The Circle, December 9, 1999.pdf
Media
Part of The Circle: Vol. 53 No. 9 - December 9, 1999
content
.sd~~~all;~~e~~:aJrt·,_.
·critic's?.,Works
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. this
one)haVebeeiion. :;,__.
• displayproudly
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gallery, pg.~
-
·• .• · .
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·.'
Th.efuert's basketball team
aere~t~~yQI~t'<righ_t)_
last'weekand
American.
J\iysd~y
mght;72:63.
Rick Smithled .the
way
with
13
points,pg.16 ..
VOLUME #53 ISSUE
#9
GOOD :LUCK· ON FINALS
EVERYONE!!!~
·
DECEMBER 9, 1999
G~pys st'-~rea,(l~for,'.the next millenium
· 'b
ERICDEABIIL
··.
' -
··.· •.
-.
··
·.
•
· · ·· .·· ..
>
·
. .Y
:. ,.,,,
..... •
... · • ••..
known asthe Y2K'issue is a
•:·
. .-::;;:,$.t(l.f/4!!'rtt~r-.:~
·:
·
;,_( .. · ..
problemthafltas ~xf~tedforover
_\Vhile:Jvi~;Fs'fficleiit;'·1'e
C
~
30.jeiu;s'ho'Y.·
I(is'.·d_ue.·t9::1iie
dreamil)'l9o!(iI1g
f()n.v.arqJ9_
the. fact- thafcoinputefdate
X~f¢t .·
end\jfclasses
and
'winter
break;
ences. have,been restric:ted; to
a_
littl¢
bug
Witlt
a big~i!e, is
com:.
only
~WO
gigits/tlmsirWsapng
ing to bring thembackinto real:.
that c9mpute1:s ~01.J,d:'feaq:_00
ity:
.
..
.. .
as· 1900 rather thrui.2000: This
The millenium bug, otl_lerwise
could :ause certain systems to
·,,,, .
·
.· ·. >
.
. ·
photo courtey Matt Halpen
Members of TKE find administrators hard to work with.
. shut ~<>wnor suspend•. opefa~
tio
·
·
··
· ·
··· · ·
· · ·
or
no
ct
their computer hardware and
software .
But how isMarist College pre-
pared to handle the Y2K Crisis
while ,students
-
are on winter
break?-
.
· Since the change over to the
year 2000. has not yet taken
place, only possible effects on
campus
life
could have been
'
•
WJEJEKJLY · POJLJL
· SGA Presidentlookingto ne~ts.~mester
©
®
Would you
consid~:t,~tµdy,i~g
· a~}fl'ad?fA:/
YFS
46
NO
54
RELATED STORYffllS PAGE
Tms
is
an
IIIISCienrijic
sur.-ey
takn
fr"'1r
J(J()
Marin
sn,d.,,,.
who
smok,,.
Hunter
by
CHRIS GROGAN
·News Editor
Toere are some hefty goals
stu'1_e11~_ goyemment is hoping
'to·achieve within, the next semes-
. ter, ascordiiig:!<{~rudent Body
President Ryan Hunter.
. _llunterheld a -State of the
Campus· address last Saturday
to discuss his administration's
accomplishments and goals for
the rest of the school year. He
said SGA has accomplished a
«fair amount" so far this year.
"One 9f the things we tried to
do ·this year is really deal with ·
issues that affect the student
body, and not get tied down
· with the mundane things," he
said .
One of the biggest things SGA
has been involved with this se- .
mest~r is dealing with the school
administration and state officials
in understanding the new cross-
walk. Hunter said the challenge
now is in getting students in
... please see
HUNTER.pg.
3 ·
simulated.
Wendy Duncan, the project .
manager for the Y2K. project
from Information Technology,
said the college is well prepared
for theY2K problem.
.
"Marist has done an excellent
. job in providing solutions," she
... please see
Y2K,pg.
4
•
.
~DAY:
.
hi:
52
lo: 35 ·
.
Community .................... 2
eatures ................ ; .......
5
Opinion ......................... 8
&E .......................... 11
Sports ....... '., ................. 16
'I
..
I
I
I
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., •.,
.,
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DECEMBER 9, 1999
The Student Government
Association's Housing and
Residential Life committee is
currently seeking more mem-
.
bers. This ad hoc committee
convenes bi- weekly to address
and resolve student concerns
regarding housing and residen-
tial life on campus. Anyone in-
terested in joining should con-
tact the SGA office at x2206 or
email Travis Mason at K7HZ.
WMCR - Marist College Ra-
dio - Thursday - Tuesday, 7;00
p.m. - 9:00 p.m. Tune in for the
latest sports talk. Sports up-
dates and coverage of your
fa-
votite Marist sports t~ams::1i
.. you have any questions, call
the
Sports Director Mike Koller
x4724.
Hey Marist ·students call
STUDENTS FOR HILLARY
,-CLINTON at x7 l
54
and get in-
volved in the future of New York
state. With the upcoming 2000
Senate race looming now is the
best time to find out: the iss,ties
that will affect you. Clinton
maybe a· Democrat and not a
New York resident but that
doesn't mean you shouldn't
check .out her message. Learn
about the issues that will affect
your future! Join STUDENTS
FOR HILLARY CLINTON2000
by calling x?
154.
The Marist music department
presents its winter concerton
Sunday, December
12
in.the
Nelly Golleti Theater at 3 p.m.
Tickets are free
for
students;
$5
regular admission.
Town of Poughkeepsie Police of-
ficers shortly after.
Security officers watched four
residents climb into a four-door se-
dan in front of Donnelly Hall, and
listened to them making obscene re-
marks Saturday, Nov.·
20 at 4:30
.
· ... · a.In.
Th~
foursome·tlien• sped· ~ut•
•• _,, I
.f;('
\·:\/;·;
~;1-:,.~
1 /
of
ttleipatkirig[li>l
:n§itig
towa'rds' ;,.
the South Entrance. While appar-! •,,
ently doing
a
~Drikenif Hazard'
A fau2~t 'was found torn off in . impersonation, the driver narrowly
Champagnat's fourth floor men's
missed the Southern curb neat the
bathroom at
2:50 a.m. Wednesday,
baseball •field,· overcJmpe~sating
Nov. 17. The gushing water cas-
and jumping the Northe~ curb.
caded through a
totaj
of eightmoms,
Luckily, the fence surrounding the
including .rooms on the fourth, · Leibenoff Field slowed the car
third, second, and first floors.
down, so he could return to the road
'
.
~-
.
.
Someone mistook a full garbage
can for his laundry basket in
Marian Hall's first floor laundry
room, dumping trash into one of
the washing machines. Housekeep-
ers found the mess; including blue
marker smeared on the walls at
7:20
a.m., Friday, Nov.
19.
Two female Champagnat resi-
dents jumped into a taxi with sev-
eral unknown males, who quickly
began making obscene remarks. The
two female residents ~ere tired of
the abuse and hopped from the
taxi
at the South Entrance, when the _un-
known males began quarreling with
the riders .. The girls reported · the
incident.at
1:30
a.m:
Saturday Nov.
20, and gave a police report to
and leave the scene. The observant
patrol officer identified the culprit,
and drove toward his residence in
Talmadge Court. The car' was evt,!n-
tually spotted at the Palace Diner.
Town of Poughkeepsie Police of-
ficers were called and questioned
the stunt driver. He denied any in-
volvement, but the damage to his
car reminded him and he confessed.
As a reward, he was issued two
tickets, one for leaving the scene
and the other for driving with a sus-
pended license. His car was then
towed and his parents were noti-
. tied.
A stolen road sign was confis-
catedfrom a Leo Hall resid~nt at
12:15 a.m.Tuesday;Nov. 23, when
Weekend Weather
FRIDAY:
hi:
S2
lo: 37
hi:44
lo:30
hi:49
lo:27
Source: http://www.weather.com
(The
Weather Channel)
Where do you not want
to be on New Year's Eve?
"At a Van Halen concert
with Gary Cherone sing-
ing."
I
,.
Bob Roth
senior
"My roomate's room be-
cause
it
smells like tuna. "
Steve•·Kios
·senior
"Spending· it with Jer-
emy D. Smith .. "
Bill
West
junior; ,- ;
-.,_;~~~rr1(··r:~:~.-,_.:- ~--· ... ·•.-·.-.. ·.:-.,. .-""::: ..
:-:,·-i~·.:~.:r, _-
. ·-_ .. : .. _
....
/,i :·-~
.::~_:i~:0•i.:~ ; . .:.
SecU9ty<>ffic:ei:s.observed~~ w!ul~,,.' Poµg~~e~psle~foHp~,~~ffi~er~ ~-~r~.
~-c:·~;,
·s!t~(~;..i~ ::~~";
;.;,!,:
i;_r~:J ..
~-...-;[_iH~:;n
student scaled it. AfterJalling
off,
th~ ~th~r,~ide: the-~tud~nt, took
his "rirlldly j~toxica~ed;?
arm, back
responding to another incident.
called.
·
Upon J>.eing asked where th~ sign·
was from, the student said he
found it on the side of the road and
he was going to decorate his wall
with it.
to the Security Office and said he
A fomale Champ~gnat resident
thought
it
was broken. The stu-
. called into a WMCR campus radio
dent was escorted to St. Francis
broadcast at
10:30 p.m. Saturday
by Fairview ambulance - in under
·
Dec.
4
and had a conversation with
forty-five minutes.
· one of the DJ's. Obviously, the con.:
versation became heate<:I because the
"J:,ull;'loader operator.Anthony, male DJ abandoned his.post.and ran
Sorbello was lifting steel b,eams to
to her room to continue the ccmfron-
New York Communications
the third floor of the new Fontaine
talion in person. A verbal barrage from • Company (NYC0MCO), located
Building and toppledthe.machine
both parties quickly ensued: She said
on West Cedar Street, reported
into the stre,et Tuesday, Nov.
23 at
lie grabbed her
arm.
He said he was
Monday,
Dec:
6 the abduction of
3:10 p.m. No one was hurt,_said . protectinghimselffromJpl}n~hll~ort
':ll_cl~eccmi~v~je½d~r,.,chrislIIlas,
Pavarini. Construction supervisor . to be thrown; The
RD
was
c<>rifactecf .
tree;
al}d:Stajstiriaf, Hgh~
fr<.lni
Mike Paris, bllt seyeraj llO-installed . . and" ~ch was.· ~e~r t~ ,his/' he~ "owni '· '. th¥busineslfront
}.t\\'n:
Thei~
windows were smashed.
comer.
festive items were taken over the
A relaxing BenoitHall resident
noticed his fan slowly creeping out
of his basement window Wednes-
day, Nov. 24 at 12:45 a.m. When
he went to the window to investi- ·
gate, a male figure· dashed away
with abducted fan. Security re-
sponded and found the culprit and
his friends. They tried
to
deny all
knowledge of the larceny, but
changed their story when security
saw the fan still in hand. Town of
weekend,- andblamelon
Marist'
s_tudents by.NYCO:MCOJ:epre-
sentatives because of a trail-of
A
"IIlilc\ly intoxicated" student wan.-
debris from the stolen items scat-
der~ into the Security Officeat
5:50
tered down ihe' street
and
into
the.
· a.m. Saturday Dec.
4,
requ~ting
a
West Cedarapartments. Studeµi
ride to his off-campus aparttnent. Se-
Affairs and Housing· personnel
curity officers were unable to pro-
were informed and promptly
vide tins service, but called
a
cab com-
stated a reindeer fitting the de-
pany for the penniless studert~ The
scription was located in' a Marian
cab company estimated a forty;five ·. Hall room'. Upon questioning, one·
' minute
wait, so the student decided ' 'of the residents of the
tooin sail
to walk. He also did not want to waste
he woke up and.it
was
there. The
the time walking around the newly-
reindeer was confiscated and re-
erected fence along Route 9, so the
turned to NYC0MC0.
1r1HUE
·<clt:JR.<ClLJE
DECEMBER 9, 1999
N
ewst
TKE:
Fraternity's dismissal
from campus remains unclear
want
·
them to
•
be very positive
enter campus housing .
... continued from
pg.
1
so that other students
'
who see
·
According to Winters, Amato
tinues to demonstrate behavior
that look at them in a positive
was open about having a dis-
and activity that is inappropri-
way."
like for fraternities, but said he
ate or against college policy, the
One argument made by the
still tried to treat them fairly.
college is not interested in ex-
fraternity is that, by kicking them
"He·said
he did not like frater:.
~~:.~any communication with
off campus, Marist is doing
nities because they don't pro~
·
more harm than good by avoid-
mote individual thinking," Win-
The circumstances surround-
ing any association with off ters said. "He did not have sym-
ing the fraternity's dismissal re-
campus parties.
pathy for TKE as anorganiza-
main unclear: Sanso la said
it
is
"If
you lose control over a fra-
tion;
.
but he did help out some
a private matter between the
ternity, you put students at
individual guys."
Unity day is an integral part
of
Hunter's plani'.rc/ephoto/ChrisGrogan
Greek organization and
.
their
more risk," said Art Sutley, a
TKE's district president Mike
national, and he is not at liberty
sophomore TKE brother.
Hoffman came to Marist in re-
to disclose it.
TKE did have a situation last
gards to the incident and met
All that is known is it was
year that involved sanctions
with. Amato and director of
based on actions that were in-
from the college. According to
housing Sarah English, but was
appropriate to their college and
Marist security, Poughkeepsie
unable to secure a meeting with
HUNTER:
Plans
aheadfor Unity Day
national guidelines,
police officers pulled over a car
Sanso la.
··
S
.
·
1
·
·
·
th
·
d
·
·
...
continuedfrompg.
J
pecu at.Jon 1s at it ha some-
after someone reported a "kid-
Sanso la said Amato was in
tlling to
.
~o . with. off
•.
caIDpus
nappi
_
r1g''
.
event that \\las origi-
charge of the matter at that:'time
formation rega
rd
ing the rules
gatherings involving the con-
nally r~ported as a hazing ritual.
and
~
he did not want to get in-
a
nd
regulations of
th
e cross-
.
sumption of alcohol by minors.
'I)teJratemity later clarified the
volved.
·
·
walk.
"1'lley always nail tis with
original report, saying it was a
Currently oniy two fraternities;
"At
th
is point, the law says
having parties," Winters said.
unity event
.involving
a willful
Alpha Phi Delta and Phi Kilppa
th
at a car muS
t
yield," he
said.
"What
about the football team
participant, and in no y;ay a re-
Sigma, remain
on
·
campus; as
"A
.
car doesf t have to
st
op,
or the baseball team or the la-
quirement for membership.
compared to foifr
.
sororities.
they must yield, and I think a lot
crosse· team? Are our parties
They also rebutted Marist's
Sansola said he does not see the
of
st
udents believe
th
ey have
any worse than their parties?"
original security reports, saying
Greek population on this cam-
to
st
op but in essence the ac-
Sansola said there is no bias
no students were pulled over,
pus growing any time soon, re-
tu~!_laws says drivers only must
against fraternities at the col-
held at gunpoint and brought
maining around the eight or nine
yield to pedeS
tri
ans," he said.
lege. Regardless of the organi-
to the police station.
·
percent of the population they
The SGA is currently in the
zation, Greek or non-Greek, he
The pledges of the fraternity
make
,
up now.
process of making pamphlets up
said they must comply with the
involved in the incident were
"Greeks have never been
_
a
to ha
nd
out to
st
udents regard-
.
g "d 1·
fth
··
11
&
•
100
h
.
·
f
·
·
ing infonnation on the laws of
m e mes o
.
e co ege or 1ace
given
ours o community
strong presence on our campus.
·
disciplinary action .
.
·
service, prohibited from any in-
Ithink they're
:
a valuable com-
th
e new crosswalk.
"(Greeks) have to be good role
volvement in TKE, forced to live
ponent," Sanso la
.
said. "Our
The largeS
t
u
nd
e~ng for ~e
models, as members
·
.
of the
oncampusallfourye.irsa,ndput
women's groups are much
SGAnextsemesterw1llbe1;Imty
.
g~OUJ?~W~~~
"
~e <3r~~
i
,
<!r&a.,:•~~:9n:a:_?n~'=-Year-yroll~qµ
~,t~
~~:::".;
ii'.~
~Qng_erthaµ
.
o.ur
,
men:s
·
gro\lps
;;
.
~ay, formerly kn
.
ow~ as D1ver-
mzatmn; and as representatives
·
·
·
.
·•·
·
f
in
addi~ion; fqritjer associate
..
Our men?s have
.
struggled
·
and
·
sity pay, Hun~er said the new
of the· follege;))
_
Sil.11solf
said
:
dean
of'Studeni"Affrufs•
·
Pft<ir
·'!
paii:
.
'
of
•
ir
'
fs
•'
their
;
uri-otgartiza
'
-:
.'
· .
nam~
,
was
,
chosen
·
to distance
''When
'
they are walking around
Amato, who mysteriously
re
>
tion."
.
.
•
:
.
·
. · .
·
the event from last ye~'s un-
wearing thefre letters; being
_signed
in
October, sent all the
.
TheTKE
fraterriitychapter_at
.
suc_cessful ~enture. ~IS ye~r,
together as a group, they repre-
existing TKE brothers a letter
Marist currently consists of 32
Umty D~y is retum~ng to its
sent· an
·
organization and we
saying they were not
allowed
to
members.
·
·
·
r?ots, bemg held out~1de on the
.
_ _ _ _ _
.
·
.
campus green much like the first
Diversity Day held two years
.
ago.
·
The concept for this year's
Unity Day is to promote cam-
pus entertainment. Hunter said
this would not only highlight
club unity but also save
·
the
.
s<::hool money.
·
"Basically we're trying to get
out of the mindset that you have
.
to spend $10,000 to put on an
event," he said.
"You
can put
on a successful event for a small
amount of money. So for enter-
tainment, we're using resources
that we have on campus."
Perfonnances will be put on by
the dance club, Asian Alliance,
MCCTA, fencing club, Black
Student Union, the Gaelic Soci-
ety and other clubs and organi-
zations.
Hunter said this day will be a
success if clubs come together
to help .
.
: :
··
..
··
.
"This year, we're stressing
that we can not have a success-
ful day unless the clubs partici-
pate and we have good, solid
club leaders who are committed
to the project," he said .
According to Hunter, another
undertaking his administration
·
is
planning is to make revisions
to the handbook. Hunter said
the goal is to make it more un-
derstandable.
"This is an important project
because it affects everyone on
the Marist College campus," he
said.
"We
have a committee that
is working to put it more in
layman's terms."
It is hoped that the revisions
will be passed next semester and
be used for the next printing of
the student handbook.
The State of the Campus ad-
dress is being shown all this
week and next week at 6:30 on-
.
MCfV Channel
J
2 .
..
g,
-
.-:-·
Students caught
in robbery attempt await punishment
by
BRENDAN~CGURK
. .
cou~se of t!t,e, ~yening, th~
,
~tp.~
_
.
grouQd, while another searched
began to question the ~ictim,
.
bery, a class E felony.
·
.
StaffWnter
,-
>'
dent
waS'stfong~amied
ana
.
be
<·
:
:
fofand
"
removed the victim's
the details of the night
'
s inci-
The two students, whoarealso
iA
Marist student has on~/
'.
came
theviainiofkseconci.:c:Ie~
" ·
wallet
:
:.
~
"
·
dent quickly came into light.
both freshmen, have been ar-
again
.~n
th
.
e
target,o(~Q ?ff:
?Tee
Wb~fY,,.r
:
)
-:
~
·h
.:
;
J
.
.. •
·
·
·
:
.
•
:~'7orqing t?
(
JosephJ.eary
;
Poughkeepsie Police officers
raigned and released
·
'
on their
campus
·
crime; the· fatest
·
in-•
a
·The
would-be partygoer re-
t~e dtrect?r ~fsafety and secu-
were immediately notified.
own recognizance to appear in
string of robberies that
.
<::ontin-
port<;d
.
that· h~ b.a?.
::
b
.
~en
;
ap.,-
.
• nty, the.v1ct1m then returned to
The Poughkeepsie Police have
court at a later date. They have
ues to plague the Mariststiident proached from _be~md arid had· c_ampus and went to_ the secu-
sin¢e arrested two Marist stu-
also since withdrawn from
population.
.
.
.
the c()~l~ ?f
h'f
J_llC~et
pulled
.
•
~ty_ (?ffi.~e 1:h.e s?me mgh~ ~f the
dents and charged them with the
Marist for the semester and are
Three weeks ago, a Marist
·
?ver~1s_h~d
:
and eyes; block..:
·
1?c1de~t,reportmgthath1s1den-
,
crime. The two students have
living at home.
The
freshman attended an off-cam-.· mgh1s ~,swn.:.~es,t.µ~~ptth_e
.
n
_
.J1ficat10!) card had been stolen,
:
been charged with second de~
Poughkeepsie Police Depart-
pu~ party located in the Town · r~ported thaf
two
people- held
..
·
and requesting a
.
replacement
gree robbery~ a class C felony
ment has been unable to be
of·Poughkeepsie: During the
him down, subdued on the
card. When secunty guards
and conspiracy to commit rob-
reached for comment.
.
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.
.
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•
•
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•
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•
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1rJH(E
:·
<CJDRUCLjE
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DECEMBER 9, 1999.
'NeWS
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PAGE4
Y2K:
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-
'
... contiime<ifr01~pg_.l
,
.,·
i
_
ng. :fhe test, which
;
'.
wascon.,.
·
,
tems
·
h~ve been testedbytheir
said, "with the main 9bjective
duded in July and August,
suppliersandreprurpeoplefrorn
for Y2K planning being the
simulated the
.
dates
.
to be De-
·
off-campus," he said.
safety and security oftheMarist
cembei-15,
1999
through April
According to Leary, most of
Community."
·
· 15, 2000. All systems and of-
the vendors tested their equip-
She reported
_
that all major In-
fices on carnpus perfonned their
merit,
·
and this process was
formation Technology systems
normal functions during the
completed by the end of Octo-
have been brought. up to date
testing period, even as the date
ber.
·
The
·
new Eckerd was built in a few months.
and made
Y2K
compliant, and if hypothetically changed to Janu-
· He further explained that most
Eckerdgoesupfast
a given system could
·
not be
aryl,
2000.
systems were not affected be-
brought up to da,te,
it
was re-
Duncan said she was im-
cause they were not operating
placed.
pressed by the test
on
a
dock or calendar system.
Due to the fact ttiat no one will
"Thetesting was
.
a huge sue-
In terms of staffing on campus
by KATEREHLY
Staff Writer
Two new buildings opened
last week, to the excitement of
Marist students - the new library
and the new Eckerd, across
Route
9.
The library, which has been the
cause of criticism for riot open-
ing earlier.has only operiedfor
studying, however. The official
opening for thelibrary wiH be
eai-Jy
·
next year. The new Eckerd,
on the other hand; did not exist
at the start of this semester.
Many students are questioning
why it took less than a semester
to build the Eckerd while it took
more than three semesters to
finish the library
>
·
"
·
:
·
·
,
·
·
'
Some students
·
said; they' felt
·
·
the Jibrnry should have been
completed on a faster schedule,
including Freshman Alisha
Fuller.
.
..
"I'm annoyed that the library
has taken so long to open and
there aren't anybooks in
it,"
she
said. "But at the ·same time; I'm
glad thatit actually opened in
time for finals."
know exactly what
will
happen
·
cess and
·
everything worked
New Year's Eve, Leary said all
until the date changes, this past
when the year changed to 2000,"
available resources
.
would be
summer Marist created a simu-
she said
,
availabJ.e in case of an emer-
lated campus-wide test to iden-
In
terms of student safety, Di-
gency:
tify the function of all systems.
rector of Safety and Security
"All requests for time off on
The systems that were tested
Joseph Leary said the campus
the holiday were denied, all
involved Admissions, Registrar,
will function nonnally
;
regularly scheduled officers will
.
FinancialAid,PayrollandHous-
"All(thefire and radio) sys-
be on duty," he said.
IRELAND: Some
students
cm11plained
abOui.Pi-Ogi-am
:,.conti,iued from
Pi
r
not a result of the program, but
rather from student's expecta-
computer lab hours and the
tions on what the program
program's cost.
would be like .
.
Brian Whalen, form.er director
"I spoke to a student who was
of the Marist Abroad Program
in Dublin last year and asked
who is now employed at
her why there was some discon-
Dickinson CoUege in Pennsyl-
tent (with the program).
·
The
vania declined comment when
feeling! got from her response
contact
.
e.d by email, directing all
was that it
·
was different, and
questions to
.
Mari st Abroad
this is '1/hat
.
we
_
try
.
t9
_
prepare
Program Coordinator Carol
students
,
for/
\
shejaid .
.
.
,
·
Toufali. ' '
'
,
..
· ..
·
' '
'
·.
'
ToufaiLs~idthatwhik'.COm:-
.
'
·.
· Toufali
s
_
aj~
tl'l_~
~~qb
,
((?J?~
\Ve.re.
.
' ',puter:l~~s.J~A
l
h~t
.
#i~si~~;<ip
.
irii
almost2~thotirs'.uTtneJJ\,S~
:
thaf
,
f
·
is
·
n6bhe cas
l
}i\i~t§'eis kfiere
:
·
lif~tyies are diff ~rent
'.
/
She hlso
.
·
·
sai~
·.
tha( compu
'
ter,:syst
.
ems
overseas are rioC as advanced
as the
,
U.S. so
the
systems ttash
more often~
.
. .
.
.
In
.
regard to
.
the
·
housing, ·
Toufali said that
.
not many
fami-
lies live in the center of the city,
so the students have to travel a
little.
