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Part of The Circle: Vol. 53 No. 5 - October 28, 1999

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VOLUME #53 ISSUE #5
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f1
hadto sha're
books
with sni-
members of the Hudson Valley
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YFS
81
RELATED SOORYTHlS PAGE
This
is
an
IDISCimlific
:nm-ey
,amr
from
100
Marin
stutknls.
-
·
she said.
-
-
,
actions invo~ving
·
t!ie racially
,
-
ap;irtheid"
_
and
discririUii~tion.
-
-At
iie~y Dutchess Coinmu-
·
segregating policy of apartheid.
-
"I
together with others _abol-
nity
/
<:;ollege
tll~
financial aid Du.ring his tenure asPresi
_
dent
ished apartheid,'' he s_aid. ''We
-
·
clepart!}leiiL waited one ~ellles-
.
heliftecl the bari on many politi-
said 'We are going to rectify our
-
ter
to make-'sure
-
that students
car
·
organizations and an-
mistakes of the past."'
who received the loan were go-
-
noririced that Nelson Mandela
-
Retired from party politics, de
ing to
'
c~asses. Each semester
would be released
from
prison.
:
Klerk said he considers himself
after, the money left over from
However, critics of de KJerk of-
to be an independent agent wh~
the loari
·
is dispensed a week
ten say that lie was responsible
wants to make a contribution to
before school begins
.
for perpetuating apartheid while
civil
society. He said that coun-
According to Caparel, th
_
ere
he was in office.
tries need to
be
more proactive,
have been suggestions made
"It's original purpose was to
citing the United States as an
bring justice," de Klerk said in
;i
example of a "well-infonned
... please see
LOANS,
pg.4
press conference before his lee-
community" that is able to ef-
[NSJ[]D)]

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Coniiiltinit·
·
.
OCTOBER 28, 1999
·.. .
·
·
.. ·
·
.
. .
.
.
· . ·
·
.
y
WMCR~FM (Marist College
Radio) is on the air. Tune to 88.1
anytime between 9 a.m. and
la.m. to hear the latest in mod-
em rock, punk, hardcore, ska,
hip-hop, ~PM, sports, and
news. Any club inter<!sted in
having a public service an-
nouncement broadcast on the
air should leave a message for
Program Director Doug Guarino
atx3132.
A nonstudent dashed out of
a McCann Centerlocker room
on Oct. 11 at 10:30 p.m. with a
student'.s baseball cap. The
owner of, the hat chased the
thief out of McCann, across
Route 9, and into thC gas sta-
tion parking lot A patrol of se-
curity ·_officers arrived on the
scene and broke up the two in-
dividuals who had begun ex-:
changing blows. Town of
Poughkeepsie Police officers
responded and took the non-
student-into custody, charging
him with petty larceny: Upon
checking his background,- the
nonstudent.was· wanted. on ·a
warrant issued by the Hyde Park
Police Department. The Hyde
Park Police were called and
picked him up shortly after.
What are you going to be
for Halloween?
Watch for the first episode
"Everything but the Kitchen
Sink," featuring Montana from
MTV's "The Real World" on
Merv, Channel 12.
How are our lives affected by
the fact that we live in a society
that is dominated by a market
While on. a routine check
economy? What are the
around the.new library Sunday,
strengths and weaknesses of Oct. 16
at
12:40 p:m., a security
"I'd like to go as a
.tampon."
;, Amy~~-
junior,._
.
,.
.
' ~
this form of social, organization
officer found a· gouged . stone ·
and the consumer life-style that
wall facade measuring r~ughly , .
tends to accompany jt?lf you 3°xl2',.i Construction ,workers> ,.,
are interested in questions such·: .:Y.,ere questioned and confessed':,•,.,
as tliese;'ihen:you' sh9uld~,con-.·
to
hitting th~1--;wall,with}~·un.,,,
!'
sider adding Philosophy
of
the : · wieldy backhoe. T,he consJr.uc-
Market Society (PHIL394L111)
tion company• allegedly prom.-
'bbu~ekeeper were notified and
resolyed the slttfaticin. '
· '!It's goingto belia;d, but
· I'm going as my favorite
maie organ. " .
._.-. _
_.,junior, · ... -. , . ,
·
_,
"I'm going as a giant
glass cutter (nipple)."
Katie Oconnel
. _sophiJiiiore ..
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niy ID ~ard; ind riofotitii
then? ',
'Was 'pushed'a'owh 'ini~'anotlier'.
to your spring schedule. The
ised to. repair the fayade: with-
course will be taught by profes- · .out any added charges-
. : The Resident .Director was iioti-: ·.; individual w&cfreached into 'the'··
,
;
. fied, went down
to'
the
entry' ''student's pocket, gra~tied his;,';.
sor Warren Neill and it will sat-
isfy the CORE/LS requirement
for a course in Philosophy or
Religious Studies.
Aggtavate4:harasstneiit calls · desk, identffied
·the
adainant . wallet;ari'd ran'off. Tlfo·shlcient -
_A gaseous odor overpowered . continue to be'furuiy
icr'
some~ · · student;
and
let him return to his _· called the:poHce, ~nd ·then his ·
The Society of Professional
Journalists are currently looking
for new members. ContactEric
Deabill at
K6X9for
information ..
The Circle
is always looking
for new staff writers and pho-
tographers. - Leave a message
at x2429,orHZALifyou are up
to the challenge.
If
you have a club ·event or
meeting that you would like
publicized in. Club Bulletins,
contact
The Circle
office at
x2449 or drop the information in
the envelope on the Circle door,
LT211A&B.
the 'Sheahan Funk' outside , one out there/ causing
the
·se-
rciom. ·· ·
mother; and then declined po:-
SheahanHall 1'.londay, Oct. 18
curity . force
_and
. the
liceinvolvement.Forty.,fivedol-
at 9:30 p.m. Mamtenancework-
Pou_ghk.eep. s. ie Polic.e_Dep.·a_rt-
An unauthorized guest in the
Jars-in cash; a Mari.st ID,
a
CT
ers ,\Ver_e c,ontacted, . and
ment to continue their investi-
Townhouses ''.A''Block Sun-
Driver's ' license,.·.· and a
thought it \Vas si~ply_ a routine
gatiorn~·. One recent case
fri~
day, Oct. 24Was advised to ieave. _ .· Ma~teryard were _ri!portedly
gas pressure equaltzatton valve,
v
O
I ved . a fern ale -student · in
campu~ by security officers; but
taken with. the wallet
.
-.at:i~ left the sc.ene .. The odor
Champa gnat; who \vas con~
was found two more times. He
continued and Central Hudson
tacted
\jy
a
supposed •s·ecurify . finally disappeared after he was
: Gas & Electric workers were
officer' at 10:50 a,m .. onThurs-
threatenedwith police action.
contacted. Workers arrived and
day Oct. 21. The false security
repaired the problem by 1 :40
officer asked for the student's
a.m., returning the 'Sheahan
social security number,which
F_unk' to the predominate stench
she told him.
He
then said· he
on the South End.
would call _back arid hung up.
. A water leak was reported on
the ninth floor of Champgnat to
security officers Oct. 21 at 12:45
a.m. When security guards in-
vestigated, they found a
flooded elevator control room
and private laundry mom. The
water had risen dangerously
close to the electrical box in el-
evator room. A plumber and
Joe Leary, director of safety and
security,. advises residents to
not give Qut any personal
fa-
formation ·over the phone- even
if they pose as security offic-
ers.
Three lapt9p · computers, val~
ued between $2,000and $3,500,
have been stolen in the lasttvio
weeks from Jocked and unlocked
rooms. One
·
• victim from
Champagnat and twofrofu Mid~
rise have filed reports with Town
of Poughkeepsie Police officers,
who are continuing the investi-
gation· of the grand larcenies.
One unsuccessflll attempted
theft. was .
_
recorded·
)n
Chrunpagnat, foiled by a cable
lock.
... Thirty-'six people. detided
aga~nst
'
stepping:cmtside when
a f~realarin: was pulled on
~
Cliampagnat's sixth floor Mon-·
day:Oct. 25 at2:17 a.m.
AH
of
the student's names were taken
down for disciplinary action af .....
ter Fairview firemen responded. ·
Each room was checked to guar-
antee no other occupants re..:
mained inside, causing the other
residents to remain outside un-
til
3:26 a.m. Luckily for the com-
pliant Chanipagnat residents,
'The we~ther w~.inild and dry,'
- according
fo
a security.guard;s
incident report. Upon reentering
the building, one unauthorized
guest was found and dealt with.
Weekend Weather.
A Leo Hall resident became
disruptive with
an
entry officer
when he· was not allowed to
enter the building without his
identification card Thursday,
Oct. 21. The resident promptly
stated, "When football shorts
come with pockets, I will carry
An off-campus, 'strong arm'
robbery occurred at a party on
Washington St. Saturday, Oct.
23 at 12:45 a.m. A male student
hi: 59
lo:37
hi:59
lo:37
SUNDAY:
hi:60
lo: 42
Source: http://www.weather.com
(The
Weather Channel)














































































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PAGE3
.
OC::l'OBER2il,

1999
News
~-----------------------------------------
Two sororities celebrate
<
A

anniversaries at Marist
·
As
·
T
one of
bigges
'
t
_•
·
on
_
this
·
can,ipu~
by
CHRISTY
BARR
Staff Writer
.
KLP
still
strong after ten
yearshere
byLEEPARK
Staff Writer
Kappa Lambda Psi (KLP) eel-
,
.
The Alpha Sigma Tau (AST)
ebrated its tenth anniversary
·
sorority will
_
celebrate both its
Oct. l
O, making it the oldest so-
.
five-year anniversary as a chap-
rority established at Mari st.
·
ter at Marist and their 100-year
A picnic was the main
:
anniversary as a natio
_
nal soror.:
.
celebratory even that was
ity
during the month of Novem-
moved inside due to inclement
ber.
·
·
weather.
·
·
·
Founded on the ideals of ide-
Senior Anne Marie Bermudez,
als
of
scholarship
a.nd
pride,
Kappa Lambda Psi's Alumni
AST began Nov.
4,
1899 in
Circl,pholo1Jcn:mysmit1t
Representative, said that there
Ypsilanti, Mich. The Delta Ep-
·
Kappa Lambda Psi sisters show off their sisterhood.
were many alumni to help cel-
silon chapter at Marist College - - - - - - - - - - -
and will continue it at the 2000
ebrate the event.
was installed onNov: 12, 1994.
convention to be held in Ala-
"A lot of alumni were up on
TheDeltaEpsilonchapterwas
"This chapter has
bama
.
As for Delta Epsilon's
Saturday," she said.
"It
was
founded when two women,
shown a

z
_
ot'oif groun
five-year celebration, plans to
greatto
talk
to so many girls who
Monica Hobbs
·
an-a
·
·
susa
·
n
and
individu;l
hold a dinner for past and
were here before us.
Russello, decidedt<>
form
a new
present sisters are in progress.
Because it was alumni week-
.
sorority on campus. At the time
growth."
Tara Pray, a current member,
·
end, there were close to seventy
Marist had only two sororities,
Heidi Bliss
said she is excited about the
sisters at Marist during the cel-
:
Sigma Sigma ~igma an
_
d Kappa
ASTDistrictPresident
_
anniversary
:
·
,
_
e~ration
;
.
·
'
;
.
·
_
.•
La,
_
µibdll
y
Es
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•,
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,...,
!en
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Fems
;

·
KLP s
·
preside?t,
·
Russello
_
begantorecnutwomen - - - - ~ - - , - - - ~ - -
ingandgettingtoknowthegirls
·
said the event was a defimte
on campus t9 fgrm a new one.
·
.
who started the Delta Epsilon
success.
'.fhirty women forined the
·
dation for the
-
~hapter to grow
chapter here at Marist during
"With aJlofthe alum coming
foun~ing class of AST.
:
on,'' she said.
·
_
the celebration dinner," she
back, the girls did a lot of net-
:
Shannan Fales,·
-
one of the
CurrentASTPresident, Crissy
said. "Being one of the newer
working, an_d a lot of business
.
founding sist
_
ers of AST, said
Esposito; said these anniversa-
_
sisters,
I have never gotten the
cards were exchanged," she
that the first year was definitely
_
ries are very important to every
opportunity to meet the
said.
the hardest because no one
.
sister.
·
,
·
founders."
Nationally, KLP was founded
knew what to expect.
.
.
_ _
"It's amazing enough that its
AST District President Heidi
April 28, 1980 at Glassboro State
·
"There were no rules,
·
no tra-
been five years and to
.
think of Bliss said that the Delta Epsilon
College (now Rowen College) in
ditions and everything was
all
the girls who have gone
chapter has
_
worked extremely
Glassboro, NJ
.
Maristformed its
new,'' she said. '!While we were
through our chapter, but it's also
hard in the last five years to im-
chapter in October 1989, mak-
tiyfng
to puildall ofthis, we had
.
our IOQ-year national anniver-
prove itself, and she is very
ing it the fourth founded chap-
to
go through initiat!ori our-
sary and to think of all the
.
proud of how the chapter has
ter, or the delta chapter out of a
selves.''
.
_
.
.
_
,
women who've been in AST
grown.
total of five.
According_(() Jennifer Gomez,
.
through the years is e~en more
"The
chapter has shown a lot
KLP is a local sorority and was
another founding sister, there
·
amazing,"she said.
.
of group and individual
the first on the campus. Ferris
was a lot of work to be done in
The National Sorority began
.
growth," she said. "In addition,
said that she hopes they will
go
thefirstye8:f.
the 100-year anniver
s
ary eel-
you have all worked hard to
nationalwithinacoupleofyears
.
·
"We basically had to pledge
·
ebrationatthe 1998convention,
continually improve the chap
-
"Eventually we'd like to go
ourselves and lay a strqng foun-
which was held in Michigan,
ter."
national, but that takes a long
time."
·
Currently there are
23
sisters
and one pledge in KLP
.
Accord-
ing to Ferris, there is a big effort
to
recruit
more students this
year.
"We
want to try to get num-
bers up
and
get more girls in-
.
volved in Greek life," she said.
Currently, KLP is working on
participating with Big Brothers/
Big Sisters and they have re-
cently taken over the campus
blood drive, which
·
will take
place Nov. 11.
Because of the tradition, Ferris
said she is hoping for many more
successful years ahead.
"We're going to continue
having fun, helping each other
out and being a family away
from home,'' she said.



































