.
"You have
_
to expect to get
Within a few years however, a
hit at a show
·
if you're on the
second branch of skinheads
floor but nobody is looking to
Appearances can give the
appeared.
hurt anyone else.

If someone
wrong impression, but don't let
The new group of skinheads
gets knocked down or hurt,
your eyes fool you .
.
Looking at
are the equivalent of modern
somebody else always
.
picks
a group of kids waiting outside
day neo-Nazis. Brought to-
them up right away or carries
.
of a punk/hardcore show, you
·
gether by beliefs of white su-
them out of the pit to help them
will see
.
a gathering of
·
"thug"
premacy and a craving for vio-
out."
.
With a more serious look
looking teenagers with baggy
lence, this new wave of on his face he said,"It's about
pants, facial piercings, tattoos,
skinheads captured more atten-
looking out for one another,
or metal spikes on their jackets.
tion than the previous chapter.
that's what it comes down to."
D-Generation
live
at Irving Plaza
Based on their appearances,
While a number of articles and
There is a minority
.
in the
..
many would think that these
news features have focused on
scene that focus on violence as
by
ADAM KOWALSKI
Order's Blue Monday.
The
kids would be derelicts,junkies, · this clan of hate punks, few ever
a main theme and it is these
Staff Writer
frightening thing that I realized
or dirtbags. However, the. · look at the positive skinheads
bands that are as a main theme
during this song was that half
hardcore scene is dominated by
who are still around
.
and it is these bands that are
It had tieen almost
·
a year
the people there to see them had
a straight-edge movement, has
The two opposing sides of seen in the media. While
·
they
since
D
:-
Generation
h~d pre-
no idea that
it
was a cover. All
several members of
animal rights
the skinhead movement can be
are a small part of the
-
overall
formed
live
.
in their hometown
and all I was very disappointed
activist groups, and others who
divided among two very differ-
movement; they make a better
of NYC. Feb. 23 was their big
with their set.
take place in community volun-
ent types of organizations. The
news story
_
so they are por-
night;
an
album release
.
party ·
So then the floor of Irving
teer services such as Habitat for
positive side is affiliated with
trayed on <'hate-gang" specials
.
sponsored by local corporate
Plaza cleared out as all the K-
Humanity. This is not the im-
groups like the A.R.A., Anti-
·
The real damage to the scene
radio butchers; 92.3 K-ROCK.
ROCK kids went upst_airs or to
age seen by the outside world
Racist Action. On
.
the oppos-
is done by the newcomers who
Their new album Through the
the back since most of them had
though.
ing sides are white supremacy
·.
are introduced into the scene
Darkness canie out that mom-
never heard of
D-Generation.
There are several popular
organizations
like
The
·
through this small ·minority.
ing, great "Rock and Roll"
D-Generation
took to the stage
misconceptions about the cur-
Hammerskins and others that They lack the proper role mod-
record by the way.
·
and ripped into three •~dance
rent punk/hardcore movement
preach hateful rhetoric and
els to show them the positive
I missed the first act
Boiler
numbers" that got the crowd
due to misleading articles and
quote infamous figures from the
effects they can
_
have. Instead
Room.
I finally got inside just
moving. They played a tight
11-
specials that have been released
past such as Adolph Hitler.
·
they are brought in watching
intimetoseeDovetailJoint.
It
song set that lasted about 40
by people outside of the scene.
There is an obvious difference
hatred and violence, so they
is hard to describe them exactly.
minutes. The reason for the
The hardcore scene is not about
between the two sides of the
follow the example set before
Kind
of
like a heavy
Third Eye
short set is that they are break-
violence, it's about unity and
skinhead culture but the general
them.
Blif!d,
except not as irritating
ing in a new drummer.
D-Gen-
mutual respect.
public is only aware of the nega-
Toby, the frontman of
H20,
and actually good live. They
eration
pounded the crowd
A recent episode of Dateline
tive side.
one of the more po_pular
played a 30..:minute setthat was
with the same power that got
titled "Straight Edge Militant
The popular misconception
hardcore bands, has been
interrupted by the crowd shout-
them their large grassroots fol-
Gangs" portrayed the hardcore
that
.
skinhead "hatecore"
·
is in-
.
watching this for years.
ing
Orgy
at them over and over.
lowing. The largest crowd' re~
scene·as a group(ifi:owdy, vio-
volved in the hardcore scene
-
"We've always had to deal
Dovetail
_
Joint
ignored the
actions
_
came duringthe radio
lent kids looking for trouble. The
brings negative accencion co the
.
with
'
the t~:mgh guys
,
but
:they
crowd and finished up
their
set
·
songs
(I
could get=on
:
a
'
very
in-
episode looked over the fact
movement. Another common
always find the yqunger kids
byepoundirig the crowd with
teresting tangent about why I
that these particular kids were
criticism of the scene is the ap-
·

who are just getting info the
.
three loud aridfast songs.
.
hate radio concerts but! will
straightedge,meaningthatthey
parent violence at theshows.
scene. It's a shame because
SothencomesOrgy. ladmit
stofmyself)No
Waypµt, She
do not drink, smoke, or do
There
is
an appearance
0(
they don't have the positive
lwas somewhat curious as to .
Starufs.Thereapdileijjfess.,':fhe
drugs. Rather than focusing on
violence on the dance floor at examples setfqr them like we did
what all the kids in the crowd
closed the set with Frankie send-
.
this positive aspect, they looked
.
eve9' show but therealityistha.t
'.
\vhen
,
we goffrrvolved
)
All we
sawi11
Orgy,
:
arid
I found ~ut.
ing most of the pit into a violent
.
at the more violent side.
.
few ever get hurt. What is 9.f..:
_
want is
.
to keep'mir
.
famHy so
These people wereidiots.
Orgy
rampage
:
Thewho}eplace went
There were several inter-
tell oyerlooked is th~t the s~~ne
;
we
~
re bringing backth~spidt of is like a cross between
Marilyn
ape as Jead singer Jesse Malin
views ?n _the Dat~line episo~e, _-.. is
:
a~?utunity and-each m_el}lber
_
,.
U
~_8,
:.when
there
:
was·
a tighter
·
··
Manson andProdigy
exc;ept the
flopped around on stage before
the maJonty of which were with_
--J9pks
',
out for an<>t~e,r. )n
:
the
>
:-i:1:#ftf'.!,Il
_
,
,
,
.
.
__
.
_
,,
.