·
:'The
·
homes
·
students
.
were
placed in were c~mfortable,
iafe
homes, mariy of which were
right
.
on the coas.t," she said .
.
"But these ll()mes
,
required
travel distance
·
on a bus or train
to geuothe cen
'
ter
'
o{the city."
As for
·
the
.
cost, Toufali said
that the Dllbl1n program ·isnot
any more expensive thaiianyof
the other abroad programs
Marist offers .
.
·
T,tie DubHn pro-
gram is priced at $10
,
000in the
.
fall
_
and $10,500 in tti~ spring,
and each of the other programs
range iri price.from $10,000 to
$11,000asemester
,
.
"Students
'
corilplete a 15 credit
seme~ter a~dJh.ey ge~ to go on
a
lot
'
of
excursions around
ille
country," Touf~J.i' said.
f,
''"<=:
,
•,·
.
:_:;
i
//
l
;,'.}.f?;i-1}
.
f>:-
..
i.
..
-~~
~~~
~~~
l
f
?ij~~!Nl
,
5_.
Overall, Toufali said students
who returned from Ireland rated
the experience as valuable. She
contributes the problems with
the program to the fact that it
was brand new and did not ineet
expectations the students
set:
.
"Whenever
.
you
_
set up spe~
cific expectations, you're in for
a shock, and
.
some of the stu-
dents had expectations that
were not met," she said. "This
was the first time the Dublin
program was offered so maybe
there were some misunderstand-
ings, but problems with the
group were not necessarily
problems with the program."
·
·.
·
.
•
:
,
,
Fishklll 914/897-9648
··:
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<CJ[][l<ClLlE
'
·
-·
DECEMBER 9, 1999
FeatU
'
res
PAGES
December:
.
'Tis the month for giving
by
KATIIERINESLAUfA
Staff Writer
Christians recognize this as one
of the most important days in
the church.
Christmas was first known as
the Feast of the Nativity and
'Tis the season once again.
was celebrated as early as 336
Menorahs
are
being lit, Y2K
AD. While the name and times
mania is picking up, stockings
have changed, the concept of
are hung by the chimney with
Christ's birth is still the key fac-
care, and Mariah Carey's
"The
tor to this holiday.
Christmas Song" can be heard
Hanukkah or Chanukah
blasting throughout the cam-
means dedication in Hebrew,
pus
.
and celebrates the rededication
It seems with all of the shop-
of the Temple of Jerusalem by
ping, decorations and music; the
Judas Meccabee in 165 BC after
holiday spirit is in the air. How-
the temple had been profaned
ever, with all of the
.
hype and
by the king of Syria
.
commotion with everything
This holiday lasts eight days
from tinsel to dreidels, we tend
and the traditional menorah eel-
to lose sight of the importance
ebrates the miracle of one cruse
and origiris of the holiday times.
of olive oil lasting through eight
··
December is the holiday
days of the original rededicat-
month and in this month, it is
ion of the temple
.
importantto recognize the eel-
.
Kwanzaa is an African Anieri-
ebrated holidays: Christmas,
.
can holiday in which family,
·
Hanukkah, and Kwanzaa. Each
community and culture are all
is celebrated by millions every
celebrated. It lasts seven days
yearandeach
.
recognizesimpor-
beginning December
26
and
tant aspects of culture.
ending of January 1st.
Christmas is a Christian holi-
·
Kwanzaa was originated in
day, which commemorates the
ancient African as the
"first-
birth of Jesus Christ. Celebrated
fruit" celebration. However, the
mainly on December 25, most
modenihistoryofKwanzaawas
.
.
Circle
photo/ Chri
s
Grogan
The
tree in front of Marist's chapel is a popular symbol of
Christmas that lights up the night.
.
developed in
,
1966 by Maulana
All of these holidays tie to-
Karenga, an African-American
gether this December to bring
scholar.
us the holiday spirit in the air.
Although the origins on reli-
gions of these holidays vary,
one important aspect
brings
these celebration times to-
gether: the spirit of giving.
Freshman Anne Keane said
the holiday giving spirit is a
good feeling.
"It gives me a warm and fuzzy
feeling inside," she said.
Even without all of the deco-
ration lights hanging around,
the campus is glowing. The giv-
ing trees placed
around
the
campus are practically empty.
Students everywhere are plan-
ning their shopping lists for fam-
ily and friends as well.
However, some students, like
Freshman Matt Rovery, are more
critical of the "spirit of giving."
"It is a month where people
are more
greedy
.
than ever and
people justify it with the 'holi-
day spirit'," he said.
Despite the critics, there is no
stopping the holiday season.
With Hanukkah currently in
progress and Christmas and
Kwanzaa
_
on the way, the holi-
day spirit is here. So in the spirit
of the season, here's wishing
everyone happy holidays!
Comm Arts Club
}~~~
-
~p~icating in
-
.
inany
differerit
Ways
.
Circle
pho1ol_Jcremy Smith
A sample of Professor Dan McCormack's exhibition of figurative photogra!11s in the gallery.
McCormac
-
k Exposed
by
ERIN BURKE
Staff Writer
Marist College Professor Dan
McCormack is now showing his
collection of figurative photo
0
grams in an art exhibit housed
in the basement floor of
Greystone Hall.
The exhibit, which began No-
vember 29 and will last until ·
December I 5, is one of
three
fac-
ulty art exhibitions shown ev-
ery year.
.
Photograms, which were origi-
nally created by Thomas
Wedgewood in the l790's, are
pictures made without the use
of a camera. They are simply a
series of exposures. Professor
McCormack said that he used a
special method in creating his
works.
"I developed and solarized
( the exposures) to create further
abstraction," he said.
McCormack's collection con-
tained three different sets of
photograms. The familial pho-
tograms were exposures of his
four children in which he had
them lie in different positions,
specifically focusing on the
torso, hips, and vertebra areas.
In the figurative and hips/ver-
tebrae photograms, he used spi-
.
nal vertebrae and skulls from
animals to enhance his piece.
Professor McCormack was an
adjunct faculty member for al-
most ten yea-:-s and has
since
been a full-time member for three
years. He teaches both photog-
raphy and digital media courses
at Marist College.
Circle
pho(ol Jeremy Smith
McCormack used a special method when creating his works.
by
JENNIFER
WEINTZ
Staff Writer
With the dozens and dozens
of clubs on Marist campus, it is
kind of hard to understand ex-
actly what each one does.
Most students are only aware
of the ones that pertain to their
major or are sports related. But
what about the ones that some
students don
'
t know about, yet
are actually quite interesting?
One of those clubs is The Com-
munic
a
tions Art Society (CAS)
"Doing this helps stu-
dents learn the art of
networking and helps
to get people to see
what they are."
Lindsey Carr
This semester the CAS had a
trip to the very famous televi
-
sions station MTV. Here, a
bunch of students had the op-
portunity to be on Total Request
Live (TRL). The trip took place
on both November 8th and No-
vember 15th. This was just one
of the many events that the club
sponsors.
Once a year, the Communica-
tions Art Society holds an
Alumni Panel. The event, which
is coordinated through Jeff
Schantz of alumni affairs, brings
alumni from the different com-
munication tracks (radio,
television, journalism, etc.)
·
come and speak to any inter-
ested students. The alumni
come to speak about their jobs
and give students any relevant
information to their particular
field
.
In addition, the club is co-
sponsoring with the Career Cen-
ter a Resume Workshop. This
workshop is opened to anyone
interested
and
helps people to
build
.
cover letters and create
resumes.
CAS is
also
looking to have
guest speakers. They hope to
have professionals in the differ-
ent tracks come in and inform
members what their job
is
like.
Recently, the club had Kathleen
Dwyer-McNulty come in and
speak about journalism.
President Lindsey Carr said
that the job skills
-
learned by
these professionals are very
-valuable.
"Doing this helps students
learn the art of networking and
helps to get people to see what
they are," she said.
The Communications Art So-
ciety is also interested in updat-
ing their Web Page. With the
help of Dr. Pennings, they are
hoping to create a history of the
club, including what they've
done, what they are presently
doing, and what they hope to
do in the future. They are hop-
ing to allow multimedia people
get some experience in the field
by doing it themselves.
According to the Vice Presi-
dent, Christine Romer, the club
is here to help the students.
"The Communications Art
Society is all for the entire com-
munications department. We
like to ask the members what
they want to do and make it hap-
pen," said Romer.
,
--
1r1A6e
·-
t~iJR-ccii3
-
DECEMBER 9, 1999
.
f'eatt.ltes
PAGE6
photo courtesy of Andn:a Dc\lan:o
Pefs~~Pets, Pets
-
and more Pets
Left to right; The first three are the Housing Hounds: Nielsen belongs to Kristine.
·
He is
a
yellow lab gearing up for winter. He is six and a retired seeing-eye dog.
Alice has a rottweilernamed Devon. He is nine years old and spoiled rotten. Laying in green pastures is Patti's dog Ella. She is a German shepherd/rottweiler mix soon
to be four. Next is Erica DeTraglia's dog
Zak. Hejs
anJ8
p<>µndJack Russel
·
terrier who loves to play with socks and has a fetish for rocks. His hobbies
_
include running
around the house, playing with his toys, barking.at anything that moves, and-sleeping
in
peopie's beds. Last is Andrea Dellarco's
'
golden retriever; Sonny.
He
is two
years old and is wearing "scrunchies" on his_ears: Thank you for all the pictures everyone! Does anyone out there have a cat?
·
j
,
1r1HnE
·
<CJ[]R.Cl[.JE
DECEMBER 9, 1999
;
:
features
"1~
.
DJ
tle
'NI~
.
.
.
.
.
.-
.
'
~
. .
'
~.
·;
,
http://www.marist.rivals.com
Any self~respecting Marist sports
fan
must check out this site on
http://
www.rivals.com,
_a
site the takes the top sports sites in the US and combines them into
one, user-friendly and complete sports community. Marist football an
·
d basketball ros-
.
ters
,
statistics, and schedules can be found here. The format is a cyber sports-page that
covers the latest in Marist sports highlights and fumbles.
·
·
·
.
.
·
·
If
you missed the football season, you can get a brief review here. To stay
current with the latest basketball progress, click
on
the
most
recent game.
You can chat with coaches and players, and even vote in the question of the
week. Thisweek's quest
_
ion: What can Mari st do to improve scoring? Cagers take note,
40%
answered better free throw percentage.
_
.
.
.
.
Test your knowledge of college football in the College Knowledge bowl against
your peers and win a prize.
·
Follow rivals links to Fox news and sports for national professional, college,
and even high
school
_
coverage.
-
.
-
Click on to the MAAChome page to see how Marist ranks among the other
·
teaIUs, and go to the Poughkeepsie Journal, along with all of the other Marist rival's
hometown papers.
.
.
.
.
.
.
:
_
·
·
_
..
_
'fp
:
keep '.1breast of cu
_
qent},1arist sports ~tandings,
·_
click on
_
to
hup:/1
lvww. inarist
:
rivals
:
coin,
the offic{at
web Site of the
·
armchair quarterback.
.
. ·
.
-
·
_
f
.
·
• .
.
•
•
.
•
.
.
•
t
Horoscopes
ARIES:Ifs
time to
your best to
explain
the
~r£.
VIRGO:
Trying to go
::
wakeupandsmellthe
facts and then move
,
f};;y
italonetodaywillonly
_
_ _
·
cpffee, Aries. The
,
.
.
on. B(careful when
.make you feeLworse,
:
.
if~
~ii:~l
~
l~i!li\
~lt~
~ilii~~iffe,i:;
•
•
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·
·
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Jhmg else
.c
movmg
111
·
·
·.
-
·
•·
-
:.
,
_
,
:
mgs
·
mto
·
acccH1nt.
It:
>
li~pp~nm a
·
gr()!JP set-
.
·'
.
--
~fow nio#on?Daysg~
.
.
.
J?}aybe
very
difficult
.
ting,Dori
'
t w9rry too
l,)y with each passing
·
not to take a 6~
,
siness
much about the out-
.•
-
hour. Others are unable
matter personally. To-
come;
·
instead,
·
focus
to comprehend how
night, be on the Jook-
on
the
interaction with
you can
.
move so
out for some~me you
others. The delight is
quickly, or why you
meet through a friend
•
as much in th
_
e process
would wantto. Take ad-
who may !lave a hidden_
as it is in the prod!-)ct.
vantage of this time
to
,......_ ....
agenda.
.
Tonight, be sure to' in-
accomplish as nmch
_
as
·
~~
CANCER:
It's time
.
to
elude the whole family
possible. If you finish
·
p.
shake
:
off the dust of
in a special announce-
your
assignments
·
your old ways, Cancer.
ment. The presence of
early, request new
The Capricorn Moon
loved ones enhances
ones:Keepinmindthat
brings new possibili~
•
'.
something new.
paying attention ~ode~
ties. Start something
.
jffl
LIBRA:
Sometimes we
..
.
tail isjus~
a.s
i01portant
-
·
·
. _
ne~, ~ither
_
apvork or
m
j1.1st have to let go, and
:
.
as meetirig
a
de~glinf
:
.
.in
'
your romantic)ife.
.
..
•
- today is going to be
-
~
TAURUS:Youcin'tget
Don't be
_
afraid.tolake
:
one of those days,
u.:
.
..
enough
.
stimulation to~
the initiative
.
wlien
:
it
bra. It's hard
to
hang
day, Taurus. The Cap-
comes to matters of the
on to anything today,
ricqrn Moon is having
heart.
A
positive atti-
whether it's your
an immense effect on
tude snatches triumph
thoughts, you,r pas-
.
your senses. Your
.
fromthejawsofpoten-
sessions or your pa-
mouthishungrierthan
tialdisaster.Ifyouthink
tience. Try not to
your stomach, but your
you can, you can.
worry too much
if
you
mindishungriestofall.
Don't let anyone tell
misplacesomethingof
Start out with a differ-
you anything different.
value -
this state is
ent restaurant, and see
Tonight, socialize with
only temporary.
If
you
where you
_
go from
an old friend over din-
make a scene, you
there. Everything you
·
ner. -
could draw the wrong
taste seems like you are
~
LEO:
Grab an irnagi-
kind ofattention. You'll
tasting it for the first
nary mop and bucket,
·
be
able to take care of
time. Smells and
Leo. It seems to b·e
it before anyone else
sounds come from ev-
Cleanup Time, and to-
finds out, anyway. At
ery direction
to
delight
day
·
you have been
home, hard work may
you. Who says it isn't
nominatedheadjanitor.
be necessary
_
in order
possible to experience
-
You might begin with
to fix a broken relation-
everything like it was
cleaning up your own
ship. Solve your prob-
the first time? Tonight,
act, and then move on
lems before they get
go out and visit
a11
of
to
helping others
_ _
...,bigger. -
the unusual places that
·
straighten out their
af-
.,t •
SCORPIO:
The Moon
your city has to offer.
fairs. Think of ways to
·~t~:
is in Capricorn and the
GEMINI:
It might
be
improve your relation-
;~ • baJance seems to come
impossible to protect
ships. Sometimes start-
back into your life, if
i
yourself from gossip
ing with a simple apol-
only for a brief, fleet-
and hearsay
.
today,
ogy is the first step.
ing moment. Expect a
Gemini. The wrong
Adapting a new health
day of harmony and
news hits the street at
regime could make you
forward motion in the
·
the wrong time
.
Do
feel years younger.
workplace. An idea of
yours is well-received
by a boss or business
partner. Tonight, make
plans to meet friends
.
at
:
a new restaurant or
.
: theater.
..
.
.
SAGI1TARIDS:
Your
light heart
·
and free
spirit are weighed
down by
material
concerns. Money and·
possessions take up
too much of your
brain capacity. Placing
importance on things
rather than people is a
big mistake. It may be
time to redefine your
values. Once you dis-
.
'
.
cover the root cif the
probJem,
·
it will be
simple
to come up
with a solution. Try to
remember that some-
times
·
less ineans
more
'.
°Tonight,
be
sure
to pay attention to
someone who is try-
ing to tell you some-
-
thing important.
CAPRICORN:
So
this is what it's like to
be a celebrity! You can
almost
see
the
photographer's flash-
bulbs and hear the
paparazzi cJamoring
for your attention.
It'sAll eyes are upon
you, and everyone is
eager for a piece of the
action. Play on other
people's greed and
make
it
w9rk
to your
advantage. Go ahead
and be selfish for a
day. You deserve the
attention, so live it up.
Pamper yourself by
doing something to-
tally expensive and
luxurious. Tonight
could
be
the icing on
the cake
if
you go af-
ter what you want.
PAGE 7
AQUARIUS:
It's hard
to look to the future
when you still have
some skeletons rat-
-
tling around in your
· ·
closet. The
ill
effects
of
a past mix-up
come
back to haunt you to-
day. Focus and orga-
nization may be espe-
cially hard. It might
be best to scrap a
project that isn't
working out. Surren-
der to
.
the inevitable,
deal with the mess
and come out swing
-
ing tomorrow. To-
night you may be
called upon to be the
host at an impromptu
gathering.
Put on
your best smile and
toast the occasion.
PISCES
:
Taking a
map along with you
everywhere you go
isn't a bad idea, Pi-
sces. Even normal
surroundings may
seem foreign today.
You may feel lost in a
crowd, which is a
problem
if
you are
try-
ing to meet someone.
Wear something that
armors
you against
feelings of vulnerabil-
ity.
Don't be afraid to
ask for directions
from a cute stranger.
Others are as happy
to help you as you are
to help them
.
At
work, a coworker may
come
to
you for ad-
vice on a personal
problem that you feel
uncomfortable dis-
cussing. It might be
in your best interest
to express your feel-
ings in order to
avoid funher embar-
rassment.
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OR
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its worth ahundred pretty, empty Rotundas.
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Perhaps Derrick
A
Jones
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peered O'{er
"A
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Circle,
Issue#?, Nov. I I} too qll.ick
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As a Prn~Life11nd Republican
party;
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Jones symbolizes politics at its best by maµipµlating my words and igrioraritly
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Jane Street
rebuffing m~
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As a skeptic of Mr. Jones'strue amb
_
itions in life I vow nevefto depait
fromthemiddleclasscitize11rywhe_reiwasbom .
.
UnfortunatelyforDerrick
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say the same. Jappreciate life and
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doesn'twhine wh
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againhe'dbelivinginthesamehypocrisythathedoesnow. Withoutthemiddle
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2000.'**
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class the rich are nothing and by forgetting the middle class America is doomed
.
Maybe this time Derrick you can answer me by telling me what you think about
the . - - - - - - - - - - - - - • - - - - - - - - - - - - • - -
rising costs of tuition and how you
'
re going
io
pay for your children's tuition,
otherwise don't tell me what I kn<>w about Marist's beaut
i
ful campus. Peace.
Benjamin ].Jrenkert
Sophomore
Words of Wisdom·
.
"No one can m
_
ake you feel
inferior without your consent."
--Eleanor Roosevelt
Patrick Whittle
Editor-in-chief
1[1]H[]E .
<Gl[]~<ClLlE
Jill
Gioco~do
·
. Managing EditQr
.
Chris Grogan
·
N~sEditor
l{atrin~
Fuchsenberg~r
'
'
.
.
Features &litqr
•
-
·
-
Jeff Dahncke
·
~pprts Editor
.
.
·
Michael Bagnato
Opinion Editor
Nik Bonopartis
-
A &£Editor
..'
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Business Managers
.
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-<:i.M:QdeleOarke,Facu/iyAd~isor
The Circle
is thestudent newspaperofMarist College, Poughkeepsi~, NY
:
Issue
are published every Thursday .
.
We welcome letters to the editor, club
_
announce-
ments and story ideas
.
We cannot publish unsig11ed letters to the editor. The
Circle
staff can be reached at
575-3000 x2429
or by email at HZAL.
·
You can
visit ~s on the web at http://www. academ
i
c.marist
.
edu/circle.
·
·
·
DECEMBER 9, 1999
PAGE9
The views expressed ori these ·pagesare not
necessarily
those of
The Circle
R.a
~
ciSt?
Just call me
''Johnny''
call ine then-word twice_." (Cape
.
-·
sori they bum crosses is to
"ii~
aside, here is wh~t transpired:
Verde is the westem-mostpoint luminate the true path of Jesus."
"Jojo" and "Horace" were sit-
.
by
PATRICK
WlilTILE
of continental Africa.)
B_ring that little tidbit up at the
ting in a local bar chatting it up.
They responded, showing next party you go to and you
They noticed that there was a
\Vhat you
.
are abouttoread is
some sense of weak wit, "N-
will be the center of attention
large ratio of African-Americans
painfully-true. The names have
·
word, n-word. Does that make
·
for sure.
to white breads at this particu-
not been c~ariged to avoid pro-
_
you happy?''
Actually, what !take from this
lar bar on this particular
tecting the guilty.
,_
·
.
..
·
.
·
In
.
actuality,-
,
they spelled out is thatthere is really no conceiv--
evening.
Recently while doing
a:
re-
:
1he
·
worci
T
incorrectly no less
'
_
able \Vay
·
to spread hate speech
"We can't use then-word in
search paper I began browsing
-
·
(they only used one "g"). Pretty
.
without sounding like an igno-
here anymore, they' II hear us
through some incendiary mate-
·
sad considering that it is prob-
rant, uninfonned, infantile mo-
and get mad," Jojo said.
rial on the web. Imanagedto
ably fairly common in theirver-
ron. The fact that things like
"We need a code word.
stumble across the e-mail ad-
nacular. I wrote them back and this pass as archaic "values" in
What's a silly name?" Horace
dress of the
Ku
Klux Klan while
saidiiwould make me happierif any defined organization should
proposed.
_
doing so, and I chose to take
they
··
actually spelled it right,
tell us so_mething about the
"How about... Johnny!" Jojo
this
.
opportunity to tell. them
noting that their ignorance may people involved in it. Moreover,
.
concluded.
what they have no doubt al-
be the result of an educational
·
their inanity should motivate us
To this day, a large number of
ready been told a million times.
deficiency as well as
a
moral to listen to ourselves when we
Mari
st students still refer to
However, since I have not been
one. They obliged, this time speak.
African -
Americans
as
oneofthemillioninoreinformed
·
granting me two "g's."
_
.
·
_
The use
:
of hate
:
speech is a
_
Americans
'
who have told them
What do I take from allthis? good wa{to sound like an inar-
i===~
they are
:
hat
·
e
:
pr.e
·
a~hing
·
Perhaps that Southemers
·
suf
:
tfculate Neanderthal in conver~
rednecks,
I
ch6se
·
to tell them
.
fer from involuntary spelling
-
sation, and if you
·
open your
anyway.
.
Our unabridged
·
dia-
·
and grammatical errors?
.
Or that ears you will hear quite a lot of
·
logue is a little.too course to be
maybe this is justthe work of a
'
it around the Marist
·
campus.
printed without making some of poor typist, who was having
.
Unfortunately, it is easy to be-
our more sensitive readers
problems seeing the keys come desensitized to it and
.
blush, but whatfollows will give
through his white hood? Or
_
adopt ifinto your own vocabu~
you a pretty good idea.
maybe I just chalked
it
all up to
lary
,
A perfect (and somewha~
I initiated the correspondence,
the fact that the Klan had more humorous
Y
example arose two
saying, "I am white, of Irish,
important things to .do that
·
years ago among a group of
English and French decent, but
-
night than write me an intelligent Marist students whose names I
I am related by marriage to Cape
response, like burning
•
crosses
•·
.
will change to protect the oth-
.
Verdeans and I am proud of that
and hanging confederate flags.
· ·
erwise innocent. Specific inac-
.
So if you call them then-word,_
Here's a KKK fun fact: the rea-
·
curacies in their conversation
"Johnny's." Is this akin to the
actions of the white-hooded
Southern folk I mentioned ear-
lier? Not really. Is it a result of
fear, manifested through preju-
dice? Probably, if you want to
get technical about things. The
bottom line is, hate speech has
seen its day, and as supposedly
intelligent college
students,
we
should pay it no degree of re-
spect by continuing to allow it
to pollute our phraseology.
If you agree, do the world a
service by considering what you
have just read.
If
you disagree,
you can just call this venerator
of his family's heritage
"Johnny."
.
......
.,
'
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,
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•
,
,
DECEMBER 9, 1999
·
--
·
·
The
'
view·s expressed
on
these
pages
are
riofnecessarily those of
The Circle
.
..
Polit~callJn~yev~itifi
.
n~tlJ~~acJ.e.s
\
.
.
...
.
.
.
.
WTO is to have free trade
nouncing Mrs. Arafat for mak-
stands today. The Republican
All about buses
by
DERRICK A.JONES
II
Political Columnist
·
among its /Jiember
\
counttjes.
ing comments that supposedly
Party
has
overlooked
-
·
This in turnwouldlowerifiiot weredamagingtothepeacepro-
Buchanan; They have over-
byBENJAMINJ.BRENKERT
eliminate
.
tanffs;
arid do away
cess between the Israelis and
looked a man who has dedi-
When I toured Marist's beau-
with trade bamers. The tariffs.
.
the Palestinians. I be)ieve that
cated the majority of his
life to
tiful campus,
I was told that pub-
protect
Am~rican
jobs
_
and trade
·
den o
u
Ii
c i ng the s ta tern en ts
the party, overlooked a man who
-
Jic transportation takes students
barriers
.
uphold-ind maini!}ii:t
would
.
have oisturbed and
-
fur-
embodies virtue and principle,
to the
'
Galleria Mall daily and that
environmentalandhumanrights · ther agitated the already un-
overlooked
a
man who could
many Marist students call the
policy. PresidentClinton wants
.
stable peace process.
.
bring back stable values and
GaUeria theirworkplace
,
,
Today,
.
the l.J.S. deeply involved in the
.
