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Part of The Circle: Vol. 53 No. 3 - September 30, 1999

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safe off
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32
RELATED STORY ON
THIS
PAGE
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Wednesday at the Union has) an ability to deal with is-
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niisyear
the award went to
Marist established the award
Cokie Roberts, chief congres-
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in
1983
toreco~individuals
sional analyst
~f
ABC News.
.
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AWARD,pg.
4
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Features ........................ 5
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ska, hip-hop,
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havjilg
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pu.qlic service greasefirewhilecookingaham-
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inicment
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broadcast on the
burger. Though
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this.resident
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air
.
should leave
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message for
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·
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Program Director Do
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guisher and s~ved the day
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the
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the-al~rmjinyway. The
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·
t11e yearbook If you have pho-
·
.
.
.
.
·
·
tos you want in
.
the yearbook
The alarms were silent Tue~.,
drop them off in the
Renyard
but on Wel at 7:45 p:ni.
{
an~
.
office, located in the basmentof other cooking mi~hap
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)
ent
the student center near' the
Fairview back to

their home
'
WIJ.~t
"
dQ
youtbink about
tfie drug and
8.lCohOl
situation
on
campus?
mailroom.
·
away from home. While in~es-
tigation the scene, Marist secu-
.
.
·
·
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·
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"I think there. is a larger
"ldon'tthink
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fels
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Do you like to discuss the hot
rity officers confiscated a
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·
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·
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"What situation?"
topics of.the day?
If
S()
join the
strii
.
cticm barrel adorned with
.
a
drug and a(chol prqblein
more
of a pr~/Jlerrfat
debate team
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ting
.
s are at
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functional blinking light
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on Janipui'then
Marist-
Marist
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the
tj
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at
DaviciBtandon
~2:30
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psychoiogy major
or a psych/spe
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cial ed major?
.
Then come
join
the Psychology
.
Club. Meetings are every other
Wed. at 12:30 p.m
.
in Dyson 206.
The next meeting will be Sept.
29.
had a breakfast'related fiascq,
·
·
one from smoking toast
,
and
one from burning bacon
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A
mechanic pulling cable
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while w'orking
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on the
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chapel
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·was smacked in
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the
.
eye with
.
a
.
her vehicle
in
Bec
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Plate
PMk
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o{Poughkeepsie police officers
.
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fo
leave and
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the
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portion of.the coil Tues
.,
Sept
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.
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The Society of Professional
.
.
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.
, but tbughed it out,
While
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refusing medical attention.
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>ottles and
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tographers. Leave a message
·
parking space in the Midrise
herinto'tte
r
ti~srbtiril\vhi~hled ...
:.
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seagraril.'s WiliB(acfclierry
.
·
eight-12·0~.beercanstosecu
>
at x2429 or
HZ4L
if you are up
Parking Lot Thurs., Sept. 23 at
5
h
.
~r
:
to

g~
_
fincl
security
i
-
.
Hi:>f
.
bottles
;
_
four Budlig~
f
¢ans, five
rify
'
of:ticers on Sun
:
; Sept. 27 at
.
to ttie challenege
.
p.m .. 'There
.
was
.
minor damage
·
ever

this
·
·
would
)
be
'
stalker Tony
.i
Samos'
.
Taliws,
·
'
and
,
si~
.
12
:
S~Hun
'.:
:
-
·
.
to both vehicles, but no injuries
.
~mid
'
Ollt
.
to
.
be
a
rnerni;;;r
-
~f
.
Buscli Ligli
f
cans
\\'ere
confis~
·
:
. -· '.
·-
The
Circle
is
:
also currently
.
seeking an assistanLwebmaster
to
_
help with managing its
website,Ifyou are interested in
this position
;
call x2429
.
If
you have a club event
pr
meeting that you
_
would like
publicized
·
in Ciub Bulletins,
contact
The Circle
office
.
at
x2429 or drop the information in
the envel.ope on the Circle door,
LT2.11A&B.
were reported.
·
her class:
·
-
·
· .
.
.
.
-
cate<i
/
alongwith24efuptiesthat
An
·
off-~ampus student
\Vas
. .
.
had ~~<iy ~ien.)niested:
reported .inis~ing
.
Sat.;. Sept 25
C:omi~g in atadismal second
A missing diiiing
/
°ii"aUcart'
.
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·
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.
att:30
_
airibyhis~n,<anipus,
_
girl"'.
.
place with one fire alarm. Resi:.
may have bee~
·
~~dtI~ted
)
rb.m
:
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.
'
.
~
J\nother gat'1,erj.iig
was
}
qj~
,;;
.
·
friend.
·
ApaireQ~Y,
he had left
dents
of
the
''F'
'.
Block over
~ .
the
·
stock room. The cart
,.
his
tiu:t>idSat
:;
Sep_(25jt 12
:
liam
.
·
his
·
girlfrie
.
nd's place
·
of
heated a frying pan Mon., 20 at been missing sine~ Fri
:
;
,
Sept:
_
·
OQ
Mjdri§e's thirdnoor, resuit-
· : :
r~idneceearlieri~ the evening
.
.
·
.
7p:m .. Upon e~tering their
COill-
17 and was r~ported
fo
~ecurity .
·
ing
in
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:
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clt5t~riienti~=
;
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Due New Yoi-k'{iriinied1ate
~
re
.:
· .
moo area,
fire
fighters observed
officers Sept 23 at7:55
a
'.
m,
,
tioQs and the clumping ofseven
·
sponse
Jaws,
security officers
a large number ofstreet signs
.
open beers, 011e open schnapps
·
.
contacted
.
Town
of
mounted around the room. Siu-
. ,
A laptop computer
-
valued at
.
bottle
;
and one
·
a1reagy emptied
P
.
oughkeepsie polic~ officers;
.
dent Affairs officers were noti-
$2,500
.
was
reported
stolen from
·
vodka bottle.
who joined in a
.
camptis-:wide
fled.
.
the Sheahan Hall lounge
.
-
effort to locate the
.
student. The
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • - . Thurs
·.
; Sept 23 at 10:40 p.m
.
A
::
40 minutes later, seven stu-
"missing" boyfriend returned to
·
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·
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.
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lounge at 10 p.m., leaving her covered with 23 bottles of Co-
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.
morning on his own, uninjured .
.
bi:66
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SATURDAY:
bi:66
lo:42
bi:
6(i
lo:47
Source: http://www.weather.com (The Weather Channel)
$2,500 computer alone to fend
rona in GartJand's
.
"G" Block.






























1CJH[]E. <CJ[]R.<ClLlE
SEPTEMBER
3::;:0,::;:1=:-99
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Variety·
of
cafeteria food
lacking · .according· to some
by
LAINEY NADEAU
Staff Writer
The new cafeteria looks more
appetizing, but many students
·are questioning whether th.e
-food is too.
. , Changed _was ·the key term
used to describe the -cafeteria
this fall when returning students
_ noticed the new physical ap~
pearance and style of food pre..:
sentation. Many students enjoy
the new atmosphere of the caf-
eteria and recognize an improve-
ment in food quality, but others
complain that it lacks variety.
Sophomore Mah Pelletier said
the food- choices are not that
varied. ·
"There is no variety," he said.
"It's fabricated food, nothing
special about it I don't enjoy
having pizza and grilled cheese
everyday."
A pizza bar is something new
to be added. to the cafeteria this
semester. The cafeteria is run
by Sodexho Marriot, a leading
food and facilities management
According to VanLueren,
Sodexho Marriot is the primary
determinant to changes made in
the cafeteria's physical appear-
ance as well as the cafeteria's
menu, but Marist tp.es to take
students comments into consid-
eration whenever possible.
"Myself and two other front
· managers look overall the stu-
. · dent ·comment cards we re-
ceive," he said.
"If
we can, we
try and make all the changes
that students want."
Having pizza everyday was
something suggested by sev-
-eral students last year and
VanLauren said that this year's
pizzabar,opendailyfrom 11 a.m.
to 7 p.m., has been a· big hit.
Some students, however, dis-
agree.
"There is no variety ...
it's
fabricated food,
nothing
special
about
it."
Matt Pelletier
Sophomore
· service around the country.
Freshman Cheryl Callahan
Along with proyiding foqd ser-
said she wishes. that there was
vices to ·colleges and universi-
less pizza and more variety in
·ties Sodexho·alsoiserves busi-
the mainme'al choices···each·
iiesses, health care facilities arid
night.
primary and seccmdary schools.
"There is pizza, grilled cheese
,:Sodexho ha·s
tun'
the.:Marist
and sandwiches every night but
food service for the last 20
there is only two· choices for
years.
_ _
main courses, that is not good
Changes to_ the cafeteria this -enough;" said Callahan. "There
year include more food lines, a
is hardly ever chicken, how am I
new salad bar and more front
supposed to get my protein?" .
house cooking. Harold:Van
VanLauren explained that the
Lueren, a front supervisorin the
school yearis dividedinto three
cafeteria,. said that front house
cycles and Sodexho -Marriot
• cooking .makes f9,od more.ap-
providesJ\1aristwitharrienufor
pealing to the. cus,tomer.
__ . _ , each cycle .
.Itis
a set menu for
. "It~l()"'.S for rrio,re, show_ an,d , the year but Marist can enc.our-
. lets students see what goe~ into, age s·ome changes b_ased on
their foods production," he said.
student comment -- cards:
.
.
Circle
yhoto/Mikc Haigh
The om_lettes~tup is new, but students question rood taste.
. ~!.
!_,_:/;; ''•
VanLauren said that on average
most students are satisfied with
the food seryice.
"I would say that about 80
percent are happy with the
changes that have bee made,"
he said. "Then you have the
ones that are just never happy."
-Sophomore John Comeliusen
is pleased with the changes that
have been made in the cafete-
ria .. He said he like.s that there is •
al ways pizza and grilled cheese.
"If
you don't like something
else that is being served you
can always grab a slice of pizza.
It works out well," he said.
Students aren't the only ones
who are enjoying the new atmo-
sphere and food selection in the
cafeteria. Cashier _Diane Ben-
jamin said she is very impressed
with the changes.
"I think the quality of food has
improved· and there is much
more of a selection," she said.
"I think that students appreci-
ate that."
Play shows the
perils of abuse
October is Domestic Violence
Month. To draw attention
to
is-
sues of domestic violence,
Marist College will host a per-
formance of "The Yellow
Dress", a one-woman play with
music this Sunday at 8 p.m. in
the Cabaret. The event is open
to the students as well as the
general public.
"The Yellow Dress" is a pow-
erful and dramatic story of the
escalation of violence in a dat-
ing relationship," said Roberta
Staples, director of counseling
services at Marist. "Recent
headlines involving the appar-
ent murder of a woman on her
wedding day by an ex-boyfriend
is only the latest example of a
problem that exists at all age lev-
els in all communities."
I
·
·1
I
I
I
·
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I
-
-
-
-
1r1HnE ·
{C][]R_(C]L]E
.
-
,
.
-
·
-
.
SEPTEMBER 30, 1999
•·
·
·
News
.
PAGE4
_____ :
.
.
Recel1trt11iggirigs
·
·
·
a
·
·
·
concelil
_
. -
Cir
cl,
photo/Megan Williams
When polled, students said that it-is safer to walk
in
groups at
night. According to others, wandering'tlie stre~t~ is a risk.
PARENTs:
·
A~tiy~li
.
~s
,
_
for
the entire f
amily
·:
·oif:cafupus
... co11ti11uedfrompg; l
_ ·
·
ior and senior parents has
risen," he said. 'This is in part
to the improved variety in
eyents
·
and the addition of
unique novelties such
as
the hot
air balloon ride, and also be-
cause
·
of educational w
_
ork-
shops, like this yeru:'s Interna-
tional Education
Program."
The Hudson River cruise
seems(~
~
-
the
:
m~s
-
t anticipated
event
of
th~
weekend: Tickets
for different times have sold o~t,
leaving some students and their
families wondering what to do.
Freshman Anna Carmon said
she
was
planning on attending
the
major events.
-
·
·
·
'We are planning on taking ad-
vantage of the night time events
here," she said.
.;:
:.contin~edfrom
pg.1
offcamptis
crimfoaJ
focidents
is
·
nothing new.
_
-
Whether you are walking
-
down the street or
inside your
house you can still become a
victim. Mike
.
Seaman, a senior
who
is living off campus for the
.
second year now, said that this
sunimer he and his housemates
·
were robbed ~wice by whom they
-
believe to be Marist students;
"I
feel safe off campus except
sometimes
I
trust the people of
Poughkeepsie more than
I
do
Marist students themselves,"
he said.
·:
A female student in West Ce-
_
easy
it
was for
:
me to gef in,"
dar,
:
o~~c~pus hou
:
sing
~
~a~
is
-
-
-
Hee ran
;
said:
.
_
''.I
was
.
also
iocatef
across
from the main
shocked that a security guard
campus, said
-
she awoke one
-
didn'.t stop me or say anything."
evening
and
found
-
an intruder
The campus security staff is
in her room
.
Yet how he entered
trained to respond appropriately
the house is unknown.
,
to
all calls for assistance.
·
Cam-
"lt is real scary that Marist
·

pus safety is a
_
collaborative ef-
security can not even keep
·
us
-
-
fort, and at Marist, the entire
safe in our own house," accord-
campu~ coq1.muruty is involved
ing to a resident in that
.
house
in making
·
the college safe and
who asked not
to
be identified
.
secure for everyone.
Katie Heeran
;'
a senior West
·
·
Joseph
'
Leary, director
~
of safety
Cedar resident; was locked out
arid security, tells students to
.
of her house one day arid man-
.
-
think safety constantly.
aged to get in through her bed-
·
"Stay
in lighted areas, travel
-
room window.
-
-
·
in groups, and watch
_
each
"I
was so surprised at how
other;'.'
Leary
said.
ALCOHQl}:
'lips forgoing out
.
.
.
.
.
:
. .
.
.
.
,
.
.
.
... contim~edfrompg. }
_
-
Binge drinking can lead to
fluence of alcohol it comes out
two weeks prior to the study.
safety
·,
problems on campus
-
such as violence or sexual as
-
Only one in six college students
such
as
violence or rape.
saultt he
said.
,
surveyed said that they do not
,
JuniorVincentAufiero said he
-
Lori Sullivan;
·
ajunior fashion
drink at all.
-
;
has seen problems from using
-
major; expressed her concern
The student questionnaire de-
·
alcohol.
· ·
about the use of "Roofies".
fined a drink
as
a
12-ounce can
''Some people like· to go out
"You
.
have to be
.
so careful
or bottle of beer or wine cooler,
·
looking for trouble and alcohol
when you go out because you
a four-ounce glass of wine or a
gives them more motivation to
never know when someone
shot of liquor.
·
do
something
and that's when
-
could
-
try to slip you some-
Binge drinking was defined for
fights can occur." Aufiero said.
thing,'~"Sullivan said.
men as drinking five or more
Aufiero, a criminaijustice ma-
·
Going out with many familiar
drinks in a row in
-
the past two
jor; said
_
that alcohol leads
people is another good idea,
weeks,
and
for women drinking
-
people to do things they would
according to Sullivan.
four or more drinks in a
row. Fre-
normally not do.
·
"You
should try not to be
quent binge drinking was de-
"A person may have certain
around unfamiliar people by
fin~d as binge drinking three or
--
.
jntentions
that
.
they• normally
.:
yourself when you go out,!'
she
-,
inorefunesinthepasttwo;weeks:
·
would
,
riot
do
but under
,
the
,
in-
·
·'.
said:•
··
0
:
,-.
y -
,:
,:
,
---------
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\veil
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.
4;(_)
·
.
·
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l';L
·
..
7;0
''