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... • ·· 1r1HnE .:-(C][]~CL]B
.......
··
..
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-
OCTOBER 28, 1999
De:J{LERK:
Message.
of.
pr:ogre·ss ..
i;egarding
current
world'issuesT ; .
Klerk proposed. He referred to ·
... continuedfrompg. 1
South Africa's socioeconomic
is not always as easy a·s if
crimeproblemasanexample.
sounds.
·
De Klerk was co-recipient of
"Some of the greatest wars
the 1993 Nobel Peace Prize ·
were caused by people who be-
along ~ith Nelson Mandela ..
Iieved fervently.that they were
Although he played a leading
pursuing truths," he said.
role in the democratization of
N8w_s.
Three points that were key in · South Africa, he said his selec- ·
de Klerk's speech were the is-
tion as co-recipient was an un-
sues of globalization; the failure
popular one.
.
Circle
photo/Jeremy Smith
of some members of the inter-
In his press conference before
national community to join i_n
the lecture, de Klerk said there
progress, and the persistence of -• is a Marist school in South Af-
racial and religious issues. He
rica that is of high repute.
The Marist mainframe has its detractors, like stressed students who call it "archaic."
EMAIL: Students.complain
warned that the w~rld cannot
h"I f~ehl a ce_rtdai?,
1
kinship bejng
. _: ..
continu_
edfi--,;_
·
_
0
_·~-
·
P. '-_•g.
r
simply alloy., a "de 1acto apart-
ere,
e sai .
am very 1m-
.,
·
'
heid" to take place.
pressed by what I see.''. . _
.
"They will actually-be
~rri'.ai.iei:.
Another consequential issue
Mari st students and faculty . than most laptops,'',· he .said.
de Klerk looked to expound was
who attended the lecture gave ... ''.This· saves space. and 'means
the concept ofa "human rights
their thoughts on de Klerk's .· lessmaintenancesirtcetheywill
culture.''.
· speech.
_
.. ·
all run from the mainframe: This
"We need a great debate on
"I thought it was a very inti-
will also cut down on the runount
how you deal with the issue of
mate lo~k at the system ofapart-
of Windows-based viruses" _
diversity," he.said.
heid from the inside," said
· While upgrades to the main-
Singularizing · the economy
Cochece. Davis, Assistant Pi:o-
frame i~prove speed and ser-
and community is a potential
fessor of Communication.
· vice to
the
campus, most people
step in the right direction de
"An Evening withEW. de
ire
concerned with the.one
Klerk','. was·sponsored by. the .. · thing they_cobid:ilot li-Je\vith-
Marist Co1lege Student Pro- -out~emaiL, · ·
grainniingCouqciL ·. '-:_.
·_ ._( :,Many students are concerned ... _
.
. .· .. ,.
·-
·
. about the ease-of-use•facfor iii·
- •;•
th{{MuSICB"Sy~tem.
Freshman.·
Jessica Clark said she rarely
uses the_system because it is
difficult. .·
.
"It's archaic and really hard to
use," she said. "I haven't been·
able to use it well so I don't
bother. It just looks old fash-
ioned."
Other students said the
MUSICB system has limited
uses, including senior Jason
Estabrooks.
"The worst part about it is you
can't get any ·attached files
when people.send·them to your
Marist account,''. he said. ''.To
open the file, ·,you ,have.to.for-
ward. to Hotmail or something ,
like that."
Senior Tom Guilmette echoed
the comments of Estabrooks.
. "Opening a file such as a pic-
ture will just get you an endless
string of codes," he said.
Williams said that he felt the
current email system is ad-
equate. According to him, if a
student finds the MUSI CB sys-
tem difficult to operate, they can
use Eudora to send and receive
email.
There are currently aboutl2,000
MUSICB accounts. Most of
these belong to students; but.
faculty, staff, alumni-and·a few·
guests are also regi~tered users, : :
. · ... continuedfrompg.
I.
such as assessing the situation .
for each individual and putting --
an extra· lean against th~ loan
because the students are al-
. ready paying tuition. A possi-
_ { bi!itY:<?Uinaricialloss keeps the,
. ; college
away
from this decision/
Weglarz said.
"We absorb that liability if the
student were
to
drop out dur-
ing the first three weeks
of
the
semester,"-he said. "Even
if they
weren'! to drop out completely,
butonly to go from a full time -
student to a parttime student.''
However adult-education stu-
dent and regular undergraduate
·students loan information is
kep_t togeth~r. _·_·_ The_ P.rc.>~!e
f
o( .
an adult-education -student' dif-":
fers from the undergraduate.
Marist's mission has always
been to serve the community:
The School of Graduate and
Continuing Education handles
the admissions of all part-time
undergraduate students, and
full time undergraduate s.tti->
dents who
art
?2 y~s onig~_-;.
and over, acc.ording t<fWeglarz .. '.:
. "A,'couple
0
:of chaBengirig:. -
situations arises when the finan-
cial aid office works with the stu-
. dent," he said.
"It
is a challeng- ·
ing situation for both them and
the college."
As far as the loan checks for
books or leans on the loans,
_ Weglarz said he didn't have the
authority to say whether or not
it could be implemented.













































1
,.
l
.
OCTOBER
28,
1999
-
-
- -
--
-
-
·
-
-
-
-
----
-
.
.
..
,
,
.
1rlH[]E
_•
.
<CltlR.<ClLlE
Features
llalloWeen
·
·
.
.
·
still a thriller
.
by
KATHERINESLAUTA
Staff Writer
seems to
_
spread across the
Marist campus as decorations
are, placed and activities are or-
ganized.
Halloween excitement is defi-
Punipkins placed 1n windows,
nitely brewing
.
_
Students are
cobwebs h~rig!ng fron:i ceilings
planning their big weekend filled
·
and
·
paper witches sticking to
with parties, costumes
·
and
doors
:
Yes, it's thattime of year memories!
-
again; Halloween.
.
Dawn Filan, a first year med.
It is time to start creating cos-
Tech student shared one of her
tumes, buying candy and
-
ar-
fondest Halloween memories.
·
ranging parties. It is amazing to
"When I was little, I would
think that the very commercial-
have one costume and go out
ized holiday we celebrate every
trick-or-treating, then go back
October 31 is actually con-
home change and go out again
nected to a holy day.
to all the same houses," she said.
Created during the 9th century,
"I
kept doing this all night."
Halloween falls on the eve of All
Ted Ebberts, a freshman com-
Saints Days. All Saints Day is a
.
munications major, said he
holy day created by the Catho-
fondly remembers himself and
lie
·
Church to honor the
.
Chris-
his friends being egged on Hai-
tian saints
.
Originally
it was
Ioween
.
celebrated as a pagan festival
"The girl who was watching
of the dead, however in the 10th
us told these older kids to get
century; it also connected itself us and they did
.
" he said.
with All Souls' Day on Novem-
However, Halloween wouldn't
ber 2, which is observed to help
.
be complete without something-
purify the spirits of the dead.
scary happening. Lucas Tucker,
Most of the customs of Hal-
a junior Chemistry student said
loween are based on supersti-
he recalled a scary memory one
tions from centuries ago.- For Halloweeri when he and his
example, thejack-:o-lantemswe
brother were.tempted to take a
buy and carve every year tradi-
mask off of their neighbor's
·
-
.
tionally are based on British
.
scarec.row.
_
Afte.F
.
~~il)git
_
off,
0~:
,
~!__r:r1an.y_ct_e_cor~t_,o_n_s us=~-
-
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-
~~~~?.~~_:~
:_.
~ -
-
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-
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folktales abciuC a riian named
"
the
·
scarecrow jumped
tip
ancr
"'"·
oents can-choose fr()m
a
wide
·
· .
Ted Eb~ert however, said he
end. Many dorms are holding
Jack O'Laritem who's spirit was
·
surprised
the twci greatly.
·
·
variety of costumes this year
believes the traditional cos-
holiday parties, as well as other
doomed to roam the earth for
"I was scared s@#$less!" ex-
whether it be creating their own
tumes will outweigh the new
clubs such
as El A~co Iris Latino
eternity. Other traditions in-
claimed Tucker
:
or purchasing one over the
costumes.
and the Black Student Union.
eluding dressing in costumes,
This weekend, Tucker also
Internet
.
.
There are speculations
"I have heard talk
_of
people
There
is
even a movie night
such as a witch
7
ghost, etc. help
hopes .to visit Salem, Massa-
as to what the popular costumes
·
planning
to be pimps and planned for those in the Hallow-
create and represent the super-
chusetts, a historical area where
will be this year.
·
witches." said Ebbert.
een spirit the evening before
natural mood of Halloween.
witches were
_
once persecuted.
Filan predicts that costumes
If
any student has not made
·
Halloween from 4 p
.
m. until 2
Today, while the actual mean-
There he plans on dressing as a
from Austin Powers will be
plans for the holiday, Marist
a.m
.
If
there are any questions
ing of Halloween tends to be Death Rocker, very gothic and
popular.
College is providing a plethora
as to time or location please call
forgotten, many of the traditions
·
angry.
"I
think Dr. Evil and Mini-Me
of activities for students
the College Activities Center at
are still carried out. A spirit
·
Besides death rockers, stu-
will be big." Said Filan
throughout Halloween week-
X 3279.
HuMarist's plan for a humorous year,
not
·
only shOWs but comedic songs alSo
phoeo cwnesy of ..
.,.....,_marisudul-lr:W@httpdl,n.ccta_html
From their Nov 1998 show:
:
Jaime O'Neill, Jeremy Smith, Jon Murray, Paul Diala,Mark
Montgomery, Carlita, Dan Tyburski, Meg Fitz, Nick Foster, Steph, and Joey Scotto.
by
ERIN BURKE
Staff Writer
This year is the first in wh_ich
the improvisational acting
group known as the HuMarist's
have been considered as part of
the MCCTA (Marist College
Council on the Theatre Arts)
board.
The company was fonned al-
most a decade ago by a group
of Marist students looking to
entertain and have a good time.
Since then its creators have
graduated and moved on to
other acting troupes. The
HuMarist's have been looked at
as an independent acting group
set aside from the theatre
arts
genre.
With twelve members, there is
no official board or elected of-
fices within the group. Instead
all twelve students brainstorm
and decide on ideas for their
skits. Each semester they put
on two or three half-hour long
shows and one hour long show
at the end of the year.
Co-director Nick Foster said
that they are also planning a few
off-campus shows in order to
"spread the HuMarist love."
Along with the small perfor-
mances, the group also travels
to a National College Comedy
Festival every year.
One new idea the group is
working on for this season is
comedic songwriting .
.
They are
hoping to formulate their own
brand of Adam Sandler-esque
music that will leave their fans
·
in hysterics. This will
be
in ad-
dition to the usual audience-
prompted improvisational the-
atre that has fueled earlier per-
formances.
Not only does this club allow
its participants to have fun, but
it also lends them great experi-
ence in the field of comedic act-
ing.
There is no word yet on when
their first show will be.













































































































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Pet Corner
This is Jen Anderson's dogMoondoggy. In this picture he is
6
years old and he is wearing his "Greyhound Bus" costume.
If
you would like a picture of your pet or anything else placed
in this section please leave it in the envelope at room
LT 211-
The Circle office
.
·
.•-
·
.
.
.
..
.
·
-
.
,
.
...
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--..
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·.
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.
PA.GE 6
:-
,
Atr0111.8thel!anv
,
relaxes
;-
''-~iid
-:
~m~11s·
-
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r:~11y
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g0wa
~.
.
.
·
~
.
.
by
JEN
GLOVER
StajJ,Writer
.
.
.
this is orily effective if the prod-
uct contains natural' ·essential
For many Marist College stu- -.
oils
.
A
number of products on
dents, stress
will be running
the market claim to
be
useful for
rampant with exams; papers, and
aromatherapy/armacology, but
_
_
long tjights of crapuning ahead.
do not contain natural essential
,
Stres~ relievers.will be a
:
must. -
,
oils.
,
,
These
'
versfons,
··
while
_ -
Today there are thousands
-
of
cheaper; may not beas effec_tive
_
products on the market that
in achie_ving their final goal.
.
.
claim to reduce stress.

These
With upcoming exams, what
. products range from body
scents would be most useful for
washes, t<> candles, to home
fra-
us to look at? For de~stressing,
grance sprays,
researchers recommend laven-
_
S u
.
rprisingly, the art of
-
··
·
·
r;,· ,
hot
der arid mints; such as pepper-
aromatherapy is nothing new.
Some ~cented canaies pare
mint and spearmint.
If
you need
Early ciyiliz~tioii.sin Egypt,
In-
relaxing an
_
d soothing.
. -
energy or need to refocus,
,
,
di
,
a,- China, and Oree.c,e all used
.
.
once again become an integral
.
fresher scents like lemon and
·
essential oiis, which are fQund
.
part of one
'
s well being.
rosemary tend to be most effec-
,
.in today's aromatherapy
.
prod-
·
The science-has spread
;
into
. -
tive.
.
-
ucts, for healing both body and
.
two distinct categories:
But as most researchers have
spirit.
.
aromatherapy
and found, it is up to each individual
Aromatherapy' wasn't recog-
aromacology.
The
definitio·n of to find out what scent it is that
nized as a science, however,until
aromatherapy requires that the
is most effective for
the°m.
The
l
920 when French scientist · fragrant oils be applied directly
scent must be d
_
esirable to each
Rene M~uri
_
ce(Jattefqs~efound
to the skin: while aromacology
person, s~ that it can work to its
:• :
.
that laven
.
~er was qut~e sqoth-
_
. is the study of scents and how
greatest
'
potential.
<:
ing
_'
afte(applyingit:fo his
,
skin
they
.:
react
,
with the mind
in
If you are really feeling
''
iri
a
·
laboratory accident.
changing our current state of stressed
:
out, a new product on
Gattefosse then to6k
'
it upon
feeling.
the market are cat diffusers
· '
himself to learn inore about oils,
·
Using oils extracted from aro-
which use atomaco logy to
scents, and
,
the healing powers
~
matic plants
'
, aromatherapy/
·
spread relaxing aromas through
:
·
:
that:tltey helcl.
ardril<!,c<>logy
·
products can be
·
the
·
car by plugging it- int6 the
<
~
Now,
as
:
self.:awareness and: ·tised as an antibacteriaJlantisep- ·
·
'cigarette
;
lighter. No matter
good-healtµ
,
is a-driving factor , tic agent;
lm
anti~inffarrimatory, _
_
wh~reyou'are
'
goingrelaxation
:: dn., a.·. numb~r
::
q_f
people's .
and
an
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:
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educes pain). . ·
cap
'
be_atyo.tir fingertips, even
, Jifestyles
·
,
;
aromatherapy has -- Consumer~
·
thustbe aware that
·
if
iris
time for
midterms.