.
·
good qualities (not that there are
ripping two garbage bags
full
of
t~~
more outspoken militant
ac:-
:,
E~
-
~
-
e
that
.
som
,
eone _do
_
e.~
\
g~!'
//:,;{
\}
:
\V~i!
t§~f'f
ht.1&!P
(
the
many to begin with) of .th
.
ose
.
fake money .to shreds and hurl-
t1v1sts such as the memb,ers of
:
hurt, someone else picks
,
then"-:
,.
proper
,
image
'
of
,
tije hardcore
,
bands got lost soµiewhere. I
-
ing them at the crowd,
--
. . .
.
Earth Crisis,
a vegan-straight
.
tip
.
and makes sure they
_
ai-thill
/ /
scene
}
l
went
to
'
thfHiiiebfeedl
·
realized the intelligence level in
Although
,
the set was
.
sort it
edge band. They were quoted
-
:
right.
.

,,
-
·:.
:
+:
-
_
?
;)\
cd,iilili~
-
siioW
i
af.Totchance
·,
the crowcl atone'point during :was nice to see·thatthe.time
supporting violent activists in~
,
.
Serious injurie~ are
a
rarity
\\'
iri Poughkeep
'
si~
:'
bti:1\1:atch"
26.
their set when two 15-year-old , , away.from playing Jive and the
volved in
,
animal rights issues
:
.
.
at shows
.
.
The majority qf}hese
.
,:
WhafJ
~
sa~
~
~a
l
illfwhi-st
:
ex-
.
'
kids jumped up and down while·
:
recent heavy radio exposure has
.
While some bands do encour-
.,
injuries are actually cau_sed
'
oy'
-::
furiple'6fah~dcbr6ciovement
,
punchingeachotherinthehead
not corrupted
:
one of.the
:
best
age frontline activities such as
:
hired security and bouncers that
·
,
tii~{t
r
h~vtb~en witness
to
iri
fora
good
4
minutes. Is this the
live
.
bands there is today.
:

I en-
fir~bo_mbing mink farms, the
get overz,ealous in ~eiratt,enipts
.
tpe
l
_
asfiwb
·
y'e~~;
~
~ . :
.
'
, ,
.
people who control the future
courage all of you
to
·
go out and
maJonty of th~ hardcor~ bands
to stop anything from getting
·
The underage drinking and
·
of music? ]fthey were drunk or
check
outD-Gen
if the come to
promote nonviolent tactics. !'-s
out of hand. In these cases the
marijuana smoking that domi-
at least stoned than I could have
your neck of the woods.
Dove-
a ~esult of news progr~~s hke
security gmu-ds do not under-
·
nated the
,
clubon
_
ly serves to
accepted this actoffoolishness,
tail
-
Joint
is definitely worth a
th!s, the. gen_eral rubhc
.
~s left
stand the scene so they attempt
·
damage the scene by giving crit-
.
but this was not the case;
Orgy
look-as well. As for
Orgy,
wait
with a rmsgu1ded 1mpr~ss1on of to interfere with the natural pro-
.
ics what they want. They want
·
played for about 40 minutes and
until they write
·
a decent song
what the movement 1s really
cess that goes along with the
to believe that the scene is run
got the most response when
themselves and then consider
about. .
.
. .
shows only to make things
by alcoholics and drug abusers they played their cover
of
New
going to see them.
~atnck Whittle, a JUntor at
worse.
because then
,
they have a rea-
Manst College and fan of
At a larger concert, the
son toshutit down.
,
straight-edge hardcore music
people on the floor run in ran-
The
.
newest addition to the
was appalled by this episode of dom directions, swinging and

New York hardcore family, a lo-
Da~line.
.
,
kic~ng at anybody wh? crosses
cal, band. of
;
yciung t~~nagers,
_Godforb1dtheres ~gr~up
their path. In the p1tof the Seif:Decay,is
_
apoorexampleof
·
of kids out there who don tdrihk
hardcore shows, the daQcers
whathas happened to the scene.
·
~rdo ~gs, that would bea ho~~
.
put m?r~ emphasis
op
form, do~
·
With
·
frequent inciteme~ts for
.
nble mfluence on the youth,
mg
.
similar moves known as
more violence on the floor the
Whittle said sarcastically.
"thrash" dandng, where they
,
band 'instigated
hvo
sep~ate
. "These kinds o_f s~ials always
punch and kick bllt
.
not at some-
fights between other misguided
..
·
focus on the md1v1duals
..
who
one. Rath~rthe dancei;s leave Jans at the show.
.
.
_
·
·
·
·
use violence, because nobody
space 1:>etween each other and
It
'
is a shame tliatthese are
·
.
·"".ants
to h~ a~ut nonvi?le~~
in the unfortunate incident that
14~
kids taking over the scene
kids that bebeve m so1:1ething.
som_eone does get hu_rt,_ they ai:e
·
because
.
they can only further
. Another popular m1sconcep-
earned out of the pit 1mmed1-
it's struggl~ by leading more of
hon about the punk and ately.
the younger fans into the wrong
ha~dcore scene invoJv~s the
~arlos of New York's. hip
frame of mind. Bands like
Self
sk!nheads. The ongms of hop/J~~z/hardcore sen~at1ons
Decayhaveagreatpotentialfor
skinheads can be traced as far
Candma
defended the pit danc-
doing good for the scene but
bac~ as ~e early 1950s .. At the
~ng at
.
hardcore shows because
also have an even stronger
po-
begmnmg of the skmhead 1t
_
serves as a way for people to
tential for causing the downfall
movement, they were a group
vent some energy without any-
of the movement.
.
...
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
~
.
.
.
I

i
f>
'
-
_
,?-:
_
'
f:
.
;~
i:m
'
I
;
~
r~
:
~
~
.
































APRILl, 1999
PAGE13
Joyi11
sobriety:
"
~µipossible!
·
-
.
·
.
.
.
.
.
_
aicoholic beverage companies.
. \i
b§;~~~
:
.
:
!~%~
~r::~:a~t':eb:~':~~e:~
·
·
On one of my recent excur-
resist a shirt with a picture of
-
~iq11s
to
an anonymous frat
.
·
vindictive chameleon spouting
.
_ ·_
partfon an.anonymous avenue,
off such timeless catch phrases
-_
lwashitwithastrikingrealiza~
as, "We could have been
tioo
·
: everyone around me was
huge!"- Pure genius.
.
haviI1g
_a
great time.
.
. .
.
.