·
.
_
mores to American society.
_
I call that person
a
liar and I ask
. WTO if not afthe forefront. I
JOHN McCAIN: B
.
Buchanan has gained national
that person what is their defini-
am s~re the farme~
-
~ steel and
Johri McCain is gaining inuch
exposure very quickly, some-
tion of public transportation.
textile industry workers of needed momentum. Notjustin
thing third party candidates
Marist needs revamped public
America are thanking Mr.
terms ofraising moneyibutalso
have a hard time doing.
transportation
and
·
_
fast.
Clinton for seHing them out.
in terms ofnational recognition.
Buchanan's goal is to give
In order to travel the Loop
They are only the backbone of He did well in a debate
_
among
America back to the voters, to
route one almost has to travel
As the semester draws to a
America, only the people who
the candidates for the Republi-
give America back its respect.
into Poughkeepsie to find the
close, it is only fitting to grade
.
built this great nation. I am also
can nomiriiition of
-
President.
.
correct bus, otherwise the other
someourmostnoteworthyand sure the people of the third
Hismessageofhonestyandin-
GEORGEW.BUSH:B+
routes would take
·
more than
notorious politicians. There-
_
world are thanking Mr. Clinton
tegrity
.
seems to reso11ate \Vith
George Bush gets points for
twenty minutesjust to arrive at
fore, I, Professor Jones, will as-
.
for sending ~hem American
the voters
_
cif,l\meric~:
_
}1<::C:ain
not losing points. He went into
the Galleria MalL Plus, the Loop
sess and grade the leader and jobs.
·
·
·:,,.
·· .
.
hasbeenanhnderqogallQfhis
detailabouthispositiononcer-
--
scheduleissoinconsistentthat
potential leaders of America.
.
·
-· -.
•
-
.,
~
:
life. Forµi"nat~lffor_liirij
/
AI_neri-
· •
tain issues on NBC;s Meet the
I'd
h
·
t
--
-
h
WILLIAM CLINTON: F
.
.
'
·
I:IILLARv
CLlNTON:
C
cans Iove
·
ai{tinclerdog
{
He\vas
'.
Press:
.
He
also did not lose any
.
dep::r; ~: ;:t::;st~nt~:ve~
..
Hillary
Cliritori
has improved
one as
·
.f
POW
~
i#-vjehiam,
and
momentum
.
when he appeared
to work
.
would most likely be
President Clinton has not in
.
from her political Jimbo in recent
he is one as a candidate for the
.
on a debate among candidates
fired within the first
few
weeks
news a lot this semester, but has
days. Even going as far as to
'
Republican nomination of for
for the Republican nomination
of employment. The never-
reasserted himself within in the
say she intends to run for
-
-
the
President of the United States.
for President. Instead of play-
present Loop Bus does not op~
last two weeks
.
The World United States Senate Seat rep-
McCain beat the communists in
ing
it
safe and being on the de-
erate on Sunday. This is a dis-
TradeOrganization'sconference
resenting New York. She has
Vietnam by not dying: He will
fensive, he was actually on the
grace to public transportation.
in Seattle went up in flames, al-
now crossed the line from First
try to use the same strategy
-
·
offensive, wounding candidate
In reality public transportation
most literally.
_
Tempers were ig-
Lady to politician. She had some
against George W. Bush.
Steve Forbes on the issue of accommodates public need.
· nited 'not
·
only'
'
behfrid close trouble in recent weeks though.
social security. Bush started as
Well correct me ifl am wrong,
doors, but outside of them as
She was pressured into making
PATRICKBUCHANAN: B
the front runner for the United
but there is a real need for trans-
well. The streets of Seattle were
the decision by fellow Demo-
Patrick Buchanan is running
States Presidency and so far has
._
portation from Marist to the
bombarded by 55,000 people,
crats. Shewastoldeitherrunor for President the hard way,
not relinquished his position.
protesting the WTO. They get out. Hillary also was
through the Reform Party. The
Galleria and back. And I am not
·
·
·
-
"
·
R
bl"
-
th R
. · --
-·--
·
-
· -
.
,
.
,
_
·
.
.
.
.
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talkingabouttaxiswhomcharge
ranged form labor organizations,
unwarran~edly attacked
m_
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The
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Marcel
Peter's S
members.
We weti
make
Go
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countries.
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New
Jer1ey!
,Massac~~setts,
West Virginia, Loutsuma,
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For
more ieformation
please
conti
Bro.John
cherry
F.M.S.
21-28
35 Street
Astoria,
NY,-
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i105
(718) 204--0506
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atter experience
far
m9r~ ac~i-
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dents every year.
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women are
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meri; In fact, in many classes in
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strong
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woman who has
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which
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take p~ :women vol- .
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Jong Hfe filed with tremeridous
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far mor~ than men do.
It
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accomplishITI~nts .
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note th
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amazing r<>le ll).Odel for all iridi-
worne1.(.s s~dies minoi:s
:
i:m this
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n9tjust
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w9men, be-
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wh9 are ¢omposeden:
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paqse she has ripeat~dly stood
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tirely
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talents n9t,pnly to help
isri:t
.
ancl how important it
_
is to
herself, but also to help em-
deal with the iss
·
ues facing power millions ofother women
women today and to stand up
in the world .
.
While sitting in
for yourself and youi:
-
gender.
the
·
audience listening to Ms.
While far too many people are
Steinem speak, I felt empowered
complacent today, not everyone
merely by hearing her words and
has
_
to
be .
.
,
It is important to re-
realizing tha~ she accomplished
mernre,r that as hard
_
as it is to
so much for women. She has
stand ~p for yourself and oth-
helped women realize their
po-
ers, it is even harder not to stand
tential and has given
-
them the
up for youcyelf and others. As-
courage to enter the public
serting yourself does not have sphere and change society. I
to
be
a radical endeavor. It can
realired
that
any
one of us i~ able
be
as easy
_
as telling someone
to make a difference if we take
·
who utters the word "faggot"
the blinders off and recognize
to please refrain from using that
the inequalities in the
-
world.
language, and that the pr9per We can ALL become women
word is '.'homosexual." It can
who take no s**L
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1rlH[]E Cl[]~(C]L]E
DECEM~~R,·9, 1999 -
An.
·
r&8Jt1rtainment
PAGE
11
Metallica
·
gets classical on
S&M
by
EDWILLMM.Sfil
paired up with Kamen and his
the beginning, but he didn't
StaffWriter
orchestra, you can't help but
have to because the almost two
Metallica
fans everywhere
were treated to an early Christ-
mas present as · the best album
of the year was released on No-
vember 23; After paying hom-
age' to their early day music and
inspirations in
Garage Inc.
last
year,
Metallica
expanded their
horizons yet again and teamed
up with Michael Kamen and the
San Francisco Orchestra to pro-
duce
S&M. ·
This CD is actually
a
record-
ing of their critically acclaimed
April
21
concert at Berkeley
Community Theatre in Berkeley,
California: Upon first hearing
. that this masterful metal band
.
.
. .
.
.
and a
100
piece classical orches-
tra would be pairing up fora
21
song concert consisting of clas-
sic
Metallica
tracks, one may
chuckle to themselves and think,
"How on earth will they pull that
one off?" It sounds almost im-
possible, but you have to listen
to it to believe it.
·
Though practically every
song sounds amazing, there are
some that stick. out more than
. others.
Until
it
Sleeps
is an ee-
rie song as itis, but ~hen it is
have a chill run down your spine
minute instrumental piece that
rightfromthe.beginning. Atthe
begins the song would have
very start of the song we are
been enough. The orchestra and
treated by a momentary playing
Metallica
mesh together better
of a mystical harp which sets the
in this song than any other by
tone for the rest of the song.
far. They seem to be playing as
James Hetfield, the lead singer
one cohesive unit, but at the
of
Metallica,
soon begins to
same time they seem to be try-
~ar into the piece with his emo- ·
ing to outdo each other. Every
tional vocals;and the rest of the
timeMetallica
seems to step up
band begins to play• with reek- ·
their play a notch, the orchestra
less abandon as well, ·but the
not only matches that intensity
most impressive thing is how the
but raises it another level as well.
orchestra keeps up whh the
This competition between the
same pace. The orchestra's vio-
two results in one of the most
lins . were added and another
powerful songs ever released on
whole dimension to the song
a CD. The crowd also adds to
was created.
the magnificence of this song
Perhaps the most impressive
as they show their enthusiasm
feat of the albu_m is how the or-
during the chorus parts scream-
chestra was able to keep up with
ing, "For whom the bell tolls!"
the band on the fast paced
Fuel
This compilation also provides
track. Not only is it a fast paced
an extra bonus as
Metallica
in-
song, but one wou)d think that
Do I have something in my teeth?
eluded two new original songs.
it's almost too heavy a song to
fastpace, but the orchestra was
Bell Tolls.
This classic
NoLeafCloverandHumanwere
be paired up with the orchestra.
brought in and it gave it
a
strong
Metallica
song was originally
made especially for this occa-
But that couldn't be further from
sense of drama. The orchestra
released on their sophomore ef-
sion, and they came out phc-
the truth as the orchestratumed
duels back and forth with fort,
Ride The Lightning.
As
nomenally.
Human
seems remi-
F_ue/
into another whole song.
Metallica
to the very end in a
powerful as it sounded in its
niscent of
Metallica's
newer
It made me feel like I was in the
musical climax that would put a
original
form,
Metallica
could
work from the
Load
and
Re-Load
middleofacarchase in a movie.
smile on any fan's face.
have never imagined just how
albums as itis powerful, yet not
The strong lyrics of Hetfield and
If there was one song that was
powerful it could sound with the
as heavy as some of their earlier
the heavy metal play of the rest
the shows topper, though, it help of 100 orchestra friends.
. ..
please see
METALLICA,pg.
of the band gave the song the
would have to be
For Whom the
Hetfield pumps up the crowd in
J 2
J!Xst~.als
The Pilfers
show?
by
DOUGLASP. GUARINO
Assistant Managing Editor
Can an unsigned band from
the Hudson Valley induce a
crowd to jump higher, dance
harder, and scream louder than
nationally recognized Mojo re-
cording artists
Pilfers?
Pe,fect Thyroid
has awnsered
that question with an' affirma-
tive ''yes.';
This past Saturday night, a
crowded Chance Theater. was
host to what was pr<:>bably the
best show that Poughkeepsie
has· seen this fall.
Pe,fect Thyroid
kicked off the
celebration with an intense, fast
paced set that didn't give the
crowd much of a chance to stop
skanking and catch their breath.
The set consisted mostly of
PTs new, harder-edged mate-
rial, including yet to
be
recorded
songs; "Gypsy," "Asylum,"
"RUWinning?" and "Mutt,"
though some older fan favorites
from the band's last two CD re-
leases, such as "Blah Blah
Blah," "Dig Me," and "Pear-a-
noya/' were also featured.
Though the element of hard rock
has become increasingly more
predominant
in
Perfect
Thyroid's more recent cre-
ations, the influence of funk,
ska, and jazz are still quite evi-
dent. The occupants of the
Chance dance floor couldn't
remain in awe of guitarist Joe
Brooks' extended solo's fortoo
long, as the unignorable funky
rhythms that bassist Jon Stern
and drummer ChrisSnykus laid
down kept the crowd jumping,
perhaps ~ng cues from the ac-
robatic stage antics of "Skunk"
Hanson (lead vocals, trumpet).
All in all, the aforementioned
characteristics of PT's perfor-
Circle
photo/Doug Guarino
Perfect Thyroid's "Skunk "at The Chance Saturday.
mance amounted to
a
high-en-
asked if I wanted to start some-
ergy frenzy that was equal, ifnot thing
new
with
him."
greater than_ the mayhem pro-
The Pilfers sound, exceeds the
duced by the headlining Pilfers.
traditional limitations of the ska
It is, however, necessary to
genre, adding the Nick Bacon's
. give credit where credit is due.
metal guitar sound, and the
I wouldn't want a bunch of sometimes reggae, sometimes
crazed Pilfers fans to jump me jazzy, bass licks of Anna Milat-
on my way· out of the WMCR Meyer, a combination that kept
studio late one Sunday evening.
the crowd seduced all night.
For the
Pilfers
put on an amaz-
Both Ranx and Nobile put on
ing show, much betterin fact
relentless displays of energy
then the "legendary"
Toasters
throughout the
Pilfers
set, so
did in August at the same venue
much in fact that Chance secu-
(a show at which
Pe,fect Thy-
rity guards had to clear extra
roid
also performed). Perhaps
space on the front of the stage
lead vocalist Coolie Ranx got the
that is normally occupied by the
last laugh when he left the
Toast-
monitors. Like the members of
ers
in 1997 to form the
Pilfers.
Pe,fect Thyroid
Ranx 's intimate
"Everyone thought I'd gone
interaction with the crowd is to
completely mad," said Ranx.
be commended.
"But, being a partof[thePilfers)
In addition to a common ap-
has reawakened my love for per-
preciation for eclectic music,
forming and making music."
both bands displayed support
Vinny Nobile (trombone/vo-
of each other. On numerous oc-
cals) has expressed similar feel-
casions during
PTs set, Snykus
ings regarding his departure chanted "Are you ready for the
from
Bim Skala Rim.
Pilfers," while Ranx offered "re-
"I was starting to feel boxed
spect for Skunk-man Hanson"
in by the musical limitations of at the close of the show.
my situation and had long since
Unfortunate souls who missed
stopped enjoying myself as a
this shindig can catch
Perfect
perfonner," said Nobile. "I was
Thyroid's
"Viva Diversity 2000"
more than ready when [Ranx]
show at The Chance Jan. 15.
;
.
f
i
i
l
l
f
i
l
L.
1PJHOE
_
,
.
JCJ[l~<G-JLJB
DECEMBER 9, 1999
Arts&
:
Bllllldainm•t
.
·
.
.
.
.
.
.
_
·
.
.
...
.
.
.
..
.
•
. .
' ·
.
•
.
.
,
•.
·
.
.
.
.
-
.
.
.
:
PAGE
.
12
ALLYMcBEALISSHOWING
IMPROVEMENn
--
~n
:
·
.
w
·
·
~i'rli
/
·
·
A,\ikt
·
11'h~~~~en
Ally
McBeal
is regularly deliv-
ering its highest ratings to date
·
,
·
despite some tough competition
in its Monday night at 9
"The Fox that Rocks" may be
timeslot.
catchy slogan for 88. l-WMCR,
Ally
McBeal
debuted on FOX
the Marist College radio station,
in
I
997, and was
an
instant rat-
but it probably does not apply
ings success. The title charac-
to the current state of affairs
ter (Calista Flockhart) works at
over
at
the FOX television net-
a Boston
.
Jaw
firm,
which is
work. FOX has had a fairly tough
headed by Richard Fish (Greg
time of it this year. Every new
Germann). Coiricidentally, one
show it introduced has either
of the attomey
_
s at the firm is
struggled in the ratings (Time of Ally's former boyfriend, Billy
Your Life, Action)
or been can-
Thomas (Gil Bellows). Billy's
celled outright (Ryan Cau(field:
wife,
.
Georgia
:
{Courtney
Year One, Harsh Realm).
The
Thome-Smith) als6Works at the
network's attempt to counter-
firm. The secretary:at the
firm
is
program against NBC's Thurs-:
.
Elaine Vassal (Jane Krakowski).
·
day night "Must-See" slate of Ally's roommate is Renee
comedies was, in a word, disas-
Radick (Lisa Nicole Carson) .
trous,butit hashadafewbright
Joinirig the dst mid-way
spots. That 70s Show is show-
.
through the first season was
ing incredible potential. Also
Peter MacNicol, as attorney
comforting to FOX executives is
John Cage. At the start of the
the fact that the comedy-drama
show's second season (1998-
9!)), two ne~ people joined
.
the
·
•
shared by a lof of other people,
ing the most cartoonish charac-
cast: Lucy
Liu,
as qng Woo,
.
since this past September Ally
·
. .
tefon the
·;
show
i
hist
_
seas
,
on; is
and Portia de Rossi as attorney
-McBeal
W()n the. prestigiot1s
·
,
be!,~g hand~t!~
'
".Vi~ a Sllrprising
NeHe P<>rter. Th_e
n
.
e'Y
acldiµol?S
,
,
.
-
~
_
11.1fay
.
a~ard for Be~t
,
So!Aedy
_
·}lffi9~!1;1$(
f~mi>
,
~~
c
~
:
i?~):>.ne of
to
.
the cast did n9th,ingto deter
•
.
•·
Seii~~J~otigh, the s~ow.is"te~h-
.
.
-,
~e
,
0
b~~f
}:
~•~~s
,;
.~
~~:mt
-,
t~~
·
cur-
Ally
McBeal's
ratings successi
·
nicallf
:
stilCa come~y
-
~drarifa),.
·
.
·
r~nt:
ep1so
_
des
,'.
ofAlly
:
ft.1cBeal,
and the show coritinu~cfits sta-
.
'
Aiso:this: September, laiscov-: - though,
·
has, :Strangely
_
enough,
tus as one of FOX's biggest
-
ered that, in the houselani Hv-
beerithedecrease
_
ofscreentime
hits. It was so successful that,
ing in this year, Ally
McBeal
is
for the show's title cha~acter.
in 1999, FOX added a show
a Monday-night staple (hereon
With a few excepti<>ns (such as
called Ally to
its
Tuesday night
campus;it is seen Monday
therecent episode iJJ;volving
lineup. InAlly,oldepisode~(and
·
nights at 9 PM on Channel 5). I
Ally_ and her parents), the
some unused fooiage)of the
tried avoiding the show the first
storylines that focus
·
on Ally
hour-long Ally
McBeal
are re-
few weeks of the new season,
·
have
·
been relentlessly goofy,
cycled and· compressed down
but
I
finally gave in around late
and infact provide grov;:ing evi-
into a half-hour sitcom-typ~
October and decided to give ita
-
dencethat Ally is just not a par-
show. In sryort,
Ally
is nothing
try
again. I told myself, "Qkay,
ticularl}' likable character. Per.,.
but a cheapened repeat
_
of the
I'll
watch it, but
I'll
probably hate
haps if her stories were changed
original series.
myself in the morning." Well,
a little, Ally would no longer be
In late 1997,
I
began watching
·
here's the news.lwatched it, but
among the weaker elements of
Ally
McBeal.
It was a nice little
I didn't hate myself in the mom-
her own show.
.
_
show, and
I
watched it when I
ing.
Though Ally McBeal is im-
would have the time. By the time
The stpries on Ally
McBeal
are
proving,it still has a ways to go.
the fall of 1998rnlled around, I
·
no longer as goofy as they were
.
.
There are still some moments of
had grown fairly tired ofthe
during the 1998-99 season. Billy
the show which remaiµ a little
show, as the oddball qualities
is currently going through sotne
too goofy. Ally Mc:I3ealis qest
of it were beginning
to
grate on
.
semblance of a mid-life crisis
when it is
.
a pure comed.fdrama.
me.Neverthele~s,Jt:riecl\vatch-:
.
(even though
:
he's
still
fairly
.
Onecan
;
hopetheshowcanstay
ing some ~pisd~e~;Jr,on1
.
the
.
.
·
young),
ariq
:
creator J)~vid
·
·
E.
on
it,s
c~
,
rrent tr~ck
;
~ti
.
ti
ge~
the
1998
-:
99 se~son.,
.
a11<i disc:ov-:
.
Kelley (who writes every
epi-
_-
feeling
_
that
:
some
'.
old Ally
.
ered that !just could
no
longer
sode, just as he does with The
.
McBeal goofin~ss may be just
.
sitthroughafull episode. It had
Practice)
has handled the sub~
around the comer. Lhope I'm
ju
•
st-gotten too goofy. The char-
·
feet
surprisingly welL The result
wrong, but if tm right, at least
acters were becoming cartoons,
is that Billy's crisis, and his de-
we can all watch The Practice,
and the snow was not very en-
teriorating marriage with Geor-
which, despite Ally McBeal's
joyable. Now, that is just my
gia, is quite effective. Also, John
recent renaissance, remains
opinion. Obviously, it was not
c_age, who was quickly becom-
David E. Kelley's best work.
KNUD1SEN:
Road Trip
songs, they kept a rapid fire
45
as songs from their last two al-
Attonito, the lead vocalist,
7l
4"
~,_ff:,,...
.
, .
· .
••
minute long set, stopping only
bums, Thicker Than Water and
seemed completely uninterested
1
J'
. J _ ~
for a couple seconds to change
F7TW.
During their set they
in both the show and the crowd,
.
... continued from page
11
instruments or take
a
quick
called up a
.
pair of their old
going through the motions in a
s
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.
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hurry to get out. lJnless SOil)
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at ~n.H2Qshow a
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l
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six~hoiit.ride h6inehvas.·~ work, while
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majority of songs they played
booked on theECFUtour since
the same set.as the one they've
rather uneventful exceptfor the
_
starts out sounding smooth and
during their set were off of their
they're not on Epitaph, to the
.
played at the last two shows
·
fog and nagging ~eed forsleep
easy like a
Fade
to Black
from
last album, The Kids Still Have
best of my knowledge, but it was
that I saw.
that <::ciuld have sent us hurdling
Ride the Lightning,
but then the
·
A lot To Say,
with a few new and
a definite plus regardless.
The Bouncing Souls
were. the
offthe road atany minute
,
Once
vocal~ take oyer and bring the
old songs mixed in between.
H20
.
came up next, making
la
.
st band of the ilight and
.
un-
again;] must re~~mphasize
my
:
_
.·
·
power of~ song like King Noth~
Following was the sty lings of that night yet another in the
fortunately they let me down.
distaste
fo,r
Jersey
.
thanks
ing
from
Load.
In
the middle,
street punk classics, The Casu-
·
long series of
shows
I have seen
Having seen them twice befo.re,
largely to the oversize<fgas sta-
though, Hetfield slows down
alties,
sporting their oversized
them play. They played thtold
I was accustomed
fo
the norinal
tion attendant that was worth-
.
and sounds
.
more like he did
mohawks and liberty spikes.
favorites such as Family Tr:ee,
energy of their set, which was
less tn supporting our need for
during
'
Cure
fro
_
m the Load al-
With
.
few
··
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.
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that C0il!es
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.
resembling
a flaw would be the song selec-
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from_tlj~tif\\f~ nearly impos-
sible foconie
_
up \\'.ith just 21.
M_etallica
ahd Micha.el Kamen
had· gone
·
throu
·
gh the
·
entire
catalogue of songs and chose
the 21 they
felt
would
.
be best
for this type of concert. After
such a great end result, its hard
to criticize· the selection of
songs, but one has to w9nder
why such classic" songs that
· seem a perfect fit for orchestral
a~mpaniment like Unforgiven,
Unforgiven//, (Welcome Home)
Sanitarium, Fight Fire With
Fire,
The
Four Horsemen,
and
Fade to
Black
were not chosen.
Despite that small imperfec-
tion, this double CD flows more
quickly than a normal length al-
bum and invokes more emotion
from the listener than most CDs
of recent history. Some may ar-
gue that
Metallica
is getting
soft teaming up with an orches-
tra,
but
if
they listen to this com-
pilation they will be tot~lly
blown away and realize that even
an orchestra can "rock" if they
want to.
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DECEMBER 9; 1999
.
·.
·
.
. .
Arts&E/Jtlll!tainm•t
.-
(Ohly
seniors
:
canlxfAdmissions
'Interns,
·
and
th~Jnternsbip
is
for the fall semester of
the
senior
year.)
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<ci1i<c1t1s
DECEMBER 9, 1999
SpQ~s
PAGE.14
Red
Foxes hitv~i~ffollgishowirig_at Role~Invitational
by
CLAYTON NORRIS
. .
.
tati~ri): ~:rad,! j~{expecting .
,:fo
the conference, he Iosta se~--
.
'
'
Staff Writer
· ·
it,"·' he said::
~•1
was' happy
be.: .
saw battle. to the, eight_ seed
in. .
. cause of the· prestige
'that
goes: . the region, Yale's Greg Royce,.
The men's tennis team: com-· along with being selected and
6-2,2-6,6-4.
·
pleted an outstanding fall sea-
the chance:to compete against
·
"If
Roberto played J;tim
son with an exclamation point
a higherlevefof competition." . (Royce) in a best threeout of
at the Rolex Invitational Tour-
· Scheidt defeateQ Farleigh
five he· would. have had· him,"
nan1ent at Princeton last month.
Dickinson's numoer one singles · · Smith said.
. .
Marist sports history was
player, Alvaro Echeverry, in
Suddenly, Marist's chances of
made as the Red Foxes com-
straight sets, 6-4, 6-4 on day one
advancing to day three of the
peted successfully for the first
of the Rolex, but was ousted
Rolex's rested in the webbing of·
time at the annual Division
I
from the tournament the next
Ralph VanDerPlasse's tennis
tournament. In all, 65 schools • day by Brown's Nick Malorie,
racket. Smith would agree that
from Maine to Virginia com~
6-0;6-l.
·
VanDerPlasse is not a bad spot
peted in singles and doubles
A shoulder injury hampered
to place the team's fate..
.
play.
Scheldt's play against Malone,
"After watching Ralph warm
Marist made a strong state-
and if it wasn't for Scheldt's
up,Ifeltthathewasfickingwith
ment long before stepping on
competitiveness; Marist coach
the fine precision ,of a Rolex
the courts, as its three player
Tim Smith would have tried to
watch," Smi£4 said.
representatives exceeded every
convince him to default.
Sure_ enough, VanDerPlasse
school except Penn State, Navy,
"(Eric) toughed it out even
came throt1gh with a convinc-
Virginia Tech and the talented
more than he should have,"
ingwinoverEric~obotkaofthe -
Ivy League schools.
