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Part of The Circle: Vol. 52 No. 17 - April 22, 1999

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-- -~------------·----r-----.-- - ~---
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Softball
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College
VOLUME#si:tsSUE#17 ;
· .http://w:ww.a:cademic.marist.edu/circle ··
APRIL 22~ 1999
WUKLYPOLL
··~
- - ~
. po
you
tllinl(tlle
,
.
.
worldis goµig ~()-
end
in the· -
. Year 2000?-
YES
NO
11
89
This
u
an umdDrlijic
survey
,al,,,
from
100
Marist
studmts.
.
SllfflvQl'"S
speak
Chris Blasie and others
danced the night away at this
year's "Marist by Moonlight."
of .experiences
fronlllolocaust
:' by
DQlJGt:AS:OEISS .
· Staff
Wri.ier .
. The ethnic
·
~lean~i~i-
in
Kosovo was a topic brought up
last Tuesday by survivors of the
·Holocaust; .
· -
F<>llowing in tlle current lec-
ture series._theme.
6f peace and
understar).ding,. the 9th annual
Holocaust Rememb;ance
·
Day
occurred'Aprii
13: On.this day,
the World recognizes it as Ho-
-
lqcaust Memoria_l Day .. The
Jee.:. -
ti.ire,
,enti.tled Overc()mingiridif-:
.ferense:.'fhJ;::Courage to Gare~ .
~-- ,was:sponsored:-by'
~e~Maiist ..
<
: •C:!ollege:Hoi<>causi~Remem~.~
~i:,
.
-:'~~~~f
~it~~~t~ij}f!&i-ji~;tJ•c:,;}tf'.':,~;:,3,
r<F'fC.~
l'l!~J~S,C~?,'J{,
.
--·:
:
.. ' --
_
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-
·
-
.,,
----
"
.
..
,
-~
-
·
.
·-,-·.- Rabbi·Daniel'Polish·otVassar·
·
,,,,,·
.. ,an~_pnilly,~.
-
:rb~~-an
.
s,
.
:.,,
~
.
-
-
..
.
_
·>-
.
:
, - w~re (escµ~d by,~~
putc~
Re-.
·
_
_]::~_91p_le SR9ke at_.the
,
_
Holo- -
.
formed
Church iirAmsterdain.
:
:
cau~t Rem~mqrance.
Day. .
·
,
le~eJt:\::!•t~~tr~;s~r ;
,i>.
.
. .
> · ·
:

,
. . · •.• ...
-
·
..•. past and' to 'remember
tlie
'
-.·
.
,.l-l'.~
.
.
needto_R:f'!/ect
memory.:or the victilli~ <>f.the ..
huma_nity wh.erev·er
l!q~osauSt
;,.
r -: :,,;
~
. .
,:
.
'
:'
-it is
threatened.'; .... ·
As the world faces the current . ·
· · · · ·
, · ·
· · ·
·
Mar
.
-Peter~Raoul ·.
assistant professor
religio
_
us studies.
petsec·~1:io11\of _Ethnif Alba.:,
n1ans;
friSimpbitani
to remem.; .
b~l''.tll~t
·
@sisr19t_~{fl!S~ tittie ..
that the.Worlg has e'xP,ed¢nced ·
·
a
'
group 9(p~qple
beitjg
,killed.• .
. _·for:.whotheyare.:'~:/
,
-~,
·
·.· - " - - - - - - - - - - -
:S<>rn~-'qfthe other speakers
she.said.
that spoke during the lecture
,
Rabbi-Daniel Polish, of the
included Mar Peter~Raoul, as~
VassarTempleinPoughkeepsie,
sistant professor ofreligious ;said ·there were many people
studies. .lle(mess~ge, was to
who did care enough to hid the
"\\'ear the)e'Yi~h Btar.,with · Jews that were being perse-
Pride." She mentioned that over · cuted.
. one.and.a b<llf nilltion victitn~ of
• Polish asked whether people
- the Holocaust were"°cl1ildren.
would do this today.
,Ac;cording to)etei-,.Raoul,
'"Would we
do
the same," he
there needs to .be
a
recommit-.. said. .
.
ment.tohumanHfe.
In closirig,he _made a plea to
''W~
need
to
protect human-
everyone in the room to "Love
ity
wh_e. rever it is tlu:eatene_d_ ,"
1---
HO~ nr-AUSf
3
... pu:=e see
:.LA,,A..,
,
pg. -.
Students let·Ioose
at
anriualdance
INSIDE
by
KATHLEEN MOYLAN
Staf!Writer
Last Friday, students daµced
the night away at the am:mal
"Marist by Moonlight" spon-
sored by the Student Program-
ming CouncH. ·
The dance was held at the
Casperkill Country Club and
went from 9:30 p.m. until I :30
am.
Bob Bammann, a junior in-
v9Ived
in
the planning of the
formal, said the dance was a
success .
. "Everyone was dancing and
s
_
eemed to. be having a good
time," he said. -
Tickets were available at
$13
for single tickets and $25 per
couple .. ;
Bammann
said that around 200
tickets were sold for the event.
According to him, this num-
··· plea.se see DANCE, pg. 4
TODAY:
Cloudy
hi:68°
lo:42°
Community ................. 2
Features ..................... 5
A&E ....................... 11
Opinion .......................
9
Sports ........................ 16
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APRIL 22. 1999
Psychology Club
Best
of
Sec11rityBriefs
These are
The·
Circle
staff's
most memorable security
briefs of the year!
.
What
ls
your opinion of
the Kosovo crisis?
Be a buddy for a day! The I>sy,-
chology Club will be sponsor-
ing its annual One to One Day
on Wed., April 28. They will be
found on the Dyson Green fr()m
9 a.m. to 2 p.m. If there are any '
· questions; please contact Jason
atX4694.
.
MusicDepartm.ent . . .
The Marist C:ollegeMust De~
partment would like to an-
nounce a concert on Wed., April
28 at 7:30 p.m. in the Performing
Arts
Room. The venue will con-:
sist of seven musicians from
Julie Martyn-Baker's Instru-
mental music class, playing in a
coffeehouse-style performance.
All are warmly invited to come
and enjoy the entertainment.
Food and refreshments will be
served. If you have a_ny ques-
tions please contact Justin or
Matthew atX4929.
Sept.I 7. A patrol through the
Student Center at2 p.ni. on Aug.
31 uncovered a box of 42 sand-
wiches, which the Marist Band
had left behind.-The sand-
wiches were destroyed due to
health concerns.
Nov. 12. Gartland Common's
"E" bl9ck residents burned ba-
,
gels at 11 :50 a.m. last Thurs, set-
ting· off the fire alarms with a
.cloud of smoke.
A West Cedar resident wit-
nessed an unidentified student
rip a young tree out of the
ground last Fri. at2:35 a.m. How-
ever, the offender left ilie scene
before sec~pty's arrival.
Oct. 29. Security witnessed
two legs flailing out of· a
Sheahan cellar window on Oct.
'._· .-. ::. ,.•.,'. ;~>--'.
·
·._···-•-:.:··.~-:'.,,'.'"~-- ·.
>
"i•
· · ·. ..
:ll
atl:15 ~tm.The legs belonged
_
SEc;X: ) ·
to an. unauthorized guest that ·
" l think America
should think a little
more before ·we get
more involved."
Michael Stanik
freshman.,
=
The
campusjofoed s.E.G;A. in
was beipgsnmggled in through
celebrating
Earth Day
99'
on
the wiricfow
·
bytwo female resi-
police were notified as the man
··" " l
have no idea
what's. going on in
Kosovo."
Shannon Lansing
_freshman
of burned food.
" I think-America
should mind th~ir own
business. "
Brandy Dziedzic
sophomore
d. ents. S.e
.. c.
·
.u .. nty
·
· ask. ed th. e gu. es.t.
·ct
h
d d
.
Wed.,April21. Therewerefree
·
ran towar st e woo e area
· to leave; short.ly after_ complet-
th G
Wh
ffi
.
t-shirts, posters, and food.
A
near e rotto.
en o 1cers · .. _Eeb. 18,Sirens.bl.ar. ed, again,
·_ing .h.· er climb through th.· e_ win:..
·
th
· · bd
·
·
· •. female occupant's room on Sun.,
Feb., 28. She aw<Jke
to
find him
sleeping in hei:roonimate~s bed.·
.
. Security office~ arrive woke the
· student, ,and questioned him.
He said that he had been.look-
lecture by environmentalist
amved,
e man was su . ued; . inGartlandCommon's''E''block
Franny Reese was given on
dow.
and handcuffed.
at-6 p.m. on,Thurs. Feb.H be-
Thurs., April 22 at 11 a.m. in the
cause of.a burned hamburger:
Performing Arts Room in ¢.e
·
. ·, · ·
.
.
.
ing for anoµier,rooni, opened
Student Center. The lecture cov-
Anoth
er
fire alarm blared in
D~c.10. Three West Cedar
,, March 4:ALeo ~all RAnoti-'
the unfocked door, and went to
ered the Sto~ King Mbunfuin . Gartland Ccmunon's '$"block at
re~idents were \Vatclling'televi- . fied securi%cifficers regarding' sleep in the confusion.
affair and its influence on the
.
?:
15 p.m. onSat;
Oct
lO:Acook-
sion in their aparµne_nt on N,ov., an unknc)\vn ,male sleeping in a
environmental movements. .
.
. · irig incident ~et
·
off the:
alarm.
22 at2_a.m, They all h~d :imaJe
Unfortunately, astlief¥depart-. and female. talking'to one
an:
-
meni allowF thtfroom to air out,
other')n ttie· apartrrlent; T;y;o 'oL
Poughkeepsieinstitute .
.:a.s~curit)'
gtj~g c:u
_
i:11,l~·:,fing~r· . th~.r~siclents.went up_thestairs:
. '
- .. The Poughkeepsi_e Institutif .,Ori

bro~?ri'.plastic'
\.Y.}
nd0
W .
after lleatjng• _tlle tw_<J
.
. voic~s ... , , .. ·.
· sponsor~ acommunity,discus.-. ·.frame; No serious ·damage was-· move info
the
sh0\yer.About45,.
· siori, on race and ethnicity · o·n
done to the:room or the guard; s. minutes later, the bathroom door.
Thurs., April
15
at7 p.m. atthe finger.
·
· ·
opened and an unknown.male
Family Partnership Center.
and female, ininimallyclad,
rart
There was a screening· of the.
from the house: The .. residenis
. Nov.19.
An
unidentified bare-
ti
11
d th
kn
· ·
1
Institute's recently released

· · ·
·

o owe . •
e
un . own coup e
foo. t male was
__ sp· ot.ted
..
ru.
nni.ng
th. d
b · th
'
ct·.
· film/Four
Faces
of
out e oor,. ut . e two 1sap-.
ar. o.und o.utsid
.
.
e. D
.. o.· nn.e. Uy· Hall
· d · t th d kn
.
Pmighkeepsie." Apaneloffour
·

· ·
peare mo e ar . ess.
people of different backgrounds
on Nov.
l~atf:
25
a:qi:
Tpe fig-
lecr·a discussion •that included
ure tlashed into Donnelly, wear-
Feb.4.Fire alarms proyed to be
th I
.
,
"R
·
d
ing dirty rags 'an_da liospital
fun
_
ctiona. l on_c. e. again in
e nst1tute
s
report, · ace an
·
· ·
·

• ·

identific. ation band'. .. A ~ecurity · G. art. land Commo· n's
"E'.~
block
· Ethnicity in Poughkeepsie," as
· ·· ·
·
·
· ·
a
starting point
. guard. who appro_ached the man . again, blaring at l :00 p.m. after
said he .was "incoherant and
another cooking mi~hap.
wild." Town
of
Poughkeepsie
Weekend Weather
FRIDAY:
·mostly cloudy
hi:
68°
lo:
46°
SATURDAY:
sur,y
hi:
65°
lo:
36°
mostly cloudy
hi:
64°
lo:
38°
Source: http://www.weather.com (The Weather Channel)
Feb)L
A
smoky aroma was
report~ :on Champagnat's 7th
floor~ S~urity was alerted and
found the source of the scent in
a
resident's
room,
where she was
burning pictures and memora-
bilia of a former male friend. No
damage was reported and the
fire alarms were not triggered.
Gartland Common's
"E"
block
residents evacuated on Thurs,
Feb. 4 because of another case
. · einier
Unisex
Stilo
: ./s StepstJ.wayfrom Jfa ...
.
'
'
~-
.
-
.
-
......
'MA

-
,,--
.
\- -· DISCOU. .
: -
,;
:
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.
. . · .
' • .
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"
...
HAIRCUTS: GUYS: $15
&
GALS: $18.
· INDIVIDUAL TANNING SESSIONS: $7
: NINE TANNING SESSIONS:
$45
Ca!Jj,r~~~O//tfUmlled
·264
NoRilf
Ram,
POUGHKEEPSIE 4Sf.9239
]llslpast~~5tltl11ICb~NtlflrKl:i)Deli;f'm~
Opt,,-"'2,s~
n.ot.JOS;Sal.8Jl>.S
. •Mllriit~artdigll;ltj,r~ltilbSladtlltl.D.!Prot:/
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!

TH£
<CIR.CL£
·
News
.
... continued
from
pg.1
._
According to the Ullman's,
they had no idea that there were
.
eve~ concentration camps at
your neighbot
,
as yourself."
,
.
that point.
··
Students Thea Cimmino and
The Ullman's hid in the
.
third
Holly Smith read a piece of Ho-
floor of an apartment to avoid
locaust literature.
.


being caught by the Germ~s.
Ci~no said the ~agedy of
.They
.
wer~• unable
to
W11lk
the holocaust affe¢t
,
ed her.
,
around or make any noise until.
"The Holocaust touched me
they heard knocking, The
deeply," she said.
·
knocking meant that the people
.
.
When survivors Frank and
living in the second floor had
•·
Emily Ulh}!_a_f ~eg~n to speak,
left the building.
they immediately had the atten-
During their time in the build-
tion of everyone in the room.
ing, the people on the second
Married for
:
.
63 years, the
floor never knew that anyone
Ullman'.s had the appearance of was ever Jiving above them.
the typical cc,uple in their fin-
According to Frank Ullman,
.
ishing of each
.other's.sen-
thereweremanytensemoments .
.
tenc~s.
,
..

,
.

-
.
"The
knock
-
llleantthat we
,
·
The Ullman's said in 1940 they
could flush the toilet,'! he said.
had d~ci_ded to take· thefamily
The Ullman's survived the
outofHollandinfearofthebor-
·
entire war in hiding. Frank
ders bdng shut d()wn
:
They de-
Ullman would not have been
cided to wait an extra day be-
here unless it was for "people
cause their son had a toothache.
helping each other."
The following day, May 9,
EmilyUllmansummeduptheir
1940, Holland was invaded and
·
experience
·
with one statement.
the borders were closed. The
"In
the worst moments of your
banks closed and Frank Ullman
life, if you believe, you will make
lost his job.
it,"
she said.
Circle photo/Joe Scotto
The son of Frank and Emily Ullman speaks at the Holocaust
Remembrance Day. The event allowed Marist students and
faculty to hear stories from survivors of the Holocaust.
Praxis
.
Foru01
highlights.
,i~w
Illlnor
byJAIMETOMEO
·
·
StaffWriter
·
While many students choose
Communications, Political Sci-
·
ence, and English
as
minors, few
know
_
anything about a new mi-
nor called Praxis.
.
This newly added minor to the
Marist curriculum was
recognized
·
at the Third Annual Praxis Project
Forum in··
_
the
.
Cabaret on last
'
:Wednesday. Praxis Project-k~p-
ersMar
.
Peter-Raoul, assistant
.
profes~qr
_
of
religious studies;
·
Bnice
L.~~k~
f
~sistant professor
-
.
·
of sociology
:
and Russell Moses,
.
-
·
assistant
.
prqfessor of philoso-
phy
·
are