.
•·
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_
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J
6f
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i:
(!
,
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.
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Root
BeeFs
th
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it 1s
byPATRICKWIIlTILE
thecountry: :aigtiinebrewsiike'.
PI~;fogf
:
,
i
,
.
.
·
.
. _ _
-
Editor_
0
i11-chief
Mug, A&W and Ifaes might be . Root beerJi_;is
:
a certain famil-
Few things in)ife are as re~
good most of the time
1
but en~
,
jarity
.
to i(tJi:at:liatkens back to
.
freshing,
.
s~~~
)
i/i4,perfect for ,te.rpris~~ like B,oylans (which,
·:,
fq~cfp;ie
,
m~ries 5>fpicJlicj;
,
foot
7
<:
-
~HI
·
·
occasions
~
a:s an ic:e~cold . slj9uld
'
befamiliaj' io
.
Marist1s
. ,
balJ patlies
;
fishi,ng trips; an<;lthe
bottleofrootbeer.
--
, .
;
many
NewJersey~ites), Olde

'
_
cons'uril.ptioo
·
·
of
~
couriilesS'
Root beer is the
·
soda of Bro~l<}ynanciDr.Brown'smake

·
cheese-i,alls.
It
is this quality
.
choice
.
for
.
thousands of the
.
the roo[bee
j:
:
worklgo around.
that,inajces it
,
distinct from your
- yollng and y
·
oung
·
at heart ..
·

Som~ companies th!J.t
are.
more
avetage soda
:
· .
.
.
__
-
- Differing'rrom other soft
drinks··
noted
for
-
their alcoholic prod~
'
·
And of
course, where would
.
becauseitis typically caffeine~
ucts have ev~n
·
taken a step in
root
'
beei- bewithout-the
·
f()lk_;
__ ·
-- free
arid
often
in
chides natural
.
the
root ~erdirection. Saranac : lorfo
·
ro
-
otbeer float ( aka-~'bla~k
·
. ·. ingred~~n6{Le
:-
io,ot extracts),
_
and Spanish
Pe~s
-
(mak~rs
pf
·.
C
.
ow'')?°:_Seni~r
J(ate Kasper was
root beer bringsan old-time
the
.
incompa
.
rable Chug's
.
braveen<>ughJo
-
shareherfond-
. feeling
'
that CQke~d Pepsi just
..
Ch9ite)
:
both
-
malci root beers
·
·
est cliildho<ld
'
l'.OOt~beer
,
float
·

:
do not p~ssess
:
.
.
that ar~
·
gtiarantee~Lto
,
·
~urn
·-
m¢mory.
: '
.
'
•.·_· ..
-.
-.
'
Arourid
·
theJ\1arist campus;
-

heads
/
Jolt Cola;
_
which is argu-:
·
.-.
"When
Twas
little Hhotight
the easiest
·
brand ofroot beer
:
al?
_
ly
'
i~ije fo
f
°y()U thanbeer,
-
~Y
·
~~w~~~Cp(?ieSt. Sospe-
_
'
to ~oin
·
e licros·s is the classic:
'
br_irigs'u'
(
the crisp yet imfortu-
-
cfal cause he taught me now to
A&
w.
·
A&
w
is ori tap in the
natelycaffeinated, near-perfec-
make a root beer float. ltwas so
Cabaret and coffee shops, and
tion of Pirate'~ Keg.
.
.
original to me," she said.
"I
is a favorite among
·
some Marist
Unfortunately,
a
bottle of gour~ . mean what more e_ntertainingfor
students.
-
.
met root beer (Virgil's for ex-
a kid then
to
putice cream into
''I
used to love going ~o the
ample)can
run
ycm
upwards of soda and then
be
amazed when
A&W restaurants with my
$1.50 at some establishments-
.
it actually tastes good."
mom and brother
and
getting
more than th~ average college
Sophomore Chris Young had
.
the occasional frosty mug,"
'
studentiswillliigtoshelloutfor
a dissimi~ar but equal moving
.
Senior Sean Dougherty said
.
some liquid r~fyeshment. So
tale ofroot beer and good times.
"I'd have to say A&W (is my
what's
a
root beer junkie todo?
''It
was a 11.ot summer night,
favorite) fornostalgic reasons,
'.'I'm
a traditional A&W fan,
.
August I believe,
I
had just got-
but going on taste alone, it'd
bufbeing a poor college kid the
ten done jamming with my band
be Sioux City, but its all good
Shop-Rite brand tastes just as
and
l
needed something to
with the exception of ghetto
good and costs a Jot Jess," Se-
quench my thirst," Young said.
Fanta."
nior Rich Gallo said.
"I didn't want to deal with soda,
SiouxCityisoneoftheinnu-
Indeed, most supennarkets
and
_
the water was contami-
merable smaller and indepen-
furnish their customers with a
nated, so I turned to my
_
old
dent brands of root beer, birch
root beer product that
is
cheaper
friend root beer.
me
to be spe-
beer and sasparilla that the
than dirt, and usually almost as
cific."
smart shopper can find in deJis
appetizing
.
But at a quarter for
Rock on, Chris. And keep the
and beverage markets across
a twelve-ounce can, who's com-
root beer flowing.






































1rlHUE <ClUR.ClLlE
OCTOBER 28, 1999
Fe
.
atures
http:\\www.champ9~porkchop.net
Here's something a little closer to home- http:\\www.champ9.porkchop.net .
.
.
This is the official
_
website of the 9th floor of Champagnat Hall also known as the "pent-
house."
,
·
·
It has profiles on
.
the studeJ!tsv.,ho live there and students who think they live there. The
profiles include information on nic~ames, birthdays, hometowns, favorite activities, tum-ons
.
and tum-offs, pers~nal quotes, majors; room numbers, and email addresses: You might even
find a celebrity there.
·
...
·
.
·
.
.
.
.
.
·
You can also check out the latestnews on the 9th floor. This includes mystery smells, stu-
dents sleeping through class,
.
and missing bedsheets. You can also get info on birthdays,
playoff games, and movie viewings:
.
.
There are also links to other sites such as the Hardcore Basement Fighting League (HCBFL).
·
Look through the gallery and see a variety of photos from a car to a body part to a poster of
a half naked girl.
.
A quote of the week is also posted. On the day I looked at the siteit was, "We're just friends."
When you do go to this site inake sure you sign the guestbook. People from al1 different
colleges have signed it and there are some pretty interesting comments.
Someone worked hard on this site so
I think everyone on campus should see it. Go to
http:\\www.champ9.porkchop.net.
Horoscopes
PAGE
7
ARIES:
Communica-
a project you've been
ing. You are intellectu-
swept up in the moment.
you get right to the
tion ~omes easily to.
stuck with
.
An intense
ally stimulated by an
Be very careful when
point.
you,
_
Aries. You won't
·
.
.
discussion c9uld lead
unexpected pers~n or
dealing with money, es-
~AQUARIUS:
Attracting
find it hard to get your
you down the path of

event. Go with the flow
pecially
.
other people's
.
someone who seemed
pointacrossatall.You
.
riches. This is a busy
andkeepanopenrnind.
.
Don't borrow from
.
out of reach will be
.
_art:
d.wing
'
ru1d)ntelli-
..
day, so
:
make s
_
ure you·
:
.
Say
.
yes to something
,
.
Jrie11ds
,,
9r.Jal1lily m.em-
sweetly
.
simple,
·
'
·
:
':
ge:µt eJ1ougl:i'to
.
keep
it:
··
'•· .
,
.
~
.
'
Otake
tiine
outto'
'
smeu.
'",:

··
·
·
·:
'
'
'},oti
normaIIy
'
wooldri
't"
·
"·""
--"·bers
'."
Pay sthct atteiilfoH
··.
"
Aqitifri
us.
.
As
the
•·
short and sweet. The
the flowers.
even consider doing.
to what your head says,
Moon moves through
.
trudthb i
1
s
1
~
-
elfd-evhi?e
1
nt,
It-~-
-
~
-
~·-•:
MCANCER:
Athrs. thhe
youb
1
ryiayth-

encounter ,a
inste~d of whber
1
e yd~ur
the ho_use of <?ernini,
an
e s an w 1st es
~~.
oon moves
..
oug
pro em at you can t
emotions may e ea mg
you gam a certam sense
willorilyleadothersto
the house of Gemini,
solve yourself. It is a
you. Thecold,hardfacts
of confidence that
suspect your motives
.
you may be feeling
humbling realization
of business are immune
makes you irresistible.
Proposing a plan to
slightlyirritableforno
that you are not the
toemotion.Don'trepeat
Romance just happens
·
your boss could lead to
apparent reason.
Mis-
source of all genius. Set
.
past mistakes.
without any apparent
big things. You
·
·
now
understandings plague
your pride aside and roll
~SAGITTARIUS:
Your
effort. Everyone seems
have the energy to cut
you, even though you
up your sleeves. Con-
thoughts fixate on rela-
to agree with every-
to the chase. Reach out
don't mean to cause
centrate on
_
the small
tionships, to the point
thing you say. The
to others in every way
anyone harm. Be very
details of a project be-
where it is difficult to
magic is on your side,
possible.
precise in your word
fore you look at the big
concentrate on anything
especially when you en-
TA.URUS:
Thankgood-
choices.
If
you can't
picture.
else. You are the one
gage in creative, intel-
ness this day
'
doesn't
say anything nice, .
mLIBRA:
Use the day to
whose words hold a be-
lectual conversation.
·
'fall into the bcjiing cat.:.
don't say anything at
communicate with your
ginning or an ending. Do
Sparks fly between you
egory. The Moon is
all, especially if you
innermost self. Try not
not let this power cloud
and an unexpected ac-
moving
through
have a tendency to use
to trap yourself in the
your views. Try to keep
quaintance. Tonight,
Gemini, which allows
sarcasm. Some people
depths of your mind.
busy with other things to
anything is possible. A
your creativity to save
are very literal, and oth-
You will have no fear of
take your mind off a
romantic partner from
you from going stir
ers have no sense of
drowning if you bring
troubling
problem.
your past may tum up
crazy.Your artistic tern-
humor.
If
you need an
along a discussion part-
Things have a way of
where you least expect
perament and good
antidote for the adult
ner. Find someone on
working themselves out.
them.
sense of timing save
world, spend part of
thesamewavelengthas
you won't be bored if ~PISCES:Theremaybe
the day from total me-
your day with children.
you to have an intense
you concentrate on what
some communication
.
·
diocrity. It costs you
~
LEO:
People will look
conversation with. Tak-
needs to be done. Setting
glitches, Pisces, so be
nothing to bring high
.
to you for advice, Leo,
ing intellectual risks is
a plan into action may
sure to clear up misun-
entertainment value to
.
so get ready to dis-
much safer than endan-
prove beneficial. Enlist
derstandings before
· '
friends and as
'
sociates.
pen
·
se some kn<>wl-
gering yourself physi-
the help ofothers
if you
they get too far. Make
You are as believable as
edge. You hold all the
cally. Good energy sur-
find you've gouen your-
sure that someone else
you are amusing.
answers. Your style
rounds you as you ex-
self in too deep.
really heard what you
Don't waste any time
mak~
·
abiggerimpres-
perience new things
~CAPRICORN:
You've
think you just told
when making plans for
sion than your sub-
throughout the day.
~ b e e n so busy looking af-
them. AU
sugges-
the
future.
stance. Sometimes it's
Talking about new
ter everyone else that
tions about improving
n
GEMINI:Geminishave
not what you say, but
things could lead to
you've barely had time
your physical sur-
dangerous minds to-
how you say it. Be es-
some interesting possi-
to think about your
roundings should be
day. Your strategies are
pecia1ly compassion-
bilities. Tonight, find a
needs. Take the day to
taken seriously. This
·
miles ahead of what
ate toward someone
. newplacetoeat,orsee
unwind and evaluate
isn't a good day to
_
anyoit
_
e' else is think-
who needs extra un-
a movie you've been
yourself. Focus on self-
move into a new place
ing. Yourforwardthink-
• derstanding. Expect to
hearing about.
improvement on both the
or make any drastic
ing could land you a
be
struck and jolted by
SCORPIO:
You may
superficial and funda-
changes. It might be
major opportunity, Be-
flashes of genius. A
feel like taking risks,
mental levels. Use exer-
best to get decorating
ing in the right place at
brainstonning session
Scorpio, but make sure
cise as a meditation on
advice from a profes-
the right time helps. It's
goes wen, especial1y if
you know all of the con-
your place in the physi-
sional before you do
almost too
easy
to toy
it involves others.
sequences before tak-
cal world. Fashion your
anything to your per-
with your opponents,
rJJ
VIRGO:
The Moon is
ing a big jump.
If
you
diet after your own place
sonal space. Fully con-
just to watch them
moving
through
must gamble, do
it
for
in the food chain. Avoid
sider a big project be-
dance to your bidding.
Gemini, leaving you
the thrill, rather than
for
the urge to ramble on
fore beginning iL Spend
Take advantage of a
with some unusual sur-
the slim possibility of
when talking to a family
the evening doing
group meeting to
prises. New places and
winning. Remember the
member. You will save a
something quiet, like
generate new ideas for
people seem interest-
details while being
lot of time and energy if
reading.























































































































































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Catholic1smsparks debateatManst, beyond
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·,-_-·
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:the Unife4.~~ie~
'
is portt:ayea'ir1the med1aJs
.
mei-ely:°aii
)
nhocen
_t:
tiys~
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§tJ}mor,
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~h~ch
clos~
t<>
80
'
pei~~iitof thc{people voted
foi-
.
:
" ·
..
.
·
·
Brenkert's article on Cathplicism
(The Circle,
Oct. 7, p.l 0) ex~apolates}rom thf
.