Smith said.
_ __ _
_
University of Pennsylvania; the
Between the lines, it was much
Between the
!WO
of them,
fourteenth ranked_ player'in the
of the same story as the trio of VanDerPiasse.and Maher won
region.
_
.
... .
..
Ralph VanDerPlasse, Roberto
three matches 9n the first clay
The
magic ended. there as
Maher and Eric Scheidt won five
of the tournament._ With'an eight
VanDerPlasse · lost to. the num~
matches in the competitive tour-
o'clock in the m6rnJng start time, . ber_:eleven player .in the· c01m-
nament
VanDerPlasse
dismissed
try,
Peiro Pivcevic ofTemple,
6~
VanDerPlasse, who defeated
Towson State's top player, Eric
1, 5-7, 6-3, in a nail biter. The
three regionally-ranked players
Horne,
6-3, 6-3.
Three hours
damage had already been done
this fall, and Maher were cho-
later the reigning MAAC cham-
by the Red Foxes though, as
sen because of their successful
pion, John Espinosa, lost to.
echoed by their proud coach.
fall·
~¢'asons,"•but,;theeselection
Maher
64,
2-6, 6-4.
·
·
"We won five matches at the
of St.heldt offered an u'nex-
Maher- and VanDerPlasse
Rolex where we had never won
pected twist
combined on a first round
before. It was an outstanding
Though the freshman did
doubles win against Iona's"tan-
way to end a fall season that saw
have a wonderful fall season, he
dem of Kropp and Moncrieffe,
us receive no P.R.," Smith said.
was only selected as the first
8-2.
"We won individual matches
.
alternate for the tournament.
Day tw~ of the Rolex's be<;:ame
Luck was on Scheldt' s . and - much t()ugher, as
the
level'
of .
Mari sf s side;.
tlio~gh, because , .
competitiqnwas,Jjtj~ed ap,ot~h . ..
an invite from another school
The
,doubles .
tCam' ,
1
o{'
chose not to compete: enter Eric
VanDerPlasse and Maher were
Scheidt.
given some of their own medi-
As would be expected, the first
cine while falling to West
year player was pleased to be
Virginia's, Dektas and Kent, and
selected.
Scheidt was struggling with his
"I wouldn't say I was sur-
ailing shoulder.
prised (normally each year at
After a first day in._ which
least one player denies an invi-
Maher defeated the best player
RADIO:
Women's
hoops to surf the Web
... continued from
pg.
J 5
cover other sports as well.'' .-· · .. -·.
Just as with anybody else, the
known by the crew.
sports department's success
The WMCR crew is so dedi-
has taken time.
cated to this project that they
''Last year, Charlie Leone
got
are even _covering the games
the ball rolling for the sports
over winter break.
department," Koller said.
•~we .
"By covering these games just picked up where he Ieftoff.
over the winter break, the guys
By a lot of teamwork, we have ·
are showing their hard work and
become a great sports team.'' .
_
true devotion to the sports de-
Not only has this year's ·
partment,"Kollersaid.
WMCRcrewpickeduptheball, · ·;;
If
things go well this season, -but they're·running down'lhe ·
Koller would love to branch orit -· · court for a slam dunk. To listen: '
into other sports as well.
to all of the exciting
Marisi."
"The radio station can't do it
women's basketball actfondust
by ourselves," he said. "But go sign on to the Internet and
with the help of the Athletic
go to:
http://www.marist.edu/
Department, we would love to
athleiiclwbasketballllive.html.
. , Photo courtesy Carlisle Stockton
VanDerPlasse performed well at the Rolex Invitational.
against players that we couldn't . know who Marist is and where·
.have competed·_ against· t\Vo
we are located.''
years ago. Now, ,ajpst schopls .
"
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1fJH[]B <CJ[]Rl<CJLJB
.
DECEMBER 9, 1999
.
s
···•
•
·
ortS
Nepoµsm?Sorry, but
ijust
~ajf
f.
.
road victory; which has not hap-
.
bufanything that comes out
of
-
pened since February 16. They
Westbrook's mouth these days.
better learn to win away from
To New EnglandPatriots Head
'
Vancouver soori, because if ru-
Coach Pete CarroU:
a
one-:\Vay•
-
_
mors are correct, they may be
ticket dutof Foxb9ro.
•
He ap~
_
moving to St. Louis in the near
pears to top the· "most likely
to
future.
-
-
.
be fired list."
_
.
To Seattle SuperSonics G Gary
__
_
·
To Denver Brnncos Head
_
_
Payton: a little more maturity~
·Coach Mike Shanahan
'
and New
-
His explosions with Coach Paul
York Jets Head Coach :Bm
_
·
Westphal are starting to become
-
Parcells: better luck next
year
for
-_
a
weekly occurrence, and the
With the
holid~y
~easo~ ap-
two great coaches, espedally'in
-
team is 13-5,
proacliirig, I will assume the role
the injury department.
_ _
· To the Chicago Bulls ... well,l'm
·
of Santa and hand mit
_
the ap:.
To Jacksonville Jaguars Head
_
not sure who can help them.
propriate
-
~re
-
sents
i
fo_r sonie in
_
- -
Coach Tom Coughlin: a smile,
_
_
_
-
Grant Hill is
a
free-agent after
sports. However
;
the Grinch will
'
To San Francisco 49ers
-
Head
·
this year, but if he wants to leave
appeai-011more than occasion:
Coach Steve Mariucci: a team
Detroit because of losing, why
Firs~
,
the world of football.
that has more talent.
-
If begets
would he want to go to Chi-
Here
'°
s
·
an obvious one
'
- to Wis-
o'i1sted i_n whatshouldbe
·
a b11sy
cago?
corisin
.
R,B
.
R<>11
Dayne: the
San· Francisco off season,_ it's
Up next, baseball
.
Hei~rn)inttophy.
_:
.
.
_
_
-
_
/
-·
-:
the"°49ers' loss.
_
-
-
__
--
-
To Boston Red Sox P Pedro
ToSL Louis Rams Head Coach
--
_
And now, the NBA.
:
/
_
_
_
:
Martinez: theMVP award for
the
Dick'Vewieli::°iyellr'sitippl}'<>f
.
To
'
New..y~rk
:
Krticks"
GiF.
\
J999
·
season that rightfully be-
.
tissue,$
;.':
His
.
eµi9tionjs
genll-.
.-
Latrell
Sprewell:
a:
muzzle for
his
.'
longs to him anyway. The two
ine; and he's not afraid to show· rtiouth ing:unes
at
Golden State.
-
writers who left Martinez off
it
.
-
-
Credit
A
&
E
honcho Nik
their MVP ballot should have
To
Washington Redskins
Bonopartis for thinking of that
their heads examine~. Speaking
Head _Coach Noi-v Turner: an
one.
of which ...
owner ~ho
_
will appreciate him
To
New Jersey Nets point
To George King of the New
for his knowledge ofoffensive
_
guardStephon Marbury: peace,
York Post and LaVelle Neal of
football;because Daniel Snyder
inner content, and fewer games
the Minneapolis Star Tribune: a
is an egomaniac.
Wu!
Turner be
where he scor:es 30 points on
·
head examination for both
.
working for Jerry Jories next
lOOshots. OK,lmeant30points
·
Maybe we can even get a two-
year?
-_-
'
on 30 shots.
for-one deal.
To Redskins WR Michael
To Los Angeles Lakers C
To the Baltimore Orioles and
PAGE 15
Freshman Elisha DeJesus has helped Marist succeed.
W01\1EN:
Off
to
:•
--
best
-
start
since
1995-96
seaoon
Westbrciok:
,
the
.
ability to go a
Shaquille O'Neal: more appre
-
Los Angeles Dodgers: a victory
full season without embarrass~
-
ciation for his MVP caliber sea-
-
total that would equate with the
ing himself in some way. His
son to this poinL Even with
sizeoftheirpayrolls.
most.recenLtransgression
:-
was.
,
_
.
Shaq.playing
.
as
.
well
.
as
_
hehas,
.
.
,
.
.
Finally, to
:
all Maristteams:
:
.. continued from pg'.16
not holdfog us back."
c~ci~~
-
-~~~~~
j
-
-
~
-
~~
~:~_,~
'
~:
·
• .
.
_
~ry;~om~~aa~d
Bost1p
;
fatl:ier of Arizona Car-
_
.
.
draws more
_
media attention.
_
commg year and beyond.
c
~
r,Jire_e
:.
pouiter
by
DeJe~us(tliree
'
-
·
-
.
portioii
of
the
season,
if
not
the
·
dinal
_
s
WR
::
-
pavidhBp~t~m;:>
;f
T~
·
Ui"e VaficoJ!yer Grizzlies: a
_
Happy Holidays to all!
of her
15
in the game) h~lped
entire season because of a re-
-
"
-
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-
·'·
-"".·
·
,
,-.
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,
.t
·
· · ·
,
- - - - - - - - -
complete a 17-3 Maristrun late
curring injury from last season,
in the second half that allowed
feels that the team is playing well
the women win their fourth
together. As opposed to the
game of the season, tying last
past few seasons where only a
year's win
·total,
56-43. Seidel
few players scored the majority
netted 16 points
_
in the winning
of the points, everyone is chip-
effort, a game in which Marist
ping in this season, which is a
trailed by nine points with just
key to the team's early success,
over seven minutes remaining
according to Vallery.
_
.
•
;,
;.-
by
KYLE WOOD
-
-
overwhelrning shadow
_
of
Michael Jordan and be realized
for the truly great player he is.
Speaking of Jordan,
l
want to
·_
.
.
witn,ess one more professional
·
game by him
.
I
want Mike Tyso
_
n to win the
_
heavyweight boxing title and for
Don
_
King to
·
shave his hair:
I
would like to see athlete's,
such as Peter Warrick, stay out
of trouble, for college football
The
holiday season is upon
and its fans lose out when ter-
us. Most people are making
rific players like himself are on
theirJists and checking th~m
the sidelines for dumb mistakes.
twice.
·
I want to see more collegiate
Here is my list of what
I
want
athlete's stay in school.
to see happen in the world
·
of
Can the geniuses, who devel-
sports.
oped the Bowl Championship
First, can Brent Musb1uger
Series, develop a better bowl
shut up! I do not want to hear a
system, one that is similar to that
20-second
_cfiatribe
everytime
of college basketball?
·
ABC
goes,t9J?~-
_
..
.
•-
,
_
Even.though itwillnotoccur,
Dick Vitale
'
-
>
see
:
Brent
_
-
I wando see-Virginia Tech up-
Musburgef"'and
-
-
insert ESPN ·-_ set Florida State.
where ABC is.
·
I want a three-peat from the
Can Shaquille O'Neal
learn
_
·
best team of this century, the
how
to
shoota
free
throw.
New
York Yankees.
I want to see the New Jersey
I
want to see Ken Griffey Jr.
Nets find one person that
can
·
and Alex Rodriguez remain in
shoot the ball.
Seattle, for they
are
the two best
I
would like to see Charles
pfaye~ in the game and fonn a
Barkley
retire,
for he will never
-
dynamic duo.
_
Hey, everyone
win a championship ring.
-,
Be-
can
dream right? Maybe Not.
fore he degrades himself any-
.
.I
would like to have Mark
more, it is time
for
himself
to get
McGwire hit 80 home runs next
out of the game and take his
season.
place
as
one of the all-time
great
Can the
NHL
find a way to ex-
players.
cite me?
I
would like to
see
Scottie
I
would like
Dan
Marino to win
Pippen win
a
title in Portland,
a
Super Bowl ring and then
re-
so that he can
be
cast from the
_
tire, for he would have nothing
left to prove.
Can Bill Parcells remain the
head coach of the New York Jets
for one more season, so that
he
·
can try to become the first
coach in
NFL
history to win
Supet
·
Bowl's with two differ-
ent teams.
I want to see Kerry Collins
remain on the New York Giants.
l
want to see the Indianapo-
lis
Colts remain as the same
team for years to come.
l
want Tiger Woods to win
the grand slam of gal[
I
would like to see an Ameri-
can step up in men's tennis and
contend with Pete Sampras and
Andre Agassi.
Can sports in general stop
expanding and diluting the tal-
ent?
Can some television station
develop a game show that is
similar to Jeopardy where the
questions only deal with
sports, so that sports junkies
around the world will have
something to do if professional
sports strike again?
Speaking of the possibility of
a labor stoppage, here is a
memo to all of the union lead-
ers and commissioners.
DON'T!
Finally, I would like
to see
the
Marist College men's and
women's basketball teams suc-
ceed and win
a
benh
·
into the
NCAA tournament, which
would bring a lot of excitement
to this campus.
in the game.
"Because
of the effort of ev-
-
The Women fell to St. Peter's,
eryone on the team, the two in-
71-56, to bring the team's
juries
_
does not hold us back,"
MAAC record to 1-1. DeJesus
Vallery said. "We are not going
scored 13, co-captain Sabrina
to dwell on the loss of players."
Vallery added 12 and Seidel pro-
Although the coaches and
vided
11
in
_
the losing effort, a
players did not set any formal
game in whichMarist shot 58.3
goals for the season, the first
percent from the field, but also
·
_
few games have given the team
committed 22 turnovers.
a new feeling of confidence for
Tift did not play in this game
each game, including the next
because of a sickness.
·
Doctors
upcoming game against Colgate.
say she has mono, but they
"We anticipate to win our
caught it early enough that she
games," Vallery said.
"We
are
will not miss too many games.
prepared we11 for every game
And late Tuesday, The Foxes
and have the ability to win."
won their fifth game of the sea-
WitharecordofS-2, the team's
son with a 58-55 triumph over
best start since going
4-1
in the
Fordham.
1995-96 season, the team now
With such a young team, it
has a new found confidence.
may be surprising that the
''We are
definitely a better team
women have been so success-
than last year," Vallery said. "It
ful early on.
feels good to be winning and it
"The freshmen have really
reinforces our confidence."
stepped up their play," Vallery
The women will take on
said. "It has helped us out a loL
Colgate on December 11 in the
We
are young, but our youth is
McCann Center.
.
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••
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Stat of the Week•
Freshman Sarah Tift
_averaged 12 points
.
and 10
reb~unds to grab MAAC
Rookie of the Week honors
oiNo~ember3o.;•··
·• i··•···
. / /
s.
. b
PETEiiMOYi.AN
y' . ' ...
Staff Writer ·
' 'According ·.to. the pres~asoh
'
evaluatioµ of-Marist issued by. .
the,''.Blue Ribbon College Year-:· .
book,'' this year's team Iacksa
strong .backcourt'. ·. _. . _
.
.
· Witli· tw<> sophorifoi:es start- · ·
ing in,Rick
•
Smith:ancf.Sean .
Kennedy, iiiany thoughUhaL
'
. ' .. .
'
.
. .
Maiist wouid. have. to rely on . forth b~;ketball that. prodli~~d
it's big men if they were to play
six possessions in which both·•
winning basketbalL .
0~
Tues:- · teams traded· baskets. ·.
.
·
·
day night against American
This series Was highlighted by
. University, however, both
a
nice alley-oop from Kennedy
guards managed to silence
to Drew Sarmiels oll' the break.
many of their critics.
As Marist began
to
turn up their
· SmithfoadthewayfortheRed
defensive inten.sity, Americaq
Eoxeswith_ thirteen points, but
\\lent to·
a.
trapping zone
off
th_e
itwas his rebounding-and pen~
inbound's p~ss
iri
anattemptto
Quote·
_
of tile W.eek ·
"Aft~r watching Ralph
wann up; lfelt ,that be :\Vas
ticking with the fiQ~preci:
sion of
a
Rolex waicb;'~
-1im
·
smith, men's tenniscoach
PAGE 16
. ·etration that helped -push
rattle the Foxes; .
,>
_
,
~
-.
.
Marist past American for a solid · · ·.Keiilledy ancISfoiili werbable.
Rick:Srilittrbrings
the
-b~n
up
against
Loyola.
Smith was key in Tuesday nigh~~:1~~cremySmilh
72-63 victory. _ . . _ .
. .
tp
handle 'the pressure and get .
· · · ·
·
.
,, . -
·
Thestartoftheganiewas.my-
goodpenetration,whichallowed
.
the game, ~ith:saniueJs'.a~d ,-··· 1ookedlike·~rmetuned~achine.
thing but pretty with .both
many good open·fooks: Tomasz
Donald Va
_
le hitting the boards
It all itarted with a fast break
teams 'struggling to find their · Cielebak was able touse the time
and_ getting a couple -of put
that featured a nice _under-
rhythm, M;aristwas playing
to set up the offense
·
to his ad-
backs.
_ ....
.- .. ·
handed pass'froffiCielebak:to
tough interior defonseand al-
vantage,_ as he once. again
Thesecondhalfstartedmuch
,
JoeMcCurdyfortheliugetwo-
lowing few secondchance op-
·
_ showed how valuable· he is Jo.· like thefirstended; withf\meri-
hand~d sl.µn.
portuntties
for the Eagles. .
-thtHearn by showca!;ing'a va~..:
.
can making
-
a small.
run,
but .. At.this point the crowd was at
The gamewas topped off with
a full court pass from Smith to
McCurdy for the two hand_ed
pump slam which put Marist up
,by eight and sealed all hoped of
a comeback for American.
In addition to Smith's 13 point,
Samuels, Kenney and Cielebek
also scored
in
_double figures.
On the other end, a few .ety of moves and shots in the
Maristwas there toanswer, Tom
a fever pitch,. and the Marist
rushed shots and some bad
pa.int.. _ . . . .
. : . _ . _.
Keniiey· had
a
huge series of faithful were treated to a tremen-
bounces had· the Red Foxes
. Once again the gam~ saw a
playsjri which he foliowed his
dous block byMcCurdy onDoc-
wondering if this was going to
series
qf
traded bas_kets in
which
own blocked stjot for a lay~up, . tor, which lead to a running hook
be _one of those nights where
American's.big,guns ofPatrjck
hitabigJay.:upplllS_the foul ~nd
shot in the lane by Cielebak
things just don, t seem to go
Docto(and Sali()µ-lliµet 'J'e,lly . mad~:~ pie¢ cuqo,get the·pass
;
fo]Jb'wirig'that
d1sp11i
:&as
a
. theirway>
_>
.
.
·
. _ _ _
·startedto'firii:fsoihernom'i11tlle· fqr1r,e'6pe11Jay~up:_
,. ·. _.
slip
p~~~,,,~i,.Jii~'.
,
P:f\.Y~Ug
Marist is now 4-2 on the sea-
son. Over the weekend, the·de~
feat~d Loyola; 76a60, for their
third \Vin of the year. , They then·
. felltwo,dayi,·1atef:fo
Iona,
85-
65. ··_:.
About five minutes into, the
post to\vork) whileTirri'_Wa~h.:
' . The high}ight'. ohhe··nighf . Kermedy:'
_
toJason)Iastirigs for
game however; both. teams
ingtoh
began·
to
find his shot.. cam~ midway thioughth(sec-
the two h~rided jam which sent
. kicked intogear and played
·
Second chance opportunities
ondhalf'YhenMaristwentona
thealreadyllypedupcrowdint6
some tremendous> back
.
and
however, helped keep Marist in
five-minute ru~ in wbich_they .. a fr~nzy: · · ·
. Marisfs next ga111e is tonight
against Hudson Valley rival
Army at 7 :30 at West Point.
~,,~:=~:
byED~LIAMS III
g~es t:6.be r~played
011
the ra-
:
~taffWriter.
dio, The
,
Athletic Department
-
"
;
_
C .
.••
'
had already.taken care, of h~v-
.
I:Jay~ Y.Q1,1,ey~L \V_anted,to· ,ing theinen's·basketball broad-
. __ foa;ve'tbi
V{arrrfcdnfines ofyotir >:.tasf.0'7°ei the.Net, so it only
\ Qartland-apartttientfo cafoh •ihe
-c:
s·eeme·ct natural to. add· the
_Jastj,f~io')1cJion·.or' ~arfs{< .women:s·basketballgames this
·
'
.Womep.lsj~asl(etqall, burare
year .. ' ... _•
_ .
.
<
S~P.#~!e~_.PYi tpqe,D:tial
4C>~ii..: • .
_
..
I<.o~
~as anxious ~o accept
,·•·.pour tljat,~ tlli:ea_terfyo111-:-..vell-
_
tll
_
e: c_hallenge and quickly
,
aS'-
being if.soil'.decide to venture· .
. ,
-senibled a crew ofhis top work-
o~tinto i~?. ·
· ... •
..
·
.
; •
.
·
·_ers;'Along with fellow senior
. Cin:kphotollcremySmith
o
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. ·
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· ·
J
r
1i
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h d
r
Tara_'·
kn_
ig' h_.fd_
ef_e,:
:
,n
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els,
a
pass ag_a_ instSt
Peter'_·
s:
Maris_tf __
ell to
.
, ··_th.,e
·Peacoc, ks_:, 7_.-2~5
__
.6 __
.
<
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- .
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r ave yoµ ~ver pun _y<>ur- . •·. u
IO '
ores, . e a to
SC
e u e
. s·elfbac}s
~e>m~
for tlle weeke_nd, · , a ¢rew.
io
cover· every single
·•1Vfarist--.-~urpri$e~_·_•_'ffth·-.5-2
~t~rt·-
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_
1fI/;f;;6i~t:tf:~~
0
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.
.•
.
.·_·
.
•...
·
.
.
the h_ard\VQ_od? .
.
.. '
' -
' V{illbe
·
·seniorRyan Maraziti,
· by
PETER.PALMIERI
.
Mansi ~bile
freslunan
S~ahTift
.
. their _th1r~ ..
~am~
Pf.th~
.S~S~Il . -
N.~\V
there is a
~jn,:ipl~
sqJ_uJion
whowil! cov~revery gain~ with
.
Staff
Writer ·
also, tossed in
lO
points.
'K.i111 ·
·
by defeatin.(I'empltby,a-s.c:o~
.
to ;thes~ P,rpblen1s/and oJbefs.
the)~xceptiorrofone; '.(or~s will
·
Hairston of Richmond led.all
of 53-41 .. _})ft.~lhed:_her fi~st
Just sign on to the Intem~t and
handle:thecolox: commentary
It ain't ov~r 'till it's over.
Seven games into the season,
the Marist women's basketball
team has staged . three-second
half comebacks and has already
exceeded last season's win to-
tal.
scorers
with
14 points.· Marist
doubl~:-double·?f the season,
listen away.· .
.
.. -.
.
duties, 'and·.sophomore Dan
·
shotadecent40percentfrom·tbe
amassmg 13 pomts and 15 re-
Forthefirsttinleintheschool's
Pricberelli, sophomore Adam
· field.
bound~.
. . . . .
. ,
history,· Marist
will
lJe brqad- · Sellegand junior Mike Ferraro
- The
women remained in Vir-
The ~orne11 traded bY. mne at
casting women's basketball . will also be on call to cover
giniato take on Virginia
Com-
halftime; ~ut outscored the
over:the Irit~rnet \VMC~; the
whenever needed.
monwea~thion Nov; 2L "Despite . Owls b¥.21
In
,the s.~on_d ~al~to
Marist,Cp}Jege radio station; is
· After the crew was selected
a 16-pointeffort by Tift and an-
c~ise·tovictory. A J~te three-
in_charge of the project in con.. _ and arougtischedule was ere-
On Nov. 19,-the women trav.:.
other 11 points by fellow fresh-
pomter by _M.ane Fu~c1an,d r,wo . junction
"6th
the Marist Athletic . ated Morrison started to in-
eled to Virginia to take on the
man ElishaDeJesus, Marist fell
key juinpe~ by S~ic_tel secured
Dep~ent .
.
. . strudt the WMCR members on
University of Richmcmd! De-" . g9:.52for its firstloss of th~ sea-
the victory fofthe Red F?xes.
Senior
Milce
Koller, the spo11S
sucI
1
things as dress codes and
spite trailing 37:.29 at halftime;
son.
I?
the first Metro Atlantic Ath-
directorof WMCR, is the man
proper conducts. Since WMCR
Marist outscored its opponent
· Marist then went on to face
letic Conference
~ C )
game
in charge and has been working
would be traveling with the team
31-19 in the second half and
Columbia, where it opened up an
of the_ s~ason? Manst squared
cl_?sely with Assis~t Athletic
to away games, it was necessary
survived for a 60-56 victory .1 &~point lead at one point and off agamst nval Loyola. A
Director Sean Momson.
that even the tiniest details be
over the Spiders.
held the lead to defeat Columbia
The two began playing with
Diesa Seidel netted 10 points
70-60.
:--Please see
WOMEN,
pg. 15
the idea when WMCR was cov-
1
and added 1 I rebounds for
On Nov. 28, the women won.
ering one of the voJJeybalJ
...
p
ease
see
RADIO,
pg.14
53.9.1
53.9.2
53.9.3
53.9.4
53.9.5
53.9.6
53.9.7
53.9.8
53.9.9
53.9.10
53.9.11
53.9.12
53.9.13
53.9.14
53.9.15
53.9.16
·critic's?.,Works
of
artlik:e .
. this
one)haVebeeiion. :;,__.
• displayproudly
atth~ ~-
gallery, pg.~
-
·• .• · .
<
·.'
Th.efuert's basketball team
aere~t~~yQI~t'<righ_t)_
last'weekand
American.
J\iysd~y
mght;72:63.
Rick Smithled .the
way
with
13
points,pg.16 ..
VOLUME #53 ISSUE
#9
GOOD :LUCK· ON FINALS
EVERYONE!!!~
·
DECEMBER 9, 1999
G~pys st'-~rea,(l~for,'.the next millenium
· 'b
ERICDEABIIL
··.