I have decided that
after
some
.
:
Until n~cenily, I viewed drink-
20 years and IO months of tea
ing alcohol as something I did
.
totaling, itis time to make up for
not need to haye
c1
g99d time. I
lost time. I have a lot of
alcohol
feli: thatit\vas the' antithesis of"
to consume ifl am going to catch
what
Ifeltwas a good time. :t-.1.y
up with the rest of you by
idea of a good time was the
graduation. From now on, I am
friendly diversion of Frisbee on
.
going to drink some form of al-
the campus green or perhaps a
coho! with every meal. For
game of 'Ms. Pac Man' in the
breakfast, I plan to drown my
pool
.
room. But this· one night,
Corn Flakes in Guinness rather
I looked around at the surround-
than low-fat milk like in the past.
iI1g
·
Maristites, most of whom
For lunch, which formerly con-
were obliterated, and I thought
sisted of orange juice and a
to myself: could 1
·
be missing
A
&
E Editor Patrick Whittle relaxes with his newfound love,
veggie-burger in my case, 1
will
something?
alcohol. Judging from this picture, he must be pretty thirsty.
have a screwdriver and beer-
-
/grabbed an
·
empy
·
cup and got a beer
from the keg. In-
stantly, I was trans-
formed into a new
man.
have neyer been drunk in your
from the stuff.
battered onion rings. I am sure
life! Loosen up'for once!" Sol
Sure enough, after a while
if I eat enough of those nasty
grabbed an empty cup and got
someone accosted me
about
things I will get some kind of
a beer from the keg.
why I was drinking when I had
buzz. Dinner will be pasta and a
Instantly, l was transfonned
always said that day would
glass of red wine. Actually,
into a new man. The usually
never come
·
. The confrontation
screw the pasta, and make that
suffocating top buttons from
escalated into an altercation,
a
bottle of red wine
.
my shirt popped off, and I
and although I did leave the
There is a lot offun to be had
sprouted a goatee. Talk about
.
house that night with a broken
in this world, and all of it can be
metamorphosis. I felt more re-
nose, you should see the other
had under the influence of alco-
laxed and conversationai. I was
guy. Albeit everyone told me
ho!. Try going on a roller
striking up conversations left
that I was actually brawling with
coaster next time you get sauced
I always felt that alcohol
and right with people I ordi-
a halogen lamp in the corner of at the amusement park. Being
couldneverbeanyfun. Itsmells
narily_would have not_thought
the living room, I am sure that
loadedcanonlyenhanceminia-
bad, tastes bad, and people do
·
to make eye contact with. After
was not the case.
ture golf, already a barrel of
regrettable things when under
·
fourorfivebrews,Ididnoteven
The next day I ran out and
laughs by nature
.
Full contact
, ,
,
its
.
iriflue11cy, J.hen,
i
thg?glJt to
_
,,
notic~}pa.!,,41-~ii;ie:-~~ql;!,_~, ~aste
bought a score of T-shirts em-
miniature golf is even better for
myselfforamin~te: ''Patrick,you
that had always shied me away
blazoned with'logos of various
you those of you
who
have
been at this for a while. Last
but not least, inebriated fly-fish-
ing is truly the sport of kings.
Just make sure you do not get
too drunk and use any essen-
tial parts of your anatomy for
bait.
Further, I think it is time to
shatter some of the unfair ste-
reotypes about us lushes. We
do not all spend all ofour hard-
earned money on booze. I usu-
ally sponge off
someone
else.
We do not use alcohol to in-
crease our social skills either.
If
that were true, Barney Gumble
from 'The Simpsons' would be
a Marist student, and a popular
one at that.
I must say I am quite happy
with my new life, and I am not
the least bit
ashamed
of myself.
I even beat someone at beer-
pong yesterday.
It
amazes me
that all of my problems were in-
stantly answered by a simple
concoction made of hops and
barley. I have found
a
new call-
ing in life. My future weekends
will be spent in a state of com-
plete intoxication. I would ad-
vise anyone who shared my pre-
vious aversion to alcohol to do
the same. I have turned over a
new leaf; the life of a dipsoma-
niac, that's the life for me. See
you at Backstreet!
Oh,
and
one more thing:
Happy April Fool's Day! Do
you have an extra quarter I can
borrow'? I think I hear Ms. Pac
Man
calling ...
··
.
.
Joy
in
sobriety:
Of
course it
is
possible!
.
perched g_n the hood of their
by
CARLITO
squad car, the two officers con-
Staff Abstainer
eluded that it definitely was not
a good idea. Now, I did notex-
For the pasttwo years I have
actly get the equivalent of a
filled these
Circle
pages with
Rodney King beating, but.they
the ramblings of a lost and tor-
definitely got their point across
tured soul: a soul thattook plea-
that they were not happy with
sure in evokirig controversy and
the way I was conducting my-
insulting others. Unbeknownst
self.
to you, the readers, my writing
.
After getting arrested I called
·
has been enveloped in wrath for
my father to bail me out, but af-
one reason and one reason only
ter I told him why
J
had been
·
·
-.
.
... alcohol.
.
arrested, he hung up the phone.
Not a day goes by that I do
As I sat on the concrete slab
ak
d
·
th
ld
bee
bed
·
Photo
courtesy Carlito
not w e up to
a
screw nver
at wou soon
ome my
,
·
and a headache. By noon I have
I expected him. to
.
arrive any
The kinder, gentler Carlito spends quality time
with a
funy
friend.
-
usually got a considerable buzz
moment. But as the
-
hours
cried, I cried tears ofrevelation
.
started crying tears of joy. No,
on
·
and I perpetuate that buzz
passed, the scent ofurine in ten-
They were tears of purification,
·
joy is not even strong enough
.
throughout the day. By the time
sified, as did my realization that
-
a spiritual cleansing if you will.
of a word; I
·
cried tears of ec-
the sun sets, I am completely
no one was coming for me.
-
So I
I know this sounds really corny,
stasy. The officer at the desk
·
inebriated and it is at this time
laid on the revolting concrete
but I had an epiphany.
came running in and his face
: ·
$at:I
:
,
cho9se to write my ar-
slab, writhing in self-pity and
revealed an expression of shock
.
ticles. Perhaps this is why I de-
looming somewhere between
that could ~ever be duplicated.
grade every possible subculture
conscious and unconsciotis.
My
whole
·
life was
·
I must have looked com-
on campus and do so without
The following day, I re-
pletely mad! I was in absolute
·
an inkling ofremorse.
quested to make a phone call
ahead of me and I
hysterics bouncing around my
Lastsemester'sc9ntroversy
andafteraverbalbarragebyan
"did not want to
cellinelation. Forthefirsttime
over my previous 'Joy in Sobri'-
·
officer that also objected to my
·
· ·
·
·
·
in years, I was thinking clearly
ety' article should have served
.
antics the previous nighti my
.
spend
i{
searching
and I loved it! This jubilance
as a wake up can but all it did
request was denied. So in that
for
my
next drl:,ik.
was contrasted with feelings of
was feed the flames ofrage th~t
-
-
~UI
s~yed .~. Friday night, Sat-
:
regret for having wasted half a
bum-within· me. Flames that
urday, Saturday night, Sunday,
·
decade of my life in an intoxi-
,
.
~hould be
;
extiriguish~d
.:-
with
:
surtday night
:
Inside the con-
I could not remember how long
cated stupor, but those feelings
holy water. but
,
instead are
.
crete walls, a man has nothing
.
it had been since I could actu-
.
were quickly
·
shot down by un-
fanned with massive doses of
'
to do but thtnk. So I sat, encap-
.
ally feel.
·
I
had
actually forgot~
.
adulterated hope. My whole life
alcohol. Since that articJe came