the
.
indiyicfoals respon~
sible for this
"time of
conscience
and consequence»
:
initiatiye
c
..
'
According to Loske, the forum
.
and minor are pai.tq(a plan to
.
increase diversity a~areness on
campus.
.
.
.
-
''Marist College's recent stra-
tegic planemphasizes commit-
'
IllenttQ greater
,
cultural diver-
sity
in
the curriculum and within
.
the campus community in gen-
.
eral," he said.
.
The Praxis Project is
a
trans-
disciplinary approach to heads,
hearts and hands~on learning.
Praxis-based education rests on
two major premise~. The first is
that all genuine knowledge
.
originates in direc,(experience
and the second is that the main
purpose of educatj~i(is to cre-
ate a more just and co~passion-
ate society.
Peter-Raoul said the project
incorporates many areas of phi-
losophy.
"Praxis jojns experjence and
inquiry," she said. '
_
'It reveals
both the inner rece
·
sses and
' .
.-
-.
.
.
·.
noble possibilities of the human
condition."
.
·
·
Students at Marist can earn
a
minor certificate in Public Praxis
by taking21 credits ov~r four
tracks in courses such as Hu-
man Values and Choices, Hu-
man Rights, Poverty and Afflu-
ence and a Public Praxis core.
Other students get involved by
.
initiating Praxis Projects around
the area or in disaster struck re-
gions.
Professors such
·
as Brother
·
Frank Kelly, who teaches The
Bible, and Peter-Raoul, who
teaches Philosophy World Val-
ues and Views, make the Praxis
Project mandatory for their stu-
dents.
John Ntcolucci, a sophomore
currently enrolled in The Bible,
said the experie~ce has taught
him
a lot
.
"I participated in Habitat for
Humanity on two Saturday
mornings," he said. "I think it's
a good way for students to get
involved
in
the community of
Poughkeepsie. When you're
there you get such a sense of
accomplishment Even after the
community services hours are
over for The Bib1e; I am going
to go back so that
I
can finish
the house."
Patrick Kempf, a sophomore
Habitat for Humanity partici-
pant, said he did not mind the
work either.
·
According to him,
it was afun time.
"It felt really good to help out
people in need and I would defi-
nitely do it again," he said.
"I
might even do it before the end
of the year again."
Even though some students
may not have enjoyed their
_
Circle photo/Jcn:my Smith
Hannah Kalyoussef speaks
at the Forum about her expe-
rience in the program.
placement of community ser-
vice, they understood the ne-
cessity for it.
Freshman Emily Schwab, cur-
rently
in Philosophy World
Views and Religions, volun-
teered at the Salvation Army for
the project.
"I workedl2 hours at the Sal-
vation Army. We had to do it
for our Praxis Project and then
write
a reaction paper for it," she
said.
'
'
I
would do something else
with community service, but I
would not go back to the Salva-
tion Army."
Many professors have
adapted this method of teach-
ing to
'
their curriculum. They
believe that students will learn
more if they are able to get ex-
perience. According to Moses,
students learn more with the
hands-on experience.
''Learning goes better when stu-
dents have the chance to explore
the connections between theory
and practice," he said.
)
.
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·PAGE4
Left to right:
Christine Graziano, Matt Yorke, Mary Witkowski and
Tracy
Gonyo enjoy their
night at the "Marist
by
Moonlight."
DANCE:
'Marist
by
Moonlight' ·fun night for
all
..
-
..
... contiiu.iedfroni
pg.
J
dance, ·suggested fish bowls
with gold fish in them for cen-
terpieces.
Ai
the end of the
-ber is down from previous years
··
·
and contributed that to the fact
night, these centerpieces were
available to be.taken home by
thatthere was a lot going on this
the attendees. White and teal
weekend.
balloons and seashells adorned
Students from all classes were
the country club.
invited, and Bammann said in
Mike Nolan, a sophomore at-
the three years that he has been
·
l d · th th
t
ten dee of the dance, said he had
mvo ve w1.
e even , many
a blast.
.
of the faces m attendance were
"I
h d.
h
1
·
f;
·li

.
a sue an awesome 1me.
ai;h~· . . , th
f
th
The school should sponsor
d
. ·
IS
yeaMr _s •. _te~Ue dor the
events like this more often," he
ance was
ans
n er e
•d·
"I' · · · ·, · ·, ·'· ' · ·1·
Sea." . •• :\
i; ·:' .. . . ..
·
.
sat , ·-• .. can t ~a1t untl next
· ··
. year!" ·· ·
·
.
RyanLorenz,·ainemberofthe
.
--+
Student Life
Council, which was
Nolan.added that the fish was
in charge of decorationsfor the
an added bonuffo the evening.
Photo courtesy of Liz Carrubba
"J
had
such an. awe-
.
. I·
,
some time ... -can
t
wait 'iJ,n#fnext year!"
·~: -· .
,
.'. <""'.:' ---~·;·
~
;·.::~ •. •·.:: ''.'.
,-,-'..-=:-?:.-~:?i-_t>:' ~~:
:
;
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:·,
'
Mike Nolan
sophomore
.
.
.

'River Fest' draws-almost 500 students
byTIIBACIMMINO
StaffWrite_r
Marist's 12th annual River
Festival· proved
·10
·be yet an-
other success last Friday.
RiverFestiyal, commonly re-
ferred to by students as "River
Fest,O' is ati annual .event spon-
sored by the senior class and
the Division of Student Affair~ ..
The festival is open to faculty,
staff and all Marist students 21
years of age and older. ·
·
Tickets were $10 per person
ahead and $12 at the door. That
. fee covers the cost of'· food,
beverage and six alcoholic
drinks. · Additional alcoholic
drink passes could be pur-
chased at $1 each. The college
also provide~ a DJ. . ..
Assistant Dean of Student · attended.
Affairs, Steve Sansofa, said the
•_. Unlike collegesponsor~d
festival is a positive_wayfor the
dances, the· festival. is exclu-
Marist community to unite and
sivelyfor M~st st11,den_ts_. "Stu-
socialize.
dents can not bri_ng 'off-campus
''The purpose
_
istQ have
a.
so-
. guests to
tli~
eyent( 'This keeps
· cial environment-where stti-
theeventintim~te-andinorecol-
dents can rekindle theirfriend- Jeg~ c,omp:iunity'.oriented; , ·._

..
ships and tomix and mingle with .
i
River' F~stifal 9riginat~d as a
faculty and staff,"htt said.' . . .
co Hege spohsored
:
event in
. River Festivaf is, .traditionally '. 1986,
It
became a follow-up to a
held on the same day as "Marist previou·sfy'. non'.::s~nctioned·
By Moonlight;''~ s,emi-_formaL
gathering of students. -The fos-
Tiie weather has been Jess than
tival has since become a posi-
agreeable • the· past couple· of tive event taking place in acon-
years: Still, the festival goes on
trolled environment.
rain or shine:
. Secretary of the class ofl 999,
The festival was held in the
Simon Hecht, said the festival
upper Hoop lot on the North end was a great success .
of campus. It ran from 3 until
7
"The class of _.1999 · was
p;m.
. ·
.
pleased with the turnout," he
·There were approximately 30
said. ''We're glad everyone had .
, faculty and staff members
a great time despite the bad
present and about~t0 students
weather."
.
. . . '
, '.
·.
Colo:r,~do high-school shooting kills_25·
Two students in black trench·
coats swept tlirougli a subur-
ban Colorado high school with
guns and explosives in
.a
horri-
fying ·suicide attack Tuesday
that may h;we left 25 people
. dead. Several students said the
killers\vere gunning for minori-
ties and athletes.
It was by far the bloodiest in a
string of school shootings that
have rocked U.S. communities.
over the past few years.
"One of them opened his cape
and had a shotgun. Finally I
started figuring out these guys
shot to kill, for no reason," said
a student, Nick Claµs. The gun-
man "didn't say. anything.
When he looked at ~e, the guy's
eyes we,::e jtjst d~d:''
.
. .
The gunmen ~-~oth ju_niors
at Columbine
High
1
School
m
this
Denver suburb -:-'."' were found
dead in
·
the school library with
self-inflicted gunshot wounds
and what appeared to
be
bombs
around their bodies, sheriff's
spokesman Steve Davis said.
· "It
appears to
be
a ~uicide mis-
sion," Sheriff John Stone said.
Students said the gunmen,
whose names w~re not released,
apparently belonged to a clique
of outcasts called the '7rench
Coat Mafia" who wore long
.black coats; boasted of owning
guns and disliked blacks,
·
His-
panics and football players:
Davis said that the motive for
the attack was unknown and
that school officials had had no
reports of trouble from the stu-
dents.
The sheriff said 25 people may
have been killed, students and
teachers alike.
--from the Associated Press













































l
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CIR.CLE
APRIL 22.1999
Features
PAGES
Pl8ying pool has become a Sport
by
RICHARDSHUTKIN
·
Staff Writer
·
There are many campus activi-
-
.
ties that enhance the leisure time
of many Marist students. ·
·
Billiards is one of these activi-
ties.
Along with the regular base-
ball, football, basketball, and
other teams there is now also a
billiards league. Playing pool
·
could
.
once could have been
thought as something that
people did on their free time.
Now it can be thought ofas
·
a
challenging sport.
The Marist College billiards
team is very competitive and
enjoyed by its many members.
Scott Teabo, billiards league
member, said he enjoys the pool-
playing experience.
"I love it because
it
is very
competitive and has very good
Students play pool in the
billiards
room
players," he said.
Teabo also said that there is
an increased amount of mem-
bers since the previous year.
"This year there is a good
handful of members, whereas
last year there were only two
girls and three boys," he said.
Teabo said he had a good ex-
perience at the billiards tourna-
ment competition that he was
involved in.
'

Students try on dres~es for the 13th Annual Silver Needle Awards and Fashion show
:
FASHION:
·
oesigners get ready for upcoming show
.
~
-
.
.
.
.
... continued
from
pg.
1
get tooflose
'
ifI were you,'' said
Mrs. Cs<>rdas, the
_
Fashion
Di-
·
rector, on the day before the
:
depart:Ip~1Ws itµaw9us ~en Day,
.
the precursor to the main event
next weekend.
·
This so-called HeUDay is ac-
tually just that
.
Students involved in the show
spend 10 to 12 hours straight
that day, pinning the 18 models,
deciding hair styles, and per-
fecting the final pieces to put
into action. Arduous is the only
word to describe:it.
However;this is
·
only part of
the dedication needed to ensure
that this event turns out
smoothly with the grace that
epitomizes
the Fashion Depart~
.
menL
For the senior designers, the
show will
be
the culmination of
their experiences at Marist-all
the way from "frosh" to "grad."
Mo Demarco, senior designer
-
said that it is a combinationof
everything that
ts
learned
throughout th~
·
years .
.
"It's a showcase of what we've
beeri
ta
,
ught throughout our four
years, and the expression of our
-
_
talen
.
ts
.
that we h
_
ave devel-
oped,'
.
' she said
.
Such a showcase will involve
12 seniodlesigners, each with
their
own
collection to
-
be
judged by the likes of such
prominent- fodustry names as
Nicole Miller, Kenneth Cole,
Marc Jacobs, Isaac Mizrahi, and
Todd OJdfiiuri, who have allpar-
ticipated ip pas~ show~.
.
This

year's most renowned
judge
wiJ(be
Madame Pauline
Trigere,
.
a 90 year-old French
designer and entrepreneur, who
all are extremely excited to
please.
The judges' eyes will
be
tan-
talized with the beauty of
springtime, the principle theme
of this year's show.
Collections will center on the
divine delicacy of flowers and
gemstones, the works of
-
Botticelli, the "swing" of the
Twenties, and the lure of the sea
with themes of pirates and fish-
ing
.
.
Awarded
wi11
be prizes for the
Best Collection, Best Garment,
arid Most Outstanding Design.
Following the show, which is
presented twice to an audience
of about 700 people, the seniors
will head
.
to Ne.w York City on
May 4for yet
'
another presenta-
tion of theirja}l!nts, with the
department chain, Lord
&
Tay-
lor underwriting the show.
Capping
all
this excitement, the
seniors and Mrs. Csordas plan
on taking
a
riice, long, well-de-
served vacation.
"I'm disappearing!" said
Csordas.
Tickets for the show on the
29th are completely sold out, but
there will however,
be
eventual
access to some of the collec-
tions on the Marist Fashion web
page.
Circle photos/ Joe Scotto
".I didn't win, but I had a great
time," he said.
Bob Bammann, another mem-
ber of the league also said the
tournament competition was a
good experience.
"It has many great players in
it," he said.
The Marist College billiards
league is a group that has a lot
of pool talent and enthusiasm.
Bammann said he enjoys be-
ing a member.
"It is very competitive and I
have had a lot of fun," he said.
J •
.
1
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.
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THEJCIRCLE.
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features
.
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PAGE6
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capac;1ty,Jet aI011e quarters).
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=-.
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Mari, the fourth
.
ghost's name
So which Miqway masterpiece
___
chul:>~y;ye!Iow,hefg._ii.iid he~o
.
in
is changed to Sue
.
But why?
do Marist students prefer; Pac
-
·
are O\'.·ershadowed by..today's
Eighteen years after it first hit
Dan Tyburski, junior commu-
Man or Ms. Pac Man?
_
_
_
advanced game
_
systems,
_
the
the arcades
,
Ms. Pac Man is StiU
nications major
,
surmises that
Mark Wallace, junior corn-
true success of the game can
be
the perfect
_
solution for a ho-
the per_fect namefor the fourth
putersciencemajor,saidthathe
,
mea~uredby)ts place in pop
huin Friday night.
·
ghost would be
,
Flo, not Sue.
favors Pac Man.
;
_
·

_
_
_

-
'
·
culture. Stuff.ed anim~s, co
_
ff~e
The game's presence in the
_
"Sue is so 'plain-
:.
Jane,' but Flo
"I don'tthink (Ms. Pac Man)
.
mugs, and a cartoon series are
MaristbiUiardsroomintheStu-
.
has that Southern waitress
is as good as the
:
original,
-
be"'
justaportionoftheplethoraof
dent Cente
i:
gives the room a bit
style," he said .
. -
"If
you were
cause Pac Man is a 01ile!ltonefo
Pa~-paraphemalia that are part
of a throwback appearance
.
ordering
_
grits, they would be
video garne te(;hnology,» he
of the Pac
-
Man legacy.
:
Suddenly it is
1981
(the year of delivered by Flo, not Sue
/
'
said. ''To put
;
it plainly though
,
Ms. Pac
·
man is sure
to
be a
the game'.s release) all over
Actually, there are a number
Ms. Pac Man is just Pac Man
fixture
in
theMaristgameroom,
again, and you are scrounging
of differences between the origi-
with a bow on his head
.
"
_
and in our hearts, for years to
for quarters from strangers.
nal
-
Pac Man and Ms. Pac Man
_
Jon Murray,juniorcommuni-
come. The tried and true cliche
Never mind that some Marist
beyond the change in the name
_
cations major said,he
'.
disagrees
,
-
that you can nQt beat the clas
-
freshman might have been born
of the
·
vexatious fourth ghost.
arguing that Ms. _Pac Man is
sics is substantiated once again
in
1981.
.
_
There are four different mazes
superior to many of today's
by the game's passing the test
Ms. Pac Man is more than just that increase in difficulty in Ms.
games.
___
-
_
_
_
,
--
-
of time
.

- :
, •
2-bit entertainment for Marist's
Pac Man, as opposed to J?ac
"
Every
-
one gets these new 20-
,
Bill Mekrut, senior political
video game fanatics,
..
Man's one level. The cinematic
bit video systems or whatever
science/English double major
Brian Wills
,
freshman
.
com-
scenes between levels in Ms.
it is, with
•'
all the'se
·
extreme
Bill Melcrutsurmned up the Ms.
puter science majo
r'
agrees with
Pac Man tell the enthralling
-
graphics
/!
he
'
said
:
f'But Ms
:
Pac
Pac Man exp~rience.
·
.
--
-
this
-
__
_
_ ,
.
,
,
-
.
_
storyofMr.andMs.PacMan's
Manisthesugarinmycoffee.,,
-.
-
"Ms;PacManisaniiistifo-
"
Ms. Pac
·
Manis
~
-
pixilated
-
love gone astray.
_
Despite winning the hearts of tion that we should not allowto
bundle of fun," he
·
said.
While Pac Man is an unend-
nostalgic video gamers, Ms.
erode into the technical mael-
Ms
.
Pac Man is essentially the
ing repetition of the same see-
-
Pac Man is viewed as
a
thing of
·_
stro:tn
;
as we have allowed other
same as the original: chase four
nario at incrementally intensify-
the past
_
by many Sony
traditional and wholesome pas
~
ghosts around aimless mazes,
ing levels of difficulty, it is actu-
Playstation
,
and Nintendo 64
times," Mekrut said
.
,
seeking "power pellets" to
ally possible to defeat the gaine ,
..
addicts. Junior qomputer Sc
,
i-
-
-
_
Checkout
h(tp:/pacman
:
com
-
thwart your enemies. The one
of Ms
.
Pac Man
_
(though
l fpr
ehceinajoi-Dave Yacobuccideni-
-
-
fourioreinfo.
_
.
.
'
'
-
·_
.
.
.
.
·
_
-~
:.
.·,
.-..
.
.
..