0
:
·
p
·
·
ID
Do:~ell~
LohJ,;
:
: -
A
variety of graduate and
prolessionalscliool
representatives
will
visit Marist to discuss their
academic programs,
aJmission
procedures, linanciJ assistance, etc.
Sponsored by the Center
for
Career
Services























-
SEPTEMBER 30, 1999
· 1rlH[]E <C][]fl<C]L]E
Features
PAGES
Champagnat canonized as a saint,
.
.
.
. · ·
.
1nsp1res Marist College and world
by
MARY WITKOWSKI
Staff Writer
Since St. Champagnat be-
community: Attheendofalong
lieved that education makes life
day he still had energy to in-
The n~me .Champagnat is syn-
more fulfilling and meaningful,
struct the brothers on religion
onymous with the largest fresh-
his dream was to establish a
and teaching methods. ·
man residence hall on campus,
branch of brothers whose func-
Although St._ Champagnat
but it also stands for a certain
tion was to provide everyone
died on June 6, 1840, his mes-
spirit, a spirit. of learning and
with the opportunity for an edu-
sage of love, service, and edu-
service, which was inspired by
cation. After only six months
cation did not die with him. The
St. Marcellin Champagnat.
of being a priest he founded a
M_arist Brothers continued to
St,. Champagnat, founder of branch of brothers within the
spread St. Charilpagnat's mes-
the Marist J3tothers,. \,Vas re~ . Society ofMary;which later be-
sage· throughounhe world and
cently canonized a saint on
cameknownastheMaristBroth-
by 1900, therewere8,000mem-
April 18, 1999 at St Peter's in . ers;
bers iri the Marist Brothercom-
Rome. This was a.momentous
St. Champagnat told his-Marist
rriumty.
occasion for the, Marist Broth-
Brothers that, ''The goal of be-
, : The Marist Brothers estab~
ers as well as for Marist College.
ing a Marist Brother is
to
come
lished · Marist College in 1929
Brother Frank Kelly, the direc-
to know· and· love God and to
and it still continues today to
tor of Campus Ministry, said the
make God loved and known."
educate students' minds and
canonization of St. Champagnat
According to Brother Frank,
spirits. The college encourages
shows
the
value
of St. Champagnat believed that
students to be dedicated to their
Champagnat's life.
education was both intellectual
studies as well as to participate
"When the Church raises up
and spiritual and that through
in the many community service
a saint they are saying that this
education young people would
opportunities offered.
person and this person's life is
come to know and love God. He
However, Marist College is
worthy of modeling," he said.
taught his brothers that in or-
not the only place that is in-
"His values and his life vision
der to educate a young person,
spired by St. Champagnat. St.
is worth imitating."
you must first show them love.
Champagnat's message of edu-
St. Champagnat was born in
St. Champagnat taught his
cation, service, and love is uni-
Lyons, France -in 1789.
brotherstobeactiveincommu-
versal.i •
.
. ..
,,_,
Champagnat
·
did not receive · ·nity'
service.· He and·his broth- · ·Some students last April were
·much· ofan-eoticatio'ii
·1iita:•
·-erscaredforiliesick:,·the dying~ -
·rortuiia.ie
enough-to witnes·s-the
youth, but through .har~i work
and the poor., Sf Champagnat canonization of St. Champagnat
and determination he studted for · was a truly humble person and
in Rome. Sophomore Andrew
ten years to become a priest and
he was always ~een alongside
Lennon described the experi-
on July 18, 1816 he was or-
his brothers building schools
ence as incredible and he was
dained.
and homes and caring for the
able to see how St. Champagnat
· . : ... , .
".
· .•· ..
.
,
.
.
photo courtesy
of Tim
Massie
Saint Man;:emn Champagnat taught community service, a
tradition Marist College strives to carry on.
.' touched so many people around
over the
world," he said. "It
the world.
made you realize that Marist was
"People were there from all
part ofa much larger family."
Hur:vicanes remain a mystery,
the .. infoi;mati.on is still limited
by
ANDY TOLAND
Staff Writer
During tl_le week preceding
Hurricane Floyd's visit to
our riverside campus, it
seemed like you couldn't do
· a thing without seeing the
. Floyd warnings on televi-
sion.
The only problem is that
for most people all of the
warnings mean nothing be-
cause we don't know
enough about hurricanes, or
at least I don't, or I didn't
before writing this.
After searching on campus
for info I found out that not
many people and not even
most professors know any-
thing about hurricanes. So I
turned to the Internet, which
proved to have a lot of facts
about hurricanes.
Here in the northeast, we
basically know nothing
about hurricanes, at least in
comparison to the hurricane
weary residents of Florida.
According
to
the National
Hurricane Centers website,
out of the 158 hurricanes around 140 mph.
that hit the U.S. over the last
The naming of hurricanes
100 years or so, 57 have hit is another thing most people
Florida. Herein New York
don't kn9w about. The Na-
we've only seen around nine
tional Hurricane Center,
in that same time.
-which originally started us-
The mosi:basic thing to ing names in the early
know abouthurricanes is . 1950's, started using names
that they are all rated ori a to simplify communication
scale of 1-5, five being th~ ,.,b·etwe~#t,,weaJher stations
worst. The scale, known
as
during the storms.
the Saffir-Simpson. Scale
There are only six lists of
rates hurricanes based on names in circulation, one list
wind speed, but also takes per season with twenty-one
into account storm surge.
names on each list. The lists·
Storm surge is the high tide run once every six years, this
created by the storm, which year's Hst making another
is usually what causes most appearance in2005.
of the damage along the
One thing about the list is
coast.
that itdoesn't have too many
The most common hurri-
familiar names on it. The
canes are category one and worst, most destructive and
category three hurricanes, deadly hurricanes ·are re-
although a large number of moved, or retired from the
category. two hurricanes list after they hit. Some no-
have made landfall over the table names retired from the
years as well. A category list over the years are An-
one hurricane has winds of drew, Bob, Hugo and Gloria.
around 74-95 mph and on up
I think it's safe to say that
the scale to category five Floyd will not be retired, at
hurricanes which can have least it won't be retired for
winds of more than 155 mph.
the dam,age it.did here. Off
At its worst, Floyd reached campus, it downed tree limbs,
category four, with winds of flooded basements and cut
pholo
coo=y
or N2tional Hurricane Centers website
Hurricane Floyd left scores of damage in its wake.
off power to a lot of area
residents, but it didn't do too
much damage.
But now at least after read-
ing through this article you
will know a little about hur-
ricanes, and when the next
one occurs you'll know what.
the weatherman is talking
about.
(All hurricane informa-
tion was found on the Na-
tional Hurricane Centers
Website.)
·:
.
-
.
'
.J
























SEPTEMBER 30, 1999
by
CANEll..MCDONALD
Staff Writer
say that fall is going to be
a
·
season full of color and self-
expiession. The
·
October is
~
Changing Jeav
·
~s a
·
nd
.
sue of Efie- Magazine
<
fea-
.
changing temperatures also tures strong ethnic prints
means changing clothes. So
.
paired with denim and knits.
what do you have tC> .look
,
This
-
ethnictheine wasech-
forward to when yqu pack
.
oed in this
.
month's issue
:
or
away your capris
;
anµ.t~I!J~;,,
:r
Mademoisene;
:
~here bdght
tops?
·
·
,
colors and
~!funky"
sho
·
es
Leading fashion magazines
were deciared as "up
.
and

·
...
-
PAGE
.
.
6
coming'' trends for
:
th
_
e fall~
_.
•'
thisfalJ are de
_
niin; wool;vel-
'
lik~/to
se~ guys in khakis
'
Dresses
.
are femfoine and
.
vet mixes, and.leather. New
anda white t-shirts:
\
;
._
-
.
ankle lengtf
:
For outerwear,
high tech materials
·
, with
.
an
:
. ·
Dave -LavaUet}
's
picks for
long coats in plaid and wool
emphasis on ~tretch fabrics, fall ai-eiolled necksweaters,
are
.
the next big thing.
are making theirway into fall
big corduroys,' a nice
_
dress
·
Wool

is· a dominant fabric
fashion lines:
.
shirt, and tight fitting rib.bed
in
many collections. Models
.
DeSanna said vests
.
are
·
sweaters.
·
Lavallee's outfit
are wearing everything from
going to be versatile.
of choice
·
rc,r
femal~s in:-
'\'.OoUa~J..c
,
e!sJq
,
skir~s .
. ;
.,
.
,
;
_
,
"Vest are back as both in-
.
·
eludes a short plaid skirt and
·
-
~
For alf those.
,
p
_
arty
;
girls,
:
.
·

,
n er
:
,
.
and
,
ou tei:w ear;!'
.
she,:
:
swe
'
ater,.witb,.a
·
dress
;
shirt
slleer dr,!!sse
.
s and tops in said.
underrieath
·
::
' ·
.
:.
.
shiny fabrics are in for
High
.
_
boots are what's
Martin Aguilar likes the
eveningwear.
popular in foo_twear. As semi-dressyfook on women.
Fashion editors at Made-
skirts plunge f~om knee
·
to
His fall picks for females in-
moiselle named
.stores
like
.
ankle leng!hs, pants are
.
elude a nice pair of jeans,
American Eagle and Gap as
cropped anywhere from the
.
.
black
,
platform shoes wi
_
th a
places to shop for the latest mid-calf to ankle.
big heel, a button down col-
trends
.
~f
the season.
.
Students, also have their
..
lared
.
blouse
,
(pref~rably in
.
SueD
_
eSanna is the pirec-
pred
_
iction,s for
_
\'/hat will he
blue),
--
and
.
black pants.
tor of the Fashion Depart-
in style for th~ fall.
.
The top.ten trends for
,
fall
ment here at Mari st. When
Skants (pants with little
-
are .. vests, wool sweaters and
asked
.
about
.
__the hottest
.
skirts on
.
.
top), long cargo
:
turtlenecl<.s,
.;:
ornamented
trends for the fall, she reiter-
skirts, fleece, and
.
_
bub
.
ble jeans,
·
bright colors, cordu-
ated a lot of things being vests are one fashion roy, hoodies, stretch fabrics,
seen ii
i'
fashion magazines
.
major's choices for fall.
vint~ge t~~hirts, leather, and
Most of the trends for this
Mike Craigg, another stu"'
layering.
·
·
,
season are based on the 60's dent, said he favors denim
.
For all those trendsetters
and ?O's. Decorated jeans,
"Denim
·
is
.
definitely who don't have the cash for
embroidery, trims, ribbons,
good,'' he said. "Especially stores like Abercrombie and
feathers, and fairly wide legs
with
wool
sweaters
and Fitch,
-
The Gap, or American
are all predicted to be hot turtlenecks."
Eagle, try thrift's tores to get
this fall.
When asked about what authenti~ 60's and 70's
D~Sanna's color picks in-
faH hem she couldn't live s~yles
.
.
You might
_
even want
.
eluded "fminy" pinks, blues,
without, Christina Pagano totry decorating sour own
deep wines, and
.
olives.
chose her Old Navy Tech jea11s to get the ornamented
The most popular fabrics
·
Ve,st
;
;
I>~gano also said
.
s~e jeans look .
.
,
.
.
,







































































,
I
I
i
.:.
·
sEP_TEl\1BER
.
30,
1999
.
PAGE7
11/ed4tte
ij
.
tie
.'if/~
http:\\w.ww.mtbinfo.com
.
Are
you a mountain biking fanatic?
If
so, go.to http:\\www.mtbinfo.com, the·mountain
biking infonnation source.

.
·
-

.
·
-
·
This site has everything you need to know for
'
planrtlng your next biking trip;
If
offers
advice from experienced riders on products such
as
frames, brakes, biking electronics,
drivetrains, clothing,
·
saddles, seatposts, suspension and wheels.
You can get infonnation from the "Bike Doctor" on bike maintenance tips such as
fixing a broken chain or spoke, riding know-how such as effective braking and riding
in
mud, and heaJth concerns suchas poison oak exposure and bike training basics.
·.
When you have the free time to read there is aJso a way to order mountain biking-
related books off the site
.
The subjects include touring; maintenance and repair, wisdom
and .inspiration and racing. Also, a portio~ of your purchase will be donated to land
access;
Chee~ out trail guides from aJl over the world and find the best places to ride. The site
gives detailed descriptions, maps and pictures of the trails.
If
you don't see your favor-
ite trail you can add it to the list.
ff
you're planning a trip in the near future the site will let you know what the weather
will
be
like on the day you chqose. It also tells you how Jong the daylight
wi111ast.
·
-, .
. Need to buy a bike or accessories? The storeg1:1ide lets you know what bike stores are
,
. the besiones
·
nearest you.
.
.
,;
"
·
So if you're itchin' to do some riding, ev~n if you've never done it before,
-
.
:
http:\\www.mtbinfo.com is perfect for you.
·
·
·
Horoscopes
·
~
ARIES:
Spend time
able, whether or not
-
well as networking.
high-potential oppor-
old obstacles makes
getting
-
to know
you intend to keep
~VIRGO:
A bank state-
tunity today requiring
room for change. Avoid
youisiblingsallover
.
them. You
_
are a
·
mentmakesyoulaugh
,
quick action, or you
listeningtopeoplewho
again.Romantic in-·
.
:
charmer, and your
.
_
and
.
thenconsiderbet-
..
.
• .
m<ly,
l:>~
:
.
.
as~~d
.
-
~o
.
·.
comearoundanddon't.
tentions have no
smile alone may get
.
ter
.
placestoputyour
.
;,•
:
-c~-;
':
\c
;,
'
,
:;
c\:\oose.,between two
.
·

.
,
..
:
make

sense
.
Youknow
. .
-
1,tac(
·
among
··
the
·
.
you what you want.
money'. Ideas
.
are
:
promising options. Be
·
where you want to go
.
.
-.
'
)
JH_rigstlia{m<l_tiv~te
-
-
-
- .
·-
There
.
are aJI°kinds
·
of
cheap-,- it's the pre-
·
on the lookout for an
~
AQUARIUS:
Paint a
you Joday:.Yotidire
.