.
sulated in misery and a heart-
ten what it was like'to have an
was ahead of me and I did not
outlastOctober,myalcoholism
·
beatawayfromanervousbreak-
emotionalsensationofanysort.
need to spend it searching for
has been progressing rapidly,
down. Tidal waves of emotion
I wondered why this
_
was hap-
my next drink.
but two weeks ago ... something
attacked me from every direc-
pening to me in the confines of
·
My father finally bailed me
happened.
tion and I was utterly defense-
my cell and then it became clear
out and instead of harboring
In a drunken stupor, I
·
Jess against them. So I cried. I
to me. The reason I could feel
animosity towards him I greeted
thought it would
be
a good idea
cried tears of anguish, tears of again was because I was sober.
him with the utmost of gratitude.
to defecate on a cop car. After
hate and tears of an undeniable
I laughed aloud in my cell.
When the cell door opened I
exiting the diner and finding me
self-loathing. But the last time I
Could
it
really be that simple? I
leaped into his arms and I think
I punctured his lung because I
hugged him harder than I ever
had before in my life. We stood
there, wrapped in each other's
warmth and cried for ten min-
utes. I do not think I had ever
felt the amount of love I did at
that moment.
It has been two weeks since
that episode and I have not had
one drink since. You never real-
ize how beautiful life is until af-
ter the alcoholic lens is
removed
from your eyes. I found aes-
thetics in every possible aspect
oflife. Yesterday I saw a spar-
row feeding her hatchlings and
it made me smile. I greet people
walking down the street and al-
though most just look at me like
I
am
crazy, once in a while some-
one smiles back at me.
I am grateful that I have the
opportunity to share my experi-
ence with you because the same
can happen to all of you. You
do not have to waste your life
with alcoholic activities and su-
perficial barroom relationships.
Life is out there! Real, pure, tan-
gible life! For two weeks I have
had a divine buzz and I never
wake up with a hangover. I wake
up with a smile on my face be-
cause ahead of me lies another
day. Another day to experience
life and all its majesty. So as a
journalist and
as
a friend, I tell
you this. You will not find mere
joy in sobriety, you will find nir-
vana.
If
you believe one word of
what you have just read, you
are a ****ing moron. Happy_
._
April Fool's Day.
"
-_...,





















































'
'
I:
I
.
/

i
'i
"
i
i
i
If
t
'
I
i
.. THE:CCIRCLE
April lz 1999
·
:'
SDo.rts
."
'.
.
'
.
-
..
B·ASEBALL: Bocchino
on
a
huge hittingt~ar for Reg
FpXes
·

... conti1111ed from
pg
16
Rossetti. Rossetti walked the
first two batters he faced before
settling down and getting Corey
Pike to pop-out t9 short. An
infield single scored another
run making the score 8-3.
Rosseui showed some gall by
buckling down and fanning the
next batter for the second out.
Coach Szefc then brought in
his stopper Bryan Dickdan.
Dickdan however, hit the first
batter he faced to bring in an-
other run
.
Then Hoover hit a
_
two run double to bring Niagara
. within two,
8-6.
Dickdan got
the final batter to ground out to
short to end the game.
Szefc said Bocchino and
Connelly played really well.
"Our three hitter (Bocchino)
is hitting like
a
vet," Szefc said.
"Dougy's got a lot of guts out
there. He fell behind some bat-
ter but battled back."
The second game was not as
close as Marist won 13-5.
Freshman Ken Catino started
his first conference game and
gave up three runs on four hits
in his first inning.
Marist scored two in the bot-
tom half of the first on a passed
ball two hit-batsman and an er-
ror.
Catino settled down over the
next four innings striking out
three.and getting out ofcontinu-
scoreless seventh .
ous jams.
.
Sunday could
.
not have beeri.
The offense exploded for
·
more different than the previous
seven runs in the fifth arid sixth
day.
.
innings.
On a frigid afternoon, Marisi's
Ambrosini laced a Texas
young pitchers were hammered
leaguer to center to open the
by the Purple Eagle offense 12-
fifth. Bechtel laid.a perfect bunt
8.
down the· first base line.
Freshman Kevin Perrucci got
O'Sullivan bunted as well and
the noci. Perrucci ran into.some
went to second on an error by
early trouble but settled down ·
the first baseman that allowed
and
·
continuously worked out
·
Ambrosini to score. Willis sac
of jams.
bunted to score Bechtel and
Offensively, Marist hit well
.
move O'Sullivan to third. Tafuto
with Ambrosini tripling for the
singled to the opposite field to
·
second time in
as
many days and
score O'Sullivan and moved to
Bechtel doubling in a run.
second on a throwing error.
The game was cJose until
Cervini followed with a rocket
Niagara exploded forfour runs
that hit the field umpire in the
in the seventh to go ahead l2c6.
side preventing Tafuto from
Marist mariaged only two runs
scoring.
in their final at bat. BuUt was
After a sac bunt by Brady,
not withoutdrama.
Bocchino drilled a two run
With the bases juiced Cervini
double to the left center field
turned
mi
·
a 2-2
.
pitch that
gap.
seemed destined for the railroad
Catino was lifted in the sixth
tracks beyond theleftJield wall
.
with one out for Rossetti.
buthungupjus~eiloughforthe
Rossetti gave up a single,
windtoslowitdowntoasacfly
charging the run to Catino but
that was caught against the wall.
got a 1-6-3 double play to end
In the second game Marist's
the inning.
hits were too
littl~
and literally
In the sixth, Bocchino hit
an
too late as the game was called
opposite field triple to score
because of darkness in the sixth.
Brady. He later scored on
a
Bechtel started the game and
passed ball. Bechtel singled
was touched up for four rims
Ambrosini home and Tafuto
before departing in the sixth.
.
singled to score O'Sullivan.
Szefc- went to senior Dean
Rossetti
·
struck out two in a
Puch~ski. Puchalski would give