.
.
:
-
_
Then
s
·
top
in and see us at;
MILLMAN'S T-SHIRT
FACTORY
_
12 Fowler ave., Poughkeepsie
(Take Route 9 South to 4~55 East
12
traffic lights 1B/ock down on left.)
454-2255 FAX 454-5771
14\11\Vlliia
.
Serving the Marist Community since 1978





















































i-·
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TH£CIRCL£
.
APRIL22,i999
Features
.
:·~
~
i
.,k
,.
_
._
)
,.
-
,
~
.
http://www.art.com
Do you have in interest
in
art and art history? Then
http://www.art.com. is the site for y~u.
In this site you can go through a virtual art gallery of the 20th century.
It
even gives information on
the lives of the artists, what events shocked the world at the time, and scientific discoveries made
from the era.
·
If
you become a member of ArtClique (sm) you can get 20 percent off of all art purchases
.
This
includes framed and unframed art. You also receive a free print with your first purchase.
As
a
member you will get notices on upcoming
art
forums, art auctions, and chats with special
guests in online forums. You also hear about special contests, classes, new products in the
·
Art
Gallery, and other promotions throughout the year.
·
Want to buy a gift for an art-loving friend? This site offers plenty.
So
if
you're a fan of Van Gogh or Monet,
http://www.art.com. is the place to go.
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
are
at the
center of what is h
.
a
_
p-
pening,
possibly
even the cause of all
,
·
that happens.
It
is
.
quite a responsibility;
·
;
_,,_
butyou'll come
.
tore-
,-
.
.
alize that you
·
wear-
fr
well. the·Leo Moon
adds a party atmo-
sphere to the driving
force of Mars. Be bold
in your pursuit of
happiness and it
might surprise you
just how easily avail-
able it is. You attract
people who can match
your pace, and today
you'll have quite a
crowd in the
mix
with
:
you .
.
·,
.
.
.
.-
.
.
.

.
.
_
·
:
:!
.
:~~~
.
:.
ri:.~~~:i
,
stubborn as
: ·
the
.
Moon moves into Leo.
The last thing you
"7ant
to do is trust
SQmeone else's judg-
ment, although your
own may be wavering
as well. Let some of
the hot air out
of your head and
reign in your self-righ-
teousness
·
in ordei: to
get through your
daily routine. Creative
energy may
be
wasted
by engaging in re-
venge
fantasies.
Know that when this
energy is applied
elsewhere it will find
you a way to avoid a
power struggle.
[i
GEMINI:
You,Gemini,
are a great story teller
at
the
best of times but
even you can some-
ti mes forget the
punch line. You'll
have them so lost in
the moment and en-
gaged in your tales
though, that they will
be willing to cut you
some clack. The enter-
,
tainment value that
you are providing is
well
·
worth the. wait.
Your intellect
will come
to your rescue. -Try
not
io
make
light of
issues that others take _
seriously
in
_order
'.
to
guaiantee'the besfre-
action .
.
CANCER:
The higher
your profile, the
greater your chances
of getting egg on your
face. As long as you
.
have been warned
you can avoid any em-
barrassment. People
might just think that it
is another one of your
eccentricities.

Being
outright outrageous
may be in the mix, but
·
be
sure to
_
cater your
actionsto fit the mood
ofthetrioment. Impor-
tant transitions go
much more smoothly
when conducted in
private. Use your
excess creative en-
ergy to get the best
value in any interac-
tion.
LEO:
Extra dashes of
soul
_
.
and pinches of
passion make for a
brilliant day.
It
makes
for the perfect mixture
with a result that will
send your heart soar-
ing. You are light re-
flecting off water, dou-
bling the shine and
heat. Your radiance is
exuded from every as-
pect
of your being. Ev-
erything you under-
take today begins or
ends with a flourish.
Know that the warmth
that is coming from
within you will keep
you cozy long after
the sun has gone
down and the forecast
for the next few days
is in your favor.
VIRGO:
A glut of
new data might make
you want to throw up
your hands in the air
in frustration.
It
is
much easier to go help
_
,
,
._,
.
c
,
oJher~
:
to
_
qay when
:
·
your desk is buried
.
·
urider an avalanche of
confusion; Let your
desire to be orga-
nized, though;

take
over before every-
thing comes tumbling
down. Do your best
.
to avoid the overbear-
ing people that may
frequent your
interactions and you
will be somewhat
saved from feeling like
the underdog. Know
though that most
·
people love to root for
the underdog, so you
may find the support
.
that you really need.
LIBRA:
Ideas, ideals
and ideolqgies are far
.
more important today
than actually getting
down in the trenches
and doing the work
.
Delve into the aca-
demic way of think-
ing,
·
ditch the minor
details, and find a
friend with which you
can brainstorm
.
Oth-
ers may look to you
for all of the answers,
but use this to spark
further debate. Push-
ing the envelope will
raise the level of dis-
cussion to a whole
new level. A good cup
of coffee and a good
friend have the poten-
tial to keep you satis-
fied for hours.
SCORPIO:
Your
boss or some other
authority figure may
be a big problem to-
day so try your best
to remain calm. If you
can stay by the side-
lines the problem will
not be defined by
you. Be warned that
there is potential for a
small career crisis -
you have been well
warned though which
will
help you deal
with
it when it arises. Use
your Scorpionic pow-
ers of concentration
until you are content
that all outbursts of
frustration are out of
.
other's hearing range.
SAGITTARIUS:
As
the Moon passes into
Leo, you may find
yourself eager to take
inventory of the great
things that have come
your way. Put them in
order and file them in
an t:asy access place
in your mind. Rooting
through all of them
will just lead to con-
fusion, although it is
likely to make you
smile at the fortune
that has chosen you
as a benefactor. Be
willing to open up and
accept the mystery.
Some things just can-
not be accounted for
and the attempt to do
so will only detract
from the fun.
CAPRICORN:
You
have probably had
better days than the
one that will greet you
today.
Try
to avoid
contracts dealing with
shared resources to-
day. You may want to
look at the situation
with practicality and
figure out
if
your deal-
ing with an ego, or
with the real person.
Things are not likely
to be as they seem.
The facades have
been build that the
masks have been
donned in order to in-
fluence the reality that
you believe that you
are viewing.
AQUARIUS:
A
sur-
prise party becomes
surprising
for every-
.
, .
one when friends
· -
from different camps
attend. Both
sides
though, are wise
enough to be open to
the ways of the other.
The encounter has the
potential to have
you wavering be-
tween two extremes.
Compromise between
the two sides will not
come easily, but may
result in a mutual re-
spect between the par-
ties and the party. Ro-
mantic partners may
contradict one an-
other in their daily
ways. Aquarians who
take it upon them-
selves to truly free
their spirits will have
an
excellent day.
PISCES:
Pamper your
~assions and take the
time to recharge your
battery.
It
is an oppor-
tune time to do
some-
thing nice for yourself
right now. Other
people may have fixed
ideas of the way
things should be, but
know that you don't
need to conform to
any set strategy. In
fact, getting caught
up in the daily dramas
of those around you
has the potential to be
quite detrimental.
Mind your own busi-
ness and keep your-
self close to the grind-
stone.
You know how
to find the path to
your own success· if
you can keep
fo-
cused. Being set in
stone is against your
changeable nature.
I
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I
;
APRIL22~1999
Email hoax addresses
more important
_
issue
PAGES
will print-their
last
.
issue on
.
Thur_s;,
,
i
Ap:ril
- _
-
29,
-
199
·
9
for)he
.
.
.
.
.
_
.-
.
.
·
spring
.
semester.
'
Stibmissiondea.diines
_
for tll.isissue are Fri.,
April23
at5 p_.m.
·
Don.
't forgetto visit
us
online!
·
WWl1J.academic.marlst edul
circle
'
Student
:
clarifjes
i
position
on
,
·
catholic~bashing'
F.ditor:
In response toNikBonapartis' rebuttal of my article (April 15, 1999) on the
treatment of homosexuals oil this campus, I would like to clarify
.
a few
.
points, as
the purpose of iny
.
_
article was misunderstood. My editorial was in response to
Editor:
Christine Hapeman' s letter to the editor in the March 4 edition of Tlie Circle,
in
I am sure that everyone has either heard about, or received a copy of the
,

·
·
which she opened
"If
you thinkMarist shows intol~rance toward~ gays, you
·
notorious erriail
'
letter that.was recently sent to
_
allMaristB account holders
;
In
'
·
-
.
· ·
oughtto be inthe
'
shoes of a
.
practicing Roman Catholic;''
·
The implication of this
short, a young lady was,allegedly, informing a few
-
young men that had slept:-with
"'
statement and the rest
of het
letter was that Marisils iritolerarit towards Catho-
:
her; wherfshewas highly intoxicated; of the fact that she is HIV positive and may
,
_,,
Jics,.even more
.
so
.
than.itistoward homosexuals . ..The
,
purpose.. of.m)!. article was
have infected
.
them with the virus.
:
.
. · .·

•,
to assert two points
·
: l)Cathblics are no oppressed at Marist (as seen by the
'As
a returning adult member of the student
_
body I was at first taken batk by the
.
celebration of Catholic holidays; etc.) and 2) Homosexuals are in fact persecuted
content. As I contemplated the issues af hand I wondered whether
-
this might
.
be a
·
at Marist. I simply contrasted the treatment of each of these groups on campus.
hoax. Either way, (I hear it was
a
hoax), I think-that everyone on
·
campus
·
can learn
·:
·
No y.rhere in my article did!_ accuse the Catholic members ofMaristof discrimi-
something from this. First,
rici
one should ever take advantage of ari
·
infox.1cated
.
natingagainst homosexuals;! did not bianfe
'
anyone in particullirfor this pre ju-
.
person.
It
is tantamount to rape and is
stated
as such in the student
.
handbook.
·

dice. Further
,
ldid not engagein any Catholic bashing-
:
-! simply stated the truth
Second, it is very dangerous in
·
today's society tohave_
'.
unprotected
·
sex
_
with
:
'-':_.
_

·
·
that MaristGollege maintains
':
a traditional Catholic envirclnll!en!, Never did I
anyone; The jolly isnotworth your
life!
Aios
·
is everywhere. It is a
fact
of life that.
·
mention or imply
.
that
the
Catholic Church is ."the root of all evils .. '.'
•.
:
i
you should allleamquickly. · _ _
__

_
. _
_
·
·
__
· ..
-
_
,
_
_
As for your belieftllat it is not a "badthing to have
_
God present on our
This being true, brings up anotherissue:{must condemn tlle decisionmaking
campus." I did not"make a subjective statement as to wh~ther
:
the presence of
body of this college for taking a to~llyirresppnsible stance""of prohibiting the sale God \Yas
_.
bad or good. I
simply
maintained that our Cqn~titution advoca~es ~
-
of condoms oil this campus. I reaj.ize thafthis
·
college has deep rnotsjn the Roman separation
_
df C~urch aiid ~tat~. We are noJonger
_
a CathoHf
'
sch90LWe receive
Catholic Church
i
but today we are
a:
private instjtution that receiyes feder~
.
federal funding; ~erefor~, ~e:Cisfon-making a(this
_
~~hQ
_
Qi§!iouldnotbe based on
funding. The University of Notre Diiroe; however, is a Catholic institution and
.
:
it
CathoHc rri~rality unless M_~stwants to revert to i
.
~
~
st~~s
~
~
.'
~ .Cllt)lolic
they sell condoms
on
their
:
crunpus.
·Today
condoms are
'
riotused for birth corttrol;
.
institutjbn aild relinquisfrallof. the federal funding i~'.r~e~ve'sarin~alif
;
·
there are
:
shots and pills that s¢rv
·
e tha( purpos1.
<
They are used for pr9tection

. '
·
,
· ·
twas
~so di~LP,rti'ed,
by
,
the w~y
iri.
_
which the AIDS
v!.fu~
i
q~
equ~tefwi.th
against
"
disease;
>
,
.
,· ·. .
,

·, ..
.
.
,
,
,
_
:
.
.
.
·..
.
_•
:
_
_ _

.
:<
·. _
,
h9mosextialify
,,
with
_
th~ iI1t~1_1~oii
'
of~howing tJieS~hur~h
_
'.~}qlerajis~IO:watds
_ .
'
As a parentofthree children, boys aiid a girl,1 am an advocate for
:
abstinence,
.
homosexuals.
AIDS
if not
_
a
gay
disease.: It does not single
-
~
,
ufhoJriqs,exu~s
:
It
is
a
(for
my children at least), as the best form ofpreyention for both birth and
.
disease that everyorieis
'
susceptiblefo. How then, can
:
oiie
"
argue
i
tha(the Churclfs
disease. lwiff do my best to convince them
to
abstain from premarital sex. But, I
care for people with
AIDS
is proof of the Churs;h's tolerance towards hQinosexuals?
will
not put my head in the sand whileJhey go out into the world, have unpro--
.
·
·
Finally, I wantto address an isslle that can
be
debated
_
indefinitely."The author
·
tected sex,
_
arid just possibly contract the HIV virus. This risk is too great.
.
menti,:med thathe wa.s
_
unable to "fJnd the connectiqn ~ef:Ween Cathoµc::islll and the
·
I believe that whoever D1ade t4e decisio11
_
to bad condoms was probably
.
.
unfair treatment of gays.''. Please let us be realistic. I
am
riot by any mearis implying
thinking that it would cut down on the sexual activity on campus, but I Qelieve
·
that individual Catholics are intolerant of hompsexµals-1 l<nowm?DY Catholics who
you are wrong. I also realize that many of the parents of students on this campus
.
are extreme1y
·
1olerant towards homosexuals'. However, the Catholic Church takes a
are Catholic and do not condone premarital se~. That does riot inean that we wish
stance against homosexuality, as jt is a labeled~ sin
.
This means the CathoHc Church
.
to
deny our children access to disease protection.
.
is intolerant ofhomose~ualio/, plain and simply. As for the remark about the Cardinal,
.
The campus administration needs to realize several factors:
_
intolerance does not always come in the form of violence. Admonishing violence
1) The student body is a diverse group of individuals, many of which are not
_
toward homosexuals is riot the same thing as being tolerant ofliomosexuality.
Catholic.
·
·
·
2) Many of the students have no transportation and are therefore reliant on the
Debra Alfano