:)
iidep~ndencefrorn'.J.f!~oi,}esia
/
Thi
(
p!)}trayal i
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s no(3:'c
_
cP,r~
.
~-
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;
·
limited US situation to the world.
.
.
.
.
·
-
·
:
.
·
: .-. ·
·
_
:
President Ford and Secretary
'
of S~te Henry Kiss~nger
.
we
_
re
·
i!l Jakarta the day
Seminaries. and convents
·
lli-e
thriving in other parts
·
of
·
the
_
world:
Africa;
~outh'
: ·

befo're thefndonesiari invasion,
,
of Eas(Timor; Dec; 7,
·
1975 ,
'
and
gaye the green· light
Korea, China among others
/
The Marist Brothers alone; riot cotmting the Jesui~ et
.
· ;
Joi
o.
the invasion .
.
U.S. amb~sador to
·
the Un
.
ited Nations
;
Daniel Patrick Moynihan,
aL,
had 11 Brothers killed inth~Rwanda conflict: Hutu,
,
Tuts1
{
art~'¢aucti.sian;
''The
\
bl6c~etfimplerneritation of
all-!J:.tf.
re'splutions against theinvasiori. U:.S.
iniHtary
aid
blood of martyrs is the seed (if Christians.'' Catholici!>m
.'
ma:/bi
"
dying fo·the
,
hedo~
:
:ajl
dfrai~ing
·
offadonesian st>ldiers}ri~feased following theJnya
s
iof!, The·fighter

nistic, consumerist, media-4riven,sex-crazed Caucasiansociety;
;
bµt !filssodetyis
_
jets
apd
helicopter gunsfrips; ~hichboinbed and strafed
.
EastTimorese fleeing to
only
10%
of the world population, which in the very week of October 3~9, 1999,
the mountains, camefroni the United
:
States:
~
Tue U:Qited States has,trained-the
.
crossed the
6
billion threshcilcL
·
. .
_
. . .
.
'
.
.
. ,
·.
·
.
.
Indonesian special forces-, th,el{opassus, in count~r,insurgen2ytechni
_
ques.
,
,

_
0
·
And the
·
USA population
is
orily
,'
5%
.
of this world population. We
,
have now
;
Ai.the
height of the atrocities
'_iri
1,1s,
whenan
'
estimated
200
;
0Qo
EastTimorese
.
reached
an
apartheid situ~ti~n .. wh~re
?~
!11ink_r:I1ey c~ ~i~ta\e
,
to the
_
9~%/~~ever,
...
h~d
b,~~
~~1e4
out
.
~r~
J
t~tal p<J_g~I~~~~;9f_6@~P@
t
c~~~
f~~e
of
'this'g~!ioci
_
dp
:
i~
~e
••..
I
have seen tlleSo
,
1:1:th Africa s1tuat10n rectified
m
~y hfettme, and students
.
will
Sl!e
.•· .
_
l:J;.S
,-
media
:
dr~pP}!~
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zl!ro .
.
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,
a
,
s~dy by noted
~q
professor and
..
,
.,
·
·
·
.
thesecond situation rectified
in
theidifetime.
.
. .
'
. .
.
.


. '
.
.
. '
politic
'
al activistNoam Choillsky
:
,
Now; oveqo yearslater; wheri
Indonesian
death
.
Fear not,
~ e!1 ! Yo
,
ur ~atliolici
_
sm}s
~qt
dyinf?ut 1.n
th~
{
v
.
or!cL
Stop
b'y
'
~ct
chat
·
.
squad~ are again
rain
paging
t¥~ugh
:
~iist'
Tinior, a{!<>ther
'
media
·
Yiliitewash
of the
(C834).
Of ~oilrse;
.
~~tp(riencl~ likeRyaµ M~ti calling Carie Pluff's religious
U
.
S. rnle is in'j,>rogress.
· _
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·
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.
·
.
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·
practice mere' ''.supetstitibn;
'
(The
c:ircle,
Oct.
7,
p~
fo),
who needs enemies?
. :
.
·
.
JfU.N_.human rights chief M~
-
Ro~inson wants to
be
iirip~alJn
"
c9ndticting
ap:
.
' .
"'•
. .
.
investigationofwarcririiesiri~tTnnor, thenpastandpresenfmembersoftheU.S.'
Bro. Joe
Belanget,
~s
.
government
and
the riiHngd~s
-
of thetJruted States;
~#o
benefi(rrom the natural
.
Editor,
.
The most recentMarist Pcill shows Senator Bill Bradley beating Governor George
.
W
.
Bush in the New York Presidential election.
_
An
interesting
poll
to ~onduct
!lll!l
.
question to ask is this: The Roman Catholic Church teaches voting for
a
pro.:.
abortion politician such as Bill Bradley makes the voter an accomplice to abortion
-
resources and
-
cheap lal,or
·
of Indonesia and East
Tunor,
.
mus{ be considered
as
instigators and propagators of thjs terrible tragedy.
·
·
They
didn'
:
t
want
a leftist gov-
em.mentiti eitlief Indonesia or East
Tim
or arid therefore caused
l\\'.o
of
t!ie
greatest
slaug
_
hters
of the
?Oth
century.
_
-:
-
_
:
·
:
_
, ·
:
·-
' ·
:
:
_
'
·
_
·
' :
G~
siidborough
-
Bellflower, CA
.
who, therefore, commits mortal sin
.
Based on the CatholicC
_
hurch's doctrinal posi- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -..
tion on abortion as stated, do you still intend to vote for pro-abortion candidates
1
·
r
·
·
]
.
H[]E
.
·

-
/Jc
-
.
][JD>
/JC]L·]E
such as Bill Bradley? Yes orno.
ll
~ l l
The institutional Catholic Church and prelates such as Cardinal John O'Connor of
the Archdiocese of New York refuse to teach the moral doctrines concerning the
voting for pro-abortion politicians. This failure of the bishops and priests to each
basic, fundamental, third grade moral doctrines has rendered the i
_
nstitutional Catholic
Church irrelevant in Catholic's lives.
.
_
..
:
,
,
0
. .
.•
,
.
,
.

_.
In the early part of this century, the chancery of the Archdiocese of New York was
known as "the powerhouse." It should now be called "the powerless house." The
Blessed Virgin Mary in recent communications to a holy Italian Catholic priest, Fr.
Stefano Gobbi of the Marian Movement of Priests, calls the pastors of the Catholic
Church: "mute dogs." The Catholic pastors and prelates have simply given up
teaching moral doctrines. A Marist Poll confirming or rejecting this assertion is
necessary so that we orthodox Roman Catholics can speak with authority and accu-
racy on the subject of Church effectiveness and pastoral leadership.
Joseph
E.
Vallely, M.A.
Washington, CT
Third Order Franciscan
'
.
,,

·
Patrick Whittle
·
Editor-in-Chief
Katrina Fuchsenberger
Features Editor
Nik Bonopartis
A
_
&EEditor
Jill
Giocondo·&
Doug Guarino
Managing Editors
Chris
G~ogan
.
News Editor
J~ff
Dahncke
·
.
Sports _Editor
.
MicbaelBagnato
·'
.
.
Opinif?n Editor
Jeremy
Smith
Photo Editor
Colleen Barrett
&

Mary
Grodio
Business Managers
G. Mooele Clarke,
Faculty Advisor
The Circle
is the student newspaper of Marist College, Poughkeepsie, NY.
Issues are published every Thursday. We welcome letters to the editor, club
announcements and story ideas. We 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.



































'
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\
\ ' \ '
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. ()~TOBER
28; 1999
PAGE9
· · The views e),Cpressed on these pages are riot necessarily those of
The
Circle
Tefisi6nsfmFeiovef··stndent.handbook
,ufos
bullsh!t!-. I dtiri'-t"wando, :
. talk. about' it!"~ posits}Senitir .
Steven.Palmer. Nevertheless, he·
.
.
found.himself ine~plicably•
drawn to the discussion. "Wait
··a minute;what do·you want to ·
know abouTit?"
.
· -
·. I wanted fojusrdropJhe con~'.
_ v~rsation,but~udderily\vithout ,
wajning;::~em<:>i
.
SeanSt Claitf ·.
ente~ withapro}?lem-"I want.
to \Vithdraw from my. class;. I
cannof follow . the le~tures at
all!'.'
.
''i
think it'.s too· 1aie ... The
handbook says something. like·
As the riovelty ofMTV's
... you have
to
withdraw before
"Say What I<araoke" begins to_ midterms;,! forget," replied Se-·
· wear off, some Mari.st students
nior Mt~hael Bagnato. Oh wait,
are devoting extra energy. to
I'm Mike Bagnato, that's me! ...
by
MICHAEL
BAGNATO
·
· Opinion Editor
understanding the
Marist Col-
whoa!
.
Lege 1999-2000 Student Hand~.
Steven J>almerrose up, deter-
book.
mined-"No, tbat's wrong
.
Circle photo councsy of "Drunk Guy ..
Tom Herny (second from left) speaks the ways of the Student Handbook before a delerious crowd.
Seni.or sensation Brian · Mike. Ii says here in the hand-
Jingeleski described the Student
book, the deadline was Oct. 25."
Haridb.ook as "not just a bunch
"Big whoop, Steve; who
of rules." The dashing Commu-
cares," I muttered. Deep down
nication major was shocked to
though, I was glad he had the
find the handbook's spellbind-
"real" information.
Henry's sentiments. "The book
tenth page. Then, I tried read-
about the handbook.
ing record of Marist's captivat-
Senior Tom Henry had still dif-
is poorly organized. All the im-
-
ing the book backwards, from
Some students remain igno-
ing past
_
ferent thoughts about the hand-
portant stuff, you can't find it" back to front. This posed an-
rant of their feelings about the
"I'd never actually read it. But book. "It's all about, like, after
Daigle continued, visibly dis-
other problem; the Marist Song
handbook, but like Palmer,
I was curious, andoegan i:ofljp
people get. wdtten up ... they
gruntled,."I think it's a ·worth-
appears
a
few pages in. I'm no
refuse to leave it alone. Senior
through it. When fcontinued, I
have: to look: thrnugh the Stu-
l~ss .. : ·piece of trash!''
·
. .
musical critic, but I couldn't help
Paul Diala left me with this enig~
discovered
many foteresting .derit:}I;ridliookto find out .. !agree that the information in .. finding the song's use ofa shift:-
matic proverb, "Hmm ... I don't
facts. Back iflJh~\d,ay/the where.;ihey)::rossed 'theline,~ .
·
the b()okcari be.liard'to 1o·cate;
irig p
_
entatonic tolydian modu-
know. Get back to me."
Kiernan Haus~ ~w.~s bµil(
PY .
pu{Qie'frifcHn:tation. insjde Js
~11
Vlhe.n.!l~~ked to
~ti~
the:_r,~!f' ·
1ar
structure to be quite catchy!
_The Marist College 1999-2000
.
someone :.~.,an emnJoyee!'' ,:-~o ~~taJl..sd;.Ny gjrlfyi,eng.[S~:: .· ba~i1;1g c~11.~l~~ !rom,}:amp~s-. ·
·
Youmightbeaskingyourself,··. Student
·
Handbook. Read
it
·
·
:
·
''jTiigeiesl<l'fonti~li'Jiiliffor"Sev~
~'!nf.or:l\1eghrui'N$isonJ;g<jf'"\mt2
':fho'Jsingi .'1-fgot
:=lgst""in
.t!ie
.
..
''Where·canlfiiia
this fasciriiff-:;.;';.agaiciffor:th6first time.-
eral-bours, "; .. and it was~ that
ten up for having a candle, but
handbook's myriad of knowl-
ing product?!I need to get my
year that they bought the.thir--
we couldn't find where the rule
edge.
.
·
; • ;:.~opy. of th,~.
Marist CoUege
teen acres that
are
now Gartland
against candles. was in th~
. Actually, the truth is, like Se-
1999-2000
Student Hand-
ComIIlons! 'Huh.!'' . .
·•
. ·.
b~ok." -
.. - .·.. . . . .
nior Brian Jingeleski, I couldn't
book?"
If so, please, calm
Jingeleski was.not
the
only
. Nelson was not availabie for get
past
the handbook's spell-
down. Give it sometime ... sleep
orie to· have strong feeFngs : com·ment, but Junior ·-Matt
binding record of the· school's
on it. Don't take my word forit;
· about the handbook. ·
·
. Daigle' s attit~cie reflected captivating past;
it
begins on th~
ask other students their feelings
Michael Bagnato is from
Norwalk Connecticut. He is a
Senior, arguably considered by
some to be a Senior sensation.
Politics
tag
teamed
by
wrestlers, actors, millionaires
'
,.
:
--
..
.
'
by
_MICHAEL
CRAIG
shortly thereafter. This is the
ence, believes he can represent
Reagan.
career that most Americans as-
Americans fairly. According to
Reagan began his career as an
sociat~ Vintura with:.· a lewd,
a
Newsweek article, Beatty at a
actor in 1937 and starred
in
films
·-The face b(politits.is being
rambunctiouswrestler. .
Hollywoo.dskuH session in f6ralmosttwentyyears. He was
changed with
ihe
Ilkesof actors, .
-
· Patrick Buchanan is nofari~v- ) 992, expressed his thoughts cm
the governor of California from
profe~sionaLwi-estlers, ancfialk
ice
to
pol~tics. From 1969 to . the sanctity of a representative
1967'to 1975. Reagan was the
show personalities; .··
.. •· . .
1974; Buchanan was a· Senior
democracf . _ .·
oldest person.elected President
:As tlie November elections
Advisor and speech writer to
".:.Go ahead and speak up.
of the United States
in
both 1980
draw
near, Illany
political
hope-:
President Nixon. He was an
Speak up for the people nobody
arid in 1984. Many still debate
fuls are dominating the air-
unsuc~essful;-yet determined,
speaks for," he said.
the quality of Reagan's presi-
waves/vying forapoll.tical of.;,
caiididate, for the Republican
While these men seem very
dency, but there is no doubt that
flee
inthe.naticiil's capitol.
Thill
nomination for President, run-
dedicated to the belief that they
there were a number of accom-
news is rather standard'. Except,
ning both in 1992 and 1996.
will be exceptional as president,
plishments during his time in
these candidates have virtually
Buchanan was
a
syndicated can entertainers really become
office; inflation and interest
little,ifany; political history.
newspaper columnist and edi-
politicians?.
rates had fallen sharply, unem-
This ."new-breed"·stars Jesse · torialwriterfortheSt:LouisPost
The answer here is Ronald ... pl~y~ent was lower, and the
VenturaiPa.tBtis:hanan, Donald -. Dispatch from 1962 to 1966, and
Trump, and Warren Beatty ex-
is now a co:.host of CNN's
ploding intothe political game.