int¢resting things pen-
cise implementation of
'',
unusual minor detail
bDd
big, bright slash of fun
burns
·
clean and
.
cjled in on your social
the
in
that
-
matters.
which could strongly
and romance across a
pure, with
,
nosmoke
calendar, and you are
Your signature is
affect the outcome,
life that has become a
·
to
·
cloud
_
'
your

vt:
-
-
,
..
..
.
:
.;
having trouble
·
decid.:._
worth a lot today. It
'
s
·
and be sure
·
you have
little too serious lately.
:
~ion. 5=ommunica~
.
ing
:
whkh ones you
·
tin)e to get off the
all the fa,cts straight.
Devote a day to what-
tion is extrnorpimir-
.
:
reaily want to attend.
dra Wing board and
~
SAGITTARIUS:
To-
ever you call your art
.
,
ily'~
-
~sy'ioday. This
.
so1!1eone'seffusiveat-
onto
the road. Today
day
is
a tim
.
e to per- -
Throw yourself
into
the
_
·
:
>
is
.
:
a good
,
day to
·.
tention could be more
-
is advantageous for
form maintenance
arms of someone you
,
.:.::
,
:
.>,
,
catch _up
,
_oll' y
_
our
·;
than yqu are comfort
::-
beginning something
.
work on relationships.
have long desired.
·
emaiis, letters or ,......_...., able with.
new.
If
you postpone
.
Yourtools are words,
Throw caution to the
· -
·
phone caUs. Now is
•".
~
CANCER:
Spend your
acting
.
for too long,
and your materials are
wind and dive into ex-
}he _time tp exnre~s
.
:~J:
~y
}
_
earning from clill
:.
--
-
·
;
you
·
may find
.
things
.
constructive answers
perience. Have an in-
:j_
ourself
'iinifsay'9r·
'.
·
:
"-
,
·
--~
~en
_
in theeducatio!l~
-
- .-
,
,_:
,,
"
;
·.
~h_a.pgeclandplru.is will
to unasked questions.
credible picnic with a
:-
a
_
skfqr
tl,:f9~e
1
~
tljjt!g$
>
_
,
styleknow,n
~ 'play/
·
·
have
t6
be redrawn.
-
Sometimes a show of
partner, or a midnight
.
~
you
·
ma)
i
_
ba~e beeri
-;
_
A
/
child's
_
endless
m
LIBRA:
You are witty
effort is aJl ittakes.
It
feast under moonlight.
putting off.You will
·
..
strea01of crea~ivity_
,
·
andfull of good ideas.
is time
.
to slow down
Give into a whim and
be
.
heard, and
will
/
~o~s
.
not depend on
·
Tell a few jokes
to
get
from the §ocial frenzy
jump
·
on a plan to an
receive answers
io
coffee
·
quality
.
or bud~
,
·
·
·

.
.
.-
the audience's atten-
that yoµ've been im-
exotic destination, or
your questions
.
get size
'.
Observe and
tion and sympathies.
mersed in lately and
just go for a drive to
TAURUS:
You are
·
react with joy. Com~

Be sure that you don
'
t
·
see what is going on
wherever you feel the
,

..
·
..
fa
·
c
·.
e
.
d w

ith a
.
.
·
cho
.
ice
,
out of your shell and
turn a discussion into
·
close to home.
urge. Pick up the tele-
-
.
The
.
easiest path is
enjoy the day. Don't
a monologue. It's a
All the juggling you
·
phone and invite a tan-
.
:
·
,~-
_'_
.
.
. :
. ·
(?
ti'o'friecessanly
the
:.
i.:
';"
ge
(
bogged down in
great time to plan
have been up to has
talizing someone to join
.

.
-.
t,~st one, If pos-
.
extraneous detaikPut
something with
a
.
caused some sore feel-
you.
,
~::.;d~~~~p;.~J
;_.;
~;b~~!.t'j,#~;
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~~~:o~.?-~lW
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:=.:!8~!c~f,
10
:~;'.
tonight.oi:tomorrow;
· ·
··
-
_,
the shelf for a\Vh1le.
:-·
may be
gett
i
ng lots of
Jong
·
way, and
·
some
'
commodatechanges in
especiaJly if con-
When you return
to
:
'
interesting invitations,
honesty can feellike a
plan. If you are not at
tracts are involved.
them, you may find
·
·
and a surprise

gift
fresh breeze.
home, stay connected
°l,ook carefully at aJI
you have a different
.
_
could be corning your
~
CAPRI
C ORN :
by
phone
or email. If
business dealings
perspective.
'
-
way. A relationship is
Change is in the air for
you are destined to get
today, and do not
~
LEO:Bringyoursocial
on the upswing and
you. Changing your
in trouble, let trouble .
-initiate anything
·
·
life
home with you.
you are enjoying
attitude couldn'thurt,
cometoyou,insteadof
new or make any
Outside the pressures
yourself immensely.
but you have worked
going out to look for it.
major
change. Some-
of the work environ-
.
All this attention is
hard enough to de-
Catch up on tasks that
:
one may not be per-:-
ment, you are relaxed .
flattering you,
and
serve something
bet-
have piled up lately
fectly honest with
enough to be the per-
·
your good mood is
ter.
Be
fii!st
in
line
to
rather than initiating
you about.an impor-
feet host. Consider
·
-
contagious.
congi:atulate. yourself
something new. Paying
tant matter. SoIOe
uniquewaystoillumi-
SCORPIO:
Ask a
for a change of per-
attention to detail will
gentle probing may
nate a room. Have a
friend for his lucky
spective and letting
keep you out of harm's
help bring out the
dinnerorcocktailparty
numberandbuyhima
go of outmoded is-
way. Another may be
wholestory.
and invite some
.
lotterytickeLNothing
sues.
Something
behaving strangely,
GEMINl:Thisisa
friends you haven't
maycomeofit,butbe
whichhasbeenbuild-
but don't get dis-
greatdayforgetting
had time to see re-
sure you've chosen
ing finaJly reaches its
tracted trying to figure
all the attention you
cently, or some inter-
someone with whom
peak,
though you may
out the mystery. Your
wanL Others are re-
estingnewacquaintan-
you can split your
notbeawareofitcon-
imagination wants to
sponsive to your
ces you would like to
winnings. Improbable
sciously. New oppor-
take you far away, but
friendly or romantic
know
better.
It's a great
events
make
for good
tunities
will
present
a foot kept on the
overtures. All prom-
time for expanding
what-if stories. Some-
themselves at just this
ground will keep you
ises sound believ-
your social circle as
one may offer you a
time,
as the clearing of
where you need to
be.





































































































































































































































































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book.ln~isbook,BuchananbasicallY
.
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says th~(~ct.oJph
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a
·
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..
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.
Buchanan's

yiew
but I
.
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;
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n1any,A.hiedcaµs and
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9reign n
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.
East Tim or .
.
·
Kosovo. Bosni
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.
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or
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article
·
Illpstly
.
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press
.
a pos1tiye view
of
heard of seven years ago, when many of the re
_
ad
_
ers of this newspaper were still in
Buchanan
;
-
! think)fonly'fare.tc>'_' address some

of Btichanan's
·
views that:soine
;
..
junior high. How times hav_e changed. Communism
.
collapied in Eastern Europe.
people
.
may
:
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ltb()t1t.
...
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· . ·
·
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·
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The Cold War came to an end. Then came a wave of de
_
mands for independence and
...
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:
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;
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articles onlin~
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·
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'
dence from Serbia:~
Arid
now th¢ E~t Tifnorese have
·
voted for
independence
from
buchanan.htm#hitler, http://www.dimensionaLcom/-"-randl/brich
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htin
.
.
·
·
.
.
.
.
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·. .
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populous riation with
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more
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than.
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·
million
.
·
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the
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·
yiews:
of
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·
people on
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people.
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·
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·
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..
.
.

.
.
.
campus have no
.
t heard ofor learned
~boilf
Tllank
you for your time
.-
-
·
·
..
In eac~ of these c~es, demam:ls for independe'IJ.ce have led
to
violence, human
.
.
.
.
,
..
-
·
·
.
.
.
.
. .
. .
..
.
.
rights abus~s
/
media attentfon
and
eventually
·
the
'
involveme,lor the international
JeffKumek6tI
.
--
._
,
,
.
community.
. .
·
.
.
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·
.
.
.
....
. .
.
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Freshman
,
.
:
The destabilizing
.
consequences Created by these demands raise difficultques'-
tions that we-needto think about Should w.e

getinvolved? Sho~Ild we support
these demands forJndependence
an~
self:-,d¢terinination? On the sµrface
/
these
'
*
.
*
.
'
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Dea
.
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.
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seem like easy.queiiticms given thatoliriepub]ic wasJ~unded
.
An
~es~
values'.
. .
.
'
-
.
'
.
Butlet
.
usalso rellle!Ilberthat therejs
an
inhereqtten~ion
:
in this age be~een
_
Circle
·
cofui~g
~
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oµ.t
,
J
fhurs.
·
Oct.
7
.
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.
Frj,
·
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,,
·
-
·
nationalismand~e_lfdeterrni_n~ti~n
:
onp~ehand,lm~tstatesov~reigntyC>n
_
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_
.
.
:
.n,:_;
;:
.
,::
.
.
'-
..•
We live i(l
,
11. ~()d~
:
~~yid~d :i,~ti~ation-.~~tes
;
.
E~ch
'.
n?tion.:sta(e, iri
'
pri_nciple; ex~r-
.
_
,
:.1. ,
.

.
_
I
1,
_
cises sovereignty over itsteiTifoiy . .Nationalist
_
movemen~
like
·
the one
in
East
_.
Com
·
·
e out
·
·
on
··
:
o
·

·
ct •
.
28
.
.
**
Tunor violate that sovereignty. So does intervention by outside forces like the
United Nations and NATO.
·
The fear among opponents of na_tionalist movements is
_
that they could tear apart nation-states as we know them
;
This has already hap-
(
pened in the former Soviet Union and the formei: Yugoslavia. They no longer
·
exist . - - - - • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • ~ • - - • • • - • •
because of nationalism.
·
.
..
.
·
.
.
.
.
·
·
1rJH[]E
·
_
<C][]R,.(C]L]E
The
fear
of disintegration jsalso palpable in lrldonesia as well
:
That couritry is a
vast archipelago of
13,00Q
islands containing
a mix
'
of
~ultures, ethriic gr<mps, and
languages. East Tiinor, with'i~
800;9()()
inhabitants; i~ only
a
s[llall part 6f_that_island
country.: The Inclonesiati government is obviously .c~ncemed that if EastTunor
goes, other groups will demand the same. Ifthathappens, Indonesia will become
the fonner Indonesia:. Maps wiJl
·
redrawn and students·wm
be
required by their
professors to learn the names of these new countries
;
Indonesians fears are under-
standable if we imagine if Hawaiians were to demand independence from the U.S.
Would we oppose those demands because we felt they might encourage separatist
movements in other
parts of the country, for example among Texans or native-
Americans?
There are no easy answers to these questions, but this generation of college
students
should get used to asking them because these nationalist movements, and
the conflic~ they generate, are likely to become more prominent in the 21st century.
ShawnShieh
Assistant Professor of Political Science
'
'
Patrick
Whittle
_
Editor-in~chief
Katrina
'
Fuchsenberger
Features Editor
Nik Bonopartis
A
&
EEditor
.
.
Jill
Giocondo &
.
Chris
.
Grogan
··_
Doug
Guarino
--
·
News Editor
·
'irf
anaging Editors
·
·
·
JeffDahncke
Sports Editor
Jeremy Smith
Photo Editor
Michael Bagnato
Opinion Editor
-._
Colleen Barrett
&
Ma'ryGrodio
Business Managers
G.
Modele Clarke,
FaculiyAdvisor
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 stpry ideas. We cannot publish unsigned letters to the
editor.
The Circle
staff can be reached at
575-3000 x2429 or by email at
HZAL.
You can visit us on the web at
http://www. academic.marist. edulcircle.



































·sEPTEMBER.3o,
1999 .-
PAGE9
. 'The
yieWs·expiessed oifthese:pages are
not
necessarily those
of
The Circle
·etmksOf:fht'l~remlin. ·
_
..
,

·
,~
'
_ · ,
.
.
. '
·
. .
·
. .
:,-.·--
~
---.:··,•-•·,
·
...

..
-
,
.
.·-·
.
-~~-
' - - ·

. ..
. . . .
tits, . . . . . . . ... ·
·
also could be. that this is going
· · · ···· · ·
·
· ·· ·
·· ·
·,
.·• · ··
·
·
So f<!,1", Russian officials have· ~n and Yeltsin is not aware ofit,
by
DERRICK A~JONES
11 . not explained
·
their newfound . because he isin a continual
.
,
wealth and; most likely,:wm not
drunken daze .. ··There is·a good
What is the'fastest \Vayf
or
the
The
:R.ussian. economy js
a
di-'. . chance that the latter is true.
InternationaLMonetary Fund · saster waiting.to-happen;
and
Theworstofitallis that while
(IMF) to waste
its
moneyf
the people in Russia are Hving
this is going on, the people of
· By givirigit.to.Jhe Russians,
in squalor. Theorily ~xplanation_ Russia are· suffering terribly.
ofcourse;-¥oneyJaundering, .• could be
:
that they• were· in-
Their government officials are
corruption,· c·over;.ups; orga.; .. volved in criminal activities.
involved in a multibillion
ni~crinie~:-no~Iamnottalking
. Oneofthe·mosfdisturb_ingre-
scheme, while the people who
·
abou,t the Clinton 'adniinistr;i-
port~ of Russian• corruption• is : these criminals are supposed to
tion; lam talking about Presi-: · that Yeltsin and hislwo daugh-
be working for, get into fistfights
d(?ntBorisY~ltsinofRussiaand • ters madeJarge purchases us-
over loaves of bread ..
his band,ofcronies.
.
.
.
ing credhcards supplied to
And what are President
. It is suspected_ that fifteen bil-, • them by. a construction com-
Clinton and his band of cronies
lion dollars, including billions in
pany; the company has done LS
doing to investigate this? The
IMF loans. were diverted by.·· billion dollars worth of work for
usual. tomfoolery that they al-
. Russian
:
officials and the Rus-. theKreinlin. ldidnotknowthat ways do. "We must suppoit
sianMafiaintoten banks in the · they even had that much money
Russia, we must not abandon
u:s:
and other countries. So
in Russia. Yeltsin has denied
Russia, blah-blah, blah, blah."
~ho exactlyis on
the
ihsid~? It .·· these bribery charges, but they
Mr. Clinton,. it would not sur~
.
. seems this: money tran··copld
:
have qeen verified, through cop:.
prise
·
me if you too were on the ·
lead straight to the top. '.S.o -far :. ~es gf credit receipts; · He stated
take.
these are only allegations·; bur : the charges are politically mod-
there are reports.that Yeltsin and . ·. ·vated.
· Derrick Jones Il is a Political
some of his top aides,."Yeltsin's
·
. What is going on jn Russia is
Science major. He is
a
Senator
Inner Circie," . have been ·pur~ · disgusting~ The ''Inner Circle''. . in Student Goveniment and the
chasing multimillion-dollar. is either taking bribes from or News Director for WMCR88.J
yachts, homes, and other ameili~
running the Russian Mafia. It•
·
The
Bla.ir 'Whittle Project
·way
aliead
ofiirii:aniB
hadfin- . is played it e~efy ·college and
ishel off the hike, and waited . high school football game. ·
byP,ATIUCKWlllTTLE
·.
for·US to meetthem<ttth.e car:
Finally;the search'paity ~nd
. ,. ,