' -
··.· •.
-.
··
·.
•
· · ·· .·· ..
>
·
. .Y
:. ,.,,,
..... •
... · • ••..
known asthe Y2K'issue is a
•:·
. .-::;;:,$.t(l.f/4!!'rtt~r-.:~
·:
·
;,_( .. · ..
problemthafltas ~xf~tedforover
_\Vhile:Jvi~;Fs'fficleiit;'·1'e
C
~
30.jeiu;s'ho'Y.·
I(is'.·d_ue.·t9::1iie
dreamil)'l9o!(iI1g
f()n.v.arqJ9_
the. fact- thafcoinputefdate
X~f¢t .·
end\jfclasses
and
'winter
break;
ences. have,been restric:ted; to
a_
littl¢
bug
Witlt
a big~i!e, is
com:.
only
~WO
gigits/tlmsirWsapng
ing to bring thembackinto real:.
that c9mpute1:s ~01.J,d:'feaq:_00
ity:
.
..
.. .
as· 1900 rather thrui.2000: This
The millenium bug, otl_lerwise
could :ause certain systems to
·,,,, .
·
.· ·. >
.
. ·
photo courtey Matt Halpen
Members of TKE find administrators hard to work with.
. shut ~<>wnor suspend•. opefa~
tio
·
·
··
· ·
··· · ·
· · ·
or
no
ct
their computer hardware and
software .
But how isMarist College pre-
pared to handle the Y2K Crisis
while ,students
-
are on winter
break?-
.
· Since the change over to the
year 2000. has not yet taken
place, only possible effects on
campus
life
could have been
'
•
WJEJEKJLY · POJLJL
· SGA Presidentlookingto ne~ts.~mester
©
®
Would you
consid~:t,~tµdy,i~g
· a~}fl'ad?fA:/
YFS
46
NO
54
RELATED STORYffllS PAGE
Tms
is
an
IIIISCienrijic
sur.-ey
takn
fr"'1r
J(J()
Marin
sn,d.,,,.
who
smok,,.
Hunter
by
CHRIS GROGAN
·News Editor
Toere are some hefty goals
stu'1_e11~_ goyemment is hoping
'to·achieve within, the next semes-
. ter, ascordiiig:!<{~rudent Body
President Ryan Hunter.
. _llunterheld a -State of the
Campus· address last Saturday
to discuss his administration's
accomplishments and goals for
the rest of the school year. He
said SGA has accomplished a
«fair amount" so far this year.
"One 9f the things we tried to
do ·this year is really deal with ·
issues that affect the student
body, and not get tied down
· with the mundane things," he
said .
One of the biggest things SGA
has been involved with this se- .
mest~r is dealing with the school
administration and state officials
in understanding the new cross-
walk. Hunter said the challenge
now is in getting students in
... please see
HUNTER.pg.
3 ·
simulated.
Wendy Duncan, the project .
manager for the Y2K. project
from Information Technology,
said the college is well prepared
for theY2K problem.
.
"Marist has done an excellent
. job in providing solutions," she
... please see
Y2K,pg.
4
•
.
~DAY:
.
hi:
52
lo: 35 ·
.
Community .................... 2
eatures ................ ; .......
5
Opinion ......................... 8
&E .......................... 11
Sports ....... '., ................. 16
'I
..
I
I
I
•
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~
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'
•
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I ' • · • , , · ) \ I \ ,t
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'
DECEMBER 9, 1999
The Student Government
Association's Housing and
Residential Life committee is
currently seeking more mem-
.
bers. This ad hoc committee
convenes bi- weekly to address
and resolve student concerns
regarding housing and residen-
tial life on campus. Anyone in-
terested in joining should con-
tact the SGA office at x2206 or
email Travis Mason at K7HZ.
WMCR - Marist College Ra-
dio - Thursday - Tuesday, 7;00
p.m. - 9:00 p.m. Tune in for the
latest sports talk. Sports up-
dates and coverage of your
fa-
votite Marist sports t~ams::1i
.. you have any questions, call
the
Sports Director Mike Koller
x4724.
Hey Marist ·students call
STUDENTS FOR HILLARY
,-CLINTON at x7 l
54
and get in-
volved in the future of New York
state. With the upcoming 2000
Senate race looming now is the
best time to find out: the iss,ties
that will affect you. Clinton
maybe a· Democrat and not a
New York resident but that
doesn't mean you shouldn't
check .out her message. Learn
about the issues that will affect
your future! Join STUDENTS
FOR HILLARY CLINTON2000
by calling x?
154.
The Marist music department
presents its winter concerton
Sunday, December
12
in.the
Nelly Golleti Theater at 3 p.m.
Tickets are free
for
students;
$5
regular admission.
Town of Poughkeepsie Police of-
ficers shortly after.
Security officers watched four
residents climb into a four-door se-
dan in front of Donnelly Hall, and
listened to them making obscene re-
marks Saturday, Nov.·
20 at 4:30
.
· ... · a.In.
Th~
foursome·tlien• sped· ~ut•
•• _,, I
.f;('
\·:\/;·;
~;1-:,.~
1 /
of
ttleipatkirig[li>l
:n§itig
towa'rds' ;,.
the South Entrance. While appar-! •,,
ently doing
a
~Drikenif Hazard'
A fau2~t 'was found torn off in . impersonation, the driver narrowly
Champagnat's fourth floor men's
missed the Southern curb neat the
bathroom at
2:50 a.m. Wednesday,
baseball •field,· overcJmpe~sating
Nov. 17. The gushing water cas-
and jumping the Northe~ curb.
caded through a
totaj
of eightmoms,
Luckily, the fence surrounding the
including .rooms on the fourth, · Leibenoff Field slowed the car
third, second, and first floors.
down, so he could return to the road
'
.
~-
.
.
Someone mistook a full garbage
can for his laundry basket in
Marian Hall's first floor laundry
room, dumping trash into one of
the washing machines. Housekeep-
ers found the mess; including blue
marker smeared on the walls at
7:20
a.m., Friday, Nov.
19.
Two female Champagnat resi-
dents jumped into a taxi with sev-
eral unknown males, who quickly
began making obscene remarks. The
two female residents ~ere tired of
the abuse and hopped from the
taxi
at the South Entrance, when the _un-
known males began quarreling with
the riders .. The girls reported · the
incident.at
1:30
a.m:
Saturday Nov.
20, and gave a police report to
and leave the scene. The observant
patrol officer identified the culprit,
and drove toward his residence in
Talmadge Court. The car' was evt,!n-
tually spotted at the Palace Diner.
Town of Poughkeepsie Police of-
ficers were called and questioned
the stunt driver. He denied any in-
volvement, but the damage to his
car reminded him and he confessed.
As a reward, he was issued two
tickets, one for leaving the scene
and the other for driving with a sus-
pended license. His car was then
towed and his parents were noti-
. tied.
A stolen road sign was confis-
catedfrom a Leo Hall resid~nt at
12:15 a.m.Tuesday;Nov. 23, when
Weekend Weather
FRIDAY:
hi:
S2
lo: 37
hi:44
lo:30
hi:49
lo:27
Source: http://www.weather.com
(The
Weather Channel)
Where do you not want
to be on New Year's Eve?
"At a Van Halen concert
with Gary Cherone sing-
ing."
I
,.
Bob Roth
senior
"My roomate's room be-
cause
it
smells like tuna. "
Steve•·Kios
·senior
"Spending· it with Jer-
emy D. Smith .. "
Bill
West
junior; ,- ;
-.,_;~~~rr1(··r:~:~.-,_.:- ~--· ... ·•.-·.-.. ·.:-.,. .-""::: ..
:-:,·-i~·.:~.:r, _-
. ·-_ .. : .. _
....
/,i :·-~
.::~_:i~:0•i.:~ ; . .:.
SecU9ty<>ffic:ei:s.observed~~ w!ul~,,.' Poµg~~e~psle~foHp~,~~ffi~er~ ~-~r~.
~-c:·~;,
·s!t~(~;..i~ ::~~";
;.;,!,:
i;_r~:J ..
~-...-;[_iH~:;n
student scaled it. AfterJalling
off,
th~ ~th~r,~ide: the-~tud~nt, took
his "rirlldly j~toxica~ed;?
arm, back
responding to another incident.
called.
·
Upon J>.eing asked where th~ sign·
was from, the student said he
found it on the side of the road and
he was going to decorate his wall
with it.
to the Security Office and said he
A fomale Champ~gnat resident
thought
it
was broken. The stu-
. called into a WMCR campus radio
dent was escorted to St. Francis
broadcast at
10:30 p.m. Saturday
by Fairview ambulance - in under
·
Dec.
4
and had a conversation with
forty-five minutes.
· one of the DJ's. Obviously, the con.:
versation became heate<:I because the
"J:,ull;'loader operator.Anthony, male DJ abandoned his.post.and ran
Sorbello was lifting steel b,eams to
to her room to continue the ccmfron-
New York Communications
the third floor of the new Fontaine
talion in person. A verbal barrage from • Company (NYC0MCO), located
Building and toppledthe.machine
both parties quickly ensued: She said
on West Cedar Street, reported
into the stre,et Tuesday, Nov.
23 at
lie grabbed her
arm.
He said he was
Monday,
Dec:
6 the abduction of
3:10 p.m. No one was hurt,_said . protectinghimselffromJpl}n~hll~ort
':ll_cl~eccmi~v~je½d~r,.,chrislIIlas,
Pavarini. Construction supervisor . to be thrown; The
RD
was
c<>rifactecf .
tree;
al}d:Stajstiriaf, Hgh~
fr<.lni
Mike Paris, bllt seyeraj llO-installed . . and" ~ch was.· ~e~r t~ ,his/' he~ "owni '· '. th¥busineslfront
}.t\\'n:
Thei~
windows were smashed.
comer.
festive items were taken over the
A relaxing BenoitHall resident
noticed his fan slowly creeping out
of his basement window Wednes-
day, Nov. 24 at 12:45 a.m. When
he went to the window to investi- ·
gate, a male figure· dashed away
with abducted fan. Security re-
sponded and found the culprit and
his friends. They tried
to
deny all
knowledge of the larceny, but
changed their story when security
saw the fan still in hand. Town of
weekend,- andblamelon
Marist'
s_tudents by.NYCO:MCOJ:epre-
sentatives because of a trail-of
A
"IIlilc\ly intoxicated" student wan.-
debris from the stolen items scat-
der~ into the Security Officeat
5:50
tered down ihe' street
and
into
the.
· a.m. Saturday Dec.
4,
requ~ting
a
West Cedarapartments. Studeµi
ride to his off-campus aparttnent. Se-
Affairs and Housing· personnel
curity officers were unable to pro-
were informed and promptly
vide tins service, but called
a
cab com-
stated a reindeer fitting the de-
pany for the penniless studert~ The
scription was located in' a Marian
cab company estimated a forty;five ·. Hall room'. Upon questioning, one·
' minute
wait, so the student decided ' 'of the residents of the
tooin sail
to walk. He also did not want to waste
he woke up and.it
was
there. The
the time walking around the newly-
reindeer was confiscated and re-
erected fence along Route 9, so the
turned to NYC0MC0.
1r1HUE
·<clt:JR.<ClLJE
DECEMBER 9, 1999
N
ewst
TKE:
Fraternity's dismissal
from campus remains unclear
want
·
them to
•
be very positive
enter campus housing .
... continued from
pg.
1
so that other students
'
who see
·
According to Winters, Amato
tinues to demonstrate behavior
that look at them in a positive
was open about having a dis-
and activity that is inappropri-
way."
like for fraternities, but said he
ate or against college policy, the
One argument made by the
still tried to treat them fairly.
college is not interested in ex-
fraternity is that, by kicking them
"He·said
he did not like frater:.
~~:.~any communication with
off campus, Marist is doing
nities because they don't pro~
·
more harm than good by avoid-
mote individual thinking," Win-
The circumstances surround-
ing any association with off ters said. "He did not have sym-
ing the fraternity's dismissal re-
campus parties.
pathy for TKE as anorganiza-
main unclear: Sanso la said
it
is
"If
you lose control over a fra-
tion;
.
but he did help out some
a private matter between the
ternity, you put students at
individual guys."
Unity day is an integral part
of
Hunter's plani'.rc/ephoto/ChrisGrogan
Greek organization and
.
their
more risk," said Art Sutley, a
TKE's district president Mike
national, and he is not at liberty
sophomore TKE brother.
Hoffman came to Marist in re-
to disclose it.
TKE did have a situation last
gards to the incident and met
All that is known is it was
year that involved sanctions
with. Amato and director of
based on actions that were in-
from the college. According to
housing Sarah English, but was
appropriate to their college and
Marist security, Poughkeepsie
unable to secure a meeting with
HUNTER:
Plans
aheadfor Unity Day
national guidelines,
police officers pulled over a car
Sanso la.
··
S
.
·
1
·
·
·
th
·
d
·
·
...
continuedfrompg.
J
pecu at.Jon 1s at it ha some-
after someone reported a "kid-
Sanso la said Amato was in
tlling to
.
~o . with. off
•.
caIDpus
nappi
_
r1g''
.
event that \\las origi-
charge of the matter at that:'time
formation rega
rd
ing the rules
gatherings involving the con-
nally r~ported as a hazing ritual.
and
~
he did not want to get in-
a
nd
regulations of
th
e cross-
.
sumption of alcohol by minors.
'I)teJratemity later clarified the
volved.
·
·
walk.
"1'lley always nail tis with
original report, saying it was a
Currently oniy two fraternities;
"At
th
is point, the law says
having parties," Winters said.
unity event
.involving
a willful
Alpha Phi Delta and Phi Kilppa
th
at a car muS
t
yield," he
said.
"What
about the football team
participant, and in no y;ay a re-
Sigma, remain
on
·
campus; as
"A
.
car doesf t have to
st
op,
or the baseball team or the la-
quirement for membership.
compared to foifr
.
sororities.
they must yield, and I think a lot
crosse· team? Are our parties
They also rebutted Marist's
Sansola said he does not see the
of
st
udents believe
th
ey have
any worse than their parties?"
original security reports, saying
Greek population on this cam-
to
st
op but in essence the ac-
Sansola said there is no bias
no students were pulled over,
pus growing any time soon, re-
tu~!_laws says drivers only must
against fraternities at the col-
held at gunpoint and brought
maining around the eight or nine
yield to pedeS
tri
ans," he said.
lege. Regardless of the organi-
to the police station.
·
percent of the population they
The SGA is currently in the
zation, Greek or non-Greek, he
The pledges of the fraternity
make
,
up now.
process of making pamphlets up
said they must comply with the
involved in the incident were
"Greeks have never been
_
a
to ha
nd
out to
st
udents regard-
.
g "d 1·
fth
··
11
&
•
100
h
.
·
f
·
·
ing infonnation on the laws of
m e mes o
.
e co ege or 1ace
given
ours o community
strong presence on our campus.
·
disciplinary action .
.
·
service, prohibited from any in-
Ithink they're
:
a valuable com-
th
e new crosswalk.
"(Greeks) have to be good role
volvement in TKE, forced to live
ponent," Sanso la
.
said. "Our
The largeS
t
u
nd
e~ng for ~e
models, as members
·
.
of the
oncampusallfourye.irsa,ndput
women's groups are much
SGAnextsemesterw1llbe1;Imty
.
g~OUJ?~W~~~
"
~e <3r~~
i
,
<!r&a.,:•~~:9n:a:_?n~'=-Year-yroll~qµ
~,t~
~~:::".;
ii'.~
~Qng_erthaµ
.
o.ur
,
men:s
·
gro\lps
;;
.
~ay, formerly kn
.
ow~ as D1ver-
mzatmn; and as representatives
·
·
·
.
·•·
·
f
in
addi~ion; fqritjer associate
..
Our men?s have
.
struggled
·
and
·
sity pay, Hun~er said the new
of the· follege;))
_
Sil.11solf
said
:
dean
of'Studeni"Affrufs•
·
Pft<ir
·'!
paii:
.
'
of
•
ir
'
fs
•'
their
;
uri-otgartiza
'
-:
.'
· .
nam~
,
was
,
chosen
·
to distance
''When
'
they are walking around
Amato, who mysteriously
re
>
tion."
.
.
•
:
.
·
. · .
·
the event from last ye~'s un-
wearing thefre letters; being
_signed
in
October, sent all the
.
TheTKE
fraterriitychapter_at
.
suc_cessful ~enture. ~IS ye~r,
together as a group, they repre-
existing TKE brothers a letter
Marist currently consists of 32
Umty D~y is retum~ng to its
sent· an
·
organization and we
saying they were not
allowed
to
members.
·
·
·
r?ots, bemg held out~1de on the
.
_ _ _ _ _
.
·
.
campus green much like the first
Diversity Day held two years
.
ago.
·
The concept for this year's
Unity Day is to promote cam-
pus entertainment. Hunter said
this would not only highlight
club unity but also save
·
the
.
s<::hool money.
·
"Basically we're trying to get
out of the mindset that you have
.
to spend $10,000 to put on an
event," he said.
"You
can put
on a successful event for a small
amount of money. So for enter-
tainment, we're using resources
that we have on campus."
Perfonnances will be put on by
the dance club, Asian Alliance,
MCCTA, fencing club, Black
Student Union, the Gaelic Soci-
ety and other clubs and organi-
zations.
Hunter said this day will be a
success if clubs come together
to help .
.
: :
··
..
··
.
"This year, we're stressing
that we can not have a success-
ful day unless the clubs partici-
pate and we have good, solid
club leaders who are committed
to the project," he said .
According to Hunter, another
undertaking his administration
·
is
planning is to make revisions
to the handbook. Hunter said
the goal is to make it more un-
derstandable.
"This is an important project
because it affects everyone on
the Marist College campus," he
said.
"We
have a committee that
is working to put it more in
layman's terms."
It is hoped that the revisions
will be passed next semester and
be used for the next printing of
the student handbook.
The State of the Campus ad-
dress is being shown all this
week and next week at 6:30 on-
.
MCfV Channel
J
2 .
..
g,
-
.-:-·
Students caught
in robbery attempt await punishment
by
BRENDAN~CGURK
. .
cou~se of t!t,e, ~yening, th~
,
~tp.~
_
.
grouQd, while another searched
began to question the ~ictim,
.
bery, a class E felony.
·
.
StaffWnter
,-
>'
dent
waS'stfong~amied
ana
.
be
<·
:
:
fofand
"
removed the victim's
the details of the night
'
s inci-
The two students, whoarealso
iA
Marist student has on~/
'.
came
theviainiofkseconci.:c:Ie~
" ·
wallet
:
:.
~
"
·
dent quickly came into light.
both freshmen, have been ar-
again
.~n
th
.
e
target,o(~Q ?ff:
?Tee
Wb~fY,,.r
:
)
-:
~
·h
.:
;
J
.
.. •
·
·
·
:
.
•
:~'7orqing t?
(
JosephJ.eary
;
Poughkeepsie Police officers
raigned and released
·
'
on their
campus
·
crime; the· fatest
·
in-•
a
·The
would-be partygoer re-
t~e dtrect?r ~fsafety and secu-
were immediately notified.
own recognizance to appear in
string of robberies that
.
<::ontin-
port<;d
.
that· h~ b.a?.
::
b
.
~en
;
ap.,-
.
• nty, the.v1ct1m then returned to
The Poughkeepsie Police have
court at a later date. They have
ues to plague the Mariststiident proached from _be~md arid had· c_ampus and went to_ the secu-
sin¢e arrested two Marist stu-
also since withdrawn from
population.
.
.
.
the c()~l~ ?f
h'f
J_llC~et
pulled
.
•
~ty_ (?ffi.~e 1:h.e s?me mgh~ ~f the
dents and charged them with the
Marist for the semester and are
Three weeks ago, a Marist
·
?ver~1s_h~d
:
and eyes; block..:
·
1?c1de~t,reportmgthath1s1den-
,
crime. The two students have
living at home.
The
freshman attended an off-cam-.· mgh1s ~,swn.:.~es,t.µ~~ptth_e
.
n
_
.J1ficat10!) card had been stolen,
:
been charged with second de~
Poughkeepsie Police Depart-
pu~ party located in the Town · r~ported thaf
two
people- held
..
·
and requesting a
.
replacement
gree robbery~ a class C felony
ment has been unable to be
of·Poughkeepsie: During the
him down, subdued on the
card. When secunty guards
and conspiracy to commit rob-
reached for comment.
.
'
.
.
.
\
'
.
.
,,_
... ;.
•
•
•
·
.
•
•
•p··
•
'
: - ·
·
-
·
1rJH(E
:·
<CJDRUCLjE
.
.
·-~
'
.
.
·.
-
·
DECEMBER 9, 1999.
'NeWS
<..
.
..
.
'
PAGE4
Y2K:
MaristfaGeSproblemh,eadOil
.
,
.
.
.
.
.
·
:
.
.
.
•.
'
.
.
.
·
-
.
-
'
... contiime<ifr01~pg_.l
,
.,·
i
_
ng. :fhe test, which
;
'.
wascon.,.
·
,
tems
·
h~ve been testedbytheir
said, "with the main 9bjective
duded in July and August,
suppliersandreprurpeoplefrorn
for Y2K planning being the
simulated the
.
dates
.
to be De-
·
off-campus," he said.
safety and security oftheMarist
cembei-15,
1999
through April
According to Leary, most of
Community."
·
· 15, 2000. All systems and of-
the vendors tested their equip-
She reported
_
that all major In-
fices on carnpus perfonned their
merit,
·
and this process was
formation Technology systems
normal functions during the
completed by the end of Octo-
have been brought. up to date
testing period, even as the date
ber.
·
The
·
new Eckerd was built in a few months.
and made
Y2K
compliant, and if hypothetically changed to Janu-
· He further explained that most
Eckerdgoesupfast
a given system could
·
not be
aryl,
2000.
systems were not affected be-
brought up to da,te,
it
was re-
Duncan said she was im-
cause they were not operating
placed.
pressed by the test
on
a
dock or calendar system.
Due to the fact ttiat no one will
"Thetesting was
.
a huge sue-
In terms of staffing on campus
by KATEREHLY
Staff Writer
Two new buildings opened
last week, to the excitement of
Marist students - the new library
and the new Eckerd, across
Route
9.
The library, which has been the
cause of criticism for riot open-
ing earlier.has only operiedfor
studying, however. The official
opening for thelibrary wiH be
eai-Jy
·
next year. The new Eckerd,
on the other hand; did not exist
at the start of this semester.
Many students are questioning
why it took less than a semester
to build the Eckerd while it took
more than three semesters to
finish the library
>
·
"
·
:
·
·
,
·
·
'
Some students
·
said; they' felt
·
·
the Jibrnry should have been
completed on a faster schedule,
including Freshman Alisha
Fuller.
.
..
"I'm annoyed that the library
has taken so long to open and
there aren't anybooks in
it,"
she
said. "But at the ·same time; I'm
glad thatit actually opened in
time for finals."
know exactly what
will
happen
·
cess and
·
everything worked
New Year's Eve, Leary said all
until the date changes, this past
when the year changed to 2000,"
available resources
.
would be
summer Marist created a simu-
she said
,
availabJ.e in case of an emer-
lated campus-wide test to iden-
In
terms of student safety, Di-
gency:
tify the function of all systems.
rector of Safety and Security
"All requests for time off on
The systems that were tested
Joseph Leary said the campus
the holiday were denied, all
involved Admissions, Registrar,
will function nonnally
;
regularly scheduled officers will
.
FinancialAid,PayrollandHous-
"All(thefire and radio) sys-
be on duty," he said.
IRELAND: Some
students
cm11plained
abOui.Pi-Ogi-am
:,.conti,iued from
Pi
r
not a result of the program, but
rather from student's expecta-
computer lab hours and the
tions on what the program
program's cost.
would be like .
.
Brian Whalen, form.er director
"I spoke to a student who was
of the Marist Abroad Program
in Dublin last year and asked
who is now employed at
her why there was some discon-
Dickinson CoUege in Pennsyl-
tent (with the program).
·
The
vania declined comment when
feeling! got from her response
contact
.
e.d by email, directing all
was that it
·
was different, and
questions to
.
Mari st Abroad
this is '1/hat
.
we
_
try
.
t9
_
prepare
Program Coordinator Carol
students
,
for/
\
shejaid .
.
.
,
·
Toufali. ' '
'
,
..
· ..
·
' '
'
·.
'
ToufaiLs~idthatwhik'.COm:-
.
'
·.
· Toufali
s
_
aj~
tl'l_~
~~qb
,
((?J?~
\Ve.re.
.
' ',puter:l~~s.J~A
l
h~t
.
#i~si~~;<ip
.
irii
almost2~thotirs'.uTtneJJ\,S~
:
thaf
,
f
·
is
·
n6bhe cas
l
}i\i~t§'eis kfiere
:
·
lif~tyies are diff ~rent
'.
/
She hlso
.
·
·
sai~
·.
tha( compu
'
ter,:syst
.
ems
overseas are rioC as advanced
as the
,
U.S. so
the
systems ttash
more often~
.
. .
.
.
In
.
regard to
.
the
·
housing, ·
Toufali said that
.
not many
fami-
lies live in the center of the city,
so the students have to travel a
little.
·
:'The
·
homes
·
students
.
were
placed in were c~mfortable,
iafe
homes, mariy of which were
right
.
on the coas.t," she said .
.
"But these ll()mes
,
required
travel distance
·
on a bus or train
to geuothe cen
'
ter
'
o{the city."
As for
·
the
.
cost, Toufali said
that the Dllbl1n program ·isnot
any more expensive thaiianyof
the other abroad programs
Marist offers .