school to provide for all of their needs.
.
.
junior
3) People between the ages of 15 and 25 are in the greatestrisk for contracting
·
, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
~~~y
of the student body are sexually active
-
adults.
··
.
·
.i,-
:
\
-
_
TH£
(;}£(CL£.
The morally correct thing to do in· this situation is to provide access to cli~~e
protection. I personally will not send my children to a campus that does not
.
.
-recognize the need for making such protection available to the student body. J\nd
I bet that many other parents would not either. I hope that this fact
qoes
riot get
·
·
around too much or enrollment may just drop off, or perhaps
it
wiU
die
off first
_
!
'
..
Janet Prince
political science major
~*
Submission deadline is Friday at
5
p.m.
Our last issue is Thurs., April 29, 1999
**
Amanda
Bradley
·
Editor-in-chief
·
ElmlbethCarrubba
-
·
··
Managing Editor
-
:
,
:
·;
Katriru,\
.
Ftlchsenberger
,
Tho~Ryan
Features
_
Editqr
·
sporis''Editor
-
.
.
.
..
·.
Chris
Grogan
NewsEd#or
.
:
·
-Tora
Quinn
'
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
HZAL.




















































































































···
APRIL 22,1999
·
··
--.:...
:
"'
·
-
..
- - - - - - ~ - - - - - - - - - . - T _ h _ e -
.
~-ie-~-s-e-
.
~-p-re_s_s_e_d_
·
~-n""th-ese
pages
are not neces~arily those of
The Circle
..
..
,
Senior offers motivation and
.
.
thanks to Marist Community
.
byTOMSCHWAB
.
Marist. One reason
-is
because
Marist studetlts have a real zeal
Before! get ready to leave
for developing close
·
relation-
this sc;hool come May,
_
there
ships with their teachers. The
are few matters I have wanted
latter involves the incredible
to address· for some time. For
.
.
amount-of students who actu-
.
the last four years
.
(have
.
ally work side-by~side with
·
been witnessed to
·
and have
those in the administration. As
absorbed an unbelievable
a student, I am not condoning
amount of inside information
or
·
supp()rting any of the reasons
taking place within the closed
I
.
mentioned.
:.
Nevertheless,
·
as
.
.
doors of this school, partly
an aspiqng
·
jo~rnalist,Lwould
because it was my duty to
_
do
:
like tc(thank students
'.
and ad-·
,
so as
;
news
.
°<l,irector
.
for th
_
e

.
:
,
m_inistraJors
who participated in
college television station, but
>
this alliance ofrum
_
ors, innuen-
·
.
also because of niy follpw
.
.
does,
and
speculation, which,
students.
I
can't express how
inevitably, led to a plethora of
manYrumors come attached
exciting news stories for me to
with.every new student I
en~
cover. I must also
_
give thanks
counter.
.
to
'
the
·media.
savvy students I
At times, these rumors be-
.
have worked with at one time or
came sources for me. Some-
another.
times these rumors would
Whether it was writing for
The
..
check out while other times
Circle,
reporting for WMCR, or
they.were non~ense. I think
anchoring on MCTV,
I
always
there are two main reasons
found there
·
to be a nice part-
..
why students know so much
nership between the three me-
behind.-the-scenes
'infp
?t
dia out}ets on this
·
campus. In
Circle file photo
Marist's green awaits the last class of the year before the end of the
millenium. (That's 1999, of course.)
the past, the partnership al-
lowed us to swap stories and
aid in each others reporting.
Lately, however, competition
seems to be creeping in, so much
so that it is destroying relations
between the clubs.
Moreover,
I
tried to make ad-
vancements in all of the
.
three
·
clubs I was once affiliated with,
both with the
administration and with the stu-
dents: My most successful
achievement thus far has been
the latest advancements within
the MCTV news department. In
fact, I found the spirit of most
students within the news club
to be refreshing. They seem to
Please see
SENIOR,
pg.
10 ...
PAGE 9
Student
shares life in
close family
byJILLGIOCONDO
Some have said that the ex-
tended family has gone the way
of hula-hoops and poodle skirts,
becoming part of the nostalgia
people
seek
to reclaim. My fam-
ily must be the exception to the
norm then because I grew up
surrounded by my extended
family.
The mere fact that within fif-
teen minutes of my house are
all of my relatives, except for
one aunt and uncle who moved
to California, seems to boggle
people's minds and many of my
friends have deemed it unusual.
I
often have to agree with them
especially when family gather-
ings start to tum crazy or I feel
like I am trapped in a situation
comedy. Other times I see how
important my family is and how
- - - - - - , · lucky
l
was
:
to grow up sur-
~;
~iij{~'1glt
" .
·
..
'.t
\'.
.
~
.
:i
1~
,
w~
·
Kaii
>
£~•w~
-

;
/'
':<}.
:
•;:/.···:
.<
tinen ...
·.•·••··<••
.
}~i-~11 ..
:
nliser-,
:<·
Oi
i
J
!lil .
'
rl
i
'
k n
.
:
.·.
1
·
·
·
·
·•·
·
·
..
·
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·
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r

·
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y
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·

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:.··.· •.
c a n
:,
.
:··.

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w
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:
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...

.

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.
Ge
.
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.
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.
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-
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··
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.:,··
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. •
··
.
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.

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. · .
-
.
t'note
}. ~
~elitgegre~ ~ng
:
~l,9_mately
;
·
~

·
/'Je_as,esee
~AR,
'
p'g;10 ..
:
·
-
.?
·,
·
-/>
-
:·.-
::c-::-·
::-<-::.-
:
\
.?-
)=
-
_.--:":::::::-:.-
·=:·''.:-,?)::\:
\
·
::~
:
/:/}~;{/
" .
,,
.,-
,
-,._·
... ·.•:
rounded by family members.
So how
large is large?
I
have
five aunts, five uncles, one
grandmother ( one is deceased),
one grandfather (one
is
de-
ceased), and five cousins. Then
there is my immediate family,
which also numbers five: two
younger brothers, mom and dad
and me.
One of the first things about
being surrounded by my ex-
tended family is the comedy it
tends
to provide. Growing up
and even now
I
often realize
how much my family tends to
resemble the stereotyped large
family in the media. Sunday din-
ners at my Italian grandfather's
house resemble pasta commer-
cials with piles of food, every-
one
.
talking at once, and just
general chaos. I even have a
Great Aunt Bertha to complete
the ste
-
reotypical large family.
Vacations are also often taken
en masse. Before I was born my
parents, maternal grandparents,
and several of my aunts and
uncles would take trips together.
This warranted the purchase of
a twelve-person tent! Trips with
a large number of people that I
remember include various camp-
ing trips where we took up three
or more sites and a trip to Myrtle
Beach.
These trips often resulted in
more comedic stories to add to
the family scrapbook including
the Giocondo/Wolpink curse;
that it will always pour at least
one day when we are camping.
There was one camping trip .
where fifteen of us ended up
crammed like sardines into a tiny
pop-up camper because the
tents flooded!
Please see
FAMILY,
pg.
JO ..•


I
;
APRIL22~1999
Email hoax addresses
more important
_
issue
PAGES
will print-their
last
.
issue on
.
Thur_s;,
,
i
Ap:ril
- _
-
29,
-
199
·
9
for)he
.
.
.
.
.
_
.-
.
.
·
spring
.
semester.
'
Stibmissiondea.diines
_
for tll.isissue are Fri.,
April23
at5 p_.m.
·
Don.
't forgetto visit
us
online!
·
WWl1J.academic.marlst edul
circle
'
Student
:
clarifjes
i
position
on
,
·
catholic~bashing'
F.ditor:
In response toNikBonapartis' rebuttal of my article (April 15, 1999) on the
treatment of homosexuals oil this campus, I would like to clarify
.
a few
.
points, as
the purpose of iny
.
_
article was misunderstood. My editorial was in response to
Editor:
Christine Hapeman' s letter to the editor in the March 4 edition of Tlie Circle,
in
I am sure that everyone has either heard about, or received a copy of the
,

·
·
which she opened
"If
you thinkMarist shows intol~rance toward~ gays, you
·
notorious erriail
'
letter that.was recently sent to
_
allMaristB account holders
;
In
'
·
-
.
· ·
oughtto be inthe
'
shoes of a
.
practicing Roman Catholic;''
·
The implication of this
short, a young lady was,allegedly, informing a few
-
young men that had slept:-with
"'
statement and the rest
of het
letter was that Marisils iritolerarit towards Catho-
:
her; wherfshewas highly intoxicated; of the fact that she is HIV positive and may
,
_,,
Jics,.even more
.
so
.
than.itistoward homosexuals . ..The
,
purpose.. of.m)!. article was
have infected
.
them with the virus.
:
.
. · .·

•,
to assert two points
·
: l)Cathblics are no oppressed at Marist (as seen by the
'As
a returning adult member of the student
_
body I was at first taken batk by the
.
celebration of Catholic holidays; etc.) and 2) Homosexuals are in fact persecuted
content. As I contemplated the issues af hand I wondered whether
-
this might
.
be a
·
at Marist. I simply contrasted the treatment of each of these groups on campus.
hoax. Either way, (I hear it was
a
hoax), I think-that everyone on
·
campus
·
can learn
·:
·
No y.rhere in my article did!_ accuse the Catholic members ofMaristof discrimi-
something from this. First,
rici
one should ever take advantage of ari
·
infox.1cated
.
natingagainst homosexuals;! did not bianfe
'
anyone in particullirfor this pre ju-
.
person.
It
is tantamount to rape and is
stated
as such in the student
.
handbook.
·

dice. Further
,
ldid not engagein any Catholic bashing-
:
-! simply stated the truth
Second, it is very dangerous in
·
today's society tohave_
'.
unprotected
·
sex
_
with
:
'-':_.
_

·
·
that MaristGollege maintains
':
a traditional Catholic envirclnll!en!, Never did I
anyone; The jolly isnotworth your
life!
Aios
·
is everywhere. It is a
fact
of life that.
·
mention or imply
.
that
the
Catholic Church is ."the root of all evils .. '.'
•.
:
i
you should allleamquickly. · _ _
__

_
. _
_
·
·
__
· ..
-
_
,
_
_
As for your belieftllat it is not a "badthing to have
_
God present on our
This being true, brings up anotherissue:{must condemn tlle decisionmaking
campus." I did not"make a subjective statement as to wh~ther
:
the presence of
body of this college for taking a to~llyirresppnsible stance""of prohibiting the sale God \Yas
_.
bad or good. I
simply
maintained that our Cqn~titution advoca~es ~
-
of condoms oil this campus. I reaj.ize thafthis
·
college has deep rnotsjn the Roman separation
_
df C~urch aiid ~tat~. We are noJonger
_
a CathoHf
'
sch90LWe receive
Catholic Church
i
but today we are
a:
private instjtution that receiyes feder~
.
federal funding; ~erefor~, ~e:Cisfon-making a(this
_
~~hQ
_
Qi§!iouldnotbe based on
funding. The University of Notre Diiroe; however, is a Catholic institution and
.
:
it
CathoHc rri~rality unless M_~stwants to revert to i
.
~
~
st~~s
~
~
.'
~ .Cllt)lolic
they sell condoms
on
their
:
crunpus.
·Today
condoms are
'
riotused for birth corttrol;
.
institutjbn aild relinquisfrallof. the federal funding i~'.r~e~ve'sarin~alif
;
·
there are
:
shots and pills that s¢rv
·
e tha( purpos1.
<
They are used for pr9tection

. '
·
,
· ·
twas
~so di~LP,rti'ed,
by
,
the w~y
iri.
_
which the AIDS
v!.fu~
i
q~
equ~tefwi.th
against
"
disease;
>
,
.
,· ·. .
,

·, ..
.
.
,
,
,
_
:
.
.
.
·..
.
_•
:
_
_ _

.
:<
·. _
,
h9mosextialify
,,
with
_
th~ iI1t~1_1~oii
'
of~howing tJieS~hur~h
_
'.~}qlerajis~IO:watds
_ .
'
As a parentofthree children, boys aiid a girl,1 am an advocate for
:
abstinence,
.
homosexuals.
AIDS
if not
_
a
gay
disease.: It does not single
-
~
,
ufhoJriqs,exu~s
:
It
is
a
(for
my children at least), as the best form ofpreyention for both birth and
.
disease that everyorieis
'
susceptiblefo. How then, can
:
oiie
"
argue
i
tha(the Churclfs
disease. lwiff do my best to convince them
to
abstain from premarital sex. But, I
care for people with
AIDS
is proof of the Churs;h's tolerance towards hQinosexuals?
will
not put my head in the sand whileJhey go out into the world, have unpro--
.
·
·
Finally, I wantto address an isslle that can
be
debated
_
indefinitely."The author
·
tected sex,
_
arid just possibly contract the HIV virus. This risk is too great.
.
menti,:med thathe wa.s
_
unable to "fJnd the connectiqn ~ef:Ween Cathoµc::islll and the
·
I believe that whoever D1ade t4e decisio11
_
to bad condoms was probably
.
.
unfair treatment of gays.''. Please let us be realistic. I
am
riot by any mearis implying
thinking that it would cut down on the sexual activity on campus, but I Qelieve
·
that individual Catholics are intolerant of hompsexµals-1 l<nowm?DY Catholics who
you are wrong. I also realize that many of the parents of students on this campus
.
are extreme1y
·
1olerant towards homosexuals'. However, the Catholic Church takes a
are Catholic and do not condone premarital se~. That does riot inean that we wish
stance against homosexuality, as jt is a labeled~ sin
.
This means the CathoHc Church
.
to
deny our children access to disease protection.
.
is intolerant ofhomose~ualio/, plain and simply. As for the remark about the Cardinal,
.
The campus administration needs to realize several factors:
_
intolerance does not always come in the form of violence. Admonishing violence
1) The student body is a diverse group of individuals, many of which are not
_
toward homosexuals is riot the same thing as being tolerant ofliomosexuality.
Catholic.
·
·
·
2) Many of the students have no transportation and are therefore reliant on the
Debra Alfano

school to provide for all of their needs.
.
.
junior
3) People between the ages of 15 and 25 are in the greatestrisk for contracting
·
, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
~~~y
of the student body are sexually active
-
adults.
··
.
·
.i,-
:
\
-
_
TH£
(;}£(CL£.
The morally correct thing to do in· this situation is to provide access to cli~~e
protection. I personally will not send my children to a campus that does not
.
.
-recognize the need for making such protection available to the student body. J\nd
I bet that many other parents would not either. I hope that this fact
qoes
riot get
·
·
around too much or enrollment may just drop off, or perhaps
it
wiU
die
off first
_
!
'
..
Janet Prince
political science major
~*
Submission deadline is Friday at
5
p.m.
Our last issue is Thurs., April 29, 1999
**
Amanda
Bradley
·
Editor-in-chief
·
ElmlbethCarrubba
-
·
··
Managing Editor
-
:
,
:
·;
Katriru,\
.
Ftlchsenberger
,
Tho~Ryan
Features
_
Editqr
·
sporis''Editor
-
.
.
.
..
·.
Chris
Grogan
NewsEd#or
.
:
·
-Tora
Quinn
'
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
HZAL.







































.
·
·
APRIL
22,1999
·
·
·
···-

.
-
.
- - - - - - - - ~ - - ; . ; . . - - . - - - -...
_
-'f_h_e_v-ie""."w-s ...
_
e-
.
~~p•r-es
...
s_e_d ..
-
~ ..
n ..
th-ese
pages
are not necessarily those of
The Circle
senior offers motivation and
thanks to Marist Community
.
byTOMSCHWAB
.
.
.
.
·
Marist. One reason
-is
because
Marist studeilts have a real zeal
B~fore I get ready to leave
for developing close relation-
this sc;hool come May,
_
there
ships with their teachers. The
are
few matters
I
have warited
latter involves the incredible
to address· for some time. For
amount-of students who actu-
.
the last four years Lhave
.
ally work side-by~side with
·
been witnessed to
·
and have
those in the administration. As
absorbed an unbelievable
a student,
I
am not condoning
amount of inside information
or
·
supp<lrting any of the reasons
taking place within the closed
I
.
mentioned.
:
.
Nevertheless,
·
as
.
doors of this school, partly
·
an aspiri_nfjournaiist,Lwould
..
.
because it was my duty to
_
do
· :
like tcdliank students
:
and ad-·
.
.
so as
;
news
.
°d.irec
_
tor
.
for the
' _:
ministra{ors
who participated in
college television station, but
·

ibis alliance ofrun:i
.
ors, innuen-
also because of rriy foll<>w
..
does,
and
·
sp
·
eculation, which,
students.
I
can't express how
inevitably, led to
a
plethora of
manYrumors come attached
exciting news stories for me to
with.every new stude,it
I
en~
cover.
I
must also give thanks
counter.
to the
·
media savvy students I
At times, these rumors be-
.
have worked with at one time or
came sources for me. Some-
another.
times these rumors would
Whether it was writing for
The
check out while other times
Circle,
reporting for WMCR, or
they.were non~ense.
I think
anchoring on MCTV, I always
there are two mainreasons
found there
·
·
to be a nice part-
why students know so much
nership between the three me-
behind_-the~scenes 'info
?t
dia out}et~

on this
·
c~mpus. In
Circle file photo
Marist's green awaits the last class of the year before the end of the
millenium. (That's 1999, of course.)
the past, the partnership al-
lowed us to swap stodes and
aid in each others reporting.
Lately, however, competition
seems to
be creeping in, so much
so that it is destroying relations
between the clubs.
Moreover,
I
tried to make ad-
vancements in
.
all of the
.
three
· clubs I was once affiliated with,
both with the
administration and with the stu-
dents: My most successful
achievement thus far has been
the latest advancements within
the MCTV news department. In
fact, I found the spirit of most
students within the news club
to be refreshing. They seem to
Please
see
SENIOR,
pg.
10 ...
PAGE 9
Student
shares life in
close family
by
JILLGIOCONDO
Some have said that the ex-
tended family has gone the way
of hula-hoops and poodle skirts,
becoming part of the nostalgia
people seek
to
reclaim. My fam-
ily must be the exception to the
norm then because I grew up
surrounded by my extended
family.
The mere fact that within fif-
teen minutes of my house are
aU of my relatives, except for
one aunt and uncle who moved
to California, seems to boggle
people's minds and many of my
friends have deemed it unusual.
I
often have to agree with them
especially when family gather-
ings start to tum crazy or I feel
like
I
am
trapped in a situation
comedy. Other times I see how
important my family is and how
=..,.,.,.,,,.,,.,,=== -----,
.
luc~y
I was
.
to
grow up sur-
rounded by family members.
So
how
large is large?
I
have
five aunts, five uncles, one
grandmother ( one is deceased),
one grandfather (one is de-
ceased), and five cousins. Then
there is my immediate family,
which also numbers five: two
younger brothers, mom and dad
and me.
One of the first things about
being surrounded by my ex-
tended family is the comedy it
tends
_
to provide. Growing up
and even now
I
often realize
how much my family tends to
resemble the stereotyped large
family in the media. Sunday din-
ners at my Italian grandfather's
house resemble pasta commer-
cials with piles of food, every-
one
.
talking at once, and just
general chaos. I even have
a
Great Aunt Bertha to complete
the stereotypical large family.
Vacations are also often taken
en masse. Before I was born my
parents, maternal grandparents,
and several of my aunts and
uncles would take trips together.
This warranted the purchase of
a twelve-person tent! Trips with
a large number of people that
I
.,.,.,,..",.
' ·
·
·
•·
• remember include various camp-
.
~i-~11.
c
>
11
1
11~~~iii
l
l\J!il
l
Itri.ote
;
>
fCrl!
;
gegre~
art~t
utHm~~<!ly
·
:1

Pleas_e see
)VAR,
pg.10 ...