-
Th~s is exactly .»7h~re,t1_1¢Jour-- ..
·
officerrealizeddiefutil~ty oftliis
What you ie abou(fd
teid
is ·. ney became, both d~rnerited arid . exercise. So they did the only
true. Demented .and
·
sad/but ·· sad;
·
as I sfli4 earliir: .
.
.
. logical thing. They sent a heli~ :
true.
.
. .
.
. .. :
.. Engrossed.in conve_rsaticm; ' copter.
. .
.
The .e::u-ly fall ,is prilll_~ Jiiking
.
Jiin and ll6st the. Money Brook
Obviously they had no way
season. Tpe
air
is· cri}p, the trail,wluchwouldhavefukerius
to see us under the trees and.
leaves are turning, and the trails
·
· dii~ctly. back
to
the car. We in-
foliage ( or foilage, as a hiker
are jus~ begging for both.young
advertently starting going up
who will remain nameless called
and
.
<?ld adventuters)C> tread .. th~ Mt;J~rOSJJ(:fttrail;and 2000
it earlier), so we constantly
upon them. Saturday I .was in- ·.·
ro~ky/upliilffeet
lat.~r, we real- .. clicked the flash from Jim's cam-
vited by close friend ~d former-
0
i.zed sometlling:jt was getting
era, waved branches and shook
Circle
A
&
E
editor Jim dark, and we were lo.st.
nearby trees. Eventually their
Dziezynskjto partake in an ex:-
We contactecIPiiolc3n the. . spotlight caught us, and they
cursioptoM:t~_Qreyl~lc,.th~lµgh, \Valkie~~~andtolcIJw11.t9 get_ illuminated the trail for the
. point of Massachusetts. )via~.:
p.elp. ,We were dueless,Twas 'search
party:
. sachusetts _is rn.y}1ome state,~<> .•. exha11sted, and\Vehapriolamps
.
Af around
1
a.in.,
the search
how could I declirie? . ·
.
ot
flashlights, no compasses, no · party came'to our rescue with
Wedeparte<i in mid-morning food ~r. water>no heavy dothes · water and that age-old life-sav-
on:Sunday along with brethren
or cold weather gear, and it was
ing supplement, peanut butter
PaulandK~vin;makingtheswift starting to lookHke we pos-
crackei:s/Theyledu·soffofML
two-hour trek to the Berkshires,
sessed no hope of navigating · Prospect, aJrailthat a red-faced
the scen_ic western Mass, fron:..
our way _out µoder the New En-
Jim had figured out hours ear- .
tierthat stiUremairis mostly. gland nioonFght .
.
Paul(after lier by checking out his maps
undisrupted
'
by
0
human;hands;
buying two.ears·qf;fo.rnfrom· under thelight.of the.red-eye
The ascent of Greylockbegan slack-jawed yokels) fQund · a
reducer. Atia.m., we were es-
around 2 p.m;, and went easily
police officer to \1ssist _us. He corted to
an
ambulance ( even
enough. At'11~. ~ummit.\V.e.w~re. , '.90.ntacte4-.!¼sea.rch RiµtyJo.~,.; '.t4p~~h_;;w,,e had"exp~i;ienced no
greeted. bl fellbw
trav~lei-s;
"to}.;:
to'find
'us;
1vei:i-:
though'-atth.e' ' ·.
hariil: arid"only the'slightest dis.: ·
use icbad pun, and unfortu-
timewewereoff-traffanddid~ot comfort from the chill winds)/
nately by the i.ncessant "bongo
even ·know what mountain.we and pro-?ided the officer with
. guy." ·J3ongo guy made it diffi-
were on. Because of the. dark
some information
.
thath~ needed
·
cult to
_
enjoy th.e serenityJ:>f the
and brooding atn11}SP.he~
_of
the· so tlJ,at he could prepare~ press
open air and decreased the en-
night, at this point we dubbed
release. Ifl ever see that news
joym.ent
I
took in· watching the escapade "The Blair Whittle
story, I will
be.
sure to frame it
hang-gliders take off. Kev sug-
Project"
.
and send it too
all
of my friend's
gested
w~ mercilessly: beat
The police officer}old us to
~nd family: I can see the head-
bongo guy with ltls own instru-:-
make a lot of n<.>ise sci that that hoe now: "Two guys, a chop~er
ment, and although it took all
search party could locate us
and a camera: The. Jim
three
of us hold him back, he easier, as thefull moon
and
red-
Dziezynski story." Or perhaps,
eventually came to. his sens.es. · eye reducer on Jim's camera "Marist student saves friends,
We took a different route to
were now our only light sources.
buys com."
descend Grey lock, making for a
The next four hours sounded
We drove back home in. the
beautiful view of the wooded
something like this:
absurd hours of the mornmg,
scenery and mountain streams.
. "HELLO! Up here!!!!"
arriving at campus around
5
a.m.
Paul and Kev went ah~ on the
"Go PA~KERS
!!
! !
Packers
Monday. It ":as an endeavor
way down, and_~~msistently
won the Super-Bowl!"
non~ of us wdl soon ·forget.
warned us on the walkie-talkie
"I've got priiiiiiiiide!" (Com-
Particularly be91use I left my
of their encounters with fallen
plete with finger-pointing mo-
keys up there, and we have to
,trees, bears, and a woodland
tion for optimal effectiveness.)
go back next weekend ...
Elvis impersonator. Around 6:00
And of course, we threw in the
Patrick
Whittle is Editor-in-
P;m., Kev and Paul (who were
time-honored "Hey!" song that
ChiefoffheCircle.
Mini Opinion of the Week:
"Sean complains that the soda machines on campus need to
be restocked. He says they're always sold out.
I can see it's tearing him up inside."
-Brian Jingeleski, on Sean.St. Clair






















































































































































































.
I
,
..
:.,
.
.
.
.
SEPTEMBER
·
30, 1999
·
·
.
.
·
The
views
expiessed
·
on these
pages
arei1ot
necessarily
those
·
of
The Circle
.
.
ThemOOeJD.trinitY:~·
·

.
·.
· •
·
andviOience
"
,
.
.
.
.
. .
-
.
..
'.
.
-
.
sp~h
·
~;;/ro~\h~pe~pl~
,
~~
-
~ ;
·,
~
·
Gat~s: Trie mari
'.:
i~
i\~~d on
.
ctiituie. Yo~havetohave
:
aginl~
'
baccrifodtistries (bothof;hich
by
CHRIS
.
·
KNUDTSEN
_..
.
.
..
:
down and pay homage to;
·
cash,
.
earth, untouchable by any mor~
mick, the majodty ~f.whicl,i are
·
I
am
·
pers·onally
·guiity :of
sup-
cultuie, and viplerice.
, .··
.
_
·
;
JallaW.
:'
Wlio could convict him
,
:
.
.
ann~yiilglyP:C t#~us~you can
porting},
_
m~nage to
.
exploit
. .
. •i
¢ish
bhanges everything
'.
_
~,'.
~fapyihing7,;-tte
'
cqtild
buy
.i
iv-
:
--
)foi
~
J>QPµ.lai,if,you afo.
:
offend-
people
.
day'after day: From ad-
lnloday's world, prio~ties
.
The
.upper
class
.,
nobility·
.

.
and
~
:'eiy'court
and everyjudg~~ with
.
irig~ome<>fi~
(
ln <:>r~ei,to attain
vertisellients directed at under-
and v~lu~s
8re.
~dicu
.
!<Jusl~
?Ut
··;
gQ
.
vefnmeni
.
bureaucrats would
i
':}norcf
than
'
~nough
.
Jri.
_
oney left
·
powei
/
y9~
'
!J111~t~~wJ1,ow to
.
.
.
age teenagers, damage done by
offocus.
·The
supposedfunda.:.
.
neverJook·at the-average Joe
>
·
.over
to buy a few ainenchpents
advertis_e
.
~<!.~~f!Jlt
\:
,>
_
.
their respective
-
products, and
mentalist movements are 11oth-
Schmoe, BUT, if you
:
added a .
fa
ibe Coristitutior .. Show
-
me
The peifec(1?rai11~~he<l, soJ-
damage done to the ecology in
ing b~~
,
m
.
assiv~ cq~g~_orn.~ra-
fat check book
·
in his ~ack
the money.
.
-
.
_· ..
.
_
diersJreeasily qrawninandin-
order
fo
make such products,
tions that run
<!
dtsgustmg pocket, all of a suddenJoe has
'

Every
·major.:interiiational
fatuate~ with pop icons
;
They
these companiefmajce bill.ions
·
amountof the-world's power.· a whole. new
_circle
of confrontation in recent times
are flashy and brightly
'
colored
of dollars off of ourignorarice:
Their control extends all the
.
way
compradres. "T~day; you are
·was
over some kind of eco:.
enough to attract attention, yet
Violence is the backbone of
through propagandist media freer than ever to do anything
nomic gain.
.
The Middle East
shallow enough not to
.ensure
any well centered society. Like
outlets and in turn, over the
you want-provided you can
was a perfect target for the al-
that the zombies aren't con-
the savage barbarians we are,
public.
pay
fot
it" (Greg Graffin).
mighty U.S. ofA to intervene
.
fused by them,
mankind has started war
.
after
Pop culture, aided by new
Sho
.
w me the money.
andpolice,sincetheywereover~
Huge media stars are also
war after
-
war after war after
·
media tools took a
fmn
grasp on
Anything and anyone can be _ flowing with oil
·
(because we-·
·
·
untouchable by law: Rockstars,
war
...
.lt is
a
small world and cor-
the minds of the general-
bought, without exception. Ev-
.
have to protect thelli from them-
celebrities, and athletes are
porate take~overs can only do
masses. Through,.the lens~s of eryone
-
has a selling price; the
selves do we not? We know
constantly let
.
off the hook
so much. Violence must be uti-
different m~dia, the
,
populace
average perspn
·
would sell
better). Trade boycotts are the
when they brake either legal or
lized to subdue all weaker foes
has become
.
fixated on micro-
.
themselves out for far less than
first line of defense/offense in
'
moral codes.
.
Imagine the
that are ignorant enough todefy
wave minute messages a11d sub-
you
,
would suspect. Mo11ey is
.
any' internationaLstruggle.
.
power that results when you
.
us
,
and greedy enough to try and
liminal rnorals .
.
~uddenlya new
Pq
:
wer.- ,Arguably, the most pow-
·
.
Without theiroil \\'.e wouid have
can't be
.
.
touched
.bya11yone,
hoid back what we need ..
.
-
.
trinity was formed. by top-name
eiful person in the world is
Bill
faced
an
economic cnsis, so we
.
·
you're
:
literally
3:
higher being.
.
·
Commori
life
is regulated by
trumped up
.
qur
moral obliga-
How ma.ny
:
times was
'.
Scott viol~nce.
·
~treets
..
are
.
still
A
..
.
y
.
.
.ear
.
.
.
I·~
-
.
th
,
e
_
.
·
_
m
·
.
·
aki
·
·
·
.
·
·
D
·
·
g
·
.
.
tion to go in
_
and save 'the day
Weiland busted with heroin?
,
plagued by crime beca_use vio-
(leaving Hussein still in
HowmanytimeswasLawrence
Jenee is a universal language .
.
cided t
.
o go to what Uhought
.
.
was
a
small gathering
.,of
.
power)'.
.
.
.
Taylor caught with cocaine?
It's hurnannature to kill for sub-
Power also conies along
·
Similar to i.mtouctiable ce-
sistence, we do so for food; why
by
NICKAD~IVINOLA
·
friends. Thisgatheringturned
with icons and superstars of pop
.
lebrities, the alcohol and to-
not for land? ·
out to be an
...
unofficial· re-
A graduate from high school union for North A,nd(}ver
.
can not help but think
.
ab
.
out High's
.
('.lass of
.
199!3--.
.

.
.
Mystery
.
mail
.
·
is
·
daqg~rous
.
t~e l)~Ople,
:;
~e
.
or
,'
s~e Jeft l]e-
.
.
-
.•
Th~
.
Yf
.
~~ do:Ylp.)11.~~tjye~
,
ay