"Crossfire" talk show.
Thefacithatthesevibrantfig-
Donald Trump, known to the
tires are· actually attempting to
world as one of its top develop-
gain a seat
.in
Washington• is
ers, a casino operator, and proud
worth praise.
_
Whether they are
womanizer, has stated his inter-
serious enough to handle the est in becoming a candidate for
responsibili!jes of a politician or President
?f
the United States.
just entertaining the public isa Re stated m -~ recent
lvew York
puzzlement.
··
'
· ·
-
·
Times interview th~t even
. .
.
. tin,g~ ....
dollar was strong. Reagan also
appointed several women to
high office, including Sandra
Day O'Connor as a U.S. Su-
preme Court Justice, and Jeane
J. Kirkpatrick as a representative
to the United Nations.
The main trend that 1s occur-
ring· 1n politics is the redifi11ing
of the criteria. that make
a
politi-
cian. Politics are not about the
people anymore; anybody can
become a politician. They just
have to be popular, rich, and
experimental-or just plain
bored
with
their current careers.
Jesse ''The Body" Ventura, . though he is a developer, he can
gave up his nickname for poli-
handle the responsibilities of a
tics in 1998. Butmanyoverlook
candidacy. -
Ventura's start in 1991 when he
While that's real estate and
was the mayor of
Brooklyn
Park
this is politics, are they re~tlly
for four years. Ventura also
so different?" he said.
'c
- -,
'
:'oed11.int?~-i{~1it!t~;_the·End
served in the United States
Warren Beatty, recently
Navy for six
years.
When he
known for his film
Bulwo,"!h, is
was discharged from the navy,
an actor who is also entering the
Ventura began an eleven-year race for president. Beatty, who
professional wrestling career has very little political experi-
~
~f~t~
S0bin~ion~
·
wm
Be Used
;To·Ulustrate
.
th~'.Oevelopmental
·
<Prci::ess•of
New
Ploys in
the.
-
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' I
I
1r.lHCJE
.
Cl[]R.<ClLlE
.
OCTOBER 28, 1999
Op~Ed
.
·-•·
·
PAGE
to
.
~
. ·
_":
_
The views expressed
on these pages
.
are not necessarily those of
The Circle
·
·
· ·
·
Abroadstutlent~readsh.ijpsofi\~e
philosophy
my own. I re-
red. I decided to see all .of this
member;
I
-
country; so I went backpacking
wasn't scared.
·
for a few months. I met heaps
byKIMFEINMAN
I can remember snuggling up
When I got
of
people, and did things that
with my mom. Her arms are
off the plane
would take ages to tell. I
fully
around me, and I am snuggled
and
stepped
enjoyed myself. I also did what
up against her body with my
outside, !took a
r
came here to do: camp and
·
head resting on her. The both
deep breath and
hike; or bushwalk; in the Aus-
of us are under a warm blanket
thought, "Well,
tralian Outback.
.
.
and watching t~levision. I felt
herelam,age20,
I then decided tq see New
so secure at the moment.
.
Noth~
fulfilling my
Zealand
.
.
·
My.boyfriend fl~w
_
ing was a problem; and ifit was,
dream." I was
·
over and joined me.
.
Together
Mommy would protect me and
about to spend
we
had
an
incredible
take care of it.
a year in Aus-
snowboarding safari. We went
Iam20now. Whenaproblem
tralia.
Ner-
· frommountaintomountain,see-
comes up, I yearn to crawl up
.
vous?
Yes.
i11g some of the most beautiful
withmymomundertheblankets.
Anxious? You.
scenery
·
along the way. We
But,
.
for some reason that does
bet. Afraid?
.
.
.
.
.
ph«ocourtesyJGmFcinman
·
ended
our
trip
with
not work anymore, maybe
.
be-
No.
.
Kim Fein~an peruses through Australia.
.
heliboarding.
·
cause I know that wiH not make
The next mom~ng my new
become friends
'
w1th the other
We then said our sad
my worries go away. Honestly
"family" picked
_
me up at the
Marist students. Geoff and I hit
goodbye, and I made yet an-
though, at times the only thing
_
hotel. !was so excited. Wbenl
·
itoffwell though;
.
he was my
.
otheJ move fr
.
om Sydney to
keeping me from that is distance.
arrived at my new hom
_
e, there
first friend in
Oz .
.
\Ve
lived in
Melbourne. Yet again; I said
Iamabout 1800milesawayfrom
~as a bouquet o~fl~wers wait-
the same town and had heaps
.
goodbye io people that had be-
home.
mg for me
:
a remmder from my
in common. I knew I had a fiiend
come my best friends, and I
I am ori my own, all by myself boyfriend that
.
every_thing
.
in him.

I eventually got a job,
moved to another p!ace full of
in
a different country (a huge
would be fine (that, and
1t
was
and "uni" (Australian for col-
·
·
endless
possibilities.
one at that). Ifeltlikeagrainof Valentine's Day). Iliketothink lege) was going great. My in-
That's where I am ~ow
,
in
sand on a huge beach when I
he sent them as a reminder
.
I
ternship tunied out to be incred-
Melbourne.
I
love it here just
stepped off the plane.
remember, we went to Bondi
ible, and I did not wantto leave
.
as much
.
My knew host family
Everything was new, unex-
Beach that day.
_
It was one of
.
Then;theother:kidsfromMarist
·
is legendary,
·
and I have met
pected, and different. The thing
the most famous in the world.
left and went back home. I knew
heaps of new people. I've met
was, even though I was the only
That day I knew that I would
i"was definitely on my own.
some new closefriends as well.
one in my that did not miss the
love it here.
.
_
.
.
:
.
.
I hung out with my Aussie
. It
was
here that it hit me; This
flight, I was not afraid.to be on
.
f
month went past, and I h11~
.
.
f¢ends and we painted the city
.
witol~ time has no~ been easy
.
I
by
MIC'IJEJ .I
-ESLFSINSKl
while Willy clicked h1s tqngue
and kept the beat Lester stole
the
act
wjth his hll_arious jokes
and humanllke actions, and the
·
show
was
a
grea(success .
.
Recently,
R
few hundred
·
·
These two shows are just a
had those four days I could not
eat due to ir stolen ATM num-
ber; this was just
,
one of the
many things
.
I hav~ been
through. But; I have realized I
didn'tneed Mom or Dad. I have
take~ care of every problem I
have had.
·
I cando
.
it! I
am
able
to survive onmy o_wn
;
.
Other
people doubted me, I was told I
would
·
neyer m
·
ake it pas~ a
month on my own.
I
was told I
would miss aHthe great things
happening
at
Marist by giving
up one of the best years of col~
.
lege.
-
Well, if I had to do it all
over again, I would do it exactly
the same. By studying abroad I
have given myself one of the
.
greatest years of my LIFE!
·
I have accomplished so much
this year
.
I have grown a tre-
mendous amount, and I have
realized there is onl)' more to
come.
·
i
have also been blessed
with µie chance of experiendng
another culture to the fullest.
·
So;
as
my year comes to
an
end,
I cherish
·
each day
I
have left. I
do not wantto
.
leave. I actually
will most definitely move back
.
here in a few years' time. But, at
lea~t I know
l
can do.it. Arid
there are only more great things
to come!
.
:
_
Do you knovv
'
what happened
on September 18th in the Caba-
ret? Perhaps)f you passed by,
you would have heard the
people went back in time as they
.
_
co'upfo
.
of ex~mples
.
of
.
wh,at
.
walked info the McCanngym. I
great work the ~.P.C; does, but I
was lucky enoughto be one of
;.
ha,ve noticed that they never
them. We wentbackto atltneof

seem to get much credit'. Last
high~heeled boots,
'
gray sui
_
ts,
:
_
year,

before I atterided Marist
and mop-topped
.
hairstyles
,
C:ollege,
·
I had the opportunity
·
You guessedit- the
_
Beailes.
It
to
.
see one _of the shows put on
·
was
,
of cour~e, ll<:>
.
t the real
by
.
the
S
.
P.C
·
I heardari ad on
Beatles. It"was a tribute
to
the
KJ04 for the
Che;ry
P~ppin'
.
Beatles
;
but do nodet thatfool
Daddies. It was held iffthe
..
y<:>u.
.
It
was,alIIlOSf
_
li~e the
_
·.
Mccann gym; I got a·group of
Beatles
,
were r:eally there
.
J!l
no
.
people together and we went
. tinieatall,
"Nott~Beatlel'had
N~ver before had jbeen
Jo
a
.
the audience singing and daric-
.
concert where I was that close
ing in the aisle
_
s to the music of
·
to the performers; I was slightly
·
sound of thunderous laughter
or the cheers of happiJ}ess from
the free pizza and soda
;
·
On Sep-
tember 18th, I was pretty much
forced to attend the S.P.C. Com-
.
edy Club featuring the
.
come-
dian Joe Materese .
.
There
.
was
on1y'a small audience there, but
laughter filled
_
the room. His
jokes about Marist College, and
·
how very muchJhereis to do
-
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--
-
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----
·
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
•-
-
·
·-
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- - -
---
·
·
·
·
John Lennon, Paul McCartney,
concerned that it would be a
George
·
Harrison,
.
and

Ringo
cheesy show, but itwas no~ that
Starr. "1964: The Tribute" oc-
at
aIJ.
Jt
,
was professional and
curred during Parent's
.
Week-
welldone; Notcinlywasthemain
. _
en~ .

Theii
.
rnusi<:al ~et i
.
ncluded
: ·
acfaw~s<:>me,
.
b~ttheop~ning
.
.
classic
-
Beatles
.
songs such as
'
.
ac~
Streich
Prince'ss,"was amaz-
"1-ielp!,
A
Hard
Day's
Night,
and.
ing
'
too. Both groups were
'
Yellow
Submarine.
B
_
efore we
_
great
.
Not many
.
people were
knew it, tlie everiing was over.
around at the end, so we even
This is just one of
.
the many
.
got to meet the performers.
<jillazing events that the Student
Stretch Princess has a hit CD,
Programming Council (S.P.C.)
popular songs that I hear on the
.
plans.
, .
radio, and they even had the lead
:Wtlly1yler&~teralsocame song for the movie
.
Teaching
to \'isit
.
the
McCann
·,
gym dur-
·
Mrs. Tingle that came out this
. ing Parents Weekend~·This was
summer .
.
I can say I saw them
another
.
event carefully planned
before they were famous, at one
and successfully pulled off
by
of their first perf onnances.
the S.P.C. This comedian and
amazing ventriloquist had the
audience doubled over in laugh-
~r,
tears were streaming down
some of theirfaces. Willy 'fyler
made the entire audience forget
that Lester was made out of
wood: I
think
it will always be a
mystery how Lester
1
1tummed"
-
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-
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.
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-
-
-
--
-
-
-
-
--
-
-
---
-
~
-
-
-
-
-
on Route 9 made the entire au-
dience double over in laughter .
.
I thanked the person who forced
me
to
go to th.at. Ldo notre-
member th~ last time
.
Uaughed
so hard; I actually hurt myself!
Joe Materese's jokes ranged
from boring familyweddings to
roller skating in the 80's, and
from his girl problem
_
sto porn .
·
Yet somehow, we all related to

it
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
·- ..

For your own sake,
.
please go
see something the
s._p:c.
puts
.
on. You might just have a good
time. You can give up McCoy's
or Club X for one night; they
can Jive. Some of the upcoming
events to look for are the Jen
Chohen band and the comedi-
ans Spanky, Eric Garrison, and
·
Greg Carey. Check the bulletin
boards for flyers on times, dates,
and places.
I
I
I
I
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l

I







































































































.
OCTOBER 28,1999
·
··
:.:
: ,
,
._
bySCO'ITNEVILLE
·
Staff Writer
-
The band
Filter has come a
long
_
way
_
from·
Hey'},fan, Nice
Shot, but it seems there riew al-
bum;
Title of R~cord, is
·
a
little
too
'
filtered and
has
taken a
shoi(bus in the wrong direc-
'
tjqµ.
:
: ·
,:.: ;,
,
..
~-
.
;
:
.
.
,
-
'
Filier, headed by"ex-Nine Inch
'
Nails'
guitanst Richard Patrick,
·
used to be known
.
for his rock-
ing; alternative· anthems,
.
such
as
Jurassitol (The Crmv City of
Angels Soundtrack) arid the
·
Crystal Method collaboratation;
Can
·
You Trip Like
I
Do (Spawn
Soundtrack). The new
Filter
.
sound has traded some of these
catchy
:
gnashing guitars
_
and
-
tortui~d
lyrics, for
a
new loose,
melfo~, sy
'
rithesizec(
sou~ci:
-
.
,,
.
-
·
-
.
'
'
,···
-
·
:.-
Sintt(the ia~(
·
al~um;
Siwrt
.
'
.
.
'
.
·
'
T
.
he black-,cla
'

.
bo
'
ys
of F"1lter, h
'
ard-s--tyl1'n'.
PhotocouncsyFillcronlinc,
Bus;
released four years ago, the
band has dropped ah integral
Patrick. More importantly,
six,
Stuck in Here, and track ll,
component, Brian'Liesegang,
..
Liesegangworked with Richard
So Cool, which weren't chart
who was
a
refined songwriter a
Patrick to polish some of the less
toppers or hard rock, but they
arid key player in the band, shar.:
angst~driven songs into pearls.
had an eerie, uniqu~ appeal.
ing the programming, keyboard~
· -
This was evident on their com-
Without Liesegang, and the
ing, and drumming duties with
bined efforts
onShort Bus'
track
fading memory of Patrick's
NIN
,,
-
s
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a,re
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·
and most of us do not let MTV
·· ·

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lm
:
ost
_
lQy~ars
.
ago
_
arevolu~
·
:
Ae
_
r
·
fo ''dig" inetalohc,e again.
_
tion happened
hi
m
.
usic. During
'
..
Ok;
·
ok most college students
tlie mid
to
late 80's
.
a form of
unfortunately listen to
Dave
musicruledtheairwavesuntilit
Matthews Band and
·
that's
wa
.