I
PAGE14
The Red Foxes lost a tough 12-8 decision to Niagara.
up four runs in four innings, one
.
first on
a
Brady
.
single back up
of which was a 425-foot bomb
.
the middle that scored Cervini.
to
·
center by Hoover.
The Red Foxes then scored one
Marist scored one run in the
run
in
the fourth, fifth and sixth.
MaristBaseball Boxscore vs.Niagara GM2Sunday
.
'
Niagara University8 (2~8~1,2.:2)
Name (Pos)
AB
R H RBI
BB
SO PO A
Mindelcf ......
:
..
,..
4
I I O
·
0 0 1 0
.
Adair2b, .
•.
.
;
.......
4
·
o
O O O
2 3 4
.
Hoov~r3b
............
4
F2
.
l
O O O
2
Pikerf: ..
,
.... , ..........
2
1
0 0
1 0 1 0
·
Luehrs
_
en
dh'. ..
_
..... 1
2
-
0 0
2
.
0 0 0
Cimadh/lb ...
'. .....
0 0 0 0
0 0 0
·
L
Murraylb/p ....
~
.•. 3
·
0 O
·
0
0 0 8 0
Keilc .. ; ..
:
.•....
~
...... ; 3
1 2
3
0 1
3
'
0
Z'.entlL •...
:
........... 3
1 1
1
0 0
1
0
.
Mierzwalf ....
:
.•. .; .•.
o
,
o
O O
.
O O O 0
Spadafino ss ...
: ....•
2
·
.
11
'
I
1
0 1
·
4
.
Mettler p,
,,
..•..... :
..
,.O O O O O O O
.
1
Totals ........
.
......•.... 26
8
7 6
4 3 18 .12
MaristCoJlege6 (7-11,2-2)
Name(Pos)
AB R H RBI BB SO PO A
Cervini
If ....
;
... , ... ;. 2 3
2
1
0 0
2
0
Brady cf ................
4 0 3 2
0 0
·
1
.
·
0
Bocchino
lb
...•....
.4
0 1 0
0 0 7 1
·
Ambrosini
dh: ......
.4
l O
·
0
0 0 0 0
Toscanorf ......
:
.....
2
·
0
2
0
2
0
1:
0
Cueto
c ...
, .............
.4
0 1 1
0 I 3 0
·
Suhrpr/c...........
0 0 0 0
0 0 0
-0
O'Sullivan 2b/ss .. 3 1
1 0
-1 0 0 2
Wtllis3b.: ..............
1 1 0 0
I O 1
·
·
2
Andros3b .
.
.........
1
o
·
o o o o o
·
o
·
Tafuto ss ....
::
: ........
2 0 0 0
0 2
·
2 4
Wissnerph .........
1 0 0 0
0. 0
.
'
o
.
0
Lockery2b ...........
O O O O O O
··o
0
Bechtel p .............. 0 0 0 0
0 0
.
0 0
Puchalski p ..
~
.. : ...
0

0
0 0
0 0 1
,
Q
Totals .....
:
... ~.: ........ 28 6 10
4
4
3
1
.
8
Q
2B - Mindel, Cervini. 3B - 2.ent
HR-Hoover.
SB -
Pike, Keil,
Cervini, Brady, Toscano.
SF - Cervini.
Win - Mettler 1-0. Loss~ Bechtel 0-2. Save- None.
WP- Mettler 2, Puchalski 3. PB - Cueto. BK- Puchalski.








































































_· :•: ;
.
April 1,
1999
-
ft\C31llpus
RepOrt-------t
·
· ·
byThomasRyan
·
)
J.11i~~J9{leagu~~~eb~ s~a
~
' >
.G<>rizalez
'
and

third baseman year. Houston's only drawback
·
·
·•
sonliegins.@
_
s
_,
$iinday/s9
_
no,v
.
,,MikeLowel
(
could
-
give
·
the is they will not have Johnson
is·as go9~
a tjn,ie~
any
to t;hime
.
Marlins the
best
young left side pitching for . them down the
in
i
~ith;pre~easoit pr~qictio11s

of the infield in biiseball.
·
stretch, although a trade for a
from
:
rp~
;
p,riWaric:eof
the
·
p_erson
-

.
'
lit the
1'1L
~t,
the Braves may
big-time pitcher is not out of the
thatp1~~ed §tap{9r~tow1nthe
.
fi11ally have some competition
question.
NCAAtoyrnaiµ~nf
.,.
·
>
·
.

in the form of the Mets, but that
Despite McGwire's record-
.
l'U
just previe\\'.
_
the N.a~onal
i~
shaky
at best.
breaking performance last sea-
League
:
this
·
:
\\'e
_
ek, giviiig
,
me a

.
son, the Cardinal's struggled all
t::tt:~!e1~J::~~et~e~a-
Look fo
_
r (Chip-
r:ru~~;ghas~~~:!~\!~~~
Individually;i~appears from
per) Jones
to
chal-
pitchers Matt Morris and Alan
the early sprinftraining num-
' l
_
en

·
g
·
e
F.
_
_
or the ba_t-
Benes so much that Morris will
bers thatMarkMcGwire and
J'
miss all of 1999 after Benes
S ~ y
:
S<>s~aremorethafpre-
tlng tUle and
.
RBI
missed all of 1998
.
They still
pared to
·
do battle again this sea--
title
this
:
year and
.
have quality arms in Kent
soiL
.,
.
-
.
..
.