..
•my Gorbechev placed bandage
h1nd:
\
)Ye,spe_Ilt
:
~Y,.:ely
,
e_
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.
y
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ean~
:t.9l<l.;!.t!,e
·
.
t!_iatth
_
1
_
s
.
~~~
.
t19t)ust
·
.
byKARENE.Sm.JL1Z
led
·
the way tll

the
·
house,
·
my
·
·
with
;
,th:e
l
~ame~p
'
eople/mosf
)
<
asniaJLgetJ,ogeJ.:ti~r,
~
:,
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.,
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e
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tli'e
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_
n"'
_
ta_.
·
_
b
··
1e·
0
_
-
.
: s
·
a·t
·
we learned to like; 'arid
;.
some
first li:ea
.
rd
_
the
'
naine
-
«Ruby"
,
:
A
}
il1ost
}
peculiar'thirig
hap,;;,
:
J.\..l
we even grew to love. Even
.
:
(anfokname of mine.inhigh
pened tO nie
·
on Wednesday.I
·
.
,
_
·
the
.-
package, as I had
;
leftit. I
the contempt we showed
school) I knew I would soon
.
got mail in my mailbox!! Iain
pawed through the Styrofoam
those we disliked was still a
be seeing
.
people that lhad sure thaf
a
few other
people
.
peanuts to pull?uta ''power
comforting reassurance.
not se~n in a year. Every
haye also persor1ally noted this
·
winder." Perplexed, I riffled
Where
will
these famjliar
clique I graduated with was
rare phenomenon, getting mail.
.
through the rest
of
the peanuts
-
face~ of.yesterday be in ten
there. This was the "Can't Whether it
'
is
.
a Colµnibia
·
fora.ny clues as towhere it had
years? Who will be the doc~
Hardly W_a.it" party of my
House flyer;
'.
advertisement for
coniefrom, My father had paid
tor,
:
the lawyer, arid
·
yes who
class; ours justtook a year in
a campus activity, or a Jetter
fodt/the packlng slip st~ted .
.
will take
'
the
.
title of town
the making.
'
'
.
.
.
.
-
from
'
home, ea.ch written mor-
But what was it?
_
After reading
drunk?
.
Sure, we all had ideas,
.
The excitement was short
selof iriatte,r that appears in my
·.
the
'
~nstructions and contorting
and we all got aJaugh \Vhen
lived:
·
sure,it'\Vas nic:esee~
·
mailboxn1akesrriefeelspeciaJ,.
rily
;
face
'
fr1:>in
'
confusion, I
our
,
predictions were
.
.
dis"
.
ing s9~e 9f
.
these
:
pe9ple but
·
:
(sniff,siliff,areyougettingteary
;,
em
.
ailed 111y
;
father askirig
:
htrn
cussed. We would hope
·
tl1e
th~ niglifwas
:
not wh.at
_
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too?.)
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.
.
.
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... :
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whatthedeiilwa'.s
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people
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we
.
}east
,
exp
.
ected
·.
pect~cC
:
j~y )he tenth
'.,
boiing
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'
My
·
mailbox ac'tiiaily
.
con-~
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My
,:
fathef:callect'.rrt~ oh
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wou
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enJ
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ime.
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He expl~ned that withrny
.
gest
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succe
.
ss; .
.
,
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,
,
a!i.2:~tiow.
J
h~d IittJ~
.
;
to
s~i
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we:4oesda9.r
:
p~e
.
wasJor.a
S.k:·~~~.
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0
t~
<
ry:t~~
::
NQis
.
een
-
trii;ty
~
'tpower \Vinder'' 1
C()Uld
'
.
These were
:
the thoushts
.
,
to thes~ . people
·
ir(h~gh
.
packet aboU:tth¢ Pt!a~e C'.orps
_
m13.ihr1g
h~,.~d
_
ry~r~.
:.
·
·
. .
snap
·
photos \vith my camera
that
;
l
·
had before
·
.
leaving
.
for
·
schg<>l;
_
_
and obviou
.
sly'
-
now
=
I
·
>
(that I had'.fequesfod}' and one
··.
scerie
-
for
,
ai:1
80s"rock
Video.
.
·
.
without havtrig
.
to manually ad-
.
·
c9llege; howev~r. they
'
iere
·
hadfien iess to say
>
\ have
·
was
'
for a
;
box
'
ttie
'
sii¢
:
1
of a
After
··
several
·
minufos
·
of us ·Vance the
'
fi]m;
·
Now I could
-
·
short lived,
, .
'
.
Wi
_.
thiii two
.
n<>
·
icl~fwhf
l
,
"".riuJd
.
have
· .
hairdryer:
·
.
_.
Hmnim
:
;:
(l
'd1
.
dn'.t
·
.
;
deep:br~athiri'g'iii
:
un,i~on
/
rriy
take photos asfast is anyfash
-
-
·
.
·
mon
_
tlis of
'
colle
·
ge, l
'
g;ive
'
thoµght: it
·
wouf<l' bijo
:the
-
order
:
anothe'r_'hairclr9er)
:
'.:
The
·
heartstoppeapouridinglike the
ion photographer!
·-
After our
little tho,ught to
90%
of
.
the
·
\~ori'ti:aiy. .
.
.
'
·
'
.
,
. ..
return
.
address gave
in~
riciin-
.
bass'td
a
loud so~g.
·
·
They 'ex'-
educating conversadon th
.
at
people I.graduated with;
:
Not
:
,
·,
The
'
people
·
I
0
woridered
dicatlon
as
to
-
who
:
hacl sent
it
~
I
..
plained that I
.
had hit my head
·
lasted
'
all oL8

minutes, Thad
to say that they thought about
.
abouf
·
have
i
chari8'ed
;
litt1 e
was cotifuse
.
d
..
a11d cuiiou
_
s
~
fo
oothe metal
'
supportsiinder-
solved the

mystery:
· ·-
Then
.
I
·
me,
;
because·
.
Iam
'.
sure
'
that
·
since
·
graduation.> They are
'-wh~t
c
.
oul~J?e inside.
.
_.
.
.
neath the table whenJ plunged
ca~led and c~ncelled rriy
:'
ap-
they did noL The point is that
·
· sti
U
·
h
:
anging

.
out
with'
th
·
e
·
Erripg
.
o~
th~
side of caution~

.
beneath
.
it~
-
'l'hatwould
'
explain _
·
pomtment
:
~1th
.
.
the
·.
Unsolved
·.
wh~tseenied-soimport~nt
:
a
-·'
same
c
crowdi' stiU
<'
spendfog•
-
·:1_calledupon
the·offidal·Marist
;·),
the·bandage·onrnyh~
.
ad~.')'
j}
/
:
~'Mysteries'i:crew;:
'.
Itc.was

not
:few
months,ago is
:
now
..
iiisig.:

"i
l~e
_
fr/FridaY
'
nights'
at
high
'
:c·
Boinb'iShlffing·Dogfto
:
cJieck
.
As l was preparing
:
tQ leav~
·
meanfto
be:
r.
<,'
' •
-
.
• ,,:
'
nificant.
:.'.
:
.,•,
'~

:
,

.

.
·
-· .
sc~ool'footbaU 1fanies;
:
and
'
'
it oui
·
for
~e.
·Un~orturiately
.
·
the hospital Mic_h),!el)acksori
·.
·:
All in allit was quite an inter~
However, upon
:
going back
:
;
siill'
pick~ng
:
.
fighfs
·
with
.
the
·
they
_
were attending a:wel~cime
·
appeared; wanting to wish tne
·
a
'
esting week. I haven't gott~n a
home for the
'
summer,
.
I came
.
·
sarrie people;· I am convinced
.
.
back
·
luncheon and
'
were
'
busy .
..
·
speedy 'recovery.' Htfwlieeled
.
·
·
package since;
-
which
·
is pro~
·
·
down· with an
·
unfortunate that in teii'years they will stiff
:
Befog brave; ltook toe matter
my wlieelchair
'
dowri to'the dis-
ably a good thing since my-head
case of high schoolnostalgia.
be doing these very same intomyownhands~literaUy,and
charge exit, singing "Heal
·
th,e -isjuststartingtoheal. Mypho-
Afterbeingaway, itis hard not
things: The only visible went home to open
·
thebox.
In
-
World" as we roH~d
-
along. - tography career is taking off,
to feel the
.
school spirit that
changes that l saw were th~t
_
the kitchen l began surgery on
·
Michael's limo driver drove
'
us
but my friendship with Michael
one once did .. There are the
·
the guys gained some weight,
the box.
:
As the
'tape
slit from
back to campus. Michael sang
Jackson isn't doing
0
too well.
champiqnship

banners,- the
:
the girls· used more
-
makeup;
my keys jabbing at it, I heard a
·
and
chatted with us, as his driver
Every time I
.
call him to apolo-
friends we thought we did riot

and everyone took up smok-
·
noise and immediately jumped
drove through ttie busy traffic
gize for my friend's callous-
miss; and our first
.
Jove. I
ing. Other than that things
under the table:·
·
Drop and to my townhouse. Just as we ness, his pet monkey answers
gu~ss it was inevitable; when
were just as they were a year cover. The next thing I felt was
pulled up to the curb, one of
.
my
3:11d refuses to put him on the
it
comes to high
·
school we
ago.
_
my·head throbbing.
friends asked him. about some
hoe. Hopefully we will be on
seem to have a very selective
I drove home that night
Several hours later I awoke in
of the tabloid stories about him.
IM:tter tenn~ soon. As for my
memory. If one remembers
feeling depressed.
·
·
We are St. Francis with my friends
His eyes flamed and his voice
friends and their 1980s fashion
only the good times, then, of better off remembering around me dressed in 80s attire
rose. In one enraged motion he
tendencies, I prefer to leave that
course, high· school will be
things not as they were but-as
..
with blue
.
eyeshadow spackJed
pushed us out of the limo as he
one an unsolved mystery.
·
·
remembered fondly.
we wished them to be. I sup-
totheirfacesandtheirbigbangs
barked,
Beat It
into our
ears.
Th_e only way to cure my
pose I was better off not go-
bopping as they spoke. I don't The car door slammed as they
sickness would be to im-
ing, better to live the high know what was scarier, realiz-
sped away, tires screeching
merse myself in "nostalgia." ·schoo.1 fantasy than tum the
ing that I was in a hospital or around the turns.
This cure came to me on a
dream into a depressing real-
that my friends Jooked like
My friends and I pulled our-
random Friday night. I de-
ity.
they had just been in a crowd
selves from the pavement I and
-
.
..
..
.
.
--
-
.
--
-
-
---
-
-
--
~
-
··-
-
-
-
--
·
··-
•·
Karen E. Shultz is a senior
Communication Major with a
concentration in RadiollVI
FilmfromAllentown, PA.


























..
1rlH[]E (C][]Bl(ClLlE
,..-.Ji·•g·
E
Qt,rµ.ing
,-$pfgp .•
J>J:ings
ishµtd
·flavottoTheGhanceTheater
- · '
.
--.·-
,-
'
'
.
.
'.·
'
-
'
.
, _ ·
, ' •
' - · • . •
. .
,
.
,.
.
.
'
·>.
by~CCYIT.NE.VILLE
- -Sfilft
f?lax~r:> ; .. -•
· It'stoo'had eveiy-grandfatlier'
·· do~s nof rock
like:·Burning
Spear.
"Burning ~Spear," ·atso
know· as Winston. Rodney,
'stifted ttie'crowd
i<>
a freriz
.\Vith .
, -.~, "...-·~-:,, ~••r,. -~,.
~:r'.· -·••·-'-·
Y :·.
. :.
his legendary presence Satur-
day· night· at -the Chance The-
ater. His visit t<> Poughkeepsie
was· part of his · 100-show tour
celebrating 30 years of politi-
cally charged reggae. '
. ·,_
Burning Spear: All
the rasta
you
can hana)e',comofl~uming
Spear.
After a wann reggae greeting
into
a
laid back, sip-your-bever-
in worn jeans and a cutoff denim
from the opening band Afire and
age-beat, with bassist Lenford
coat, topped off with a hemp
an
endless intermission,
Bum-
Richards and percussionist
hat, which his grey beard and
ing Spear's
publicist took the
Nelson Miller laying the foun-
dark locks flowed from.
mike,. asking the crowd "Are
dation for the horn section to
The marathon had begun. The
Y?U
ready for the_ legendary
pi_pe over .. The crowd, ranging
bubbly reggae sound, the
<>ff-
Buming' Spear?"· Screams ·en-
from paj~a-clad, dread-locked
beat keyboard
fill,
Burning
'sued. The band came next, a
"hippies" to sixty-year old men,
Spear's voice thrown on the
. ·trombonist, saxophonist, trum-
to eight-year old girls with their
crowd through a reverberating
peter, drummer, keyboardist,
parents, began to move around,
microphone - the band's fiery
bassist, lead and rhythm guitar-
dancing
·
and glancing to the
intensity caught slow but built
ists flooded onto the tiny stage,
sides of the stage, awaiting the
into a blaze, going non stop for
all taking up their instruments
Burning Spear's wisdom.
11/2 hours. The songs flowed
around the vacant central micro-
"Behold!" he yelled from off into one another like water, each
phone.
stage. Cries erupted as
Burning
... please see
BURNING
The band commenced, laying
Spear
stepped in to view, clad
SPEAR,
page
12.
How much do you think
·know
about Hollywood?
by
NIKBONOPARTIS
A&EEditor
son an internet company
has decided to hold a
- webathon this November,
You have seen it at the news-
selling Coleman memora~
_ paper checkouts
in
the form of _
bilia and giving away
tabloids, onTVin the horrible
prizes." I am not sure
manefestations known as
EX-
about anyone else reading
TRA, El,
and
Access Holly-
this information, but I can
wood,
and now online as a
tell you I will be lined up to
_ growing presence of gossip
tossmypaycheckawayfor
sites. America's o!,essesion
the actual fishbowl that
with the SO-:Called/'stars" that
.
. ·-
..
PhotocourtesyNBConline.
A.brah~(Co~eman's~old-
are plastered all over our media
Stop
staring at her hair.
fish) res1ded
_
m
on
Differ-
. consciousness has made us into
were breaking.J!eV1s· on
the
state
ent Strokes.
Laugh at me if you
a bunch of-couch::-slouching,
of national· security. If that is
will, but] will be the envy of
potato-chip eating idiots who - not enough
<t<>
satiateyour ap-
every kid on the block. Besides,
hang on the every word of Hol-
petite for the un-newsworthy,
I feel bad. The poor kid spent
Jywood insiders .. Yeah, I think
we had
Jl -
brief update on the
his_
18
million.
_we can admit it-.we-are all a
whereabou~<>fRobertDowney
Inanotherinstanceofhorrible
bunch ofwanking starshaggers. . Jr. Prison food for New Year's
!

had not realized the leveiof anyone?
. immersion we have developed
With tliis in mind I decided to
into the lives of people we hardly
inform myself on all the
HoUy-
kn_Qw_ when one night over the · .wood· goings-on this. week to
suininer. I stopped by-a friend's
writeJb,is i;:olumn.Jbere
arc
lots
house to v,isit. When I stepped _ of juicy tidbits.to .delve into, so
inside and greeted his mother, I. Jet us not
waste
another, word ..
was
met with a forceful
shoosh!
The
EXTRA.
"newsmagazine",
and with
a
finger to her lips, my. inf~ous · perveyors'of useless
friend's mom focused her atten-
"star" knowledge, brouglJt us .
tion on the
TV,
eyes entranced
this little nugget of stunning in-
by the opening scenes of
Ac-
fonnaµon - Gary Coleman, the
cess Hollywood.
"Find out fonner child-.star of Different
which stars are wearing their Strokes, has filed for bank-
hair JikeJerinifer Aniston!" the ruptcy.
EXTRA
reports
"A
defi-
TV
announcers hawked. "And
ant
Gru:y
Coleman talked with us
later on
Access Hollywood,
we
about his decision to go on-New
show you what's on the dinner
York's WPU radio as a mystery
menu for John Travolta's New
guest and then push an internet
Year's Eve bash!"
sitethatcouldmakehimmillions.
Who
cares
whatJohn Travolta
Money problems have plagued
is eating tonight, let alone
the31-year-oldforrnerchildstar
monthsfromnow? Idonoteven
that made and lost 18 million
know what rm eating tomorrow.
dollars. The money, he says, was
But there it was, in front of us -
hoarded by his adoptive parents
an interview with Travolta's
and managers, leavinghimpen-
cook, Travolta himself mulling
niless by the time he held a news
over possible party plans, and
conference last month after fil-
the repClrters eating it up as if it
ing bankruptcy. That's the rea-
''Ricky ' Martin
is
probably sick to death ofhear-
sexy
dance/'
.
ing about the Latin lady killer by
-
now, but I am going to run my
Japanese Fan
mouth (pen?) anyway. Access
, . _ , , . . . . ..
,Hollywood had their cameras
· tJ"agedy befalling a star,_ we learn
present when Ricky took Japan
from )?! that the pres~ures of . by storm. One· starstruck Japa-
working a few hours a week on
nese teenage girl put it best in
a
TV
show and making millions
her grammatically painful but
have finally caught up with _ everprovocativeinsight, "Ricky
Neve Campbell. It seems the
Martin is sexy dance!" Well
Scream Queen has come down
put. Martin made
People
with "alopecia areata",
a
"bi-
magazine's Best Dressed list,
zarre disorder that causes your
and -continues to pop up all
hairtofallout. Neveblamesthe
over the place as people who
extreme stress of juggling a
TV
should have something better
show
and
a movie career for the
to do continually question his
loss of her locks.'! . I_ actually
sexuality.
shed a tear for Neve when I
All this week we have had to
heard this. The good news is -hear about who was wearing
that she can afford the Hair Club
wha:tat the Emmy's, but my
fa-
for Women, if such a thing ex-
vorite report was one of some-
ists. The bad thing is that if she
one who could not. fit into
does not get that hair back, she
Armani or Versace. I was lucky
willbeoutofwork. Damn.
enough to catch an update on
Of course, what kind of Hol-
Camie Wilson's obesity prob-
lywood gossiper would I be ifl
lems. Wilson, for the unin-
didn't touch on the ~icky Mar-
formed, recently underwent
tin phenomena?· I know you're
gastric bypass surgery. This is
PAGE 11
a special weight loss procedure
a la lyposuction that reduces
stomach capacity by 90% by
stapling the stomach shut with
a special· metal contraption.
Wilson was portrayed as the
woefulchild star who reminisced
. about being the fat kid. Give it
up. There is a secret to weight
loss, and it is called self control.
You can't have your cake, and
your cheeseburgers, and your
hot dogs, and your pastries,
and eat them too ... unless you
are Camie Wilson or Camryn
Manheim.
But when all was said and
done and my eyes were glazed
over from too many hours in
front of the television, I was
grateful for not being sucked
into the world of Hollywood
gossip. I have served my week
and that's it, no more star talk
for me. Next week I will have
something new to complain
about. In the words of the phi-
losopher Patrick Whittle, "That
stinks, and so does that." ·


























































_,
:
·;
·
,
·
.
·
·
.-
·
'
·
.
·
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.
.
j
i
I
i
i
i
i
-1
..
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.
.
.
.
SEPTEMBER 30; 1999
Q
:
nT\I
with
.
-
.
Mike
..
•·
Thatnp$0rJ
Fra~ier: Still
the Highlight
of "Must-See TV"
The cast of
Frasier,
~ith
Grammer, center,
and
d-6~{ect'dr~~.;iicouncsyNBCOnline. ·
Last week in this column, I
incidentally, those were also the
seasons of the show proved
mentioned that, of NBC's
Just
scenes that took up the least
that it was up to the task. How-
Shoot Me, Friends, and Frasier,
amount of screen time in
:
the
ever,
it
became apparent early
Frasier is the only show- that
episode. That is pretty much my
in the 1998-99 season thatsome-
truly deserves to bea
hit. I know
opinion of
Friends: it is good
in
thing was
·
wrong with
Frasier.
I
risked the wrath of many
small doses.
·
Itjust was not as good as it
people, as there are a lot of
However, although
Friends
.
used to be.
Friends fans around here. Heck,
,
may not be great; it
·
is still a
This was not a good way to
there are a lot of. Friends fans
good deal'betteithan1esse, the
win over established
Seinfeld
anywhere. I know that; it is a
show that follows
Friends· on
viewers, and
Frasier did lose a
popular show. Still: it has never
Thursday nights.
Jesse is enter-
sizable portion of
Seinfeld's au-
.
really seemed very specialto me.
··
ing its second
_
seaso~ on the air.
·
.
·
dieiice.
-
some efforts
·
w.ere·nfade
Recently, though;
·
I decided
_
to
·
Its first season; while success-
to right the ship, iuch as giving
reevaluate my statemei-it about
ful in the ratings (thanks to its
FrasierCrane(KelseyGrammer)
Friends. On Thursday, Septem-
cushy timeslot), was a dud with his old job back, as a radio talk
ber 23,
f
w'atched the season
critics, so the producers
oflesse show host" the fictional station
premiere of NB C's legendary
decided to retool the show. Half
KACL. For some reason, the
"Must-See TV" Thursday
of the original cast was ousted,
writers thought it would be wise
lineup of sitcoms. The lineup
and
Jesse
.

(Christina
for Frasier to lose his job and
consisted of:
Friends, Jesse,
Applegate) got a new job. Still,
deal with being unemployed.
Frasier, and the new series
as is the case with most shows
That proved tiresome, and luck-
StarkRaving Mad. After watch-
that
_
go in for retooling, the
for-
ily the writers gave Frasier his
ing all four, my
.
opinion still
-
mat of Jessemay beneV{, but
it Job back. Not everything was
stands. When given a choice
is hardly improved:·The
:
show,
-
back to normal 011.Frasier(ther~
between
Friends and
Frcisier,l
..
. · is predictable
_
and unfi,u1ny;a1:_19-
•.
·
w.e
.
re
_
s.tm
t()~
.
!Uany episodes
would choose Frasier.
.
-
the characters
'
aiid'situaHoits
··
dealingwithinisundeistandings
Friends is not a notably bad
are stock sitcom material. The
between the characters), but by

show. It's just not aU that good;
Jone bright spot of the Septem-
the end of the season, things
Most of the jokes I can see com-
ber 23rd episode was the return
were getting back on track. If
ing, and the ones that I can not
.
of
_
Jesse's boyfriend Diego
Thursday's episode were any
.
see coming usually just aren't (Bruno (;ampos), but that scene
indication,
Frasier is back.
all that funny. Also, the writers
also lasted too long, and became
One of the strengths of
of
Friends have a tendency to
unfunny. Again, because of its
Frasier has always been the
dw
_
ell on things for just far t~o
cushy timeslot,
Jesse
will
prob-
performance turned in by its su-
long, sucking all of the possible
ably last the season, although,
perb ensemble cast. Grammer is
humor out of
it.
Take Rachel
·
with material like this, you re-
.
more than ably supported
.
by
(Jennifer Aniston) and Ross
ally hope it will not.
.
David Hyde Pierce (who plays
(DavidSchwimmer)forexample.
This brings me to the crown
Frasier's brother Niles); John
Their on-again, off-again ro-
jewel in NBC's "Must-See TV"
Mahoney (gruff but lovable
fa-
mance grew stale years ago, and· lineup,
Frasier: Frasier is com-
ther Martin), Jane

Leeves
·
yet their relatiqnsh1p still con~
ing off its most creatively un~
(Dapl!ne Moon, Martiri'slive-
tinues. Monica (Courteney Cox)
.
even season ever, and that re-
in health care provider), arid
and Chandler's (Matthew Peny)
ally cmild not have come at
a
Peri Gilpin (Roz Doyle, Frasier's
relationship is also getting very
worse time. For last season was
fellow employee). Pierce,
in
par-
old, and was never very appeal-
the first season that
Frasier
.
ticular, does such a good job as
ing to begin with. The funniest
was seen on Thursday nights
Nlles that he steals many of the
moments in last Thursday's sea-
at 9, which was the time slot
scenes that he isjn; This great
son premiere camein the scenes
Seinfeld
·had
occupied since
cast frequently makes what is
with Joey (Matt LeBianc) and
1993.
Frasier had some big
already good writing seein
Phoebe (Lisa Kud,row). Not'co-
shoes
.
to fill, and the
.
first five
great. That is anotlleJ strength
of
Frasier. it has some great writ-
ers. The writing is consist~ntly
very sophisticated. The writers
never seem to look down at the
·
audience: They are confident
that there are viewers out there
who,
torexampie, arefamiliarwifu
the works of playwright Eugene
O'Neill. Sometimes, watching
Frasier can ii1ake you
·
~eel
smarter
:
.
Also,
the
writers fre-
quently can tun:l'Out a real_gem
of
atf episode
/
Such
-
was the
case with the
·sepiember
23rd
episode, in which Frasier begins
.
dating a woman
·
who~ i.J
_
nbe-
knownst to him; looks just like
his late mother. Instead ofthe
crass one:..liners and bawdy
sexual humor that lesser sitcoms
w_ould have employed for a sub-
ject like this,
Frasier, as always,
takes thehighei:road.1.)le wp~-
ers. handle the subject. rather
qelica.t~W,·
,,
:.
:
:.:
:.,
:,;;,;.
,
,; _
:
,
.
The
·
excellt!nce of
Frasie.r just
makes the show
.
that foJiows it,
Stark Raving Mad; seem that
much w_ors~.
StarkRavingM,ad
had
-
its series debut Sept 23rd;
and while it is not as woefully
BURNING
S
.
PEAR:·
Reggieltr(re
'
.
.
... continued from page
JI.
unfunny as its time slot prede-
band member throwing in an
cessor
Veronicas Closet, it is
improvisational drop
:
in to the
still pretty bad
.
.
sfream. Standing on the bal-
Frasier
-
seems r~freshed and
cony, the pit bel_ow was a mass
ready
·
to achieve comic great'.'.'
of gyrating
·
bodies, some hop-
ness again in this, its
_
seventh
ping, some w:aving, a couple
season on the air. It also should
twirling to
a
beat that didn'tap-
benoted that
.
fifteen years ago
p~ar
.
to be there. No one stood
this month,
Di
Frasier Crane
.
still. No one tried to climb on
madehisfirstappeilrancefathe"
s'i°age. No
j
)ne was kicked,
Thursday night at 9 timeslot, in
punched orbitten -a welcomed
.
the third-season
,
premiei:e
.
of
change from the Chance's usual
Cheers.Now,~thFrasierseem-
venue;

·
·
irigly back at the top ofJts g~me,
''It's getting late, we've got to
things have COQ)e
full
circle.
change," the legend sang, exud-
From
"
Chee,:s
to
Seinfeld to
_
ing
an
energy, revitalizing the
Frasier, Thursdaynights at 9 on
crClwd; even the bouncer
NBC is
the
place to be for great
couldn't help but smile a.rid beat
comedy.
.
the stool he was perched upon.
Another ten~minutejani session
ensued, headed by
Burning
Sprar'f. rhythmic l<,ettle drums
and
_
various percussion instru-
ments he had at his disposal.
·
Nearly two
.
hours later, the leg-
end left the stage amidst the jam
session, which ended three min-
u
_
tes after his departure. The
trance ended, and the crowd
awoke, overpowering all ofthe
speakers with their chant,
"Spear!" He returned on the call,
allowing his band pnly a three-
minute break before three more
songs, lasting thirty more ener-
getic minutes.
His parting words, set to the
band's never ending flow, were
"Music should be clean, one
hundred percent free. Music
should have a moral, with direc-
tion, for the future's child. Rasta
music's clean, so you must save
love." The crowd erupted one
more time as he disappeared
from the stage.




























1rJH[]E ··.·· ·cc][]R.<C]L]E
·SEPTEMBER 30, 1999
~A.:& E-~
PAGE 13
CoQ,[t!JhambeTroeks
Sprillgsteen's home turf
-
.
.
•',
·
; '
>

•• '··
· ,:·
<· .~-
· . .
Photo counesy Roadrunner Records.
Coal (;hamber appeared at New Jersey's Asbury Park
byMARKDICCIANI
SuijfWriter
· Last Saturday
I
went to
Coal
Chambers
metal ''Livin' La
Vida
· Loco" tour in Asbury
Park.
The
other bands that played were
Ainen,Slipknot,
and
Machine
-Head
as well as a bunch oflocal
hardcore bands that played in
between on a second stage.
Each and every one of the sec-
ond stage acts were. bad in my
· opinion. However,
I
did
feel .that
it was cool that
Coal Chamber
hooked up these no name
· bands because they really did
not have to;
The concert started on a down
note when the excrusiatingly
Pilfers
.
. ·
release
· Chawalaleng CD
By
ADAM KOWALSKI
Staff
Writer
and pester those guys to get it
in.
· The Pilfers
were up next and
walked on stage around 5:00.
They played an extremely long
It was originally scheduled for
set, clocking in at over 100 min-
Friday Night at Tramps.
_
Oh, but· ut~Sof rest free n<?~-stop mu-
Tramps closed on Thursday for
sic~· which seemed odd to me
good. Tramps closed itsdoors
considering that their two al-
after 20 years, add1ng it to the
bums do not even come close
growing list of NYC Rock Clubs
to
100
minutes.
The Pilfers
have
shutting down, or being shut
a very
·
unique·sotind, blending
down, depending on if you lis-
ska and reggae with a little bit
ten to the 'city or the club own-
of punk and hardcore. Their
ers respectively.· But before I
frontman, Coolie
Ranx,
was in
ramble ori about the dosing al-