·
::\\_·-:.,
.:
:
>:
:
·/?
':::-·
. .
. .
.
' '~
";':
•2,
/,-::;__<-,
:.;· -.
-
..
.
ing trips where we took up three
or more sites and a trip to Myrtle
Beach.
These trips often resulted in
more comedic stories to add to
the family scrapbook including
the Giocondo/Wolpink curse;
that it will always pour at least
.
one day when we are camping.
There was one camping trip .
where fifteen of us ended up
crammed like sardines into a tiny
pop-up camper because the
tents flooded!
Please see
FAMILY,
pg. 10 ...
·
'





































































































.

•,
.
)
-------
-
--
-
----------------------------
PAGElO
ATTENTION
Do
-
you
:
_
:
have
.
.
what
it
-
·
takes
·
to be the -next
Opinion
-
~dito.r?
\-
~-
mail
·
Tara
'.
At
KZBQ
to· nominate yourself
or a
·
1oved one.
*Take my
job.~.please!*
FAMILY: The
more the merrier
... continued from
pg.
9
As much as
I
hated grow-
.
ing up surrounde~ with a large
family and dealing with ihe con-
stant supervision and traditions,
.
Hook back now and realize how
important my family is and how
·
lucky
-
I
was to grow up sur-
·-
r!)unded by loving caring rela-
'
-
lives.
·
:
/
1pz
Gioconda is a junior com-
~:>
inunlcations major with a con-
';~
c'entration in journalism. She
··• '
)
~f~m Syracuse,
NY.
WAR:
Writer wages
not worth fighting.
~ication; major ~i;h a ~/nor
ornot, most
_
Marist
'
students
brace what you can gain inde-
war with inner demons
Am I a humor columnist? Was
in English. She is from Teaneck,
who possess these qualities, for
. ·
pendently. I am proud of my ac-
Chris Farley a comedian? The
NJ.
_
lack of a better cliche, are few
complishments at this school.
which run rampant like
only way to get through self-
..,.,.,,...,,.._...,........,,..,..,,.._
~==
_
and
,
farbetween. There are too
__
_
In
fact, the success I have
rabid Range Rovers in
loathing and isolation is
many students who lack the
earned here may never ha\'e
her mind
through humor. It does not
passion and perseverance to get
come my way at a larger school.
sound terribly funny when put
ahead. Rather they
,
watch as
Lastly, I believe _in the future of
..
.
continued from
pg.
9
that way. However
;
despite it
their parents slowly throw thou
-
this college and its latest
plan
sion now, I am forever defeated.
all, it is just like that Bernini fel-
.sands of dollars away. At one
to raise the admittance caliber
My relationship with Marist
low said ih that film
;
"Life is
point, I was ready to transfer to
.
for incoming students.
has been a cross between a bad
Beautiful," only he said it in Ital-
- - - - - - - - - - -
a much more reputable univer-
Moreover
,
I thank everyone
marriage and the VietnamWar.
ian
.
.
.·.
.
.
·
SENIOR:
Motivation
sitybecause I folt this school
and anyone who h
_
as ever
Actually, lthas been more like a
.
.
Oh, and folks,
Miu,i
,
st
i~
_
~o,t~~
;
. ·