~jncereTT1on.iously yanked
·_·
fine._,.buthey, as life gets h.rrder
_
fromradio rotation by
,
the intm-
.
and we find ourselves 'nearing
_
'
sion
o(bands such
as
-
Nirvana,
the Armageddon of our youth,
-
Soun_dgarden_and Stone Temple

graduation,
it
can
be
a great re-
Pi(ots. Forme, this changip.g of
·
.lief to listen to
Warrant, or Hur-
.
:
tl{e
:
rHc~ n' r6Ifgllarc:lwasmore
i
ricani
'
~r Wingere.xpel
_
the joys

.
-
_
-
frus
,
tt~ting
_
th~Jhat big fence
of having
·
3:
good time ap.d par
,
-
Mafis{has b"uilLarourid the
·
·
.
tying. Forget
Beastie Boys or
campus (kids,
-
write'the paper
·
house
·
_
music, or
'.
I>uffy
·
_
\Vith
yourcoinpl;rin~!)
-
,
_
·
(One,one,one) Metal is truly the
:,
·
Heavy Metal used to MEAN
·
·
real partytime groove .
.
sqrrietbipg.
It
was a state of mind
·
The
thirig
is, its iomewhat
.:.
Away to escape the drudgery
·
hard to find the greatmetal CD's
and t9ilofthe 1980's ratrace:lt
·
of days past. A lot of the com-
was amagicaltime.
It
was a time
panies that once put these
where you could
_
see metal
groups on the market
_
decided
·
.
b~dsplayollMTVorbeheard
that their time had past and vi-
Oll
_
YIU orrockthelocal civic
ciously dropped bands
_
like
_
.
cent~(
:p1j
_
~
aJl.fell_apart \Vhen
Wznge_i,and .Po{son froll} their
·
"
our
age group embraced mopey
'
label.
_
The oncesticcessful rock
crap
_
ola
like
all
those
band had to find refuge
·
with
·
interchangable Seattle
_
bands
smaller, obscure companies like
and so:-called "alternative" mu-
CMC, Cleopatra
_
and Mauso-
sic like
·
Smashing Pumpkins and
leum. The aforementioned mu-
SonicYouth .
.The
term "altema-
sic labels don't have as wide a
tive" rapidly
_
became a misno-
distribution as say, Columbia, so
mer because alternative music
much of the later albums were
became very much the forefront
released overseas (where this
and ordure of the day fo~ most
stuff still sells). The older al-
radio
_
and
-
tv stations: Altema-
bums are now officially out of
tive? More like "No
Friggin
print so the only few places
Choice." I TRIEI5 to
'
like
where an album such as
Soundgarden but they bored
Hurricanes 'Slave To The
Thrill'
me. Their melodies were messy
can
be
found are low-rent music
and lazy. The lyrics were de-
outlets and E-BAY. It's a sad
pressing and whiny and the gui-
state of affairs when classics
tars were noisy and irritating. I
such as
Tuff's 'What Goes
regressed and stuck by the true
Around Cornes Around' are ba-
rock bands that I, and every-
sically inaccessible to anyone
body _else, has
grown
up with.
. ..
please
see
METAL
pg
12.
Luckily, now that we are older
'
days, the
QeW
and not
'
so im-
proved
Filter is moving in the
_
direction of a more pop, not-so-
alternative alternative direction.
·
They_ are·still mixing some of the
old guitar work with some new
synthesized, mixed electronic
components, watering down
their_ original sound; lumping
them in with the other homog-
enized alternative grpups out in
the pasture.
The eleven-track album has its
highs and lows, depending on
the listener's expectations. The
new comer to
Filter's abilities
may like the new sound, enjoy-
ing the opening track, Sand,
which is merely a thirty second
noise that builds to the charac-
teristically angst-filled song,
Welcome to the Fold. This
method is artistically reminis-
cent of Trent Reznor'.s work on
the
Lost Highway album, but
not quite as effective. Track 2,
Welcome to the Fold, is the first
single released from the album,
and the only characteristically
Filter song, where Patrick's
PAGE 11
screims, "You take my money,
you think you're great, you
think it's funny, I hate your
face ... "
The album does have some
other catchy, air-filled songs,
such as track
6,
Take a Picture,
where the strumming guitar
plays off Patrick's warm fuzzy
lyrics about being a baby. The
screaming during the song, and
the lyrics, "I'm a newborn, kick-
ing and screaming," uttered
over and over, leads me to be-
lieve he just might be one.
Don't get this reviewer wrong,
Filter is/was a good band, and
is branching in new directions,
including a Styx-ish, Mr. Roboto
synth voice dubbing on Track
9,
Cancer, which shows the abil-
ity to grow (or regress) musi-
cally, which all bands need to
do once in a while (I guess). Next
time, they just need to take a
better shot at some tighter lyr-
ics, and stop trying to
fit in with
the rest of the
"alternative"
scene, and get back to what they
do best.





























































·

'
·
.,
.
:
..
.
.
.
.
.
,
.
..
.
·-
-
- -
-
.
.
.
.
.
..
·
--
·
-
.
~
-
-


·

·
·
·~
-
.
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·
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·

·
··
.
,
,-
..
.
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....
.
..
. .
.
itJH[]E
::
t:J[)R.<ClLJE
OCTOBER 28, 1999
.
.
~--
Thrill
.·.
M
.
e
·
ta1
··

g
·
.
·
10
·
·
cy
··

.
Dcmg~rfan
,
Thisisbasicallyth'i
-
·
froiri'Warr;~tis
c
alledBellyW
..
·
'
.
.
'
..
.
.
,
,
fence, focusing rriote oU:just
.
only difference between
the two
Belly
and, while)ani Lane's
VO-
·
•••
contjnuedjropi 'pg, 1l
:,
.
wrestling
/
u1 don;t
·
u
s
e
'
chairs,
groups:
Bon Jovi
MIGHT get calsare still melodic - the music
corner of. the arena, even into
don't need tables, I don't want
... continued frompage
.
JJ
played on MTV while
Dange'i
:•
.
.
:
'
itself is distracted and "brainy.'
'
the bleachers
.
Afterwards,)us:-
...
.

to· bleed.»
-
.
He emphasized the
Danger
plays in,
:
.Japan._Also,
.
Npb9dy listens to
Warrant
to
·
tinCrediblecarneoutto'fic{after
..
prcifeis'foriai'asp€<:fofwrestling,
·
_
some of the better-know'n
·
hard
'
.
think. Other bands such as
T/:1T
,
,
·
Sabu';beating tum.with his
,
staff
.

.
saying
·
that personal
.
grudges in
who wants to start
.
a metal CD

tock/metal
:
groups have
gtin
f
,;
Kip \Vinger;
·
scorpions,
an~
Rob Van Pam; Sabu's occa-
thelockerroomareputasidefor
collection.
.
Interestingly :
:
thro,ugh
,
major
·
group
.
:changes
.
·
.
Vc:iin
.
did
the semi-grunge thing
sionalpartner,
came
outto break the sake of their careers. Corino
enough
,
it seems that :EBA)' (the ..
.
b~cause of the changing times.
too ancl it just did~'twork:The it up;only to be thanked by Sabu
.
mentioned that many of the best
internet item auction)
.
is whe're
.
Van
Halen
lost their lead singer.
albums bombed and most of the

beating him on.ce he recovered
.
tag
·
teams
·
in history, such as
these bands and their rare al-
Iron Maiden
has been in tran-
acts wound up going back to Taz exited solo.
_
·
"The Rockers'' Marty Jeanetty
bums get the most respect.
sition for a few years and
Bon
the original s
_
ound. Interest
-
RVD
, "
The Whole F'n Show"
and Sean Michaels, hated each
Hurricane'sseminalTakeWhat
Jovi
has been reluctant to re-
inglyenoughSOMEmetalacts destroyed Rhino, keeping his
otherbuthadtoworkwitheach
You Want
goes for an unheard
lease a "true" album as of yet.
·
did try to stretch by joining TV Championship. The match
other much like any other job.
of
50
bucks ... and there's only 7
banger Danger lost their lead
completely different groups.
was fairly even, but RVD domi-
He said
,
"This is how we feed
songs on the ed
.
! And it's
.
used!! singer
A.t'1D
a unrele~ed
,
album
ORGY,
who had the hit
Blue
nated enough to come out as
our families. As
_
much as you
These albums
:
a.re.like goid
_
for
>
.
when their label dropped them.
·
.
Mon day,
wa~ founded by
the winner
:
Rhino was escorted
don't like a guy; you still have to
people like
.
m.e
<
and
·
.
Joe
·
However, the t(!ceni rel~ase
Rough
Cuu
guitarist Amir
.
to
the
ring by Jack Victory and
work with them, and that's that."
Metalhead. Part of
the
thrill of from
Db called
Four
111e
Hard
Derakh:
Rough Cutt
is
.
a kind of Steve Corino, who we managed
For a11 the critics of wrestling,
listening to the music some-
Way
with Canadian vocalist legendary LA metal band.
Mar-
to meet up with earlier in the
complaining that wrestling is a
times is the fact that some al-
Paul ~aine is arguable the best
velous 3,
who had the recent night:
negative influence on society,
bums have to be tracked and
metal release in the past
.
ten
hit Freak
OfThe Week
was origi~
Corino has been wrestling in
Corino emphasized the point that
hunted before they can
be
en-
years.
It kicks. I suggest you
nally
Southgang
but changed ECW since December of last wrestling is a legitimate career
joyed
.
I got
Over The
Edge a few
pick it up if you wantto rock.
their music to Pop instead of year. Prior to that he wrestled in
to sustain a family on. Himself
weeks ago and It took me a
Sadly some 80's metal acts
straight ahead metal. The secret a couple of the _independent
being a father, he enjoys time
whole year to find it.
tried to swing with the tide~
is out. Even
Third
.
Eye
Blind
leagues for about five years
.
He
with his family when he is not
Some bands survived the great
when the country's taste in mu-
have hair-metal roots.
has wrestled across the coun-
on the road wrestling four days
metalmassacreof1991-TheYear
sic shifted to Alternative (as
Sowhatshouldyoubuyifyou
try as well as in Canada and
aweek.
of Grunge. Bands like
Iron
Anthra.~
once said "An altema-
wantto headbang? I'm not re-
Puerto Rico, which he said was
The highlight of the night was
Maiden, Bon Jovi,
·
and
Van
tive to what?").
Danger Dan-
ally a fan of
Metallica
or more violent than anywhere in
running into Joey Styles, thean-
Halen
have fan bases that
ger
did a misguided but ok al-
Godsmackoranything like that.
the U.S. "Almost every state is
nouncer for the TNN shows.
stretch far beyond the usual
bumcalledDawnthatattempted They'reok,butl'mahair-metal different,differentcrowdswant Mayb<! it was because he was
temperamental teenagers
.
How-
to bridge the gap between
consumer
.
I like bands that are
different stuff. Down South
the only ECW employee smaller
ever, while these bands still
Grunge and rock. It just kickingbutalsohaveamelodic,
theywantmorematwrestJing...
thanme
,
ormaybeitwasbecause
have major record deals, they
sounded confused.
Warrant
,
emotional side. Ballads are cool
in Puerto Rico it was just pure
he said Patrick Whittle looked
don't sell like they used to in
one the purveyors of
Cherry
and I like rockers too. Next
violence."
like a member of the "Mean
the 80's. You're more likely to
Pie, started doing albums that
week, part II of this piece: The
Trying to bring an old-fash-
Street Posse." Regardless, ECW
·
find 80
Bon
Jovi
fans on cam-
reminded me of a poor-man's
ultimate list of great metal
ionedstylebacktoECW,Corino
is the true definition ofprofes-
pus then you are one
Da11ger
Pumpkins. The most recent CD
bands
.
Rock on.
tries to avoid the excess vio-
sional wrestling
.


















()CTOBER
28, 1999
ifjfIJE ;
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...
· 1
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· 1
·business
·
ooe.we
-
·
· ttianioo
ovember·11,1999 ·
tlOMPU1ER® _
-
.J'iSSOCIA1ES
Software superior
by
design.
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1r1HnB
.
C][]~<C]L]B
OCTOBER 28,
·
1999
sports
·pAGEl4
1\vo straightwins keep W()men's soc~er~11~Ve
by
JORDANEIBLE
Staff Writer
The Marist women's soccer
teain, whose season seemed lost
after going winless in its first
12
games, greatly
-
improved its
chances of a Metro Atlantic
Athletic Conference (MAAC)
tournament bid by winning its
two contests last week.
The Red Fox.es defeated St.
Peter's and Manhattan
,
bring-
ing their conference record to a
respectable 3-4
.
Head coach Tara Nichols said
she is pleased with the team's
progress.
"We're playing Marist soccer
now despite our struggle in the
beginning
,
but that's past us,"
Georgetown
4-0
Duquesne
3-1
Siena
3-2
Marist
3-2
Iona
.
:
3-2
.
LaSalle
2-3
St. Peter's
1-5
Canisius
0-4
Fairfield
o~o
>~;
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.
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. .
she said.
"\V~,'re
con~entiating
goal by Marist
;
Sh~ks shot a
.
son:
.
;
;
;
spreads wilfonly reinforce our
.
on our last two games to secure -
free
kick past
.
Beidler, making the
.
Th;t v,ould be
all
the scoring
chances.,,
>
.
.
·
.. .
a playoff spot.
If
we win both
advantage
3~0.
.
·.
.
of the afternoon, as Marisf won
Mar.ist is
nOw
3
·
-12-1
with two
of them, or at least end with a
That would be
aH
goalkeeper
1-0.
.
.
.
.
.
games remaining~ While the
win and a tie
,
we
'
re definitely
Mellanie N_ai needed, as she
Maristnow has 15 confereri~e
overall rec01:d seems horrible,
in."
saved seven shots and pro-
goals and
38
total pointsin the
·
victories in the nex.t two games
.
What started off as a slow first
duced the team's first shutout
MAAC, which could be benefi~
will ex.tend the season .
.
half against St. Peter's last
of the
,
season.
cial ifthere is a tie for the final
Marist played atRideryester-
Wednesday picked up when
The Foxes
;
next triumph came
pfayof(spot
.
_ .
·
day, but results were not avail-
Sarah Mc Turk received a cross-
two days later against Manhat-
'
Currently fairfie
_
ld and Loyola
able at press time. The season
ing pass from Jenny Shanks at
. ·
tan
.
-
Again NaL stopped
·
a1
L
hold first and
_
·
second plai=e, re-
finale is Saturday at Siena at
1:00
the 34-minute mark and
·
scored
seven shots,
·
while McTurk
specti:vely.