the legendary ska band the
low me to gefto the point of this
Toasters
for many years and his
article: the album release party
experience ·shows on · stage.
forthePilferssophoniorealbum
They kept the·crowd dancing
Chawalaleng>
.
like maniacs for the entire set
, ·,It tookpiace Saturdafafter-
and their eriergy'never faltered
'nboh atWetfands i1:YNYC after
even' though they ,fook no
. a· search went on to firtd :i:new
breaks: ·
,.;
·
·
venue for.the show: The early
So put down your fancy pa-
hour had no effect on the tum· per and nmout and pick up their
out though, as the place was
new album
Chawalaleng
right
packed. In fact so many people
now. There is no sense in wait-
had to be turned away that a
1ng. Every time I see them they
second show on Sunday was
impress me more and more. In a
also ad9ed. The opening acts
few weeks they will be hitting
were
Catcli 22, Weston
and
theroadwithThePietastersand
Edna's Goldfish.
_
the before mentioned
Spring
Well, l missed
Catch
22 ... so -
Heeled Jack.
For all tour info
onto
Weston.
I would really like
check out www.pilfers.com. ,
to give 'a good review, they
ThtPilfers
ended· the set
sounded great ... what I could
sometime around 6:50 or so, but
hear that is. I unfortunately
nQt before doing what almost
could not hear any of the vo-
every band that comes through
cals for the entire 40-minute set.
New York has be~n doing these
What I did make·out I really did
days -' discussing the state of
enjoy. It reminded me of
Blink ·
l'_lffairs in the city. Coolie actu-
bad Amen hit' the stage. Their
sound was like a punk.band
with a ton ofdistortion and a
singer that screams incoher-
. ently into the microphone. Plus,
the singef was constantly in-
sulting tpe_cr()wd with a com~
plete· disregard for who pays
hispaycheck.. The only qands
that
I
can think of that were
worse live were
Neurosis
and
.Cooter.
Slipknot
was excellent.
If
your not familiar with Slipknot
they are a really· good metal
band with a singer, two guitars,
bass player, drummer, two per-
cussionists, and a DJ, all of
whom wear crazy custom masks
and red janitors outfits. The
· vocal levels left a little to be de-
sired but their show was so en-
tertaining that it really didn't
matter.
... Machine Head
was as out-
standing as they normally are. I
was glad that they·still played a
lot of old songs from
Burn My
Eyes
and
The More Things
Change .. ;
as well as good ones
from their. newest album,
The
Burning ·Red. ·
- . That .was the third time that I
had seen
Machine Head
and
they still had not disappointed
me. Still, my favorite perfor-
mance of
Machine Head
was
when they headlined right here
at The Chance.
Coal Chamber
seems to get
better every time that I see them.
They also seem to get freakier
every time that
I
see them.
If
you
ever want to see an excellent live
band than see these guys. · Their
live show is amazing. Their en-
ergy is intense and their sound
is almost perfect.
Coal Cham-
f:if~.~.•.:,.·•
..
:
.;;
·
;".--
.. ·.
·
··.··.: ..
:.·.:z
ji~i{{:.·~.·.·
.. :.:.-,·.•.·.·.· •.
· · . • · . o . ;
•. ···.••
.. •·:···.·.·
.. :·;
.. · . .
···
...•..•.
··
. . . . . . .
·•e·
.. :
t·· ,·
, ~fib •.
:
~ · ·
1
~ - : · - - ~
·

her
are also wearing really
freaky outfits now and have
cold stares on their faces on
s.!age but it is not done in a
tacky way like Marilyn Manson
does.
Coal Chamber
actually
looks cool with the way they
present themselves, n_ot like
freaks.
One last thing that
I
would like
to mention is the attitude of the
crowd. The audience was actu-
ally calm and cool with each
other. It was almost like how
the hardcore scene tries to por-
tray itself with unity but fails to
(at least from what I have scene
from going to hardcore shows
at The Chance). There were no
fights and there were no idiots
who went to the concert only to
show how tough they were, not
because they liked the music.
. ;"
.
... ·envkorifiient:fo,cus&i~n
ensunrtg
your.success
throughout
your
educatio~. We
;
:
:iiaVe
:a:·riation~y'.recognjzedJaculty_arid tne
resources you
wJll need to estab-
: , .;-J.7.:,lj~~;~!fi~J~l]_i~;~-e~r:iN~4Pres,entative
wiJ!:be·on
~pus to explore
with·you
. - ; _, .theimanf
opporturiitlesJhat
a\vait
you
at)Vestem New
England
College's School
··•: .>Jf
~,f
S~op
by:anu
visit
Ii
you are unable to attend,
call
for details about our
-. series
ofopenhouses. -
J
82 three years ago before they
ally seemed choked up as he
lightened up. The· played fast
talked about the closing of Co-
melodic punk songs· and when I
ney Island High in July by the
couldhearthevocalslwasdefi-
Commerce Department. He
'1
:_
;; ·
nitely impressed.
called it the home of the
Pilfers
.
;,
·--:'
.-
.-
·.·
•,
,~
;
If
you are
ready
to reap tlte long~term
-· beri~n~ of{iaw
d~e, attend our
·;:"fJAMPtJs.VJSIT
Western
NewEngland
College · .
. Edna
s
Goldfish
went on next
and the one place that would
and really fired the crowd up.
never try to shut them out.
So
They put forth an hour-long set
before I tum this into an op-ed
that fused rock and ska in a style
piece on the dictator of New
very similar to that of York whose final tenn, thank
Connecticut's
Spring Heeled
Christ, is currently in progress I
Jack.
They were entertaining
will say to go check out the Pil-
and kept the crowd moving.
fers' new album as well as the
They are definitely worth a Iis-
new
Ednas
Goldfish.
I'll also ·
ten and just released a new al-
addRIPtoConey;Iforonemiss
bum as well, so go over to Rhino
it already.
FOR PROSPECTIVE LAW STUDENTS
:·October
6{1999;4~7pni , _
. __ -.
.
~
..

.
.
.
.
Call us
at
800-782-6665 for information
.
.
.
.
about the campus location.
www.Iaw.wnec.edu
School of Law
Sprin~eld.
Massa~usetts
.. {

























































































'
.,
_(.:
..
,.
:
f..
J
(;
/
_
1r1HnE
·
·-
<01nR:.c1b1e
·-
SEPTEMBER 30, 1999
.
.
spo
.
rts
Men's tennis
·
·
.
prepares
.
another
trip.
to
-NOA.A's
by
CLAY NORRIS
-
Staff Writer
VanDerPla
_
sse was in a gre~t
.
does not start until the spring.
mood after his conversation with -. In between tournaments and
the oasketball star and Marist
After last spring 's berth in the
alum, and Smith said he believes
NCAA tournament, the Marist
this positive thinking contrib-
men 's tennis team is gearing up
uted to his strong play
.
in the-
to attempt to
,
make a re.turn trip.
tournament.
:
·-
·
.
Last weekerid
the
Red Foxes ·
Also starting the season out
won
20 matches in a. three day
-
on the
'
right foot were freshmen
tournament at Brown College in
Elliot Hedman and Eric Scheidt.
Providence, Rhode Island.
The talented newcomers ad-
It was a very successful show-
vanced to the semifinals
:
and
ing for the Marist, as it went up
quarterfinals of the Flight
B
di-
against several Division I ten-
vision,
respectively.
nis powers. Competition in the
The doubles team of Patrick
field included Brown, Boston
Dahnert and
-
Hedman were a
College, Anny, Harvard, Colgate
successful combination, as they
and Providence
_
.
advanced all the way to the
fl-
Leading the way was senior · nals of Flight B doubles.
Ralph VanDerPlasse, who
.
With the Brown Invitational
reached the semi-finals of the
being such a positive experi-
FJightA division, in which the
ence, talk of a repeattrip to the
top players from each team are
NCAA tournament has already
placed.
surfaced.
Third-year Marist head coach
Coach
Smith
descril:>es repeat-
Tim
Smith
attributed
ingasMAACchampsandearn-
VanDerPlasse's stellar play to a
_
ing another bid to the NCAA's
conversation he had with an
as "realistic goals."
.
NBA superstar prior to the trip.
Marist should once again be
"Before we left, Ralph
·
had a
a force to be reckoned with while
nice talk and received a firm
looking to duplicate last year's ·
handshake from fellow country-
11-0
conference record.
·
man Rik Smits," Smith said.
The official
_
tennis
'
season
-
.
matches with divisional oppo~
-
nents,
.
the Marist
:
squad will
concentrate
_
on building their
phystcal strength and
-
endur-
ance
.
Bo~
-
anaerobic and aerobic
workouts are scheduled around
.
-
a
mix
of sprinting and long dis-
tance running.
Another focus of the pre-
season is
team continuity. Smith
thinks that the team chemistry
needs improvement because
when the
-
season does come
around his team wiJI
.
need each
-
other's support on the sidelines
as much as they need that pun-
·
ishing backhand or well placed
drop shot.

.
_
.
.
"You can'tmakechickeri soup
without chicken
;
" has been
Smith's no-nonsense approach
to recruiting. This year looks to
be
a
four-star batch
.
.
·
Alorig with Scheidt and
Hedman, sophomore newcomer
Jason Goller looks to be another
key ingredient in coinpleinent-
ing VanDerPlasseand senior
·
captain Mike RacaneJli through-
out the season.
Senior
·
capt,~,
.
;q,,
Ne-ts
,
on
bolsters
Red
<
FoX defense
by
RYANMARAZITI
Staff Writer
:
PAGE 14_ -
,
.
_
_.
.
..
_
_
.
.
.
-
.
: ·
.
Ci'!,'le
photo/Jill Skolarczak
Ralph VanDerP
-
lasse
-
prepares for
the
Brown
tournament
.

_
.
.
-
-
.
...
.
.
.
:
-
·
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
'
"
Your team is leading
17-10
with under
a
minute left in the
fourth quarter. It's third-and-
ten,
.
and the opposing team has
moved the ball
SO
yards
in the
last_ two minutes, compleiing
passes of
15 and l-7
.
yards to
~
their best wide receiver fc:ir first
downs~
.
. -
Another pass
·
is inevitable .
.
You don't
_
need to be The
.
Tuna
to know who it's going
-
to, so
who do you assign to cover this
wide out?
_.
_
-
.
-
·
.
-_
.
-
If
fr
is the Marist Red 1-o;i<:es,
the choice is easy:
.
-
number 18,
Bassell Nelson,
_the
senior c
_
ap-
tain who
.
led thele~glie in pllSs ,
.
_
'
-
-
:
_
soc·cER:
-
-
,
Perfect
.
·
.
we¢ke11d
..
impto¥
'
~~
breakups last year.
-
·
·
·
The 5-foot-9-inch, 180pound
Milton, Mass. native is not only
an aggressive defensive back,
but also an assertive student' of
the game.
'Tm trying to study a lot more
this year," Nelson said. "It's
important to have an idea of how
certain
teams play and w.ho their
·
strengths are so you can
·
react
in big situations."
Nelson, a communications
major
ancl
younger of two sons,
has played in the defensive sec-
ondary all his life. He said he
chose Marist over both the Uni-
versity of Connecticut and the
University of Massachusetts at
Amherst not knowing much
about the small Poughkeepsie
school.
.
_
.
·.
Circle
pho(o/Jill Skotan:zal<
Nelson was an extra
in
the film Good Will Hunting.
-
.
-
:
"I'd heard it-had
a
good edu-
-
defenses the Metro Atlantic
· cation
_
to offer," Nelson said. "I
Athletic Conference (MAAC)
dido' t really know
_
too inuch
has ever seen.
_'.
about the football program but
Actually, in 1997 the defense
I knew it was on the rise."
-
had been the best the nation had
Nelson admitted there was
ever seen against the rush
more.
among Division
I
schools.
"I also wanted to get out of
That year's team allowed a
state," he laughed.
meager 398 total rushing yards,
.
Fortunately for him the pro-
highlighted by two of the fierc-
. gram had reached its highest
est competitions in school his-
point to date during his sopho-
tory against conference power
more and junior seasons, when
he contributed to two of the best
...
please see NELSON,
pg.15
R~d FOxeStO
7-2
·.:·; ...
-i:-.,.v
~
:
~

··
·
;
..
~
: __
',,::-•
---.
1
<
·)
:
Ld·~
~
..
<
.·.;.
... contin~edJrom
'
pg. 16
The
··
_
fed1h
'
has~'anofh6
i'
b1g'
._
-
weeken
_
d c~ming up;JTTtveling
.
-
to Niagani tomorrow for
a
4:00
Th~
·
coach wafqu
_
ickto re~og
-
-
game.
-
They ~illal~obe hi'.ac-
ni~ the play of sophomores
Ri-
tion on Sunaay for
a
1 :00
con-
-
chard Bradley, Brian Garafola,
_
test ·versus .Canisius.
and DeBrito.
-
·
_
..
"Botlt of these next games are
And despi~~ the iu
-
c~ess
'
o'f
conference games and it
'
s
'
im-
the team, there has
.
been no
porta:nt
,
thatweplayourgame,"
.
c_~ange of attitude during prac-
said Karcz, who added that los-
t1ces.
-
ing both
·
would offset the sfic-
"We're anticipating
-
th~ next
·
cess that the team accomplished
opponent," DeBrito said. ''We
this past week:
·
.
·
have the same mentality from
Karcz, along with the rest of
the beginning of the season, we
the team is confident
_
that the
.
·
just want to go out and play the
team has
a
legitimate chance to
next game."
·
· th
·
wm e conference. The key to
Forward Brian Karcz agrees.
the team's success
will
be stay-
"We're working real hard, and
ing focused on its goals
·
and
we have to stay focused," he
bringing
its "A" game against
said. ''We're not letting the sue-
every opponent, according to
cess get to us."
Kan::z.
---
'
-
















1rJHUE <CJ[]R.CJLJB
..
,,
'
'--•
.
.
.. L~sLwe~k;:;A~§ta,:111§iHg'.: .. ·
:<?f
chara.c~~/frd.i)ii~~~p.n/·.:'BobbyV?"
, .
. ·.
bac~_J~al Ande.rspn s-s~ason
·. There was,'11Qw~yer~ Ol!.e s1g'7 :· · Never has a Valentine-led
team
ended with ·a t?m./\C~. Co
_
~ch ·· _nific~t:~h!11}ge_._;_~fia11 BU~ick,": , _
advanced to _the playoffs. _With .
Da11-Reeves.hinted !hat th~ m-.· last year's' offeils~ve:cooxdina:-·- the talent the Mets have includ-
ju_ry wa~. due'.··, _i~ '. Pl!rt; : to
for; is. tjoVv'··_J3aJt!,~ofet
he;,icl "
ing the besUnfield in baseball,
Ancl~rson s pres~~~<>n hol?out. -.·c()ach. •••· Ray '-,~~e!P111n, Whose ··. · they belong in the postseason ..
_
~~yes has n.o ptse~~ ,
_
previous experience includes· -
If
not Valentine does not de-
~derson'~ injticy_same_~s ~e - changing Pittsbur,gh's :I(ordeli serve\o manage the Mets in
result of tr}'mgto _put()n ~fi"' Stew~ from "Slash': wsludge, ·
2CXX>.
-
-
. cial
tur,l\
'.lnjt1p-~_on~~ial
~
-·· now ;calls Minnesoia•s-;pl:iyli;° ' .. : . And now, my top five players
hay~J-~p,f Q,r.~'ln~t,~,!Yi.Q~fpme
i,Jherman _lac~s cre~ti,f!ty,_~d ; in base biµ! having exceptional
coilllllonpl~ce-1ntheN_F'L;· ·· . _ 1t s a shame with this offense,-:· seasons that you may not have
. Just as_k,_ theJ~ts. _D1d_Wayne
How can Randy Mo$s only . heard about:
·
Chrebet.gr'Yinfiy Testaverde _catch two passes for 13-yards · ·
-5.
Scott Williamson/Danny
hold -_ouf·: .. : '·\
.
,_ ·
·.
in an entire game, as he did
in
·
Graves, Cincinnati- - With 19
Thf? falcons hav<tother prob-
Gteen Bay on Sunday? · ·
wins 44 saves and overl90 in-
lem,s ~es!des thelos
.
s ofAnder-
Moss has as many touch-
ning~ pitched combined, the
son, p~cularly a lack ~f depth
down catches (one) this ye_ar as
Reds' co-closers have symbol-
at. quarterback and wide re-
backup tight end Carlester . ized the club's remarkable run
ceiver: :_ . . ·- .
,
.
Crumpler.
. ·. ·
toward the postseason.
If
<:;_hris Chandler s hamsu:ing
Billick was successful becaus.e
4. Carlos Beltran, Kansas City -
co,nturne~ .· to • trouble . him,
he always put the ball in the
The AL's probable rookie of the
coupl~dw1th theioss of Ander-
hands of._ his playmakers. _ If year has scored and driven in
· son, theFal,conswHlbe_he!1ded ·
·
• ·Sherman does not do the same
over 100 runs, and·has topped
nowhere;this year. -
·
·
quickly, he can kiss his job
·
20 in homers and steals.
}nst<!ad
.
of hurting feelings,
good~bye.
.
3. Tim Hudson Oakland - Has
Reeves should be trying to fix.
In baseball, the New York
10winsanda3.i5ERAasamid-
whatis wrong with his football · · Mets have made a late-season
season call-up.
·
team. To do that, he may need · collapse for the second year in 2. Brian Giles, Pittsburgh:.. His
to look in the mirror first.
a row. Manager Bobby Valen-
season is over -due to a finger
The next stop on the NFL's
tine believes that he should be
injury, but not before hitting .315
"studs to duds" tour is Minne-
replaced if the Mets fail to reach
with 39 homers and 115 RBI.
. sota," where the Vikings sud-
the playoffs.
1. ·
Kevin Millwood, Atlanta -
denly forgot h6'\y to score.·
Valentine graced the cover of The Braves' most consistent
At first glance, the problem is
last week's Sporting -News,
starter of'99 has 18 wins to go
mystifying, since Minnesota
which included the caption
with a 2.69 ERA and 200
has its same record-setting cast
"Why does everyone HATE
strikeouts.
PAGE 15


·NE L
·
S ON
iDe
:
·fe.~n,isve back
shines against pass
. .. continued from pg.14
houses.andrivals Georgetown
and Duquesne.· Unfortunately,
Marist_lostboth but:thedefense
allowed the ·team. to post their
·
best margins. of.defeat, losing
by only a combined seven
points.
·
Nelson.said being a pait of
those teams was impressive.
"We came out against every
team.confident we were going
to dominate them defensively,"
he said. "The defensive line
was huge, and it was exciting
because our backfield saw a lot
of action when teams couldn't
get their running game to-
gether."
Bassel, whose name is Egyp-
tian for "one who is brave,'' had
"When I play, it's all
about ·strategy. It's
_
all about knowing
when to come up or
when to stay back
and being able to
read your opponent.
Be
_
ing
a
captain has
forced me to do the
same thing with
people.
Bassell Nelson
Marist defensive back
the best game of his careerdur-
Nelson said he doesn't like to
ing the successful 1998 cam-
have everything known aboµt
paign when he intercepted two
him, but players and friends will
passes in a 60-0 thrashing of tell you he's visible walking all
Canisius on November? in front
over campus with that army
of over 1,000 atLeonidoffField.
backpack
The humble Nelson was quick
Despite his low profile, Nelson
to downplay his performance.
does accept the responsibilities
"I had two interceptions but I
that come along with being a
got beat for a touchdown,''
captain on and off the field. He
Nelson said,, ~·soit wasn't my . describes his playing. style as
best really.".
..
strategic, the same way he.
This year's team has not faired
handles people.
as well (l-2overall,
1-1
MAAC).
"When I play it's, all about
However, Nelson believes the
strategy," Nelson said. "Its all
team
will
win.
about knowing -when to come
\Veek- three in the.NFL has .this injury, but we can be sure
concluded, and .the.final four
that
:
he was out of shape and
t~frori1theplayoffslastyear notprepared to endure the rig-
(Denver Brnncos, New York
ors ofa 17-game
NF1,
season.
Jets; . Minne.so ta Vikings and
The. on!y team to. record
a
win
Atlanta Falcons) are a com-
thatmad!.!theconferencecham-
"It's been a rough start this · up or when to stay back and
in baseball, the greatest leadoff · year because we're young and · being able to read your oppo-
hitter and offensive catcher of there are guys in different posi-
nent Being a captain has forced
all time and. a· decent pitching
tions
a.rig
learning how to play
me to do the· same thing with
staff. So how is it that they have
together," Nelson said. "We 're people. I learn how to read them
· lost six straight games and now
trying to put everything to-
and deal with them."
- bined 1
"7)
L< ··
- .
'
pionships ,last yearis the Vi-
.·. Speaking ofthe Falcons, their
·
. khigs. But they are.a dismal 1-2
star running back Jamal Ander"'. · and ·have scored_ a measly 54
son hasbeen lost for the rest.of points, averaging just 18 points
the seaso'ri due to a knee injury,
per game. -
- -
__
1
and Dan. Ree
..
v. es.made an inter.;
Where has the offense.gone
· ·
b
·
·
-after last year's record-settirig
esUng comment;a OUt It,
556
. points?
.
-
-
.
· ''It
seems ·like ,when a guy
holdsout;hecomesbackinaiid
The defenses that they have
has injuries. Tljat is the' tough
faced. so far (Falcons, Raiders
part,'' Reeves.stated.
_ arid Pack~rs) ar~ not po~r de-
Therejs no doubting that . fense~. Atlanta IS foui:th
m
the
Anderson's injury w.as freaky ·· NFC m defense, the Raiders h!d
and most likely caused by
artifi-
Charles Woodson ~on tam
cial turf. ·However, Anderson
Randy Moss for the enure game
wasnowherenearthelevei that
(only4 catches)and the Pack--'
he had obtained lastyear.
- ers used their first three-picks
Reeves, who
is
also the gen-
of the draft _last year to select
eral manager of the Falcons,.was
comerb~cks man attempt to halt
makin.g
a
point !}lat future Fal-
the yikings pass offense.·· .
cons better. think twice before
This week they face off agamst
holding out, otherwise there is
the NFL's best ·defense, the
a good chance for serious in-
Tampa Bay Bu~anee~.
jury.
_
·
. It's not ~e change 1~ offen-
No one can be certain that
s1ve coordmators that 1s hurt-
Anderson's hold out caused
ing the offense, bunather the
· ·
Vikings are just playing against
some difficult defenses.
Misery loves company, and
the New York Mets could be
joining the previous two teams
with that feeling.
Mets manager Bobby Valen.:
tine recently· stated that if the
Mets do not make the playoffs
then he should be fired. He
could not
be
more wrong.
The Mets have the best infield
-
trail the Cincinnati Reds by"one-
. gether so we can get things go-
Being able to read people will
and.:a-half games for the wild
ing." ·
be an asset after he graduates,
card?
·
What does he feel the team's
as he said he plans to pursue
The players are not produc;:
chances are of challenging for
the film industry.
ing down the stretch. Valentine
the MAAC title with one con-
"I don't want to be an actor or
is not losing the games himself ferenc;e loss already?•
anything like that," Nelson ex-
by making bad decisions, so.
He says they will win.
plained,
"I
want to do stuff be-
there is no need to fire him at
"Our goal, inevitably, is to win
hind the cameras and in the ac-
the end of the season. It is as
the MAAC title, and I think we
tual industry itself."
. simple as that.
still can," Nelson said. "Everi
He took his first step on that
And now, my top five base-
though we had those two domi-
path two summers ago when he
. ball players who are producing ·· nant. defensiye years and we
was an extra ih the Oscar win-
exceptional seasons that you
didn't get the title, I don't see
ning film Good Will Hunting.
may not have heard about.
any.reason this team can't get it
"I really only did it because it
5)Magglio0rdonez-29HR 114 , once .we· get everything to-
was by my house and also so I
RBI and a .296 batting average. · gether." ·
could get my foot in the door, if
He lias been the only consis-
Spoken like a true captain. Or anything," Nelson said, "It
· tent player on his team all year. . perhaps it accentuates his low
wasn't anything big."
4) Jay Bell- Leads the Arizona
profil~personality.
It's all about strategy.
Diamondbacks with 37 dongers
and has 109 RBI. He led aie sec-
ond~year franchise to a division
title
3) Brian Giles '7 He hit .315 with
39 homers and 115 RBI before a
season-ending finger injury.
.Now we know why Cleveland
held onto him for as long as
possible.
2) Mike Hampton - Tied for first
in the National League in wins
with
20 and
fourth in the
NL
with
a3.0IERA.
1)
Rafael Palmiero - 46 HR 146
RBI and a .332 batting average.
Do you think that he is glad to
be
back in Texas and out of Bal-
timore?




































































































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t~
~~Mati~t
.Th~
Marist College Red.Foxes
• · 3,:,r~d}hje>J~ll)'T!~~p
!OOK
It ·
were shutout for the second
infromlliere.off,a2-yardrun;
, straight.w.ee~;
this
tiln~f~iirig
.
··Jiellis~o•s
··
extra
poirit
gave .
;Jo'pu_quesn_e ii(a ffuIDl>ling ?.1.-0
i .
..
the'
Dtikes' a
commanding 21-0
defeat S~tutday .befo!~ a\hollle, ·. . .
iead with 12:3·9 to go in tpti~pen-
crowd
·
of-1
542. . .. , .. , -
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irighhlf \;·. :"
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·
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riugues~e
used·~
diversifi~d·
,,·
:
.,Affor-Ziminerciari·rcrnnd
rini'@d
'
1fa~s.saiiie;r<>lling}l1eµ-. .
. Michael Rees.e·
in
the back of the
· way
'.to
43l,yards
of:
total
of.::
....
endzone i.1fthjustoyer ~:nunute
f~11sf on· .th~,
usually
·
souhd
·remaining in the half.to push the
Mari.st defense. :
<
>·. ··.··••. • .
·
lead to28;-0; Marist puttogether
'Toe·tiukes·
w~sieci
no
tini'e'
in
jts best
scoring
·
threat
of the
jumping.
on
.
thejcor¢bo#d. •
. ·
..
day.:,:, . ;
i.:'.:
.
. ;. :; ; . ·. ·.. .
Aftef tlle ~peningJcic~off
"Y<lS .
.
·
',
·J\'s ·.
quarterback- Rick
returned to theii'own 46.:yatd . .
·
.
. ·· ·
.
·· . .
·
· ..
-
.
. .. .
. Montejano. con1p,leted four
, line, Duquesne~p'iit.togetlier)m
Marist battles Duquesn·e during S1:1turday afternoon's
31-0
defeat atth.e h~nds of the ~~.kes...
:straightpas·se.s ataJranticpace
. impissive
_
six~play,2:l
_
Odri".e
.
. ......... :,_.:~--,/
.
, . ': .. · ·.· ...
.
.
t\ ....
;:~Jry~gt9Ieatth,e'clock/th~~ed
that:f ~atu,red. 'the· -running .of
·
gaiiis: ,
> )/:. ··. . . . .. ,
,
. .. . .. .
.
.
th~ lead to 14:-0 :-vith 2:53 ieft in .. urifotfunafely
,
right:iiow';we·1rre\tr:'Ptfs:tc:>tin~,th,elllS(?~".~§_9il'the
.
Donte Small.
;>
~j. . · .... ·· .. :: . . ·.·• .....
>
;H6~~ver. the drive,c~e '~o: a
the
opening' period... . . ,'
. ,:.n6f'nfosliing:'·entiµgfJrlief/J)~q~.~Ile 75.:yar~ Uti_eWith five
·
.. Smaiicarried four
tim~f
orJ'.2
·
• si:r~eching .halt_ as·

Cha11tand ·
.
,,:Maiisf s ~.off'e1~e, \V.~s
t9ta1Iy :
p◊intf
c>ti
th~
l>c>ard.)'.J1eid said .. ; s~9I1ds:l~ftjn ~ei~ajf. · ·. ·
.
,
yards;
on
the ·:op~_ning-drive,
\vas:
iriterceptech:iri thira-and.:
i1:1_effec.tiye .for
:~h~
~.econ~ ... ·~

The junior
.
tighre11d
·
w~ one . \ . :rvfo9~elan9 · l~fted _.011e cieep
which culmiiiat~d ·in a· du:e~- ·' ei·g~(
on,
ihe .b~ci~~sne ~6-)'~d
straight game: Jlet1d coac_h Jim.·. , of.th~ Joi:i€i bright spots.on, the
m\o
~e.
:
ngll_t ~om.er of the e_nd
yard>
t91ithdowri:i-un
over
.
the. ..}foe
with 4:
12
to go in the first.~ ·:p~dy)ootced for'a ¢hange mid'- ... offensive .end and said' he has . : ·. zon~'JUSt out of the. reach of
. lef(-lii<Je
t~
op'e~j,!ie
'
s.coring; .. ' .. · : Duqtiesne;' w~o estab!isht:cfa

. .
\Vay
through the second pedod ... corifi.dehce :that the team
\l/!U'
widexecejver Brian Traynor to
Oriando·Bellisario's extra s·trotig ninnfr1g game on 'their .·by pulling Chatr<1nd',(5-8'.'.59;
2 .
bouncd,ack.
.::,.,,
:
'0
·end.the first half.
.
. ,
pointmadeitJ-Q.
.
. .
. .·
·
·ru:sifew.ppssessions; deci<led . irit)infavor.o:t'RidcMoriteJano .
"I
kribwttiat'we.allhav.e the':.
-
~
The,
second half was full.of
After the
two
teams traded
to
unl~a~h· its p~ssing attack on_ (9-1~:74, 1 int.) for' the s~cond ·
ab,ility
to
get the
job done;u R.eid
·
sloppy play by both si~es, as
. punts. on the- ensuing• p~sse~~ '!he, next poss~ssio11, :· , .. , . . . stra,ightweek. ·
· ·
. · .··
.
· · .. · .. ·. · .
'.
·
said; , ?lfeetthat soon getting
each te~·s ,second ,umts saw
sig~~,_the:Red\9~~s t~pko~<!r
.
~f!~r
J.?~n~e ~m~l;~icl_(~c}
pp
·
•:}~.eitl},er q~af~e
_
rp~ck h~s
points on,the board_.will not.be ·. exten,s1ve time; . D
.
uquesne
at_ tlJ.eip-<>~ll
is:
~~~1
b~e,
.\V~t!1.
.J?
yar4s;,?1(the 'gio~n<! tcf9pen .. : thri\V_n _. lor .:, a,,
,
. to u shdo wn
a probiem/: Reid said. .
. :
.. could. only muster. an Orlan~o
J:4~~
1
.~t;t;.,iv,.
.
~~
.
1:?~~94,:,M~
.
st
.jhe-'~rifeJ.;_guartirb.a_cl([o,riy
o:
throiigh'•.!1.rree
;
g~es/
.
:,:
:
.: :_ '.