.
.
arid
a.cl
vice bffered at .
.
ha~ been
.
tain~~d
BX
.
-
:
tilts _gen-
,
,
help~~ me_ ?Ver the years i~ri the
.
.
~~r~~S;~il~
tt:
p~;;::
_
-
_
fu
0
~~~11
·
ebrscr;~T;
~
·
1
t
·
_
s;-::
,
,.-
-
:
_
!
no
:
charge

(TAKJ3-
,
~T)
.:·
·
@~1:::~ithM~~~tt~~
:,_
;:
{ti~i:~nMl~
;
~~
;
-
~~rr:~~
,
;
years secretly knowing that I
places work for some people
,-
·'
.
.
.
continued from
pg.
9
your own person and 1_1ot wast-
_
never pompous, fake or dis-
was putting my life on hold. I
_
some _do not Find wha~~ou like
want to get the moit out of their
ing time debatin? the iy~y ~ther
·_
trustful.Thank you and best of
stuck with it because l feared
and hsten to yourse~f.
-
Aft~r
education which was evidenced
_
_
_
p~ople should hv~ their. hv~s.
_
_
Juck.
the unknown. I scorned myself three years
,
I am learnmg that 1s
by their persistence, tenacity,
_
Smee tt:ien, I
·
dec1de4 to m1~k
.
For some ready
·
to gtadriate,
and regarded myselfas a "walk-
all that matters. Others want the
:
and determination
.
Such drive
everything
l
cou~d out of this life is now
at
their doorsteps.
ing disapppintment." I could
bestfory~u, but only you know
·
and dedication arerare even at
sch?ol ~d have bef!n success-
College may have already
not bear to admitto anyone
,
not
what that
IS.
.
.
.
.
the professional network
.
.
ful
m
~om~ so_
:
.:
_
;
_
:
'
-
.
.
.
opened the door for themto
_
see
even myself, that! hated it here.
May J~su~ Chnst
.
and Elvis
_
level of broadcast journalism.
This me,ssage}s
.
m~ant for
it. Ma
r
ist pushed me out the
Inessence,Ilostall self-respect
Presley hve m your
_
heart for-
_
For some like myself, they
'
ve
those who ;:it one P<?!nt or~-
-
door_thefirstyearlgothere.For
and felt that every wound I suf-
ever. Amen

and thank you,
garne
r
ed
·
these characteristics
other. hav(!
_
felt what I ~m trymg
that, I

am most
_
grateful. Good
fered came from a war that I did
thank you very much
.
_
for years.
_
t~ convey. D~ not be dis
_
cour
-
_
Irick
to
tho_se graduating in the
not want to fight and that was
Outside the clubs
aged by C1uts1de ap<1;tlly. Em-
_
·
class of
1999.
·
·
·
·
·
·
3 MONTHS FOR
$99*-
(5'X5'
INT)
OII.Y.
$20.00
SECIRTY DEPOSIT.
*Slqect
ta
avaHability •
.
.
-
.
.
.
•:
..
..
.
...
.
-
.
',
'-
-
~
_-
:
.
--
_:

·
·:
·.
~
:
~.·
~
-
:
·
:
;
:
:
-~
Offer available to
stooeots with valid college
1.0.
ooly.
Subject
to availability. Offer
good
oo
new
rentals only. Expires
5/30/99.
camot
ht!
combined
with
other offa-s .
A
SELF-STORAGE






















THECGIR.<CLE-
APRIL 22 1999
A
&
E
Cherry
Poppin
~
lJaddies
put
·
on
the perf eet
show
by
DOUG GUARINO
Staff Writer
Totally
Theatre
byRACHAELVOLLARO
Staff Writer
Festival is coming! Festival
is coming!
There are few occasions
Starting tonight at
8
p.m. Fes-
when a Marist building can be
tival '99: A Touch of Harry takes
considered to be any sort of a
the stage. Other performance
'cultural' meJting pot.
dates are Fri., April
23
at
8
p.m.
This past Saturday night; the
and Sat., April 24 at 2 p.m.
McCann center was just that.
There is no charge for tickets,
Sort
of... · · ·
but all donations go to the John
Pending the performance of
P. Anderson Scholarship.
MOJO recording artists
Cherry .

Festival '99.is the annual pro~
Poppin' Daddies,·
zoot suit- .
duc:tion put on by the Theatre
donned middle-''agers,• accom-
Workshop· class and MCCTA.
panied by top hat.:wearing
The Theatre Workshop class is
middle-schoolers; piled into the
taught by Dean Cox and gives
main gym to
mix with
a some-
students the opportunity to
what less cliche:botind T~sliirt
learn all aspects of putting to-
and. jeans clothed college
gether a full-scale production.
crowd. .
·
All the plays selected for Festi-
Similarly confused critics
·
·
Circle photo/Joe Scotto
val '99 are student written, stu-
have accused the band of be-
Cherry Poppin' Daddies
put on an energetic show at the McCann center Saturday night.
dent directed, and student pro-
ing nothing more than part ofa
ence indisputable Saturday
ists.
Opening the show was the
duced.
·
ct· .. ·
f
ct·
I ·
·
h d
·t th
·
Producer Christopher D.A.
passmg ra 10 swmg a . t 1s
mg t esp1 e
e apparent per-
Schmid said their lyrics tend
New York based
Stretch Prin-
Betz, a senior, said that the class
these same critics who have ig-
plexity of many audience mem-
to be more involved then that
cess,
making their second ap-
d
rt.
t d t
·1
b
"''h
D dd" ·
d d
t
f th
b
and Festival are a great experi-
nore some pe men e a1 s.
ers.
L,
e
a
1es_poun e ou
o o er swing ands.
pearance in Poughkeepsie this
Prior to the MOJO release of an hour long set;.: that. th. ough.
"Th
,
I
f
·
f

c
ence for students who have an
.
ere s p enty o room m
year a ter openmg 1or
Eve 6
at
interest in theatre.
the now infamous 'Zoot Suit
dominated by swing, included
the world for more songs about _ The Chance in Fe,bruary.
"It's a great way for students
:::!:: ..
:w1.z.-.l.·.
i~:!~?T..1.}b1~f-
:.·.••~.r;,:~a:.::t:r.n.s
.. ~.
!~_:,:,:.~.:.,~~, ·.·
~:tubniyr~~r1!~~1~~~:~~gres . Str,eThtcl1ePirn£1'neccetsios,uksepl:\t.11.th·t-ePcorpowodf
to be involved in every aspect,'
- dies
have recbrd~d
three
albums
O
Quixote, CosaNos'tra,
anifTeeiz~ :
to think about,''·h~-said.
· . ' 'entertained throughou.r°their
35': ,
of putting· up
a
show," 'he said;
encompassing
a
divers~ rn.ix of ..
age Brain. Surgeo.n? '.. .
.
.
As far as plans for the future
minute
Jong
set.·
.
'fhough there
"It
gives a view of how a show.
music including
funk,
ska,
punk;
Schmid said 'tli~t regardless
are concerned, the band is· cur-
songs are relatively simple, gui-
goes from a bunch of papers to
and hard rock in addition to
of genre, the music the band
rently working on a new album
tarist James Wright and drum-
a script to production to
th
e fi-
swing,> for · th~ ind_ependent
plays is intended to get people
expected to· be out -around
mer Dave Magee put on an ob-
nal performance."
-
sp· ace Age.la. bel. ·
· · .
moving.
Chri
·
h. h
d
.
d"
1
f
I
Freshman, assistant pro-
stmas t1me, w 1c , accoli -
v10us 1sp ay o musica talent
ducer Kate Huebbe said that this
Bassis(Dan.Schmid,
'
who
'"The original conception of ing to Schmid will be approxi-
and
skill,
while
the
cofoundeclthe hand·. in .1988
the band was to play music that
mately
1/3 swing. Some of the
Cranberryish
voice of singer/ · is a new experience for moSL
with vocalist/gµitarist/song
wewould wantto jump around
new songs that will appear oh
bassist Jo Lloyd borderlines on
"This is a very ne\Y experi-
writer Steve Perry, said he has
too," .said Schmif .
"It
really
the album were featured in
alluring. The end result is
ence for most of the people in
found such accusations and
blows my mind thatrnorepeople
Saturday's show including,
So
catchy tunes that can easily get
th
e class. They are inexperi-
mislead genre-labeling to be haven't tried to make swing and ·
Long 'Tis, Soul Cadilla,, and
stuck in one's head.
enced in many different aspects
somewhat frustr<;1ting. _ . .
punk rock go handin hand.
Diamond Light Boogie.
Though one of the audience
rega
rd
ing a
th
eatrical
P
rod
uc-
"The way pe<>plej,frceive ·we're trying to keep things up-
Schmid cites many different
highlights was undoubtedly the
tion," she said.
music is a curious thing," said
dated and modem and combine
influences for the new album.
band's live rendition of theirra-
Fellow classmate, junior
Schmid.
"I
wish people were
all ourinfluences so that we can
"We've been listening to
a
dio single
Free,
what is perhaps
Karen Gumaer said
th
ere was a
able to get their brains around
hliv~ both
Fishbone
and
Cab
lotofGlam rock like
T-Rex, Gary
most enticing is Lloyd's gra-
lot more work
th
an she antici-
Il)ore things atatfme ..
It
has al-.
C.alloJVayjn
one song."
Glitter,
and
The New York
cious personality, as she warmly
pated.
ways been a problem with our
Another thing that separates
Dolls,"
said Schmid. "Some of
thanks fans for their apprecia-
"Things were done differ-
band because we're so diverse.
The Cherry Popp
in' Daddies
the songs reflect that a little bit,
tion both on and off stage.
ently
th
is year
th
an in years
If
people don't know. what to
from other swing bands is their
but we've also been}istening to
Stretch Princess'
self-titled
paSt A majority of
th
e
work is
call you, then they have a hard
lyrics, which iO the· case of alotof soul music and Motown
debut CD is now available on
really done outside of the class-
time ·dealing with yoti, or even
Drunk Daddy
a song about a
style stuff and also a lot of mod
Wind-Up/BMG records. For
room," she said.
accepting that you exist."
child who is abused
by
an alco-
rock like
The Faces
and
The
more
info
check
out
Junior Corey Lewis, who is
Nevertheless, the band's
holic father, are sometimes
Yardbirds.
That stuff is like the
www.daddies.com
and
also in the class, said it exposed
ta
· d th ·
·
h · · k"
·
·
ct· ·
I
him to aspects of theatre out-
s ge presence ma e eir exist-
s oc mg to swmg tra 1t10na -
best basement party music."
www.stretclzprincess.com.
'Ltn;k
~tock' ·successor to ''i'raibspotting'
by
JOHN SULLIVAN
Staff Writer
A few years ago we got a film
out of the UK called
'Trajnspottingf and it managed
to become fairly successful
when it was transported to the
states. After- that, a series of
rather forgettable British films
made their way over to our side .
but none of them could rely
capture the eccentric inanity of
'Trainspotting.' Director Danny
Boyle created a panoramic car-
toon about the'heroin subcul-
rure
in England that approached
its subject with subdued com-
edy and humorous pathos.
Boyle has yet to repeat his own
success, but freshman director
Guy Ritchie may have beat him
to the ·punch.
.
'Lock, Stock and Two Smok-
ing Barrels' is a UK film about a
group of friends who lose a fixed
poker game and wind up owing _
a dangerous gangster large
amounts of pounds. During the
movie, the four friends spend
most Of their time drinking,
smoking and gener.tlly falling in
and out of good and bad luck.
Mostly, they just react to the
colorful set of supporting play-
ers that surround the group.
Included are a Samuel Jackson-
esque drug dealer who likes to
set people on fire, a mob
strongann who is touchingly
raising his 12-year-old son to
follow in his footsteps, a Jabba
The Hut-like porn peddler, and
a second group of friends who
concern themselves with rob-
bing a peace-loving band of
marijuana growers. The plot is
a kind of "robbing Peter to pay
Paul" set of circumstances that
culminates in one of t~e bloodi-
est and funniest shoot-outs I
have seen since 'Enemy Of The
State.' .The first group of friends
decides to pay the debt back by
robbing the second group of
criminal lowlifes, and this in tum
gets our heroes into even deeper
trouble. The plot is not as com-
plex as
it
sounds but there is a
large cast and it is important to
keep people's names and moti-
vations straight to enjoy the
violent payoff.
Critics wrote 'Lock Stock' off
as a very, very well-done
Tarantino clone and;
fo
a way,'it
is (although Richie maintains
that he has not seen Pulp Fic-
tion). 'Lock Stock' plays des-
perate measures for laughs and
several times a shotgun blast to
someone's limbs is considered
a punchline. Despite the vio-
lence and nihilistic attitude of
the film, we do get a glimpse at a
side of England's society that
is never really approached in
many UK films. For example, the
phenomena of "laddism" which
describes a ritual of boozing,
cigarette smoking, wearing of
black leather jackets and soccer
... please see
LOCK,
pg. I
2
side of acting.
"I've learned to enjoy direct-
irig
and other parts .of the- be-
hind the scenes," he· said. ·
- The plays ihat will be per-
formed this year. ~re M,am_a's
Boy, A Quiet Sabbath in
Amherst, Pale Eggs of the Beast,
Freshman Year of Life, Pickles,
The Journey, The Devil and
Mike Faust and$$$ Lucrative.
Betz said it is a good variety
of shows.
"There's an absurdist play, a
drama, a comedy and your av-
erage Joe Schmoe College
show," he said.
Freshman Ben Hecht, the
playwright of Mama's Boy, said
seeing his work come to life has
been a great experience.
"It's helped me critically ana-
lyze my own work, and it will help
me improve my future writings,"
he said.
'
)
' '


























































'
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I
,
'

r.
,
i
I
I
f
l
I
I
!
·
·
TH£
·
CIR.<Cl£.
APRIL 22,
1999
---
:
;
A
-
·
:
&
·
·
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PAGE 12
,

.
Hip-hopking>r~@.dyit9 go ·nati~n@-l
··
·
by
PATRICKWllITILE
A&E Editor
James Rusch mixes business
with pleasure when it comes to
hip-hop.
·
.
.
Rusch typically g~ts
.
prodpc:.
tion jobs through word of motith
·
arid from people in the business
noticing his tracks
,
tte
:
believes
.
his work botli
'
as
a
DJ arid a pro-
·
duceris good enough to speak
for itself.
.
. .
.
• ,
Fellow Marist DJ Felix Tapia
concurs .
.
"He's pioneering, putting to~
gether some music groups,"
Tapia said. "He's headstrong
about that."
·
Thoughnot one
fo
play the
race card, Rusch has encoun~
.
tered some difficulty as a white
.
hip-hop prnducer. One occa-
Rusch, a junior communica-
tions major from Riverhead,
Long Island, is undeniably
Marist's hip-hop king. He is a
producer, manager and a DJ, and
fom1erly
ran
his own record la-
bel, Rusch Records. He has
worked with big name acts like
Das EFX,
and with his own
art-
ists like
Periah
and Tracy Tay-
lor.
Rusch 's priorities are
straight: music is the most im-
portant thing in his
life.
.
·
sion was when he worked with
Manhunt,
who'appeared on
'No
Airplay' with
Canibus
and
l,fycelf.
"Hip-hop is not even a form
of music, it's a feeling.
It
isn't
equal to love, like I couldn't say
'I hip-hop you,'" mused Rusch
.
"But at the same time it's a re-
ally deep feeling."
Rusch first got involveq in
.
'
,',
' ·.
.,
'
.
'
.
'
':
'
·
.:.
·
.. '

• .
•.
·.

.
'
'
'
:
;,
Photo courtesy James Rusch
the hip-hop world when he got
Hrp-hop DJ/Producer/Manager James Rusch wt:iere he rs most at home: behrnd the
.
turntables.
his first drum machine and sam-
used to rhyme over Ru~ch's
wh~tJam
.
es Rusch is all about.
wheri
I
getfo thetabl~," R~sch
pier at age 15. He started writ-
beats, contacted him arid told
"WhenPei-iah
went to jail,
said.
.
..
·
.
ing music, and by the time he
him lie
.
had an artist named
he called me before his mother,"
Rusch puts management and
got to Mari st his beats had
Periah. Periah,
who released
Rusch said.
production before all of his other
reached a new level.
two
·
regiona1Jy distributed
Rusch considers DJing a
endeavors. He gets shows
In December of 1996, his
singles on Rusch's label, be-
hobby, although he set his sec-
booked, handles
.
pubHc rela-
freshman year at Marist, Rusch
came Rusch's longest running
ond national mix tape, 'Charlie
tions, and hopefully gets his
called Tracy Taylor, a girl
'
he
artist.
Hustle,' to be released in May.
artists signed. His current crop
went to high school with who
Rusch has stood by
Periah
·
Rusch, who DJ's under his own
of artists in.eludes
Periah, Cam-
he said had an amazing voice.
though thick arid
·
thin, includ'.'
name, does riot ~oubt his abil-
oufl,age
.
Kame le on
and a
12-
He
did his first track with herin
ing losing a chance to work,with
ity behind the turntables.
year-old
R
&
B singer named
February of '97.
'
'
'
'
TLC
to bail him out. Staying
"I
don't need to
fall
myself
Shika. Upc~ming undertakings
· John Mims,
a
'
rapper who
tight with his artists
'
is
part
of nothing;
_
my skills\vill say it all
inc:lude
a
project'with
Camp
Lo.
Reversion
·
to
primacy,
1980s at The Chance
by
CHRIS KNUDTSEN
Staff Writer
The Chance was struc::k
by
a
time
·
warp to the 80s on
Fri.,
April 16.
_
to blow the
.
bassist/vocalist's
took the stage for that. The
hair back while he played.
thought behind this
.
gesture is
Nights liky this are the
respectable, sine~ they' try to
epitome
of
everything that was
encourag~ support for the
wrong with
.
the
.
80s.
·
From the
younger bands.
.
cheesy hair; to t}:le nut-hugging
·
_
One
'.
of the m<>re interesting
pants, to th(? qvedy distoi;1ecl
.
:
aspec($ of
-
the show:(acl!Ially
,
voices
;'
screami11g
'
abcn1t,cfo
.
ath
one of the few),
:wasfo
the di-:
and destructi611, eve1:ything
,
·
versify
.
oftheci'owct Thete'were
.
poimecJ
.
to
9ne
:
description

of the regulars of the
.
h.ardcore
_
the bands~ 'tooibox.'
·
.
·
sllows, as well as a group of
Thefo\V loyal hardcore fans
death
.
metal rockers that
.
.
"Manhunt
said
I.
was the first
white producer he liked,'' Rusch
said
.
·
'Tvelost jobs because I
was white."
.
·
·
·
The Black Student's
·
Union
·
elected Rusch "Black Kfog" this
·
month.
·
BSU Treasurer
Rtisshelle Thompson
·
strongly
approved of his election.
"It
backs up what we say all
year that we are not a closed
.
·
club, and James supports every-
thing that we do," Thompson
said.
Despite the factthat he said
when he shows up in
·
the studio
people are "expecting a black
guy," Rusch said
'
he sees
·
the
music as aforce that can create
un.derstariding between people.
"Torrie, there's no black; no
white;
·
there'sJu'dt liip-hop:;,
;
'
_ 25
TaLife
headlined a show
with a motley crew of ridicu-
lously long~haired
·
death metal
bands; The show was interest-
ing at least, which was the one
positive thing about it.
_ The opening bands were
horrible. There is nothing to be
said in their defense and any~
on~ who would even attempt to
defend them is out of their mind
(and obviously cleaf as well).
,
.
. at The Cha]1ce waited all night
borderlined on a gothic appear.,
for the supposed saving grace
ance with their face paintings
of
25
Ta Life.
We were sorely
and black attire.
·
disappointed.
·
_
Throughout the night the
·
A set consisting of six songs
crowd seemed to Q_e getting
is not worth waiting for, espe-
alonganditlookedlikeitwould
cially when you c~msider
.
. what
be
:
one big happy family; That
we had to wait through. A weak
did not last.
.
.
LOCK:
New UK film
is
an
unconventional success
..
.
.
·
·
.
·
.
-.
.
.
.
.
,
.
It 'Was
.
not the fact that the
bands played death metal that
made them horrible; what made
them horrible was that- they
played it terribly. The opening
two sets looked more like prac-
ti<;~ sessions than perfor-
mances.
.
.
,tyile.
originally had the ben-
ef1t.of the doubt because I h~d
heard thatthey were decent.
Wl_loever told me that was
wrong". ·
. The descending banner was
the first warning sign. The
double bass drum set up was
the second (something all the
bands other than
25
had in
common). The final warning
sign was the wind machine used
set of six songs that has been
Dupng
25's
set, a fight broke
done by, the band for theJast outbetweenmembersofthedif-
few years is even worse. .
fereni cliques.
·
Although the
Perhaps it was because of the
fight was
,
short lived, the death
venue that the band seemed
metaleraµposthadhisnosebro-
somewhat
,
apathetic .
.
More
ken.
.
::
.
.
likely could be the possibility
The situation could have
that Rick, the lead
.
singer,
.
~d
progressed into further pande-
the rest of the
-
lineup haye
be-
monium but the
.
bouncers
come bored with the band.
rushed
:
in
to sa.ve
.
the day,
.
There was littl~ ~~ergy
_
from
quickly separating the two
be-:
.
the band, almost as
.
if~ey did
fore it could get worse .. When
not want to bother with-the
the two went
.
at it again,
secu-
show. The ex~t~ songs were
rity moved even faster to pre-