.
·
T,tie DubHn pro-
gram is priced at $10
,
000in the
.
fall
_
and $10,500 in tti~ spring,
and each of the other programs
range iri price.from $10,000 to
$11,000asemester
,
.
"Students
'
corilplete a 15 credit
seme~ter a~dJh.ey ge~ to go on
a
lot
'
of
excursions around
ille
country," Touf~J.i' said.
f,
''"<=:
,
•,·
.
:_:;
i
//
l
;,'.}.f?;i-1}
.
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Overall, Toufali said students
who returned from Ireland rated
the experience as valuable. She
contributes the problems with
the program to the fact that it
was brand new and did not ineet
expectations the students
set:
.
"Whenever
.
you
_
set up spe~
cific expectations, you're in for
a shock, and
.
some of the stu-
dents had expectations that
were not met," she said. "This
was the first time the Dublin
program was offered so maybe
there were some misunderstand-
ings, but problems with the
group were not necessarily
problems with the program."
·
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DECEMBER 9, 1999
FeatU
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PAGES
December:
.
'Tis the month for giving
by
KATIIERINESLAUfA
Staff Writer
Christians recognize this as one
of the most important days in
the church.
Christmas was first known as
the Feast of the Nativity and
'Tis the season once again.
was celebrated as early as 336
Menorahs
are
being lit, Y2K
AD. While the name and times
mania is picking up, stockings
have changed, the concept of
are hung by the chimney with
Christ's birth is still the key fac-
care, and Mariah Carey's
"The
tor to this holiday.
Christmas Song" can be heard
Hanukkah or Chanukah
blasting throughout the cam-
means dedication in Hebrew,
pus
.
and celebrates the rededication
It seems with all of the shop-
of the Temple of Jerusalem by
ping, decorations and music; the
Judas Meccabee in 165 BC after
holiday spirit is in the air. How-
the temple had been profaned
ever, with all of the
.
hype and
by the king of Syria
.
commotion with everything
This holiday lasts eight days
from tinsel to dreidels, we tend
and the traditional menorah eel-
to lose sight of the importance
ebrates the miracle of one cruse
and origiris of the holiday times.
of olive oil lasting through eight
··
December is the holiday
days of the original rededicat-
month and in this month, it is
ion of the temple
.
importantto recognize the eel-
.
Kwanzaa is an African Anieri-
ebrated holidays: Christmas,
.
can holiday in which family,
·
Hanukkah, and Kwanzaa. Each
community and culture are all
is celebrated by millions every
celebrated. It lasts seven days
yearandeach
.
recognizesimpor-
beginning December
26
and
tant aspects of culture.
ending of January 1st.
Christmas is a Christian holi-
·
Kwanzaa was originated in
day, which commemorates the
ancient African as the
"first-
birth of Jesus Christ. Celebrated
fruit" celebration. However, the
mainly on December 25, most
modenihistoryofKwanzaawas
.
.
Circle
photo/ Chri
s
Grogan
The
tree in front of Marist's chapel is a popular symbol of
Christmas that lights up the night.
.
developed in
,
1966 by Maulana
All of these holidays tie to-
Karenga, an African-American
gether this December to bring
scholar.
us the holiday spirit in the air.
Although the origins on reli-
gions of these holidays vary,
one important aspect
brings
these celebration times to-
gether: the spirit of giving.
Freshman Anne Keane said
the holiday giving spirit is a
good feeling.
"It gives me a warm and fuzzy
feeling inside," she said.
Even without all of the deco-
ration lights hanging around,
the campus is glowing. The giv-
ing trees placed
around
the
campus are practically empty.
Students everywhere are plan-
ning their shopping lists for fam-
ily and friends as well.
However, some students, like
Freshman Matt Rovery, are more
critical of the "spirit of giving."
"It is a month where people
are more
greedy
.
than ever and
people justify it with the 'holi-
day spirit'," he said.
Despite the critics, there is no
stopping the holiday season.
With Hanukkah currently in
progress and Christmas and
Kwanzaa
_
on the way, the holi-
day spirit is here. So in the spirit
of the season, here's wishing
everyone happy holidays!
Comm Arts Club
}~~~
-
~p~icating in
-
.
inany
differerit
Ways
.
Circle
pho1ol_Jcremy Smith
A sample of Professor Dan McCormack's exhibition of figurative photogra!11s in the gallery.
McCormac
-
k Exposed
by
ERIN BURKE
Staff Writer
Marist College Professor Dan
McCormack is now showing his
collection of figurative photo
0
grams in an art exhibit housed
in the basement floor of
Greystone Hall.
The exhibit, which began No-
vember 29 and will last until ·
December I 5, is one of
three
fac-
ulty art exhibitions shown ev-
ery year.
.
Photograms, which were origi-
nally created by Thomas
Wedgewood in the l790's, are
pictures made without the use
of a camera. They are simply a
series of exposures. Professor
McCormack said that he used a
special method in creating his
works.
"I developed and solarized
( the exposures) to create further
abstraction," he said.
McCormack's collection con-
tained three different sets of
photograms. The familial pho-
tograms were exposures of his
four children in which he had
them lie in different positions,
specifically focusing on the
torso, hips, and vertebra areas.
In the figurative and hips/ver-
tebrae photograms, he used spi-
.
nal vertebrae and skulls from
animals to enhance his piece.
Professor McCormack was an
adjunct faculty member for al-
most ten yea-:-s and has
since
been a full-time member for three
years. He teaches both photog-
raphy and digital media courses
at Marist College.
Circle
pho(ol Jeremy Smith
McCormack used a special method when creating his works.
by
JENNIFER
WEINTZ
Staff Writer
With the dozens and dozens
of clubs on Marist campus, it is
kind of hard to understand ex-
actly what each one does.
Most students are only aware
of the ones that pertain to their
major or are sports related. But
what about the ones that some
students don
'
t know about, yet
are actually quite interesting?
One of those clubs is The Com-
munic
a
tions Art Society (CAS)
"Doing this helps stu-
dents learn the art of
networking and helps
to get people to see
what they are."
Lindsey Carr
This semester the CAS had a
trip to the very famous televi
-
sions station MTV. Here, a
bunch of students had the op-
portunity to be on Total Request
Live (TRL). The trip took place
on both November 8th and No-
vember 15th. This was just one
of the many events that the club
sponsors.
Once a year, the Communica-
tions Art Society holds an
Alumni Panel. The event, which
is coordinated through Jeff
Schantz of alumni affairs, brings
alumni from the different com-
munication tracks (radio,
television, journalism, etc.)
·
come and speak to any inter-
ested students. The alumni
come to speak about their jobs
and give students any relevant
information to their particular
field
.
In addition, the club is co-
sponsoring with the Career Cen-
ter a Resume Workshop. This
workshop is opened to anyone
interested
and
helps people to
build
.
cover letters and create
resumes.
CAS is
also
looking to have
guest speakers. They hope to
have professionals in the differ-
ent tracks come in and inform
members what their job
is
like.
Recently, the club had Kathleen
Dwyer-McNulty come in and
speak about journalism.
President Lindsey Carr said
that the job skills
-
learned by
these professionals are very
-valuable.
"Doing this helps students
learn the art of networking and
helps to get people to see what
they are," she said.
The Communications Art So-
ciety is also interested in updat-
ing their Web Page. With the
help of Dr. Pennings, they are
hoping to create a history of the
club, including what they've
done, what they are presently
doing, and what they hope to
do in the future. They are hop-
ing to allow multimedia people
get some experience in the field
by doing it themselves.
According to the Vice Presi-
dent, Christine Romer, the club
is here to help the students.
"The Communications Art
Society is all for the entire com-
munications department. We
like to ask the members what
they want to do and make it hap-
pen," said Romer.
,
--
1r1A6e
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t~iJR-ccii3
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DECEMBER 9, 1999
.
f'eatt.ltes
PAGE6
photo courtesy of Andn:a Dc\lan:o
Pefs~~Pets, Pets
-
and more Pets
Left to right; The first three are the Housing Hounds: Nielsen belongs to Kristine.
·
He is
a
yellow lab gearing up for winter. He is six and a retired seeing-eye dog.
Alice has a rottweilernamed Devon. He is nine years old and spoiled rotten. Laying in green pastures is Patti's dog Ella. She is a German shepherd/rottweiler mix soon
to be four. Next is Erica DeTraglia's dog
Zak. Hejs
anJ8
p<>µndJack Russel
·
terrier who loves to play with socks and has a fetish for rocks. His hobbies
_
include running
around the house, playing with his toys, barking.at anything that moves, and-sleeping
in
peopie's beds. Last is Andrea Dellarco's
'
golden retriever; Sonny.
He
is two
years old and is wearing "scrunchies" on his_ears: Thank you for all the pictures everyone! Does anyone out there have a cat?
·
j
,
1r1HnE
·
<CJ[]R.Cl[.JE
DECEMBER 9, 1999
;
:
features
"1~
.
DJ
tle
'NI~
.
.
.
.
.
.-
.
'
~
. .
'
~.
·;
,
http://www.marist.rivals.com
Any self~respecting Marist sports
fan
must check out this site on
http://
www.rivals.com,
_a
site the takes the top sports sites in the US and combines them into
one, user-friendly and complete sports community. Marist football an
·
d basketball ros-
.
ters
,
statistics, and schedules can be found here. The format is a cyber sports-page that
covers the latest in Marist sports highlights and fumbles.
·
·
·
.
.
·
·
If
you missed the football season, you can get a brief review here. To stay
current with the latest basketball progress, click
on
the
most
recent game.
You can chat with coaches and players, and even vote in the question of the
week. Thisweek's quest
_
ion: What can Mari st do to improve scoring? Cagers take note,
40%
answered better free throw percentage.
_
.
.
.
.
Test your knowledge of college football in the College Knowledge bowl against
your peers and win a prize.
·
Follow rivals links to Fox news and sports for national professional, college,
and even high
school
_
coverage.
-
.
-
Click on to the MAAChome page to see how Marist ranks among the other
·
teaIUs, and go to the Poughkeepsie Journal, along with all of the other Marist rival's
hometown papers.
.
.
.
.
.
.
:
_
·
·
_
..
_
'fp
:
keep '.1breast of cu
_
qent},1arist sports ~tandings,
·_
click on
_
to
hup:/1
lvww. inarist
:
rivals
:
coin,
the offic{at
web Site of the
·
armchair quarterback.
.
. ·
.
-
·
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.
·
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.
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.
.
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Horoscopes
ARIES:Ifs
time to
your best to
explain
the
~r£.
VIRGO:
Trying to go
::
wakeupandsmellthe
facts and then move
,
f};;y
italonetodaywillonly
_
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cpffee, Aries. The
,
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~fow nio#on?Daysg~
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.
J?}aybe
very
difficult
.
ting,Dori
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l,)y with each passing
·
not to take a 6~
,
siness
much about the out-
.•
-
hour. Others are unable
matter personally. To-
come;
·
instead,
·
focus
to comprehend how
night, be on the Jook-
on
the
interaction with
you can
.
move so
out for some~me you
others. The delight is
quickly, or why you
meet through a friend
•
as much in th
_
e process
would wantto. Take ad-
who may !lave a hidden_
as it is in the prod!-)ct.
vantage of this time
to
,......_ ....
agenda.
.
Tonight, be sure to' in-
accomplish as nmch
_
as
·
~~
CANCER:
It's time
.
to
elude the whole family
possible. If you finish
·
p.
shake
:
off the dust of
in a special announce-
your
assignments
·
your old ways, Cancer.
ment. The presence of
early, request new
The Capricorn Moon
loved ones enhances
ones:Keepinmindthat
brings new possibili~
•
'.
something new.
paying attention ~ode~
ties. Start something
.
jffl
LIBRA:
Sometimes we
..
.
tail isjus~
a.s
i01portant
-
·
·
. _
ne~, ~ither
_
apvork or
m
j1.1st have to let go, and
:
.
as meetirig
a
de~glinf
:
.
.in
'
your romantic)ife.
.
..
•
- today is going to be
-
~
TAURUS:Youcin'tget
Don't be
_
afraid.tolake
:
one of those days,
u.:
.
..
enough
.
stimulation to~
the initiative
.
wlien
:
it
bra. It's hard
to
hang
day, Taurus. The Cap-
comes to matters of the
on to anything today,
ricqrn Moon is having
heart.
A
positive atti-
whether it's your
an immense effect on
tude snatches triumph
thoughts, you,r pas-
.
your senses. Your
.
fromthejawsofpoten-
sessions or your pa-
mouthishungrierthan
tialdisaster.Ifyouthink
tience. Try not to
your stomach, but your
you can, you can.
worry too much
if
you
mindishungriestofall.
Don't let anyone tell
misplacesomethingof
Start out with a differ-
you anything different.
value -
this state is
ent restaurant, and see
Tonight, socialize with
only temporary.
If
you
where you
_
go from
an old friend over din-
make a scene, you
there. Everything you
·
ner. -
could draw the wrong
taste seems like you are
~
LEO:
Grab an irnagi-
kind ofattention. You'll
tasting it for the first
nary mop and bucket,
·
be
able to take care of
time. Smells and
Leo. It seems to b·e
it before anyone else
sounds come from ev-
Cleanup Time, and to-
finds out, anyway. At
ery direction
to
delight
day
·
you have been
home, hard work may
you. Who says it isn't
nominatedheadjanitor.
be necessary
_
in order
possible to experience
-
You might begin with
to fix a broken relation-
everything like it was
cleaning up your own
ship. Solve your prob-
the first time? Tonight,
act, and then move on
lems before they get
go out and visit
a11
of
to
helping others
_ _
...,bigger. -
the unusual places that
·
straighten out their
af-
.,t •
SCORPIO:
The Moon
your city has to offer.
fairs. Think of ways to
·~t~:
is in Capricorn and the
GEMINI:
It might
be
improve your relation-
;~ • baJance seems to come
impossible to protect
ships. Sometimes start-
back into your life, if
i
yourself from gossip
ing with a simple apol-
only for a brief, fleet-
and hearsay
.
today,
ogy is the first step.
ing moment. Expect a
Gemini. The wrong
Adapting a new health
day of harmony and
news hits the street at
regime could make you
forward motion in the
·
the wrong time
.
Do
feel years younger.
workplace. An idea of
yours is well-received
by a boss or business
partner. Tonight, make
plans to meet friends
.
at
:
a new restaurant or
.
: theater.
..
.
.
SAGI1TARIDS:
Your
light heart
·
and free
spirit are weighed
down by
material
concerns. Money and·
possessions take up
too much of your
brain capacity. Placing
importance on things
rather than people is a
big mistake. It may be
time to redefine your
values. Once you dis-
.
'
.
cover the root cif the
probJem,
·
it will be
simple
to come up
with a solution. Try to
remember that some-
times
·
less ineans
more
'.
°Tonight,
be
sure
to pay attention to
someone who is try-
ing to tell you some-
-
thing important.
CAPRICORN:
So
this is what it's like to
be a celebrity! You can
almost
see
the
photographer's flash-
bulbs and hear the
paparazzi cJamoring
for your attention.
It'sAll eyes are upon
you, and everyone is
eager for a piece of the
action. Play on other
people's greed and
make
it
w9rk
to your
advantage. Go ahead
and be selfish for a
day. You deserve the
attention, so live it up.
Pamper yourself by
doing something to-
tally expensive and
luxurious. Tonight
could
be
the icing on
the cake
if
you go af-
ter what you want.
PAGE 7
AQUARIUS:
It's hard
to look to the future
when you still have
some skeletons rat-
-
tling around in your
· ·
closet. The
ill
effects
of
a past mix-up
come
back to haunt you to-
day. Focus and orga-
nization may be espe-
cially hard. It might
be best to scrap a
project that isn't
working out. Surren-
der to
.
the inevitable,
deal with the mess
and come out swing
-
ing tomorrow. To-
night you may be
called upon to be the
host at an impromptu
gathering.
Put on
your best smile and
toast the occasion.
PISCES
:
Taking a
map along with you
everywhere you go
isn't a bad idea, Pi-
sces. Even normal
surroundings may
seem foreign today.
You may feel lost in a
crowd, which is a
problem
if
you are
try-
ing to meet someone.
Wear something that
armors
you against
feelings of vulnerabil-
ity.
Don't be afraid to
ask for directions
from a cute stranger.
Others are as happy
to help you as you are
to help them
.
At
work, a coworker may
come
to
you for ad-
vice on a personal
problem that you feel
uncomfortable dis-
cussing. It might be
in your best interest
to express your feel-
ings in order to
avoid funher embar-
rassment.
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was shocked to
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s~e my 1~01e as~qciated with th~;teqn liberal.
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anti-middl~ class, would
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side with me as a fe
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Jones symbolizes politics at its best by maµipµlating my words and igrioraritly
.
•.
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Jane Street
rebuffing m~
;
As a skeptic of Mr. Jones'strue amb
_
itions in life I vow nevefto depait
fromthemiddleclasscitize11rywhe_reiwasbom .
.
UnfortunatelyforDerrick
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say the same. Jappreciate life and
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doesn'twhine wh
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then
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2000.'**
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class the rich are nothing and by forgetting the middle class America is doomed
.
Maybe this time Derrick you can answer me by telling me what you think about
the . - - - - - - - - - - - - - • - - - - - - - - - - - - • - -
rising costs of tuition and how you
'
re going
io
pay for your children's tuition,
otherwise don't tell me what I kn<>w about Marist's beaut
i
ful campus. Peace.
Benjamin ].Jrenkert
Sophomore
Words of Wisdom·
.
"No one can m
_
ake you feel
inferior without your consent."
--Eleanor Roosevelt
Patrick Whittle
Editor-in-chief
1[1]H[]E .
<Gl[]~<ClLlE
Jill
Gioco~do
·
. Managing EditQr
.
Chris Grogan
·
N~sEditor
l{atrin~
Fuchsenberg~r
'
'
.
.
Features &litqr
•
-
·
-
Jeff Dahncke
·
~pprts Editor
.
.
·
Michael Bagnato
Opinion Editor
Nik Bonopartis
-
A &£Editor
..'
-
..
i
'
.
-
.·
.
-
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J~rein_y
Smitli
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.
.
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·
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Business Managers
.
,
~
-<:i.M:QdeleOarke,Facu/iyAd~isor
The Circle
is thestudent newspaperofMarist College, Poughkeepsi~, NY
:
Issue
are published every Thursday .
.
We welcome letters to the editor, club
_
announce-
ments and story ideas
.
We cannot publish unsig11ed letters to the editor. The
Circle
staff can be reached at
575-3000 x2429
or by email at HZAL.
·
You can
visit ~s on the web at http://www. academ
i
c.marist
.
edu/circle.
·
·
·
DECEMBER 9, 1999
PAGE9
The views expressed ori these ·pagesare not
necessarily
those of
The Circle
R.a
~
ciSt?
Just call me
''Johnny''
call ine then-word twice_." (Cape
.
-·
sori they bum crosses is to
"ii~
aside, here is wh~t transpired:
Verde is the westem-mostpoint luminate the true path of Jesus."
"Jojo" and "Horace" were sit-
.
by
PATRICK
WlilTILE
of continental Africa.)
B_ring that little tidbit up at the
ting in a local bar chatting it up.
They responded, showing next party you go to and you
They noticed that there was a
\Vhat you
.
are abouttoread is
some sense of weak wit, "N-
will be the center of attention
large ratio of African-Americans
painfully-true. The names have
·
word, n-word. Does that make
·
for sure.
to white breads at this particu-
not been c~ariged to avoid pro-
_
you happy?''
Actually, what !take from this
lar bar on this particular
tecting the guilty.
,_
·
.
..
·
.
·
In
.
actuality,-
,
they spelled out is thatthere is really no conceiv--
evening.
Recently while doing
a:
re-
:
1he
·
worci
T
incorrectly no less
'
_
able \Vay
·
to spread hate speech
"We can't use then-word in
search paper I began browsing
-
·
(they only used one "g"). Pretty
.
without sounding like an igno-
here anymore, they' II hear us
through some incendiary mate-
·
sad considering that it is prob-
rant, uninfonned, infantile mo-
and get mad," Jojo said.
rial on the web. Imanagedto
ably fairly common in theirver-
ron. The fact that things like
"We need a code word.
stumble across the e-mail ad-
nacular. I wrote them back and this pass as archaic "values" in
What's a silly name?" Horace
dress of the
Ku
Klux Klan while
saidiiwould make me happierif any defined organization should
proposed.
_
doing so, and I chose to take
they
··
actually spelled it right,
tell us so_mething about the
"How about... Johnny!" Jojo
this
.
opportunity to tell. them
noting that their ignorance may people involved in it. Moreover,
.
concluded.
what they have no doubt al-
be the result of an educational
·
their inanity should motivate us
To this day, a large number of
ready been told a million times.
deficiency as well as
a
moral to listen to ourselves when we
Mari
st students still refer to
However, since I have not been
one. They obliged, this time speak.
African -
Americans
as
oneofthemillioninoreinformed
·
granting me two "g's."
_
.
·
_
The use
:
of hate
:
speech is a
_
Americans
'
who have told them
What do I take from allthis? good wa{to sound like an inar-
i===~
they are
:
hat
·
e
:
pr.e
·
a~hing
·
Perhaps that Southemers
·
suf
:
tfculate Neanderthal in conver~
rednecks,
I
ch6se
·
to tell them
.
fer from involuntary spelling
-
sation, and if you
·
open your
anyway.
.
Our unabridged
·
dia-
·
and grammatical errors?
.
Or that ears you will hear quite a lot of
·
logue is a little.too course to be
maybe this is justthe work of a
'
it around the Marist
·
campus.
printed without making some of poor typist, who was having
.
Unfortunately, it is easy to be-
our more sensitive readers
problems seeing the keys come desensitized to it and
.
blush, but whatfollows will give
through his white hood? Or
_
adopt ifinto your own vocabu~
you a pretty good idea.
maybe I just chalked
it
all up to
lary
,
A perfect (and somewha~
I initiated the correspondence,
the fact that the Klan had more humorous
Y
example arose two
saying, "I am white, of Irish,
important things to .do that
·
years ago among a group of
English and French decent, but
-
night than write me an intelligent Marist students whose names I
I am related by marriage to Cape
response, like burning
•
crosses
•·
.
will change to protect the oth-
.
Verdeans and I am proud of that
and hanging confederate flags.
· ·
erwise innocent. Specific inac-
.
So if you call them then-word,_
Here's a KKK fun fact: the rea-
·
curacies in their conversation
"Johnny's." Is this akin to the
actions of the white-hooded
Southern folk I mentioned ear-
lier? Not really. Is it a result of
fear, manifested through preju-
dice? Probably, if you want to
get technical about things. The
bottom line is, hate speech has
seen its day, and as supposedly
intelligent college
students,
we
should pay it no degree of re-
spect by continuing to allow it
to pollute our phraseology.
If you agree, do the world a
service by considering what you
have just read.
If
you disagree,
you can just call this venerator
of his family's heritage
"Johnny."
.
......
.,
'
•
I
'
,
'
1
'
•
'
•
'
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>
·,
,
'
,
•
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I
.
•
,
,
DECEMBER 9, 1999
·
--
·
·
The
'
view·s expressed
on
these
pages
are
riofnecessarily those of
The Circle
.
..
Polit~callJn~yev~itifi
.
n~tlJ~~acJ.e.s
\
.
.
...
.
.
.
.
WTO is to have free trade
nouncing Mrs. Arafat for mak-
stands today. The Republican
All about buses
by
DERRICK A.JONES
II
Political Columnist
·
among its /Jiember
\
counttjes.
ing comments that supposedly
Party
has
overlooked
-
·
This in turnwouldlowerifiiot weredamagingtothepeacepro-
Buchanan; They have over-
byBENJAMINJ.BRENKERT
eliminate
.
tanffs;
arid do away
cess between the Israelis and
looked a man who has dedi-
When I toured Marist's beau-
with trade bamers. The tariffs.
.
the Palestinians. I be)ieve that
cated the majority of his
life to
tiful campus,
I was told that pub-
protect
Am~rican
jobs
_
and trade
·
den o
u
Ii
c i ng the s ta tern en ts
the party, overlooked a man who
-
Jic transportation takes students
barriers
.
uphold-ind maini!}ii:t
would
.
have oisturbed and
-
fur-
embodies virtue and principle,
to the
'
Galleria Mall daily and that
environmentalandhumanrights · ther agitated the already un-
overlooked
a
man who could
many Marist students call the
policy. PresidentClinton wants
.
stable peace process.
.
bring back stable values and
GaUeria theirworkplace
,
,
Today,
.
the l.J.S. deeply involved in the
.
·
.
_
mores to American society.
_
I call that person
a
liar and I ask
. WTO if not afthe forefront. I
JOHN McCAIN: B
.
Buchanan has gained national
that person what is their defini-
am s~re the farme~
-
~ steel and
Johri McCain is gaining inuch
exposure very quickly, some-
tion of public transportation.
textile industry workers of needed momentum. Notjustin
thing third party candidates
Marist needs revamped public
America are thanking Mr.
terms ofraising moneyibutalso
have a hard time doing.
transportation
and
·
_
fast.
Clinton for seHing them out.
in terms ofnational recognition.
Buchanan's goal is to give
In order to travel the Loop
They are only the backbone of He did well in a debate
_
among
America back to the voters, to
route one almost has to travel
As the semester draws to a
America, only the people who
the candidates for the Republi-
give America back its respect.
into Poughkeepsie to find the
close, it is only fitting to grade
.
built this great nation. I am also
can nomiriiition of
-
President.