•.. .. . . The Dukes again used a light- • Bel_lisario 30-yard filed goal m
:
· \V~~@:pletRillW't~~\~al\gq~p;
:,~t~~~~
wtg~@qf9.s~§sm ..
;,,;;iJlg&tt~?,,§I~~-·~~i~iPff~[~d. ... ning
q~~~½:
clriyferu.:Iyii!.Qi~se,c-, . the, .
fmi~_
CJU?ft~r,to dose the
tll~Jj,<!Iq {)~
~t~tr~n~tb
o.f
t,he )•trJ:tje ;,on, .
.
a: lJ.e~ut,tfiilly !]uo~n
·
· h~s.,t~1:n1g
_
ws on
~liy
th~ of-· _ond ~eriodto bum the Red

sconng at
31-0
m
favor of-the
pa~~m~)gatll.~;"~s.,q~~erba.~Ic
-
. deep ball
f i;,r a 3+yard touch;.
feris~
is stiuggling;.
.
. ,
Foxes, /
.
·
. ·. . . . .
c
Dukes.
·
Key~rF 99artr~
nd
· ~It•. Se~n· · do,wti'pass'.
i ..
i./.: : \
·
,',
>· \
.
.
>;
''H~elthat_we
are stiU
trying.· , MeraJti~M~cchiapuntfrom
'iThe ~ed Foxeswill~ej~_ac-...
• 5;t~~~~?
ane
l.(~v~n.~tack fo.r.
~~g
'Bellisaricfs e~~~:po~rif p~she':i to coIDetog~ther ~s
~
·unit
and : .
pis own end zone left Duquesne
·
tlon this Saturday· at Camsms; .
•·!en.'s ... ·sO~ce~.··
·
.equais
ta,t}
··••Sja§~nis
W'i,~itoiftl\gf$e·tell
.- .,
,
·.
~
-
·.•.·.
·