p layed; such as
Crucified,
vent anything froni happening.
Keepin' it Real,
and others.
The 80s are dead, and should
As always, the band played
remain that way. However, there
Inside Knowledge,
only with-
is some credibility in the glam-
out Rick singing. Oneofthevo-
rock death metal scene that is
calists
from
a
local
derived from
its
cheesiness.
Poughkeepsie hardcore
·
band
After all, it is only entertainment.
..
:
co~tinu~djrom
pg.
11
·
that
.
d~fi~~s
.
dose

.
friendship
between me)J
,
in England is ex.,.
plored. 'I'he
,
:lads'.
in 'Lock
Stock'
.
come off as people who
·
generally care about each other
and woulcJ Ill.Uch rather be
knocking bac~ a few pints than
avoiding dangerous gangsters.
It
is this association that we feel
with
.
the
:
Bri~:in the
film
that.
carries us thr9ugh the plot
,
We
want our hero.es to relax and get
the money in the end because
,
we like them, and _we buy their
relationship. Guy Ritchie wrote
a script that reflects the bold
vernacular of Liverpool kids and
the quick, staccato conversa-
tion between the lads is part of
the thrill of 'Lock Stock's' plot.
For the first half-hour we might
not know what's going on but
as
the movie progresses we pick
up 6n
the
subtleties and q4irky
phrasing thatiscoinnion to the
cockney dialect.
·
·
·
'Lock Stock' shows us a cul-
ture in great detail btit, surpris-
ingly, does notrevert to
any
of
the conventions of the UK film
'
genre (i.e. anything with butlers
or Hugh Grant). That
was
what
I liked about Trainspotting and
that is what
I
liked about 'Lock
Stock.and
~o
·,
s,m~ki~g Bar-
rels.' Guy Ritchie's directing is
fast and furious but lie choreo-
·
graphs his scenes well in a man-
ner that is less confusing and
less
showboating
than
Tarantino's signature methods.
I would advise everybody to
check out 'Lock Stock,' and on
the way back, grab yourself a
pint and a cig.































:
APRIL 22. 1999
PAGE
'
13
The
MultimediafMilleniun1
Massacre
by
CARLITO
'
Staff Clairvoyant
As you all know, I have a
long history of talking directly
out of my @$$. But for· once I
have something to say that is
of the utmost importance.
In
the
film 'Terminator' technology,
revolted against its' human cre-
ators and the final result was the
extermination of the human race.
I
am
here to tell you that
as
the
new millennium approaches,
mankind faces its' most severe
threat since ... well, the last Ice
Age I guess.
The demise of civilization as
we know it will occur in the year
2000 and the catalyst will be the
multimedia
.
.
The multimediated
world possesses a versatile ar-
senal
._
of lo_aded weapons
.
that
have secretly joined foi-cesjn a
movement
against
.
the
unpublicized segments of soci-
ety. As an intern at Access
Hollywood, I have inside infor-
mation that
I
am willing to share
with you despite heavy discour-
.
agement from CBS management
The first platoon of the Mili-
tant Multi Media Military Mili-
tia (MMMMM) consists of the
music industry. As you know,
teenybopper pop is the biggest
thing since pre-sliced cheese
·
and they represent the first line
of attack.
,
N'Sync; Backstreet
~o;,,
Menudo and\lle formi(
i
'
'
i~~r~s~i9.11
·~~t!}1.e
N
i~l,~on{'.at:,
'
'
i
;
_
~yl;)
\
Aiill6(gli'
itie
'
told the
'
inembers
_ofNKOTB
~ave beeµ
·
\
:
i
_
ng
,
~:ys1em
~
e~st
_
s to
'.
q~t~~ne
·
.
:
preifs
'
J!J~t
\
s~~
.
cltose
to
de-
systemat1caUy brainwashing

:
.
which TV programs
are
the mosf
mamrnarize
herself to focus more
.
prepubescent wome
_
n
·
for
.
the
· ·
·
popular.
·
Jf so, you are ~nother
attention
·
on her talent
·
the sili-
past twenty years. At their con-
.
victim of media propaganda.
cone was actually n;eded to
certs, they perpetyally emit
_
a
·
Brigadier General Rex Nielson is
·
construct a set of mega-breasts
subtle, undetectable gas into
actually the leader of the tele-
that will tour the world, pummel-
the audience that renders de-
vised platoon and has been the
ing any virgins that stop and
cent, coherent. children into
mastermind behind a subliminal
stare.
screaming, drooling sluts.
attack on_ the viewing public
Since the American Virgin is
These are only the short-term
since the 1940s.
about as common as the Florid-
effects however. By the year
In
the past 50 years, he has
ian Whooping Crane, Pamela is
2000, all fans of the aforemen-
been brainwashing blacks and
pondering a contingency plan.
tioned bands will be reduced to
whites alike in attempts to rob
If
she can not come up with any-
quivering mounds of sub-or-
them of their identities. There
thing, she will re-augment her-
ganic gelatin
·
similar to that
are innumerous attempts of his
self and torture the world with
found at the bottom of a can of to cross-racialize the public, but
future episodes of
'V.I.P. •
Spam. This will eliminate 16%
only some are blatantly obvi-
The film industry has per-
of the global population as well
ous. In 'Amos & Andy,' he en-
haps the two most prominent
as any hope for the perpetua-
couraged white people to pre-
figures in this rebellion: Arnold
tion of human
life.
tend theywere black and in 'The
Schwartzenegger and Sylvester
Marilyn Manson is fronting
Cosby Show,' he encouraged
.Stallone.
Without Stallone's
the post:.adolescent platoon
black people
,
to pretend they
.
culinary
skills
and
and wiHexpand his fan base by
were wh~t.e. Makolni Jamal
.
Schwartzeneggers's knack for
announcing inMayofthis yew
.
'Warnerwasworkingundercover
·
0
knitting, the MMMMM sol-
that he did
_
in fact
P!~Y
Pauf'on
/
,:
~phe
time
and is
U,QW
pne of
·
diers· would be going to the
tJle Wonder Years,
/
- Throug
_
h
·:
·;
Nielso_!l's ~ght h~nd men. This
··
battle with empty stomachs and
post.,.hypilotic suggestion, he
·
·ta:ctic
even infiltrated the music
shoddy clothing. The guerilla
·
will persuade the yuppie, baby-
industry in examples such as
unit is lead by Paul Reubens
boomer portion of the popula-
.Vanilla Ice, Eminem, Living
who is complemented by cut-
tion that self-mutilation and
Color and Terence Trent
throats such as Woody Allen
anatomical cross-genderization
D' Arby. Where Nielson is go-
and Emanuel Lewis. That may
is
advantageous for the Homo
ing with this plan is presently
not sound too ferocious a
Sapien race. After his subcon-
unknown.
group, but Reubens is a black
scious stranglehold on the
·
The fashion industry has
belt in Aikido and Lewis
is
a
American public has been so-
seen a lot of activity in past
former Navy SEAL. Brendan
lidified, a plague of spontane-
weeks. Just recently, Pamela
Fraiser was part of the platoon
ous gender transformation and
Anderson shocked the world
but he was dishonorably dis-
fatal self-inflicted wounds will
.
when she removed her only re-
charged after eating a month's
sweep across the middle-:aged
deeming quality. (Her breasts.
worth of banana rations in 10
middledass.
And while were on the subject
minutes.
-
PerhaP,s you ,are _under.the
·:·
,
P_a~ela, for the loy~ o(O
_
()~,
You may \)e \VO~~ering why,
.
after all this talk about the mul-
timedia, I havefaiJed
to
mention
computers. The reason for this
is that they are not in a battle
against mankind, but in fact, a
sentinel that is guarding it. Un-
beknownst to many, Bill Gates
is a cyborg that is direct
I
y wired
into the World Wide Web. For
this reason, you would think
that he would be the kingpin in
this battle against humanity. But
he realized that having a tech-
nological and financial strangle-
hold (I love that word) on the
entire world is more prosperous
than sharing the throne with
Webster and Rocky Balboa.
Gates is currently planning a
counterrevolution and in his ef-
forts, he has recruited multime-
dia nonconformists like Keanu
Reeves (who fails to conf9rm to
the fact that he
_
is ignorant and
void of talent), Pauly Shore
(who continues to breathe even
though the entire planet urges
otherwise),
andEminem (who is
a cracker). Gate's efforts will
inevitably fail though, and main-
stream society will disintegrate.
This is a grim reality to face
my brothers and sisters, but it
is one we face together. I en-
courage you to cherish these
fast few months on earth be-
cause
I
intend to do the same.
When
I
asked senior Martin
Kappas how he will spend his
last hours alive, he responded,
"Just give me a bottle of gin and
a_~ouple ofhookers'." Amen.
won
by
·
a wannabe
·
coine. Once the top three were
picked it was up to the viewers
to decide who would be the next
VJ. Omar was a very outgoing
·
person, but his music knowl-
edge
did not compare to
Thalia's. As for Laura, I would
·
have rather seen MTV shut
down than her have even one
more minute of airtime. She was
your average phony whose only
concern it seemed was to see
how intolerable she could act
on camera. I do not know how
she made it to the final three, it
.
must have been a full moon.
New flick 'Go' does
not 'go' far enough
·
·
obnoxious person
·
! have ever
by
ALEX HEINEMAN
seen on camera, how she even
Staff Writer
made it through· the first audi-
tion amazes me. Thalia who was
Last week MTV had their
prob
-
ably the most postured
second
"Wanna
Be A VJ" con-
speaker, seemed the most com-
tesL The contest began on
fort:able on camera and gave the
Monday
in
th.ree
·
cities
(Chi-
audience a feeling that she de-
,
cago, LA, NYC) with more then
·
_
served to win,
I
liked Thalia at
5000 hopefuls auditioning. So
.
.
first, l?ut as she began to move
-
what does it take to fill the shoes
'
tip
in
'
the ~on test she became
of Carson Daily or Ananda?
·
more and more arrogant.
-
As it seemed to nie from
/
The rules for the final show-
.
watching the contest, not too
down were
as
follows: each con-
rituch. The-first step
in
taking
testant gained points as the day
part in this overgrown publicity
went on depen4ing on what
stunt was
-
-
to wait iri line for
.
plac
_
e they took
iri.
each
:
event,
around
'
rn
hours to do a minute
half way through two contes-
.
long screen test.
If you showed
tants were to be eliminated and
some talent and originality in
eventually a wiruier would arise
youi a
_
udition, (and thefans ap-
from
_
the
_
irpoints ~lied with the
proved)
·
you were called back
most viewership popularity.
on
.
Toutsday when,
.1vfl:V
i
nar-:-
,
Thalfa lead the group the entire
rowed their selection of contes~
·
show beating out:the rest in al-
tants down to 15 and- eventu-
mosi every ev~nt. As the fes-
ally
fi~e
'who would go
-
on to
.
tivities winded down Laurel and
Saturday's final competition.
K-Sha were eliminated, it was
The remaining five were Laurel,
not a big surprise; She seemed
Omar,K-Sha, ThaliaandLaura;
·
like a nice pei:son, but had_no
Laurel had little personality and
.
outstanding characteristics or
even less ~lent, but she gave it
qualities about her, which is
her all and ~µrprisi~gly made it
obviously important in a
.
con-
to
.
the
.
final
.
showdown. Omar
test
like this.

K-Sha
was
another
was'
a
stnooth
talking Notorious
story. At first- I thought K-Sha
BIGesque
looking
·
fellow whose
had a chance. She seemed like a
claim
to fame was that 1999 was
very original and
real
person, but
"the year of the fat man.,, Omar
when she began to lose some
was my pick to win, but unfor-
of the events instead of putting
tunately he did not. K-Sha was
a smile on and bearing it she
the most real person in the
began to complain, at one point
group, who although was not
telling Matt Pinfield "her buzzer
tremendously charismatic at
was broken." If she had not
least seemed to act like herself.
acted like such a sore loser we
Laura was probably the most
might have seen a different out-
In the end Thalia
.
won as
MTV's next VJ. Along with her
new job she also received
$25,000 dollars and a new Kia
Sportage. Not bad for a weeks
work. It was obvious to me that
Thalia was going to win, but I
was kind of disappointed she
did. Thalia
·
seems to be, in the
plainest temis
I
can put it; a
b**ch. Throughout the
'
show
she acted in an unpleasant man~
ner as
if
the other contestants
were no match for her. When she
did win and was crowned by
last years winnerJesse (or the
human annoyance as
;
I
like to
call him) she had the audacity
to say "watch my hair." Also in
-
the press conference after
_
the
show Thalia preceded to act like
a belligerent idiot
as
if she were
·
the Queen of England. She will
end up doing low budget porn
in a hotel room somewhere in
Vegas. Even_ though Omar did
not, win he should have. His
personality was strong and he
seemed Jike
a
down to earth per-
son who could have done the
job justice. Better luck next year
Omar. Savor your 15 minutes
Thalia, the clock is ticking.
by
ADAM KOWALSKI
Staff Writer
'Go' is the new film by Doug
Limon, the director of the criti-
cally acclaimed
film
'swingers.'
'Go' is yet another one of
those increasingly more
.
com-
mon films where different sto-
ries try to intertwine with each
other. Like most of the other
recent attempts at this, such as
'200 Cigarettes,' this attempt
comes up lacking. This is not
due to
a
problem with the indi-
vidual stories, but in the formu-
laic fashion in which they all end
up.
The stories are well done, but
it seems more like
a
collection
of short films then a whole
movie: The story takes place in
one night and follows a group
of people through a wild, con-
fusing, and odd evening. The
first story centers on Ronna,
played by Sarah Polley. Ronna
does not have enough money
to pay her rent, so when an op-
portunity arises to make a drug
deal that would give her enough
cash, she gives it a shot. Things
go wrong and she finds herself
being hunted down by the an-
gry dealer.
The second story centers
around Simon and Marcus,
played by Desmond Askew and
Taye Diggs. They journey to
Las Vegas with two other
friends and proceed to get in all
sorts of trouble. Simon finds
himself running naked through
a hotel, stealing a car with
Marcus and having an alterca-
tion in a strip club that leads to
a high-speed chase through the
streets of Las Vegas. This is
arguably the most well done of
the short stories.
It is very remi-
niscent of' Swingers.' It has the
same kind of humor, and yet still
manages to tell an intelligent
story.
The third tale is arguably the
most disturbing. It centers on
two actors, Zack and Adam,
who have a legal problem. They
go along with a sting operation
put together by Burke, played
by William Fichtner. After the
operation fails they are invited
over for Christmas Eve dinner
at Burke's house. This leads to
an odd and bizarre altercation
with Burke and his wife. The
·
film tries to connect them too
much to the other tales and for
some reason lets it come up lack-'
ing with a too easy way out for
the character's troubles,
This film is all connected with
a final scene centering on
Ronna's friend Claire, played by
Katie Holmes. This ending to
the film-seems too simple. The
characters get themselves into
bad situations that should not
be as easily fixed as they
·
are.
The ending is not as intelligent
as the stories and takes the
standing of the film down a few
notches. Perhaps my love for
'Swingers' made me go in ex-
pecting a little more from this
film.
This is a decent film, it is
just not what I expected.
..
_
...
.,,,.
.
..
.
.




































































































I
I
I
f
r
,
(
I
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/
v
·
,
,
y
'
·

'
t.
i
.
i
.
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.

··
·
·
·
··

·
·

.
-
·
-
- - - - - - - , - - - - - -
- ~

April 22
7
1999
.
.
-
. ·
.
.
.
..
.
.
.
Men's lacrosse
sfiffers
heartbreak'ill
badlOS§
by
PEIBRMOYLAN
Staff Writer
The Marist Lacrosse team suf-
fered a heart breaking loss last
Wednesday when they fell to
the Siena Saints 12-11.
The game was close all the
way
,
and in the final minute of
play, the Saints were able to put
in the game winner and erase all
hope for the Red Foxes to finish
.500 in the MAAC this season.
The much anticipated Siena
game became an all out war with
both teams scoring impressive
:
.
.
.
~
•.
,-.
:
:.
.
:
..
.
·
_
,
_
·
~.
.
.
·
·
-
.
.
.
.
.
goals and showing tough de-
Marist has be~n in this season.
fense. Paul Donohue
:
added
Bf
the time this
,
article prints,
three goals to his impressive
the Red F:oxes
will
have already
freshman season,
·
while Jim
faced Boston College, leaving
Mekovetz
and
Anthony
..
onlytfu:ee garries left, and only
Lucchetto also contributed of-
one
_
o_f
-
_them being a conference
fensively.
.
game. Providence, Albany, and
.
.
On defense
;
·
Anthony
Lafayette are allJough teams,
Padrucco set the tone forMarist
yet are also beatablefor the Red
with consistent hustle and play
_
Foxes
.
. · ·
while Mike Condela
.
made his
If Marist can get passed their
first start in goal this season aiid
.
past disappointments and win
played strong.
the next three,
·
the season may
The last minute goal by Siena
.
tum out to be more of a learning
was just another loss ii}
a
col-
experience and a point to build
lection of heart breakers that
on then a failure
.
.
.
,
C1n:le
photolloe Scotto
Both the men's and women's lacrosse teams a~e struggling mightily in the 1999 season.
PAGE
.
14
aseballBoxscore vs.- St. Peter's GM2 Sri~day
Name(Pos)
.
·
·
.
AnthoilyCervini'dh ....
:
.. .
Chuck Bechtel
dh .
.
. : ....
.
.
RyanBraclycf... ......... .
.
Antboriy Bocchino If ...... .
Kevin Wissner
I
b .....
.
..
.
.
John Andros 1 b ........... .
Tun
Bittner
if ...... ,.:::.
Steve 0,-Suilivan 2b/ss ....
Ben <;::uetc>c ..
. : .
.........
.
Henry
Suhrc., ......... , ..
Jimmy Wtllis3b .......... .
JeffTafuto
·
·
ss ...
.
....... .
. Michael Lockery 2b ....... .
Ken Catino p ............. ,
.
Jeremybqran p ....... , .
.
. .
VmRomap'.
.
..
.
...
.
..
.
.
.
. .
Andrew
Lobb
p .... , ....
.
.. .
Totals .........
.
.
.
....... .
.ABRHRBIBBSOPOA
4
.
332
0 0 O.
·
O
2
L
2 2 0 0
.-
0
-
-
O
.
6 3 2 4 0 1 2
:
0
5 2 0 0 1 1 0 0
3 2 3 3 1 0 3 0
2 0 0 0 0 0
.
3 1
5 2
.
2- 1 1
1 .
3
:
0
6 2 3 4
·
o
l
.
0
.
3
5 2
_
3 2 0
0
6
,
()
1 0 0 0 0
.
1 2
·
0
s - 2 2 0 . 0
·
2-1
.
o
4
_
_
2 3
,
1
-
1
.
0)>
_
·
o

0 0 0 0 0 0 0
,
1
o o o o
b
·
o o o
.
o o
o
·
o
·
o o o
.
o
O
0 0 0 0 0 1 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
48
21
23 19
4
j .
21 5
St Peter's College
7
(9-26,3~ 12)
Nrune
(Pos)
._
.
. .
AB R
H
RBlBB
so
PO
A
Healy
'"
dh'..:: ..
.
..
u
..... ,.
.
4
.
.
1
·
1
.
i
.
0
1 0
..
0
·
Ramos-Romanocf ..
::
..
L.
.
1
0 0

·
er
O ..
i
'
o
,
.
Casatemlf ...
t
;
.
..... , .
.
;
.
2 0 0
·
o
O
·.
0
.
·
2
·
0
Petrarcac/lb ..
:
··
·
·······
3
.
2
·
1 1
l.
.
0 5 0
Rankin2b/lb...
.
..........
1 0 0
0
O_
.
-
1 0
_
1
_
Camejoc .. .,.,............
3
l L
1.
0
1 .
1
·
0
Yuengel lf/cf,.
..
..
.
......
4
l
1
0 0
.
2
5
0
Duncan ss.,
.'
...
~
······"··
1
0 0 0
-
0
.
0
·
t
0
Guzman ss
.;
"'········:....
2
I 1 2 O O O
.
0
Janczakrf.....
.
..........
2 0 0 1
J
1 2 0
Gaglia:rdi3b.....
.
....
.
...
3 0 0 0 0 0
_
O O
.
Cirillo lb: ..
.
..
,
.........
_
0 0 0 0 0
..
0 2 1
TogI].ella2b...............
,
·
1
1
0 0 2 0
l.
0
Looneyp ... ; ....
.
. ,.......
0
0
0 0 0 0 1 0
K9rmanp.
:
·
...
,
....... :....
0
0
0
·
0
··
0 ()
·
0 0
Brooksp ... ,
::
............
o
o o
o
·
o o
:
o o
Taltyp:.: ... :
:
...........
.
0 0
··.
o
0
.
0
.
0 0
.
,
0
Totals .......
:
·
............
21
-_
7
5 6
4
6 21 2
RHE
684-1110 -
21
23
2
010003 3 -
TS
7
LOB-Marist 1(), St. Peter's
4.
2B
·
~ Brady 2, Bittner, 9tieto, Willis. 3B -O'Sullivan; Petrarca,
Guzman.
··
-
.
·.
.
.
HR
~
Ceryiiii
/
BechteI; O'Sullivan.
.
.
SB - Brady, ~ue
,