• _
_
.
Mercker and Donovan Osborne
However, a third player is also
walk away
the NL
to compliment Benes; but after
-
having anurireai spring arid he
MVP
.
.
.
a couple of 125 pitch outings all
-
is ~raves third baseman
.
Chip-
could see time on the DL.
per)ones, Lookfor Jones to
.
Speaking of abused pitchers,
·
.
ch~leiige fcir: ~e
;
batting aver-
.
·
The Mets added some much-
.
. Kerry Wood will also miss the
age arid
'
RBI" crowns this y
'
ear
needed punch to their lineup in entire 1999 season, which is not
and:WalkawaywiththeNLMVP
acquiring Robin Ventura and only a great loss for the Cubs
for perennial power Atlanta.
Bobby Bonilla, but the also got but also for baseball fans every-
.
The NL Cy
>
Young race has
much older. Along with Ventrua
where. Wood's 20-strikeout
.
sofue bigriaines at the top but'
and Bonilla, they also picked up
performance last year against
does perhaps lackdepth. Randy
the
_
. middle-aged Rickey the Astros may have been the
Johnson, Curt Shilling and of
Henderson and Orel Hershiser most domin
_
ating outing ever,
course the Braves' Big Three,
and injuries could be a problem
.
.
but to many long outings took
Greg Maddux, Tom Glavine, and
The pitching staff is solid, but if it's toll on Wood's elbow. Now
John Srriciltz are all solid con-
either Rick Reed or Al Leiter the Cubs will have to tum to
tenders.
.
But it appears the
cannot repeauheir p~rfor.:.
Kevin Tapani to be their ace and
''
poclgei:s m
_
ay
;
have bou
·
ght
rnancesJrom last year, the Mets
hope Sa111my Sosa puts them on
·'.i
iliems~lves
a
.
winner
·
in
.
Kevin
.
·
.
-may find themselves around the
his shoulders again like he did
.
Brown
/
Brown seems to get
.500mark.
in '98.
, .'
: .
...
b°etter everyy~ar
/
at least
in
the
.
'
·
As long as Schilling is on the
The Dodgers and Arizona Dia-
regular seasbn,
.
and pitching in
.
·
Philli~
they willbe ~on;ipe~tjve,

mondbacks
_.,
have
·
tried to buy
·
the huge-D6dgerStadiiim
will
_
:
the
:
problem beirig he may'not the NL
Welk
and
.
in the Dodg- ·
only help hi01
Y -
:
·
.
_
_ ..
'
be for much longer. Aside frorri
ers case it may have worked.
What's on Tap?
Baseball -
4/1
@
LaFayette 3 p.m.
4/3 Home vs. Iona 1 p.m.
4/5 Home vs. Iona 3 p.m.
Softball -
4/6 Home vs. Quinnipiac 3 p
.
m .
.
4/8
@
Stoneybrook 2:30 p.m.
4/9 Home vs. St. Francis 3 p.m.
PAGE15
Men's Lacrosse -
4/3 Home vs. VMI 1 p.m.
4/6 Home vs. Manhattan 3:30 p.m.
4/9
@
Canisius 7:30
p.m .
Women's Lacrosse -
4/1 Home vs. Albany 4 p.m.
4/6 Home vs. LaSalle I p.m
.
4/8
@
Fairfield 7 p.m.
Men's Crew -
4/3 Home vs. Army 7:30 a.m.
4/10
@
Villanova Invitational
Women's Crew
-4/3 Home vs. Army
4/10
@
Villanova Invitational
Tough Trivia
Who was the only pitcher to throw a no:-hitter
on opening day?
Last week's question
~
.
Which current NBA head coach was
drafted by a MLB team?
Answer - Danny Ainge, head coach of the Phoenix Suns was
drafted by the Toronto Blue Jays
.
-~
.
.
.
.
.
.
-
.
.
If he does not pull it off, do
Schilling, the Phillies pitching is
·
The Dodgers have spent
a
not be surprised to seeChanHo
horrendous, and everi
'
a quality
whole lot of money to bring in
Brown, Caminiti, and Greg
ParkorCarlos PerezoftheDodg-
line-up will not make a winner
·-
Brown and trade for Perez, Jeff
Vaughn. Andy Ashby and Ster-
ers make a run at the Cy Young.
otlt
of
this team.
Shaw, Gary Sheffield, Todd
·
ling Hitchcock return to hold
ery year, and every year they
seem to be right in the middle of
things. This year should be no
different. Pitchers Mark Gar-
dener, Kirk Rueter and Shawn
Estes have all had at least one
Everyone'spickforRookieof
A
surprise team could be the
·
Hundley
·
and
Mark
:
down the pitching staff, while
theYearisCardinal'soutfielder
Expos. They have one of the
Grudzielanekinthelastyearand