.
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:•~ithYanybody,'.' :II~focl¢s'said; .. :3:.Lifi'.ilie'MAAC;and
,
droppel:i
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f :::::
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f
~tiif
J!i!i!SI~!;
Loyofato go 2;0 last \_\'.eekend, .· Cf~ndi#g::~A{\9{c~~,h1pJ~~s; :
ip:f
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rlie,
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~eani.(playid·a.gqod:
.. ···.

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.. ·
.
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<rtilt~t~t!¾?~~!
0
~i~t:••-•:tii:~:a11;;l\~~h
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· equ,aJ1ng J_ast· s
.
eason .. ~··•· entire_: ; ,thefii:s~ go~ of th~,gailleJ~ ~:- ·.· •. · .....
t11~
~Qd:pf?th~_:s~ason/~cl·the•
· ;~~iti!¥~~i¥'.~lltiltlif
ll~ft;;~~
.(tvlAAC) los.s ofthe_season
twC> .
~i)( saves to
,-
sec~tetp~_v1ctory~:.: ,niaybe~efitin·r~rtltjngs.:~t:the-
days later,J~0. completing the .
In
the Loyola game on,Sun-
endoftheseason,-wliicliwou,ld
perfect weekend. .
. day, Steve Murk.nett~d
a11
uf • :<be.~~Ipfui-iij.sclledl:l}iiig·g#nes
.
:
,
Maristhead co~ch Bobby .· assistedgoalat20:28ofthefirst ·,?ga.instnatiop?}lyffinked.teams
Herodes said he is impressed half for the only goal
_
of the
af- · .
outside of the·corifere.iice next ·
with the team's play thus far.
ternoon
to
lead the Fox~
to
their year.
. . ·
·
• .
.
·
.· . ,
I
aroe
phot~il:eHaigh
A Maristplayer attempts a header Sunday against Loyola.
.
'
.
Herodes attributes the suc-
cess of the-team
to
hirrd train-
ing, .and ..
adcled
.tharthe. sopho~·.
. mores, have -stepped. up· their
. play-tltlsieason.'··.·
<
·
.
.
.
~ t s¢ason the players were
"thrownjnto
the
wolves,"
as
Herodes likes to call
it,
and
gained ~xperience from there.
'The sophomores are leading
the team," Herodes said.
· ... please see SOCCER, pg.14·


53.3.1
53.3.2
53.3.3
53.3.4
53.3.5
53.3.6
53.3.7
53.3.8
53.3.9
53.3.10
53.3.11
53.3.12
53.3.13
53.3.14
53.3.15
53.3.16