Marist,
·
Niagara,
p
.
m.
_
_
.
·
.
..
..
the game's first goal, heading it
scored the winiiing goal.
Iona and Sieria will battle for the
Captain Nicole Omeck seemed
past Chamaigne Beidler:
Mc Turk broke the
0-0
tie
12
third
.
and fourthpositioris.
confident in the team's
Only ten minutes into the sec-
minutes into the second half.
Iri
the event of a tie, bids will
chances.
ond half, Kasey Sibrinsz put
Forward
.
Jamie Bierwirth
be distributed
'
to those teams
..
t
WeJIJow our role .
.
we need
Marist upby
a
pair when she
chipped asolid shot which hit
with., the mostMAACgoals.
th.,esenextfe\Vwinstogetabid
,
"
sent the ball high into the left
the right
:
cross bai:. McTurk
"We still have a huge oppor:
she
:
said. ".Our practices are
corner of the cage.
:
.
then deflected the
ball
in,
tally-
tunity for a spot," captain Carie
-
progressing well and our shoot.:.
Aft~r continuous p
'
ressure ori
ing her sixth point of the sea-
Pluff said .
.
"Greater point
ing is on target."
..
6-1
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3-4
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byCLAYNORRIS
Thursd~Y;
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.
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-
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·
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.
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StaffWriter
Fairfield
.
but rebounded to
de-
.
.
. .
She brings energy
.
.
·
·
feat Ion; on~unda.y;
_
.
.
.
.
, .:

:
·
:
andf
eedba:ck,
·.
11,lf:lfh
This
s
eason has been noth-
Herzner sa,id they
_
cannot ex-
more than we. have
ing to brag aboutfor'the
.
Marist
.
pect to.o
_
muc~
_
too
,
soon
'.
..
.
·
·
.
;
. ..
_
.. •.
.
.

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...
.
volleyballtearnodtsnewcoacti.
.
"W~
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ve b~~n
_
tiµdng one step
been
U,Sf!d
,
to
.
_
ln
the
·
Elizabeth ~erzner,
jus~
t'No
_
~ta
t~me
·
, f?t~n~
_
thiciug~
b~9I
,
past/
ew
;
year.~;
.
years
.
removed from _bemg a
team andmd1v1dual problems,''.
...
·
.
·
.
·
· ·
four-year letter winner forthe
..
s~e
·
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Coaching was always in f:lle
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li~
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tshe.Ji;isf g9.es
_
·
back of her mind in herplc1ying
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beat
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~ttitu.cl~:<J1,1 th§c_cj~tf:-
:
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u
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qie~t<> guide
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.
days, but not riecessarilywhere
·
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Along~ithineotalJoughness,
·.
·.
·
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team
on the
·
coun.
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,
·

,

.
.
she wanted to
.
place her future .
.
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As fate would havei~

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"'
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;
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.
ieader
;
now I just have the title/'
.
is now
.
coaching played
·
that
,:;
)
ng;
which are the
.
n;iomentulll-
·
.
·
Parker said
/
''lt's not al{that
'
clif-
she rnamed
.
the
couit with
:
no(
:'
~:\1/ingi
_
i:ig_

eqllivalents
'.
'.
to
J
er~ntfrom past years really
/'
too long ago.
'·'<-·

_
·
•-
,

;_
htj.¢.¢(tjiiiaV:d·strikeoutsjn
.
,
Going irito the season~ co;yh
"I wentthmugh
,
the same
:

baseball
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Herznersaidshewas confident
·
things
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ttley
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going

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ill the
_
.
·
·
through now
/!
He~nersaid.
·._
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glari11g y.:~!!]a!ess~s
_i~
theJeam MAAC.
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Now,

with
_
9nly one
·
.
guess
yOt1
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,
coti~(
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,
tPat
it
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the slq~
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.
c'oiiference
game
remaigingand
helpsmore
than
it
.
hinders."
-.
·
notjeHing
fully
as a whole.
the tea~ farJrom the top
,
it ap-
·
.
.
sen
_
ior captain
·
Jen,
i
Parker
·
To
heJpwith th~
-
~911dirig con-
.
pearsJhataMAACToumament
.
agreed.
.

_..
·
_
.
.
__
cepfHerzilel'. re}ies
'
ori Parker,
::
bid
-
will have
to
waif until next
·
.
.
.
"She brings energy ancifeed
~
.
Mary
-
~e
t
li J(oehlnepp and
year.
·
_··
...
·
..
.
..
·
·
-
·
:
·
.
·:
· .
.
.

back, rnuclimore
·
thanwe have
,
-
ttj~li'a'R,an1ey; tJieJhree
'
capuiins
.
Judging byHeriner's attitude,
bee!} u~e
_
d to in,
,
the
,
past
few
.
A
lf
.
the
te~,
tcrbrini the squad
..
that
could
hei
real possibility
.
· years,!'

Parkersaid
;
"Both
·
ofo
_
ur
,
}
ogetller and thenreport to t!Je
·
.'
'I know
it's
an old saying, but
·
newcoac:he~f(Herzneras o/ellas
.
:
<:oache~
:
.
·
.
.
·.
.
. ..·
. . .
'
practiceho\V you play' is what
assista~
k
-
.
c:oach ·
'.
A~am
.
.
:-
J>arker said she thinks this is
a
we
will live by as a team; and
Andrade) are very knowledge-
good approach:
,
·
·
· :
·
every game and practice is a big
able
:
at)d noi:iest"
.
·
. .
.·..
.
_

.
·
>
"Fe work very \Veil together
.
.
one," she said.
.
.
Parker
·
and
··
company have
· ·
All
three
of us are
team
oriented
.
The Red Foxes' next action will
.
be~n
.
trying
.
to work out the

..
arid love to hang oufwith each
.
.
be this Saturdiiy-When the
Man-
kinks s<:> far
,
this season
;
-
Their
>
other,'
'.
~he said.
'.'
gach one of
;
~
a
ttan.Jaspers come to town for
r~cc:>rd, stands at5
-"
l7
overall,
--;
us brings a different element of a I :0() p.m. matchup
.
and 2.;6
'
in the Metro Atlantic
··
:
leadership
·
to theteam.
,
Trisha

·
.
Then itwill· be
·
off°to die
:, ,
J\thleti<?
.
Conference.
is definitely the motivator and
Harvard Invitational Nov.
5-6;
a
.
.
.
Maristsplifits two contests
Mary
-
Beth leads by example,
tournament Jeatu
-
ring Stony
lasf week. They dropped last
__
_ both on and off the court."
Broqk, Harvard and Dartmouth.
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..
1rJHUE <ClU~<ClLJE

'
.
.

.
.
.
'
With the 1999 Major League
.
gives him the ~dge over jeff Scott Williamso~
:
0
He recorded
Baseball Season winding to a
·
Zimmerman, Brian Daubach,
12 wins, 17 saves, and 107
close, here are one man's pre-
BillyKoch,'andmid-seasoncall-
strikeouts out of the bullpen.
dictions
for_
the post-season
up TimI:fuds.on.
.
_
,
Williamson was a key figure in
.
award win
'
nets:
AL MANAGER OF THE
Cincinnati's remarkable run to
AL
MVP:
Pedro Martinez gets
'YEAR:
!imy
Williams. He has
·
the post-season that fell just
the nod over
·
Rafael Palmeiro
been baseball's best manager for
short.
and Manny Ramirez.
·
Under
the lasttwo seasons.
Playing ona contender gives
normal circumstances,
it
is diffi-
Few people expected the Red
him the edge over Preston Wil-
cult to justify
a
pitcher winning
Sox to make the playoffs in '98.
son and Warren Morris.
the MVP.
Even fewer expected them to
NL MANAGER OF THE
.
However, Martinez's season
make it in '99 after the Joss of
YEAR:
Jack McKeon over
·
was extraordinary. He won 23
Mo Yaughn.
Bobby Cox and Buck Showalter.
games,ledtheALinERAat2.07
However, Williams continued
No one expected the Reds to
and had 313 strikeouts in 213.1 . to work his magic with few
come anywhere close to 96 wins
innings.
household names other than
this year. McKeon's demeanor
.
A
pitcher shou
_
ld only win the
.
Nomar Garicaparra and Pedro
and handling of young players
MVP when he dominates the
Martinez.
explain the Reds' rise.
league. RogerClemensin 1986
·
NLMVP:Hwasaraceallsea-
Here are the top 5 baseball
and Dennis Eckersley in 1992
son between Chipper Jones and
teams of the decade:
fall into this categor_y, and so
Jeff Bagwell. Jones essentially
5.
1995 Indians- won 100 out
doesMartinezin 1999.
wins the award for his
.
perfor-
of 144 games, but fell short in
In terms
:
of valtie to
:
his team,
.
niance against the Mets in
a
late~
.
the World Series against ...
·
Martinez also stands out. He
st;ason series in Atlanta. For
4.
1995 Braves
.
_ the Braves'
recorded
.
nearly·
·
~

quartet of the season, Jone;

finished hit-
.
only world championship team
Boston's~4 wins, and no other
ting.319with45HR; lIORBI,41
in adecadeofNLdomination.
Red Sox pitcher won more than
2B, and 25 SB.
3.
·
1992-93 Blue Jays - back-
10 games this year.
·
·
·
NL CY
YOUNG:
A close race
.
to-back World Series titles. Who
AL C:Y
YOUNG:
The only
between Randy Johnson, Mike
·
will forget Joe Carter's blast to
question is who finishes sec-
Hampton,JoseLima,andKevin
·
endthe1993Series?
ond. Mike·Mussina?
·
··Millwood
goes to Johnson.
2. 1994Expos- but due to the
.
:
·
..
.
.
.
.
.
Photo courtesy Jill
Sl>,tarcv,k
Garofola was MAAC Player of the Week earlier in the year.
GAROFOLA:
Marist
sophomore second in
conference in scoring
ALROOKIEOFTHEYEAR:. ·
Johnson led the majors with
strike, we never got to find out
Carlqs Beltran. He hit .293 with
.
.364
strikeouts and had
an
ERA
·
how
:
good they
·
were. They
22HR: l08RBI;27sB'.aiiaf1.i"
.
t>f2A8. With~orerunsupport; started to dismantle the next
R. Beltran also
'
added
·
1'6-
out.:.-'
.. '
his
17
wins
'
'
coulc(have
·
easily
season.
·
.
.
.
: ..
continued from
pg.
14
fo~!;~:~~;~aid he understands
fieldassists.
.
topped20.
_
·
.
..
.
·

,
,
..
, ·
:.
I
1
·
99s
·
Y:n1c
·
·
.. ·
·
th
·
·
·
·
·
.
.
.

..
.
. .
a ees -
e greatest
·
that bei~g
a
scorer put
a
certain
HI~.~~~~<>.!1:~91!g consiStency
NL !OOKIEOF~YEAR:
teanfever?
·
'
'
·
·
· ·.
_
_
·
''to
get where we wanted to be."
amount of pressure on him. So
·
·
The

last
.
baseball season
·
of for 35. games, whereas Palmiero
this millennium is almost fin-
played 158.
ished.
·
.•·
.
.
.
·
· For National League MVP my
But
·
before
.
we can forget
choice is Vladimir Guerrero. He
about baseball until next Spring,
doesn't get a lot of national ex-
the post~season awards must be
·
·
·
..
posure
_
but the numbers do not
handed out. Here.are my pre~ .. lie, .316BA42HRandl3lRBI.
dictions.
)
0
.
.
.
·

·
.
·
.
.
Chipper Jones and Larry
Lets first look at the American
Walker deserve some votes but
.
.
Lea$UeCyYtiungAwarq. ln~n Guerr~rnhad the most im~res-
era when~
:
h~tting is dominant
·
sive season of the three:
·
.
4nd fris
:
:very hard to find good
·
'I'heOakland Ns Art Howe is
pitching,Peqro Martinez was
my selection for A.L. Manager
amazingaildwiUwineasily, He
oftheYear. Histeamhada$22.8
wonthepitching~plecrownin
.
.
miHion opening-day payroll.
the
·
AL.
}
He
\
vas simply domi.:.
.
They flirted with the playoffs
nating'.
·
and put together their fiistwin-
In the National League the Cy
ning season since 1992 while
Young Award is up
_
fo_! grabs.
improving by 13 games over last
Mike Hampton, Greg Maddux,
seaso
_
n _:. the biggest increase
and
-
Kevin Millwood have
in victories in the league.
strong cases, however, my
One hundred victories. The
choice is Randy Johnson.
first team to make the playoffs
The Big Unit's record looks
in just its second season. The
less than dominating (17-9), but biggest one-year turnaround in
thafs due to the fact that his
baseball histor_y. NL Westcham-
team
never scored
many
runs for
pions.
him. He led the league in
For these reasons, Arizona
strikeouts (364) and ERA (2.48).
skipper Buck Showalter is the
Isn't it sweet to come back
NationalLeagueManagerofthe
home'? RafaelPalmieromustfeel
Year.
that way, and an added bonus
For American League Rookie
wiJl be the
·
American League
of the-Year my choice is Carlos
MVP award.
Beltran. He hit .293 and had 22
He had 47
HR
148 RBI and a
HR and 108RBI. Therearemany
.324 BA. Texas would have won
other good candidates such as
the division without him, how-
FreddieGarcia,JeffZimmennan
ever, the team would not have
and Billy Koch, but Beltran was
been as balanced without him.
a level above them.
Pedro was the most dominant
As for National League
player in the league, but only
Rookie of the Year, it's Mookie
·• ·
.
.. ::
_,
Last year the team consisted
when the pressure of the sport
'
' '
\
.
ofl 4 freshman and this

year ten
begins to mount, Garofola said
i
.•


. ·
'
returned as starters .
.
·
.
Garofola
he looks to his coach and men-
.
, ,
saict' the young squad has ma~
.
.
tor, Bobby Heiodes.
··
',iured
quickly because of the ups
"Coach (Herodes) takes a Jot
jmd
'downs of the past two sea-
of pressure off me," Garofoia
sons.
said. "He's been the biggest
·
·
"Last year was rough because
influence on me because he
we started out by losing five
pushes me
,
but he also prepares
Wilson's son, Preston, who wm
·
.
straight before our first win," the
me mentally."
walk away with the honors. He
forward said. "This year we
Yankees catcher Yogi Berra
hit .280 with 26
HR
and 71 RBI. started out on a high but we just
said that baseball was 90 per-
Warren Morris had a solid sea-
.
dropped back to back losses to
cent mental and 50 percent
son(.288BA15HRand73RBI),
.