Reggie Sanders, acquired for
J.D.Drewandlamnotgoingto
best managers in the game to
ahalf. Allthese.playersmakea
Vaughn, wiHiookloaddsome
disagree. Drew looked like a
go with some of the best young
hefty sum, or will command it
power toaline-up that features
seasoned veteran in his Sep-
talent In the end; it should be when they become free agents
.
Tony Gwynn and Wally Joyner.
tember call up last season
,
and
the Braves once again.
. Some
·
good youn°g
·
playei:s .
The Diamondbacks spent a
there is no reason to think he
·
There appears t<Y be a much
were traded away, and as the
fortune on Randy Johnson and
won't
.
continue to impress this
.
tighterraceintheCentral.
Orioles have learned, you can
ToddStottlemyerintheoff-sea-
year. Having McGwire hit be-
Ken Caminiti returns to the
not just go out and sign guys
son, but their hitting still seems
hind him will
'
help. also.
,
The
Astros to solidify their third and hope they play well to~
mediocre at best. First baseman
Philliesareanimprovedclub, but
base position and give .them
.
gether.
_
It
takes time to make a
Travis Lee is a pure hitter in the
they could be lani.enting theloss
some left-handed hitting in their
great team, and if the Dodgers
three hole, but if Matt Williams
·
of Drew, who they drafted but
all right handed line-up
.
They
let this group stay together they
does not rebound from a forget-
could riot sign, for years to
have two quality starters in
·
could have one.
·
table '98 the D-backs will have
_
come.
Shane Reynoids
·
and Mike
The San Diego Padres made it
to look to outfielders and Luis
.
If
anyone is
to
challenge Drew
Hampton and some young to the World
.
Series last year, and
Gonzalez
-
imd Steve Finley for
it will probably be one of two
pitchers in Jose Lim~ and Scott
·
then had to watch as many of run support.
Flori9a Marlins.
_
Shortstop Alex · Elarton who pitched well last their start players left, including
The Giants get overlooked ev-
.
..
great year
-
the last two seasons,
.
and if they put it all together this
·
season, look out.
In the end I see the Braves
,
Astros, and Dodgers winning
their divisions, and the Giants
to be the surprise wild card.
Look for the Braves and Dodg-
.
ers to meet in a classic NLCS,
and the Braves to return to the
World Series after a two-year
hiatus .
American League predictions
coming up in the next issue of
the Circle.
Softballloses five
in
a.row
after 5-3 start
by
JEFFDAHNCKE
Staff Writer
Sjnce beginning the season
by winning five out of its first
eight games, the Marist College
softball team has s~ggled
.
-
The Red Foxes dropped a pair
of games to Big East foe Seton
Hall last Saturday, extending
Marist's current losing
str~
to
five games. Marist is now 5-8
on the year.
Seton Hall defeated the Foxes
in game one by the scor:e ~f 5-2,
and completed the sweep with
a
6-2
triumph over the Red Foxes
in the second game of the
doubleheader.
·
In game one, Mari st was held
to only three hits as the Pirates'
.
. .
Misty Beaver stymied the Foxes,
striking out 12.
·
The game was tied at two
apiece going into the sixth in~
ning,
_
until Seton Hall used an
RBI double by Natalie
:
Denning
to take a 3-2 advantage. The
Pirates then used a pair of RBI
doubles in the seventh to keep
the game out ofreach.
·
The second game of the
double-dip was not much bet~
ter for the Foxes, as they man-
aged only four hits against Se-
ton Hall's Jenn Berghoff. Marist
dug itself a hole early when Jen
Rosant, who went 3-3 in game
one, smashed a two-run
homerun. The 3-0 lead held by
Seton Hall after the first inning
was enough, as Marist's bats
·
neve~ woke up.
· Earlier in the week, on
Wednesday,· Hartford traveled
to North Field, and subse-
quently left with a pair of one~
.
run victories.
·
·
Marist wasted a splendid
pitching performance by
Melanie Kasack in game one, as
Hartford managed a 1-0 win. In
game two, Maristjumped ahead
to a 2-0 lead in the first inning
but never scored again, as the
Foxes fell 3-2 in eight innings.
In game one, all the scoring
occurred in the fourth inning.
Tamara Jaworoski led off the in-
ning for Hartford with a double.
After Kasack retired the next
two batters, an error by Marist
first baseman Jenn Hanson al-
lowed Jaworoski to score, yield-
ing the only run of the contest.
Hartford's Elizabeth Nadeau
allowed only one hit over her
seven innings, a seventh inning
double by Amanda Koldjeski.
Marist wasted no time getting
on the board in the second
game. Michele Gosh led off the
game with a double. After mov-
ing to third on a base hit, Kerri
Harris drove in two on a two-
out single.
Pitcher Jenn Hanson held that
lead until the seventh inning.
Hartford trailed 2-1 going into
the final frame
.
After allowing a
leadoff single, Hanson was re-
p laced on the mound by
Kasack. Kasack was unable to
preserve the victory, as she sur-
rendered three hits and the ty-
ing run.
After Marist was unable to
score in its half of the seventh,
Nadeau led off the eighth with a
single. She was sacrificed to
second, and then moved over
to third on a groundout by Dana
Kennett.
Jaworoski then
knocked in the go--ahead, and
eventual winning, run with a
single.
Harris was 2-3 for Marist, with
a pair of RBI. For Hartford,
Jaworoski led the attack by go-
ing5-5.
Kasack took the loss in relief,
dropping her record to 3-4.
Marist is in action next Tues-
day at North Field when they
play host to Quinnipiac.















































i
I
I
'
I
!
I
I
'
I
'
l
I
.
'
_.......,
r
Stat of the Week
.
.
·
.
Quote of the Week
Paul Donahue leads the
TII£
.
<CIR.CL£
Ar:;-~:~;·~~;;;;_-
s
.
0
rt
s
--ii....
. . . . . . . .
__,
. . . .
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
.;;;;;;;;~-
"I'm in a groo
_
ye right no,w.
I just hopeJ can keeJ) go-
ing with the groove."
.-An-
thony Bocchirw! baseball
:
·
PAGE16
M a ri st
joins
Big East Conference!
by
BILLSIIl1E
·
Sports Editor
·
adding Pi vision, I
.
teams to go
~long withBig£ast games
against Miami; Syracuse,_and
The Big East Conference
Virginia Tech
.
among others.
shockingly accepted Marist's
.
Preliminary talks with Notre
bid to become the conference's
Dame about a home and home
.
fourtetlnth member
.
late Tuesday
series in 2001 and 2002 are un-
night.

.
.
.
..
·
.
·
.
. .
.
.
·.
denvay
·
but nothing is
'
certain.
.
,
Orie day after Big
·
Easfmem
0
The men's basketball team
her
C~nn~cticu( won the
may be the biggest winner in the
NCAAt<mmey, the Big East had
exit from
·
the Metro
·
Atlantic
an even bigger reason to eel.:
Athletic Conference. Afteronly
eb
_
rate, .
.
two years in the conference the
·
"We are ecstatic to
·
have the
Red Foxes had proved them-
Red Foxes as'a member of the
selves the classof the league.
Big
East,"
Big
East
·
commis-
They really had nothing left
to
sioner Dave Wilson said. "First
prove in the conference so the
UCONN wins the National
movetotheBigEastcomesata
.
Championship, 1U1d now Mari st
perfect time for them.
.
swimming, Iacrosse;and track.
If
Marist
has a sport in which
. the Big East in not currently af-
filiated, the Big East will be be-
ginning actionin that sport in
the year 2000.
.
.
.
·.
.
•·
·
!'What this
meah
_
s
is that all
sports on this