.
correct bus, otherwise the other
someourmostnoteworthyand sure the people of the third
Hismessageofhonestyandin-
GEORGEW.BUSH:B+
routes would take
·
more than
notorious politicians. There-
_
world are thanking Mr. Clinton
tegrity
.
seems to reso11ate \Vith
George Bush gets points for
twenty minutesjust to arrive at
fore, I, Professor Jones, will as-
.
for sending ~hem American
the voters
_
cif,l\meric~:
_
}1<::C:ain
not losing points. He went into
the Galleria MalL Plus, the Loop
sess and grade the leader and jobs.
·
·
·:,,.
·· .
.
hasbeenanhnderqogallQfhis
detailabouthispositiononcer-
--
scheduleissoinconsistentthat
potential leaders of America.
.
·
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•
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tain issues on NBC;s Meet the
I'd
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WILLIAM CLINTON: F
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CLlNTON:
C
cans Iove
·
ai{tinclerdog
{
He\vas
'.
Press:
.
He
also did not lose any
.
dep::r; ~: ;:t::;st~nt~:ve~
..
Hillary
Cliritori
has improved
one as
·
.f
POW
~
i#-vjehiam,
and
momentum
.
when he appeared
to work
.
would most likely be
President Clinton has not in
.
from her political Jimbo in recent
he is one as a candidate for the
.
on a debate among candidates
fired within the first
few
weeks
news a lot this semester, but has
days. Even going as far as to
'
Republican nomination of for
for the Republican nomination
of employment. The never-
reasserted himself within in the
say she intends to run for
-
-
the
President of the United States.
for President. Instead of play-
present Loop Bus does not op~
last two weeks
.
The World United States Senate Seat rep-
McCain beat the communists in
ing
it
safe and being on the de-
erate on Sunday. This is a dis-
TradeOrganization'sconference
resenting New York. She has
Vietnam by not dying: He will
fensive, he was actually on the
grace to public transportation.
in Seattle went up in flames, al-
now crossed the line from First
try to use the same strategy
-
·
offensive, wounding candidate
In reality public transportation
most literally.
_
Tempers were ig-
Lady to politician. She had some
against George W. Bush.
Steve Forbes on the issue of accommodates public need.
· nited 'not
·
only'
'
behfrid close trouble in recent weeks though.
social security. Bush started as
Well correct me ifl am wrong,
doors, but outside of them as
She was pressured into making
PATRICKBUCHANAN: B
the front runner for the United
but there is a real need for trans-
well. The streets of Seattle were
the decision by fellow Demo-
Patrick Buchanan is running
States Presidency and so far has
._
portation from Marist to the
bombarded by 55,000 people,
crats. Shewastoldeitherrunor for President the hard way,
not relinquished his position.
protesting the WTO. They get out. Hillary also was
through the Reform Party. The
Galleria and back. And I am not
·
·
·
-
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·
R
bl"
-
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. · --
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ranged form labor organizations,
unwarran~edly attacked
m_
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Marist Brothers
of'
the Schqols
The
-
Marist
-
St.
Marcel
Peter's S
members.
We weti
make
Go
·
number
·
-
a
,
7 4
countries.
In
·
:this
·
-
country
-
the
.
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..
New
Jer1ey!
,Massac~~setts,
West Virginia, Loutsuma,
,.•
For
more ieformation
please
conti
Bro.John
cherry
F.M.S.
21-28
35 Street
Astoria,
NY,-
1
_
i105
(718) 204--0506
.
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-
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Education
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o_f
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We
are
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in
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apostolic'.
·
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New
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T~as,
-
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California.
·
"A
heqtt
that
knows
no
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bounds."
~rewtlii11gs
to
.
Say
.
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be as easy as demanding equal-
.
.
·
.:'.continued from
pg.
9
.
.
ity in all )om;.relationships. It
.
.
.
-
.
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.
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9an be a~ ~asy astelling people
-
mouths because these men are
.
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:
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obvi_ously misogynists . .\1/h<> ei-
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~d g~t.inJ~w_et~c9id~tj~tf.ian
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with women
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b~duise the
campus
_
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·
actuiµly
:
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atter experience
far
m9r~ ac~i-
conra.c.i: withwomen lcnows that
dents every year.
-
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women are
_
eqtlally int~lligent as
.
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meri; In fact, in many classes in
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strong
.
woman who has
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which
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take p~ :women vol- .
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Jong Hfe filed with tremeridous
·
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-
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It
.
accomplishITI~nts .
.
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.
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is
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.
note th
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·
·
amazing r<>le ll).Odel for all iridi-
worne1.(.s s~dies minoi:s
:
i:m this
.
;
_yiduals
/
n9tjust
-
,
w9men, be-
.
campu_s;
,
wh9 are ¢omposeden:
,
.
:
,
paqse she has ripeat~dly stood
,
tirely
:
of w.~men; ~ay~ s9me of:.,
_:
lipfor
0
tlj.e owr
.
e~s~djn our
.
so;.
,
:·
theJligl)~t
~
QPAs of the entire
:
::
~iety.
_
Steine11_1is
_
ahighly intelli-
-
·swdeotbQQY-
· •
:
;
,
; \ ·
.
~'
:,,_
.
-
gen(woman\J/qo __ u~edherabili-
Stejnem
_
also spoke of acµv-
,
,
ties and
.
talents n9t,pnly to help
isri:t
.
ancl how important it
_
is to
herself, but also to help em-
deal with the iss
·
ues facing power millions ofother women
women today and to stand up
in the world .
.
While sitting in
for yourself and youi:
-
gender.
the
·
audience listening to Ms.
While far too many people are
Steinem speak, I felt empowered
complacent today, not everyone
merely by hearing her words and
has
_
to
be .
.
,
It is important to re-
realizing tha~ she accomplished
mernre,r that as hard
_
as it is to
so much for women. She has
stand ~p for yourself and oth-
helped women realize their
po-
ers, it is even harder not to stand
tential and has given
-
them the
up for youcyelf and others. As-
courage to enter the public
serting yourself does not have sphere and change society. I
to
be
a radical endeavor. It can
realired
that
any
one of us i~ able
be
as easy
_
as telling someone
to make a difference if we take
·
who utters the word "faggot"
the blinders off and recognize
to please refrain from using that
the inequalities in the
-
world.
language, and that the pr9per We can ALL become women
word is '.'homosexual." It can
who take no s**L
·
i~tt
!
I,
~,
~
.
,
~
·k1
I:
l
}
1rlH[]E Cl[]~(C]L]E
DECEM~~R,·9, 1999 -
An.
·
r&8Jt1rtainment
PAGE
11
Metallica
·
gets classical on
S&M
by
EDWILLMM.Sfil
paired up with Kamen and his
the beginning, but he didn't
StaffWriter
orchestra, you can't help but
have to because the almost two
Metallica
fans everywhere
were treated to an early Christ-
mas present as · the best album
of the year was released on No-
vember 23; After paying hom-
age' to their early day music and
inspirations in
Garage Inc.
last
year,
Metallica
expanded their
horizons yet again and teamed
up with Michael Kamen and the
San Francisco Orchestra to pro-
duce
S&M. ·
This CD is actually
a
record-
ing of their critically acclaimed
April
21
concert at Berkeley
Community Theatre in Berkeley,
California: Upon first hearing
. that this masterful metal band
.
.
. .
.
.
and a
100
piece classical orches-
tra would be pairing up fora
21
song concert consisting of clas-
sic
Metallica
tracks, one may
chuckle to themselves and think,
"How on earth will they pull that
one off?" It sounds almost im-
possible, but you have to listen
to it to believe it.
·
Though practically every
song sounds amazing, there are
some that stick. out more than
. others.
Until
it
Sleeps
is an ee-
rie song as itis, but ~hen it is
have a chill run down your spine
minute instrumental piece that
rightfromthe.beginning. Atthe
begins the song would have
very start of the song we are
been enough. The orchestra and
treated by a momentary playing
Metallica
mesh together better
of a mystical harp which sets the
in this song than any other by
tone for the rest of the song.
far. They seem to be playing as
James Hetfield, the lead singer
one cohesive unit, but at the
of
Metallica,
soon begins to
same time they seem to be try-
~ar into the piece with his emo- ·
ing to outdo each other. Every
tional vocals;and the rest of the
timeMetallica
seems to step up
band begins to play• with reek- ·
their play a notch, the orchestra
less abandon as well, ·but the
not only matches that intensity
most impressive thing is how the
but raises it another level as well.
orchestra keeps up whh the
This competition between the
same pace. The orchestra's vio-
two results in one of the most
lins . were added and another
powerful songs ever released on
whole dimension to the song
a CD. The crowd also adds to
was created.
the magnificence of this song
Perhaps the most impressive
as they show their enthusiasm
feat of the albu_m is how the or-
during the chorus parts scream-
chestra was able to keep up with
ing, "For whom the bell tolls!"
the band on the fast paced
Fuel
This compilation also provides
track. Not only is it a fast paced
an extra bonus as
Metallica
in-
song, but one wou)d think that
Do I have something in my teeth?
eluded two new original songs.
it's almost too heavy a song to
fastpace, but the orchestra was
Bell Tolls.
This classic
NoLeafCloverandHumanwere
be paired up with the orchestra.
brought in and it gave it
a
strong
Metallica
song was originally
made especially for this occa-
But that couldn't be further from
sense of drama. The orchestra
released on their sophomore ef-
sion, and they came out phc-
the truth as the orchestratumed
duels back and forth with fort,
Ride The Lightning.
As
nomenally.
Human
seems remi-
F_ue/
into another whole song.
Metallica
to the very end in a
powerful as it sounded in its
niscent of
Metallica's
newer
It made me feel like I was in the
musical climax that would put a
original
form,
Metallica
could
work from the
Load
and
Re-Load
middleofacarchase in a movie.
smile on any fan's face.
have never imagined just how
albums as itis powerful, yet not
The strong lyrics of Hetfield and
If there was one song that was
powerful it could sound with the
as heavy as some of their earlier
the heavy metal play of the rest
the shows topper, though, it help of 100 orchestra friends.
. ..
please see
METALLICA,pg.
of the band gave the song the
would have to be
For Whom the
Hetfield pumps up the crowd in
J 2
J!Xst~.als
The Pilfers
show?
by
DOUGLASP. GUARINO
Assistant Managing Editor
Can an unsigned band from
the Hudson Valley induce a
crowd to jump higher, dance
harder, and scream louder than
nationally recognized Mojo re-
cording artists
Pilfers?
Pe,fect Thyroid
has awnsered
that question with an' affirma-
tive ''yes.';
This past Saturday night, a
crowded Chance Theater. was
host to what was pr<:>bably the
best show that Poughkeepsie
has· seen this fall.
Pe,fect Thyroid
kicked off the
celebration with an intense, fast
paced set that didn't give the
crowd much of a chance to stop
skanking and catch their breath.
The set consisted mostly of
PTs new, harder-edged mate-
rial, including yet to
be
recorded
songs; "Gypsy," "Asylum,"
"RUWinning?" and "Mutt,"
though some older fan favorites
from the band's last two CD re-
leases, such as "Blah Blah
Blah," "Dig Me," and "Pear-a-
noya/' were also featured.
Though the element of hard rock
has become increasingly more
predominant
in
Perfect
Thyroid's more recent cre-
ations, the influence of funk,
ska, and jazz are still quite evi-
dent. The occupants of the
Chance dance floor couldn't
remain in awe of guitarist Joe
Brooks' extended solo's fortoo
long, as the unignorable funky
rhythms that bassist Jon Stern
and drummer ChrisSnykus laid
down kept the crowd jumping,
perhaps ~ng cues from the ac-
robatic stage antics of "Skunk"
Hanson (lead vocals, trumpet).
All in all, the aforementioned
characteristics of PT's perfor-
Circle
photo/Doug Guarino
Perfect Thyroid's "Skunk "at The Chance Saturday.
mance amounted to
a
high-en-
asked if I wanted to start some-
ergy frenzy that was equal, ifnot thing
new
with
him."
greater than_ the mayhem pro-
The Pilfers sound, exceeds the
duced by the headlining Pilfers.
traditional limitations of the ska
It is, however, necessary to
genre, adding the Nick Bacon's
. give credit where credit is due.
metal guitar sound, and the
I wouldn't want a bunch of sometimes reggae, sometimes
crazed Pilfers fans to jump me jazzy, bass licks of Anna Milat-
on my way· out of the WMCR Meyer, a combination that kept
studio late one Sunday evening.
the crowd seduced all night.
For the
Pilfers
put on an amaz-
Both Ranx and Nobile put on
ing show, much betterin fact
relentless displays of energy
then the "legendary"
Toasters
throughout the
Pilfers
set, so
did in August at the same venue
much in fact that Chance secu-
(a show at which
Pe,fect Thy-
rity guards had to clear extra
roid
also performed). Perhaps
space on the front of the stage
lead vocalist Coolie Ranx got the
that is normally occupied by the
last laugh when he left the
Toast-
monitors. Like the members of
ers
in 1997 to form the
Pilfers.
Pe,fect Thyroid
Ranx 's intimate
"Everyone thought I'd gone
interaction with the crowd is to
completely mad," said Ranx.
be commended.
"But, being a partof[thePilfers)
In addition to a common ap-
has reawakened my love for per-
preciation for eclectic music,
forming and making music."
both bands displayed support
Vinny Nobile (trombone/vo-
of each other. On numerous oc-
cals) has expressed similar feel-
casions during
PTs set, Snykus
ings regarding his departure chanted "Are you ready for the
from
Bim Skala Rim.
Pilfers," while Ranx offered "re-
"I was starting to feel boxed
spect for Skunk-man Hanson"
in by the musical limitations of at the close of the show.
my situation and had long since
Unfortunate souls who missed
stopped enjoying myself as a
this shindig can catch
Perfect
perfonner," said Nobile. "I was
Thyroid's
"Viva Diversity 2000"
more than ready when [Ranx]
show at The Chance Jan. 15.
;
.
f
i
i
l
l
f
i
l
L.
1PJHOE
_
,
.
JCJ[l~<G-JLJB
DECEMBER 9, 1999
Arts&
:
Bllllldainm•t
.
·
.
.
.
.
.
.
_
·
.
.
...
.
.
.
..
.
•
. .
' ·
.
•
.
.
,
•.
·
.
.
.
.
-
.
.
.
:
PAGE
.
12
ALLYMcBEALISSHOWING
IMPROVEMENn
--
~n
:
·
.
w
·
·
~i'rli
/
·
·
A,\ikt
·
11'h~~~~en
Ally
McBeal
is regularly deliv-
ering its highest ratings to date
·
,
·
despite some tough competition
in its Monday night at 9
"The Fox that Rocks" may be
timeslot.
catchy slogan for 88. l-WMCR,
Ally
McBeal
debuted on FOX
the Marist College radio station,
in
I
997, and was
an
instant rat-
but it probably does not apply
ings success. The title charac-
to the current state of affairs
ter (Calista Flockhart) works at
over
at
the FOX television net-
a Boston
.
Jaw
firm,
which is
work. FOX has had a fairly tough
headed by Richard Fish (Greg
time of it this year. Every new
Germann). Coiricidentally, one
show it introduced has either
of the attomey
_
s at the firm is
struggled in the ratings (Time of Ally's former boyfriend, Billy
Your Life, Action)
or been can-
Thomas (Gil Bellows). Billy's
celled outright (Ryan Cau(field:
wife,
.
Georgia
:
{Courtney
Year One, Harsh Realm).
The
Thome-Smith) als6Works at the
network's attempt to counter-
firm. The secretary:at the
firm
is
program against NBC's Thurs-:
.
Elaine Vassal (Jane Krakowski).
·
day night "Must-See" slate of Ally's roommate is Renee
comedies was, in a word, disas-
Radick (Lisa Nicole Carson) .
trous,butit hashadafewbright
Joinirig the dst mid-way
spots. That 70s Show is show-
.
through the first season was
ing incredible potential. Also
Peter MacNicol, as attorney
comforting to FOX executives is
John Cage. At the start of the
the fact that the comedy-drama
show's second season (1998-
9!)), two ne~ people joined
.
the
·
•
shared by a lof of other people,
ing the most cartoonish charac-
cast: Lucy
Liu,
as qng Woo,
.
since this past September Ally
·
. .
tefon the
·;
show
i
hist
_
seas
,
on; is
and Portia de Rossi as attorney
-McBeal
W()n the. prestigiot1s
·
,
be!,~g hand~t!~
'
".Vi~ a Sllrprising
NeHe P<>rter. Th_e
n
.
e'Y
acldiµol?S
,
,
.
-
~
_
11.1fay
.
a~ard for Be~t
,
So!Aedy
_
·}lffi9~!1;1$(
f~mi>
,
~~
c
~
:
i?~):>.ne of
to
.
the cast did n9th,ingto deter
•
.
•·
Seii~~J~otigh, the s~ow.is"te~h-
.
.
-,
~e
,
0
b~~f
}:
~•~~s
,;
.~
~~:mt
-,
t~~
·
cur-
Ally
McBeal's
ratings successi
·
nicallf
:
stilCa come~y
-
~drarifa),.
·
.
·
r~nt:
ep1so
_
des
,'.
ofAlly
:
ft.1cBeal,
and the show coritinu~cfits sta-
.
'
Aiso:this: September, laiscov-: - though,
·
has, :Strangely
_
enough,
tus as one of FOX's biggest
-
ered that, in the houselani Hv-
beerithedecrease
_
ofscreentime
hits. It was so successful that,
ing in this year, Ally
McBeal
is
for the show's title cha~acter.
in 1999, FOX added a show
a Monday-night staple (hereon
With a few excepti<>ns (such as
called Ally to
its
Tuesday night
campus;it is seen Monday
therecent episode iJJ;volving
lineup. InAlly,oldepisode~(and
·
nights at 9 PM on Channel 5). I
Ally_ and her parents), the
some unused fooiage)of the
tried avoiding the show the first
storylines that focus
·
on Ally
hour-long Ally
McBeal
are re-
few weeks of the new season,
·
have
·
been relentlessly goofy,
cycled and· compressed down
but
I
finally gave in around late
and infact provide grov;:ing evi-
into a half-hour sitcom-typ~
October and decided to give ita
-
dencethat Ally is just not a par-
show. In sryort,
Ally
is nothing
try
again. I told myself, "Qkay,
ticularl}' likable character. Per.,.
but a cheapened repeat
_
of the
I'll
watch it, but
I'll
probably hate
haps if her stories were changed
original series.
myself in the morning." Well,
a little, Ally would no longer be
In late 1997,
I
began watching
·
here's the news.lwatched it, but
among the weaker elements of
Ally
McBeal.
It was a nice little
I didn't hate myself in the mom-
her own show.
.
_
show, and
I
watched it when I
ing.
Though Ally McBeal is im-
would have the time. By the time
The stpries on Ally
McBeal
are
proving,it still has a ways to go.
the fall of 1998rnlled around, I
·
no longer as goofy as they were
.
.
There are still some moments of
had grown fairly tired ofthe
during the 1998-99 season. Billy
the show which remaiµ a little
show, as the oddball qualities
is currently going through sotne
too goofy. Ally Mc:I3ealis qest
of it were beginning
to
grate on
.
semblance of a mid-life crisis
when it is
.
a pure comed.fdrama.
me.Neverthele~s,Jt:riecl\vatch-:
.
(even though
:
he's
still
fairly
.
Onecan
;
hopetheshowcanstay
ing some ~pisd~e~;Jr,on1
.
the
.
.
·
young),
ariq
:
creator J)~vid
·
·
E.
on
it,s
c~
,
rrent tr~ck
;
~ti
.
ti
ge~
the
1998
-:
99 se~son.,
.
a11<i disc:ov-:
.
Kelley (who writes every
epi-
_-
feeling
_
that
:
some
'.
old Ally
.
ered that !just could
no
longer
sode, just as he does with The
.
McBeal goofin~ss may be just
.
sitthroughafull episode. It had
Practice)
has handled the sub~
around the comer. Lhope I'm
ju
•
st-gotten too goofy. The char-
·
feet
surprisingly welL The result
wrong, but if tm right, at least
acters were becoming cartoons,
is that Billy's crisis, and his de-
we can all watch The Practice,
and the snow was not very en-
teriorating marriage with Geor-
which, despite Ally McBeal's
joyable. Now, that is just my
gia, is quite effective. Also, John
recent renaissance, remains
opinion. Obviously, it was not
c_age, who was quickly becom-
David E. Kelley's best work.
KNUD1SEN:
Road Trip
songs, they kept a rapid fire
45
as songs from their last two al-
Attonito, the lead vocalist,
7l
4"
~,_ff:,,...
.
, .
· .
••
minute long set, stopping only
bums, Thicker Than Water and
seemed completely uninterested
1
J'
. J _ ~
for a couple seconds to change
F7TW.
During their set they
in both the show and the crowd,
.
... continued from page
11
instruments or take
a
quick
called up a
.
pair of their old
going through the motions in a
s
. &
.
.·
·
.
·
M .
.
.
.
·.·
.
drink. Halfway through the,
_
set
.
friends who had gotten married
hurry to get out. lJnless SOil)
_
e-
they covered Kids United, the
at ~n.H2Qshow a
_
f~w y~11rsJ,e-
i
•
thi~g I:iaJ>P.~r.~
,
.
so§~l? resp~!--
i'.
sion was recently signed to Epi-
long tiine
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six~hoiit.ride h6inehvas.·~ work, while
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majority of songs they played
booked on theECFUtour since
the same set.as the one they've
rather uneventful exceptfor the
_
starts out sounding smooth and
during their set were off of their
they're not on Epitaph, to the
.
played at the last two shows
·
fog and nagging ~eed forsleep
easy like a
Fade
to Black
from
last album, The Kids Still Have
best of my knowledge, but it was
that I saw.
that <::ciuld have sent us hurdling
Ride the Lightning,
but then the
·
A lot To Say,
with a few new and
a definite plus regardless.
The Bouncing Souls
were. the
offthe road atany minute
,
Once
vocal~ take oyer and bring the
old songs mixed in between.
H20
.
came up next, making
la
.
st band of the ilight and
.
un-
again;] must re~~mphasize
my
:
_
.·
·
power of~ song like King Noth~
Following was the sty lings of that night yet another in the
fortunately they let me down.
distaste
fo,r
Jersey
.
thanks
ing
from
Load.
In
the middle,
street punk classics, The Casu-
·
long series of
shows
I have seen
Having seen them twice befo.re,
largely to the oversize<fgas sta-
though, Hetfield slows down
alties,
sporting their oversized
them play. They played thtold
I was accustomed
fo
the norinal
tion attendant that was worth-
.
and sounds
.
more like he did
mohawks and liberty spikes.
favorites such as Family Tr:ee,
energy of their set, which was
less tn supporting our need for
during
'
Cure
fro
_
m the Load al-
With
.
few
··
J;l.~ll
.
5,
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.
be_tween
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ev~i.
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the bnly thing
that C0il!es
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resembling
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tion/ Metallica has such a wide
selectio~
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<>t' so
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to
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from_tlj~tif\\f~ nearly impos-
sible foconie
_
up \\'.ith just 21.
M_etallica
ahd Micha.el Kamen
had· gone
·
throu
·
gh the
·
entire
catalogue of songs and chose
the 21 they
felt
would
.
be best
for this type of concert. After
such a great end result, its hard
to criticize· the selection of
songs, but one has to w9nder
why such classic" songs that
· seem a perfect fit for orchestral
a~mpaniment like Unforgiven,
Unforgiven//, (Welcome Home)
Sanitarium, Fight Fire With
Fire,
The
Four Horsemen,
and
Fade to
Black
were not chosen.
Despite that small imperfec-
tion, this double CD flows more
quickly than a normal length al-
bum and invokes more emotion
from the listener than most CDs
of recent history. Some may ar-
gue that
Metallica
is getting
soft teaming up with an orches-
tra,
but
if
they listen to this com-
pilation they will be tot~lly
blown away and realize that even
an orchestra can "rock" if they
want to.
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DECEMBER 9; 1999
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.-
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DECEMBER 9, 1999
SpQ~s
PAGE.14
Red
Foxes hitv~i~ffollgishowirig_at Role~Invitational
by
CLAYTON NORRIS
. .
.
tati~ri): ~:rad,! j~{expecting .
,:fo
the conference, he Iosta se~--
.
'
'
Staff Writer
· ·
it,"·' he said::
~•1
was' happy
be.: .
saw battle. to the, eight_ seed
in. .
. cause of the· prestige
'that
goes: . the region, Yale's Greg Royce,.
The men's tennis team: com-· along with being selected and
6-2,2-6,6-4.
·
pleted an outstanding fall sea-
the chance:to compete against
·
"If
Roberto played J;tim
son with an exclamation point
a higherlevefof competition." . (Royce) in a best threeout of
at the Rolex Invitational Tour-
· Scheidt defeateQ Farleigh
five he· would. have had· him,"
nan1ent at Princeton last month.
Dickinson's numoer one singles · · Smith said.
. .
Marist sports history was
player, Alvaro Echeverry, in
Suddenly, Marist's chances of
made as the Red Foxes com-
straight sets, 6-4, 6-4 on day one
advancing to day three of the
peted successfully for the first
of the Rolex, but was ousted
Rolex's rested in the webbing of·
time at the annual Division
I
from the tournament the next
Ralph VanDerPlasse's tennis
tournament. In all, 65 schools • day by Brown's Nick Malorie,
racket. Smith would agree that
from Maine to Virginia com~
6-0;6-l.
·
VanDerPlasse is not a bad spot
peted in singles and doubles
A shoulder injury hampered
to place the team's fate..
.
play.