ngel~Janczak,Togriella
2:
tdari~tC::~Il~g~
C
IP
-H
RER
BB
so
AB:BI<
.
KeriQatirio.
L
..
'
..... 4.0
-
1
LO O
A
-14
JS
.
ieremyoo
·
ran,: .....
.
LO
o o
o
1
.
1
3
.
4
·
VmRoma
:
: .
..
......
1.023
..
2 2
0
5
·
7
·
AndrewLobb .... , .. {.02
'3
3
1
I 5
·
6
St
.
P~ter's Coliege
IP
11
RERBBSO
AB
BF
Looney ..............
·
LI 8 10
6
2 1 14
16
Korman ...•... ,......
0.2
5 4 0 I I
7
·

g
Brooks .......
:
.
.
....
J.O
3
4
l
.
l
4
8 9
Talty...............
4-.0
13
3 0
J
19 19
-
.



















































April 22
7
1999
.
THE CIRCLE
--
-
S
·
go
:
rts
ff
,
Campus
Report---
.
·
'.
byThomasRyan
'
The best player of a golden
age in sports retired this year,
and his name is not Michael Jor-
dan.
Wayne Gretzky, the Great One,
retired Sunday to a spectacular,
well-deserved ceremony that
saw his number 99 retired from
the
NHL
forever.
Gretzky, unlike Jordan, does not
have his face plastered all over
the airwaves or all over various
merchandise, he went about his
business of being the greatest
hockey player ever very quietly.
Some may look at that
as
a posi-
tive about Gretzky. However,
there is no question Jordan
raised his sport to a higher level
that Gretzky did with hockey.
Jordan's high-powered mar-
keting machine ·and personable
attitude elevated him to
·
a sta-
tus higher
than
any athlete ever,
except for maybe Muhammed
Ali. People all around the world
knew who Jordan was even if
they knew nothing about the
game of basketball. Jordan was
basketball f<;>r all they knew.
·
However, in comparing statis-
tics, Gretzky's accomplishments
are matched in
·
basketball only
by
Wilt
Chamberlain, notJordan.
It was Chamberlain who scored
the most points
·
in
·
one game,
who had the hig_hest average in
a season, and has'the highest
average for'acai:eer. Jordan did
·
not revolutionize his sport like
Chamberlain and
_
Gretzky, but he
did more to
·
popularize a sport
than any other athlete.
Before Jordan and Magic
Johnson arid Larry
·
Bird, NBA
games were televised on tape
delay. Today the NBA enjoys
contracts with NBC and Turner
Broadcasting arid bring in very
. good ratings that were unimag-
inable in the past.
.
The
NHL,
however, has been
solidified as the fourth major
team sport and probably always
will be. Not even the Great One
could change that.
Jordan raised
his
sport
·
to a
,
high.er
level than
,
Gretzky
did
I
guess there are not any res-
ervations about the black quar-
terback anymore, huh?
Three of the five quarterback's
~en in round one of the 1999
NFL draft were black, including
'
Donovan McNabb, the number
two overall
pick
and Akilli
Smith, the number three overall
pick. Shaun King, out of Tulane,
was taken in the second round
by Tampa
·
Bay, making four
black quarterbacks selected
.
in
the top 50 picks.
.
·
One of the last remaining ra-
cial hurdles
-
in:the world of
sports,
.
the percentage of black
quarterbacks;in the NFL com-
pared to the rest of the positions
·
is enormously different. Many
reasons for that include the
myths of black quarterbacks not
being smart enough or enough
of a leader to be a quality signal
caller.
In 1988, Doug Williams led his
Washington R.edskins to the
Super Bowl, only to be asked
continuously about the pres-
sures of representing
an
entire
race and ending possible stereo~
types. Including one question
from one
·
of
.
the smarter media
members who asket, "How long
have you been a black quarter-
backT' Williams went out and
led his team to the victory and
captured the MVP award.
Since then, however, no black
quarterbacks have led their team
to the Super
Bowl. With more
emphasis placed on mobility
from the QB's due to the rash of
injuries at the position the la~t
two or three years, more and
more black quarterbacks are get-
ting an opporttinity at the pro
level.
It
is about time.
B3Seballdestrojts
PeaCOC.ks
by
THOMAS RYAN
Sports Editor
on last Sunday.
·
A combined 37
runs and
42
hits in just
14
in-
nings highlighted the Marist
Do not be surprised if the
St.
attack. Tim Bittner, Jeff Tafuto,
Peter's baseball team drops
and Ben Cueto all collected a
Marist from
_
_
the schedule next
combineq six hits in the two
year.
.
.
.
.
games. Center fielder Ryan
The Red Foxes totally annihi-
.
Brady had six RB.I's and An-
lated the Peacock's ori their
·
thony Cervino scored five runs
home turf, sweeping a double
in the massacre.
header
16-5
and
21-7
:
Believe it ornot, after the first
·
-
The two
·
wins put the Red
inning of the first game St.
Foxes solidly.in. third plac
_
e
in
Peter's actually
·
led by a score
µie North Division of the Metro of
1-0.
Little did they know what
Atlantic Athletic Conference; · was about
·
to happen
·
10
them.
They are now
9-7
in the MAAC
arid
18-17
overall with16 games
remaining before the MAAC
Championships
held
at
Dutchess
·
Stadium in Fishkill,
NY
Sweeping the Peacocks gave
the
Red Foxes a
4-3
record for
the week after they had split a
.
double header with Siena, de-
-
f~~tt!d
_
~_h_ig~,
.
a,l_!d.
.
~~r~. ~W~Pt.
_
..
_
The Red Foxes scored two runs
-
f!1emselv~ by the S~iiits:
'
Yes-·.
~
in
'
tile
s~cbnd.ihning, three in
'
terday the Red
·
Foxes
·
faced a
.
.
the
thfrd and t~o in the fourth
very to~g~. challenge in_ the
before exploding for six runs
Sou~ D1~1s1on le~ders, Rider.
and eight"hits
-
to increase their
At pnnt time Mans~ was set to
lead to
13-2.
The inning was
take on the Broncos ma double
highlighted by a two-run triple
heade! yesterday.
by Bittne_r and two singles from
Manst also faces a tough cha!-
Cueto.
·
Ienge over the weekend when
Doug Connelly was the ben-
~ey face LeMoyne, the_ team
eficiary of all the run support,
directly
·
ahea~ of ~em m the
but he pitched well himself, giv-
MAAC standmgs, m back to
ing up only two ~ e d runs in
back two-game sets. With a
seven innings while throwing a
good showing there, the Red
complete game.
Foxes have a chance to move
IfthePeacock'sthoughtgame
up to second in the North Divi-
one was bad, they would not
sion.
believe game two. This time the
·
They would not be in a posi-
Red Foxes did not wait for SL
tion to move up, however,
if
not
Peter's to grab the early lead.
for the hitting display they put
Marist came out with six runs in
the top half of the first inning
·
and followed that up with eight
runs in the second inning.
The first batter of the game
was Cervino and he led off with
a solo home run. Later in the
inning Steve O'Sullivan also
homered, this one a two-run
blast that gave Marist a 5-0 lead.
The second inning was also big
.
for O'Sullivan. The second
baseman hit a two-run triple in
the inning for the second of his
three hits in the game. The Red
Foxes collected seven hits in the
inning
.
Starting pitcher Ken Catino
struck out four in four innings
before leaving the game when it
_
got out of hand. Jeremy Doran
.
came in to pitch a scoreless fifth
inning to get the win.
As enjoyable
as
the sweep of
St. Peter's was, the sweep at the
hands of the Siena Saints was
equally disheartening. After
battling the Saints to a two-
game split just three days ear-
.
lier, the Red Foxes were swept
by Siena
9-5
and
2-1.
.
Game two was an especially
tough lost for Marist as they
held
a
1-0
lead for five innings
before the Saints rallied for two
runs in the bottom of the sixth
to eek out the win.
Marist was one out away from
escaping the sixth inning jam
unscathed, but then first
baseman Sean Dougherty
ended the Red Foxes hopes with
a two run single of starter Kevin
Perucci.
The Red Foxes will be in ac-
tion today when they hit the road
to take on Monmouth at
3:30.
• I
I
,
·

;

1
( I I
f
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f f
f
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PAGE15
What's
-
on Tap?
Baseball~ 4/22 @ Monmouth 3:30 p.m.
·
·
·
··
·
4i24
Home vs. LeMoyne (DH) noon
4/25 Home vs. LeMoyne (DH) noon
4/28@ Hofstra 3:30 p.m.
Softball - 4/23
@
Canisius 7 p.m.
4/24
@
Niagara TBA
Men's Lacrosse - 4/24 Home vs. Providence
1
p.m.
Women's Lacrosse - 4/23 @ Howard 1 p.m.
4/28 @ Manhattan 4 p.m
Men's Crew
-4/25
MAAC Championships
@
Orchard
Beach
Women's Crew -4/25 MMC Championships @
Orchard Beach
Men's Tennis - 5/14-5/16 NCAA Regionals TBA
Tough Trivia
Who is now
the
active career points
leader
in
the N~ after the retirement of Wayne Gretzky?
Last week
'
s
·
question - What team holds the record for the
most consec
.
utive losses to start a Major League Baseball sea-
sop.
7
.
.
Answer
-
The Baltimore Orioles lost 19 straight games to open
the 1988 season.
Marist Scoreboard
Baseball - 4/15 Marist 14, Lehlgh 11 4/17 Siena 9,
Marist 5 4/17 Siena 2, Marist 1 4/18
Marist 16, St. Peter's 5 4/18 Marist 21
,
St.
Peter's 7
Softball -4/15 Marist I, St. Johns
O
4/15 Marist 2,
St. Johns 1 4/17 Marist 5, Iona 4 4/17
Marist 3, Iona 1 4/18 Fairfield 3, Marist 0
4/18 Marist 2, Fairfield I
Men's Lax - 4!14 Siena 11
,
Marist 10
Women's Lax- 4/6 Lasalle 20, Marist 5 4/8 Fairfield
16-3
Men's Crew-4/17 Varsity 8 Marist5:45, RPI5:55
Fr. Mari st 6: I 7, St. Lawrence 6:43
Sec. Var. Marist 6:09, Vassar 6: 14
Women's Crew -
Varstiy 8 UCONN 6: 18, Marist 6:25
Men's Tennis-
4/14 Marist5, Fordham 2, 4/15 Marist
5, Quinnipiac 2
TENNIS:
Red Foxes looking for
huge upset at tournament
.
.
. continued from
pg /6
lifetime.
"How many college athletes
have the chance to win a col-
lege championship and then
have the opportunity to play in
the biggest and best college
tournament of all, the NCAA
Championship,
"
he said .
This could be a story of a big
university taking out a mid-sized
college, and some people think
so. But give Marist credit
,
this
team is talented and confident.
In this story David is stronger
than most people think, and the
Goliath could fall one more time.



































































































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Stat of
the Week
TheMaristBasebail
Team
:~9.ij%ned to.score 37~tjs
:~nd&ill41 hits in a seeep
ofSLPeter'.s/:,, .. ·
- ·
• '
• 't~--
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THE <CIR:CL£. -
"' 0 .
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--i.-~------------------------
Quote o ,the Week.
,'
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''We· ha\itfnoth1ng·tg._lose
and'~vecytliing tQ:gainin
. ay!'
:.'MlkeRacinel{i;inens
tennis .
·
··Softball
'
enjoys
.
· best
·
·
week~
f
J
hey~~
J7.
.
. . _·
·
-
.
·
siith when C;iroiyn ·Fortney fqr the ineptness of the Manst
by
JEFFD~~
doubled sconng Daphne Page.
offence that aftemC>on. . .
StaffWnter
.
_
B~t frke g~i :t\Vo against
. A sofoho~e1:1n by Koldjesk_i
. Consistency is one thing the
Fairfield; Maristresponded im-: · 111 the fifth mnmg
.
was all that
Marist College softball team
has _
m,ediat~iy. )1o~h ~i
_
ngled hoIU~
Kasack: wp~ld nee~,.~ Mari~t
·not had much of this season.
Kat Cheski with two outs inthe
esc~ped w1th<lllexc1tmg 1-0 ~-
. Last week, however, the Red
.
bottom o(th~ sixth, ·.which
umpli. KoldjeskiandKeiriHar-
Foxes showed that things might
proved.
tc>
be
the
ganie winner,
ris both had two hits for the Red
be ready to change.
with the Foxes walking away
Foxes, :._,. .
.
.
.
Marist won five ou,tof six
witha54victory . . :.:
.
- Andwhynotonemore~as_ack
games last:we'ek, improving its
, Kasack gotthe complet game
victory for gametwo? 'This tune
record to 14-15. The Foxes are
win; striking .out seven while
sh~ allowed .one run on three
5~3
in the Metro Atlantic Ath-
walking none. _
.
.
. hits over seven,-leading the Red
letic Confererice. _.
. Game two saw Kasack lead the
Foxes
to
a thrilling 2-1 victory
The Red Foxes had won four
way once again, afshe allow~d
over the Gaels. ·
in a row until they split a pair
only two hits over seven in:
. The Foxes trailed 1-0'in the
against Fairfield_ Jast ·sunday.
nings. Marist won 3-1. · ·
fifth, after a third inning tripl_e
The split came after consecu-
.
Ionafellbehindrightaway,as
by: Jami DeProspo scored
tive sweeps against Iona and St.
-<-?s!"'M• "·'"''
•>:.,
111.,""",,,~,,,..,,;
RBI singlei,_by Cheski and Tucci Lauren Fisher ~ith the game's
John's.. /
in. the first
Pi!l
Marist up
2~0.
first run, But Marist quickly
The endto _the'
four
game \Vin
That was all_ the scoring that erased that in th~ fifth.
streak came in game
-
one Sfin-
~r,~;.oJ,.;2,,.~-
.
,
~oul<i' be .n~cessary; as ·the
<
Koldjeski produced a tWO"OUt
dayaftemoonatNorthField,as
Gaels managed only a Jillian
single. Han,:is then_ brought
the Foxes fell 3-0. The Stags ..._..;.... __ --'-..;....-..;........_...;.._--_ _ _
..;.... _ _ _ _ _
_.
MathewsRBI'single. ·
·
·
Koldjeski home when she
jumped ahead in the top of the
_
circ1cph01o11ocScono
·
Rachel Ammons gave the
touched up St.·John's pitcher
second when a Theresa
Foxes. some insurance· in the
Gina Calabrese for a. two-run
O'Connor single scored Karyn
Mari5t scftball ~wept
t'.!.
th
rilling ·doLJble header againSt
th
e Gaels...
sixth with a base hit that scored
homerun.
.
Kennedy with the game's first
Cheski.
So, after such a successful
run.
The start of the win streak be-
week, Marist hopes t9 continue
Missy Powers, who went4-4
Yarashas. _ ._ ... ,,. .
. ·-• .
,Red Foxes on top.
gan last-Thursday when St.
its strong, and.consistent, play
on the afternoon, had
ari
RBI
Fairfielddrew first blood in the
Iona cut the lead to one in the
John's c_ame to town. · Sticking
in the coming games.
·
single of her own in the third,
top
~f
th.e ninth
':"hen
Dana . .fourth wheri a Laurie: Lawler
with a recurring theme, game
The Lady Red Foxes will be in
putting Fairfield up 2-0. They
Yoµng singl!;:d h~me .Christen 'single knocked in two. 'The
one was dominated by Kasack.
actio·n tomorrow night at
added an insurance run iri tlie
9iarkwith th~ g~e•,s fus_trun.
Ga.els then tied the_ score in the
She threw a shutout, making up
Canisius.
seventh to preserve to
3-0
vie~ _.
So Marist.caine. 9ut neecµrig
tory: .,,: ,
. ,
-. _
<
. _
to score in 'the ·ninth:
::
Marla
·

In
addition to Powers' perfect
Sara,cfop lll.J.na~ed''.a',oi~~out
.
.
d_ayrDom.inique Kostecki als9 .. single~ . grii:lgirig)1p :Melissa·
went44 for Fairfield., Forthe Tucci. Tucci then connected off .
F.oxes,,Michele Gosh was
3~3:.
Yarashasforatwo.-funhbnieruri; ·
.
, Joanna Nelson got the
·
win· gi\'iniMarist a·2~i~iri: ''.:·· · · ,.
while Melanie Kasack took the
Kasack scattered) I hits over
loss.
the rtjne fonhigs tqj'mp~ov~ her ..
Grune.twowasapitchersduel,
r~9fdto l.1-12 .• -_;: ,,,; ;:.,;.,
and it iastedinto the ninth.iiv
A
day.earli,erfo_n~, cain~Jo , ·
ning; Both teams wen_t score- ··
·
Poughkeepstefqrapajr.,Qaiµe._·_·
less.thr6ugh the first eight in-
.
on¢P.ittedKas~ckagainsiiorii,1;
nings behind strong pitch~ng
hurle~JendoergiC _· .
_ .. · _" _

performances. Kasack was on
Marist took a
~1-·
Iead after
the hillfor Marist, while Nelson
three innings.The offense wa~
startedonceagainfortheStags: - highligh.ted ·by 'Amanda···
Nelson was then replaced in the
Koldjeski, whose two,run homer
third inni_ng
ht
Heather .- in the botto~ of the first put the
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Circlcphoto/JcremySrilith.
,.Jn
winning
five
out
of
six
gam~s.rn
,wh.c1tw.~sc(early
their best '1Ve!3kofthe.1.999 season.
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,·BeSfleam ·
on
campus'·
.
..
.
ready
for the
NCAA's
up.against'.·
have'fo'.pfaj:first r6~nd? it
"In the.fall we were playing
could. be Duke lJnh\ersity, the
,more
,
MAAC: opponents, but
University of Georgia, or maybe
-now in the spring our competi-
the.Universjty.of Southern
Cali-
tionis tougher and stronger (U.
fomia; accor~ing to Smith.
. of Rhode Island~ Boston ·col-
-·Those areuneducated.guesses
)ege)," Smith s:µd .
.
"This will· ofcciurse; the'restwi~1Jeleftup
help us. better
_
prepare for the
to the selection committee .. •· ·
NCAA tournamenL ·
,
Th~NCAAtoumainentwillbe
. There is no team on the Marist
held on the week of May -14-16
campus hottec right now than
and the matches
are
single elirni-
· byKAARENUMMEfil
Sports Editor
ff
you consider yourself a
Marist sports buff, try this on
for size.
Can you name the four teams
that participated in their respec-
tive NCAA tournaments during
Marist's illustrious sports his-
tory? Got it yet?
Here's your answer: the 1985-
86
and
86~87
men's basketball
teams,
the
men's baseball team
two years ago, and finally ... the
I 998-99
men's tennis team.
Led
by second· year coach Tim
Smith, the Red Foxes have com- ,
piled an outstanding I 8-5 mark,
including an 11-0 record in the
fall season.
While they are ~urr~ntly en- . the Men's Tennis team. With
nation. The 64-tearn field will
joying the µtle of''.the best team
thefrregular season finished, all
be tarved dowh to the
fo,
who .
on campus", junior ·Mike Marist can dois practice hard
willgotoQeoigiatoplayforthe
Racanelli says that.their team's '. and wait. It's the waitthat championship.
unity has helped
carry
them this_·· maybe the more excitingjob, but
Is· Cinderella ready_ to dance
far.
th~ most nerv~:-racking'part of at the ball? The statistics this
"Even though tennis is an in-·:· the next couple
of
weeks. _ _ year say yes, even. though
dividual game, we have grown
On May 4, i11 the McCann
Maristwill be going up against
as a team thiS:'year," Racanelli . Recreation Center, Maiist's op-
the nation's best competition.
said. "The more experienced
ponent in the NCAA touma-
Their top six players are a com-
older guys mixed well with the
ment will be determined live on
bined. 85-38 (.693) in singles
younger talent."
television, via satellite. Just like
matches all year an4 they have
Marist finished up their spring
the NCAA basketball touma-
won the all-important doubles'
schedule last week, with a set
ment, Marist's name will appear
point nine out of
their
last twelve
of (5-2) wins at home against
in brackets for the first time in
times out in the spring.
Fordham University and on the
the history of the tennis pro-
To see how dominant· this
road against Quinnipiac. Even
gram. Anyone who would like
team has been, here are their
though Marist was only 7-5
in
to
be
on television and.support
records for singles matches dur-
the spring, Coach Smith said
theRedFoxesisinvitedtocome
ing the year. Junior Roberto
theirperfonnance was due to the
down to the gym.
Mayer is 14-6, junior Ralph
level of competition they were
Who willthe Red Foxes likely
VanderPJasse 15-4, freshman
Ju~ Delgado
17-;4,
fres~an !Jat .
Dahnert is 11-11, senior Ben
Scurto is· 13-8 and Racanelliis
15-5.
How does Smith feel- this
will
-
translate into their match in the
nationals?
~We do have two juniorcol-
_ lege transfers that have experi-
ence
in
larger tournaments and
tha_t will help," he said. "But it
will be· anew·experience for the
tearn." .
.
With the team playing as well
as they have, they look strong
going into next month's tourna-
ment., Racanelli says that this
season is already a success no
matter w~athappens in May.
'We have grown as
a
team and
accomplished something that
no other Marist Tennis team has
accompiished before,'' Rkcanelli
said. "We have nothing to lose
and everything to gain in May.
We are going to have fun and
play tough."
Racanelli said he also feels that
this could be the chance of a
... please see
TENNIS,
pg. 15
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52.17.1
52.17.2
52.17.3
52.17.4
52.17.5
52.17.6
52.17.7
52.17.8
52.17.9
52.17.10
52.17.11
52.17.12
52.17.13
52.17.14
52.17.15
52.17.16
52.17.17
52.17.18