.
campus wiltfi-
.
haliy:gelthe attention they de-
.
serve," president of club affairs
Wanda Williams said.
"We'll
be
in ali the newspapers and our
athletes will· finally
_
get some
·
positive feedback for their hard
work."
Michael Van Richmond, cap-
tain of the shuffleboard team,
agrees.with WiUiams.
joins, it's bee:n orie heck of a
·
Even domination gets boring
·
·
"The Big Eaii opens up tre-
mendous oppo!1unities for us,"
Van Richmond said. "No longer
wilf
we
be in the shadows, the
week for our conference."
after a while, and Marist is no
The Big East officials were not
different
:
Why stay in
_
a confer-
the
·only
ones happy about the
ence where the
·
competition
new alliance.
can't match up?
,
"We really can not believe
."It
was getting sickening, the
they accepted us," Marist ath~
scores we were rolling up," a
lytics director John
·
Stevenson
basketball coach said
.
on the
said. "We just put our name in
condition of anonymity.
"I
for consideration as a joke, and
mean, why keep embarrassing
·
now look atus: It
is a
real
rags
these teams for another I 0
to riches story."
years. We proved are point, let's
Marist will officially join the
move on."
conference in September of the
·
After the announcement was
year2000 when the Marist foot-
made, several Big East schools
ball team will first take the field
were reevaluating their place in
as a member of the ~ig East.
the·conference. In fact, rumors
..
"Wehaveatonofworktodo,"
have already
~
started. that
assi
_
stant·footbalfcpach James
schools such as Pittsburgh and
McAndrews said
.
"Going from
West Virginia have petitioned
a Division I-AA team to a Big
·
the MAAC for membership to
East team in a mere 17 months is
avoid
the
Red Foxes.
·
going to be
a
huge challenge."
·
Besides the major sports
,
all
BigEastwiHailowu~ to move
to theforefronL"
One final area where the move
will help Maristathletics
••
is in
recruiting. As soon as the move
was announced, no
.
fewer than
six
.
high
.
school
·
basketball
McDonald's all-american's
changed their pledge to Marist
"I've wanted to come here
(Marist) all my life," Red Fox re-
cruit Carlos Bender said. ''The
only thing holding them back
.
was their conference, and now
that they
are
in
.
the
B°fg
East they
are the total pac~a8t?
.r
.
April Fool's Day!! Even
tl10ugh this
is
only a joke we
·
wish the Marist sports teams
·
good luck in their seasons
in
the
MAAC.
.
Marist will have to rework their
Marist sports wilr be
.
going to
entire football schedule as well,
the Big
,
East. This includes
Baseball.
teamjust
7-ll
~
after
roµghseheduleander.rati¢p1ay
.
·
·
·
against teams from ac:ross the
playNiagarainapairofdouble-
b y R ~ . ~ ~
country
.
.
The most notable be-
lieaders
·
on Saturday and Sun~
ing against the lfnive~sity
:
of day, March 27and 28th.
_ .
Miami who is ranked #3 in the
Senior
;
co~captain; Doug
country. Miami played like the
·
Conn¢Ily started the firstgame
number three team in the nation
on Saturday;
;
Connelly ran into
by ripping the Red Foxes for 15
some trouble
in
the first inning
runs and allowing only one.·
as he struggled with his control
The
.
boys are ba~Ic:
.
Baseball season is underway
but the boys o( summer at
Marist look more like they're
still stuck in winter.
The Red Foxes kicked
·
off the
season in Florida going4-8
·
The Red Foxes returned to the · and the umpire. After a walk on
friendly confines ofMcCann to
a number of close pitches, first
Marist baseball got a
chance
to
experience when they played the
#3 Miami Hurricanes in
Florida.
.
Joe
MGCurdy
wili
not' be battling
'
the Manhattan Jasp~rs
in 2000 as Marist headed
to
the Big East Conference.
·
.
.
.
.
.
'
baseman
·
Kevin Wissner was
the bottom halfof the fourth on
unable to handle Connelly'.s
a solo bombbyfreshman Chuck
throw on a slow roller putting
Bechtel. thattowered over the
two on.
A
fielder's choice would
treys behind the wall in left.
eventualiy
_
5-core the go ahead
.
·
l\1arist would
.
have

added an-
rilhner,
·.
·
otherifaCervinihithadn'ttaken
·
Mari st wasted no time getting
-
·
'.
a
freak
bounce off the
·
top
'
of the
, ~ ~
.
~~~~~~
-
h~~f
·
ol'~;fi~s:;
<:
:
t;.r~
-t
;
to~?;?
·.
·
back
·
in
·
fo~

a
·
leftfteldei
·,
AnthonyC:erviaj
llir
-.
,;
·
-
Then Mansdanded the
'
final
.
the first pitch he saw 420Jeet
blov/fri the bottom
·
of the fifth
over
the
center field
·
wall to tie
.
exploding for six runs. 'Fresh-'
the score at one.
.
.
.
man Anthony Bocchino, 6 for 7
Niagara marl~ged another run
·
·
on the day, led 9ff with a bunt
in the top_ of the
.
second on more
single.
'
A triple off the top right
of Connelly's misfortune. After
c~nterfield wall by juniortrans-
striking out the
_
first two Purple
fer, catcher Anthony Ambrosini
Eagles, Connelly walked the
plated Bocchino.
next batter.
.
.
..
.
:
.
.
..
Bocchino said he hopes to
. A dose call at firstin,Ni~gara's
keep
i
his hot bat
:
fa\'.or put
fa9
runnerli on with
,'
"I'm_in a groove right 11ow,"
two o~ts. Co
_
ni!eHy then walked
·
:
Bocchino said .
.
;
"Ijust hope!
·.·
another batter to load the bases.
can keep going with the
·
Niagara
_
5-cored
.
again· when
groove."
Connell~ couldn't get all of his
Be!ehtel laced
a
Texas leaguer to
leather on
,
a)i~~r.·knockingit
·
centertoscoreArnbrosinL Sec-:
·
down
'
betweep the charging
. ··
ond baseman Steve O'Sullivari
:
thi~d baseman
Jim Willis
and
reached on a bunt and moving
.
shortstop Jeff Tafuto.
.
..
·
Bechtel. to second~ Willis then
Connelly sitid the
_
umpfre
stn,;ck out looking. But Jef(
wasn't giving him much of the
Tafuto picked up the slack by
plate
,
,
.
.
.
.•
.

.
.
hitting an inside::-the-park
"He was squeezing me hard in
homerun to clear the bases and
the first couple innings,"
giveMaristan8-2leadafterfive
Connelly said; "I didn't have
inpings.
my best stuff but the team
The seventh inning held some
played reaJly good today."
drama as Connelly walked the
Connelly would then settle
first batter and was lifted for
down and not a yield another
freshman
middleman PJ
hit or run over the next four in-
nings while striking out five.
...please see BASEBALL,
pg. 14
Marist added another run in


52.15.1
52.15.2
52.15.3
52.15.4
52.15.5
52.15.6
52.15.7
52.15.8
52.15.9
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52.15.11
52.15.12
52.15.13
52.15.14
52.15.15
52.15.16