Scheldt's play against Malone,
"After watching Ralph warm
Marist made a strong state-
and if it wasn't for Scheldt's
up,Ifeltthathewasfickingwith
ment long before stepping on
competitiveness; Marist coach
the fine precision ,of a Rolex
the courts, as its three player
Tim Smith would have tried to
watch," Smi£4 said.
representatives exceeded every
convince him to default.
Sure_ enough, VanDerPlasse
school except Penn State, Navy,
"(Eric) toughed it out even
came throt1gh with a convinc-
Virginia Tech and the talented
more than he should have,"
ingwinoverEric~obotkaofthe -
Ivy League schools.
Smith said.
_ __ _
_
University of Pennsylvania; the
Between the lines, it was much
Between the
!WO
of them,
fourteenth ranked_ player'in the
of the same story as the trio of VanDerPiasse.and Maher won
region.
_
.
... .
..
Ralph VanDerPlasse, Roberto
three matches 9n the first clay
The
magic ended. there as
Maher and Eric Scheidt won five
of the tournament._ With'an eight
VanDerPlasse · lost to. the num~
matches in the competitive tour-
o'clock in the m6rnJng start time, . ber_:eleven player .in the· c01m-
nament
VanDerPlasse
dismissed
try,
Peiro Pivcevic ofTemple,
6~
VanDerPlasse, who defeated
Towson State's top player, Eric
1, 5-7, 6-3, in a nail biter. The
three regionally-ranked players
Horne,
6-3, 6-3.
Three hours
damage had already been done
this fall, and Maher were cho-
later the reigning MAAC cham-
by the Red Foxes though, as
sen because of their successful
pion, John Espinosa, lost to.
echoed by their proud coach.
fall·
~¢'asons,"•but,;theeselection
Maher
64,
2-6, 6-4.
·
·
"We won five matches at the
of St.heldt offered an u'nex-
Maher- and VanDerPlasse
Rolex where we had never won
pected twist
combined on a first round
before. It was an outstanding
Though the freshman did
doubles win against Iona's"tan-
way to end a fall season that saw
have a wonderful fall season, he
dem of Kropp and Moncrieffe,
us receive no P.R.," Smith said.
was only selected as the first
8-2.
"We won individual matches
.
alternate for the tournament.
Day tw~ of the Rolex's be<;:ame
Luck was on Scheldt' s . and - much t()ugher, as
the
level'
of .
Mari sf s side;.
tlio~gh, because , .
competitiqnwas,Jjtj~ed ap,ot~h . ..
an invite from another school
The
,doubles .
tCam' ,
1
o{'
chose not to compete: enter Eric
VanDerPlasse and Maher were
Scheidt.
given some of their own medi-
As would be expected, the first
cine while falling to West
year player was pleased to be
Virginia's, Dektas and Kent, and
selected.
Scheidt was struggling with his
"I wouldn't say I was sur-
ailing shoulder.
prised (normally each year at
After a first day in._ which
least one player denies an invi-
Maher defeated the best player
RADIO:
Women's
hoops to surf the Web
... continued from
pg.
J 5
cover other sports as well.'' .-· · .. -·.
Just as with anybody else, the
known by the crew.
sports department's success
The WMCR crew is so dedi-
has taken time.
cated to this project that they
''Last year, Charlie Leone
got
are even _covering the games
the ball rolling for the sports
over winter break.
department," Koller said.
•~we .
"By covering these games just picked up where he Ieftoff.
over the winter break, the guys
By a lot of teamwork, we have ·
are showing their hard work and
become a great sports team.'' .
_
true devotion to the sports de-
Not only has this year's ·
partment,"Kollersaid.
WMCRcrewpickeduptheball, · ·;;
If
things go well this season, -but they're·running down'lhe ·
Koller would love to branch orit -· · court for a slam dunk. To listen: '
into other sports as well.
to all of the exciting
Marisi."
"The radio station can't do it
women's basketball actfondust
by ourselves," he said. "But go sign on to the Internet and
with the help of the Athletic
go to:
http://www.marist.edu/
Department, we would love to
athleiiclwbasketballllive.html.
. , Photo courtesy Carlisle Stockton
VanDerPlasse performed well at the Rolex Invitational.
against players that we couldn't . know who Marist is and where·
.have competed·_ against· t\Vo
we are located.''
years ago. Now, ,ajpst schopls .
"
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.
DECEMBER 9, 1999
.
s
···•
•
·
ortS
Nepoµsm?Sorry, but
ijust
~ajf
f.
.
road victory; which has not hap-
.
bufanything that comes out
of
-
pened since February 16. They
Westbrook's mouth these days.
better learn to win away from
To New EnglandPatriots Head
'
Vancouver soori, because if ru-
Coach Pete CarroU:
a
one-:\Vay•
-
_
mors are correct, they may be
ticket dutof Foxb9ro.
•
He ap~
_
moving to St. Louis in the near
pears to top the· "most likely
to
future.
-
-
.
be fired list."
_
.
To Seattle SuperSonics G Gary
__
_
·
To Denver Brnncos Head
_
_
Payton: a little more maturity~
·Coach Mike Shanahan
'
and New
-
His explosions with Coach Paul
York Jets Head Coach :Bm
_
·
Westphal are starting to become
-
Parcells: better luck next
year
for
-_
a
weekly occurrence, and the
With the
holid~y
~easo~ ap-
two great coaches, espedally'in
-
team is 13-5,
proacliirig, I will assume the role
the injury department.
_ _
· To the Chicago Bulls ... well,l'm
·
of Santa and hand mit
_
the ap:.
To Jacksonville Jaguars Head
_
not sure who can help them.
propriate
-
~re
-
sents
i
fo_r sonie in
_
- -
Coach Tom Coughlin: a smile,
_
_
_
-
Grant Hill is
a
free-agent after
sports. However
;
the Grinch will
'
To San Francisco 49ers
-
Head
·
this year, but if he wants to leave
appeai-011more than occasion:
Coach Steve Mariucci: a team
Detroit because of losing, why
Firs~
,
the world of football.
that has more talent.
-
If begets
would he want to go to Chi-
Here
'°
s
·
an obvious one
'
- to Wis-
o'i1sted i_n whatshouldbe
·
a b11sy
cago?
corisin
.
R,B
.
R<>11
Dayne: the
San· Francisco off season,_ it's
Up next, baseball
.
Hei~rn)inttophy.
_:
.
.
_
_
-
_
/
-·
-:
the"°49ers' loss.
_
-
-
__
--
-
To Boston Red Sox P Pedro
ToSL Louis Rams Head Coach
--
_
And now, the NBA.
:
/
_
_
_
:
Martinez: theMVP award for
the
Dick'Vewieli::°iyellr'sitippl}'<>f
.
To
'
New..y~rk
:
Krticks"
GiF.
\
J999
·
season that rightfully be-
.
tissue,$
;.':
His
.
eµi9tionjs
genll-.
.-
Latrell
Sprewell:
a:
muzzle for
his
.'
longs to him anyway. The two
ine; and he's not afraid to show· rtiouth ing:unes
at
Golden State.
-
writers who left Martinez off
it
.
-
-
Credit
A
&
E
honcho Nik
their MVP ballot should have
To
Washington Redskins
Bonopartis for thinking of that
their heads examine~. Speaking
Head _Coach Noi-v Turner: an
one.
of which ...
owner ~ho
_
will appreciate him
To
New Jersey Nets point
To George King of the New
for his knowledge ofoffensive
_
guardStephon Marbury: peace,
York Post and LaVelle Neal of
football;because Daniel Snyder
inner content, and fewer games
the Minneapolis Star Tribune: a
is an egomaniac.
Wu!
Turner be
where he scor:es 30 points on
·
head examination for both
.
working for Jerry Jories next
lOOshots. OK,lmeant30points
·
Maybe we can even get a two-
year?
-_-
'
on 30 shots.
for-one deal.
To Redskins WR Michael
To Los Angeles Lakers C
To the Baltimore Orioles and
PAGE 15
Freshman Elisha DeJesus has helped Marist succeed.
W01\1EN:
Off
to
:•
--
best
-
start
since
1995-96
seaoon
Westbrciok:
,
the
.
ability to go a
Shaquille O'Neal: more appre
-
Los Angeles Dodgers: a victory
full season without embarrass~
-
ciation for his MVP caliber sea-
-
total that would equate with the
ing himself in some way. His
son to this poinL Even with
sizeoftheirpayrolls.
most.recenLtransgression
:-
was.
,
_
.
Shaq.playing
.
as
.
well
.
as
_
hehas,
.
.
,
.
.
Finally, to
:
all Maristteams:
:
.. continued from pg'.16
not holdfog us back."
c~ci~~
-
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-
-
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~:~_,~
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·
• .
.
_
~ry;~om~~aa~d
Bost1p
;
fatl:ier of Arizona Car-
_
.
.
draws more
_
media attention.
_
commg year and beyond.
c
~
r,Jire_e
:.
pouiter
by
DeJe~us(tliree
'
-
·
-
.
portioii
of
the
season,
if
not
the
·
dinal
_
s
WR
::
-
pavidhBp~t~m;:>
;f
T~
·
Ui"e VaficoJ!yer Grizzlies: a
_
Happy Holidays to all!
of her
15
in the game) h~lped
entire season because of a re-
-
"
-
::--
-
·'·
-"".·
·
,
,-.
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-·
,
.t
·
· · ·
,
- - - - - - - - -
complete a 17-3 Maristrun late
curring injury from last season,
in the second half that allowed
feels that the team is playing well
the women win their fourth
together. As opposed to the
game of the season, tying last
past few seasons where only a
year's win
·total,
56-43. Seidel
few players scored the majority
netted 16 points
_
in the winning
of the points, everyone is chip-
effort, a game in which Marist
ping in this season, which is a
trailed by nine points with just
key to the team's early success,
over seven minutes remaining
according to Vallery.
_
.
•
;,
;.-
by
KYLE WOOD
-
-
overwhelrning shadow
_
of
Michael Jordan and be realized
for the truly great player he is.
Speaking of Jordan,
l
want to
·_
.
.
witn,ess one more professional
·
game by him
.
I
want Mike Tyso
_
n to win the
_
heavyweight boxing title and for
Don
_
King to
·
shave his hair:
I
would like to see athlete's,
such as Peter Warrick, stay out
of trouble, for college football
The
holiday season is upon
and its fans lose out when ter-
us. Most people are making
rific players like himself are on
theirJists and checking th~m
the sidelines for dumb mistakes.
twice.
·
I want to see more collegiate
Here is my list of what
I
want
athlete's stay in school.
to see happen in the world
·
of
Can the geniuses, who devel-
sports.
oped the Bowl Championship
First, can Brent Musb1uger
Series, develop a better bowl
shut up! I do not want to hear a
system, one that is similar to that
20-second
_cfiatribe
everytime
of college basketball?
·
ABC
goes,t9J?~-
_
..
.
•-
,
_
Even.though itwillnotoccur,
Dick Vitale
'
-
>
see
:
Brent
_
-
I wando see-Virginia Tech up-
Musburgef"'and
-
-
insert ESPN ·-_ set Florida State.
where ABC is.
·
I want a three-peat from the
Can Shaquille O'Neal
learn
_
·
best team of this century, the
how
to
shoota
free
throw.
New
York Yankees.
I want to see the New Jersey
I
want to see Ken Griffey Jr.
Nets find one person that
can
·
and Alex Rodriguez remain in
shoot the ball.
Seattle, for they
are
the two best
I
would like to see Charles
pfaye~ in the game and fonn a
Barkley
retire,
for he will never
-
dynamic duo.
_
Hey, everyone
win a championship ring.
-,
Be-
can
dream right? Maybe Not.
fore he degrades himself any-
.
.I
would like to have Mark
more, it is time
for
himself
to get
McGwire hit 80 home runs next
out of the game and take his
season.
place
as
one of the all-time
great
Can the
NHL
find a way to ex-
players.
cite me?
I
would like to
see
Scottie
I
would like
Dan
Marino to win
Pippen win
a
title in Portland,
a
Super Bowl ring and then
re-
so that he can
be
cast from the
_
tire, for he would have nothing
left to prove.
Can Bill Parcells remain the
head coach of the New York Jets
for one more season, so that
he
·
can try to become the first
coach in
NFL
history to win
Supet
·
Bowl's with two differ-
ent teams.
I want to see Kerry Collins
remain on the New York Giants.
l
want to see the Indianapo-
lis
Colts remain as the same
team for years to come.
l
want Tiger Woods to win
the grand slam of gal[
I
would like to see an Ameri-
can step up in men's tennis and
contend with Pete Sampras and
Andre Agassi.
Can sports in general stop
expanding and diluting the tal-
ent?
Can some television station
develop a game show that is
similar to Jeopardy where the
questions only deal with
sports, so that sports junkies
around the world will have
something to do if professional
sports strike again?
Speaking of the possibility of
a labor stoppage, here is a
memo to all of the union lead-
ers and commissioners.
DON'T!
Finally, I would like
to see
the
Marist College men's and
women's basketball teams suc-
ceed and win
a
benh
·
into the
NCAA tournament, which
would bring a lot of excitement
to this campus.
in the game.
"Because
of the effort of ev-
-
The Women fell to St. Peter's,
eryone on the team, the two in-
71-56, to bring the team's
juries
_
does not hold us back,"
MAAC record to 1-1. DeJesus
Vallery said. "We are not going
scored 13, co-captain Sabrina
to dwell on the loss of players."
Vallery added 12 and Seidel pro-
Although the coaches and
vided
11
in
_
the losing effort, a
players did not set any formal
game in whichMarist shot 58.3
goals for the season, the first
percent from the field, but also
·
_
few games have given the team
committed 22 turnovers.
a new feeling of confidence for
Tift did not play in this game
each game, including the next
because of a sickness.
·
Doctors
upcoming game against Colgate.
say she has mono, but they
"We anticipate to win our
caught it early enough that she
games," Vallery said.
"We
are
will not miss too many games.
prepared we11 for every game
And late Tuesday, The Foxes
and have the ability to win."
won their fifth game of the sea-
WitharecordofS-2, the team's
son with a 58-55 triumph over
best start since going
4-1
in the
Fordham.
1995-96 season, the team now
With such a young team, it
has a new found confidence.
may be surprising that the
''We are
definitely a better team
women have been so success-
than last year," Vallery said. "It
ful early on.
feels good to be winning and it
"The freshmen have really
reinforces our confidence."
stepped up their play," Vallery
The women will take on
said. "It has helped us out a loL
Colgate on December 11 in the
We
are young, but our youth is
McCann Center.
.
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Stat of the Week•
Freshman Sarah Tift
_averaged 12 points
.
and 10
reb~unds to grab MAAC
Rookie of the Week honors
oiNo~ember3o.;•··
·• i··•···
. / /
s.
. b
PETEiiMOYi.AN
y' . ' ...
Staff Writer ·
' 'According ·.to. the pres~asoh
'
evaluatioµ of-Marist issued by. .
the,''.Blue Ribbon College Year-:· .
book,'' this year's team Iacksa
strong .backcourt'. ·. _. . _
.
.
· Witli· tw<> sophorifoi:es start- · ·
ing in,Rick
•
Smith:ancf.Sean .
Kennedy, iiiany thoughUhaL
'
. ' .. .
'
.
. .
Maiist wouid. have. to rely on . forth b~;ketball that. prodli~~d
it's big men if they were to play
six possessions in which both·•
winning basketbalL .
0~
Tues:- · teams traded· baskets. ·.
.
·
·
day night against American
This series Was highlighted by
. University, however, both
a
nice alley-oop from Kennedy
guards managed to silence
to Drew Sarmiels oll' the break.
many of their critics.
As Marist began
to
turn up their
· SmithfoadthewayfortheRed
defensive inten.sity, Americaq
Eoxeswith_ thirteen points, but
\\lent to·
a.
trapping zone
off
th_e
itwas his rebounding-and pen~
inbound's p~ss
iri
anattemptto
Quote·
_
of tile W.eek ·
"Aft~r watching Ralph
wann up; lfelt ,that be :\Vas
ticking with the fiQ~preci:
sion of
a
Rolex waicb;'~
-1im
·
smith, men's tenniscoach
PAGE 16
. ·etration that helped -push
rattle the Foxes; .
,>
_
,
~
-.
.
Marist past American for a solid · · ·.Keiilledy ancISfoiili werbable.
Rick:Srilittrbrings
the
-b~n
up
against
Loyola.
Smith was key in Tuesday nigh~~:1~~cremySmilh
72-63 victory. _ . . _ .
. .
tp
handle 'the pressure and get .
· · · ·
·
.
,, . -
·
Thestartoftheganiewas.my-
goodpenetration,whichallowed
.
the game, ~ith:saniueJs'.a~d ,-··· 1ookedlike·~rmetuned~achine.
thing but pretty with .both
many good open·fooks: Tomasz
Donald Va
_
le hitting the boards
It all itarted with a fast break
teams 'struggling to find their · Cielebak was able touse the time
and_ getting a couple -of put
that featured a nice _under-
rhythm, M;aristwas playing
to set up the offense
·
to his ad-
backs.
_ ....
.- .. ·
handed pass'froffiCielebak:to
tough interior defonseand al-
vantage,_ as he once. again
Thesecondhalfstartedmuch
,
JoeMcCurdyfortheliugetwo-
lowing few secondchance op-
·
_ showed how valuable· he is Jo.· like thefirstended; withf\meri-
hand~d sl.µn.
portuntties
for the Eagles. .
-thtHearn by showca!;ing'a va~..:
.
can making
-
a small.
run,
but .. At.this point the crowd was at
The gamewas topped off with
a full court pass from Smith to
McCurdy for the two hand_ed
pump slam which put Marist up
,by eight and sealed all hoped of
a comeback for American.
In addition to Smith's 13 point,
Samuels, Kenney and Cielebek
also scored
in
_double figures.
On the other end, a few .ety of moves and shots in the
Maristwas there toanswer, Tom
a fever pitch,. and the Marist
rushed shots and some bad
pa.int.. _ . . . .
. : . _ . _.
Keniiey· had
a
huge series of faithful were treated to a tremen-
bounces had· the Red Foxes
. Once again the gam~ saw a
playsjri which he foliowed his
dous block byMcCurdy onDoc-
wondering if this was going to
series
qf
traded bas_kets in
which
own blocked stjot for a lay~up, . tor, which lead to a running hook
be _one of those nights where
American's.big,guns ofPatrjck
hitabigJay.:upplllS_the foul ~nd
shot in the lane by Cielebak
things just don, t seem to go
Docto(and Sali()µ-lliµet 'J'e,lly . mad~:~ pie¢ cuqo,get the·pass
;
fo]Jb'wirig'that
d1sp11i
:&as
a
. theirway>
_>
.
.
·
. _ _ _
·startedto'firii:fsoihernom'i11tlle· fqr1r,e'6pe11Jay~up:_
,. ·. _.
slip
p~~~,,,~i,.Jii~'.
,
P:f\.Y~Ug
Marist is now 4-2 on the sea-
son. Over the weekend, the·de~
feat~d Loyola; 76a60, for their
third \Vin of the year. , They then·
. felltwo,dayi,·1atef:fo
Iona,
85-
65. ··_:.
About five minutes into, the
post to\vork) whileTirri'_Wa~h.:
' . The high}ight'. ohhe··nighf . Kermedy:'
_
toJason)Iastirigs for
game however; both. teams
ingtoh
began·
to
find his shot.. cam~ midway thioughth(sec-
the two h~rided jam which sent
. kicked intogear and played
·
Second chance opportunities
ondhalf'YhenMaristwentona
thealreadyllypedupcrowdint6
some tremendous> back
.
and
however, helped keep Marist in
five-minute ru~ in wbich_they .. a fr~nzy: · · ·
. Marisfs next ga111e is tonight
against Hudson Valley rival
Army at 7 :30 at West Point.
~,,~:=~:
byED~LIAMS III
g~es t:6.be r~played
011
the ra-
:
~taffWriter.
dio, The
,
Athletic Department
-
"
;
_
C .
.••
'
had already.taken care, of h~v-
.
I:Jay~ Y.Q1,1,ey~L \V_anted,to· ,ing theinen's·basketball broad-
. __ foa;ve'tbi
V{arrrfcdnfines ofyotir >:.tasf.0'7°ei the.Net, so it only
\ Qartland-apartttientfo cafoh •ihe
-c:
s·eeme·ct natural to. add· the
_Jastj,f~io')1cJion·.or' ~arfs{< .women:s·basketballgames this
·
'
.Womep.lsj~asl(etqall, burare
year .. ' ... _•
_ .
.
<
S~P.#~!e~_.PYi tpqe,D:tial
4C>~ii..: • .
_
..
I<.o~
~as anxious ~o accept
,·•·.pour tljat,~ tlli:ea_terfyo111-:-..vell-
_
tll
_
e: c_hallenge and quickly
,
aS'-
being if.soil'.decide to venture· .
. ,
-senibled a crew ofhis top work-
o~tinto i~?. ·
· ... •
..
·
.
; •
.
·
·_ers;'Along with fellow senior
. Cin:kphotollcremySmith
o
h -
. ·
f:
d -
· ·
J
r
1i
-
h h d .,
h d
r
Tara_'·
kn_
ig' h_.fd_
ef_e,:
:
,n
.
els,
a
pass ag_a_ instSt
Peter'_·
s:
Maris_tf __
ell to
.
, ··_th.,e
·Peacoc, ks_:, 7_.-2~5
__
.6 __
.
<
.
- .
.
r ave yoµ ~ver pun _y<>ur- . •·. u
IO '
ores, . e a to
SC
e u e
. s·elfbac}s
~e>m~
for tlle weeke_nd, · , a ¢rew.
io
cover· every single
·•1Vfarist--.-~urpri$e~_·_•_'ffth·-.5-2
~t~rt·-
·
::
_
1fI/;f;;6i~t:tf:~~
0
0: ··•-
g~:%t:;~:~~:;:;t~~
'
.
. '
.
' •' .-.··
.
.
. '
: .
'
·:
.
.
.•
.
.·_·
.
•...
·
.
.
the h_ard\VQ_od? .
.
.. '
' -
' V{illbe
·
·seniorRyan Maraziti,
· by
PETER.PALMIERI
.
Mansi ~bile
freslunan
S~ahTift
.
. their _th1r~ ..
~am~
Pf.th~
.S~S~Il . -
N.~\V
there is a
~jn,:ipl~
sqJ_uJion
whowil! cov~revery gain~ with
.
Staff
Writer ·
also, tossed in
lO
points.
'K.i111 ·
·
by defeatin.(I'empltby,a-s.c:o~
.
to ;thes~ P,rpblen1s/and oJbefs.
the)~xceptiorrofone; '.(or~s will
·
Hairston of Richmond led.all
of 53-41 .. _})ft.~lhed:_her fi~st
Just sign on to the Intem~t and
handle:thecolox: commentary
It ain't ov~r 'till it's over.
Seven games into the season,
the Marist women's basketball
team has staged . three-second
half comebacks and has already
exceeded last season's win to-
tal.
scorers
with
14 points.· Marist
doubl~:-double·?f the season,
listen away.· .
.
.. -.
.
duties, 'and·.sophomore Dan
·
shotadecent40percentfrom·tbe
amassmg 13 pomts and 15 re-
Forthefirsttinleintheschool's
Pricberelli, sophomore Adam
· field.
bound~.
. . . . .
. ,
history,· Marist
will
lJe brqad- · Sellegand junior Mike Ferraro
- The
women remained in Vir-
The ~orne11 traded bY. mne at
casting women's basketball . will also be on call to cover
giniato take on Virginia
Com-
halftime; ~ut outscored the
over:the Irit~rnet \VMC~; the
whenever needed.
monwea~thion Nov; 2L "Despite . Owls b¥.21
In
,the s.~on_d ~al~to
Marist,Cp}Jege radio station; is
· After the crew was selected
a 16-pointeffort by Tift and an-
c~ise·tovictory. A J~te three-
in_charge of the project in con.. _ and arougtischedule was ere-
On Nov. 19,-the women trav.:.
other 11 points by fellow fresh-
pomter by _M.ane Fu~c1an,d r,wo . junction
"6th
the Marist Athletic . ated Morrison started to in-
eled to Virginia to take on the
man ElishaDeJesus, Marist fell
key juinpe~ by S~ic_tel secured
Dep~ent .
.
. . strudt the WMCR members on
University of Richmcmd! De-" . g9:.52for its firstloss of th~ sea-
the victory fofthe Red F?xes.
Senior
Milce
Koller, the spo11S
sucI
1
things as dress codes and
spite trailing 37:.29 at halftime;
son.
I?
the first Metro Atlantic Ath-
directorof WMCR, is the man
proper conducts. Since WMCR
Marist outscored its opponent
· Marist then went on to face
letic Conference
~ C )
game
in charge and has been working
would be traveling with the team
31-19 in the second half and
Columbia, where it opened up an
of the_ s~ason? Manst squared
cl_?sely with Assis~t Athletic
to away games, it was necessary
survived for a 60-56 victory .1 &~point lead at one point and off agamst nval Loyola. A
Director Sean Momson.
that even the tiniest details be
over the Spiders.
held the lead to defeat Columbia
The two began playing with
Diesa Seidel netted 10 points
70-60.
:--Please see
WOMEN,
pg. 15
the idea when WMCR was cov-
1
and added 1 I rebounds for
On Nov. 28, the women won.
ering one of the voJJeybalJ
...
p
ease
see
RADIO,
pg.14
53.9.1
53.9.2
53.9.3
53.9.4
53.9.5
53.9.6
53.9.7
53.9.8
53.9.9
53.9.10
53.9.11
53.9.12
53.9.13
53.9.14
53.9.15
53.9.16