·
Coluf!JbiaaridColgate.,,
physical. Garofola said his
but its Preston's power that will
Garofola's field leadership can
physical preparation for soccer
lift him to this award.
be traced back to high school
includes five to six days of lift-·
*****
This week's top
5
will look
at the top 5 individual teams
.
of
the decade.
·
5)
The 1994 Montreal Expos.
.
This team was stacked (Alou,
.
Walker,
Hill,
Wetteland, Grissom,
and others) and we were de-
prived of seeing October base-
ball in Montreal due to the
strike.
4) The 1997 Florida Marlins.
They beat the Giants, Braves,
and Indians~ on way to a world
championship. These were all
teams that they were not sup-
.
posed to beat. It was one of the
best teams ever assembled and
then dissembled.
3) The 1993 Toronto Blue Jays.
They were the first team to re-
peat since the '78 Yankees.
2)The 1995 Cleveland Indians.
100-44 in a strike shortened year.
Though they lost the world se-
ries it would have been interest-
ing to see what they could have
done with a full season.
1)
The 1998 New York Yan-
kees.
114 regular season wins,
which was the second most
ever, and a world championship.
Dominating.
.
where he was a four-'year var
-
ing and running in the off sea-
sity. starter and elected to the
son, as well as playing three
all-county team
three
times while
times a week during the
fa!
I.
breaking the school's record for
"My
speed is my greatest as-
career goals, finishing with 48.
set," Garofola
said.
"I
play with
The Bellport, New York
·
quicktumswithmybacktothe
native's ability to figure out op-
goal."
posing defenses reflects one of
Speed also seems to be pro-
his more interesting character-
fessional soccer's greatest as-
istics. Just ask his parents
set as well. Through the fonna:
about the time they got a new
tionofMajorLeagueSoccerand
computer during Brian's fresh~
the United States women's
man year.
World Cup victory, Americans
No one in his household was
have adopted a love for the pre-
ver_y computer literate, so the
viously European dominated
novice Information Systems
sport.
major took it upon himself to
Garafola said he is proud of
learn the system and teach his
soccer's recent explosion of
family how to use it as well
.
popularity and acceptance in
Garofola said the practicality
America.
·
of the technology is what at-
"It's great and well deserved,"
tracted him to the field of infor-
Garofola said. "It's been so
mation systems.
popular all over the world for
"It's more hands-on," Garafola
years and it deserves this type
said. "I think that's what really
of publicity."
interested me."
The young Marist field gen
-
Leaming about computer tech-
eral said the growth in popular-
nology will take patience, a vir-
ity is also prevalent among stu-
tue that Garofola said he uses
dent soccer fans on campus as
when opposing defenses key in
well.
on him.
"More and more people come
"I tr_y to actually keep a calm
to each (Marist) game," he no-
head and stay within myself and
ticed. "It tells us they are see-
not try to do too much," said
ing how fun it can be and they
the MAAC player of the week
are enjoying it."














































































































































































































































































·
....:
.
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by
PATRICK
.
KEMPF
.
\.
·;
.
·
siaffWfiter
'. .
.
.
fe
11siy
_
e}tpt
:
~g19~'
.
the ~eco~~;
:
i~_foij~~_f<>r
1po yard~,-qverthe
..
_
.
·
.\
.
,
•. .
.
.
..
as tlie game ~,11111ng ki~k_was
nuddle at thel .,.yardhne.- Steve
·
·
~i~~ii~tli:i!i
,
2
:
~!if
ii!~i!Sf
ii
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ar~
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;;
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·,
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sp
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:
p!Jtt
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,
an
.
.
---=
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-
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y~c
f
tJ~lg
'
g<;fal
:
imed
:
th~
Red
·
e;
"qrov~
.
tlle
,
ball
!O
~e?vfari~t14-:
' .
eight ptay
;
_
Q7-:y#ds~
'
ciririg drive
,
:
.
Foxest~ a~~l 7-vidory over the·
i
y¥d1iri,e
~i~ ~ijder
.
three min-
·
,
'
of i!(<>*n
tlta,t
was
·
~a_pped off
-~
visiting§e~a'-Vks;
:
:
>,
::
:
utesto pl~y
;
:>
·
'.,'
.
..
.
iii
spectacularfashiori.
.
.
.
.
·
.
• Za~¢hei's last second heroics
·

,
How~yer,
,,
afterthe'fytaris(de:-
:
::
.
·
Ori
.-
first-and:,ten from
'
the
.
capp
_
e4
'_
ofC11ii
_.:1
qi'pr~ssiv~ last
·
feif~(!
"
Mld
)
t,s
.
ground,:.~att
.
M,aris
(
Z5;yard line; Wagne;
mip
_
~t~
---
~i:t~'.~
.
Jo
r:
Marist ~hat
''i_
O
.
'.Q(?~
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bl_p1;kecl
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Garret
>
4U~~~backLqu_Siiliorie
.
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51
,
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leftm9teco~
.
".
:c:.:-
PH~-~~r.~fs
.
3?:
f
YW:d/ie!<l,
:
&~al
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fl.u
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~he
,
ci.pu.t
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(?f
,
fh;e1)0
,
cket,
:
~i~~e1

~eyes
_
atta~k~
-
~h~Y.Ja9.~e~def~-~S
_
Ei
_
~l=l~~rday.
_
'~
.
testa11d 7? yards
.
b~tween them
,
att;wptt9 setup1he
,
gatne ~m-
:
eluded several Mansr defend-
.
agam for a 30-yard gam to bnng
·.
off by his 30-y¥g touchdo}Vn
i[i~JttJ1!yti~1
t
,
;I
~~S
t
~11{l
i
i1¥ili~!f
J{i~
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lt
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la_st y~ar •
.
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;
e plac~-:
·
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IIJ.l~
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r~ur
,
~~te~
_
left

:
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th~~~9~
at
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0:10wt!b
·
I2:33
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s~m~pl~y
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k1cke
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r
.
.
said,
-.
m
_
re,fei:-ence,
tp
,:
m
.
th~
9.peru,.ng s
_
tanz~;
·
.
Miguel
.
·
left in the ~ajf.
:
.,-
'.
·
·•
<>
·.. ··•·
.
ma~~ 1tJ
7~10,
·
2
."':
:::;'
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<-'
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;
,
·
·
~
mtens~
,
fou~ quart~rwbere
. Wagn~r
~
.
victofy<>ver
.
?vl_a,tj~(
<\
Reye.s
:
c12
-
~
3fP~$;':66yard,s)>e,x;;

:
·
_
·. ·.:
{
";,
~:ft
i
r ~~~c'essiye ,pri~t~by
.
'
.<
'Ya#~i-'.s
'
~t~ Silille, who.¥
·
_:
.
t~mpers ~nd
flagef
~iJtpJl~\\'. be-
last year on
_
.
the
.
strength _of: a.
• •
,
.
plodedfor tfu.ee
,
big runs to put
.
b<>th t~an1s, th~ ~ed Foxes ~ook
. ·
for a school record
1_
98 yards on
. ·
fore th~ R~d ~ox~s p~~yai\ed.
last nu.nute
·
bloc~ed field .goal
the
.
Red
_:
F<ixes
_
deep'
.-
into
·
..
_-
p6$se~siof a~
_
the
·
Vfagner
.
43-:
.
34
carri~s, took overon th
_
~ ni~t
.
"l._think
~at it ~ar.i
.
fe,@yJelp
attenipL
,
·
_ ...
·.
·.
: ..
.
.
.
Wagner~erritol)'.
>
_ ,
·:.
.
yard line\vith ~:37Ieft in
the,
se.c
-
,
pos
·
se~sfon .
.
Th
_
e senior run-
us as a tearri,:' Zacch~i said.
"It
What
·
started
·
off as
an
off en-
·
.
Kevin Chartrand (12-23, 238
.
orid quarter
.
On:thiid: down
·
_
ning back carried six times for
.
buHds
a
lot of confidence going
sive showcase f91}?~
/
teams
--
yd.
l
-Int.)
found Brian
.
~h~i-
.
trand found
-
Loyzynski
.
53 yards on the drive, capped
·
into the next game
;
"
..
.
.
,
~
Ct
_
rti.~
.
r
·
~J...nn
·
to
·
.
.
third
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I
Openet fo
r'
the t~am,• ac~orciiiig
i
.
~
·
.'
· ..
t9
~
MiIHO:wney,
<
who'added\hat
:-
:
i
·
·:_
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iet;f;;;b;0~~;!:sj;
t
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>
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p.
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ar,11:g
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~he,rr
{
th
_
ey
_
A~f~atedJ'hilaclel
,:
'
.
z
phi
i
t'
~
Tixtiie.
Karcz;
Mik~
·
·
-~
.'
Sch!!Hng
;
_
and
~chard
Br~dley,
i
w~9
)i
eue4,tlie
gairtew~~nei-,
~Ir
·.,
I
,
;
,
':
s~p
,
r~d
J
~~~
,
sec~?;?
-
h1f
t9
Ae
.
~d
.. __ ·. .
.
i
.,
tt:ie t~amJo, a
J'.'
2.
vic:tory.
,
>
I
·
·
·
/2d
~i'
¼~6~~
~
,
i
0
~
i~l.:~~ballf~~
ifu
:,
r
~:
1~~itt~;
•·;
,
f
j
!;i
1;.
1~i~i{t~t
.
,.
1
>
<, · •
.
-
.. -
·
.
,
the
,
dnyer's seat of tlie
:
corifer-'-
·
fil!d c
.
~a!~Q
.,
~
lo
_
t
,
of 9pportu111-:
.
: -
~
.
.
&
g
~~:;:
'.
~ii
l
liilf
'i
lt!itif ~!
f
,I
. Maiist inen's
'
spccer team' had
.
goal
pf~y
~e~on on
.
an assist
.
SS?!ff
_
fo.11cr goal~alld a~de~
.
an
ortly
~
_
tWo
l)lelll,ishes
'
on i~inl!fe
froinPatrick~kCalL
'
, ·
:
'
.· ·
-
·
.
.
ass~~
.
t
H}
-
~()
Iv½A~
\\'it1s'.
,
..
.
.
season
>
· · ·
--

·
:
Biai~
Karc;
i
added
iuiothe~ off
:
<
~
~
.
s~t
{
hlsq eijned him
the
_
·
.
-
Hc,wevei-,
:
.}:
loss
to
;
the Stag~
.
·
~ssists fr
6
m 'riri~
,
Gru:ofofa
aricl
·
tioii()r
}
>(be~ng 1fan1_ed
MAAC
'
·
and
'
two
·
,
more
·
rion:conference
Steve
:
Murk.
'.
.
Murk
"
added an and
_
Ea~tern
·
College Ath}etic

fosses
droppe4
ih
'e
team
fo
third
...
insurarice
..
goal
:
off:
ariother
as-
.
-
CpIUe~ri~
~J\._c)
f,'lay~r of the
.
.
.
-
placeiniheMetroAtlanticAth~
-
sistfromGarofola.
.
-•
·
'
·
.
\Yee~J<>r~e~e
,
~k<>fQ
_
ct.4
,
,
Ietic
'
Conf ererice (MAAC)and
.
C
:
DeBrito
.
made four savesitithe
_
.
/~
I
.
~vas
~appy wi9J th~ h9nqr,
,
brougbt it
f
season record to
'
ll ~
- ·
3:osliufout,his
tlilid
shutout
of
bl!t
.
it
\
iS
. ·
a te;tm eff~~t,"
5.
the season
:
_
.•
.
·
.
.
,M~lle>wneysaid. 'T.Jier¢ llaye
On Oct
6;
the men .hosted
The Red
Foxes
next traveled .
.
~en tw.o o.ther guys from our
FairlieldJor top ranking in the
.
to
take
on IvyLeagueopponent
te~
to get the award,so it just
MAAC. Fairfield started off the
Columbia University: A goal by
~hows how much our team has
scoring when Barry o~Driscoll
Leslie Fitipatiick and
·
two
'
by
unpr~ved."
,
.
, .
.
netted a
-
penalty
'.
kick twelve
·
Michael Ching secured the vie-
~anstfell to5-2 ":' the:MAAC,
minutes foto th~ game.
tory
·
for the Lions.
whi~h places them
m
thrrd place
·.·
S
t
eve Murk
.
then
·
scored
off
a
Marist then
·
Jost its second
behmd first place Loyola, (7-1-1
pass
·
fromThomas Mullowney
game in
a
row
'
by
..
faUing to
·
in th~ M_A~C)
)
~.fl s~c~nd
toevenupthe~core. O'Driscoll
.
_
Colgate, 2-().
·
Dan Rollins and
·
plac~ Fa~r!1eld (~-2 m the
·
'
_tallied
his second
·
goal of the
Brian Giordano provided all the MAAC)
,
with two conference
game ten minutes
.
later to give
offense that was needed for the
games remaining in the season
the Stags the lead fo_r good.
Red Raiders:
before
_
the MAAC Champion-
Goalkeeper Carlos DeBrito
"Columbia was one of the big~
ships io Nove~ber.
.
.
made five saves in the 2-1 loss.
gest and most solid teams that
The Foxes next action wdl
The defeat dropped Marist to
we played all season," Karcz
come Saturd~y afternoon at St.
5-2 in the MAAC.
said. "They were one ofthe best
Peter's at
1
:00 p.m. The MAAC
"We were disappointed with
teams we've played."
Championsh~ps run from Nov.
the result of the Fairfield
game,"
The two losses to Columbia
2-
7
at the Disney Wide World
Brian Karcz said. •we were in
and Colgate served as an eye of Sports complex in Orlando.
.
.
_-
.
:
·
-
-
'
·~...,..
,
......
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-
·~
.,.
--
:
.
:
-
-~~--
,
_
--
-,
.
.
.
-
..
,
..


53.5.1
53.5.2
53.5.3
53.5.4
53.5.5
53.5.6
53.5.7
53.5.8
53.5.9
53.5.10
53.5.11
53.5.12
53.5.13
53.5.14
53.5.15
53.5.16